(SNews) – The U.S. Secret Service has responded to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request by refusing to hand over details of its investigation into the cocaine found in the White House.

The FOIA request, for a list of people possibly involved in the White House cocaine incident, was filed by the Heritage Foundation.

The Secret Service rejected the request by claiming that such records are outside its authority.

The Heritage Foundation filed a FOIA request after the Secret Service found “no suspects” and closed the investigation into the cocaine discovery in mid-July.

The FOIA request seeks the list of hundreds of individuals who may have accessed the area where the substance was found.

In a letter from the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), the agency denied the request.

“As your request seeks records reflecting visitors or related information concerning the Office of the President, please be advised that these records are not Secret Service agency records subject to the FOIA,” the letter reads.

“Rather, these records are governed by the Presidential Records Act … and remain under the exclusive legal custody and control of the White House.”

The DHS’s response to the FOIA request caused The Daily Signal, a news outlet of the Heritage Foundation, to suggest that the Secret Service may have “never created such a list in the first place.”

Steve Bradbury, a distinguished fellow at the think tank, dismissed the DHS arguments for not turning over the visitor list.

Bradbury points to the legal difference between an agency record and a presidential record.

The distinction is usually based on “who generates the record and whose business the record reflects,” he told the outlet.

“If it’s an agency record, it’s subject to FOIA.

“If it’s a White House record, it’s covered by the Presidential Records Act.”

Bradbury said that the key question is whether the Secret Service used the White House logs to create its own new record.

If the Secret Service did use the White House records to create a “new document on its systems, which was its own list of suspects that it generated, that new document should” be available via a FOIA request, he said.

However if the Secret Service did not create a new document, it would suggest that the agency didn’t take the investigation seriously, Bradbury noted.

The Heritage Foundation isn’t dropping the matter, however, and confirmed that it intends to appeal the rejection.

This isn’t the first time that the Secret Service has turned down a FOIA request on the White House cocaine issue.

Jason Leopold, an investigative reporter at Bloomberg, had earlier asked for information such as emails, text messages, suspicious activity reporting, intelligence bulletins, letters, directives, and other such material referencing the cocaine found at the White House.

On July 11, the DHS notified Leopold that his request was denied.

“[There are] no records or documents available to you at this time,” the DHS said.

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