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Writing Your Request

WRITING YOUR REQUEST

You don’t need to be a lawyer to put together your request. There isn’t one specific way you must write your request for it to be valid. However, we have found it useful to break down a request into several parts. All examples below come directly from FOIA requests filed by the Center for Constitutional Rights. We have also included an annotated request in this guide as an example.

Introduction

You don’t need a long introduction, but here are the elements we include at the beginning of many of our requests:

  • State the law – identify that the request is made pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. Sec. 552.
  • Name the people or organizations making the request.
  • Summarize what you are seeking.
  • Identify which agencies and sub-agencies you are requesting be searched.
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“This is a request under the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. Sec. 552 (“FOIA”), on behalf of Color of Change (“COC”) and the Center for Constitutional Rights (“the Center”) (collectively “the Requesters”) for information regarding the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”) and Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) policies and actions involving the monitoring and surveillance of public protests surrounding police violence, policing reform, racial justice, and the Black Lives Matter movement (“BLM”).”

Style and format

Many agencies now have forms online that let you fill out and submit a request. We strongly recommend against using these forms unless you absolutely have to. These forms will often not give you room to add all the information and detail you may want. Instead, we recommend that you write your request in a format similar to a formal letter, addressed to the agencies using the structure we outline below. If you’re writing on behalf of an organization, add your logo to the first page. Then, when you’ve finished, save a copy of your request as a PDF. Send both a printed, hard copy of your request to the agency, and email the PDF copy to the agency.

Citing to statutes and agency regulations

You do not need to use legal language in your request. You can still file excellent FOIA requests without legalese. However, we have found it helpful to cite to the federal FOIA statute and certain agency regulations in many of our FOIA requests. The people reviewing requests are often lawyers, so citing to specific statutes and laws can clarify for them their obligation to process your FOIA, and it can help later on if you choose to litigate.

Each federal agency has its own FOIA related regulations

You should be able to find up-to-date agency regulations online.[3]

[3] Many federal agencies post the FOIA regulations on their websites. Examples of specific federal agency regulations on fee waivers are 28 C.F.R. §16.10(k) (Department of Justice) and 6 C.F.R. § 5.11(k) (Department of Homeland Security).

Additionally, sometimes agency regulations contain language that can be helpful to you. For example, there might be additional language in DHS’s regulations supporting your argument for a fee waiver or expedited processing.

For state-level requests, make sure to look at state and local laws and cite to those specific to the state, county, or city where you are making your request.

Purpose of request

You can keep this short or include a detailed narrative, depending on your strategy. You could even leave out this section. However, if you are hoping to get a fee waiver or expedited processing, it can be helpful to include at least a short summary of why the information you are seeking is important to you, your organization, and/or the communities you work with.

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“The purpose of this request is to obtain information for the Requestors and the public on the Detention Bed Mandate, Bed Mandate and/or Detention Quota, decision-making surrounding the mandate, and its impact on detention policy and detention contracting decisions nation-wide from June 2006 to the present. This information will enable the public to engage in an important ongoing policy debate and the upcoming Congressional appropriations debate.”

Using information produced by their FOIA request, Detention Watch Network and Center for Constitutional Rights released the report “Banking on Detention” in 2015.

If your campaign objectives require it, you can go further into why you are requesting these records. We recommend citing to news articles or other public information that shows why releasing these records to you is not only important, but urgent.

Wherever possible, show how members of your organization have been affected by the policy or government action in question by citing an article and even individual stories that led your organization to file this request so you could better serve your membership and advocate for them.

Telling a story in your request itself can be a great tool for shaping public narrative about your organization’s issues before you’ve even received any documents. However, other times it might be strategic to keep things simple and not go into as much detail. It all depends on how you choose to use FOIA requests in your advocacy.

 

Anne Rolfes, director of the Louisiana Bucket Brigade, speaks on why her organization, in partnership with other grassroots groups, filed a state records request seeking more information about a new pipeline in the region:

“The Bayou Bridge Pipeline is a bad project for Louisiana that will enrich a few people at the expense of our clean water, our Atchafalaya, and people’s health. The company is seizing people’s land against their will. We deserve to know the whole truth about this shady process, and these records will provide clarity. ”

ANNE ROLFES

DIRECTOR, LOUISIANA BUCKET BRIGADE

Define the terms you decide to use in your request

Defining your terms will help both you and the government agencies identify what you are looking for. For instance, something that you will often see defined in most FOIA requests is the word “Record,” which you could define by writing:

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“In this request, ‘Record’ includes, but is not limited to, all records or communications preserved in electronic or written form, such as correspondences, emails, documents, data, videotapes, audio tapes, faxes, files, guidances, guidelines, analyses, memoranda, agreements, notes, orders, policies, procedures, legal opinions, protocols, reports, rules, or manuals.”

Identify the records being sought

Earlier we listed some examples of the types of records you can request. Remember to be creative, but also as specific as possible. FOIA requires requesters to “reasonably describe” the information you are seeking. This does not mean you need to know the names of certain documents, policies, or people, but it does mean you need to be more specific than “I request all emails by ICE agents about detentions.” An example of a more specific request might be: “We seek any and all records related to detention facilities’ compliance with ICE’s Performance-Based National Detention Standards between the years 2013 and 2015.”

It can also be helpful to cite to public documents that might show the existence of the records you are seeking, or how government officials were discussing a certain policy, or other evidence that backs up the reasons for your request. For example, if there’s a recent article in the New York Times where the director of the FBI is quoted discussing the government policy you’re seeking information about, include that in your request.

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“Any and all names of databases created or used by ICE to identify targets of home enforcement operations, including databases supplied to ICE by other government agencies.”

Louisiana Bucket Brigade Founder and Director Anne Rolfes speaks at a press conference in front of governor’s home.

Specify the format of production

It’s crucial to be specific about how you want any records produced to you. First, you should always say that you are seeking both paper and electronic records. Second, we’ve found that it’s helpful to specify that electronic records are produced in PDF format, and ask for them to be text-searchable. Make sure to also specify that you want “parent-child” relationships between related documents maintained, such as email file attachments produced together with the email with which they are associated. You can also ask for data in its original format, such as spreadsheets in Microsoft Excel format.

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“Please provide the requested documents in the following format: In PDF format; Electronically searchable wherever possible; Each paper record in a separately saved file; ‘Parent-child’ relationships maintained, meaning that the requester must be able to identify the attachments with emails; Any data records in native format (i.e. Excel spreadsheets in Excel); Emails should include BCC and any other hidden fields; with any other metadata preserved.”

Payment and making a “fee waiver” request

Filing your request is free, but government agencies are typically allowed to charge for processing and copying done in response to your request and usually set limits on the amount they charge per page. However, under FOIA you may be entitled to a “fee waiver” so that you won’t have to pay for any of the records you receive.

Federal fee waivers

To qualify for a fee waiver under the law, you need to show a number of things. Primarily, you must show that:

  • You or your organization does not have a “commercial interest” in the information.

  • Disclosure of the records that you or your organization are requesting is “in the public interest.”

  • The information “is likely to contribute significantly to public understanding of the operations or activities of the government.”

You can show the likelihood you will distribute the information by showing you have a history of doing so – whether as a journalist, non-profit or membership organization, or in other ways. It is a good idea to take a look not only at the specific provision of the federal law that provides for fee waivers, 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(A)(iii), but also at the federal regulation regarding fee waivers of the agency whose records you are requesting.[4]

[4] For a full description of what kinds of request can be granted expedited processing, see 5 USC

Make sure that the explanation you provide about why you are entitled to a fee waiver matches the requirements in the agency’s regulation, and cite the regulation.

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The Requesters are non-profit organizations dedicated to civil rights, human rights, and immigrant rights, and have a proven track record of compiling and disseminating information and reports to the public about government functions and activities, including the government’s record and position on immigrants’ rights, detention, and policy matters. The Requesters have undertaken this work in the public interest and not for any private commercial interest. Access to this information is crucial for the Requesters and the communities they serve to evaluate immigration enforcement actions and their potential detrimental efforts.”

State fee waivers

Some state open records laws also allow you to get fee waivers, while others do not. But even if a state’s law and regulations do not provide a detailed process to obtain a fee waiver, you should still ask for one, including telling a state agency that you’re making the request in the public interest and not for any profit or commercial motive.

Additional language on fees to include

Finally, it is good to include language that protects you if your fee waiver request is denied. You can ask agencies that you be contacted if the cost of producing responsive records reaches a certain amount. For example, you can say, “If no fee waiver is granted and the fees exceed $100.00, please contact us to obtain consent before processing additional records.” You can also ask agencies to give you an estimate of how much producing the documents might cost you before they produce the documents.

Expedited processing request

You can also ask federal agencies for “expedited processing” under FOIA. This means that your request would be processed by the agency much sooner than normal. Under the federal statute, expedited processing will be granted if the requester “demonstrates a compelling need.”[5]

When making this request, explain why the public needs to know about the information you are requesting right away – cite news articles, recent events, or reports that help demonstrate the urgency of your request.

One common way to do this is to show that, as an individual or organization “primarily engaged in disseminating information,” the records you are seeking show an “urgency to inform the public” of government activity. As with fee waivers, you should also look at the specific agency regulation that explains what kinds of requests, and by whom, qualify for expedited processing. For example, the Department of Homeland Security allows for expedited processing when “the lack of expedited processing could reasonably be expected to pose an imminent threat to the life or physical safety of an individual” or when the records you seek are “a matter of widespread and exceptional media interest in which there exist possible questions about the government’s integrity which affect public confidence.” Make sure that the explanation you provide about why you are entitled to expedited processing matches the requirements in the agency’s regulation, and if possible, cite the regulation.

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“The Requesters are entitled to expedited processing of this request because there is a ‘compelling need’ for the information. 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(6)(E) (i)(I)…There is an urgent need to inform the public of the policies and decision-making regarding the ICE detention bed quotas or detention bed mandate. The appropriations debate will begin in a matter of months and it is paramount that the public have the requested information to meaningfully engage in the public debate surrounding the cost of detention…Politicians on both sides of the aisle have also called attention to excessive use of immigration detention, which is directly tied to the mandate. For example, during a March 2013 House Judiciary Committee Hearing, Representative Bachus (R-Ala.) warned of an “overuse of detention by this administration,” and was among 190 House members who voted for the amendment to eliminate the detention bed mandate.”

Agencies do not often grant expedited processing, but it is important to request it if you are entitled to it. A denial of expedited processing does not need to be administratively appealed and can be brought straight to federal court.

Unfortunately, many state open records laws do not allow for expedited processing. However, this should not stop you from making an argument that your request is in the public interest and should be processed as soon as possible.

[5] 6 CFR § 5.5 - Timing of responses to requests.

Certification and conclusion

This is an important legal step. Add a line near the end of your request saying everything you have written is “true and correct.” In addition, we suggest reiterating parts of the law that are helpful if your request is denied. Here is an example from a Center for Constitutional Rights’ request:

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“The Requester certifies that the above information is true and correct to the best of the Requester’s knowledge. If this Request is denied in whole or in part, the Requesters ask that the DHS and FBI justify all deletions by reference to specific exemptions of FOIA. [You can cite to DHS and FBI regulations here]. The Requester expects DHS and FBI to release all segregable portions of otherwise exempt material, and reserves the right to appeal a decision to withhold any records or to deny within the application for expedited processing and waiver of fees.”

FOIAs from the Center for Constitutional Rights and others in the 1980s revealed surveillance of activists.

What the paragraph above is doing is reminding the government agencies (in this case the FBI and DHS, but it could be any agency) that they must explain why they have redacted any information, and that if they do redact parts of a document, they must still provide you with the un-redacted parts of that document.

The language in this example also reminds them of your right to appeal any decision they make – this includes agency decisions about withholding records and also about granting you a fee waiver or expedited processing.

Contact information for any responses

We highly recommend identifying one specific person as the contact for your request. Ideally this is the person who signs the request. Agencies receive hundreds of FOIA requests every month, and the more names and contact information you list at the bottom of a request, the greater the chance of confusion by the agency, which means the person processing your request might just pick someone’s name and address that they see listed and send responses directly to them. The person they choose may no longer be part of your organization, or may not check their email or mailbox that often. So choose someone who will be staying on top of their email and regular mail. It is critical to stay on top of the correspondence that happens after you file a request, because missed deadlines can give an agency legal justification to close your request entirely and can also make it difficult for you if you later choose to litigate your request. Make sure to send one copy of the request to each agency and/or component to which you are directing your request. For example, you might send your request to the FBI, DHS, and ICE.

In her landmark opinion supporting the release of documents in our case NDLON v. ICE, in which the National Day Laborer Organizing Network sought documents as part of their campaign to stop ICE’s “Secure Communities” program, Judge Shira Scheindlin wrote:

“The Freedom of Information Act was intended to facilitate transparency about the government’s policies even – or perhaps especially – when members of the public are disturbed by those policies and are fighting to end them. The Act calls on government employees to diligently and honestly respond to requests even from people with whom they disagree.”

JUDGE SHIRA SCHEINDLIN

NEW YORK