Tooby's California Post-Conviction Relief for Immigrants



 
 

§ 4.32 A. FOIA Requests

 
Skip to § 4.

For more text, click "Next Page>"

One way to obtain official information about a client’s general immigration status is to submit a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to the DHS on the person’s behalf.  Counsel need not reveal the client’s address, but can request that the information be sent to counsel’s office.

 

            To submit a FOIA request, use Form G‑639 and a Certification of Identity.  To avoid delay, the letter and envelope should be clearly marked “Freedom of Information Act Request,” circled in red.  Provide the client’s name, date of birth and “A number” (eight‑digit number beginning with “A,” found on immigration documents), if the client has one.  If the client does not have an “A number,” it is unwise and unnecessary to identify your client as an alien.  Regulations governing FOIA requests are found at 8 C.F.R. § 103.10.

 

            The DHS can impose a fee for copying if the file is more than several pages long.  Federal law requires the immigration authorities to respond to your request within 10 days. [112]  In the past the DHS would delay response for months or years, but response has quickened considerably.  In 2007, the DHS created a special FOIA processing track for noncitizens in removal proceedings, with the goal of expediting the processing of those FOIA requests.[113]  Properly submitted “Track III” FOIA requests are currently being processed in three to six weeks.

 

            The FOIA request should yield all immigration records, correspondence, applications submitted by the client, decisions on applications, etc.  Sometimes the government will refuse to divulge portions of the file; this refusal can be challenged on appeal if necessary.

 

            A FOIA request can be sent to any district or regional office.  Send the FOIA request to all district offices most likely to have had contact with your client.  Address it to “Freedom of Information Act Request,” followed by the address.


[112] 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(6).  See Mayock v. INS, N.D. Cal., No. C‑85‑5169 (July 6, 1988) (compelling INS to respond to FOIA requests within 10 days); see also O’Rourke v. U.S. Department of Justice, 684 F. Supp. 716 (D.D.C. 1988).

[113] Special FOIA Processing Track for Individuals Appearing Before an Immigration Judge, 72 Fed. Reg. 9017 (Feb. 28, 2007).

 

TRANSLATE