[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 44, Volume 1]

[Revised as of October 1, 2005]

From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access

[CITE: 44CFR6.87]



[Page 61-64]

 

              TITLE 44--EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AND ASSISTANCE

 

 CHAPTER I--FEDERAL EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT AGENCY, DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND 

                                SECURITY

 

PART 6_IMPLEMENTATION OF THE PRIVACY ACT OF 1974--Table of Contents

 

                   Subpart G_Exempt Systems of Records

 

Sec. 6.87  Specific exemptions.



    (a) Exempt under 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(1). The Director, Federal 

Emergency Management Agency has determined that certain systems of 

records may be exempt from the requirements of (c)(3) and (d) pursuant 

to 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(1) to the extent that the system contains any 

information properly classified under Executive Order 12356 or any 

subsequent Executive order and which are required to be kept secret in 

the interest of national defense or foreign policy. To the extent that 

this occurs, such records in the following systems would be exempt:



Claims (litigation) (FEMA/GC-1)--Limited Access

FEMA Enforcement (Compliance) (FEMA/GC-2)--Limited Access

General Investigative Files (FEMA/IG-1)--Limited Access

Security Management Information System (FEMA/SEC-1)--Limited Access



    (b) Exempt under 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(2) from the requirements of 5 

U.S.C. 552a (c)(3), (d), (e)(1), (e)(4) (G), (H), and (I), and (f). The 

Federal Emergency Management Agency will not deny individuals access to 

information which has been used to deny them a right, privilege, or 

benefit to which they would otherwise be entitled.

    (1) Exempt systems. The following systems of records, which contain 

information of the type described in 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(2), shall be 

exempt from the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(2) listed in paragraph 

(b) of this section.



Claims (litigation) (FEMA/GC-1)--Limited Access

FEMA Enforcement (Compliance) (FEMA/GC-2)--Limited Access

General Investigative Files (FEMA/IG-1)--Limited Access

Equal Employment Opportunity Complaints of Discrimination Files (FEMA/

PER-2)--Limited Access



    (2) Reasons for exemptions. (i) 5 U.S.C. 552a (e)(4)(G) and (f)(1) 

enable individuals to be notified whether a system of records contains 

records pertaining to them. The Federal Emergency Management Agency 

believes that application of these provisions to the above-listed 

systems of records would impair the ability of FEMA to successfully 

complete investigations and inquiries of suspected violators of civil 

and criminal laws and regulations under its jurisdiction. In many cases 

investigations and inquiries into violations of civil and criminal laws 

and regulations involve complex and continuing patterns of behavior. 

Individuals, if informed, that they have been identified as suspected 

violators of civil or criminal laws and regulations, would have an 

opportunity to take measures to prevent detection of illegal action so 

as to avoid prosecution or the imposition of civil sanctions. They would 

also be able to learn the nature and location of



[[Page 62]]



the investigation or inquiry, the type of surveillance being utilized, 

and they would be able to transmit this knowledge to co-conspirators. 

Finally, violators might be given the opportunity to destroy evidence 

needed to prove the violation under investigation or inquiry.

    (ii) 5 U.S.C. 552a (d)(1), (e)(4)(H) and (f)(2), (3) and (5) enable 

individuals to gain access to records pertaining to them. The Federal 

Emergency Management Agency believes that application of these 

provisions to the above-listed systems of records would impair its 

ability to complete or continue civil or criminal investigations and 

inquiries and to detect violators of civil or criminal laws. Permitting 

access to records contained in the above-listed systems of records would 

provide violators with significant information concerning the nature of 

the civil or criminal investigation or inquiry. Knowledge of the facts 

developed during an investigation or inquiry would enable violators of 

criminal and civil laws and regulations to learn the extent to which the 

investigation or inquiry has progressed, and this could provide them 

with an opportunity to destroy evidence that would form the basis for 

prosecution or the imposition of civil sanctions. In addition, knowledge 

gained through access to investigatory material could alert a violator 

to the need to temporarily postpone commission of the violation or to 

change the intended point where the violation is to be committed so as 

to avoid detection or apprehension. Further, access to investigatory 

material would disclose investigative techniques and procedures which, 

if known, could enable violators to structure their future operations in 

such a way as to avoid detection or apprehension, thereby neutralizing 

investigators' established and effective investigative tools and 

procedures. In addition, investigatory material may contain the identity 

of a confidential source of information or other informer who would not 

want his/her identity to be disclosed for reasons of personal privacy or 

for fear of reprisal at the hands of the individual about whom he/she 

supplied information. In some cases mere disclosure of the information 

provided by an informer would reveal the identity of the informer either 

through the process of elimination or by virtue of the nature of the 

information supplied. If informers cannot be assured that their 

identities (as sources for information) will remain confidential, they 

would be very reluctant in the future to provide information pertaining 

to violations of criminal and civil laws and regulations, and this would 

seriously compromise the ability of the Federal Emergency Management 

Agency to carry out its mission. Further, application of 5 U.S.C. 552a 

(d)(1), (e)(4)(H) and (f)(2), (3) and (5) to the above-listed systems of 

records would make available attorney's work product and other documents 

which contain evaluations, recommendations, and discussions of on-going 

civil and criminal legal proceedings; the availability of such documents 

could have a chilling effect on the free flow of information and ideas 

within the Federal Emergency Management Agency which is vital to the 

agency's predecisional deliberative process, could seriously prejudice 

the agency's or the Government's position in a civil or criminal 

litigation, and could result in the disclosure of investigatory material 

which should not be disclosed for the reasons stated above. It is the 

belief of the Federal Emergency Management Agency that, in both civil 

actions and criminal prosecutions, due process will assure that 

individuals have a reasonable opportunity to learn of the existence of, 

and to challenge, investigatory records and related materials which are 

to be used in legal proceedings.

    (iii) 5 U.S.C. 552a (d)(2), (3) and (4), (e)(4)(H) and (f)(4) which 

are dependent upon access having been granted to records pursuant to the 

provisions cited in paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section, enable 

individuals to contest (seek amendment to) the content of records 

contained in a system of rec ords and require an agency to note an 

amended record and to provide a copy of an individual's statement (of 

disagreement with the agency's refusal to amend a record) to persons or 

other agencies to whom the record has been disclosed. The Federal 

Emergency Management Agency believes that the reasons set forth in 

paragraphs (b)(2)(i)



[[Page 63]]



of this section are equally applicable to this paragraph, and, 

accordingly, those reasons are hereby incorporated herein by reference.

    (iv) 5 U.S.C. 552a(c)(3) requires that an agency make accountings of 

disclosures of records available to individuals named in the records at 

their request; such accountings must state the date, nature, and purpose 

of each disclosure of a record and the name and address of the 

recipient. The Federal Emergency Management Agency believes that 

application of this provision to the above-listed systems of rec ords 

would impair the ability of the Federal Emergency Management Agency and 

other law enforcement agencies to conduct investigations and inquiries 

into civil and criminal violations under their respective jurisdictions. 

Making accountings available to violators would alert those individuals 

to the fact that the Federal Emergency Management Agency or another law 

enforcement authority is conducting an investigation or inquiry into 

their activities, and such accountings could reveal the geographic 

location of the investigation or inquiry, the nature and purpose of the 

investigation or inquiry and the nature of the information disclosed, 

and the date on which that investigation or inquiry was active. 

Violators possessing such knowledge would thereby be able to take 

appropriate measures to avoid detection or apprehension by altering 

their operations, transferring their activities to other locations or 

destroying or concealing evidence which would form the basis for 

prosecution or the imposition of civil sanctions.

    (v) 5 U.S.C. 552a(e)(1) requires that an agency maintain in its 

records only such information about an individual as is relevant and 

necessary to accomplish a purpose of the agency required to be 

accomplished by statute or executive order. The term maintain as defined 

in 5 U.S.C. 552a(a)(3) includes ``collect'' and ``disseminate.'' At the 

time that information is collected by the Federal Emergency Management 

Agency there is often insufficient time to determine whether the 

information is relevant and necessary to accomplish a purpose of the 

Federal Emergency Management Agency; in many cases information collected 

may not be immediately susceptible to a determination of whether the 

information is relevant and necessary, particularly in the early stages 

of investigation or inquiry, and in many cases information which 

initially appears to be irrelevant or unnecessary may, upon further 

evaluation or upon continuation of the investigation or inquiry, prove 

to have particular relevance to an enforcement program of the Federal 

Emergency Management Agency. Further, not all violations of law 

uncovered during a Federal Emergency Management Agency inquiry fall 

within the civil or criminal jurisdiction of the Federal Emergency 

Management Agency; in order to promote effective law enforcement, it 

often becomes necessary and desirable to disseminate information 

pertaining to such violations to other law enforcement agencies which 

have jurisdiction over the offense to which the information relates. The 

Federal Emergency Management Agency should not be placed in a position 

of having to ignore information relating to violations of law not within 

its jurisdiction when that information comes to the attention of the 

Federal Emergency Management Agency through the conduct of a lawful 

FEMAs civil or criminal investigation or inquiry. The Federal Emergency 

Management Agency therefore believes that it is appropriate to exempt 

the above-listed systems of records from the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 

552a(e)(1).

    (c) Exempt under 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(5). The Director, Federal 

Emergency Management Agency has determined that certain systems of 

records are exempt from the requirements of (c)(3) and (d) of 5 U.S.C. 

552a.

    (1) Exempt systems. The following systems of records, which contain 

information of the type described in 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(5), shall be 

exempted from the provisions of 5 U.S.C. 552a listed in paragraph (c) of 

this section.



Claims (litigation) (FEMA/GC-1)--Limited Access

FEMA Enforcement (Compliance) (FEMA/GC-2)--Limited Access

General Investigative Files (FEMA/IG-2)--Limited Access

Security Management Information Systems (FEMA/SEC-1)--Limited Access





[[Page 64]]





    (2) Reasons for exemptions. All information about individuals in 

these records that meet the criteria stated in 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(5) is 

exempt from the requirements of 5 U.S.C. 552a (c)(3) and (d). These 

provisions of the Privacy Act relate to making accountings of disclosure 

available to the subject and access to and amendment of records. These 

exemptions are claimed because the system of records entitled, FEMA/SEC-

1, Security Management Information System, contains investigatory 

material compiled solely for the purpose of determining suitability, 

eligibility, or qualifications for access to classified information or 

classified Federal contracts, but only to the extent that the disclosure 

would reveal the identity of a source who furnished information to the 

Government under an express promise or, prior to September 27, 1975, 

under an implied promise that the identity of the source would be held 

in confidence. During the litigation process and investigations, it is 

possible that certain records from the system of records entitled, FEMA/

SEC-1, Security Management System may be necessary and relevant to the 

litigation or investigation and included in these systems of records. To 

the extent that this occurs, the Director, FEMA, has determined that the 

records would also be exempted from subsections (c)(3) and (d) pursuant 

to 5 U.S.C. 552a(k)(5) to protect such records. A determination will be 

made at the time of the request for a record concerning whether specific 

information would reveal the identity of a source. This exemption is 

required in order to protect the confidentiality of the sources of 

information compiled for the purpose of determining access to classified 

information. This confidentiality helps maintain the Government's 

continued access to information from persons who would otherwise refuse 

to give it.



[45 FR 64580, Sept. 30, 1980, as amended at 47 FR 54816, Dec. 6, 1982; 

52 FR 5114, Feb. 19, 1987]