There are those who believe that the Freedom of
Information Act is the gateway to all knowledge about UFOs. If you have a
question, just file a FOIA request and the information will be sent to you.
Anything you wish to know, you can learn, if you can find the right agency,
form your questions intelligently, and if you have a little patience.
And I say crapola…
Here’s why. In the last century, which of course,
means fifteen years ago, I wanted a report that had been issued at the White
Sands Proving Ground. I provided the precise name of the document, the name of
the author and the date it was published. Their response? They I needed more
precise information. I confess I don’t know what more they could have needed
other than where the file cabinet in which it was stored was located and in
what office on the base.
I bring this up now because in the last year my
attempts at FOIA have gone astray. I have, since the report was published in
the mid-1990s, attempted to learn more about how the Air Force Roswell reports
were ordered. I have asked the Secretary of the Air Force’s office, repeatedly,
for all information about this including memos, letters, orders, minutes of
meetings, and all the other nonessential waste of paper that you would expect
from a government bureaucracy. And I
have been given the run around.
First I was sent to the Government Printing Office
and their response was a catalog of documents available. Now I knew that the
GPO would not have anything I wanted, but I sent a FOIA to them so that I could
say that it wasn’t the right place.
Second, I was told that the documents had all been
transferred to the Air Force Archives, but they said they had sent them on to
the National Archives. NARA said, “No,” they didn’t have them. I returned to
the Air Force Archives which gave me the details of the transfer, so it was
back to NARA. They said that they did have the records, but they had not been
reviewed and that would take a while. Get back to them later…
Which I did. But all they had were the records produced
in the investigation including the video tapes made by the Fund for UFO
Research, a court martial record of a doctor from 1957 that had no significance
to the investigation at all, copies of documents that I and other private
researchers had sent them, and nothing that filled my request.
In the last year I have attempted to get these
documents again. I have sent four FOIA requests to the Secretary of the Air
Force FOIA office and have not received a single reply. I would have thought
that at the very least they would have let me know they received the request as
the law requires.
The other day, I sent another FOIA request and
this time I had to pick a category. Was my request commercial, educational/new
or other. I fall into the commercial category, which from the sound of the
emails, means they are going to charge me for the service. It seems to suggest
they have a new way to stop FOIA. Make it clear it will cost money… and yes, I
agreed to pay for the service because it is for a book but the information
isn’t all that spectacular.
The point here is that it doesn’t seem that FOIA
works as well as it used to. It seems that they can ignore repeated requests,
and I really don’t want to pay an attorney two hundred dollars an hour to sue
them for a response, only to learn that the information is considered vital to
national security which would launch another lawsuit. They have the resources
to dance, but we out here do not.
Oh, I get it that lots of people file FOIA over
trivia… but then, if the records weren’t hidden away, there would be no need
for FOIA. And yes, I understand that some things are a matter of national
security, but I’m not sure how that might relate to the Air Force
investigations of Roswell since the Air Force said it was a balloon, or how it
relates to the radar tracks of a commercial airliner more than two decades ago.
FOIA just doesn’t work the way it used to and that
is really all I’m saying.