Documents not available under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) include those that are classified for national security reasons, information related to personal privacy, law enforcement records that could compromise investigations, and certain inter-agency or intra-agency communications that are protected by deliberative process privilege. Additionally, trade secrets or confidential commercial information are also exempt from disclosure. These exemptions are designed to protect sensitive information and maintain national security, privacy, and the integrity of governmental processes.
It depends on which documents. If you are asking about his college records, he is under no obligation to release them-- they are protected, as are mine and yours, by a 1974 federal privacy law called FERPA (Federal Educational Rights and Privacy Act). If you are asking about government records, those that are not considered classified can be released; journalists often file Freedom of Information requests when a government official refuses to make such documents available.
You simply write a letter describing the documents and/or type of information you want released, and mail it to the FOIA office of the FBI. You will probably have to pay per page copying charges, etc.
There are many different places to find information on the 2002 tariffs. It was a big deal in the news so any news website will have information on it. One can also contact the government to get information under the Freedom of Information Act. The government will then send information about the tariff including copies of legal documents that concern the tariffs.
Cites can be found as to the number and kind of PARDONS (472) and COMMUTATIONS OF SENTENCE (100) granted by President Kennedy but no readily available source as to the names and sentences/crimes of the individuals. This information is undoubtedly available SOMEWHERE under the Freedom Of Information Act.
Some entities have forms available that you can use to request FOIA information from them. You'd have to call the entity to find out. If they do not, you simply prepare a letter with the necessary information.
Look under documents in your memory or cloud.
this is covered under the freedom of information act and the drawings can be obtained at your city government office.
Yes. Under the Freedom of Information Act (5.2) you can request a copy of your records.
Send a request plus $1.00 to the Post Office in question and ask for the information under the Freedom of Information Act of 1974.
Employment records are a public domain document. Anybody can access employee information under the Freedom of Information laws, not just the police.
Government documents can be classified under various schemes depending on their sensitivity and the potential impact of their unauthorized disclosure. Classification levels, such as Confidential, Secret, and Top Secret, are used to determine access and handling protocols. These schemes are designed to protect national security and sensitive information. Therefore, not all government documents are classified, but those that contain sensitive information typically fall under these classification schemes.
your documents will go under My Documents then the user name. each user has its own My Documents.