Resistance Survival Guide #227
Public records are one of the few places where the paper trail still does not care about spin, vibes, or some sweaty spokesperson’s damage-control email. If you want to expose corruption, connect powerful people to public money, or build a cleaner evidence trail for projects like EpsteinWiki, this is where the real work starts. The good news is that you do not need a press badge to begin. Federal agencies accept written Freedom of Information Act requests, many agencies publish records online before you ever have to file, federal court filings can be searched through PACER, campaign money can be tracked through the Federal Election Commission, and nonprofit filings can be checked through the IRS. In other words, the receipts are sitting there. You just need to know how to stop doomscrolling and start hunting. (FOIA.gov)
Skill Level: Intermediate
Why This Matters
A strong public records investigation can do something a thousand hot takes never will: it can prove a pattern. Public records help you move from “this seems shady” to “here is the filing, here is the date, here is the payment, and here is the contradiction.” The federal government’s own FOIA portal says you should first look for records already posted online, then submit a request if the material is not public. The National Archives also points researchers to catalog tools, digitized holdings, and other online databases before they ever set foot in a reading room. That matters because the fastest stories often come from records already sitting in plain sight, waiting for somebody with a grudge against nonsense and a halfway decent search strategy. (FOIA.gov)
Step by Step Guide
Step 1: Start with a question that has a paper trail
Do not begin with a giant, foggy topic like “government corruption” unless you enjoy drowning in PDFs and regretting your life choices. Start with a narrow, testable question that is likely to generate records. Ask who signed the contract, who paid for the trip, who approved the meeting, who donated the money, who owned the company, or who appeared on the court docket first. Good headlines are usually hiding inside very boring administrative facts. A useful beginner move is to write one sentence that names a person, an institution, a date range, and a type of record. That gives you a search target instead of an anxiety spiral. The National Archives’ research guidance follows that same logic by telling users to determine a topic, gather what they already know, and then search for records tied to that topic. (National Archives)
Step 2: Search what is already public before filing anything
Before you draft a FOIA request, go hunting in the places that already publish records. Use the National Archives Catalog, agency reading rooms through FOIA.gov, the federal courts through PACER, campaign money databases at the FEC, nonprofit filings in the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search, and company filings in the SEC’s EDGAR search. PACER says its system provides public access to more than 1 billion federal court documents, while the FEC lets users browse how candidates and committees raise and spend money. The IRS search tool includes Form 990 records and determination letters, and EDGAR lets you search more than 20 years of filings by keyword, company, person, date, and filing type. That is not a side quest. That is often the whole story right there, hiding in a filing cabinet with better branding. (PACER)
Step 3: File a FOIA request like a grown-up with receipts, not like a chaos goblin
When the records are not already online, file a focused request. FOIA.gov says your request must be in writing and should reasonably describe the records you want. That means you should ask for a defined category of records, identify the agency most likely to hold them, and give a date range whenever possible. A stronger request asks for “emails sent by X official between January 1 and March 1, 2026, containing the phrase Y” instead of “everything about this mess.” If you are working state or local angles, use the Reporters Committee’s Open Government Guide to check the law in your state, because state public records rules are not identical to federal FOIA. This is where beginners usually sabotage themselves: they ask for too much, too vaguely, from the wrong office, and then act shocked when the bureaucracy responds with the energy of a dead possum. Be specific. Make their search easier. Your future self will thank you. (FOIA.gov)
Step 4: Organize every record like it might become evidence later
The second you download a file, start a simple system. Save the original document, rename it clearly, log the source, log the access date, and write one sentence about why it matters. If you are building a larger archive, create columns for person, organization, date, document type, location, and key claim. Court records found through PACER, agency releases found through FOIA, and corporate or nonprofit records pulled from EDGAR or the IRS become far more powerful when they can be compared side by side. This is exactly how messy information starts turning into a pattern. One filing is a document. Ten related filings are a timeline. Twenty linked records are a headline with teeth. PACER, EDGAR, FEC, and IRS databases all support this kind of cross-checking because they provide searchable records tied to people, entities, dates, and filings. (PACER)
Step 5: Look for contradictions, not just facts
This is the part where the story wakes up. A headline usually appears when one public record collides with another. Maybe a politician says they had no ties to a group, but the FEC shows donations. Maybe a nonprofit says it serves one mission, but the Form 990 shows unusual payments, insiders, or related entities. Maybe a company claims stability, but SEC filings show legal risk, debt, or executive churn. Maybe a court docket shows motions, settlements, or names that were mysteriously absent from public statements. Your job is not to collect trivia. Your job is to find the gap between what powerful people said and what the records show. That is how a document dump becomes a narrative. And yes, that is exactly the kind of muscle that feeds investigative work, timeline work, and evidence pages in larger research ecosystems. (FEC.gov)
Step 6: Write the headline after you build the timeline
Most people do this backward. They decide on the scandal first and then go shopping for supporting scraps. Do not do that. Build a timeline from the records, identify the strongest fact pattern, and then write the headline around what you can prove. A solid beginner formula is this: who did what, according to which records, and why it matters now. That structure keeps you from wandering into conspiracy mush or unsupported claims. It also makes your writing more readable for search engines and actual humans, which is useful when you are trying to pass Yoast without sounding like a malfunctioning press release. Good public records storytelling is not dramatic because you added adjectives. It is dramatic because the dates, payments, filings, and signatures line up in a way that exposes something real. The records do the yelling for you. (National Archives)
Example
Let’s say you want to investigate whether a public official’s favorite nonprofit is more political than charitable. You could begin by checking the organization in the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search for Form 990 filings, then search the names of executives or board members in the SEC’s EDGAR system if they also run companies, then look up federal campaign activity in the FEC database, and finally search PACER for lawsuits involving the organization or related names. If records are missing, you could file a FOIA request for agency correspondence or grants tied to that group through FOIA.gov. Suddenly you are not just waving your arms and saying “this feels gross.” You are building a sourced timeline with filings, payments, cases, and agency records. That is how actual accountability work gets done. (IRS)
Required Reading
For federal requests, start with FOIA.gov’s request guide and FOIA FAQ. For archived and historical federal material, use the National Archives research tools. For court records, use PACER. For campaign money, search the Federal Election Commission data portal. For nonprofits, use the IRS Tax Exempt Organization Search. For corporate filings, use the SEC EDGAR full-text search. For state public records laws, keep the Reporters Committee’s Open Government Guide in your bookmarks like the little transparency weapon it is. (FOIA.gov)
Conclusion
Public records work is not glamorous. It is patient, repetitive, and occasionally powered by spite. But it is also one of the most effective ways ordinary people can challenge secrecy with something stronger than outrage: proof. You do not need to be a journalist to ask better questions, find better documents, and build sharper stories. You need a narrow question, a clean filing system, and the discipline to follow the paper trail until the pattern becomes obvious. That is the whole game. The headline is not magic. It is what happens when the receipts finally stop whispering and start biting. (FOIA.gov)
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