#FOIA Monday special #SCOTUS edition thread! At 10am eastern today, the Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in a case about the deliberative process privilege. A brief thread about what's going on ⬇️ (1/x)
First of all, you can listen to the oral arguments this morning LIVE on C-SPAN; link should be available here: https://www.c-span.org/supremeCourt/calendar/a That's pretty cool. The public should always be able to listen to oral arguments, as @rcfp has argued #FOIA (2/x)
Ok, second, what is this case about? Well, it concerns the deliberative process privilege, one of the privileges incorporated into #FOIA's Exemption 5. You can learn more about it in the FOIA Wiki here: https://foia.wiki/wiki/Deliberative_Process_Privilege (3/x)
The deliberative process privilege is one of the most overused and abused #FOIA exemptions. It's used to conceal embarrassing and inconvenient information. It's widely known as the "withhold it because you want to" exemption. (4/x)
The facts of the case, Fish and Wildlife Service v. @SierraClub, are pretty detailed and complex. I'd read the @SCOTUSblog summary instead of trying to get a summary here. (6/x)
Interestingly (or frustratingly), this case does not involve #FOIA's foreseeable harm standard, because the request was submitted before the 2016 amendments came into effect. It's the second case in two years the #SCOTUS has taken that doesn't involve foreseeable harm. (7/x)
. @rcfp and a coalition of newsmedia organizations filed an amicus brief in support of @SierraClub, addressing the overuse and abuse of the deliberative process privilege, which undermines the purpose of #FOIA. You can read it here (pdf warning): https://www.rcfp.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/2020-08-03-RCFP-amicus-brief-in-Fish-and-Wildlife-Service-v.-Sierra-Club.pdf (8/x)
In 2014, the VA cited the privilege to withhold the names of hospitals where 19 veterans died because of delays in medical screenings, claiming the information was “preliminary.” @cjciaramella's story on that is here: https://perma.cc/Q8H4-33WR  #FOIA (10/x)
The DOJ cited the privilege to withhold a report about the United States government’s Nazi-hunting operations, as well as its role in creating a “safe haven” for Nazis and their collaborators after WWII. Read @EricLichtblau's story on that here: https://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/14/us/14nazis.html (11/x)
Suffice to say, the deliberative process privilege is a huge obstacle to the public's right to understand what the government is up to. In 2019, it was cited more than 74,000 times to withhold records in part or in full under #FOIA. (12/x)
What will today's case hold? Of course, we don't know. But the #SCOTUS's last #FOIA case, FMI v. Argus Leader, did not turn out well for the public's right to know: https://foia.wiki/wiki/Exemption_4#Confidential The Court overturned decades of precedent, expanding the scope of Exemption 4 (13/x)
I think it's fair to say many people were surprised the #SCOTUS took the case being argued today. Tune in at 10am eastern to hear what the justices think! Direct link: https://www.c-span.org/video/?475850-1/us-fish-game-service-v-sierra-club-inc-oral-argument #FOIA (14/14)
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