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The
Jonestown Report, November 2001, Volume 3 |
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FOI Updates
In addition to the government documents which the editors of the jonestown report have obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, we have numerous requests that are still pending. While we will report on those releases in future editions, we also invite readers who are interested in particular requests to contact us directly so we may keep you informed of developments as they occur. Central Intelligence Agency: In the early
1980's, in compliance with a court ruling on a lawsuit filed by the
editors of the jonestown report, the CIA released a small number
of heavily-redacted documents on Jonestown. We have now asked for
reconsideration of the earlier decisions to withhold much of the material.
The new request notes the passage of time since November 1978, the
deaths of numerous U.S. Embassy officials in the intervening years,
and then-President Clinton's 1994 Executive Order pledging greater
openness of government records. Internal Revenue Service: The IRS decision
of February 1978 to investigate the tax-exempt status of Peoples Temple
did more than add fuel to the Jonestown community's belief in a government
conspiracy against it; the decision represented a tangible threat
to its financial stability. Our request seeks all IRS records related
to the initial approval of the tax-exempt status, and the subsequent
investigation reviewing that approval. Department of Justice: In response to public
outrage over the death of Leo Ryan at the Port Kaituma airstrip, the
Justice Department prosecuted and convicted one man of conspiracy
to kill a Congressman. This request seeks all government records related
to the trials of Larry Layton. National Archives: Realizing that many federal
government agencies may have turned over old records to the National
Archives for storage, we recently asked the archives for a copy of
any documents related to Peoples Temple and Peoples Temple which may
be warehoused there. Department of State (1): Because the State
Department issued passports for members of Peoples Temple who emigrated
to Guyana, and because those passport records were instrumental in
the identification of the Jonestown dead, we have asked the agency
for a copy of all passports recovered in Guyana following the deaths
in Jonestown. Department of State (2): While the FBI was
responsible for the removal of most records from Jonestown following
the mass deaths, one published source claims that an unnamed representative
of the U.S. Embassy in Georgetown also removed papers from the encampment
during the evacuation of the bodies. We have filed a request for copies
of those documents.
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