Application of Jason Leopold and Buzzfeed, Inc. for Access to Certain Sealed Court Records ( 2020 )


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  •                                  UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    IN THE MATTER OF APPLICATION OF  Miscellaneous Action No. 20-95 (BAH)
    JASON LEOPOLD AND BUZZFEED, INC.
    FOR ACCESS TO CERTAIN SEALED     Chief Judge Beryl A. Howell
    COURT RECORDS
    MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
    On September 17, 2020, petitioners Jason Leopold and Buzzfeed, Inc., applied to this
    Court for an order directing the unsealing of currently sealed applications, along with any
    supporting documents and resulting court orders, filed by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency
    (“DEA”) since May 31, 2020 that were submitted for a non-Title 21, U.S. Code, investigative or
    law enforcement purpose. Appl. ¶ 3, ECF No. 1.1 This petition was prompted by information
    that, over the two-week period from May 31, 2020 to June 14, 2020, the Attorney General
    delegated non-Title 21 duties to the DEA. Id. ¶ 2 (citing Ex. A, Memorandum, dated May 31,
    2020, from Timothy Shea, Acting Administrator of the DEA, to the Deputy Attorney General).
    Petitioners opted to limit the types of judicial records sought to be unsealed in response to the
    petition to DEA applications for: (1) warrants issued pursuant to the Stored Communications Act
    (“SCA”), see 
    18 U.S.C. § 2703
    (a); (2) court orders issued pursuant to section 2703(d) of the
    SCA; and (3) court orders authorizing the installation and use of pen register and trap and trace
    (“PR/TT”) devices, see 
    id.
     § 3123.
    Rather than file a request for these records directly from the U.S. Department of Justice
    or its component, DEA, pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), 
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    ,
    1
    Petitioners’ application was directly referred by the Clerk’s Office to the Chief Judge because it “pertains
    to a criminal investigative or grand jury matter to which no judge has been assigned.” D.D.C. LCrR 57.6.
    1
    which expressly provides exceptions to disclosure that may be applicable to the records sought to
    be unsealed here, see, e.g., 
    id.
     § 552(b)(7), (c), petitioners are seeking, under the authority of In
    re Leopold to Unseal Certain Electronic Surveillance Applications and Orders (“Leopold”), 
    964 F.3d 1121
     (D.C. Cir. 2020), now on remand before this Court, to have the U.S. District Court for
    the District of Columbia search for, identify, review, unseal as appropriate, and make publicly
    available these records, Pet’rs’ Mem. Supp. Appl. at 9–10, ECF No. 1-1. The parties in both the
    instant case and the remanded, earlier case, which was brought by Leopold and the Reporters
    Committee for Freedom of the Press (“RCFP”) to unseal decades of sealed investigative
    applications and orders, In re Application of Jason Leopold, No. 13-mc-712 (“In re
    Leopold/RCFP”), were directed to show cause why the two cases should not be consolidated.
    See Minute Order to Show Cause (Oct. 6, 2020); Minute Order to Show Cause (Oct. 6, 2020), In
    re Leopold/RCFP, No. 13-mc-712. While the petitioners in both cases have no objection to
    consolidation, the government opposes. See Pet’rs’ Resp. to Order to Show Cause (“Pet’rs’
    Resp.”), ECF No. 3; Pet’rs’ Resp. to Sept. 1, 2020 Minute Order (“Pet’rs’ In re Leopold/RCFP
    Resp.”) at 15–16, In re Leopold/RCFP, No. 13-mc-712, ECF No. 68; Gov’t’s Resp. to Court’s
    Sept. 1, 2020 Minute Order Following Remand from the D.C. Circuit (“Gov’t’s In re
    Leopold/RCFP Resp.”) at 24, In re Leopold/RCFP, No. 13-mc-712, ECF No. 67. For the
    reasons set out below, the two cases will be consolidated.
    I.     LEGAL STANDARD FOR CONSOLIDATION
    A court may consolidate two pending actions if they “involve a common question of law
    or fact.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 42(a)(2). Consolidation “is permitted as a matter of convenience and
    economy,” Hall v. Hall, 
    138 S. Ct. 1118
    , 1127 (2018) (quoting Johnson v. Manhattan Ry. Co.,
    
    289 U.S. 479
    , 496 (1933)), and “is ordinarily left to the sound discretion of the District Court,”
    2
    Moten v. Bricklayers, Masons, & Plasterers, Int’l Union Am., 
    543 F.2d 224
    , 228 n.8 (D.C. Cir.
    1976); see also United Bhd. Carpenters & Joiners v. Operative Plasterers’ & Cement Masons’
    Int’l Ass’n, 
    721 F.3d 678
    , 689–90 (D.C. Cir. 2013). In exercising that discretion, district courts
    must weigh any potential prejudice and confusion resulting from consolidation against the risk of
    inconsistent rulings on common factual and legal questions, particularly involving identical or
    overlapping parties, and the concomitant burden on the parties and the court, length of time, and
    relative expense of proceeding with separate lawsuits if they are not consolidated. See 9A
    Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice & Procedure § 2383 (3d ed. 2020)
    (citing Arnold v. Eastern Air Lines, Inc., 
    681 F.2d 186
    , 193 (4th Cir. 1982)): Cantrell v. GAF
    Corp., 
    999 F.2d 1007
    , 1011 (6th Cir. 1993) (same); Johnson v. Celotex Corp., 
    899 F.2d 1281
    ,
    1285 (2d Cir. 1990) (same); Hendrix v. Raybestos-Manhattan, Inc., 
    776 F.2d 1492
    , 1495 (11th
    Cir. 1985) (same); see also Singh v. Carter, 
    185 F. Supp. 3d 11
    , 18 (D.D.C. 2016); Royer v. Fed.
    Bureau Prisons, 
    292 F.R.D. 60
    , 61 (D.D.C. 2013); Nat’l Ass’n Mortg. Brokers v. Bd. Governors
    Fed. Reserve Sys., 
    770 F. Supp. 2d 283
    , 286 (D.D.C. 2011).
    II.    DISCUSSION
    Petitioners Jason Leopold and Buzzfeed in the instant case, and petitioners Leopold and
    intervenor RCFP in In re Leopold/RCFP, seek to unseal currently sealed investigative
    applications and related orders filed by the government in this Court, pursuant to the SCA, 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 2701
     et seq., and the Pen Register Act (“PRA”), 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 3121
    , et seq. Given the
    obvious common issues of law and fact raised by both petitions, the parties in both cases were
    directed, as noted, to provide their views on consolidation. At the same time, the parties in In re
    Leopold/RCFP were directed to provide their views on how that case should proceed on remand.
    See Minute Order to Show Cause (Sept. 1, 2020), In re Leopold/RCFP, No. 13-mc-712. The
    3
    question of consolidation turns, in part, on how In re Leopold/RCFP will proceed on remand,
    and thus the D.C. Circuit’s decision and its import in carrying out the mandate on remand are
    discussed first, before turning to the reasons strongly militating in favor of consolidation of the
    petitions in both cases.
    A.      The Hubbard Factors and the D.C. Circuit’s Leopold Decision
    The D.C. Circuit in Leopold confirmed that disclosure of the judicial records at issue in
    both the instant case and in In re Leopold/RCFP is governed by the six-factor test of United
    States v. Hubbard, 
    650 F.2d 293
     (D.C. Cir. 1980). Leopold, 
    964 F.3d at 1130
    . Those six
    Hubbard factors are “(1) the need for public access to the documents at issue; (2) the extent of
    previous public access to the documents; (3) the fact that someone has objected to disclosure,
    and the identity of that person; (4) the strength of any generalized property and privacy interests
    asserted; (5) the possibility of prejudice to those opposing disclosure; and (6) the purposes for
    which the documents were introduced during the judicial proceedings.” 
    Id. at 1131
     (quoting
    MetLife, Inc. v. Fin. Stability Oversight Council, 
    865 F.3d 661
    , 665 (D.C. Cir. 2017)). Based on
    its construction of the statutory authorities implicated by the judicial records at issue, the D.C.
    Circuit concluded that a strong presumption of public access applies to SCA warrants and
    2703(d) orders but not to PR/TT orders. See 
    id.
     at 1130–31 (“With respect to SCA
    materials, . . . Congress displaced neither the common-law presumption of access nor
    the Hubbard test for making unsealing decisions [and] [w]ith respect to pen register
    orders, . . . Congress did displace the presumption, but did not displace the Hubbard test as the
    standard for unsealing. Therefore, when faced with a request to unseal either kind of material,
    the district court should apply the traditional Hubbard balancing test—albeit without a thumb on
    4
    the scale in the case of pen register orders.”). Further, the D.C. Circuit held that “the burden of
    producing judicial records may not permanently foreclose their unsealing.” 
    Id. at 1134
    .
    In so holding, the D.C. Circuit rejected this Court’s reading of Hubbard as setting out the
    six enumerated factors, in part III.A of the opinion, as “generalized interests,” Hubbard, 650
    F.2d at 317, which “can be weighed without examining the contents of the documents at issue,”
    id., and also allowing consideration of additional “particularized” factors, which required focus
    “on the documents’ contents,” id. at 322. Following part III.A., titled “The ‘Generalized
    Interests’ for and Against Public Access in This Case,” the Hubbard Court outlined
    consideration of such particularized factors in two separate subsequent sections, parts III.B,
    “Particularized Factors That May Have Weighed Against Nondisclosure,” id. at 322, and III.C,
    “Particularized Privacy Interests Which May Weigh in Favor of Denying Public Access,” id. at
    323. Part IV of the Hubbard opinion, “The Procedures to Be Followed in the Supplemental
    Proceedings,” id. at 324, summarized the Circuit’s analysis of the “generalized interests at
    stake,” and observed that its conclusion “that the seal on the documents at issue should be
    retained” could be overcome on remand should the trial judge “justif[y] disclosure on the basis
    of the ‘particularized’ factors we suggest or on some other basis,” id.2 In other words, in
    Hubbard, the generalized factors were a critical part, but not the entirety, of the analysis, as the
    D.C. Circuit now holds, see Leopold, 
    964 F.3d at 1132
     (finding that six enumerated factors of
    Hubbard test were “adopted to ‘fully account for the various public and private interests at stake’
    in sealing or unsealing judicial records” (quoting MetLife, 865 F.3d at 666)).
    2
    On remand, the district court in Hubbard structured its analysis according to the Circuit’s opinion,
    separately analyzing the six generalized interests for and against disclosure and then the “particularized justifications
    for the release of individual documents or groups of documents,” and concluding that the documents at issue should
    be unsealed. Hubbard, 650 F.2d at 332. The district court’s decision on remand was reversed for incorrect analysis
    of the particularized justifications. See id. at 332–33.
    5
    Relying on the particularized factors and interests highlighted by the Hubbard Court in
    examining the contents of the documents sought to be unsealed, this Court previously found that
    “[w]here the type of record sought to be unsealed requires careful review prior to unsealing to
    ensure that information properly retained under seal is not disclosed, and where the volume of
    the materials sought be unsealed amplifies the burden that undertaking such review will impose
    on a party and/or the Court, Hubbard properly allows a court to cognize such burden in weighing
    a motion to unseal.” In re Leopold, 
    327 F. Supp. 3d 1
    , 25 (D.D.C. 2018) (citing Hubbard, 650
    F.3d at 323). This Court then declined to recognize a retrospective right of access, given the
    decades of sealed applications at issue, “in light of the considerable administrative burden that
    such extensive unsealing . . . would impose on the [U.S. Attorney’s Office] and the Clerk's
    Office, due to the necessity of identifying, reviewing and redacting sensitive law enforcement
    and privacy-protected information from any unsealed records.” Id. at 7. Notably, on appeal, the
    government did not defend that conclusion. Leopold, 
    964 F.3d at 1132
    .
    Since Hubbard itself does not “mention administrative burden as a ‘particularized . . .
    other interest,’" 
    id.
     (quoting Hubbard, 650 F.2d at 323), the D.C. Circuit concluded that no such
    particularized reasons “based on the documents’ contents” can be “reasons for sealing entire
    categories of past and future filings,” id. (emphasis in original). As a result, “although
    administrative burden is relevant to how and when documents are released, it does not justify
    precluding release forever,” and no matter how time-consuming production may be, “time-
    consuming is not the same thing as impossible.” Id. at 1133. Accordingly, the Circuit held that
    “the burden of producing judicial records may not permanently foreclose their unsealing.” Id. at
    1134.
    6
    B.      Remand Proceedings in In re Leopold/RCFP, 13-mc-712
    In outlining their views on remand proceedings in In re Leopold/RCFP, the parties focus
    their responses on prospective relief, that is, on the mechanism for unsealing investigative
    materials going forward, and acknowledge that they currently have no plan for implementing the
    D.C. Circuit’s mandate in Leopold as to historical materials. See Gov’t’s In re Leopold/RCFP
    Resp. at 14–16. Nonetheless, the parties evidently anticipate that retrospective relief will be
    limited in two significant ways: first, any disclosures from sealed records will encompass only
    the specific materials petitioners requested and, second, for the most part, no actual sealed
    judicial records will be unsealed, but rather certain agreed-upon information will be “extract[ed]”
    from those sealed documents. See id. at 2. That anticipated plan seems far off-base from the
    D.C. Circuit’s mandate, however.
    The D.C. Circuit in Leopold indicated that the documents themselves must be unsealed
    and rejected the steps already taken to make publicly accessible docket and other information for
    these judicial records as falling short of the requisite disclosure. As a reminder of what the D.C.
    Circuit found insufficient, this Court had developed a workable solution to provide public access
    to both retrospective and prospective docket information for SCA applications for warrants and
    orders, under 
    18 U.S.C. §§ 2703
    (a), (c) and (d); for PR/TT applications and orders, under 
    18 U.S.C. §3123
    ; and for records, at the request of foreign governments, under Mutual Legal
    Assistance Treaties (“MLATs”), 
    18 U.S.C. § 3512
    . On a retrospective basis, the Court
    “provided an unprecedented level of transparency into the process of judicial review of the [U.S.
    Attorney’s Office’s] use of PR/TT and SCA authorities to collect evidence in criminal
    investigations,” In re Leopold to Unseal Certain Electronic Surveillance Applications and
    Orders, 
    300 F. Supp. 3d 61
    , 100 (D.D.C. 2018), by unsealing (1) the total numbers of U.S.
    7
    Attorney’s Office (“USAO”)-filed PR/TT matters filed annually during the period of 2008
    through 2016;3 (2) the total numbers of SCA § 2703(d) and warrant matters, retrieved using
    certain search criteria, filed by the USAO and Department of Justice (“DOJ”) components during
    this period; (3) certain docket information concerning PR/TTs the USAO initiated during this
    period; (4) over 100 pages of redacted documents from four representative sample PR/TT
    matters from 2012; and (5) fifteen categories of extracted information from a representative
    sample of ten percent of USAO-filed PR/TT matters from 2012, id. On a prospective basis, the
    Clerk's Office and both the USAO and DOJ adopted administrative and operational changes in
    processing sealed government surveillance applications in criminal investigative matters to
    permit such applications to be filed electronically, pursuant to Memoranda of Understanding
    (“MOUs”) with the Clerk’s Office, see D.D.C. LCrR 49(e)(4), using a standardized format for
    case captions that contained no personally identifying information, but, depending on the type of
    application, included pertinent information about: “(1) the number of target telephone lines,
    subscriber accounts, and/or devices that are the application's subject or subjects; (2) the type of
    target or targets (e.g., a landline, cellular, or mobile telephone; email account; cell tower; or other
    facility or device) subject to the application; (3) the service provider to which the order would be
    directed; and (4) the primary offense statute(s) under investigation.” Id. at 105.4 Further,
    biannual docket reports have been issued about various types of sealed criminal investigative
    3
    See Order and Notices, In re Appl. of Jason Leopold to Unseal Certain Electronic Surveillance Appl.
    and Orders, No. 13-mc-712 (Sept. 21, 2016, Feb. 22, 2017, and Apr. 24, 2017), ECF Nos. 22, 32, and 37;
    Order and Notice, In re Disclosure of Pen Registers from January 1, 2017 through September 30, 2017, No.
    18-mc-61 (Apr. 30, 2018), ECF No. 1; Standing Order No. 18-46, Disclosure of Limited Docket Lists for
    Certain Sealed Appls. Filed by USAO-DC (Oct. 2, 2018).
    4
    The referenced MOUs are available on the Court’s website, at MOUs—Electronic Filing of Sealed
    Applications and Orders, U.S. DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA,
    https://www.dcd.uscourts.gov/mous-electronic-filing-sealed-applications-and-orders (last visited Dec. 10, 2020).
    8
    matters filed twelve through six months prior to each report's publication that provide
    information about the total numbers of such matters and, as reflected in the standardized caption
    for each matter, the number and type of target accounts (e.g., landline telephone, cellular
    telephone, and/or email), the providers’ names, and the primary offense statutes under
    investigation. See Standing Orders Regarding Unsealing of Limited Docket Information for
    Sealed Applications, U.S. DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA,
    https://www.dcd.uscourts.gov/news/standing-orders-regarding-unsealing-limited-docket-
    information-sealed-applications (last visited Dec. 10, 2020).
    This comprehensive solution for providing limited transparency as to the nature of the
    sealed dockets for investigative matters, while avoiding the administrative burden of undertaking
    the time-consuming and meticulous process of unsealing appropriately redacted documents
    contained in those sealed dockets, was rejected by the D.C. Circuit as inadequate, because those
    docket “reports are not the court dockets themselves and do not indicate whether an application
    for a warrant or order was granted or denied.” Id. at 1132. Consequently, the parties in In re
    Leopold/RCFP agree that the biannual generation of this unsealed docket information for sealed
    investigative applications should be discontinued. See Pet’rs’ In re Leopold/RCFP Resp. at 11;
    Gov’t’s In re Leopold/RCFP Resp. at 18. Accordingly, the mechanism used by this Court for
    several years to provide limited transparency regarding the sealed dockets for sealed
    investigative applications filed in this Court by both the USAO and DOJ under the SCA, the
    PRA, and MLATs is now discontinued.
    The Circuit also rejected the proposition that a public right to access existed as to certain
    information in the filings but not the filings themselves, id. at 1131, and instead contemplated
    that the “documents [must be] released, id. at 1133 (emphasis added). These statements, plus the
    9
    rejection of the Court’s alternative solution to provide the public with limited information about
    the sealed investigative applications and related judicial records without conducting wholesale
    unsealing, indicate that SCA and PR/TT materials must be unsealed both retrospectively and
    prospectively.5
    This conclusion comports with the Circuit’s more specific instructions on how to proceed
    on remand. The Circuit held that “[a]dministrative burden is relevant to how and when a judicial
    record may be unsealed, but not to whether it may be released at all.” Id. at 1123 (emphasis in
    original). As the Circuit noted, this Court previously determined that the Hubbard factors
    weighed in favor of access to the investigative materials at issue, see Leopold, 
    964 F.3d at
    1126
    (citing In re Leopold, 327 F. Supp. at 22), and held that the materials were not subject to
    wholesale unsealing only because of the administrative burden involved, see id. (citing In re
    Leopold, 327 F. Supp. 3d at 5, 7, 21–22). Ejecting administrative burden from the Hubbard
    analysis, as the Circuit has directed, see id. at 1132, dictates that the investigative materials must
    be unsealed, with some flexibility left to the district court to manage “the manner or timing of
    unsealing,” id. at 1133, for example, to allow redactions to be made over a sufficient time period
    that “the U.S. Attorney’s and Clerk’s Offices” need not “drop everything and make unsealing
    their top priority,” id.
    The parties, in contrast, assert that production of “extractions” of certain information
    from the sealed investigative materials at issue going back to 2008 is sufficient retrospective
    relief to comply with the Circuit’s Leopold mandate. See Pet’rs’ In re Leopold/RCFP Resp. at
    5
    Moreover, the government’s acknowledgement that the Circuit’s mandate requires prospective unsealing of
    the judicial records at issue, see Gov’t’s In re Leopold/RCFP Resp. at 2–14, undercuts any suggestion that historical
    investigative records of the same types need not also be unsealed, as the logic of the Circuit’s opinion provides no
    basis for so distinguishing between past and future filed investigative materials.
    10
    6–8; Gov’t’s In re Leopold/RCFP Resp. at 14–15. 6 This position, however, is at odds with the
    Circuit’s clear indication that a right of access pertains “to the filings themselves,” not just the
    information contained therein, see Leopold, 
    964 F.3d at 1131
    .
    Further, although petitioners acknowledge “that the D.C. Circuit’s opinion in . . . Leopold
    does not preclude Petitioners from agreeing voluntarily to narrow the scope of the retrospective
    relief sought in this litigation” and state that they “do not intend to ask the Court on remand to
    grant additional retrospective relief beyond the retrospective relief that [they] previously
    requested,” Pet’rs’ In re Leopold/RCFP Resp. at 5, in the next breath, they assert that they do not
    view “any agreed-upon limitations on the scope of [their] retrospective relief . . . [to] curtail or
    otherwise restrict the right of Petitioners—or any other member of the press or public—to seek
    the unsealing of docket sheets and/or other judicial records[,] in particular SCA or PRA
    matters[,] on a case-by-case basis.” Id. at 6. Indeed, even before any unsealing procedure has
    been settled in In Re Leopold/RCFP, petitioners Leopold and Buzzfeed in the instant case seek
    unsealing of entire records, not merely an extraction of information, should the requested
    materials exist. Appl. ¶¶ 3, 18–20.
    Petitioners appear to contemplate that, as an alternative to filing requests for investigative
    records directly to federal law enforcement agencies, pursuant to FOIA’s statutory framework
    and clearly delineated exemptions, the norm going forward is to file petitions for unsealing of
    such records to this Court under Leopold’s directive. The Court and its Clerk’s Office, unlike an
    agency subject to FOIA, is not equipped with electronic search tools beyond the federal
    Judiciary’s Case Management/Electronic Case Files system (CM/ECF) nor staffed to process and
    6
    The government proposes unsealing, rather than providing extractions of, some requested sealed
    investigative materials filed since 2015, see Gov’t’s In re Leopold/RCFP Resp. at 15, but otherwise suggests that
    retrospective relief will take the form of extractions rather than unsealing.
    11
    respond to “case-by-case” requests for unsealing. Thus, the clear import of the Circuit’s decision
    in Leopold, together with its nod to the district court’s flexibility to manage the unsealing
    process, is that historical SCA and PR/TT materials are subject to redaction and unsealing—not
    merely to an extraction process, even if these petitioners would be satisfied with such process.
    Upon unsealing, petitioners and any other interested members of the public or media may
    conduct their own searches of publicly accessible judicial records to identify any such records of
    interest.
    C.      Consolidation of the Instant Case with In Re Leopold/RCFP
    Against this backdrop summarizing the requirements and import of the D.C. Circuit’s
    decision and mandate in Leopold, the Court now turns to the question of whether consolidation
    of the instant case with In re Leopold/RCFP is appropriate. In response to the Court’s order to
    show cause why the instant case should not be consolidated with In re Leopold/RCFP,
    petitioners state they “do not oppose consolidation” but “do not view consolidation as needed to
    guard against the risk of inconsistent rulings . . . ; nor, in petitioners view, will consolidation
    result in greater convenience or economy.” Pet’rs’ Resp. at 1. For its part, the government
    opposes consolidation, stating that the instant petition is “a request for the unsealing of a separate
    and new and discrete matter, not a request for wholesale unsealing like what is involved” in In re
    Leopold/RCFP. Gov’t’s In re Leopold/RCFP Resp. at 24. Further, the government “neither
    admit[s] nor den[ies] the existence” of the documents that petitioners seek in the instant case,
    Gov’t’s Opp’n Pet’rs’ Appl. ¶ 4, ECF No. 5, and argues that this application is “an inappropriate
    legal vehicle to compel a prosecutor to admit or deny the existence of any ongoing criminal
    investigation,” id. ¶ 9.
    12
    Consolidation will promote judicial economy for the Court, including its Clerk’s Office
    staff, as well as result in greater economy of time and resources for the parties, because of the
    considerable substantive overlap between the subject matter of the two cases. Both cases seek
    unsealing of the same types of records, though the instant case has a more limited scope. Thus,
    assuming they exist, the materials that petitioners seek to have unsealed in the instant case will
    ultimately be unsealed in the course of implementing the D.C. Circuit’s mandate in Leopold.
    Certainly, the same substantive analysis would apply in both cases. Most importantly,
    implementation of any operational process to search for, identify, redact, and unseal as
    appropriate, would be the same in both cases. In this regard, proceeding on separate tracks in
    two separate cases seeking unsealing of the overlapping sets of records is nonsensical, and may
    result in confusion.
    To be sure, consolidating this case with In re Leopold/RCFP may mean petitioners here
    will not have access to the requested records as quickly as they would like. The materials
    requested here, to the extent they exist, will be unsealed not on demand but rather in the course
    of the wholesale unsealing that, as explained, implementation of the D.C. Circuit’s mandate in
    Leopold requires. Thus, consolidation could be understood to delay resolution of the instant
    case, which in some instances would weigh against consolidation. See, e.g., Nat’l Ass’n Mortg.
    Brokers, 
    770 F. Supp. 2d at 286
    . That is not so here, however, because any delay would be a
    byproduct not of consolidation but of the fact that the materials sought here would be unsealed in
    the course of the wholesale unsealing that must be conducted In re Leopold/RCFP, and that the
    wholesale unsealing involves a large volume of records and will be a time-consuming process.
    Given the overlap between In re Leopold/RCFP and the instant case, such possible delay poses
    no reason to proceed with separate cases. Conversely, consolidation will have no impact on the
    13
    timely resolution of In re Leopold/RCFP, since the materials sought in the instant case, if they
    exist at all, will eventually be unsealed in In re Leopold/RCFP anyway.
    Moreover, proceeding separately with both cases—let alone, with other potential
    FOIA-like petitions for public access to sealed investigative judicial records—would impose a
    considerable burden on the Court. Responding to potentially innumerable individualized
    unsealing requests for large volumes of sealed records, or highly specific categories of records,
    such as the request in the instant case, would occupy substantially more judicial attention and
    resources than directing and overseeing the systematic, wholesale unsealing of all materials
    related to applications for SCA warrants, SCA section 2703(d) orders, and PR/TTs. Whether
    these materials are unsealed piecemeal, namely in response to individual petitioners’ requests, or
    categorically, the end result, of course, is the same: the records will be unsealed. For these
    reasons, consolidation is appropriate.
    The government argues that consolidation is unnecessary since the instant petition seeks
    unsealing of “a separate and new and discrete matter,” Gov’t’s In re Leopold/RCFP Resp. at 24,
    but this argument overlooks the fact that implementation of the D.C. Circuit’s mandate in
    Leopold encompasses unsealing of the materials petitioners request here, too. The government
    likewise ignores the substantial judicial-economy reasons for systematically unsealing all
    materials related to applications for SCA warrants, SCA section 2703(d) orders, and PR/TTs.
    The Court is not equipped, and does not intend, to manage and respond to individual unsealing
    requests like the one in the instant case, releasing investigative applications, orders, and related
    materials bit by bit at the discretion of any petitioner with the initiative to file an application to
    unseal some given subset of such records, as easily as a FOIA request is made to a federal
    agency. Instead, the D.C. Circuit’s mandate to “release[]” the “judicial records” at issue here,
    14
    Leopold, 
    964 F.3d at 1134
    , will be implemented by unsealing all of those records, in redacted
    form as appropriate, including the records petitioners seek in the instant case.
    III.     ORDER
    Accordingly, upon consideration of petitioners’ Response to Order to Show Cause, ECF
    No. 3, petitioners’ Response to September 1, 2020 Minute Order, In re Leopold, No. 13-mc-712,
    ECF No. 68, and the government’s Response to Court’s September 1, 2020 Minute Order
    Following Remand from the D.C. Circuit, In re Leopold, No. 13-mc-712, ECF No. 67, it is
    hereby
    ORDERED that this case be CONSOLIDATED with In re Application of Jason
    Leopold, No. 13-mc-712; and it is further
    ORDERED that all filings in these consolidated cases shall be made only in case no.
    13-mc-712; and it is further
    ORDERED that the Clerk shall close this case and transfer whatever parties are not
    identical to case no. 13-mc-712.
    SO ORDERED.
    Date: December 10, 2020.
    __________________________
    BERYL A. HOWELL
    Chief Judge
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