2015: The Year in Government Secrecy
http://www.truthdig.com/eartotheground/item/2015_the_year_in_government_secrecy_20151224
via truthdig:
Heres a rundown on how this past year shaped up on the issue of government accountability (hint: not well) from someone who knows quite a bit on the subject: reporter Jason Leopold, whos familiarized himself thoroughly on the secrecy tip as well as on the Freedom of Information Act and its uses.
Leopold takes stock on
Vice News:
On issues as wide-ranging as Guantanamo and net neutrality, to the federal governments response to the Ebola outbreak, to the costs of operating black-site CIA prisons across Europe, US government agencies again refused to err on the side of disclosure in 2015 as they were instructed to by thenAttorney General Eric Holder back in 2009 and instead chose to conceal information. In doing so, the agencies cited threats to national security, privacy, the so-called deliberative process, and other exemptions under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).
And despite it all, the Obama administration continued to proclaim that it is the most transparent administration in history.
There were victories in the fight for transparency this year, however. It was a VICE News FOIA lawsuit that forced the State Department to publicly release Hillary Clintons emails, arguably the most high-profile release of documents in 2015.
When we sued the State Department on January 25 for Clintons emails, the scandal over her exclusive use of a private email account while she was Secretary of State had not yet unfolded. Our decision to litigate was based instead on the fact that she was set to become the Democratic presidential frontrunner in 2016, and we wanted to gain insight into the way she performed as the nations top diplomat.
The monthly disclosures have contained, for instance, revelatory details about Clintons stance on the controversial 2009 troop surge in Afghanistan and her work in helping to secure the release of high-profile Guantanamo detainee Omar Khadr, have also helped to shed much-needed light on the State Departments disastrous FOIA operations that caused the years-long delay of documents.
Posted by Kasia Anderson