Police Intervention: Your Rights, January 21, 2011
FOIAchat was a weekly conference on Twitter that occurred between 2010 and 2013 from 2 PM to 3 PM EST under the hashtag #foiachat. The discussion invited collaboration between activists, citizens, bloggers, and journalists on public records requests topics. Topics included the Freedom of Information Act and state equivalents, open meetings laws, and related issues.[1]
FOIAchat was discontinued in 2013. Read our legal disclaimer.
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During this FOIAchat, 21 contributors participated. To review this FOIAchat on Twitter, click here.
Links
- Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press - Open Government Guide by state
- Salt Lake Tribune - Police video shows how drug raid turned deadly
- Ann Arbor News - Appealing your denial of police records
- Richmond police reportedly drop case to retrieve FOIA docs. In VA: police released records, changed their mind and sued to get them back.
- Ann Arbor News - Tips to keep FOIA request costs down.
Footnotes
- ↑ This article is one of approximately 120 on Ballotpedia about FOIAchats. These articles are among 37,000 created by the nonprofit Sunshine Review, which Ballotpedia acquired in July 2013.
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