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WILLIAM PICKARD SPEAKS OUT
Today we have a special treat. William Leonard Pickard, the plaintiff in Pickard v. Department of Justice, the Ninth Circuit case allowing criminal defendants to sue the Department of Justice to get documentation about informants after the government admits in court that a certain person is an informant has written specially for takingthefifth-acriminallawblog.com his comments on the Ninth Circuit decision.
INFORMANT RECORDS NOW AVAILABLE THROUGH FOIA
In a significant published decision affecting thousands of cases, the 9th Circuit ruled on July 27, 2011 that defense attorneys and the public may now obtain federal informants’ agency records through FOIA, once the informant is officially confirmed by testimony at trial. In Pickard v. DOJ, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 15397, the 9th Circuit determined that “as a matter of first impression and great importance” (Judge Wallace, concurring), federal informant Gordon Todd Skinner’s DEA files must be provided to Plaintiff William Leonard Pickard.
The decision has broad implications for the defense bar, describing for the first time a FOIA method to obtain informant records after their testimony in any case. The decision in Pickard v. DOJ provides a check on prosecutors’ compliance with their obligations at trial to disclose impeachment evidence on government witnesses.
In interpreting FOIA Sec. 5 USC 552(c)(2) whereby informant records are subject to FOIA if the individual were “officially confirmed” as an informant by a federal agency, the 9th Circuit declined to adopt DOJ’s proposed standard that would require a “press release” by a “head of an agency,” instead concluding that Pickard’s explanation — that agents’ testimony should suffice — “makes more sense” in a FOIA context and in view of the legislative history of 5 USC 552(c)(2).
The 9th Circuit observed that since the 1976 enactment of FOIA, DOJ had never issued any regulation or advisory interpreting “official confirmation” under FOIA, nor had any court ruled on the issue. Observing “the cat is out of the bag” regarding informant Skinner’s records, the 9th Circuit determined that agency records of Skinner must be made public, thus opening the door for similar requests by defendants, attorneys and public interest groups for informant records. Although the 9th Circuit noted the decision “may cause trouble for prosecutors and confidential informants,” the availability of informant records through FOIA will assist prosecutors, defense attorneys and the courts in assessing what records are material to the defense, bypassing prosecutors’ prior unilateral determinations in selecting specific records for release (see http://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-9th-circuit/1575518.html).
William Leonard Pickard
http://www.freeleonardpickard.org
crucible27@gmail.com
Tucson, Arizona




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