For more than six years, a progressive think tank in Washington, D.C., has been pressing the CIA in court for information about the late Colombian drug trafficker Pablo Escobar.
When a judge ruled in part against the agency this summer, telling the CIA to go back and do a more adequate search for documents, the government decided not to appeal the decision. In October, the CIA's lawyers at the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia said it would take five years to complete the search for records under the broad terms of the request.
This is how government lawyers put it in a court filing then: "Based on the wording of plaintiff's Freedom of Information Act request, defendant currently believes that five years will be required to complete the FOIA search."
On Tuesday at a hearing in the case, the presiding judge, Royce Lamberth, assailed the government for seeking more time to complete a public records request that was initially filed with the agency in 2004. "I'll tell you up front that you're not getting five years," Lamberth, the chief federal trial judge in Washington, said. He called the government's proposed schedule "laughable on its face."
The Institute for Policy Studies, which focuses research on social and environmental movements, first submitted the request to the CIA in 2004 asking for all records that mention or relate to Pablo Escobar, the leader of the Medellin cartel who was fatally shot in 1993.
The lawsuit, filed in 2006 in Washington federal district court, said that the Escobar records will allow the public to "effectively analyze and understand the United States government's foreign policy."
An Assistant U.S. Attorney in the District, Fred Haynes, said in court Tuesday that the "big killer" in the case -- the part of the document request that will consume the most time -- is the search and review of records with other agencies. "That's going to be a difficult thing," Haynes told Lamberth.
When Haynes mentioned that the CIA may want to ask the judge to reconsider the scope of his August ruling, Lamberth wasn't amused. "You're talking four months later and you want to play this game?" the judge said. Lamberth on Tuesday called the agency's search for records "slipshod."
Haynes told the judge that not all the potential relevant documents are in an electronic format, and that each piece of paper that merely mentions the name Escobar needs to be closely inspected. Much of the information is likely classified, Haynes said. That classification decision, he said, would have to be reviewed.
"In an effort to try to more narrowly focus the search for documents and thereby dramatically reduce the search time, defendant has repeatedly asked plaintiff's counsel to advise the CIA of the specific information that they are interested in discovering," Haynes said in a court filing in November.
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JOHN R ARENAS
THE SEARCH FOR GOVERNMENT DOCUMENTS WITH THE NAME 'ESCOBAR' HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH FOREIGN POLICY, IN MY OPINION.
FOR WHAT PURPOSE WOULD THE SEARCH PROVIDE?? HE WAS A COKE DEALER IN COLUMBIA, PROBABLY ALLIED WITH THE INTERNATIONAL SICILIAN MAFIA ,ORGANIZED CRIME.
WHAT KIND OF 'FOREIGN POLICY' ARE YOU GOING TO WRITE ABOUT?
ASK THE US A. G., HOLDER ABOUT DOCUMENTS PERTAINING TO THIS SEARCH. YOU WILL NEVER GET THEM FROM THE CIA.
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