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Date
Wednesday, June 3, 2026
Sources monitored
322
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THE WIRE - FOIA SITREP - Wednesday, 3 June 2026

Today in the wire

The Washington Post reported today that the Trump Presidential Library cannot produce Twitter direct messages sent by the former president, with evidence indicating the first Trump administration made an affirmative decision not to preserve DMs in its archival system - a potential Presidential Records Act violation that NARA must answer for. The DHS Inspector General has opened audits covering every less-than-fully-competitive contract awarded in fiscal year 2025, a portfolio exceeding $9 billion, while holdover officials who helped build that contracting posture remain in place.

WIRE | WED 03 JUN 2026 | 34 ITEMS

THE WIRE - FOIA SITREP

Wednesday, 3 June 2026 - 322 sources monitored - 34 intel items reviewed

HEADLINE INTEL

Trump Library Claims Missing DMs Were Never Preserved

Selective retention pattern signals deliberate PRA evasion.

According to a Washington Post investigation published June 3, 2026, the Trump Presidential Library has told requesters it cannot produce Twitter direct messages sent by the former president, even as evidence of those communications exists. Records reviewed by the Post indicate the first Trump administration made an affirmative decision not to capture and preserve DMs within its archival system. That decision, if confirmed, would represent a potential violation of the Presidential Records Act, which requires preservation of presidential communications regardless of platform. NARA, as the custodian of presidential records, bears institutional responsibility for ensuring compliance and for surfacing gaps of this kind. Requesters seeking these communications face a compounded obstacle: the records may be legally required to exist but are administratively absent from the archive.

Why it matters

A documented decision to exclude platform-specific communications from presidential archives sets a precedent that could shield entire categories of executive-branch messaging from public accountability and FOIA-adjacent access mechanisms.

What changed

The Trump administration's first term reportedly opted not to save Twitter DMs to the presidential library archive, a departure from full-platform preservation that is now surfacing as a records gap.

What requesters do now

File requests with NARA specifically citing the Presidential Records Act and requesting all records related to the administration's social media preservation policy, including any written decisions to exclude direct messages from archival capture.

SOURCES: Washington Post

COURT ACTIVITY

Thorogood v. Navy, No. 26-1219 (Fed. Cir.) -- Nonprecedential opinion issued June 3, 2026, resolving a Merit Systems Protection Board appeal against the Navy. Full opinion text was not available for automated retrieval and requires manual verification for substantive holdings. Operators tracking Navy administrative litigation should retrieve the PDF directly to assess whether the court's analysis of agency record-keeping has bearing on pending FOIA appeals.

David Boland, Inc. v. Secretary of the Army, No. 25-1383 (Fed. Cir.) -- Rule 36 summary affirmance issued June 3, 2026, upholding the Board of Contract Appeals decision without written opinion. The BCA origin confirms this is a contract dispute with limited direct FOIA applicability. No new legal standard is established and no doctrinal leverage is created against Army administrative determinations.

Fox Logistics and Construction Co. v. United States, No. 24-2150 (Fed. Cir.) -- Nonprecedential opinion issued June 3, 2026, arising from the Court of Federal Claims in a government contract dispute. Full opinion text is available only in PDF and the accessible source content does not disclose the court's reasoning or any discussion of agency records or exemptions. Manual verification of the PDF is required before any substantive conclusions can be drawn for FOIA operators.

No FOIA or Privacy Act opinions were identified in today's monitoring window. The three Federal Circuit items above are contract and personnel matters; operators should verify each PDF directly before building any request strategy around them.

SOURCES: Federal Circuit, Federal Circuit, Federal Circuit

Quiet today: agency moves, foia in the wild, tech watch, watch list.

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Date: Wednesday, June 3, 2026
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THE WIRE - FOIA SITREP - Wednesday, 3 June 2026

The Washington Post reported today that the Trump Presidential Library cannot produce Twitter direct messages sent by the former president, with evidence indicating the first Trump administration made an affirmative decision not to preserve DMs in its archival system - a potential Presidential Records Act violation that NARA must answer for. The DHS Inspector General has opened audits covering every less-than-fully-competitive contract awarded in fiscal year 2025, a portfolio exceeding $9 billion, while holdover officials who helped build that contracting posture remain in place.

Date: Tuesday, June 2, 2026
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THE WIRE - FOIA SITREP - Tuesday, 2 June 2026

The D.C. Circuit's divided panel ruling that the Pentagon's transgender service ban is likely unconstitutional keeps DoD personnel policy records under active litigation pressure and accelerates the FOIA clock on implementation directives and OGC communications. OMB is advancing two parallel threats to grant transparency: a political-alignment filter that would route funding decisions through exemption-resistant White House channels, and a second rewrite of 2 CFR 200 that hands direct approval authority to political appointees.

Date: Monday, June 1, 2026
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THE WIRE - FOIA SITREP - Monday, 1 June 2026

The federal legal workforce has shed more than 10,000 attorneys, a structural event that compounds FOIA processing delays across every agency still running lean. At the FBI, former officials have launched an external support network for current agents under strain from Director Kash Patel's leadership changes - a signal that bureau transparency operations face compounding attrition risk.

Date: Sunday, May 31, 2026
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THE WIRE - FOIA SITREP - Sunday, 31 May 2026

322 sources monitored for the 31 May 2026 window. The day's dominant signal is a D.D.C. opinion tightening the expedited-processing standard in ways that will affect every advocacy-driven FOIA campaign. Secondary signals include a $10 billion IRS settlement negotiated outside normal inter-agency channels, a CIA officer arrest with Pentagon equities, a mass federal lawyer exodus degrading agency processing capacity, and a DHS proposal to strip Customs from sanctuary-city airports. Three items car

Date: Saturday, May 30, 2026
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THE WIRE - FOIA SITREP - Saturday, 30 May 2026

High-volume monitoring window. 322 sources processed. Multiple concurrent accountability crises across ICE detention, DOJ fund mechanics, NSC diplomatic records, and federal charging strategy against protest activity. The lead is the DOJ anti-weaponization fund injunction - a judicially frozen executive compensation mechanism with a dateable paper trail and immediate FOIA surface area. Court activity is dense: Kennedy Center renaming voided, IRS lawsuit forced back open, Spokane conspiracy convi

Date: Friday, May 29, 2026
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THE WIRE - FOIA SITREP - Friday, 29 May 2026

Heavy source day. 322 sources monitored. Lead is DOJ's active investigation into litigation funding for a private citizen adverse to the executive, a pattern that implicates prosecutorial independence and will generate aggressive exemption claims. Secondary leads: CFTC voluntarily dismantling its own enforcement win against Gemini; ICE pepper-spraying a sitting U.S. senator at a private detention facility; American Oversight's Federal Records Act warning over DOJ's deletion of January 6 prosecut

Date: Thursday, May 28, 2026
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THE WIRE - FOIA SITREP - Thursday, 28 May 2026

Heavy day. Thirty-plus source items processed across federal litigation, agency procurement, and state-level records terrain. The lead is Biden's active federal lawsuit to block DOJ from releasing his own interview recordings - a former president using litigation as a FOIA shield. The court docket is live with consequential holdings: the Second Circuit handed agencies a mootness playbook in Bal v. OFAC, and the Supreme Court sealed off a personnel-policy accountability path for immigration judge

Date: Wednesday, May 27, 2026
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THE WIRE - FOIA SITREP - Wednesday, 27 May 2026

322 sources monitored. The dominant story today is structural suppression: OPM is advancing a governmentwide NDA that would bind two million federal workers under civil and criminal penalty, and OMB has simultaneously rescinded the Biden-era logging memo in favor of a directive to shrink federal data collection. Both moves narrow the records universe before a single exemption is invoked. On the litigation front, former President Biden filed suit to block a court-ordered DOJ release of Hur invest

Date: Tuesday, May 26, 2026
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THE WIRE - FOIA SITREP - Tuesday, 26 May 2026

Monitoring window: Tuesday, 26 May 2026. 322 sources monitored. Lead development centers on OMB's rescission of federal cyber event logging requirements - a policy move with direct downstream consequences for the completeness of agency records available to FOIA requesters. Secondary pressure points include a pending Guantanamo torture-taint ruling with potential to crack DoD and CIA classified-record shields, DOJ institutional credibility under active judicial scrutiny, and a DOJ Inspector Gener

Date: Monday, May 25, 2026
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THE WIRE - FOIA SITREP - Monday, 25 May 2026

Monitoring window: Monday, 25 May 2026. 322 sources monitored. No actionable public-source items were returned in this cycle. All sections reflect a cold-start state. The Wire publishes the absence of intelligence with the same authority as a full brief. Operators should treat today as a baseline hold, not a clearance.

Date: Sunday, May 24, 2026
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THE WIRE - FOIA SITREP - Sunday, 24 May 2026

Today's monitoring window of 322 sources yields several high-value operational signals. The dominant story is a whistleblower disclosure to Congress alleging that USCIS systematically closed thousands of FOIA requests to manufacture the appearance of court compliance - a documented bad-faith closure pattern at scale. Secondary leads include a news group suing ICE for raid footage, a D.C. district court allowing former President Biden to intervene in a Special Counsel recordings FOIA suit, a cour

Date: Saturday, May 23, 2026
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THE WIRE - FOIA SITREP - Saturday, 23 May 2026

DHS and USCIS shut the mail and email channels on the same day. EFF and Judicial Watch stacked multi-agency litigation on opposite ends of the spectrum. EPA wants to delete the Environmental Justice expedited track while NRC tightened to DOJ model. Still-interested inquiries continue as the agency tool of choice for shaving backlogs without admitting capacity loss. 207 sources monitored, 661 intel items reviewed.