White House Science Advisor John Holdren sued over emails

CEI Files Lawsuit against Office of Science and Technology Policy

The Competitive Enterprise Institute has sued the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy to produce the work-related emails of its director, John Holdren, that were sent from a private email account and thus hidden from the Freedom of Information Act and archiving laws.

The lawsuit alleges that Holdren used an email account from his former employer Woods Hole Research Center, an environmental advocacy group.

From CEI:

CEI Files Lawsuit against Office of Science and Technology Policy

The Competitive Enterprise Institute sued the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy (OSTP) for flouting the Freedom of Information Act. CEI’s Chris Horner asked OSTP to produce work-related emails that OSTP’s Director, John Holdren, stored in an email account at his former employer, the environmental-pressure group Woods Hole Research Center. OSTP has resisted producing them. (The use of such non-official accounts for agency business frustrates federal open-government laws, and undermines government accountability, since such accounts are generally not searched in response to FOIA or congressional oversight requests seeking work-related communications or agency records. Moreover, the use of email accounts at a former employer that lobbies the federal government gives such pressure groups direct access to and control over public records, including highly sensitive information.)

What is ironic about this is that OSTP’s Director, soon after taking office, lectured OSTP employees about not conducting official business using private email accounts, and about the need to forward all work-related communications to their agency email account in order to comply with federal record-keeping laws. (See May 10, 2010 Memo from OSTP Director John Holdren to all OSTP staff, Subject: Reminder: Compliance with the Federal Records Act and the President’s Ethics Pledge, at 1, available as Exhibit B to the letter at this link.) Apparently, the longer an official is in power, and the less he fears losing power, the less he cares about government transparency and the rule of law.

Meanwhile, OSTP has thumbed its nose at CEI’s request under the Information Quality Act that it correct OSTP Director John Holdren’s notoriously false claim, criticized or disagreed with by climate scientiststhat global warming is leading to more severe cold weather. As of the time this blog post was published, OSTP’s “Information Quality Guidelines” website continued to falsely claim that “OSTP has received no information quality correction requests. Any future requests will be posted on this page.” It so claims even though CEI had submitted its most recent information quality request about a month ago (emailing it on April 13, and faxing it on April 14), and that same week, discussed that request by phone with an OSTP employee, who confirmed receipt of CEI’s request, and stated that it would be posted on OSTP’s web site.

OSTP made this false claim on its web site even though it was blatantly wrong at the time it was made: OSTP has received not one, but two CEI data quality correction requests, including a highly-publicized 2003 request that OSTP was sued over and resulted in a correction of OSTP’s earlier climate change claims. See Chris Mooney, Paralysis by Analysis: Jim Tozzi’s Regulation to End All Regulation, Washington Monthly, May 1, 2004, at 23 (“Last August, the Competitive Enterprise Institute . . . filed suit under the Data Quality Act over a Clinton-era report on global warming, known as the National Assessment of Climate Change. Though the suit was ultimately settled out of court, government lawyers agreed to attach a disclaimer to the report.”).

OSTP’s recent attempt to evade FOIA is equally disturbing. OSTP first claimed that CEI lawyer Chris Horner’s FOIA request was not a FOIA request at all, even though it explicitly cited FOIA and FOIA statutory provisions and regulations. Then it interpreted Chris’s request as covering only certain emails already found in Holdren’s official OSTP email account. The latter contention tortured the English language, while its former contention was legally just wrong: judges have ruled that agencies have to produce records reflecting agency activities, even if they were “neither created by agency employees, nor . . . currently located on agency property.” Burka v. HHS, 87 F.3d 508, 515 (D.C. Cir. 1996). Here, the records were exchanged with an agency employee — indeed, the agency’s director! — and recent rulings affirm that FOIA can be used to request agency records, even when they are in an official’s private email account. (See, e.g., Landmark Legal Foundation v. E.P.A., 2013 WL 4083285, *6 (D.D.C. Aug. 14, 2013) (refusing to dismiss a FOIA lawsuit, because EPA failed to search agency officials’ personal email accounts); CEI v. EPA, No. 12-1617, 2014 WL 308093, at *14 (D.D.C. Jan. 29, 2014) (noting that a requester ”can simply ask for work-related emails and agency records found in the specific employees’ personal accounts; requesters” need not even identify the non-official email addresses at issue, which requesters may not know)).

http://www.openmarket.org/2014/05/05/cei-files-lawsuit-against-office-of-science-and-technology-policy/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+Openmarketorg+%28OpenMarket.org%29

h/t to Dennis Kuzara and Chris Horner

 

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Resourceguy
May 8, 2014 1:51 pm

Transparency and FOIA do not apply to the politically well connected, just ask Hillary.

May 8, 2014 4:04 pm

Federal record-keeping laws?
We don’t need no federal record-keeping laws. We ARE the law!
I’ve been there, done that. Watch out America.

AJ
May 8, 2014 8:32 pm

Eli Rabett says:
May 8, 2014 at 8:49 am
“Woods Hole Research Center is not an environmental advocacy group…”
On their website’s masthead, the byline reads “Science, Education, and Policy for a Healthy Planet”. So it looks like policy advocacy is part of their raison d’être.

old construction worker
May 9, 2014 4:59 am

pottereaton says:
May 8, 2014 at 7:15 am “The idea that once you are a government employee you lose the right to communicate privately about your job or policy is restrictive and destructive of the deliberative processes necessary for the effective governance. In the high councils of government, people need to be able to speak freely without fear of being hounded out of government or even arrested.”
So you believe if someone in a powerful government “conducting” government business shouldn’t be subject to laws. Interesting. I guess “inside trading information” is OK for government employees while the rest of us would be facing jail time.

Jimbo
May 9, 2014 8:15 am

ralfellis says:
May 8, 2014 at 11:31 am

Jimbo says: May 8, 2014 at 2:41 am
Why should I listen to a word that Dr. John Holdren has to say? His record of prediction is terrible. World population was in 1969 was around 3.7 billion. Today it stands at just over 7 billion and rising.
In a 1969 article, Holdren and co-author Paul R. Ehrlich argued
“if the population control measures are not initiated immediately, and effectively, all the technology man can bring to bear will not fend off the misery to come.”
_________________________________

Having just made a tour of Pakistan, India and Philippines, I would say that he was dead right – for there was overcrowding and misery galore.
Not everyone lives in Wyoming, you know….
Ralph.

You need to read a lot slower and don’t miss the critical words. Here they are again.

…..immediately, and effectively,…..

It was not initiated in “Pakistan, India and Philippines” immediately, and effectively. That is my point Ralph.
India produces enough of what it’s people want. Talk to the exporters.

Jan 23, 2014
India Forecast to Remain Top Rice Exporter in 2013-14, Despite Lower Production
http://oryza.com/news/rice-news/india-forecast-remain-top-rice-exporter-2013-14-despite-lower-production

Don’t miss the word “Remain”.
And finally Ralph, “there was overcrowding and misery galore” in UK cities in the early part of the 19th century. In 1975 you could not say the same. The problem was not over population but poverty and a lack of municipal action among other issues.
Ralph, I DO NOT LIVE IN THE USA. I too live in a poor, developing country. I know the low down. Think before you post next time.

mpainter
May 9, 2014 8:27 am

Eli rabbit:
<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Like any such group, they do what they can to advance their point of view.
You say that they do not advocate sound environmental practices, as perceived by them. You need to re-think.

Jimbo
May 9, 2014 8:32 am

ralfellis says:
May 8, 2014 at 11:31 am ……………..
Having just made a tour of Pakistan, India and Philippines, I would say that he was dead right – for there was overcrowding and misery galore.
Not everyone lives in Wyoming, you know….
Ralph.

People are generally better off today than when Holdren made his failed prediction
World agricultural production has trended UP since 1990 and rising.
Global fertility rates since the 1960s has been plunging.
See this example and you might understand why Holdren and co. keep on getting it wrong.
Read about the agricultural revolution since the 1960s. Holdren got it wrong because he and Ehrlich argued

“if the population control measures are not initiated immediately, and effectively, all the technology man can bring to bear will not fend off the misery to come.”

Do you agree that they got it wrong in 1969 given the critical words “immediately, and effectively“? The populations of the 3 countries you quoted went up.

May 9, 2014 12:51 pm

Thanks David Ball. I knew “it” had a name:
warmcold droughtflood
It’s everywhere, happening now, look out your window, it’s worse than we thought.

May 9, 2014 4:06 pm

It seems the government can read private citizens’ emails without a request but emails and business conducted by government and paid for by the citizens is made out of bounds.

May 9, 2014 9:43 pm

There are subjects and government employees in Australia and UK that have to sign the Official secrets act, and public servants can not communicate with the media, or they lose their jobs. I can just imagine how this must be in America. National security must have gone paranoid.

May 9, 2014 9:47 pm

LOL, maybe a certain person might disappear it’s happened before even in UK, we don’t know the dark side of governments. They have a way of covering up a suicide or accident.