FOIA Advisor

FOIA Commentary (2024)

FOIA Commentary: "Your Honor, May It Please the Court . . . I'd like to file a FOIA request!"

FOIA Commentary (2024)Ryan MulveyComment

As FOIA Advisor reported yesterday, Adam Schiff, a prominent Democrat in the U.S. House of Representatives, has introduced a bill that would make the judicial branch subject to the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”). That legislation is called the “Judicial FOIA Expansion Act.” A copy of the congressman’s press release is available here. FOIA Advisor’s “legal eagles,” Ryan Mulvey and Allan Blutstein, offer their thoughts on Rep. Schiff’s proposal.

RM: I am not opposed to expanding the FOIA to cover parts of the legislative and judicial branches. In a 2019 article published in The Journal of Civic Information, my co-author and I suggested that Congress should consider making legislative branch agencies subject to the FOIA. (That scholarship was cited in the 2020-2022 FOIA Advisory Committee Final Report to support just such a recommendation.) The same logic cuts in favor of extending the FOIA to judicial support offices and agencies, such as the Administrative Office of the Courts. The Schiff bill, however, goes far beyond any modest attempt to make administrative agencies of the judicial branch subject to the FOIA. It would make the courts themselves, and the judges who fill their benches, “agencies.” I think that reform is ill-considered.

I’ll highlight what I think are the two biggest problems with this legislation.

First, the re-definition of an “agency” is awkwardly accomplished with a series of changes to Section 551. The bill would create a carve-out to the current exclusion of “courts” from the general APA definition of “agency,” as well as add a lengthy definition for “court of the United States.” This latter definition would perplexingly include non-court entities like the Sentencing Commission and Federal defenders. That’s a bizarre approach. The more natural change would be to modify the FOIA’s definition of “agency” at Section 552(f)(1), which is already different than Section 551(1), and then call it a day.

More troublingly, the proposed re-definition of “court of the United States” is extraordinarily expansive. It would include basically the entire federal judiciary, save the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court. It would even include “security or protective service[s]” that contract with the judicial branch, without regard for whether they are non-governmental vendors. On this last point, it may be possible to quibble with what it means to “use[] funds appropriated,” but allowing for such ambiguity is dangerous. It seems unnecessary to make security companies subject to the FOIA tout court, as opposed to ensuring agency control (through a governmental entity) over records concerning the performance of their contracted duties.

Second, the scope of this bill has been perhaps misleadingly described by Rep. Schiff on Twitter/X and in his office’s press release. We’re not just talking about access to “administrative records,” or materials under the control of the “administrative apparatus of the judicial branch.” Plainly read, this bill would make courts themselves (i.e., judges) into “agencies.” To be sure, there would be new, special exemptions, including for “[a]ny matter related to an ongoing case.” But that sort of provision presents its own problems. What happens when a case is no longer “ongoing”? The FOIA’s current exemptions would still be available, but do in-chambers deliberations qualify for withholding under Exemption 5? Under the deliberative-process privilege? Under what one article has called the “obscure doctrine” of judicial privilege? There is a lot of unknown territory here that hasn’t been well thought out. And don’t get me started on the proposed exemption for “[a]ny information not in the possession of the courts.” We’ve long moved past physical possession as determinative for legal control in FOIA jurisprudence. This kind of language has the potential to muck things up.

Let’s be honest. If this bill were ever to pass—and the chances are admittedly quite low—judges would be inundated with requests for their email and text messages. At a purely practical level, and setting other legal objections (even constitutional), if legislators aren’t willing to make themselves, let alone the President, subject to the kind of public scrutiny those comes with the FOIA, why should federal judges be treated differently?

AB: “Ill-considered” is a politer term than I would used to describe the Judicial FOIA Expansion Act, so it is probably for the best that you led off. This bill “cannot be taken seriously”—to borrow a phrase from Justice Scalia—for all of the reasons you mentioned, Ryan, particularly access to judicial communications. And if that possibility wasn’t apparent from the bill’s text or Congressman Schiff’s press release, Newsweek cleared things up with this headline: Supreme Court's Private Emails Could Be Made Public Under New Bill.

Since you mentioned the federal FOIA Advisory Committee, I’ll add that a champion of this bill, Michael Lissner of the Free Law Project, argued for greater judicial transparency in a March 3, 2021 presentation to the Committee (on which I served at the time). To his credit, Lissner recognized that a request model would raise problems, such as requests for voluminous records, establishing a workable appeal process, and the prospect of judges souring on FOIA oversight. Congressman Schiff’s bill does not overcome any of those problems. Notably, Lissner did not in 2021 suggest that communications to and from judicial chambers should be available, and I doubt many Committee members would have been receptive to that idea. Indeed, Lissner’s presentation engendered only one direct reaction, specifically from Villanova University professor Tuan Samahon, who recommended enacting a separate, affirmative disclose statute for certain judicial records instead of FOIA’s request model. Professor Samahon was right.

Commentary: Glomar is alive and well

FOIA Commentary (2024)Allan BlutsteinComment

On June 28, 2024, the U.S. Supreme Court in Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo overturned its 40-year-old Chevron doctrine, which the Court explained “sometimes required courts to defer to ‘permissible’ agency interpretations of the statutes those agencies administer—even when a reviewing court read the statute differently.”

In a hot take, Ryan Milliron, a FOIA blogger and frequent litigator, asserted that the Court’s decision would preclude federal agencies from issuing Glomar responses, that is, refusing to confirm or deny the existence of records sought under FOIA.

Mr. Milliron, a CPA by trade, is mistaken. FOIA Advisor’s Ryan Mulvey, lead counsel for the Cause of Action Institute team in the Loper Bright case, explains:

Chevron deference was never really relevant—with one possible exception, noted below—to judicial review under the FOIA. To start, the FOIA is clear that courts must adopt a de novo standard of review for all matters related to the withholding of an agency record. Such a standard isn’t expressly true, as a textual matter, for Section 706 of the APA, at least insofar as it pertains to questions of law. Second, and more obviously, no one agency is responsible for administering the FOIA, which applies across the federal government. See, e.g., Tax Analysts v. IRS, 117 F.3d 607, 613 (D.C. Cir. 1997). An agency wouldn’t even be able to get past “Step Zero” of the old Chevron regime. That was even the case with specific provisions that direct OMB to devise and publish uniform (i.e., government-wide) fee guidelines, too. OMB’s definitions simply weren’t entitled to any special deference. See Sack v. DOD, 823 F.3d 687, 692 (D.C. Cir. 2016); see generally Cause of Action v. FTC, 799 F.3d 1108 (D.C. Cir. 2015).

That said, things were always a bit tricky with Exemption 3, which cross-references withholding statutes that exist outside Section 552. As it stands, I believe there’s still a technical circuit split about whether or when deference to agency interpretations of the scope of an Exemption 3 statute are warranted. That split should now ostensibly resolve post-Loper in favor of good, ole’ de novo review across the board. Consequently, as with any question of statutory interpretation, a judge would provide his or her independent, best judgment about the scope of the withholding provision. And application of that statute in any particular FOIA case would (as before) be considered de novo.

As an aside, there are other kinds of ‘deference’ that exist in FOIA land, and which many requesters find troubling, especially given the statute’s promise of de novo review. Courts often afford significant deference to factual determinations set out in agency affidavits. Consider, for example, the language of “substantial weight” in Exemption 1 litigation, or the “good faith” and “regularity” presumptions in all cases. There’s also a radical uniqueness to FOIA and FOIA litigation that ends up giving de facto deference to the government. We might look to the the lack of an administrative record, the rarity of discovery, the multiple rounds of summary judgment so that agencies can get another bite at the apple, etc. Finally, the D.C. Circuit has decided to afford deference to an agency’s interpretation of its own regulations that provide for additional grounds for expedited processing beyond those set out in the statute. See, e.g., Al-Fayed v. CIA, 254 F.3d 300, 307 n.7 (D.C. Cir. 2001). (That, of course, implicates Auer deference, which is still good doctrine, albeit limited by Kisor v. Wilkie.) Loper Bright and the broader movement to reform the administrative state haven’t yet touched these kinds of concerns.

But to return to Mr. Milliron’s assertion, an agency that issues a Glomar response has only ever needed to persuade a reviewing court that acknowledging the existence or non-existence of requested information would constitute information that itself falls within a FOIA exemption. See, e.g., Schaerr v. DOJ, No. 21-5165, No. 2023 WL 3909471 (D.C. Cir. 2023). In evaluating such Glomar claims, as opposed to arguments about the scope of the underlying exemptions, courts were never required by Chevron to defer to agency legal interpretations. The matter was always de novo. Moreover, whatever factual deference might have been given to an agency’s affidavits would not have been required by Chevron. The recent abrogation of Chevron has absolutely no impact on Glomar responses, and it certainly doesn’t foreclose their use.

Congratulations to Mr. Mulvey and his colleagues at Cause of Action Institute, including FOIA Advisor’s Kevin Schmidt, on the landmark Loper Bright ruling.

FOIA Commentary: A few more remarks about Dan Metcalfe

FOIA Commentary (2024)Allan BlutsteinComment

FOIA Advisor noted two weeks ago that Dan Metcalfe had died in late January at the age of 72.  Apropos of “Sunshine Week,” below is more extensive tribute—with lots of citations (as Dan liked), to boot.

When I first met Dan in 2003, he asked me a question that quickened my heartbeat: “How many mistakes do you think you made on your resume?” I had prepared a lot for this interview, but not for that question. Was it just a test or did he have me dead to rights? I played it straight. “I had thought none,” I replied, “though now I have more doubt.” That was the right answer. Dan proceeded to point out one or two inconsistencies in my spacing—nothing I had ever noticed. After I got the job, which I wasn’t expecting after leaving his office, Dan surprised me with a phone call to tell me that DOJ would raise my starting salary, which I hadn’t negotiated or even complained about privately. Whether this was Dan’s doing I don’t know, but I appreciated his personal call. This was Dan (to me) in a nutshell: tough and generous.

More about Dan. He began his career as a trial attorney in the Department of Justice’s Civil Division, where he specialized in Freedom of Information Act and Privacy Act litigation.  One case he handled from this period that stands out is Lesar v. DOJ, 455 F. Supp. 921 (1978), aff’d 636 F.2d 472, 486-88 (D.C. Cir. 1980), which upheld the government’s withholding of personal information about Dr. Martin Luther King from records of its assassination investigation out of respect for the privacy interests of his surviving family.  This concept of “survivor privacy” was embraced by the U.S. Supreme Court a quarter century later in the landmark FOIA case, NARA v. Favish, 541 U.S. 157 (2004), which positively cited Lesar v. DOJ.  Dan also was involved in some of the earliest FOIA litigation establishing the government’s appropriate use of a Glomar response,[1].   

What Dan will be most remembered for, of course, is his 25-year run at DOJ’s Office of Information and Privacy, which he co-directed with Richard (Dick) Huff beginning in 1981.[2]  Among his many responsibilities, Dan directly supervised the defense of—by his count—more than 500 FOIA and Privacy Act litigation cases.[3] He also co-authored the DOJ’s Guide to the Freedom of Information Act, a legal treatise analyzing key judicial decisions that was relied on by both government and private practitioners.  His speaking appearances with Mr. Huff at training sessions and other events were audience favorites and became popularly known as the “Dick and Dan show.”

Dan was only 55 years old when he retired from DOJ in 2007 after 30 years of service.[4]  Wasting little time, he joined American University’s Washington College of Law later that year as both an adjunct professor and the founding director of the Collaboration on Government Secrecy, the first educational center of its kind.  In addition to his academic endeavors, which included hosting Sunshine Week events and other conferences, Dan found time to flex his litigation skills when he represented law school graduates in a protracted and ultimately successful Privacy Act lawsuit against DOJ.[5]  Dan closed CGS in 2014 to care for his ailing father, but he continued to teach law for several more years.

I cannot do justice to Dan’s innumerable professional accomplishments, but Dan will not be shortchanged.  Several months before his death, Dan published a memoir (with no shortage of endnotes) that chronicled his career and discussed notable transparency issues. [6]  Given the meticulous written work for which Dan was known, as well as his near-photographic memory, the last sentence of the book’s Preface rings loud and true:  “any factual error . . . is . . . entirely mine, only mine and actually doubly mine—but I warn anyone who thinks I made one that, by definition, ‘I was there,’ and that I kept darn good notes, of course.”[7]

————————————————————————————————————————————————————-
[1] See, e.g., Gardels v. CIA, 689 F.2d 1100 (D.C. Cir. 1982) (approving "Glomarization" that acknowledged overt contacts with educational institution but refused to confirm or deny covert contacts).

[2] See, e.g., DOJ, FOIA Update, “New FOIA Office Established,” Vol. III, No. 2 (1982), https://bit.ly/49Sns9O.  The name of the office was changed to the Office of Information Policy in March 2009, see DOJ, FOIA Post, “Annual FOIA Report Q&As,” (2009), https://bit.ly/3Tks2XV, in large part because OIP’s Privacy Act responsibilities had been transferred to DOJ’s Office of Privacy and Civil Liberties in March 2006.      

[3] I can claim credit for working on a few of those cases for Dan, whose edits in purple magic marker brightened many pages. A streak of two or three purple-free pages was an accomplishment for a rookie OIP litigator.

[4] DOJ, FOIA Post, “OIP Holds Silver Anniversary Celebration,” (2006), https://bit.ly/3wCI4ol.  Dan was appointed to Senior Executive Service at age 32, which may have made him the youngest SES appointee then and since.  

[5] Class of Attorneys Sues DOJ Over Job Denials Based on Ideology, Courthouse News Serv., July 1, 2008, https://www.courthousenews.com/class-of-attorneys-sues-dojover-job-denials-based-on-ideology/.  Following a six-year odyssey to the D.C. Circuit, the lawsuit was settled in 2014 for $572,000.  See Ben James, DOJ Settles Political-Bias Claims Over Honors Program, Law360, Mar. 17, 2014, https://www.law360.com/employment-authority/articles/519041/doj-settles-political-bias-claims-over-honors-program.    

[6] Daniel J. Metcalfe, Inside Justice: Secrecy at Work (2023).

[7] Id. at 3. 

Commentary: Notable court decisions of 2023

FOIA Commentary (2024)Allan BlutsteinComment

Federal courts issue hundreds of decisions in FOIA cases every year. Most do not break new legal ground or attract media attention. Before 2024 gets too far away, the legal eagles of FOIA Advisor -- Allan Blutstein (AB) and Ryan Mulvey (RM) -- look back at 2023 and discuss the decisions that stood out to them (in no particular order).

(1) Am. Civil Liberties Union Immigrants’ Rights Project v. ICE (2nd Cir. Jan. 26. 2023) — reversing and remanding district court’s decision that agency was not required to create and substitute unique identifying numbers for FOIA-exempt alien identification numbers. The panel rationalized that alien IDs were merely digital placeholders allowing agency officials to trace immigrants, the value of which outweighed the burden of substituting functionally equivalent, non-exempt placeholders.

AB: Requiring an agency to create identifiers that did not previously exist strikes me as the creation of a “new” record, which is precisely what the estimable Judge Nichols held in Institute for Justice v. IRS (D.D.C. 2021). That simple and logical proposition was too much for this panel to bear, however, because of the societal “value” it perceived in the information at stake (i.e., tracing immigrants). The result: a 40-page remand and a dubious precedent. I’ll save some space for rebuttal.

RM: You may not need the to provide a rebuttal! I appreciate the Circuit’s point that electronic records and, specifically, database-stored records give rise to unique problems. The breaking point here was ensuring the public has the same “person-centric access” that the agency enjoys with use of the A-Numbers. In other words, the Circuit believed the FOIA should require disclosure of records in a way that preserves their functional utility, even if that entails modifying an existing record in some way to protect exempt information. Is the substitution of the A-Number, in light of that principle, an impermissible “creation” of a record? It’s a close call. There should be a limit to the force of any functional-utility principle, but the Circuit acknowledged as much and ICE conceded it wouldn’t be burdensome to swap out the A-Numbers with unique identifiers. The Fifth Circuit addressed a different kind of record-creation question in Rutila v. Dep’t of Transportation, which we also plan to discuss, and there it distinguished ACLU as only involving the “alternation” of a record, rather than “creation” of a new one. It’s a sensible distinction in my opinion, given the facts.

(2) Citizens for Responsibility & Ethics in Wash. v. U.S. Dep’t of the Army (D.D.C. June 14, 2023) — ruling that communications between South Dakota state officials and the National Guard (a hybrid state-federal entity) did not fall within Exemption 5’s consultant corollary exception because they were not made for purpose of aiding the National Guard’s deliberations; noting that its ruling “produced an odd outcome considering that these discussions would be protected either under Exemption 5 (if wholly federal) and under South Dakota law (if wholly state) . . . and yet the very structure of the National Guard necessitates crossing federal-state lines.”

RM: There has been a lot of discussion about the consultant corollary over the past few years, ever since the Ninth Circuit considered Rojas v. FAA and the Fifth Circuit decided Jobe v. NTSB. This case struck me as factually interesting because the agency—the South Dakota National Guard—has “dual federal-state status.” Notably, the Court rejected the Army’s “joint venture” line of argumentation, which has been accepted by some courts in the DDC, and which depends, in my view, on a misreading and misapplication of the principles in Dep’t of the Interior v. Klamath Water Users Prot. Ass’n. That’s had more of an impact on records reflecting back-and-forth between agencies and Congress, but I’m still glad to see it rejected here.

AB: This result is unfortunate because State governors should be able to receive confidential advice from the armed forces under their command, as the court acknowledged. But the decision was compelled by longstanding precedent. The government’s “joint-venture” argument was denied because of lack of evidence, not on principle, so your good feelings about that aspect of the case might be misplaced.

(3) Citizens for Responsibility & Ethics in Wash. v. DOJ (D.C. Cir. Jan. 31. 2023) — reversing and remanding district court’s decision and concluding, in relevant part, that the agency failed to establish that the names of companies that supply the government with a drug used for lethal injections qualify as “commercial” information under Exemption 4; and Ctr. for Investigative Reporting v. DOL (N.D. Cal. Dec. 22, 2023) — concluding, in relevant part, that DOL improperly withheld EEO-1 reports pursuant to Exemption 4 after deciding—over the objections of six representative federal contractors—that the workforce demographic data contained within those reports did not qualify as “commercial.”

AB: In his last term before retirement, Judge Sentelle showed that he still had the right stuff with his concurring opinion in CREW. Given the circumstances presented, the names of the business contractors seem well within reach of the “commercial” threshold of Exemption 4—which I hope will be borne out on remand. As for the EEO-1 reports in CIR, I was surprised that the court did not alternatively rule on the confidentiality prong and foreseeable harm. I doubt the government would meet the latter test; I am less confident that the reports are non-commercial in nature. Because confidentiality is easier to establish under Exemption 4 after Food Marketing Institute, I suspect we’ll continue to see more of these commercial threshold challenges from plaintiffs .

RM: I agree with your last point, and since you raise the new test for confidentiality, permit me a brief digression. While I could guess why CREW conceded the pentobarbital contractors’ identities were “confidential,” at a more abstract level I’m suspicious that company names should ever qualify as “confidential,” regardless of whether they are “commercial.” To the extent the new “actually and customarily kept private” test leads to a different conclusion . . . well, that just illustrates why it is too malleable and prone to subjective application. As for the “commercial” question, I think this, too, ought to be an objective inquiry. “Commercial information” means “commercial information,” and it can’t simply mean any information held by or concerning a commercial enterprise. I find little persuasive force in Judge Sentelle’s concurrence, and I don’t think his rephrasing of the “relevant question” changes anything. I would wager the agency struggled to defend in its position in the first place precisely because company names are inherently “identifying” and not intrinsically “commercial.” I understand this time around the government is arguing the names are “commercial” because they “uniquely identify” “proprietary” “corporate identities.” We’ll see how things turn out, but color me skeptical the Circuit would think that a winning argument if it came up on appeal again. Turning to CIR, I agree it would have been difficult, on the record, for the agency to prevail on the alternative grounds, or at least on foreseeable harm. The case otherwise strikes me as a commonsense application of the logic of CREW v. DOJ.

AB: And—to steal your line—I agree with your last point. As for CREW, I am sympathetic with the view that the identities of government contractors should generally be known to the public. Not in this case, however. And surely the name of a company itself can have commercial value; it’s called goodwill. I will concede this much, however: just as Congress expressly protected the identities of unsuccessful contract bidders via legislation, it should do so here, too, in order to settle the matter definitively.

(4) Cause of Action Inst. v. Nat’l Oceanic & Atmospheric Admin. (D.D.C. May 24, 2023) — granting requester’s cross-motion for summary judgment; holding that the agency’s search was inadequate because it too narrowly defined what constituted “agency records” of a regional Fishery Management Councils because it only searched for correspondences “submitted to the chair” or “specifically discussed or disseminated at a Council meeting”; noting that guidance purporting to define an “agency record” improperly relied on the Federal Records Act; ordering agency to conduct a search of non-federal employee council members’ and staff’s personal email accounts and devices.

RM: In the interests of full disclosure, this is my case. Quite apart from the FOIA, I think the decision is notable because it deals with regional fishery management councils. Those councils have been in the news a lot with the Supreme Court considering Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo (another case I’m working on) and with the Fifth Circuit likely to hear an Appointments Clause challenge to the whole council system in Arnesen v. Raimondo. But the decision is also an important clarification of two FOIA principles. First, the Federal Records Act (“FRA”) and records-management laws don’t govern disclosure and cannot displace the FOIA. Here, the agency had tried to limit the scope of its “control” over records based on dubious guidance that relied on the FRA’s definition of a “record,” which is narrower than the FOIA’s definition. Second, “control” can extend to records of non-federal employees who are conducting business for the federal government, and an agency can’t end run around the FOIA by denying such non-employees agency-controlled e-mail accounts.

AB: I would tell you to “go fish” if I disagreed about anything, but I do not. Related, and since you co-authored an amicus brief that surveyed state open records laws, you might recall that a number of state legislatures also rely on a narrow definition of public records in considering what legislative records are subject to disclosure. In New Mexico, for example, communications held by individual legislators are not considered public records unless they are used or received by the Senate or House or a committee thereof, because—the argument goes—only those bodies exercise legislative authority, not individual legislators. In sum, good catch here, counselor.

(5) Buzzfeed, Inc. v. DOJ (2nd Cir. June 29, 2023) (summary order) — affirming district court’s decision that DOJ’s Inspector General properly relied on Exemption 7(C) to withhold the identity of a former senior employee from a report concerning that employee’s misconduct; noting that the employee’s rank, seriousness of wrongdoing, and absence of alternative access to the information favored disclosure, but agreeing with district court that disclosure would “do little to advance the public interest identified by [plaintiff]” and that disclosure would impact the privacy of victims, witnesses, and other third parties.

AB: The underlying case was discussed at some length during the American Society of Access Professional’s “Sunshine Week” presentation last year. My feeling then was that it was a close decision, that the district court made no obvious errors, and that—like many NFL replay reviews—the original call (either way) would not be overturned. Interestingly, the Second Circuit took into account that disclosure would create a risk of identifying victims and witnesses, an argument that the requester did not dispute but which the district court had found “speculative.”

RM: Yes, I recall that presentation. And there were similar discussions about the district court’s application of the Perlman factors at the other training events throughout the year. I agree that the balancing was close. Seeing as the Circuit didn’t find the risk to third parties to be “speculative,” it would have been useful to see a bit more explanation for how releasing the name of the retired official could have been used to actually identify victims and witnesses, whose names were otherwise redacted (without objection or challenge from the requester).

(6) Rutila v. DOT (5th Cir. July 10, 2023) — affirming, in relevant part, the district court’s decision that FAA was not required to take screenshots of certain requested information that was displayed to agency system users but could not be exported, because doing so would require the creation of new records; and Stevens v. HHS (N.D. Ill. Oct. 2, 2023) — finding that certain information contained in an agency database was readily reproducible via screenshots and would not impermissibly require the creation of new records.

AB: These cases deal with an issue similar to the one in ACLU v. ICE above, namely whether agency productions would require the creation of new records. To fulfill the request in Rutila, the FAA could not simply query a database; it “would have to open the relevant software, display the requested data, and take a screenshot of the displayed information.” Because the agency did not “actively maintain” the requested information “in any format,” the Circuit held that producing a screenshot would require creating a new record. In Stevens, by contrast, the information sought consisted of database query results. The court concluded that the database results were “readily reproducible” via screenshots and required to be produced pursuant to Section 552(a)(3)(B) of the FOIA. I am not an IT Specialist, but I am satisfied that the different facts of these cases warranted their respective outcomes.

RM: I found the Rutila court’s distinction of ACLU v. ICE to be satisfactory, as I mentioned above. I agree with your evaluation of Stevens, too. As far as I am aware, the outcome is consistent with other cases dealing with undisputed database data that can be reasonably extracted in a disclosable form or format.

(7) Am. Soc’y for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals v. APHIS (2d Cir. Feb. 16, 2023)affirming district court dismissal of “policy or practice claim” that alleged APHIS, as a result of its decommissioning certain databases of proactively disclosed records, was regularly citing “exemptions that do not apply” and engaging in “unreasonable, inexcusable and unexplained delays” while adjudicating requests and appeals for the same records previously hosted on the databases; holding that, “even assuming that a ‘policy or practice’ claim is cognizable [in the Second Circuit], . . . such a claim . . . [fails] because [Congress] . . . reversed the alleged policy or practice . . . [by] direct[ing] the agencies to ‘restore’ each decommissioned database ‘and its contents’ to the status quo ante . . . [and to make those records] available ‘in their entirety without redactions except signatures.’”

RM: Let’s start with the per curiam opinion. I’m not too bothered by the Circuit dodging the bullet and declining to definitively accept “policy or practice” claims. The district court decided they were justiciable, older circuit precedent is ambivalent, and other district courts will hopefully do the same in the future. On the merits, Congress had reversed the offending agency action and effectively provided the kind of equitable remedy a court would order by barring the agency from trying to decommission the database again in the future. I’m more worried about Judge Menashi’s concurrence. It’s true the concept of a distinct “policy or practice” claim is a little odd. If you go back and read Payne Enterprises, it was really about mootness, and Judge Edwards used “claim” in an ambiguous way. In truth, it’s quite troublesome for requesters to plead a stand-alone claim about an alleged unlawful “policy or practice” on the front end. And, as it now stands in the D.C. Circuit, a requester can’t even use a traditional “mootness” exception—you basically need to allege the elements of a separate Payne claim in the complaint. See Cause of Action Inst. v. DOJ, 282 F. Supp. 3d 66 (D.D.C. 2017). More broadly, I think Judge Menashi conceives of the court’s remedial authority too narrowly, and in a way that is inconsistent with Supreme Court jurisprudence concerning the broad equitable powers courts enjoy under the FOIA. It is entirely reasonable to characterize an unlawful policy or practice under the FOIA as a constructive withholding. And for that very reason—contrary to the Judge’s suggestion that a policy or practice claim might arise under the APA—courts have tended to reject claims under Section 702, except for narrow instances where the agency is violating its own implementing regulations, rather than the FOIA itself. Probably time for Congress to step in.

AB: I am not troubled by the per curiam opinion, either, for the same reasons you mentioned. I am even less concerned by the concurrence. Forget Congress, which is all-too susceptible to the trial lawyer lobby. Let’s go to the Supreme Court, shall we? Since you were just there, I am sure you would trust its judgment.

RM: Only if it’s my policy-and-practice case, and I get to make the argument, Allan!

HONORABLE MENTIONS (without comment)

Behar v. DHS (2d Cir. July 8 2022), cert denied, No. 22-578 (May 1, 2023) — declining to hear challenge to Second Circuit’s ruling that records obtained by the Secret Service from Donald Trump’s presidential campaign and transition were not “agency records,” or, alternatively, were protected from disclosure under Exemption 7(C).

Waterman v. IRS (D.C. Cir. Feb. 21, 2023) — affirming in part and reversing in part district court’s decision and holding that: (1) IRS properly relied on Exemption 5’s deliberative process privilege to withhold “evaluative” facts in an auditor’s memo concerning plaintiff’s suspected misconduct, but that the memo’s chronological collection of plaintiff’s statements was not exempt; (2) IRS improperly invoked Exemption 5 to withhold an auditor’s memo summarizing her telephone calls with plaintiff that, in the majority’s view, reflected no point of view; and (3) IRS properly invoked Exemption 5 to withhold an analysis of plaintiff’s disciplinary referral, including extracted facts pertinent to plaintiff’s alleged misconduct. In a partial dissent, one panelist opined that both auditor’s memos were deliberative because “(1) their purpose was to assist in a discretionary decision” whether to further investigate [plaintiff]) and (2) their authors selected facts that reflected a point of view (that plaintiff should be investigated).

Project on Gov't Oversight v. DHS (D.D.C. Feb. 20, 2023) — ruling, in relevant part, that DHS improperly relied on Exemption 5’s deliberative process privilege to withhold “unverified observations of first impression” from expert reports.

Commentary: 2023 FOIA news in review

FOIA Commentary (2024)Allan BlutsteinComment

As 2024 gets underway, the FOIA Advisor staff is pleased to provide a summary of the most notable FOIA developments that occurred outside the courtroom in 2023. We will discuss our top 2023 court decisions in a forthcoming post.

Legislation

The 118th Congress is off to a historically slow start, passing fewer than two dozen bills in its first year—none pertaining to the Freedom of Information Act. Several attempts were made, however.

  • On February 16, 2023. U.S. Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) reintroduced the First Opportunity for Information to Americans Act of 2023. First introduced in June 2022, this legislation would bar agencies from releasing FOIA-requested records to foreigners and certain foreign entities.

  • On March 30, 2023, U.S. Senators Thomas Tills (R-NC) and Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) and others re-introduced the Financial Regulators Transparency Act of 2023, which would extend the FOIA to regional Federal Reserve banks. On December 21, 2023, the reserve banks announced that they had voluntarily adopted a policy for public requests for information effective January 1, 2024

  • On June 6, 2023, U.S. Senators Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa), Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), and Peter Welch (D-Vt.) introduced the Open and Responsive Government Act, which aimed to restore Exemption 4’s National Parks test for confidential commercial information. The bill also attempted to reinforce the law’s presumptions of openness and transparency by underscoring any information outside of the scope of FOIA’s nine exemptions should be publicly available. 

  • On June 14, 2023, Congressman Jamie Raskin (MD-08) and Senator Ben Cardin (D-MD) introduced the Private Prison Information Act of 2023, which would require all U.S. government agencies comply with FOIA requests relating to private prisons, jails or detention facilities, including immigration detention facilities.

  • On June 27, 2023, a House appropriations bill for the Department of Defense was introduced that would prohibit the disclosure of certain records of service members without their consent. See Sec. 8139. The bill passed the House on September 28, 2023.

Regulatory updates

By our count, four agencies proposed changes to their FOIA regulations in 2023 that have not yet been finalized: Defense Nuclear Facilities Safety Board; Office of Management and Budget; Peace Corps; and the Postal Regulatory Commission.

Seven agencies issued final rules amending their FOIA regulations in 2023: Department of Commerce; Department of Defense; Department of State; EPA, Office of the Director of National Intelligence; Office of the Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator (EOP); and th Office of the.United States Trade Representative

Federal FOIA Advisory Committee

On June 8, 2023. the Federal FOIA Advisory Committee unanimously recommended that DOJ’s Office of Information Policy “issue guidance stating that whenever an agency withholds information pursuant to Exemption 5, the agency should identify the corresponding privilege(s) invoked.” The Committee is expected to vote on additional recommendations before the end of its term in June 2024.

Other agency updates

  • The Department of Justice announced on March 2, 2023, that federal agencies had received a record-high total of 928,316 requests in fiscal year 2022.

  • On March 13, 2023, nearly one year after the Attorney General issued a customary FOIA memorandum, DOJ’s Office of Information Policy released guidelines concerning the foreseeable harm standard enacted in 2016 and applying a presumption of openness.

  • FOIAonline, a request platform operated by the EPA, was decommissioned on September 30, 2023. At its height, 22 agencies used the platform. See related article here.

  • In October, the Department of Justice added a search tool to FOIA.gov that “helps the public more quickly locate commonly requested information.”

Interesting stories

We generally do not feature stories about the filing of FOIA requests or lawsuits, or stories that are based on records obtained via FOIA. But some are too quirky or consequential to ignore. Here are a few that captured our attention in 2023.