ASPCA v. APHIS & Dep't of Agric. ( 2023 )


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  • 21-1489
    ASPCA v. APHIS & Dep’t of Agric.
    In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    AUGUST TERM 2021
    No. 21-1489
    AMERICAN SOCIETY FOR THE PREVENTION OF CRUELTY TO ANIMALS,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    ANIMAL AND PLANT HEALTH INSPECTION SERVICE,
    UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of New York
    ARGUED: JUNE 2, 2022
    DECIDED: FEBRUARY 16, 2023
    Before:       LEVAL, PARKER, and MENASHI, Circuit Judges.
    The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals
    (“ASPCA”) appeals the judgment of the district court dismissing its
    “policy or practice” claim brought under the Freedom of Information
    Act (“FOIA”) against the Department of Agriculture and its
    component agency the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.
    The ASPCA alleged that the agencies adopted a policy or practice of
    violating the FOIA when, on February 3, 2017, the agencies
    decommissioned two online databases of frequently requested
    documents. The ASPCA argued that the policy or practice violates the
    FOIA because the decommissioning exacerbated delays in processing
    FOIA requests and caused some requests to be improperly withheld
    through excessive redaction.
    While the ASPCA’s action was pending before the district
    court, Congress enacted a new statute that required the agencies to
    recommission the databases, and the agencies complied. The district
    court held that the ASPCA’s policy or practice claim was resolved
    when the agencies recommissioned the databases as required by law.
    We agree and hold that under these circumstances the ASPCA cannot
    state a policy or practice claim. The judgment of the district court is
    affirmed.
    Judge Menashi concurs in a separate opinion.
    KATHLEEN R. HARTNETT, Cooley LLP, San Francisco, CA
    (Patrick Hayden, Cooley LLP, New York, NY, and Erin
    Estevez, Holland & Knight, Tysons, VA, on the brief), for
    Plaintiff-Appellant.
    NATASHA W. TELEANU, Assistant United States Attorney
    (Benjamin H. Torrance, Assistant United States Attorney,
    on the brief), for Damian Williams, United States Attorney
    for the Southern District of New York, New York, NY.
    2
    PER CURIAM:
    Plaintiff-Appellant the American Society for the Prevention of
    Cruelty to Animals (“ASPCA”) appeals the judgment of the district
    court granting judgment on the pleadings to Defendants-Appellees
    the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Animal and Plant Health
    Inspection Service (“APHIS”), a component agency of                the
    Department (together, “the agencies”). The ASPCA brought twenty-
    six claims under the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), 
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    , challenging the withholding and redaction of requested
    records. According to the ASPCA, the records revealed information
    about the agencies’ maintenance of animal welfare standards,
    including the licensing and regulation of animal dealers and
    exhibitors. The district court adjudicated each of the withholdings.
    The ASPCA’s last challenge—and the only one at issue in this
    appeal—was a “policy or practice” claim against the agencies. The
    ASPCA alleged that the agencies adopted a policy or practice that
    systematically violated the FOIA in a manner requiring equitable
    relief from the district court. The district court concluded that the
    ASPCA failed to state a policy or practice claim. We affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    On April 8, 2019, 1 the ASPCA sued the agencies under the
    FOIA alleging that the agencies followed a “policy or practice” of
    1The ASPCA filed an amended complaint on May 31, 2019. J. App’x 11-83.
    We rely on the ASPCA’s allegations in the amended complaint.
    3
    violating the FOIA.     2   Specifically, the ASPCA alleged that the
    agencies
    have regularly and repeatedly failed or refused to abide
    by the FOIA’s requirement that agencies shall determine
    within 20 business days of receiving a FOIA request
    whether to comply with such request and shall
    immediately notify the person making such request of
    such    determination      and       the   reasons   therefor.
    Furthermore,      [the   agencies]     have   regularly   and
    repeatedly failed or refused to respond to [the ASPCA’s]
    appeals within the time period required by the FOIA and
    have regularly and repeatedly failed or refused to release
    requested records promptly, within a reasonable period
    of time, or at all.
    J. App’x 80-81; see also 
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    (a)(6)(A)(i). In addition, the
    ASPCA alleged that the agencies had “released only substantially
    redacted records, citing FOIA [e]xemptions that do not apply.”
    J. App’x 81. The ASPCA’s “policy or practice” claim encompassed the
    “erroneous redactions” as well as the “unreasonable, inexcusable and
    unexplained delays,” both of which “blocked the ASPCA’s access to
    vital information contained in the requested records.” J. App’x 81.
    According to the ASPCA, these actions showed that the agencies
    “adopted, endorsed, or implemented a policy or practice that
    constitutes an ongoing failure to abide by the FOIA’s requirements in
    2 The ASPCA’s suit followed exhaustion of its administrative appeals. See
    
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    (a)(6)(C)(i).
    4
    connection with the processing of [the ASPCA’s] FOIA requests and
    appeals.” J. App’x 80.
    The allegations focused on the agencies’ decommissioning of
    two public databases that included frequently requested documents.
    The ASPCA had relied on the databases to access information. These
    databases—the “Animal         Care Information       Search”   and    the
    “Enforcement Action” databases—“provided access to agency
    records detailing inspections of [Animal Welfare Act (‘AWA’)]-
    licensed facilities, including commercial breeding facilities, and
    enforcement actions taken by [the agencies] against these licensees for
    AWA violations.” J. App’x 17-18. 3 The “ASPCA regularly reviewed
    inspection records and enforcement actions” by consulting the
    databases, so the decommissioning of the databases hindered its
    ability to obtain that information. J. App’x 18. The agencies
    decommissioned the databases on February 3, 2017, and, as a result,
    the ASPCA needed to request the records through the FOIA process.
    The ASPCA alleged that, “[a]s a predictable consequence” of
    the decommissioning of the databases, the agencies’ “FOIA requests
    increased significantly,” leading to “a systemic breakdown” and a
    significant backlog of requests. J. App’x 21. Thus, the ASPCA alleged,
    the agencies’ “policy or practice” was a “self-inflicted” harm pursued
    in “bad faith” and executed “when [the agencies] abruptly blocked
    3 Access to these records, according to the ASPCA, provides information
    about “commercial dog and cat breeders” subject to AWA regulations and
    serves “not only to warn the public about cruel puppy mill operations, but
    also to monitor [the agencies’] administration of the AWA, identify needed
    policy changes and provide guidance to lawmakers.” J. App’x 18.
    5
    access to the[] databases and failed to take adequate measures to
    respond to the individual FOIA requests.” J. App’x 21.
    The ASPCA further alleged that “it is substantially likely that
    [the agencies] will similarly improperly withhold inspection
    photographs, enforcement records, and inspection reports in
    response to future FOIA requests.” J. App’x 52. To remedy the alleged
    policy or practice violation, the ASPCA requested declaratory and
    injunctive relief, including the “[i]ssu[ance of] a permanent injunction
    directing [the agencies] to release to [the ASPCA] all wrongfully
    withheld records,” a “[d]eclar[ation] that [the agencies’] policy or
    practice of failing to abide by the FOIA’s procedural requirements is
    unlawful,” and an injunction barring the agencies “from maintaining
    or continuing their policy or practice of violating the FOIA’s
    procedural requirements.” J. App’x 82.
    The agencies denied having any policy or practice that violated
    the FOIA and argued that, in any event, an intervening act of
    Congress resolved the ASPCA’s policy or practice claim. The Further
    Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2020 became law on December
    20, 2019 and required the agencies to recommission the databases.
    7 U.S.C. § 2146a, 
    Pub. L. No. 116-94, § 788
    , 
    133 Stat. 2534
    , 2657 (2019).
    The Act directed the agencies to, “within 60 calendar days, restore on
    its website the searchable database and its contents that were
    available on January 30, 2017, and all content generated since that
    date; and … hereafter, make publicly available via searchable
    database, in their entirety without redactions except signatures,”
    records including “all final Animal Welfare Act inspection reports”
    and “enforcement records.” 7 U.S.C. § 2146a(a), (b)(1)-(2). In
    compliance with the Act, the agencies “removed certain redactions
    from inspection reports and animal inventories already posted in its
    6
    Public Search Tool and reposted all inspection reports and inventories
    dating back to January 2014” on February 18, 2020. J. App’x 231. Less
    than a month later, the agencies began posting final enforcement
    records as well. J. App’x 231. As a result, “many of the records
    requested” through the FOIA were “proactive[ly] post[ed]” and made
    “available online.” J. App’x 231.
    On April 20, 2020, the agencies moved for judgment on the
    pleadings or, in the alternative, summary judgment. The agencies
    argued that the ASPCA failed to state a policy or practice claim
    because the databases had been recommissioned. The agencies also
    reiterated the denial that the APHIS “ha[d] a pattern or practice,
    either formal or informal, of refusing to timely respond to FOIA
    requests or otherwise refusing to comply with the FOIA until a
    requester files a lawsuit.” J. App’x 222. The agencies submitted a
    declaration that the APHIS “makes every effort to respond … to FOIA
    requests and appeals within the 20-day statutory timeframe,” “seeks
    to fully comply with the FOIA,” and “does not purposely or
    intentionally seek to violate the FOIA for any reason.” J. App’x 222
    (Declaration of APHIS FOIA and Privacy Act Director Tonya Woods).
    The agencies acknowledged the FOIA backlog 4 and described ways
    in which the agencies were “engaged in improving processes” to
    resolve it, including additional resources. J. App’x 227-28 (Woods
    Declaration).   5   The agencies also expressed “hope” that the
    4  Since fiscal year 2016, the APHIS “has had challenges in reducing its
    backlog” because of “setbacks” including “increased FOIA requests and
    litigation, which impact APHIS’s ability to timely close FOIA requests and
    appeals.” J. App’x 222-23.
    5 Woods stated that the APHIS “has requested and been granted additional
    resources”—including “three consecutive contracts” funding “contract
    7
    recommissioning of the databases would “reduce the number of
    incoming FOIA requests,” further helping to address the backlog.
    J. App’x 231. The ASPCA cross-moved for summary judgment on
    May 18, 2020.
    The district court granted the agencies’ motion for judgment on
    the pleadings. ASPCA v. APHIS, No. 19-CV-3112, 
    2021 WL 1163627
    (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 25, 2021). 6 The district court noted that the Second
    Circuit has neither recognized nor “delineated any legal standards for
    evaluating policy and practice claims,” and it therefore applied “the
    legal framework established by the D.C. Circuit.” 
    2021 WL 1163627
    ,
    at *14. The district court concluded that the ASPCA’s “allegations
    plausibly demonstrate that the [a]gencies made a decision … that led
    to a self-inflicted breakdown in their ability to timely process FOIA
    requests and promptly produce responsive records.” 
    Id. at *15
    . Yet the
    district court explained that the ASPCA’s allegations did “not relate
    the entire story” because “Congress intervened to reverse” the
    decommissioning of the databases “by enacting Section 788 of the
    Further Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2020.” 
    Id. at *16
    .
    Because “the offending policy and practice described in the
    Amended Complaint was the systemic collapse of the [a]gencies’
    FOIA processes following their decision to shut down the databases
    attorneys to assist with the processing of animal welfare related FOIA
    requests and requests associated with FOIA litigation” “totaling
    approximately $1.5 million”—and had “created a new intake team” to log
    and respond to FOIA requests more efficiently. J. App’x 227-28.
    6 The district court also adjudicated the other twenty-six counts of the
    ASPCA’s complaint, granting in part and denying in part each of the
    parties’ motions for summary judgment. As a result, the ASPCA has
    received or will receive all the requested documents to which it is entitled.
    8
    in February 2017,” the district court concluded that “the ASPCA has
    not established that the [c]ourt must intervene to correct a policy or
    practice that the [a]gencies have in place that will impair the ASPCA’s
    lawful access to information in the future.” 
    Id.
     at *16 & n.13 (internal
    quotation marks and alteration omitted). The district court rejected
    the ASPCA’s argument that the Appropriations Act and the
    recommissioning did not fully resolve its policy or practice claim
    because it sought an additional category of documents—photographs
    taken during licensee inspections—that the Act did not require to be
    published in the databases. The district court said that the amended
    complaint “does not plausibly support that the [a]gencies
    implemented some special policy or practice of withholding
    photographs from FOIA productions.” 
    Id.
     at *16 n.13. For these
    reasons, the district court decided that “the ASPCA does not state a
    valid policy and practice claim upon which relief can be granted.” 
    Id. at *16
    .
    The district court also decided, “[i]n the alternative,” that even
    if it had “broken new ground in the Circuit and found that the ASPCA
    successfully stated a policy and practice claim,” the district court
    “would grant the [a]gencies’ motion for summary judgment on the
    issue for substantially the same reasons: because Congress has
    already acted to address the challenged policies and practices, the
    record does not convince the [c]ourt that the equitable relief the
    ASPCA seeks is warranted.” 
    Id.
     at *16 n.15. The district court granted
    the agencies’ motion for judgment on the pleadings and denied as
    moot the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment on the policy
    or practice claim. 
    Id. at *17
    . The ASPCA timely appealed. J. App’x 732.
    9
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    A party may move for, and a district court may grant, judgment
    on the pleadings after the pleadings are closed if the motion is filed
    “early enough not to delay trial.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(c). We review such
    a judgment de novo under the same standard as the grant of a motion
    to dismiss for failure to state a claim under Federal Rule of Civil
    Procedure 12(b)(6). Lively v. WAFRA Inv. Advisory Grp., Inc., 
    6 F.4th 293
    , 301 (2d Cir. 2021). That is, we evaluate a judgment on the
    pleadings to see whether the complaint fails to state a claim that is
    “plausible on its face.” 
    Id.
     In doing so, we “draw all reasonable
    inferences in the plaintiff’s favor” to assess “whether a complaint’s
    factual allegations plausibly give rise to an entitlement to relief.” 
    Id.
    (alteration omitted). While we “should assume th[e] veracity” of
    “well-pleaded factual allegations,” we are “not bound to accept as
    true a pleading’s legal conclusion.” Lynch v. City of New York, 
    952 F.3d 67
    , 75 (2d Cir. 2020) (emphasis and alteration omitted).
    DISCUSSION
    We agree with the district court that, even assuming that a
    “policy or practice” claim is cognizable, the ASPCA failed to state
    such a claim against the agencies because the Further Consolidated
    Appropriations Act of 2020 reversed the alleged policy or practice.
    The Act directed the agencies to “restore” each decommissioned
    database “and its contents” to the status quo ante and to “make
    publicly available” in the databases the AWA inspection reports and
    enforcement records that the ASPCA had sought in this litigation.
    7 U.S.C. § 2146a(a), (b). The Act also required that such records be
    made available “in their entirety without redactions except
    signatures.” 7 U.S.C. § 2146a(a), (b)(1)-(2). These requirements
    10
    address both aspects of the ASPCA’s policy or practice claim—the
    alleged delays in responding to requests and the allegedly excessive
    withholdings and redactions. J. App’x 80-81.
    The ASPCA urges us to follow the logic of the D.C. Circuit’s
    decision in Payne Enterprises, Inc. v. United States, which held that
    “even though a party may have obtained relief as to a specific request
    under the FOIA, this will not moot a claim that an agency policy or
    practice will impair the party’s lawful access to information in the
    future.” 
    837 F.2d 486
    , 491 (D.C. Cir. 1988); Appellant’s Br. 35-36. But
    even if we were to adopt that court’s reasoning, the D.C. Circuit in
    Payne contended with an extraordinary set of circumstances not
    present here. In that case, the requester had repeatedly sought agency
    records, in the form of bid abstracts, from the U.S. Air Force. 
    837 F.2d at 488-89
    . The agency repeatedly denied the requests without
    thorough explanation, and the requester appealed through the
    administrative process to the Secretary of the Air Force, who “made
    it clear that the officers’ position was wholly unjustified” and ordered
    the records disclosed “without exception.” 
    Id. at 489
    . The officers,
    however, “continued to withhold the bid abstracts,” forcing the
    requester “to make repeated appeals to the Secretary to obtain the
    information.” 
    Id. at 490
    . The D.C. Circuit decided that while the
    requester had received individual documents, the agency was
    “merely … refraining from the conduct of which [the requester] has
    complained while the case is pending” and was “free to return to [its]
    old ways.” 
    Id. at 491
    .
    Following the logic of Payne would not warrant reversal in this
    case. Here, the agencies are not “free to return to [their] old ways”
    given the change in law that prohibits the agencies from
    decommissioning the databases and from withholding or redacting
    11
    many of the documents the ASPCA sought. Even if the ASPCA were
    correct that the allegedly improper responses to FOIA requests
    resulted from an agency policy, that policy is no longer operative due
    to a change in governing law. The agencies have not altered their
    conduct only while litigation is pending.
    The ASPCA tries to rescue its claim by pointing to (1) the
    absence of certain agency records from the databases and (2) its
    allegation that the agencies initially improperly redacted some of the
    requested documents. First, the ASPCA notes that requested
    inspection photographs remain excluded from the publicly available
    documents in the two databases. Appellant’s Br. 40-41. We disagree
    that absent photographs are enough to save the claim. The allegation
    regarding the delayed response and processing of the photograph
    requests cannot by itself sustain a policy or practice claim based on
    the “systemic breakdown” of the agencies’ FOIA process resulting
    from the decommissioning of the databases. J. App’x 21. As noted by
    the district court, this alleged breakdown has been resolved by
    congressional action. Nothing in the complaint indicates that any
    future requests for photographs would not be processed in a timely
    fashion now that the agencies have recommissioned the databases
    and freed resources to devote to the relatively fewer FOIA requests
    for non-database records. 7
    Second, the ASPCA suggests that its allegation of improper
    redaction can stand apart from the allegation of unlawful delay.
    Appellant’s Br. 4-5, 33, 41. But the only such plausible allegation in
    the complaint is a conclusory statement that the agencies have
    7 The complaint notes that the initial commissioning of one of the databases
    in 2009 “reduced incoming FOIA requests by 35%.” J. App’x 18.
    12
    “released   only substantially redacted     records”   with    “FOIA
    [e]xemptions that do not apply.” J. App’x 81. The ASPCA alleged that
    this practice began “on or about” the time of the decommissioning of
    the databases. J. App’x 81. A claim based on this allegation cannot
    survive the intervening change in law that required not only the
    recommissioning of the databases but also the publication of the
    records “in their entirety without redactions except signatures.”
    7 U.S.C. § 2146a(b).
    We thus reach the same conclusion as the district court that the
    ASPCA has not stated a claim on which relief may be granted. The
    ASPCA does not ask us to adjudicate its claims over particular
    documents or to order the disclosure of documents improperly
    withheld. It asks us to order the agencies to comply with the FOIA. 8
    But “[u]nder Rule 65(d), an injunction must be more specific than a
    simple command that the defendant obey the law.” S.C. Johnson &
    Son, Inc. v. Clorox Co., 
    241 F.3d 232
    , 240 (2d Cir. 2001) (quoting
    Peregrine Myanmar Ltd. v. Segal, 
    89 F.3d 41
    , 51 (2d Cir. 1996)).
    Moreover, in adjudicating a FOIA dispute, “[a] declaration that an
    agency’s initial refusal to disclose requested information was
    unlawful, after the agency made that information available, would
    constitute an advisory opinion in contravention of Article III of the
    Constitution.” Payne, 
    837 F.2d at 491
    . Because the ASPCA’s concrete
    complaints about the databases and withholdings have been
    resolved, the ASPCA cannot state a policy or practice claim to seek a
    broad order mandating that an agency conform its FOIA process to a
    requester’s notion of what would be reasonably expeditious—even
    8 See Oral Argument Audio Recording at 29:22 (“We were seeking
    compliance with FOIA.”).
    13
    assuming that a policy or practice claim could be stated in the first
    place.
    CONCLUSION
    The ASPCA cannot state a policy or practice claim that the
    agencies systematically violated the FOIA after an intervening
    statutory enactment required the restoration of the databases that
    underpinned the ASPCA’s claim. We affirm the judgment of the
    district court.
    14
    21-1489
    ASPCA v. APHIS & Dep’t of Agric.
    MENASHI, Circuit Judge, concurring:
    I agree with the court that, even if we were to recognize a
    “policy or practice” claim as cognizable under the Freedom of
    Information Act (“FOIA”), the ASPCA has not stated such a claim in
    this case. I write separately to explain that a “policy or practice” claim
    is not cognizable under the FOIA.
    I
    Once a complaint is properly filed, the FOIA provides a federal
    district court with “jurisdiction to enjoin the agency from withholding
    agency records and to order the production of any agency records
    improperly withheld from the complainant.” 
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    (a)(4)(B).
    To decide whether such a remedy is appropriate, the court “may
    examine the contents of such agency records in camera to determine
    whether such records or any part thereof shall be withheld under any
    of the exemptions” set forth in the FOIA. 
    Id.
     If the court decides that
    the records have been improperly withheld, it may “order[] the
    production of any agency records improperly withheld from the
    complainant and assess[] against the United States reasonable
    attorney fees and other litigation costs” and, if warranted, the court
    may “additionally issue[] a written finding that the circumstances
    surrounding the withholding raise questions whether agency
    personnel acted arbitrarily or capriciously with respect to the
    withholding.” 
    Id.
     § 552(a)(4)(F)(i). In such a case, however, the court
    may not order the agency to alter its FOIA procedures or otherwise
    change its operations. Instead, the FOIA contemplates that “the
    Special Counsel shall promptly initiate a proceeding to determine
    whether disciplinary action is warranted against the officer or
    employee who was primarily responsible for the withholding” and
    the “Special Counsel, after investigation and consideration of the
    evidence submitted, shall submit his findings and recommendations
    to the administrative authority of the agency concerned.” Id. It is then
    the responsibility of the “administrative authority” to “take the
    corrective action that the Special Counsel recommends.” Id.
    This statutory scheme authorizes a federal district court to
    provide the narrow remedies of enjoining an agency from improperly
    withholding records and ordering it to disclose the requested records
    that were improperly withheld. It does not authorize a court to
    superintend the policies and practices of that agency.
    Those who are “adversely affected or aggrieved by agency
    action” may instead challenge a policy or practice under the
    Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”). 
    5 U.S.C. § 702
    . “The APA
    ‘sets forth the procedures by which federal agencies are accountable
    to the public and their actions subject to review by the courts.’” DHS
    v. Regents of the Univ. of Cal., 
    140 S. Ct. 1891
    , 1905 (2020) (quoting
    Franklin v. Massachusetts, 
    505 U.S. 788
    , 796 (1992)). “It requires
    agencies to engage in ‘reasoned decisionmaking,’” 
    id.
     (quoting
    Michigan v. EPA, 
    576 U.S. 743
    , 750 (2015)), “and directs that agency
    actions be ‘set aside’ if they are ‘arbitrary’ or ‘capricious,’” 
    id.
     (quoting
    
    5 U.S.C. § 706
    (2)(A)).
    In this case, the ASPCA might have pursued a challenge to the
    agencies’ decommissioning of the databases under the APA. The
    ASPCA decided not to do so because it would have faced “different
    exhaustion requirements” and would have needed to identify “a
    specific final agency action we could point to under the APA.”1 In
    1   Oral Argument Audio Recording at 27:25.
    2
    addition to the requirements to exhaust administrative remedies and
    to identify a final agency action, the ASPCA would have needed to
    establish on the merits that the decision to decommission the
    databases was “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or
    otherwise not in accordance with law.” 
    5 U.S.C. § 706
    (2)(A). By
    pursuing its challenge to the decommissioning of the databases not as
    an APA claim but as a “policy or practice” claim under the FOIA, the
    ASPCA evaded these legal requirements. It argued that a court
    should order the agencies to reverse the decision to decommission the
    databases not because that decision violated the law or the
    requirements of reasoned decisionmaking but because it created a
    FOIA backlog. The FOIA provides no authority for a court to entertain
    such a challenge to agency action without following the requirements
    of the APA, and courts should not allow parties to evade APA
    requirements by using the FOIA in this way. The proper avenue for
    challenging the policies and practices of agencies is the APA, 
    5 U.S.C. § 706
    .
    II
    In any event, allegations based on an agency policy of “delay”
    cannot state a claim on which relief can be granted. The FOIA
    “prescribes no fixed timeframe within which an agency must produce
    non-exempt records. Rather, the statute establishes a set of
    procedures for agencies (and requesters) to follow in furtherance of
    the general mandate to make non-exempt records promptly
    available.” Judicial Watch, Inc. v. DHS, 
    895 F.3d 770
    , 791 (D.C. Cir.
    2018) (Srinivasan, J., dissenting).
    For example, the statute provides a “default 20-working-day
    timeline,” CREW v. FEC, 
    711 F.3d 180
    , 189 (D.C. Cir. 2013), in which
    the agency determines “whether to comply with [a FOIA] request” and
    3
    notifies “the person making such request” of that decision, 
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    (a)(6)(A)(i) (emphasis added). But “the statute expressly
    contemplates that an agency could take several months to process a
    FOIA request, and agencies regularly—and lawfully—take that long
    to determine whether to produce requested records.” Judicial Watch,
    
    895 F.3d at 791
     (Srinivasan, J., dissenting). A court may not “grant
    judgment in the requester’s favor merely because the default twenty-
    day period had elapsed without a determination by the agency,”
    considering that “the statute presupposes that the court could
    recognize that the agency should be given additional time to process
    the request.” 
    Id. at 794
    . The agency may show that it is “exercising
    due diligence in responding to the request” and making “reasonable
    progress in reducing its backlog of pending requests.” 
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    (a)(6)(C). Such a showing would be a basis for a court to “allow
    the agency additional time to complete its review of the records.” 
    Id.
    Given the statutory scheme, a requester cannot establish a violation
    of the FOIA merely by alleging that the agency has engaged in
    “delay.”
    Courts that have recognized “policy or practice” claims have
    emphasized that a requester must at least allege “prolonged,
    unexplained delays in producing non-exempt records.” Judicial Watch,
    
    895 F.3d at 780
     (majority opinion) (emphasis added). The unexplained
    character of the delay allows for the inference that the agency could
    have “a policy or practice of ignoring FOIA’s requirements.” 
    Id.
    In this case, the alleged delays were not unexplained. The
    ASPCA itself alleged that the delays resulted from the agencies’
    backlog of FOIA requests following the decommissioning of the
    databases in 2017. [A 21] Thus, the ASPCA challenged not the “delay”
    itself but the agencies’ policy of decommissioning the databases. The
    4
    case therefore turned on whether the agencies’ database policy was
    lawful. The FOIA could not answer that question; it contains no
    provision requiring the agencies to maintain those databases. The
    nature of the claim here—a challenge to the lawfulness of the
    decommissioning of the databases—underscores the importance of
    entertaining challenges to an agency’s policy or practice through the
    framework of the APA rather than under the FOIA.
    5