THE
WHITE
HOUSE
WASHINGTON
March
19,
2002
MEMORANDUM
FOR
THE
HEADS
OF
EXECUTIVE
DEPARTMENTS
AND
AGENCIES
FROM:
ANDREW
H.
CARD,
JR.
Assistant
to
the
President
and
Chief
of
Staff
SUBJECT:
Action
to
Safeguard
Information
Regarding
Weapons
of
Mass
Destruction
and
Other
Sensitive
Documents
Related
to
Homeland
Security
As
noted
in
many
discussions
during
the
past
several
months,
you
and
your
department
or
agency
have
an
obligation
to
safeguard
Government
records
regarding
weapons
of
mass
destruction.
Weapons
of
mass
destruction
include
chemical,
biological,
radiological,
and
nuclear
weapons.
Government
information,
regardless
of
its
age,
that
could
reasonably
be
expected
to
assist
in
the
development
or
use
of
weapons
of
mass
destruction,
including
information
about
the
current
locations
of
stockpiles
of
nuclear
materials
that
could
be
exploited
for
use
in
such
weapons,
should
not
be
disclosed
inappropriately.
I
asked
the
Acting
Director
of
the
Information
Security
Oversight
Office
and
the
Co-Directors
of
the
Justice
Department's
Office
of
Information
and
Privacy
to
prepare
guidance
for
reviewing
Government
information
in
your
department
or
agency
regarding
weapons
of
mass
destruction,
as
well
as
other
information
that
could
be
misused
to
harm
the
security
of
our
Nation
and
the
safety
of
our
people.
Their
guidance
is
attached,
and
it
should
be
distributed
to
appropriate
officials
within
your
department
or
agency,
together
with
this
memorandum,
to
assist
in
your
undertaking
an
immediate
reexamination
of
current
measures
for
identifying
and
safeguarding
all
such
information
at
your
department
or
agency.
All
departments
and
agencies
should
review
their
records
management
procedures
and,
where
appropriate,
their
holdings
of
documents
to
ensure
that
they
are
acting
in
accordance
with
the
attached
guidance.
They
should
report
the
completion,
or
status,
of
their
review
to
my
office
through
the
Office
of
Homeland
Security
no
later
than
90
days
from
the
date
of
this
memorandum.
If
agency
officials
need
assistance
in
determining
the
classification
status
of
records
related
to
the
development
or
use
of
weapons
of
mass
destruction,
they
should
contact
the
Information
Security
Oversight
Office,
at
202-219-5250.
For
assistance
in
determining
the
classification
of
nuclear
and
radiological
weapons
classified
under
the
Atomic
Energy
Act,
they
should
contact
the
Department
of
Energy's
Office
of
Security,
at
202-586-3345.
If
they
need
assistance
in
applying
exemptions
of
the
Freedom
of
Information
Act
(FOIA)
to
sensitive
but
unclassified
information,
they
should
contact
the
Justice
Department's
Office
of
Information
and
Privacy
(OIP),
at
202-514-3642,
or
consult
OIP's
FOIA
Web
site
at
www.usdoj.gov/04foia/index/html
[sic].
Information
Security
Oversight
Office
National
Archives
and
Records
Administration
700
Pennsylvania
Avenue,
NW
Washington,
DC
20408
March
19,
2002
MEMORANDUM
FOR
DEPARTMENTS
AND
AGENCIES
FROM:
LAURA
L.S.
KIMBERLY
Acting
Director
Information
Security
Oversight
Office
RICHARD
L.
HUFF
DANIEL
J.
METCALFE
Co-Directors
Office
of
Information
and
Privacy
Department
of
Justice
SUBJECT:
Safeguarding
Information
Regarding
Weapons
of
Mass
Destruction
and
Other
Sensitive
Records
Related
to
Homeland
Security
At
the
request
of
the
Assistant
to
the
President
and
Chief
of
Staff,
we
have
prepared
this
memorandum
to
provide
guidance
for
reviewing
Government
information
regarding
weapons
of
mass
destruction,
as
well
as
other
information
that
could
be
misused
to
harm
the
security
of
our
nation
or
threaten
public
safety.
It
is
appropriate
that
all
federal
departments
and
agencies
consider
the
need
to
safeguard
such
information
on
an
ongoing
basis
and
also
upon
receipt
of
any
request
for
records
containing
such
information
that
is
made
under
the
Freedom
of
Information
Act
(FOIA),
5
U.S.C.
§
552
(2000).
Consistent
with
existing
law
and
policy,
the
appropriate
steps
for
safeguarding
such
information
will
vary
according
to
the
sensitivity
of
the
information
involved
and
whether
the
information
currently
is
classified.
I.
Classified
Information
- If
the
information
currently
is
classified
and
is
equal
to
or
less
than
25
years
old,
it
should
remain
classified
in
accordance
with
Executive
Order
12958,
Sec.
1.5
and
Sec.
1.6.
Although
classified
information
generally
must
be
declassified
within
10
years
of
its
original
classification,
classification
or
reclassification
may
be
extended
for
up
to
25
years
in
the
case
of
information
that
could
reasonably
be
expected
to
"reveal
information
that
would
assist
in
the
development
or
use
of
weapons
of
mass
destruction."
Id.,
Sec.
1.6(d)(2).
- If
the
information
is
more
than
25
years
old
and
is
still
classified,
it
should
remain
classified
in
accordance
with
Executive
Order
12958,
Sec.
3.4(b)(2),
which
authorizes
agency
heads
to
exempt
from
automatic
declassification
any
"specific
information,
the
release
of
which
should
be
expected
to
...
reveal
information
that
would
assist
in
the
development
or
use
of
weapons
of
mass
destruction."
(Agencies
should
note
that
the
automatic
declassification
date
for
any
classified
information
over
25
years
old
that
involves
the
equities
of
more
than
one
agency
was
extended
under
April
2003
by
Executive
Order
13142.
Agencies
have
until
then
to
exempt
such
information
from
automatic
declassification
under
any
one
of
the
pertinent
exemption
categories
in
Executive
Order
12958,
Sec.
3.4(b).)
In
this
regard,
agencies
should
note
that
Department
of
Defense
(DOD)
information
that
involves
the
equities
of
more
than
one
DOD
component
is
considered
to
have
multi-agency
equities.
Information
maintained
by
the
Defense
Technical
Information
Center
(DTIC)
or
the
National
Archives
and
Records
Administration
(NARA)
also
is
deemed
to
have
multi-agency
equities,
i.e.,
those
pertaining
to
DTIC
or
NARA
and
those
pertaining
to
the
component
agency
or
agencies
that
created
the
information.
II.
Previously
Unclassified
or
Declassified
Information
- If
the
information,
regardless
of
age,
never
was
classified
and
never
was
disclosed
to
the
public
under
proper
authority,
but
it
could
reasonably
be
expected
to
assist
in
the
development
or
use
of
weapons
of
mass
destruction,
it
should
be
classified
in
accordance
with
Executive
Order
12958,
Part
1,
subject
to
the
provisions
of
Sec.
1.8
(d)
if
the
information
has
been
the
subject
of
an
access
demand
(or
Sec
6.1(a)
if
the
information
concerns
nuclear
or
radiological
weapons).
- If
such
sensitive
information,
regardless
of
age,
was
classified
and
subsequently
was
declassified,
but
it
never
was
disclosed
to
the
public
under
proper
authority,
it
should
be
reclassified
in
accordance
with
Executive
Order
12958,
Part
1,
subject
to
the
provisions
of
Sec.
1.8(d)
if
the
information
has
been
the
subject
of
an
access
demand
(or
Sec
6.1(a)
if
the
information
concerns
nuclear
or
radiological
weapons).
III.
Sensitive
But
Unclassified
Information
In
addition
to
information
that
could
reasonably
be
expected
to
assist
in
the
development
or
use
of
weapons
of
mass
destruction,
which
should
be
classified
or
reclassified
as
described
in
Parts
I
and
II
above,
departments
and
agencies
maintain
and
control
sensitive
information
related
to
America's
homeland
security
that
might
not
meet
one
or
more
of
the
standards
for
classification
set
forth
in
Part
1
of
Executive
Order
12958.
The
need
to
protect
such
sensitive
information
from
inappropriate
disclosure
should
be
carefully
considered,
on
a
case-by-case
basis,
together
with
the
benefits
that
result
from
the
open
and
efficient
exchange
of
scientific,
technical,
and
like
information.
All
departments
and
agencies
should
ensure
that
in
taking
necessary
and
appropriate
actions
to
safeguard
sensitive
but
unclassified
information
related
to
America's
homeland
security,
they
process
any
Freedom
of
Information
Act
request
for
records
containing
such
information
in
accordance
with
the
Attorney
General's
FOIA
Memorandum
of
October
12,
2001,
by
giving
full
and
careful
consideration
to
all
applicable
FOIA
exemptions.
See
FOIA
Post,
"New
Attorney
General
FOIA
Memorandum
Issued"
(posted
10/15/01)
(found
at
www.usdoj.gov/oip/foiapost/2001foiapost19.htm),
which
discusses
and
provides
electronic
links
to
further
guidance
on
the
authority
available
under
Exemption
2
of
the
FOIA,
5
U.S.C.
§
552
(b)(2),
for
the
protection
of
sensitive
critical
infrastructure
information.
In
the
case
of
information
that
is
voluntarily
submitted
to
the
Government
from
the
private
sector,
such
information
may
readily
fall
within
the
protection
of
Exemption
4
of
the
FOIA,
5
U.S.C.
§
552
(b)(4).
As
the
accompanying
memorandum
from
the
Assistant
to
the
President
and
Chief
of
Staff
indicates,
federal
departments
and
agencies
should
not
hesitate
to
consult
with
the
Office
of
Information
and
Privacy,
either
with
general
anticipatory
questions
or
on
a
case-by-case
basis
as
particular
matters
arise,
regarding
any
FOIA-related
homeland
security
issue.
Likewise,
they
should
consult
with
the
Information
Security
Oversight
Office
on
any
matter
pertaining
to
the
classification,
declassification,
or
reclassification
of
information
regarding
the
development
or
use
of
weapons
of
mass
destruction,
or
with
the
Department
of
Energy's
Office
of
Security
if
the
information
concerns
nuclear
or
radiological
weapons.
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