Alford v. Department of Veterans Affairs , 277 F. Supp. 3d 91 ( 2017 )


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  • UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    LEROY ALFORD, §
    Plaintiff, §
    v. § Civil Action No. 16-2170 (RCL)
    DEPARTMENT OF §
    VETERANS AFFAIRS, )
    Defendant. §
    MEMORANDUM OPINlON AND ORDER
    I. Background
    Leroy Alford is a retired disabled veteran who had been receiving certain vocational
    rehabilitation and employment benefits until they were discontinued by the Department of
    Veterans Affairs (VA) on April 22, 2016. In short, in parallel with other efforts, Mr. Alford has
    filed requests under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5 U.S.C. §552, for records that would
    shed light on the VA’s decision to terminate his participation in the vocational rehabilitation
    program and help him prepare a possible time-sensitive appeal.
    The precise factual record in this case is somewhat difficult to distill.l The parties disagree
    on such basic matters including exactly how many FOIA requests were filed and when. Mr. Alford
    appears to have changed his mind at various points in his communications with the VA about
    l For example, the Motion for summary judgment attaches ll numbered exhibits (not including Ms. Grant’s first
    declaration), see [7-3], but the motion, the accompanying memorandum of points and authorities, and the
    defendant’s statement of facts only cite to one of those, Exhibit l, as establishing the date and scope of Mr. Alford’s
    initial FOlA request. The only other explicit description or reference to any of the VA’s numbered exhibits comes
    in its reply brief, in which counsel attempts to dismiss potentially serious deficiencies in the first declaration she
    filed in the case. See [13] at *5. See also discussion of Alford’s third FOIA request, inj‘i'a.
    l
    whether he was in fact making a FOIA request.2 The VA’s counsel, on the other hand,
    characterizes Mr. Alford as having made three separate FOIA requests. See [7] at *1 and n. 1.
    After spending an inordinate amount of time piecing together a complete timeline from the exhibits
    each side has included with their filings, the Court counts four communications from Mr. Alford
    to the VA that either explicitly were FOIA requests, or that the VA construed as FOIA requests
    First, on May 18, 2016, Mr. Alford informed the VA that he wished to review his vocational
    rehabilitation case file. Mr. Alford made a second request, on June 2, 2016, reiterating the first.3
    The VA processed these as FOIA requests and, on July 14, 2016, released to Mr. Alford his entire
    Counseling/Evaluation/Rehabilitation (CER) folder, which included an lndividual Written
    Rehabilitation Plan (IVVRP) dated June 7, 2011. [7-2] at paras 8-9.
    On September 8, 2016 Mr. Alford transmitted via fax to the VA what can be accounted for
    present purposes as his third FOIA request, which references an earlier but unspecified “Second
    [FOIA] Request.” [l-l] at *23. He emailed the same document to his point of contact at the VA
    the following day. In this request, Mr. Alford asked for “copies of any [IWRP not already
    produced,] dated after 06/06/11.” 
    Id. Having received
    no response from the VA, he emailed the
    agency on October 27, 2016 to follow-up on his request. Pls. Complaint [1] at para 6. Without a
    response from the VA, Mr. Alford filed suit in this Court on October 31, 2016.
    2 Curiously, even now Mr. Alford disputes that his communications to the VA on May 18, 2016 and June 2, 2016
    constituted FOIA requests, see Pl.’s Resp. to Def``.’s Stmt. of Material Facts in Dispute [10] at *21-22, despite a June
    3 email that suggests he was submitting a FOIA request, a September 8, 2016 letter that references an earlier,
    unspecified “Second [FOIA] Request,” [l-l] at *23, and the December 5, 2016 letter, [10] at *33, which appears to
    have a subject line “Second [FOIA] Request,” all of which indicate he had understood there to be a previous FOIA
    request Because l) it appears Mr. Alford, at least at one time, thought himself to be submitting FOIA requests during
    his correspondence with the VA, 2) the VA processed those requests in accordance with FOIA, and, 3) in any event,
    this Court construes liberally the filings of pro se litigants, the Court will proceed with a standard FOIA analysis
    3 The VA refers to Mr. Alford’s submissions of May 18, 2016 and June 2, 2016 as “requests,” i.e., in the plural. See
    [7] at * l . Mr. Alford considered the June 2016 FOIA request to have been separate from his request for administrative
    review of his records. See [7-3] at **4, 8. His subsequent communications in September 2016 and December 2016,
    however, each either referred to or bore the subject line “Second Freedom of lnformation Act (FOIA) Request.”
    2
    On December 5, 2016, Mr. Alford submitted his fourth request,4 which appears to feature
    as a subject line the words, “Second [FOIA] Request.” [4-1] at *7. This time, Mr. Alford asked
    for “all records[] contained in my [vocational rehabilitation] file folder, [and] any emails between
    VA personnel concerning any discussions” regarding his entitlements after the VA’s July 14, 2016
    document release to Mr. Alford. After again receiving no response from the VA, Mr. Alford filed
    a Motion [4] for leave to amend his complaint on December 27, 2016, to include his expanded
    request in the present lawsuit. The Court granted leave to file his amended complaint on January
    11, 2017, [5], and Mr. Alford filed his First Amended Complaint [6] that same day.
    On January 30, 2017, the VA filed its Motion for summary judgment, [7], arguing it
    conducted a reasonable search for the records Mr. Alford requested on May 18, 2016 (and,
    impliedly, June 2, 2016), and produced to Mr. Alford his CER folder in its entirety, which it says
    fulfills his request. The VA has also represented that, in reference to Mr. Alford’s September 8,
    2016 request, it has adequately searched for any further IWRPs, and that none exist. 2d Grant
    decl. at para 6. Finally, having failed either to oppose Mr. Alford’s Motion [4] for leave to amend
    his complaint or respond to the amended complaint once filed, see Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(3), and
    without so much as a citation to the applicable regulation (which the Court surmises to be 38 C.F.R.
    §1.559(f)), the VA moves this Court to dismiss Mr. Alford’s First Amended Complaint under
    Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) for his supposed failure to exhaust administrative
    remedies related to his fourth FOIA request. [7] at n. 1.
    For his part, Mr. Alford disputes the adequacy of the VA’s searches and production. See
    [10]; [17]. He also has requested the Court to order the VA to pay his costs for bringing the present
    4 Counsel for the VA finally entered an appearance in this case the following day.
    3
    action, [4-1] at *3, and has since moved for leave to file a second amended complaint and for the
    Court to hold a hearing on his case. See [18].
    Upon consideration of the VA’s Motion [7] for summary judgment, its embedded Motion
    to dismiss the Amended Complaint, [7] at n. l, Mr. Alford’s opposition, [10], the VA’s reply
    thereto, [13], and Mr. Alford’s surreply, [17], as well as Mr. Alford’s requests for costs and his
    motion [18] for leave to file a Second Amended Complaint to request a hearing, and the entire
    record before the Court, the VA’s motion for summary judgment [7] is granted-in-part and denied-
    in-part; the VA’s motion to dismiss Mr. Alford’s first amended complaint is denied; Mr. Alford’S
    request for costs is granted; and Mr. Alford’s motion to amend his complaint to request a hearing
    [18] is denied.
    II. Legal Standards
    a. Summary Judgment in FOIA Cases
    Summary judgment is appropriate where “the movant shows that there is no genuine
    dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” FED. R.
    CIV. PRO. 56(a). As applied in a FOIA case, an agency defendant may be entitled to summary
    judgment if it demonstrates that 1) no material facts are in dispute, 2) it has conducted an adequate
    search for responsive records, and 3) each responsive record that it has located has either been
    produced to the plaintiff or is exempt from disclosure Miller v. U.S. Dep't of Justice, 
    872 F. Supp. 2d
    12, 18 (D.D.C. 2012) (citing Weisberg v. DOJ, 
    627 F.2d 365
    , 368 (D.C. Cir. 1980)).
    When an agency receives a FOIA request it is obligated to “conduct a search reasonably
    calculated to uncover all relevant documents.” Truitt v. Dep’t of State, 
    897 F.2d 540
    , 541 (D.C.
    Cir. 1990) (intemal quotation marks omitted). The adequacy of a search, therefore, depends not
    on “whether any further documents might conceivably exist,’7 
    id., but on
    the search’s design and
    scope. An agency must accordingly show that it made “a good faith'effort to conduct a searchfor
    the requested records, using methods [that] can be reasonably expected to produce the information
    requested.” Oglesby v. U.S. Dep ’t of Army, 
    920 F.2d 57
    , 68 (D.C. Cir. 1990).
    The agency bears the burden of showing that it complied with FOIA and it may meet this
    burden “by providing ‘a reasonably detailed affidavit, setting forth the search terms and the type
    of search performed, and averring that all files likely to contain responsive materials . . . were
    searched.’” Ilurralde v. Comptroller of Currency, 
    315 F.3d 311
    , 313_14 (D.C. Cir. 2003). The
    plaintiff may then “provide ‘countervailing evidence’ as to the adequacy of the agency’s search.”
    
    Id. at 314.
    If a review of the record created by these affidavits “raises substantial doubt,” as to a
    search’s adequacy, “particularly in view of ‘well defined requests and positive indications of
    997
    overlooked materials summary judgment would not be appropriate Valencia-Lucena v. U.S.
    Coast Guard, 
    180 F.3d 321
    , 326 (D.C. Cir. 1999) (quoting Founa'ing Church of Scl``entology v.
    Nat’l. Sec. Agency, 
    610 F.2d 824
    , 837 (D.C. Cir. 1979)).
    “Agency affidavits are accorded a presumption of good faith, which cannot be rebutted by
    ‘purely speculative claims about the existence and discoverability of other documents
    
    SafeCard, 926 F.2d at 1200
    . They may, however, be rebutted by evidence of bad faith. 
    Id. b. Administrative
    Exhaustion in FOIA Cases
    Generally, FOIA requesters “must exhaust administrative appeal remedies before seeking
    judicial redress.” Citizens for Responsibility and Ethz'cs in Washington v. FEC, 
    711 F.3d 180
    , 182
    (2013). “But if an agency does not adhere to certain statutory timelines in responding to a FOIA
    request, the requester is deemed by statute to have fulfilled the exhaustion requirement.” 
    Id. (citing 5
    U.S.C. § 552(a)(6)(C)(i)).
    III. Analysis
    A. Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment
    On May 18, 2016 and June 2, 2016, Mr. Alford asked to review his vocational
    rehabilitation case file. The VA’s declarant describes in detail where such files are located. First
    Grant decl. [7-4] at paras. 5-8. The responsive CER folder was located, processed, and
    eventually mailed to him on July 14, 2016. 
    Id. at para
    15. Although the VA’s proffers in this
    regard seem, by themselves, to reflect an adequately reasonable search and production of
    documents, the agency’s own submissions show otherwise. The plaintiff’ s requests were to
    review his vocational rehabilitation case file, [7-3] at *3, which he also referred to as his “VOC
    rehab records.” [7-3] at *4. The VA searched for and produced to him only his hard-copy CER
    folder, and have failed to make an express representation to this Court that the CER folder would
    contain all the documents to which Mr. Alford’s request referred. In fact, one of the defendant’s
    own exhibits, [7-3] at *28 (a screenshot of a portion of Mr. Alford’s folder in an electronic
    database listing what appear to be the titles or descriptions of several potentially responsive
    documents), the defendant’s subsequent search of an electronic database for updated versions of
    a document contained in the CER folder, see discussion of Alford’s third FOIA request, infra.;
    2d Grant decl. at para 5 , and statements made by the defendants in their most recent filing, [20]
    (“[the electronic database] contains electronically stored case notes that were made by Vocational
    Rehabilitation (“VR”) counselors concerning Plaintiff, as well as an electronic log of every action
    taken in Mr. Alford‘s case . . . . Case notes are typically created by VR counselors to summarize
    conversations, highlight electronic mail received, and to identify actions taken on the case.”), all
    indicate to the Court that the VA should have Searched beyond the file cabinet containing Mr.
    Alford’s CER file for information responsive to his request. Accordingly, the Court must deny
    summary judgment to the VA with respect to the May and June requests.
    6
    The VA’s actions taken with respect to Mr. Alford’s request of September 8, 2016, are
    even more troublesome In his September request, in light of an IWRP that had been included in
    his produced CER folder nearly two months earlier, Mr. Alford asked for “copies of any [IWRP
    not already produced to him,] dated after 06/06/11.” [1-1] at *23. The VA failed to respond. The
    agency’s excuse for its silence, it says, is that “Mr. Alford received a copy of his entire CER folder
    on July 14, 2016. In addition, there is no IWRP dated for June 6, 2011.” First Grant decl., [7-4]
    at para 17.
    The VA’s representation makes it apparent that the VA misread Mr. Alford’s request in at
    least two ways. First, somehow the VA did not understand that Mr. Alford, having received his
    entire CER folder, was asking for one or more documents that, if they existed, were not included
    in that folder. Second, the VA failed to notice that Mr. Alford’s request clearly stated that he
    sought any IWRP dated after June 6, 2011. Despite certain aspects of the record before the Court
    being difficult to sort through, the Court finds it difficult to grasp what exactly about Mr. Alford’s
    September request might have been confusing to the VA, and why the VA thought it an acceptable
    course of action to simply not to a disabled veteran’s request for records about himself as they
    might relate to a time-limited appeal of a denial of benefits. The fact that Alford’s CER folder had
    already been produced gave no reason to be non-responsive to a request for something other than
    the exact thing that had already been released. The VA’s July 14 production and Alford’s
    September 18 request did not cross in the mail - Alford’s September request clearly indicates that
    he had received and reviewed what the agency had already provided to him, and that he was
    requesting something beyond what he had been given.
    Regarding the VA’s second misreading of his request, the Court finds it perturbing not
    merely that agency personnel ignored the word “after’7 when they initially received the request,
    but that it (and, apparently counsel) continued to do so up until the filing of the VA’s reply brief
    on its motion. To that end, the Court finds incredulous counsel’s characterization that repeatedly
    omitting the word “after” from how it construed the scope of Alford’s request is a mere “obvious
    typo.” [13] at *5. At minimum, that “typo” is prima facie evidence that the VA did not read Mr.
    Alford’s FOIA request correctly, which is a legally relevant fact that potentially relates to the scope
    of the agency’s search. And if it were as obvious as counsel says, counsel should have had it
    corrected before filing the sworn document with the Court.
    Nevertheless, the Court does not agree with Mr. Alford that these errors evince bad faith
    on the part of the government in this proceeding See [10] at *15-18. In fact, if indeed the VA
    interpreted Mr. Alford’s request as only to produce a single document on a specific date, that it
    nevertheless revisited the matter looking for documents outside of the dates it apparently thought
    Mr. Alford was asking for, see First Grant decl. at paras. 18, 23; 2d Grant decl. at para. 6,5 is
    evidence of good faith, at least with respect to this litigation6 Regardless of the VA’s initial failure
    to respond to Mr. Alford’s FOIA request in a timely manner and despite the agency’s and counsel’s
    long-standing blind-spot for the word “after” that so clearly appeared in Mr. Alford’s request, the
    Court has no basis to find that the agency has acted in bad faith in this litigation.
    That said, the record in this case shows that there are two databases Where Mr. Alford’s
    IWRPs might be found: the geographically-egalitarian monikered Corporate Waco Indianapolis
    New Jersey Roanoke Seattle (CWINRS) Case Management System, and the far more clear and
    easier to type Benefits Delivery Network (BDN) system. The VA has represented that the BDN
    5 Inexplicably, Ms. Grant again characterizes Mr. Alford’s request as being for an IWRP “developed in June 2011.”
    2d Grant decl. at para 6. The VA is saved on this point only because it in fact reviewed the document log for responsive
    files for the period of June 2010 through April 2016. See 
    id. 6 The
    VA’s decision to “revisit” Mr. Alford’s file came one day before counsel filed a Motion [3] to extend its
    deadline to respond to Mr. Alford’s complaint
    system, which originally housed'IWRPs, is obsolete and is no longer used “for any purpose.” 2d
    Grant decl. at para 7 (noting a sunset date for BDN of April 7, 2017). Although there were
    previously some discrepancies between what data was successfully migrath from BDN to
    CWINRS, see Pl. Ex. B, Review of Quality Instrument, at *3 (4th qtr 2010, General Comment 4 -
    “Counselor should ensure that BDN and CWINRS data are consistent”), the record suggests those
    have now been corrected, at least as they related to Mr. Alford’s file Pl. Ex. C, Checklist for
    Proposed Discontinuance (notating that BDN and CWINRS have both been updated as of April
    22, 2016), The VA avers that “If another IWRP [were] developed for Leroy Alford, it would have
    been highlighted in the [CWINRS] document log.”7 2d Grant decl. at para 5. The VA’s
    declarations describing its search of the CWH\IRS system are sufficiently detailed to satisfy the
    Court that the agency conducted a sufficient search for any other IWRP related to Mr. Alford.
    Because there were none in the system to produce, the Court grants Summary judgment to the VA
    as to Mr. Alford’s third FOIA request.8
    B. Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss the Amended Complaint
    Mr. Alford’s amended complaint contains allegations related to his fourth FOIA request.
    That request stems from his December 5, 2016 letter, requested some of the same information as
    he had previously, but added a further request for related emails. The defendant argues that Mr.
    Alford has failed to exhaust his administrative remedies with respect to this request, and that it
    therefore should be dismissed [7] at *1 n. 1. Assuming Mr. Alford’s request was properly filed,9
    7 The Court notes that it took surprisingly long for the VA to express the quoted fact clearly. Both in Ms. Grant’s first
    declaration and in counsel’s accompanying briefs, the defendant emphasizes that CWINRS tracks all documents
    “entered into the system,” without ever stating positively and unequivocally that IWRPs are among the categories of
    documents that always would be entered into that system. Without the quoted sentence in Msr Grant’s second
    declaration, the Court would have been unable to grant summary judgment to the VA as to Mr. Alford’s third request
    8 As this is a FOIA case, the Court was not called upon and makes no determination as to whether regulations may
    have required the VA to update Mr. Alford’s IWRP annually.
    9 The VA has not argued otherwise
    5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(3)A)(ii), the VA’s response would have been due to him by January 4, 2017.
    See 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(6)(A). The record does not show that the VA responded to his request by
    that date, and Mr. Alford is therefore deemed to have exhausted his administrative remedies See
    
    id. at §
    552(a)(6)(C). He did not file his First Amended Complaint that included the allegations
    concerning his December 5, 2016 request until January l l, 2017. [6].
    The Court suspects that, had counsel actually read the principal case she cited to as grounds
    for her motion to dismiss Mr. Alford’s amended complaint, Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics
    in Washington v. FEC, 
    711 F.3d 180
    (2013), she would not have found it fit to include such a
    frivolous argument, even as a footnote not otherwise addressed in her filings In fact, the sentence
    immediately following that which she quoted as direct support for the proposition that
    administrative exhaustion is generally required in FOIA cases, explicitly cites to the statutory
    carve-out that squarely applies in cases such as this one, where the agency has failed to respond to
    the FOIA requester in a timely manner. 
    Id. at 182
    (“As a general matter, a FOIA requester must
    exhaust administrative appeal remedies before seeking judicial redress But if an agency does not
    adhere to certain statutory timelines in responding to a FOIA request, the requester is deemed by
    statute to have fulfilled the exhaustion requirement.”) (emphasis added).10
    Even if the VA could be said to have responded to Mr. Alford’s fourth request in some
    general way that might arguably make §552(a)(6)(C)(i) inapplicable, the Court would still have to
    analyze defendant’s motion to a far greater extent than the 203-word footnote would suggest
    Failure to exhaust administrative remedies in a FOIA matter “is not jurisdictional because the
    10 Because, as described earlier in this opinion, there appears to have been so many lapses in competence in this
    case7 the Court will not go so far as to question whether there has been a violation of counsel’s duty of candor to the
    Court. But it is telling that the pro se plaintiff in this matter did take the time to read the cases counsel cited ~ even
    if only in her footnotes _ and correctly found her use of certain quotations to be wholly unsupportive of the
    propositions for which she used them.
    10
    FQIA does not unequivocally make it so.” Wilbur v. C.I.A., 
    355 F.3d 675
    , 677 (D.C. Cir. 2004)
    (per curiam) (quoting Hidalgo v. FBI, 
    344 F.3d 1256
    , 1258 (D.C. Cir. 2003)). Rather, in FOIA
    litigation, exhaustion is a jurisprudential doctrine that can bar judicial review if both the “particular
    administrative scheme” at issue and the “purposes of exhaustion” would support that conclusion.
    The D.C. Circuit has squarely held that the FOIA’s administrative scheme “favors treating
    failure to exhaust as a bar to judicial review.” 
    Hidalgo, 344 F.3d at 1259
    , See also 5 U.S.C.
    §552(a)(3); 38 C.F.R. § 1559(f). The purposes of exhaustion include 1) preventing premature
    interference with agency processes, 2) giving the parties and the Court the benefit of the agency’s
    experience and expertise, and 3) to compile an adequate record for review. See 
    Wilbur, 335 F.3d at 677
    .
    Although the FOIA’s administrative scheme tends to “favor[] treating failure to exhaust as
    a bar to judicial review,” 
    Hidalgo, 344 F.3d at 1259
    , that same scheme also requires agencies to
    be responsive to FOIA requests in the first instance, and with certain particularity See 5 U.S.C.
    §552(a)(6); 38 C.F.R. .§§1.557(0), 1559(d). With respect to Mr. Alford’s fourth request (and, until
    the VA filed its motion for summary judgment, his third, as well), the VA failed in this regard.
    Further, Alford cannot be said to have bypassed the agency’s administrative process because the
    agency’s failure to acknowledge his request both violated its own regulations, see 38 C.F.R. §
    1557(a) (requiring acknowledgement of requests); 
    id. at §
    1557(d) (governing the VA’s procedure
    in making adverse FOIA determinations including notice to the requester of his appellate rights),
    and denied him the opportunity to comply with its regulations See 
    id. at §
    1559(d) (requiring an
    appeal to “clearly identify the determination being appealed”). The second purpose of exhaustion,
    allowing the parties and the Court to benefit from the agency’s experience and expertise, also does
    not favor dismissal here The VA’s months-long silence as to Mr. Alford’s latter two requests for
    11
    4a limited set of records about himself, while his appellate clock was ticking regarding his benefits
    denial, indicates a pattern of behavior suggesting that experience and expertise was not
    forthcoming, absent this litigation. Similar reasoning applies with respect to the completeness of
    the record for this Court to review, regarding which this Court felt the need to order counsel for
    the VA to supplement the record explaining what exactly a potentially critical document was See
    [19].ll The defendant’s motion to dismiss is thus denied.
    C. Qid. at § 
    552(a)(6)(C).
    13
    This Court may award litigation costs reasonably incurred in a FOIA cases “in which the
    complainant has substantially prevailed.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(E)(i). One way for a FOIA plaintiff
    to establish his eligibility for costs is via a “voluntary or unilateral change in position by the
    agency. . .” § 552(a)(4)(E)(ii). This ‘catalyst’ theory of eligibility for costs is sometimes explained
    in terms of reasonable FOIA costs and fees being merited if “the litigation substantially caused the
    requested records to be released.” ACLU v. U.S. Dep't of Homeland Sec., 
    810 F. Supp. 2d 267
    , 274
    (D.D.C. 2011) (intemal quotation marks omitted).
    ln addition to being eligible for costs, a plaintiff must also be entitled to them. Weisberg
    v. U.S. Dep't of Justice, 
    745 F.2d 1476
    , 1495 (D.C.Cir.1984). ln a typical FOIA case, entitlement
    “entails a balancing of four factors: (1) the benefit of the release to the public; (2) the commercial
    benefit of the release to the plaintiff; (3) the nature of the plaintiffs interest; and (4) the
    reasonableness of the agency’s withholding.” 
    Id. at 1498.
    The balancing of these factors is subject
    to wide discretion by the district court, see T ax Analysts v. U.S. Dep't of Justice, 
    965 F.2d 1092
    ,
    1094 (D.C.Cir.1992), but the D.C. Circuit has explained that the first three factors, which do not
    on their face favor the awarding of costs here, are meant to “assist a court in distinguishing between
    requesters who seek documents for public informational purposes and those who seek documents
    for private advantage” Davy v. CIA, 
    550 F.3d 1155
    , 1160 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (emphasis added).
    This, however, is not a typical FOIA case Mr. Alford did not intend this matter to fall
    under the FOIA. Rather, he sought to exercise rights that he claims to have as an accredited
    representative of the Military Officers Association of Arnerica7 see [10] at *98, to conduct an
    administrative review of his records See [7-3] at *2. The VA never explained to Mr. Alford, nor
    to the Court, why Mr. Alford could not examine his records via the non-FOIA process, as he
    alleged he has a right to do. lnstead, it was the VA that treated Mr. Alford’s request to review his
    14
    records as a FOIA request and then, aware that Mr. Alford was seeking his records for the purpose
    of assisting his preparation of an appeal from the VA’s termination of his benefits, which has a
    deadline imposed by the VA, the VA became non-responsive at a critical juncture in the parties’
    correspondence Under these circumstances7 Mr. Alford did not seek to leverage the FOlA “for
    private advantage” in the way envisioned in Davy. With the first three factors awash, the Court
    will apply the fourth factor as it relates to the VA’s unreasonable intransigence with respect to Mr.
    Alford’s September 2016 request
    “The mere filing of the complaint and subsequent release of documents” is insufficient to
    show a causal nexus Weisberg v. DOJ, 
    745 F.2d 1476
    , 1496 (D.C. Cir. 1984)). Rather, it must
    be established that it is “more probable than not that the government would not have performed
    the desired act absent the lawsuit.” Conservation Force v. Jewell, 
    160 F. Supp. 3d 194
    , 202-03
    (D.D.C. 2016) (applying Pub. Citizen Health Research Grp. v. Young, 
    909 F.2d 546
    , 550 (D.C.
    Cir. 1990) to the FOlA context). Here, the VA admits it initially made a determination that Mr.
    Alford’s request did not merit a response First Grant decl. at para. 17. lt was only the onset of
    this litigation that caused it to respond, and explain that there, in fact, were no lWRPs created for
    Mr. Alford after the 2010 plan expired, despite the normal practice of updating the plans annually.
    See 
    id. at para.
    19 (discussing annual review dates). The Boolean change in the VA’s approach ~
    going from wholly non-responsive, to providing a reasonably detailed explanation as to why there
    were no documents responsive to Mr. Alford’s September request, for the purposes of this case
    where Mr. Alford was subject to agency-imposed deadlines in a related matter, represents the kind
    of changed course that merits an award of costs to Mr. Alford, at least to the extent of his filing
    fee
    15
    ln addition, the VA has at this stage lost its summary judgment motion as to Mr. Alford’s
    first two requests lt also has failed to make any record whatsoever as to its processing of his
    fourth FOIA request. The facts of this case therefore merit “compensation for enduring an agency’s
    unreasonable obduracy in refusing to comply with the [FOIA’s] requirements” LaSalle Extension
    Univ. v. F. T. C., 
    627 F.2d 481
    , 484 (D.C. Cir. 1980). The Court accordingly awards Mr. Alford
    the cost of his filing fee for this lawsuit
    D. Motion for Leave to Amend Complaint to Request a Hearing
    On May 22, 2017, Mr. Alford filed a motion to leave to amend his complaint a second
    time, merely to request a hearing. F ederal Rule of Civil Procedure 15(a)(2) provides, “a party may
    amend its pleading only with the opposing party’s written consent or the court’s leave The court
    should freely give leave when justice so requires.” The Court does not find relief under Rule
    15(a)(2) to be appropriate here The path ahead in this matter appears to the Court to be rather
    straightforward -the VA must reconcile why it did not search its CWINRS database with respect
    to Mr. Alford’s first two requests; the matter of his third request has been resolved; and his fourth
    request, clear upon its face, remains outstanding The Court will order the defendant to file a status
    report as to the outstanding issues within 30 days
    Despite the VA’s and counsel’s numerous unforced errors in this case and the Court’s own
    frustrations laid bare in this Opinion, the Court does not see evidence of bad faith that might merit
    a hearing. Scheduling a hearing at this juncture would be unlikely to bring any more swift or
    complete resolution to the issues outstanding in this case, and it does not appear to the Court that
    justice requires an amendment in this instance
    16
    IV. Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, it is hereby:
    ORDERED that defendant’s Motion for summary judgment [7] is DENIED with respect
    to Mr. Alford’s FOIA requests of May 18, 2016, June 2, 2016, and GRANTED with respect to Mr.
    Alford’s FOIA request of September 8, 2016. Summary judgment will be entered accordingly lt
    is
    FURTHER ORDERED that the defendant’s Motion to dismiss [7] at *1 n.l Mr. Alford’s
    fourth FOIA request is DENIED. lt is
    FURTHER ORDERED that the defendant shall pay to Mr. Alford the sum of $400 in
    restitution for the filing fee for this lawsuit. lt is
    FURTHER ORDERED that the defendant shall file status report as to its search for and
    production of any additional information responsive to Mr. Alford’s first and second requests, and
    its processing of Mr. Alford’s fourth FOIA request, within 30 days of the date of this Order.
    SO ORDERED.
    Date: § /j_%//,/{ t
    Royce . Lamberth
    United States District Judge
    17