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Clinton Library Releases Files On UFOs

By JOSH GERSTEIN, Staff Reporter of the Sun
November 9, 2007

Under fire for its sluggish processing of files from President Clinton's White House, the National Archives released files and photographs yesterday responding to 14 Freedom of Information Act requests from members of the public.

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The records appear unlikely to contain any political bombshells, though there could be fodder for the tabloids. Many of the requests sought information about the Clinton White House's records on unidentified flying objects or UFOs.

The files detail the predilection of one of Mr. Clinton's chiefs of staff, John Podesta, for the extraterrestrial-laden television series, "the X-Files." A listing of the newly-released files is available on the Web at http://www.clintonlibrary.gov/textual-foia.html#0313.

In a recent court filing, the Clinton Library's acting director, Emily Robison, said it had 287 pending requests for information from the Clinton Library's archives. The responsive records could total 10.5 million pages, she said.

So far, the library has released records in response to just 18 Freedom of Information Act requests, according to the library's Web site.
At a debate for Democratic presidential candidates last week, one of the moderators, Timothy Russert of NBC News, questioned Senator Clinton about her husband's decision to ask the library to consider for withholding certain records about Mrs. Clinton, as well as other files.

Mr. Clinton later called the questions "breathtakingly misleading." He noted that the letter he sent the archives dated from 2002, long before Mrs. Clinton's presidential bid. He also said the thrust of the request was to speed up release of some records.

One of the former president's aides, Bruce Lindsey, said in a statement last week that Mr. Clinton had not blocked any record from being released.

The bulk of the delays in responding to the public requests, which often focus on substantive issues like Mrs. Clinton's Health Care Task Force, seems to stem from thin staffing at the library, which is run by the National Archives. Only six staffers conduct the page-by-page review required to weed out classified and private information, as well as information a former president is entitled to withhold for 12 years after leaving office.

Asked by e-mail about the newly disclosed files and any possible impact on Mrs. Clinton's presidential bid, Mr. Podesta repeated an "X-files" catch phrase: "The truth is out there." He declined further comment.

More substantive records about the Clinton White House appear to be on the verge of release.

"We have had a breakthrough," a National Archives spokesperson, Susan Cooper told The New York Sun yesterday. "There should be a significant addition of materials coming up in the next few weeks."


Reader comments on this article

TitleByDate

SO [12 words]

Jeff Kelley 

Nov 11, 2007 20:06

FILES [45 words]

bob 

Nov 11, 2007 13:24

Clinton Library Releases Files On UFOs [104 words]

john 

Nov 11, 2007 02:42

Selective Release [88 words]

Mahone Dunbar 

Nov 10, 2007 09:10

Hillary's white house records [155 words]

carol Vitucci 

Nov 9, 2007 13:50

What about Sandy? [29 words]

Mary Grant 

Nov 9, 2007 11:58

Papers should be released only if they will NOT alert the terrorists [51 words]

tiredofit 

Nov 9, 2007 06:18

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