Difference between revisions of "MuckRock News"

From Wikispooks
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "{{website |wikipedia=https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MuckRock |founders=Michael Morisy, Mitchell Kotler |start=May 2010 |URL=https://www.muckrock.com |logo=muckrock.png |interes...")
 
(Mockingbird)
Line 15: Line 15:
 
Since 1995, the CIA had maintained the CREST database, which contains every “historically valuable” record that had been declassified, at the [[US National Archives]] in College Park, Maryland. However, this was available on only 4 computers, and only during limited office hours, a fact that the CIA admitted on its website that "may be inconvenient and present an obstacle to many researchers."<ref name=vice>http://motherboard.vice.com/read/13-million-pages-of-declassified-cia-documents-crest-archive-were-just-posted-online</ref>
 
Since 1995, the CIA had maintained the CREST database, which contains every “historically valuable” record that had been declassified, at the [[US National Archives]] in College Park, Maryland. However, this was available on only 4 computers, and only during limited office hours, a fact that the CIA admitted on its website that "may be inconvenient and present an obstacle to many researchers."<ref name=vice>http://motherboard.vice.com/read/13-million-pages-of-declassified-cia-documents-crest-archive-were-just-posted-online</ref>
  
In June 2014, MuckRock sued the [[CIA]], arguing that the CREST database was "technically public, but in practice largely inaccessible." The CIA initially claimed that it would take up to 28 years to put the material online. However, it later reduced this estimate, and all 13 million documents were published on the CIA's website on 17 January 2017. This was after MuckRock user [[Michael Best]] announced a kickstarter project to put them online by printing out the records (at the CIA's expense) and then republishing them on WWW.<ref name=vice/>  
+
In June 2014, MuckRock sued the [[CIA]], arguing that the CREST database was "technically public, but in practice largely inaccessible." The CIA initially claimed that it would take up to 28 years to put the material online. However, it later reduced this estimate, and all 13 million documents were published on the CIA's website on 17 January 2017. This was after MuckRock user [[Michael Best]] announced a kickstarter project to put them online by printing out the records (at the CIA's expense) and then republishing them on WWW.<ref name=vice/> Many concern [[Operation Mockingbird]], the CIA's project to control the {{ccm}}.<ref>http://21stcenturywire.com/2017/03/01/mockingbird-mirror-declassified-docs-depict-deeper-link-between-the-cia-and-american-media/</ref>
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
==References==
 
==References==
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}

Revision as of 12:39, 3 March 2017

A site of interesting documents obtained by FOIA requests.

Muckrock.png
Website.png https://www.muckrock.com  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Started: May 2010
Founders: Michael Morisy, Mitchell Kotler


Main focus: Freedom of Information Act

MuckRock News is a group that helps people to file requests under the Freedom of Information Act.

MuckRock has obtained some notable successes, including an admission about Operation 40.

Suit against the CIA

Since 1995, the CIA had maintained the CREST database, which contains every “historically valuable” record that had been declassified, at the US National Archives in College Park, Maryland. However, this was available on only 4 computers, and only during limited office hours, a fact that the CIA admitted on its website that "may be inconvenient and present an obstacle to many researchers."[1]

In June 2014, MuckRock sued the CIA, arguing that the CREST database was "technically public, but in practice largely inaccessible." The CIA initially claimed that it would take up to 28 years to put the material online. However, it later reduced this estimate, and all 13 million documents were published on the CIA's website on 17 January 2017. This was after MuckRock user Michael Best announced a kickstarter project to put them online by printing out the records (at the CIA's expense) and then republishing them on WWW.[1] Many concern Operation Mockingbird, the CIA's project to control the commercially-controlled media.[2]

 

Sponsors

EventDescription
Democracy FundFinances numerous organizations as part of effort to control the narrative. Founded by Pierre Omidyar in 2011.
Google News InitiativeGoogle and the deep state buying domination over corporate media and creating tools to censor independent voices.

 

Documents sourced from MuckRock News

TitleTypeSubject(s)Publication dateAuthor(s)Description
Document:John Young InterviewinterviewCryptome
Surveillance State
FOIA Requests
15 November 2013Michael Morisy
Document:MacGuire Denies Butler ChargesreportThe Business Plot
Gerald MacGuire
Grayson Murphy
Robert Sterling Clark
20 November 1934What was to become the US Deep state promoted official narrative of the Business Plot, that it never happened.
Many thanks to our Patrons who cover ~2/3 of our hosting bill. Please join them if you can.


References