<<http://ap.tbo.com/ap/breaking/MGBDP9DE2WD.html>>

Justice Department Says It Can't Share Lobbying Data Because Computer
System Will Crash

By Ted Bridis Associated Press Writer 
Published: Jun 29, 2004 

 
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Bush administration is offering a novel reason for
denying a request seeking the Justice Department's database on foreign
lobbyists: Copying the information would bring down the computer system. 
"Implementing such a request risks a crash that cannot be fixed and could
result in a major loss of data, which would be devastating," wrote Thomas
J. McIntyre, chief in the Justice Department's office for information
requests. 

Advocates for open government said the government's assertion that it
could not copy data from its computers was unprecedented but
representative of generally negative responses to Freedom of Information
Act requests. 

"This was a new one on us. We weren't aware there were databases that
could be destroyed just by copying them," Bob Williams of the Center for
Public Integrity said Tuesday. The watchdog group in Washington made the
request in January. He said the group expects to appeal the Justice
Department's decision. 

Many Justice Department computer systems, especially at the FBI, are
considered outdated. The FBI is spending nearly $600 million to modernize
its antiquated systems. 

The Center for Public Integrity sought information about lobbying
activities available under the U.S. Foreign Agents Registration Act, a
1938 law passed in response to German propaganda before World War II.
Database records describe details of meetings among foreign lobbyists,
the administration and Congress, and payments by foreign governments and
some overseas groups for political s and other campaigns. 

"What they're asking for is a lot, and it's not something at this
particular point in time we have the technical ability to do," Justice
Department spokesman Bryan Sierra said Tuesday. 

McIntyre explained in a May 24 letter that the computer system - operated
in the counterespionage section of the Justice Department's criminal
division - "was not designed for mass export of all stored images" and
said the system experiences "substantial problems." 

"It sounds like incredible negligence for an agency that is keeping
public records to keep them in such a precarious condition," said Stephen
Doig, interim director at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism at
Arizona State University. "I've never heard the excuse that making the
equivalent of a backup copy would somehow cause steam to rise out of the
computer." 

The government said an overhaul of the system should be finished by
December and copies should be available then. 

Paper copies of records still are available for review four hours each
day for people willing to travel to Washington, the Justice Department
noted. Williams said the index available to researchers there is at least
12 months outdated, "which kind of renders it useless." 

Attorney General John Ashcroft ordered federal agencies in October 2001
to review more closely which documents they release. Ashcroft's policy
lets officials withhold information on any "sound legal basis." Under
looser policies issued in 1993, agencies could hold back information to
prevent "foreseeable harm." 

"This is an administration and Justice is an agency that does not go out
of its way to make information available to the public," said David
Sobel, general counsel for the Washington-based Electronic Privacy
Information Center. 


-----
"You cannot cripple an opponent by outwitting him in a political debate, 
You can do it only by following Lenin's injunction: 'In political
conflicts,  the goal is not to refute your opponent's argument, but to
wipe him from the face of the earth.'"
 --The Art of Political War (4thReichKlan Political Manual)

_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to