[Code of Federal Regulations]

[Title 8, Volume 1]

[Revised as of January 1, 2006]

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

[CITE: 8CFR103.10]



[Page 60-62]

 

                     TITLE 8--ALIENS AND NATIONALITY

 

               CHAPTER I--DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY

 

PART 103_POWERS AND DUTIES; AVAILABILITY OF RECORDS--Table of Contents

 

Sec. 103.10  Requests for records under the Freedom of Information Act.



    (a) Place and manner of requesting records--(1) Place. Records 

should be requested from the office that maintains the records sought, 

if known, or from the Headquarters of the Immigration and Naturalization 

Service, 425 I Street, NW., Washington, DC 20536. Records are maintained 

in the Headquarters, regional offices, service centers, district offices 

and the following suboffices: Agana, Guam; Albany, NY; Charlotte, NC; 

Cincinnati, OH; Hartford, CT; Indianapolis, IN; Las Vegas, NV; 

Louisville, KY; Memphis, TN; Milwaukee, WI; Norfolk, VA; Pittsburgh, PA; 

Providence, RI; Reno, NV; St. Louis, MO; Salt Lake City, UT; Spokane, 

WA; and St. Albans, VT. In certain cases, a district director may 

designate another Service office as a file control office. For locations 

of the Service's regional offices, service centers, district offices, 

and sub-offices see 8 CFR 100.4.

    (2) Manner of requesting records. All Freedom of Information Act 

requests must be in writing. Requests may be submitted in person or by 

mail. If a request is made by mail, both the envelope and its contents 

must be clearly marked: ``FREEDOM OF INFORMATION REQUEST'' or 

``INFORMATION REQUEST.'' Any request for information not marked and 

addressed as specified will be so marked by Service personnel as soon as 

it is properly identified and shall be forwarded immediately to the 

appropriate office designated to control Freedom of Information Act 

requests. A request will not be deemed to have been received for 

purposes of the time period under 5 U.S.C. 552(a)(6) until the request 

has been received by the appropriate office, or would have been received 

with the exercise of due diligence by Service personnel. Service Form G-

639, Freedom of Information/Privacy Act Request, may be used for rapid 

identification as a Freedom of Information matter and to ensure 

expeditous handling; however, a request may be submitted in any written 

form. Each request made under this section pertaining to the 

availability of a record must describe the record with sufficient 

specificity with respect to names, dates, subject matter and location to 

permit it to be identified and located. A request for all records 

falling within a reasonably specific category shall be regarded as 

reasonably described if the description enables the records to be 

identified by any process not unreasonably burdensome. If it is 

determined that the request does not reasonably describe the records 

sought, the response rejecting the request on that ground shall specify 

the reason why the request failed to meet requirements and shall extend 

to the requester an opportunity to confer with Service personnel to 

reformulate



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the request. Individuals seeking access to records about themselves by 

mail shall establish their identity by submitting a notarized signature 

along with their address, date of birth, place of birth, and alien or 

employee identification number if applicable.

    (b) Authority to grant and deny requests--(1) Grant or deny. The 

Associate Commissioner for Information Resources Management, regional 

administrators, district directors, service center directors, and heads 

of suboffices specified in paragraph (a)(1) of this section, or their 

designees, may grant or deny requests under exemptions in 5 U.S.C. 552 

(b) and (c).

    (2) [Reserved]

    (3) Authority to state that a record cannot be located or does not 

exist. The head of any office specified in paragraph (a)(1) of this 

section has authority to notify a requester that a record cannot be 

located from the information supplied, or is known to have been 

destroyed or otherwise disposed of.

    (c) Prompt response--(1) Response within 10 days. Within 10 days 

(excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays) of the receipt of a 

request by the Service (or in the case of an improperly addressed 

request, of its receipt by the appropriate office as specified in 

paragraph (a) of this section), the authorized Service official shall 

either comply with or deny the request unless an extension of time is 

requested as required under 28 CFR 16.1(d). A request improperly 

addressed will not be deemed to have been received for purposes of 5 

U.S.C 552 (a)(6) until it has been or would have been received by the 

appropriate office with the exercise of due diligence by Service 

personnel.

    (2) Treatment of delay as a denial. If no substantive reply is made 

at the end of the 10 working day period, and any properly invoked 

extension period, requesters may deem their request to be denied and 

exercise their right to appeal in accordance with 28 CFR 16.8 and 

paragraph (d)(3) of this section.

    (d) Disposition of requests--(1) Form of grant. When a requested 

record is available, the responsible office shall notify the requester 

when and where the record will be available. The notification shall also 

advise the requester of any applicable fees under 28 CFR 16.10. The 

Service shall have fulfilled its duty to grant access whenever it 

provides a copy of the record, or, at its discretion, makes the original 

record or a copy available for in-person review in response to an 

express request for such review. In-person review is discretionary and 

shall not be granted when doing so would unreasonably disrupt the normal 

operations of a Service office.

    (2) Form of denial. A reply denying a written request for a record 

in whole or in part shall be in writing, signed by one of the officials 

specified in paragraph (b)(1) of this section. The reply shall include a 

reference to the specific exemption under the Freedom of Information Act 

authorizing withholding of the records. The notice of denial shall 

contain a brief explanation of how the exemption applies to the record 

withheld and, if the deciding official considers it appropriate, a 

statement of why the exempt record is being withheld. The notice of 

denial shall include a statement of the right of appeal to the Attorney 

General under 28 CFR 16.8, and that judicial review will thereafter be 

available in the district in which the requester resides or has a 

principle place of business, or the district in which the agency records 

are situated, or the District of Columbia.

    (3) Right of appeal. When a request for records has been denied in 

whole or in part, the requester may, within 30 days of its receipt, 

appeal the denial to the Assistant Attorney General, Office of Legal 

Policy, (Attention: Office of Information and Privacy), Department of 

Justice, Washington, DC 20530. Both the envelope and letter must be 

clearly marked: ``FREEDOM OF INFORMATION APPEAL'' or ``INFORMATION 

APPEAL.''

    (e) Agreement to pay fees. In accordance with 28 CFR 16.3(c) a 

requester automatically agrees to pay fees up to $25.00 by filing a 

Freedom of Information Act request unless a waiver or reduction of fees 

is sought. Accordingly, all letters of acknowledgment must



[[Page 62]]



confirm the requester's obligation to pay.



[40 FR 7237, Feb. 19, 1975, as amended at 41 FR 34938, Aug. 18, 1976; 42 

FR 15408, March 22, 1977; 43 FR 22332, May 25, 1978; 44 FR 23514, Apr. 

20, 1979; 48 FR 49652, Oct. 27, 1983; 48 FR 51430, Nov. 9, 1983; 52 FR 

2942, Jan. 29, 1987; 58 FR 31148, 31149, June 1, 1993]