From Dan Froomkin's column this morning...the set of records allegedly destroyed in microfilm form is not the only set being sought by the press:
The microfilm that the Pentagon reported destroyed was housed at the Defense Finance and Accounting Service in Denver and consisted only of a few months of payroll records -- albeit some of them from during the hotly contested third quarter of 1972.
The Associated Press lawsuit that Tomlin filed is for the microfilm of Bush's entire personnel file from the Texas Air National Guard. Those records are in Austin.
The Denver microfilm was the subject of a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request -- and the Austin lawsuit was filed in response to the denial of a FOIA request.
But they were different FOIA requests.
"There have been numerous FOIAs," Tomlin told me yesterday. "The lawsuit in particular is focused on microfilm that we believe to be in the possession of the State of Texas. . . . Not just payroll records, but the entire personnel file."
In fact, Tomlin said, "There could be payroll records in there that might duplicate the lost records. . . . But we're not sure."
More at his White House Briefing page:
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/politics/administration/whbriefing/