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Corporations Have Personal Privacy |
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Corporations Have Personal Privacy Par Very Very IPLe [2010-05-07] à 19:59:07
Présentation : In AT T Inc. v. FCC USA, No 08-4024, the Third Circuit ruled that corporations have personal privacy. Here are the facts of the case AT T participated in a federal program administered by the FCC, designed to increase schools access to advanced telecommunications technology by providing equipment and services to elementary and secondary schools. AT T billed the Government for the cost. In August 2004, AT T voluntarily reported to the FCC that it might have overcharged the Government for some work done. The FCC conducted an investigation, and ordered AT T to produce some documents, such as invoices, internal e-mails providing pricing and billing information, names of employees In April 2005, CompTel, a trade association representing some of AT T s competitors, submitted a FOIA request for a llpleadings and correspondence contained in the Bureau s AT TE-Rate investigation file. AT T submitted a letter to the Bureau opposing the request, arguing that the FCC collected the documents for law enforcement purposes, and therefore that the FCC regulations implementing FOIA s exemptions prohibited disclosure. Indeed, exemption 7 C of the FOIA shields from mandatory disclosure records or information compiled for law enforcement purposes, but only to the extent that the production of such law enforcement records or information . . . could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy. 5 U.S.C. 552 b 7 C . The FCC rejected AT T s argument, and held that the exemption does not apply to corporations because corporations lack personal privacy within the meaning of Exemption 7 C . According to the FCC, this interpretation accords with the Exemption s purpose to protect key investigation players from the literal embarrassment and danger that an individual might suffer, rather than from the more abstract impact that a corporation might suffer. AT T filed a petition for review of the FCC s order, arguing that the FCC incorrectly interpreted Exemption 7 C . The Third Circuit interpreted Exemption 7 C as defining a person to include a corporation FOIA s exemptions indicate that Congress knew how to refer solely to human beings to the exclusion of corporations and other legal entities when it wanted to. Exemption 7 F , for example, protects information gathered pursuant to a law enforcementinvestigation that, if released, could reasonably be expected toendanger the life or physical safety of any individual. 5 U.S.C. 552 b 7 F emphasis added . Yet, Congress, in Exemption 7 C , did not refer to the privacy of any individual or some variant thereof it used the phrase personal privacy.
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