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The Freedom of Information Act, the main tool forcing the government to be more transparent, is designed to be insulated from political considerations. Anyone who seeks information through the law is supposed to get it unless disclosure would hurt national security, violate personal privacy or expose confidential decision-making in certain areas. People can request government records without specifying why they want them and are not obligated to provide personal information about themselves other than their name and an address where the records should be sent. But at the Homeland Security Department, since July 2009, career employees were ordered to provide political staffers with information about the people who asked for records
-- such as where they lived and whether they were private citizens or reporters
-- and about the organizations where they worked. If a member of Congress sought such documents, employees were told to specify Democrat or Republican. No one in government was allowed to discuss the political reviews with anyone whose information request was affected by them. Papoi was replaced earlier this month by her new boss, Delores J. Barber, who took over Papoi's title as deputy chief FOIA officer and moved into Papoi's office. The Republican chairman of the House oversight committee, Rep. Darrell Issa of California, said that "appeared to be an act of retaliation," after Issa identified Papoi as the employee who confidentially complained in March 2010 to the DHS inspector general about the political vetting of requests for government files. The emails also raise doubts about whether the emails previously released to the AP were properly censored. "The government should not keep information confidential merely because public officials might be embarrassed by disclosure, because errors and failures might be revealed or because of speculative or abstract fears," Obama said shortly after he took office. In a statement Sunday, Homeland Security Department spokeswoman Amy Kudwa said, "Redaction decisions have always been made by FOIA professionals and career legal staff." The government censored Callahan's email that described the "crazy" scrutiny by political advisers. It also censored another email by Holzerland, who told Callahan in September 2009 that the political reviews were "bananas!" Also censored were complaints by Papoi, the former deputy, that the political reviews were "meddling" and, together with "constant stonewalling" by the department's top lawyers, causing delays in the agency's open records department. "I currently have 98 requests that are tagged by the front office for tracking and forwarding to the front office," Papoi wrote in one previously censored passage. "I simply don't have the time or staff to review all of those requests before we send them on. Quite honestly, we shouldn't have to." The AP protested last year that the emails it received had been improperly censored, but the Homeland Security Department never responded to its formal appeal. ___ Online: Censored copies of government emails:
http://www.dhs.gov/xfoia/
gc_1283193904791.shtm
[Associated
Press;
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