Selasa, 13 Maret 2012

Asking For Information Without Legal Counsel

Many people do not want, or cannot find, an Attorney to resolve a problem he or she is having with the government. Then there is the problem of paying the fees for an Attorney.
I have close friends who are lawyers, but my personal admiration and respect for these people does not extend to the industry as a whole. I choose, like many people do, to do my homework and represent myself or  go "pro se" in court. This is not easy. First of all, people in the business of selling their knowledge of the law and procedures (as in lawyers, law clerks, Judges, etc) dont want anyone taking money away from them, as in doing it yourself or telling people that they can be their own "attorney". So, pro se litigants get attacked. Get used to it. Ride it out. Tape the person attacking you, and file a complaint with his or her boss. If you cant tape, then write everything that happened when you were attacked, and send a letter certified return receipt or send by email a detailed factual summary of what happened, and ask for an explanation. Give a deadline for a response.
I found the article below interesting, because in New York City, the Department of Education does not want you to have any information about what they do everyday. Unfortunately for the DOE, anyone can file a Freedom of Information request, of any City or State Agency. However there are exemptions in each State as well as under each Agency. Here is the Department of Justice FOI Law exemptions.
One of my favorite sites for current FOIL information is the Reporters For Freedom of the Press. Talk of the Sound has an interesting historical perspective.
New York State's site for FOIL is too general for me, and the New York State Department of Education has its own rules.
And then there is New York City Department of Education. Joe Baranello, Records Access Officer seems to take the law into his own hands. There is no exemption that either he or Mike Best, General Counsel to the DOE, doesn't use when they do not want you to have the information that you request. Waiting two or more years for a response is not uncommon.
But, filing FOIL requests is very easy, and I urge everyone to keep filing requests, and, ultimately, Article 78 lawsuits if they (the DOE FOIL and Law Department) dont comply. Dont give up.
I send in FOIL requests that look like this - 
Mr. Joseph A. Baranello
Central Records Access Officer
Office of the General Counsel
New York City Department of Education
52 Chambers Street
New York, NY 10007

JBaranello3@schools.nyc.gov

Dear Mr. Baranello:

Under the provisions of the New York Freedom of Information Law, Article 6 of the Public Officers Law, I hereby request to receive E-mail copies of:

1) 
2) 
3) 

If the records have been removed from their original locations, please cause a diligent search to be conducted of all appropriate file rooms and storage facilities.

If any record has been redacted, please identify which categories of information have been redacted, and cite the relevant statutory exemption(s).

If you have any questions relating to the specific record(s) or portion(s) being sought, please phone me at                 so that we may discuss them.

As you know, the Freedom of Information Law requires that an agency respond to a request within five business days of receipt of a request.  Therefore, I would appreciate a response as soon as possible and look forward to hearing from you shortly.  If for any reason any portion of my request is denied, please inform me of the reasons for the denial in writing and provide the name and address of the person or body to whom an appeal should be directed.

                                                                   Sincerely,

Behind the News — March 1, 2012 02:01 PM

My Lawyer, Myself

Suing the government for access to info, pro se
Inside well-funded newsrooms, investigative reporters can usually turn to company lawyers for help with stalled public records requests. But independent freelancers don’t have that luxury, and many can’t afford to hire legal counsel on their own. So when the time comes to stop asking the government for public records and start demanding them, what can a low-to-no budget freelancer without legal counsel do?
To start, it’s possible to act as your own attorney and sue for access to information without the benefit of legal counsel—a tactic called pro se representation. Over the past few years, as the U.S. economy has taken a nosedive, more and more people have elected to save on legal fees by representing themselves in court. “It’s generally a bad idea for people to represent themselves in court, period,” said Geoff King, Northern California’s SPJ FOI committee co-chair and a former staff attorney for the First Amendment Project. King, ever the comedian, quoted an adage to me via e-mail: “A man who is his own lawyer has a fool for a client.” Still, when it comes to FOIA-related lawsuits, there are plenty of resources out there to prevent pro se litigants from looking silly.
Tools like Litigation Under the Federal Open Government Laws 2010, a comprehensive 711-page guide to access laws, make it relatively simple to get a good idea where to start when assembling a knowledge base about all things related to FOIA suits. The book, which is updated every two years, covers everything from case law to filing fees. FOIA-specific complaints, which can be modified and used as templates, are readily available at sites like the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s FOIA Litigation for Accountable Government (FLAG) Project. The FOIA Project, a searchable database of FOIA-related filings compiled by the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC) and Document Cloud, links to hundreds of court documents from FOIA suits.
Creating a viable complaint requires time and legal research. A number of basic pro se resources exist online, including the Self-Represented Litigation Network and SelfHelpSupport.org, which hosts a legal library and boasts a community of 4,000 people who have experience representing themselves. Legal blogs like Shlep: the Self-Help Law Express can help you decide whether or not self-representation makes sense.
Thus far, journalists without lawyers have both succeeded and failed in court. Website publisher June Maxam of the online North Country Gazette represented herself after being quoted a price of $7-10,000 for professional legal representation.
“We could not afford that amount of money,” Maxam told me via e-mail. “Each attorney we had consulted told us [our case] should be a “slam dunk” because of case law precedent, and we had two supporting formal opinions from the NYS Committee on Open Government, but no one would help us pro bono…. it was decided to proceed pro se rather than drop the issue.”
Maxam and her co-plaintiff, a local government official, won their case—sort of—in January after filing a suit in September 2011 demanding access to records kept by a local volunteer fire department. The judge ruled that the requested documents had to be turned over, but that the fire department’s meetings weren’t subject to New York’s Open Meetings Law. Appeals for the case, which Maxam says was her first related to public records, are now being heard.
“Just because you’re right and have the law on your side doesn’t mean that you’ll get a ruling in your favor,” Maxam warned. “If you’re not prepared for a fight, then don’t file.” Costs related to her suit were defrayed by a grant from the Knight Foundation’s FOI fund, which provides aid to FOIA litigants.
Ellen Smith, managing editor of the award-winning watchdog website Mine Safety and Health News, considered filing a FOIA suit pro se in U.S. District Court, but decided against it. “It was too complicated and, quite honestly, stressful,” she said. “I started getting everything together (and had sample filings so I could use similar language, but fill-in-the-blanks) when [attorney] Drew Shenkman from Holland and Knight took my case for me. It was a huge relief.”
Even with professional counsel, Smith says, the suit still took up a lot of her time. The day before her court filing was due, the government made a “substantial” release of information, rendering the previous legal efforts more or less worthless.
Others have succeeded by initially filing suits themselves, and then later retaining professional counsel as the suit progressed. Current Miami Herald contributor and librarian Theo Karantsalis, of Florida, began a suit pro se suit against the Department of Defense and the Air Force that later resulted in a victory and records being handed over. The Associated Press detailed his attempts to get information.
Steve Aftergood, director of the Federation of American Scientists Project on Government Secrecy, has represented himself twice in lawsuits related to requests for information related to federal intelligence budgets. Previously, he received professional counsel from Kate Martin of the nonprofit Center for National Security Studies.
When Martin was unavailable to help with his most recent requests, Aftergood decided that representing himself in court would be “an interesting challenge.” He used the previous filings as a template, since there were both content and case law overlap.
“Even so, it was necessary to do a fair amount of new legal research, and to get acquainted with the rules of procedure,” he said. “I spent quite a bit of time at law libraries, copying old cases and studying them. Pro se litigants should understand that, in courts of law, what you need in order to win is a compelling legal argument. Passion or eloquence (or self-righteousness) is no substitute, and may actually work against you. ‘I really want the document, and I think I am entitled to it’ is not a legal argument. You have to do the research, and to make the case. If you can do that, then you have a chance.”
Prospective litigants should also carefully consider the potential downsides of litigation, Aftergood says. “If they lose their case, they may not only lose time and money,” he told me. “They may also generate adverse rulings that will become part of the legal landscape and that will make life more difficult for future litigants. The fact is, litigation is not always the right move.”
For Aftergood, the hard work ultimately paid off. Though he lost one of his two suits, a judge ruled in his favor and against the government in the other. “For me,” he said, “it was a powerful antidote to cynicism about FOIA and about the legal system.”

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