The NSA Has Found a New Way to Categorically Deny FOIA Requests – Gizmodo

The notoriously secretive National Security Agency is raising security concerns to justify an apparent new policy of pre-emptively denying Freedom of Information Act requests about the agencys contractors.

The policy was cited by John R. Chapman, the agencys chief FOIA public liaison officer, in a letter to Gizmodo on January 17, 2017, three days before Donald Trumps inauguration. In explaining that the agency had declined to even conduct a search for records about a company called SCL Group, Chapman wrote, Please be advised that due to changing security concerns, this is now our standard response to all requests where we reasonably believe acquisition records are being sought on a contract or contract-related activity.

The response appears to indicate that the NSA will no longer releaseor even search forany records pertaining to the private contractors it works with. SCL Group is a U.K.-based behavioral research firm that has reportedly worked with the Department of Defense in the past; its subsidiary Cambridge Analytica was a central component of the Trump campaigns winning strategy.

Several FOIA experts contacted by Gizmodo said they had never heard of such a denial before.

This sounds like a non-Glomar Glomar response, Bradley Moss, deputy executive director for The James Madison Project, told Gizmodo, using a nickname for the notorious practice of national security and law enforcement agencies refusing to confirm or deny the existence of records. There are existing reasons to categorically deny a request, and even to refuse to conduct a search, Moss said, but hes never seen such a response justified in this way.

Theyre clamping down across the board, Moss said. There is clearly a determined and deliberate attempt to plug any gap that might allow the public to see how the national security apparatus actually works. The apparently new standard hasnt been reflected in the regulations that govern the NSAs FOIA practices, and no rules or proposed rules have been recorded in the Federal Register that might illuminate the issue. Any decision by the NSA to pre-emptively deny requests for contractor-related records would be a major departure for the agency; in 2008 it produced a 22-page internal guidebook for responding to just such requests.

Chapmans letter didnt specify which changing security concerns motivated the new policy, and he did not immediately respond to an emailed inquiry from Gizmodo. When we called his office, the person answering the phone told us that Chapman wasnt in the office and that we dont really answer questions over the phone. The NSAs public affairs office did not respond to a request for comment.

Gizmodo will appeal the denial. As for the company we were asking about: SCL Group (originally Strategic Communication Laboratories) has a complicated and sprawling corporate structure that makes it difficult to determine which of its components conduct what business and for whom. Cambridge Analytica, the subsidiary that worked on both the Trump and Brexit campaigns, made some $14.4 million in this election cycle, filings with the Federal Election Commission show, including $5.7 million from Ted Cruzs campaign and $5.6 million from Donald Trumps. The secretive father-daughter duo Robert and Rebekah Mercerbillionaire patrons to both Steve Bannon and Kellyanne Conwayare reportedly investors.

SCL Group worked predominately with commercial clients until the late 90s, when the Indonesian government reportedly hired the organization for its psychological warfare expertise to respond to secessionist and religious violence. On its website, SCL Group claims to have worked with a variety of governmental and private entities the world over, including the U.S. State Department. SCL did not return a request for comment. (When we asked the State Department for documentation of that work, an official responded, The claim by the company that you conveyed in your request is peculiar. Without additional information, I am not able to verify the vendors claim.)

If you know anything about the NSAs changing security concerns, SCL Group, or Cambridge Analytica, please do get in touch, on a confidential basis if you like.

Originally posted here:
The NSA Has Found a New Way to Categorically Deny FOIA Requests - Gizmodo

Related Posts

Comments are closed.