100 Million Pennies For Your Thoughts? DEA Hands MuckRock A $1.4 Million Estimate For Responsive Documents
from the one-agency's-pocket-change-is-another-entity's-small-fortune dept
The EFF recently kicked off a contest for the "most outrageous response to a Freedom of Information Act request" and we already have a frontrunner for the first inaugural "Foilie." MuckRock's loose confederation of FOIA rabblerousers has been hit with a $1.4 million price tag for John Dyer's request for documents related to the "localization and capture" of Mexican drug lord "El Chapo." (Or Joaquin Guzman, as he was presumably known to his mom.)
The price tag for the requested documents is almost absurdly high. Almost. There are some mitigating factors that might keep this request from snagging the coveted "Foilie." For one, there's a whole lot of responsive documents.
In fairness, the request is quite broad in scope, and the estimated 13,051 case files would create considerable workload.But on the other hand, the estimate seems to have been pulled out of thin air, rather than based on any actual calculations.
But assuming that $200,000 of that fee came from photocopying (which would put the total number of pages at two million), that would put the time estimate at over 40,000 hours, or 1785 days. That's almost five years of constant work without breaks.And while $1.4 million may be pocket change for an agency with a budget in the low billions, it's a much bigger number than MuckRock's system is built to handle. Attempting to punch this estimated total into the "Cost" field returned a "What is this? A phone number??!?" error.
Naturally, the DEA has denied MuckRock's requested fee waiver, citing a whole page worth of reasons, but really mainly because there's no way it would kick 13,000 documents loose without collecting a substantial amount from the requester. On the other hand, this sky-high fee runs counter to the intended purpose of the Freedom of Information laws: to "free information." That doesn't mean it should necessarily be "free," but it does mean that agencies are supposed to do their best to ensure the public isn't priced out of accessing information.
This request will have to be narrowed considerably if MuckRock hopes to obtain anything on this subject from the DEA. While it does have crowdfunding options, the chances of donors putting together over a million dollars seems unlikely. And the DEA itself could use some guidance on putting together fee estimates, seeing as some simple math exposes how its $1.4 million quote is completely unmoored from reality.
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Filed Under: costs, dea, el chapo, fees, foia, joaquin guzman
Companies: muckrock
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Don't forget that 2 million pages will spend mind boggling amounts of black ink for the redaction. Or maybe they read TD and will duct tape a few redacted pages in a cylinder and fax it to MurckRock to offload ink costs. Who knows?
/derp
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Those people earn only $5 per hour? Sure, it is just copying but still it is work... seems that they don't pay much. No wonder the economy guess to sh**. How can you even afford a decent lunch with $40 a day? That is less than some of my friends pay for an aperitif.
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Wow, where do you live? Where I am, $40 can buy you a whole week of decent lunches. But yes, $5/hr seems unbelievable -- that's not even minimum wage.
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Gold plated paper...
Unless they are training and employing monks to scribe each page individually, complete with fanciful illustrations, there is no possible excuse for a cost that high other than cost padding to try and avoid having to provide the asked for documents.
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Re: Gold plated paper...
If each one worked out to be ~155 pages then you would have 2 million pages. For reference, our scanning bureau would charge approx $10-15 for prepping and scanning each file or around $25-30 for photocopying including labour, but we don't do any redaction.
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At the rates you listed then, that would come out to be approximately $326,275-391,530, including labour, which still leaves a difference of about 1.1 million. If all of that is redaction time, that is still insanely expensive.
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I have some legal documents stored in my office that are well over a thousand pages in length, and that's just related to some software I've worked on.
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Why aren't these files native-digital?
Someone tell these chumps it's not 1975 any more.
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can has USB?
phuck paper!
1.4 million for carpel tunnel from all the reactions might be the cause I guess?
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Contempt of court.
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Of course there is the option of not doing any redaction's at all and just send the entirety of any documents, but that would set a precedent that would undermine the entire secrecy part of government actions, and that would cause a tear in the space/time continuum, or something.
Maybe they could create some pre-redacted pages, then make multiple copies (approximating the number of documents requested) with new page numbering. In that case the underlying 'redaction's' would all be FU, over and over and over again.
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You can both turn of the history recording and delete the existing history in documents, so that's not actually a problem.
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Of course there is the option of not doing any redaction's at all and just send the entirety of any documents, but that would set a precedent that would undermine the entire secrecy part of government actions, and that would cause a tear in the space/time continuum, or something.
Maybe they could create some pre-redacted pages, then make multiple copies (approximating the number of documents requested) with new page numbering. In that case the underlying 'redaction's' would all be FU, over and over and over again.
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Can someone FOIA the estimate?
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Unmoored
I'm not sure how this is news - *EVERYTHING* the DEA does is unmoored from reality, as has been well-known and -documented for decades. If the DEA allowed reality to enter into the mix. . . the DEA would be forced to disband itself, return every stolen penny to the people it rightfully belongs to, and turn every employee over for prosecution under the RICO Act.
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Math
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Firstly in the DEA's response letter there is the fee waiver section. This is not based on the volume of documents requested rather on how 6 different factors are "balanced". The DEA basically said that 5 of 6 factors were in the requester's favor and "Consequently, you request for a waiver of fees is denied." What? The "balancing" determined that even though the request would contribute to "public understanding" (factor 3) it would not do so "significantly" (factor 4) and this one factor outweighed the 5 other factors. This seems rather dubious but lets continue.
How about the time spent "searching" for the documents? The DEA conducted a "preliminary" search which involved entering the drug lord's "name, social security number and/or date of birth" into the "Narcotics and Dangerous Drug Information System (NADDIS)" which found 13,051 files. Ok so it looks like the actual "search" part is already done (even if only in "preliminary" form) so that can't take much time, how about the review for reactions? Well according to the DEA "review costs may be charged to commercial requesters only" and they have already told the requester "there is no indication that you are a commercial requester" (factors 5&6 above).
So this all adds up to mean that the DEA thinks it will take over 5 years of effort to type a few words into a computer system. Even considering that it took almost a whole year to type this in on a "preliminary" basis I can't believe that they were working full time typing those few words nor that it would take 5 times as long to type it "officially". The only other reasonable conclusion is that those are mostly copying fees and there are over a thousand pages in each of those files. Or, you know, the DEA is lying. Take your pick.
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FOIA
The request is not specific. Much time must be spent researching the file as many documents most likely do not relate to the issue being sought. That is very costly. FOIA request responses only release documents specifically related to the request. There may be and probably are many documents in these files which do not.
Each page must be reviewed for sensitive information, ie: law enforcement names. 3rd party ID info., attorney work product, law enforcement sources who could be endangered if ID was released, attorney work product etc. Documents are not just copied and released. Whether documents are paper or digitized, they still must be read and redacted carefully.
Any investigation of a cartel leader undoubtedly took years and involved many sources and sensitive investigations which may still be tied to current law enforcement activities. The Freedom of Information Act provides for approximately a dozen exemptions for non releasable subjects and much danger could be involved if not handled with much caution. Furthermore, the law does provide that an agency may deny a request if it creates a substantial burden upon the agency. Otherwise, a deluge of frivolous requests could drive an agency to a halt which in no way serves the intent of the FOIA.
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And again as I said above, the DEA determined "there is no indication that you are a commercial requester" and so those review costs cannot be charged to him.
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