We‘ve become accustomed to the NSA‘s infamous Glomar responses. The agency is fond of telling FOIA requesters that it‘s not saying it has the sought-after documents on hand, but it‘s also not not saying that either. It‘s the public records Schrödinger‘s box, where requested documents lie in a dual state of existence and nonexistence, supposedly because any hint either way would rend the national security fabric in twain.
Brendan O‘Connor of Gizmodo reports that a January 17th response to his FOIA request contains some new additions to the NSA‘s usual Glomar.