CREW responds to White House Office of Administration's brief, which is factually and legally wrong

CREW is suing the White House Office of Administration for failing to respond to our FOIA request by providing records that would document the White House’s knowledge of millions of missing email, its failure to restore the email or put in place an electronic record-keeping system that would prevent this problem, and the possibility that the email were purposefully deleted.  Our brief can be found here.   The Office is trying to claim its exempt from FOIA requests. 

Quite simply, the White House brief is factually and legally wrong: 

  • In 1996, OA filed a brief in the Supreme Court in Armstrong v. EOP, arguing that EO 12122 gives the director of OA “a broad delegation of authority” and explaining that OA’s duties do not include the president.

They didn't fail to respond...

...they just accidentally deleted your FOIA e-mail. Oops!

Your FOIA request was the first Bush had ever heard of the Freedom of Information Act, which he immediately overturned in EO13042, "Full Rescinding of Freedom of Information Act of 1966, Because Johnson Was A Dummy and I've Got Things To Hide, Dammit!"

So thanks a lot, CREW, for tipping Bush off about FOIA. He may never have found out about it otherwise.

consummate professionals

maybe junior tried his hand at writing a legal brief.

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Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington uses high-impact legal actions to target government officials who sacrifice the common good to special interests. Receive email updates:
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