16-06-2011, 02:20 AM
Sent by someone in the know, dealing with the military.
Frog
> You can get lists of military investigations pertaining to a particular
> company or contractor or organization. Then once you have the lists, you
> can ask for the investigation reports themselves.
>
> This is a very powerful investigative tool, and the materials you will get
> back can be quite stunning.
>
> Simply write to each of the following agencies, and ask them for a list of
> all investigations pertaining to the particular company, contractor or
> organization. I recommend against combining multiple requests into one
> letter; instead I suggest a separate letter for each company, contractor
or
> organization.
>
> In your letter, ask for a printout/listing of investigations/files at the
> agency identified through a search of the DCII for the company XXXXXXX.
You
> should also mention the Freedom of Information Act and identify if you are
a
> newsmedia requester. You should mention that you want them to retrieve a
> complete list for all years.
>
> Note: the term DCII has been used to stand for different words over the
> years, so to prevent the possibility of a no records response, I suggest
you
> simply use the term DCII rather than spell out the words.
>
> You should send a letter about any particular company to each of the
> following offices to get a thorough reply.
>
>
> DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE OFFICE OF INSPECTOR GENERAL
> DoD IG FOIA Requester Service Center
> Office of Freedom of Information
> 400 Army Navy Drive, Suite 1021
> Arlington, VA 22202-4704
> FAX: 703-602-0294
> OR ELECTRONICALLY AT
> http://www.dodig.mil/fo/foia/NEWREQUEST.cfm
>
>
> AIR FORCE OFFICE OF SPECIAL INVESTIGATIONS
> FOIA Office
> HQ AFOSI/XILI
> P.O. Box 2218
> Waldorf, MD 20604-2218
> FAX: 301-870-1116
> EMAIL: afosi.hq.foia@ogn.af.mil
>
>
> NAVAL CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIVE SERVICES
> Naval Criminal Investigative Service Headquarters (Code 00LJF)
> 716 Sicard Street SE Suite 2000
> Washington Navy Yard DC 20388-5380
> FAX: 202-433-9242
> EMAIL: NCISFOIA@navy.mil
>
>
> ARMY CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION COMMAND
> ARMY CRIME RECORDS DIVISION
> Department of the Army
> U.S. Army Crime Records Center
> 6010 6th Street, ATTN: CICR-FP
> Fort Belvoir, Virginia 22060-5585
> FAX: 703-806-0462
> EMAIL: CRCFOIAPA@conus.army.mil
>
> ===
>
> Once you get your list in the mail, which typically takes only 2-3 weeks,
> you can write back to the agency and get copies of the closing memo and
> final report for any of the investigations listed. You should ask for the
> investigations by case number. Don't worry that this will get voluminous
--
> typically the closing memos and final reports are not more than a couple
of
> dozen pages. To protect yourself against getting a monster report, you
can
> of course limit it to the first 50 pages of each report, or the first 100
> pages of each report, etc. The reports take about 4-6 weeks to get.
>
> ==========
>
>
Frog
> You can get lists of military investigations pertaining to a particular
> company or contractor or organization. Then once you have the lists, you
> can ask for the investigation reports themselves.
>
> This is a very powerful investigative tool, and the materials you will get
> back can be quite stunning.
>
> Simply write to each of the following agencies, and ask them for a list of
> all investigations pertaining to the particular company, contractor or
> organization. I recommend against combining multiple requests into one
> letter; instead I suggest a separate letter for each company, contractor
or
> organization.
>
> In your letter, ask for a printout/listing of investigations/files at the
> agency identified through a search of the DCII for the company XXXXXXX.
You
> should also mention the Freedom of Information Act and identify if you are
a
> newsmedia requester. You should mention that you want them to retrieve a
> complete list for all years.
>
> Note: the term DCII has been used to stand for different words over the
> years, so to prevent the possibility of a no records response, I suggest
you
> simply use the term DCII rather than spell out the words.
>
> You should send a letter about any particular company to each of the
> following offices to get a thorough reply.
>
>
> DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE OFFICE OF INSPECTOR GENERAL
> DoD IG FOIA Requester Service Center
> Office of Freedom of Information
> 400 Army Navy Drive, Suite 1021
> Arlington, VA 22202-4704
> FAX: 703-602-0294
> OR ELECTRONICALLY AT
> http://www.dodig.mil/fo/foia/NEWREQUEST.cfm
>
>
> AIR FORCE OFFICE OF SPECIAL INVESTIGATIONS
> FOIA Office
> HQ AFOSI/XILI
> P.O. Box 2218
> Waldorf, MD 20604-2218
> FAX: 301-870-1116
> EMAIL: afosi.hq.foia@ogn.af.mil
>
>
> NAVAL CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIVE SERVICES
> Naval Criminal Investigative Service Headquarters (Code 00LJF)
> 716 Sicard Street SE Suite 2000
> Washington Navy Yard DC 20388-5380
> FAX: 202-433-9242
> EMAIL: NCISFOIA@navy.mil
>
>
> ARMY CRIMINAL INVESTIGATION COMMAND
> ARMY CRIME RECORDS DIVISION
> Department of the Army
> U.S. Army Crime Records Center
> 6010 6th Street, ATTN: CICR-FP
> Fort Belvoir, Virginia 22060-5585
> FAX: 703-806-0462
> EMAIL: CRCFOIAPA@conus.army.mil
>
> ===
>
> Once you get your list in the mail, which typically takes only 2-3 weeks,
> you can write back to the agency and get copies of the closing memo and
> final report for any of the investigations listed. You should ask for the
> investigations by case number. Don't worry that this will get voluminous
--
> typically the closing memos and final reports are not more than a couple
of
> dozen pages. To protect yourself against getting a monster report, you
can
> of course limit it to the first 50 pages of each report, or the first 100
> pages of each report, etc. The reports take about 4-6 weeks to get.
>
> ==========
>
>