In the Chamber of Deputies there is always a lot of talk about transparency but they, themselves, are suspected of shady dealings as they refuse time and time again to release their entire payroll to anyone requesting it through the Freedom of Information Law (Law 200-04). According to El Caribe, the Chamber of Deputies says that this is restricted information, but the Senate has published a complete list of its employees and their information and across the street from the Congress, the Supreme Court of Justice publishes updates on all of personnel. Carlos Pimentel, who works on the area of government transparency for civil society group Citizen Participation (PC), says that “different organizations and citizens have on repeated occasions demanded this information and the Chamber insists that this is private information, which is not true. It is false, and contradicts every international standard on transparency.” Pimentel said that they publish the list of positions and the salaries, but not the names, in open defiance of the Law of Free Access. “Without names there can be no attempt at analysis,” said Pimentel.