JUDICIAL WATCH VICTORY: City of Asheville
Agrees to End Discriminatory ‘Black Only’ Scholarships and
Grants
Another victory for Judicial Watch!
The City of Asheville, North Carolina, settled our federal civil rights
lawsuit after
agreeing to remove all racially discriminatory provisions in a
city-funded scholarship program. The city also
agreed to remove racially discriminatory eligibility provisions in a
related program that provides grants to educators. The City Council
approved the settlement on January 11.
In October 2021, we filed the lawsuit
in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina on
behalf of a North Carolina citizens group, WNC Citizens for Equality, Inc.,
whose members include high school students who were ineligible for a
scholarship program only because they are not Black (WNC
Citizens for Equality, Inc., v. City of Asheville et al. (No.
1:21-cv-00310)). (The Legal Insurrection Foundation partnered with us in
the lawsuit.)
Here’s the background. On May 5, 2021, the City of Asheville entered into
an agreement with the Asheville City Schools Foundation to establish and
administer the City of Asheville Scholarship Fund. According to the
agreement, the City of Asheville Scholarship is “awarded in perpetuity to
Black high school students within Asheville City Schools, with special
consideration given for Black students pursuing a career in education.”
(In July 2020, Ashville’s City Council unanimously approved what is
called a “reparations
initiative,” that provided
“funding to programs geared toward increasing homeownership and business
and career opportunities for Black residents.”)
To settle our civil rights lawsuit, on January 11, 2022, Asheville’s City
Council approved a resolution that removes the racial criteria for the
scholarship:
[T]he scholarship will give preference to applicants whose household
members, including parents and/or guardians have a high school education or
less, these applicants representing “first generation” college
students.
The City Council also removed racially discriminatory language for a
scholarship program for educators and staff of Asheville City Schools.
The scholarship agreements were also amended to prohibit discrimination
based on race and other categories.
Our clients, a group of Asheville residents, including high school
students, courageously challenged this blatantly discriminatory and illegal
scholarship program in federal court.
Thankfully, the City of Asheville did the right thing in quickly ending
these indefensible race-based scholarship programs.
This federal lawsuit and the resulting remarkable settlement should serve
as a wake-up call to those activists and allied politicians pushing the
extremist leftist agenda to segregate and discriminate based on race.
Judicial Watch Sues for Info on CIA Targeting President
Trump
For four years the Deep State schemed against President Trump to end his
presidency. Then near the end of his administration, they accused him of
planning a coup, according to reports.
To unveil the details we filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit
against the CIA for records of communications and meetings between then-CIA
Director Gina Haspel and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Mark
Milley (Judicial
Watch, Inc. v. Central Intelligence Agency (No.
1:21-cv-03387)).
We sued in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia on December
31, 2021, after the CIA failed to respond to a September 15, 2021, request
for:
- All records of communication between CIA Director Gina Haspel and Gen.
Mark Milley between November 1, 2020, and January 20, 2021.
- All records regarding all meetings between CIA Director Haspel and
Gen. Milley between November 1, 2020, and January 20, 2021. This includes
all summaries, notes, and transcripts, as well as all records created in
preparation for, during, or pursuant to any such meeting.
Milley and Haspel reportedly
had at least one conversation in which President Trump was attacked as
being part of a “coup.”
This isn’t our first lawsuit involving Milley. On March 5, 2021, we filed
a FOIA lawsuit
against the Pentagon for records about House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s
January 8, 2021, telephone call with Milley. Pelosi acknowledged the call
in a January
8 letter to her colleagues.
It ought to be disturbing to all Americans that the head of the CIA and the
Chairman of the Joint Chiefs were reportedly conspiring against the
president of the United States.
Our new lawsuit will hopefully ferret out the truth about any plots to
undermine President Trump by the military and CIA.
Judicial Watch Sues for Dr. Fauci’s Calendars and Calendar
Entries
Dr. Anthony Fauci wields enormous power, and the American people have a
right to know what he has been up to.
In our pursuit of that information, we filed a Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) lawsuit with OpenTheBooks.com against the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services (HHS) for Fauci’s calendars and calendar entries.
(American
Transparency, d/b/a/ OpenTheBooks.com and Judicial Watch, Inc. v. U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services (No. 1:22-cv-00036)).
He’s the Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases (NIAID.
We sued in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia after the
National Institutes of Health (NIH), which is an agency of HHS, failed to
respond to our November 5, 2021, FOIA request for:
All calendars or calendar entries for Dr. Anthony Fauci, including
calendars maintained on Dr. Fauci’s behalf. For calendars or calendar
entries created electronically, the records should include the names of
invitees, notes, and other attachments for a given entry.
The time frame of the request was identified as “November 1, 2019 to
March 31, 2020.”
“It's an understatement to say that Dr. Fauci’s daily calendar from the
earliest days of the pandemic is in the public interest. By not producing
it, NIH is acting like it has a lot to hide,” said Adam Andrzejewski, CEO
and founder of OpenTheBooks.com.
On October 28, 2021, we filed a FOIA lawsuit
on behalf of OpenTheBooks.com against the HHS for the employment contracts;
financial, conflict of interest, and financial disclosure documents; and
job description of Dr. Fauci, as well as royalties paid to NIH employees by
outside entities (American
Transparency, DBA OpenTheBooks.com v. U.S. Department of Health and Human
Services (No. 1:21-cv-02821)). (This issue made big news this week
after an unhinged Fauci called a United States Senator a “moron” for
simply asking that he disclose all his financial information.)
We have several other FOIA lawsuits concerning Dr. Fauci. One of these
recently uncovered
emails and other records that confirm Fauci agency funding for gain of
function research in Wuhan, China.
Fauci’s agency is playing shell games with records and we will continue
to go to court to stop the illegal secrecy.
Judicial Watch Sues State Department for Biden Afghanistan Coverup
Document
Biden’s Afghanistan surrender was the worst defeat for America since the
War of 1812. In fact, it may be even worse than that. So, one can imagine
the desperate coverup of the truths about this catastrophe by the Biden
administration.
Enter, Judicial Watch.
We filed two Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuits against the
Department of State for records of the censorship of government reports
about U.S. tax dollars spent on military support and equipment for
Afghanistan, as well as records about payments to Afghanistan’s
government and/or any member of the Taliban related to the U.S. departure
from Afghanistan (Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of State (No. 1:21-cv-03391)) (Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of State (No. 1:21-cv-03390)).
We filed the lawsuit about the censorship of government reports about
Afghanistan after the State Department failed to respond to a September 13,
2021, FOIA request for:
All records regarding the editing or removal from any public website of any
report pertaining, in whole or in part, to any military equipment or
training provided to the government of Afghanistan or any component
thereof. This request includes, but is not limited to, any related
directives or requests, as well as any related records of communication
between any official or employee of the Department of State and any
official or employee of any other branch, department, agency, or office of
the Federal government.
We filed the lawsuit concerning payments to the Afghanistan government
and/or Taliban after the State Department failed to respond to a September
8, 2021, FOIA request for:
All records related to any actual or proposed payments to the government of
Afghanistan and/or any member or associate of the Taliban related to the
departure from Afghanistan of any U.S. citizen or other individual
authorized by the U.S. Government to depart. This includes, but is not
limited to, all fees related to the use of any airport for any such
departure.
Even without a lawsuit, we already uncovered smoking gun records showing
Biden’s lawless contempt for the people’s right to know about his
Afghanistan debacle.
Emails
we obtained from the office of the Special Inspector General for
Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR) confirm that the Biden administration
censored hundreds of reports from government websites at the request from
the State Department:
On August 16, 2021, at 3:18 p.m., one day after the Taliban seized control
of Afghanistan’s capital Kabul, Carole Clay, an official at the State
Department’s Bureau of the Comptroller and Global Financial Services, emails
SIGAR official Matt
Dove to inform him of the State Department’s “unprecedented
request” to SIGAR “to suspend large portions of your website and public
access to reports and records:
We request urgent assistance in identifying and temporarily removing (and
potentially redacting on a longer term basis) all potentially sensitive and
identifying information on U.S. government assistance programs/projects in
Afghanistan. A great many of your historical publications contain extensive
details about activities and partners that could put individuals at risk in
the current environment.
We caught the Biden administration red-handed
trying to cover up its Afghanistan disaster. As Americans reportedly remain
stranded there, the Biden administration has yet to come clean about the
tens of billions of military resources potentially lost to the Taliban and
about whether the government paid or considered paying the Taliban during
Biden’s deadly and disastrous surrender.
EXCLUSIVE: Judicial Watch Uncovers Dirty Voter Rolls, Fights for
Election Integrity
The issue is simple: Dirty voting rolls can mean dirty elections. In our
Investigative Bulletin, Micah Morrison, our chief investigative reporter,
lays
out our latest, essential efforts to ensure cleaner election rolls –
and elections:
In a high-impact case of potential voter fraud, you’ll learn about only
from Judicial Watch, a new investigation reveals likely ineligible voter
registrations around the country.
In November, Judicial Watch’s election integrity team sent letters to
officials in five states warning
of apparent serious violations of the National Voter Registration Act.
The NVRA is a critical election integrity measure that directs the states
to make “a reasonable effort” to remove from voting rolls “the names
of ineligible voters” who have been disqualified from voting due to death
or failure to provide notification of change of residence.
The numbers of potentially ineligible
voters identified in the new Judicial Watch probe are staggering. The NVRA
requires states to remove registrations of voters who fail to respond to an
address confirmation request and then fail to vote in two consecutive
elections. States are required by federal law to report to Congress how
many ineligible voters are removed from their rolls for this reason.
Judicial Watch mined the statutory reporting data for some astonishing
revelations: over the most recent four-year reporting period, large
counties in powerful states such as New York and California reported few or
no removals of ineligible voters from voting rolls.
For example, in the heart of New York City,
Manhattan, with 1.2 million registered voters, state authorities removed a
grand total of two ineligible voters from voting rolls for failing to
respond to a notice and vote, according to data New York itself provided to
Congress.
In Brooklyn, with 1.7 million registered
voters, the number removed for this reason: zero. In Queens, with 1.3
million registered voters, the number removed as ineligible: zero. In the
Bronx, with 867,000 voters: one ineligible voter was removed. In Staten
Island, with 344,000 voters: zero.
The story is the same in California. Large
counties show impossibly small number of ineligible voters removed from
voting rolls for failing to respond to a notice and vote. In San Bernardino
County in Greater Los Angeles, with a county population of 1.2 million
registered voters, a total of fourteen ineligible voters were removed from
the voting rolls for the entire four-year reporting period, according to
data the state provided to federal officials. For Sacramento County, with
over one million registered voters: zero removed. In Fresno County, with
more than 500,000 registered voters: two ineligible voters removed.
“About 10% of Americans move every
year,” notes Robert Popper, Judicial Watch’s director of voting
integrity efforts. “Those counties should generate hundreds of thousands
of cancelled registrations. There is simply no way to comply with federal
law while removing so few outdated registrations under its key
provision.”
Judicial Watch sent warning letters to
state election officials in five states—New York, California, Oregon,
Arkansas, and Illinois—noting the impossibly low numbers of statutory
removals. The warning letters give the state 90 days to correct the record.
“If the data are incorrect,” the Judicial Watch letters note, “please
provide what you believe to be the correct numbers.” If the numbers are
not corrected or otherwise resolved within 90 days, “we will commence a
federal lawsuit.” Read the letters here.
Judicial Watch supporters know that this is
not our first rodeo.
In California, we uncovered 1.6 million
inactive voters on electoral rolls in Los Angeles County and sued, forcing
LA to clean
up its act.
We sued Pennsylvania for failing to make
reasonable efforts to remove ineligible voters from their rolls.
Pennsylvania revised its numbers, admitting
it had reported incorrect information to a federal agency on the
removal of ineligible voters. But even the new figures are too low.
Pennsylvania now admits that in eighteen other counties—which together
contain twenty-five percent of the entire state’s registered voters—it
removed a grand total of fifteen inactive, ineligible voters in a two-year
period.
We went to court in Colorado, where studies
have shown that a majority of the state’s counties have registration
rates that exceed 100% of the voting-age population. Our lawsuit
charges “an ongoing, systemic problem with Colorado’s voter list
maintenance obligations.”
We filed a
lawsuit in North Carolina for the same reason—large numbers of
ineligible voters on the state voter rolls.
We’ve successfully taken on Ohio,
Kentucky, and Indiana as well. In Ohio, a Supreme Court decision upheld
a voter-roll cleanup stemming from a Judicial Watch lawsuit. In Kentucky,
we sued for a voter-roll cleanup and won.
Indiana agreed
to clean up its rolls after Judicial Watch launched an
investigation.
The new warning letters put California on
notice (again) and expand Judicial Watch’s electoral integrity work into
New York, Oregon, Arkansas, and Illinois. “Once again, Judicial Watch is
leading the charge for clean voter rolls and election integrity,” says
Judicial Watch President Tom Fitton. “These letters are just the
beginning of another sweep, in federal court if necessary, to clean voter
rolls throughout the country.”
Feds Sit on Records Request for 16 Years, Thank Judicial Watch for
‘Continued Patience’
Our Corruption Chronicles blog has the incredible
tale over the outrageous, and almost comical, stonewalling Judicial
Watch faces day to day from the federal swamp:
In a brazen failure to comply with a public records law enacted to keep
government accountable, a federal agency waited 16 years to respond to a
Judicial Watch request for information related to a controversial
intelligence operation. Back in 2005, Judicial Watch filed a Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) request with the Department of Defense (DOD)
for records related to Able Danger, a secret military unit led by the U.S.
Special Operations Command (USSOCOM) that reportedly identified some of the
9/11 hijackers before the 2001 attacks. The request
also asks for U.S. intelligence, law enforcement and/or counterterrorism
projects utilizing data mining software techniques to search open-source
records in the public domain.
Last week, 16 years and a month later, USSOCOM’s FOIA team contacted
Judicial Watch to say it reviewed its current backlog of cases and
identified the 2005 inquiry as one of USSOCOM’s oldest pending requests.
“Before we continue to process your request, our office would like to
confirm that you are, in fact, still interested in the subject matter of
your request,” the agency writes in an electronic mail to Judicial Watch.
“If so, we will continue to process; if you are no longer interested,
please consider withdrawing your request.” The email ends with regards
and is signed by USSOCOM FOIA Team. Judicial Watch quickly responded that
it is very much interested in the subject matter and asks the SOCOM FOIA
team to keep the case file open and continue to process the government
records that we are owed. “Please provide a projected date of when (after
16+ years) you anticipate accomplishing your mission,” Judicial Watch
writes to the agency. USSOCOM’s replies by thanking Judicial Watch for
its “continued patience” and writes that it anticipates completion of
the request in “approximately 18-24 months,” adding that “it could
more or less.”
After more than a decade and a half, it is inconceivable for the government
to take another two years—possibly more—to provide the information.
Under FOIA, enacted in 1967 to ensure citizens are informed about their
government, all federal agencies are required to respond to records
requests within 20 business days. The information surrounding Able Danger
without question concerns the operations and activities of government
covered under FOIA, namely open-source data mining efforts and the
assertion that 9/11 terrorists had been identified by U.S. intelligence
agencies a year before the 2001 attacks. In 2005 Army intelligence officer
Lieutenant Colonel Anthony Shaffer said his Able Danger unit identified
four of the 9/11 hijackers as Al Qaeda operatives well before the 2001
attacks. Months later, a congressman revealed
the secret military unit singled out 9/11 ringleader Mohamed Atta 13
different times and pinpointed a problem in Yemen two weeks before the 2000
bombing of the Navy destroyer USS Cole in the port of Aden that killed 17
sailors. A 2006 Senate
probe found no evidence to support that Able Danger identified Atta
before 9/11. The USSOCOM records Judicial Watch is working to obtain could
help uncover the truth.
The stonewalling of this vital information by the government is hardly an
isolated case. Judicial Watch regularly must sue the government in federal
court to get public records that should not require litigation to obtain.
The USSOCOM case, however, breaks the previous record for the time a
federal agency has taken to respond to a Judicial Watch FOIA request. In
December 2001 Judicial Watch asked the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA)
for information concerning Osama Bin Laden being expelled from Sudan in May
1996 and relocating to Afghanistan. Fourteen years and six months later the
Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA), a component of the DOD, finally responded
to the FOIA request, writing in a letter
that the records exist but “all substantive portions of the five
documents (36 pages) must be withheld in full from disclosure pursuant to
the FOIA.” Like in the most recent snub involving Able Danger, the
government expresses regret for taking so long—nearly 15 years—and a
declassification officer apologizes for the delay in replying to Judicial
Watch’s request, explaining that to properly respond, it was necessary to
consult with other agencies and offices.
Until next week …
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