The Trump administration on Saturday released a set of documents once deemed top secret relating to the wiretapping of a onetime adviser to Donald Trump’s presidential campaign. The New York Times reported that the documents involving former Trump campaign adviser Carter Page were released to the Times and several other media organizations that had filed Freedom of Information Act lawsuits to obtain them. The FBI later posted the documents to its FOIA website online.
The Washington Post
A Florida online publication asked a federal appeals court Thursday to order a trial be held on its Freedom of Information Act lawsuit seeking FBI documents that may reveal a U.S.-based support network for the 9/11 hijackers. The case heard before the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals centers on reporting published by the Florida Bulldog about the FBI investigation into a Saudi Arabian family that abruptly left a Sarasota home two weeks before the 2001 terror attacks. One FBI document that was released said that agents had found “many connections” in 2002 between the family and some hijackers who took flying lessons at a nearby airport, including ringleader Mohamed Atta.
The Ledger
A senior employee at Dover Air Force Base, Delaware, acted inappropriately by offering inspectors a peek at American icon John Glenn’s body while the body awaited burial in early 2017, Air Force investigators found. It wasn’t the only case of inappropriate behavior involving the bodies of fallen service members by the employee outlined in a report obtained under a Freedom of Information Act request by Military Times: In one instance involving the severed ear of a service member, the employee allegedly leaned over the remains and yelled, “Can you hear me?” The behavior was confined to a single individual, and there was no systemic problem at the mortuary, investigators found, in the course of 34 formal interviews, talking to 50 witnesses, and reviewing numerous documents.
Military Times
PETA said it filed an appeal with the U.S. Department of Agriculture stating that the agency is violating the Freedom of Information Act by not releasing evidence related to “The Camel Farm” in Yuma. PETA said the USDA is withholding photographs, videos and other records from nine months of inspections. PETA said “The Camel Farm” had more than 30 violations of the federal Animal Welfare Act during that time.
KYMA
U.S. Immigration Customs Enforcement (ICE) responded Thursday to the Gettysburg Times’ Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for copies of “any and all records” concerning May 9’s arrests at Montezuma Mexican Restaurant, Gettysburg. “No records responsive to your request were found” after “a search of the ICE Office of Enforcement and Removal Operations,” the response says.
Gettysburg Times
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