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VIRGINIA
FREEDOM OF INFORMATION
ADVISORY COUNCIL
COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA
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AO-24-03
October
23, 2003
Ms. Rebecca
K. Glenberg, Legal Director
American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia
Richmond, Virginia
The
staff of the Freedom of Information Advisory Council is authorized
to issue advisory opinions. The ensuing staff advisory opinion
is based solely upon the information presented in your correspondence
of September 16, 2003 and October 20, 2003.
Dear
Ms. Glenberg:
You
have asked a question concerning the Virginia Department of
Corrections' (DOC) response to your records request under
the Virginia Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).
You
indicate that on August 19, 2003, you submitted a FOIA request
to DOC for all records relating to "(1) Protocols and
procedures for the execution of prisoners by lethal injection;
(2) Protocols and procedures for the execution of prisoners
by electrocution." On August 26, 2003, DOC responded
in writing, stating that it was withholding the requested
records pursuant to subdivision A 69 of § 2.2-3705 of
the Code of Virginia because they were security procedures,
the release of which would jeopardize the security of the
building or the safety of persons using the building. DOC
provided you with a document titled "History of Executions
in Virginia" and a copy of relevant portions of the Code
of Virginia relating to executions. You indicate that you
sent a second letter to DOC on September 2, 2003. You requested
that DOC provide you with the volume and subject matter of
the withheld records as required by subdivision B 2 of §
2.2-3705, or that DOC redact the requested records and provide
you with non-exempt portions pursuant to subdivision B 3 of
§ 2.2-3705. DOC responded, again asserting the procedures
and protocols were wholly exempt pursuant to subdivision A
69 of § 2.2-3705, and noted that the withheld procedure
is thirty pages long . You ask if the requested records fall
under the exemption at subdivision A 69 of § 2.2-3705,
and whether DOC is required to provide redacted copies of
the requested records instead of withholding them in their
entirety.
Subsection
A of § 2.2-3704 states that [e]xcept as otherwise
specifically provided by law, all public records shall be
open to inspection and copying. Subdivision A 69 of §
2.2-3705 sets forth an exemption that allows the records custodian
to withhold, in his discretion, [e]ngineering and architectural
drawings, operational, procedural, tactical planning or training
manuals, or staff meeting minutes or other records, the disclosure
of which would reveal surveillance techniques, personnel deployments,
alarm or security systems or technologies, or operational
and transportation plans or protocols, to the extent such
disclosure would jeopardize the security of any governmental
facility, building or structure or the safety of persons using
such facility, building or structure.
The
Virginia Freedom of Information Advisory Council has previously
opined that not all procedures and protocols developed by
DOC would automatically fall under the exemption at subdivision
A 69 of § 2.2-3705.1 The exemption at issue
does not exempt all procedural records solely because they
may be related to security issues. Instead, the exemption
applies only to those records where disclosure would jeopardize
the security of the building or the safety of persons using
the building. In this instance, DOC has determined that that
protocols and procedures relating to the execution of prisoners
relate to the safety of both employees as well as other prisoners
at the facility. Therefore, it appears that DOC has properly
exercised its discretion in choosing to exercise this exemption
and withhold the requested records.
You
next ask if DOC is required to provide redacted copies of
the protocols and procedures, instead of withholding the records
in their entirety. Subdivision B 3 of § 2.2-3704 states
that [w]hen a portion of a requested record is withheld,
the public body may delete or excise only that portion of
the record to which an exemption applies and shall release
the remainder of the record. The law contemplates that
it is possible to have exempt and non-exempt information co-mingled
in a single record, in which case the non-exempt portion of
the record must still be provided to the requester. Although
I have not seen the protocols and procedures relating to executions,
it is feasible that all portions of the requested documents
are properly subject to the cited exemption. Therefore, the
issue of redaction is not relevant in the instant case.
Thank
you for contacting this office. I hope that I have been of
assistance.
Sincerely,
Maria
J.K. Everett
Executive Director
1
Virginia
Freedom of Information Advisory Opinion 13 (2002).
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