FBI’s Internal Magazine – “The Investigator” – April 1967
Scanned directly, at high resolution, from a rare printed copy of the FBI’s long-running internal magazine, The Investigator.
Rogue transparency activism. #FOIA
Scanned directly, at high resolution, from a rare printed copy of the FBI’s long-running internal magazine, The Investigator.
“While this effort did develop a great deal of intelligence and confirmation of the systemic corruption in the Afghan mining industry, it did not produce any actionable information that could be used in a U.S. or Afghan criminal prosecution.”
All of the proposed changes to the Interior Dept’s FOIA regulations clearly presented in context.
Previously unreleased photos of Secretary of Energy Rick Perry at meetings, conferences, and sitting in sweet cars. Cameos by Zinke, Pruitt, Trump, and Bill Gates.
Previously unreported: US Attorneys Office and FBI opened a case regarding Whole Foods co-founder John Mackey’s secret postings to an online stock forum. They closed the case when the SEC declined to pursue charges after its own investigation.
During the summer, the Drug Enforcement Administration pulled down all issues of its newsletter for drug warriors, plus six years of its chemistry journal. They’re reposted here, as convenient collections.
I just posted two huge FOIA releases from EPA regarding the Volkswagen emission-rigging scandal: 194 spreadsheets and 7 big PDFs (530 megs) and 8 years of email between EPA and VW (3.5 gigs). (Original FOIA requests from reporters at Reuters and Bloomberg.)
As part of the standard process of determining when federal agencies can destroy their documents, the Department of the Interior is asking for permission to destroy massive amounts of existing and future records, as well as keeping other records permanently.
{Exclusive} What’s on the FBI’s internal version of Netflix? For the first time, here’s the menu for FBI TV, the streaming video service available as part of the Bureau’s intranet site (BUNET).
Rare videos of interviews about polygraphs, introduced and explained by a groundbreaking researcher.