Pubdate: Sat, 31 Jul 2004 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Copyright: 2004 Globe Newspaper Company Contact: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/52 Author: Sean P. Murphy, Globe Staff and Jack Encarnacao, Globe Correspondent Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/Forfeiture ORDER TO DESTROY PAMPHLETS CANCELED US Alters Demand to Its Libraries The Government Printing Office has rescinded a week-old order that libraries nationwide destroy five US Department of Justice pamphlets. The office announced the decision in a letter sent yesterday to about 1,300 libraries across the country. Last week, the printing office invoked its authority to order the removal of the pamphlets, which provide instructions about prosecuting asset forfeiture cases. A Justice Department spokesman said in an interview that the material was meant for internal use and not for public distribution. Judith C. Russell, superintendent of documents at the Government Printing Office, signed last week's and yesterday's letters. Reached at her Washington office late yesterday afternoon, she declined to comment. Veronica Meter, director of public relations for the office, said the office received word late yesterday afternoon from the Justice Department asking that the earlier request be rescinded. Asked whether the Justice Department made a fuller explanation for its earlier request, Meter said she could only quote from yesterday's letter that the Justice Department had made a determination, after review, that the pamphlets were "not sufficiently sensitive to require removal." The pamphlets had been sent to the 1,300 libraries designated by Congress to make available copies of virtually all federal government documents. The pamphlets were written by the Justice Department's Office of Asset Forfeiture and Money Laundering. Casey Stavropoulos, a Justice Department spokeswoman, did not return calls seeking comment. The Justice Department's decision to order the pamphlets destroyed drew criticism from Patrice McDermott, deputy director of governmental affairs for the American Library Association, and Bernard A. Margolis, president of the Boston Public Library, one of the libraries ordered to destroy the pamphlets. "I'm thrilled," he said. "I think our concerns have been heard that when material is placed in the depository system for access by citizens that it should stay there." Last week, the American Library Association wrote to members of the US Senate and US House Judiciary Committees, saying, "We are gratified that [the government] has realized that information that is legally available to the public should remain so." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake