Update: U.S. Supreme Court rules in Indian Island case

  • By Paul Gottlieb, Peninsula Daily News and by The Associated Press
  • Monday, March 7, 2011 3:27pm
  • News

By Paul Gottlieb, Peninsula Daily News and by The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court today rejected the government’s broad use of an exemption in the federal Freedom of Information Act to withhold documents from the public, ruling for a Seattle-area resident who wants Navy maps relating to its main West Coast ammunition station at Indian Island across Port Townsend Bay.

The court, by an 8-1 vote, threw out a Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that backed the Navy’s decision to withhold maps showing the extent of damage expected from an explosion at Indian Island.

Writing for the majority, Justice Elena Kagan rejected the Navy’s use of a Freedom of Information Act exemption that allows information to be withheld if it deals with a federal agency’s “personnel rules and practices.”

But Kagan said the act’s Exemption 7, which protects “information compiled for law enforcement purposes” from disclosure, “remains open for the Ninth Circuit to address on remand.”

Seattle lawyer Dave Mann, who argued the case on behalf of peace activist Glen Milner, 59, of Lake Forest, who filed the FOIA request, said Monday the Supreme Court has 25 days to remand the case to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals.

Justice Stephen Breyer dissented, saying the courts have consistently allowed broad use of the exemption for 30 years.

“I would let sleeping dogs lie,” Breyer said.

The case before the court revolved around competing ideas of public safety. The government said that releasing the maps could allow someone to identify the precise location of the munitions that are stored at its base on Indian Island.

But Glen Milner, a longtime community activist, said that the people who live near the base have valid reasons for wanting to know whether they would be endangered by an explosion. An explosion at the Navy’s Port Chicago, Calif., ammunition depot during World War II killed 320 people.

Milner has raised safety concerns about several area naval facilities. While he could not get the map for the ammunition station, an official at the Bangor submarine base provided Milner a map showing the probable range of damage from an explosion at that facility.

Kagan said the Navy may have legitimate interests in keeping the maps out of public circulation. She said the government could stamp the maps “classified,” which would keep them from being disclosed under FOIA. Or the Navy could perhaps rely on another FOIA provision that protects law enforcement information in some circumstances, she said.

The Associated Press is among 20 news organizations that filed a brief urging the court to limit the government’s invocation of the personnel exemption.

The case is Milner v. Department of the Navy, 09-1163.

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