Flete-Garcia v. United States Marshals Service ( 2021 )


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  •                                UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    FULVIO FLETE-GARCIA,
    Plaintiff,
    Civil Action No. 18-2442 (RDM)
    v.
    UNITED STATES MARSHALS SERVICE,
    Defendant.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
    This case concerns the adequacy of the response by Defendant United States Marshals
    Service (“USMS”) to two Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), 
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    , records
    requests submitted by Plaintiff Fulvio Flete-Garcia, a federal prisoner proceeding pro se. The
    USMS previously moved for summary judgment, Dkt. 20, and the Court granted in part and
    denied in part that motion, Flete-Garcia v. USMS, No. 18-2442, __ F. Supp. 3d__, 
    2020 WL 1695127
    , at *7 (D.D.C. Apr. 7, 2020) (“Flete-Garcia I”).1 In particular, the Court was
    persuaded that the USMS properly invoked FOIA Exemption 7(C) to redact certain material but
    was unpersuaded that the USMS had conducted an adequate search for responsive records. 
    Id. at *5
    . In the same decision, the Court denied Plaintiff’s cross-motion for summary judgment. 
    Id. at *1
    .
    1
    Although the USMS characterized both its previous motion and this motion as “motion[s] to
    dismiss Plaintiff’s complaint, or in the alternative, for summary judgment,” Dkt. 20; Dkt. 34, the
    USMS filed an answer to the complaint prior to filing the motions, Dkt. 15, foreclosing dismissal
    pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b), see Fed. R. Civ. P. 12 (b) (stating that
    defenses “must be made before pleading if a responsive pleading is allowed”); see also Lockhart
    v. Coastal Intern. Sec., Inc., 
    905 F. Supp. 2d 105
    , 112 (D.D.C. 2012). The Court therefore treats
    the pending motion as one for summary judgment, as it did the previous motion. See Flete-
    Garcia I, 
    2020 WL 1695127
    , at *2–3.
    The USMS subsequently conducted a new search and released a handful of additional
    records to Plaintiff. Dkt. 34 at 5, 8 (SUMF ¶¶ 6, 16). In light of that further effort, the USMS
    now renews its motion for summary judgment. 
    Id.
     This time around, the USMS comes closer to
    carrying its burden. One remaining question, however, will prevent the Court from entering
    judgment in favor of the USMS. The Court will, accordingly, GRANT in part and DENY in
    part the USMS’s motion.
    I. BACKGROUND
    In July 2018, Plaintiff sent “two duplicative [FOIA] requests to the USMS,” which
    handles the transportation of federal detainees. Flete-Garcia I, 
    2020 WL 1695127
    , at *1. In
    both requests, Plaintiff sought “the dates and times of Plaintiff’s transportation between
    [Massachusetts Correctional Institution Cedar Junction at Walpole (“MCI Cedar Junction”)] and
    the federal courthouse between May 4, 2015 and January 17, 2018.” 
    Id.
     The only material
    difference in the two requests is that the first request “specified that the records could be located
    at MCI Cedar Junction,” while the second request specified that the records “were located at the
    USMS’s office in Washington, D.C.” 
    Id.
     After receiving no substantive response from the
    USMS, Plaintiff brought this action in October 2018. Id at *2; Dkt. 1.
    Shortly after this action was filed, the USMS conducted a search for responsive records,
    treating the two duplicative requests as a single request, and it released a five-page, partially
    redacted “USM-129 Individual Custody/Detention Report” to Plaintiff. Flete-Garcia I, 
    2020 WL 1695127
    , at *2. Then, “[i]n April 2019, the USMS moved . . . for summary judgment,
    arguing that it [had] conducted an adequate search and that the redactions it made were
    warranted under several FOIA exceptions.” Id.; see also Dkt. 20. Plaintiff opposed the motion
    and cross-moved for summary judgment. Dkt. 23; Dkt. 24.
    2
    With respect to the one document that was located and released in part, the Court
    concluded that the USMS’s redactions—which included “withhold[ing] the names and/or contact
    information of law enforcement personnel and prisoners unrelated to Plaintiff, . . . including
    those who were to be kept separate from [Plaintiff] while in custody,” Flete-Garcia I, 
    2020 WL 1695127
    , at *7 (quotation omitted)—were permissible pursuant to Exemption 7(C), which
    exempts disclosures “that ‘could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted invasion of
    personal privacy,’” in records “‘compiled for law enforcement purposes.’” Campbell v. U.S.
    Dep’t of Justice, 
    164 F.3d 20
    , 33 (D.C. Cir. 1998) (quoting 
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    (b)(7)(C)); 
    id. at 31
    (quoting 
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    (b)(7)(A)-(F)). The Court, accordingly, granted summary judgment in
    favor of the USMS as to the lawfulness of the redactions. Flete-Garcia I, 
    2020 WL 1695127
    , at
    *7.
    The Court was unpersuaded, however, that the “barebones declaration [that] the USMS
    proffer[ed] in support of its motion” satisfied the agency’s burden of showing that it had
    conducted an adequate search for other records. 
    Id. at *5
    . As explained in the declaration that
    the agency submitted in support of its motion, USMS personnel had contacted the agency’s
    Prisoner Operations Division (“POD”), which oversees federal detainees, and that office was
    unable to locate any records relating to Plaintiff. 
    Id. at *4
    . In addition, USMS FOIA personnel
    searched the Justice Detainee Information Population Management/Prisoner Tracking System
    database (“JDIS”), which itself contains more than one database, including the USMS Warrant
    Information Network System and the Prisoner Population Management/Prisoner Tracking
    System. 
    Id.
     That search located the five pages responsive to Plaintiff’s request. 
    Id.
     The
    declarant, USMS Associate General Counsel Clifford R.R. Kreiger, also contacted the USMS
    District Office for the District of Massachusetts, which indicated that it did not keep records
    3
    indexed by names of prisoners and that any records it maintained on Plaintiff would be related to
    accounting data. 
    Id.
    The Court concluded that the USMS was not entitled to summary judgment with respect
    to the adequacy of its search because the Krieger declaration had failed to describe “‘in
    reasonable detail the scope and method of the search[es]’” that the agency conducted. 
    Id.
    (quoting Abdeljabbar v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, 
    74 F. Supp. 3d 158
    , 168
    (D.D.C. 2014)). The declaration omitted “any detail regarding search terms or methodologies,
    possible custodians, or whether additional databases or files might contain the requested
    records.” 
    Id.
     It also did not specify whom Krieger contacted at the USMS District Office in
    Massachusetts or what he asked that person to do, and it did not explain why the fact that the
    District Office does not “keep records indexed by name of prisoners” meant that the office had
    no records responsive to Plaintiff’s FOIA request. 
    Id.
     As the Court summarized:
    Overall, the USMS’s evidence merely shows that (1) someone contacted the
    POD, which conducted a search of unidentified files using unidentified search
    criteria; (2) someone searched the Detainee Information System database, using
    unidentified search terms and specifications; and (3) Krieger “contacted”
    someone in the agency’s Massachusetts office, and that person indicated that the
    office did not keep records indexed by names of prisoners and, instead, only had
    accounting data.
    
    Id. at *5
    . The Court accordingly denied the USMS’s motion for summary judgment, but also
    denied Plaintiff’s cross-motion for summary judgment, noting that the USMS could supplement
    the Krieger declaration with additional information or conduct additional searches in response to
    Plaintiff’s FOIA request. 
    Id.
    The USMS opted to conduct a new search. Dkt. 34 at 5 (SUMF ¶ 6). That new search
    located “additional and more responsive data.” Dkt. 34-1 at 3 (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 9). In addition
    to the five-page USM-129 Individual Custody/Detention Report that the USMS’s first search had
    4
    identified, the new search found a one-page database printout logging twenty-three occasions
    when Plaintiff was transported by the USMS between May 4, 2015 and January 17, 2018, 
    id.
     at
    6–7 (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 20); Dkt. 36-1 at 1 (Ex. A). That is precisely the information that
    Plaintiff sought in his FOIA requests. In addition, the USMS’s supplemental search located two
    documents that the agency deemed “not responsive” but nonetheless released to Plaintiff “out of
    an abundance of caution:” (1) a “USMS Subject Report” and (2) a “USM-312” Personal History
    record, Dkt. 34-1 at 8 (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 25); Dkt. 36-2 at 5–7, 13–15 (Ex. B). The USMS
    redacted parts of these documents pursuant to FOIA Exemptions 6, 7(C), (E), and (F). Dkt. 34 at
    14; 
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    (b)(6), (7)(C), (E) & (F). “On April 22, 2020, the USMS, Office of General
    Counsel, sent the updated search results to the USMS District Office for the District of
    Massachusetts with a request that they mail them to” Plaintiff. Dkt. 34-1 at 8 (2d Krieger Decl.
    ¶ 26); see also Dkt. 36-2 (Ex. B).
    Having completed its supplement search, the USMS renewed its motion for summary
    judgment in July 2020, Dkt. 34, and the Court issued a Fox/Neal Order instructing Plaintiff to
    respond to the motion on or before August 11, 2020, Dkt. 35, a date also specified in the Court’s
    June minute order setting the briefing schedule, Minute Order (June 22, 2020). If Plaintiff failed
    to respond, the order explained, the Court would “accept as true any factual assertion supported
    by . . . evidence submitted with [the USMS’s] motion.” Dkt. 35 at 2. Over six months have now
    passed, and Plaintiff has not complied with the Court’s order and has not responded to the
    USMS’s renewed motion.
    II. LEGAL STANDARD
    The Freedom of Information Act “embodies a ‘general philosophy of full agency
    disclosure.’” Flete-Garcia I, 
    2020 WL 1695127
    , at *2 (quoting U.S. Dep’t of Def. v. FLRA, 510
    
    5 U.S. 487
    , 494 (1994)). “The law, accordingly, requires that agencies engage in reasonably
    robust searches for potentially responsive records and that they disclose the records they find
    unless those records fall within one of nine exclusive statutory exemptions.” 
    Id.
     “[T]he vast
    majority of FOIA cases can be resolved on summary judgment.” Brayton v. Off. of U.S. Trade
    Rep., 
    641 F.3d 521
    , 527 (D.C. Cir. 2011). Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56(a), a
    summary judgment is appropriate when “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.” A fact is “material”
    if it is capable of affecting the outcome of a dispute, see Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 248 (1986), and a dispute is “genuine” if the evidence is such that a reasonable
    factfinder—here, the Court—could find in favor of the nonmoving party, see Scott v. Harris, 
    550 U.S. 372
    , 380 (2007). “In a FOIA action, the agency may meet its burden by submitting
    declarations that are ‘relatively detailed and non-conclusory.’” Flete-Garcia I, 
    2020 WL 1695127
    , at *3 (quoting SafeCard Servs., Inc. v. SEC, 
    926 F.2d 1197
    , 1200 (D.C. Cir. 1991)).
    Although an agency need not “‘search every record system,’ it must search those systems ‘that
    are likely to turn up the information requested.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Oglesby v. U.S. Dep’t of Army,
    
    920 F.2d 57
    , 68 (D.C. Cir. 1990)). Even if a plaintiff does not oppose a motion for summary
    judgment, “the Court cannot deem [the] motion . . . ‘conceded’ due to lack of opposition and
    must, instead, evaluate ‘for itself whether the record and any undisputed material facts justify
    granting summary judgment.’” Id. at *6 (quoting Winston & Strawn LLP v. McLean, 
    843 F.3d 503
    , 505 (D.C. Cir. 2016)).
    III. ANALYSIS
    In considering the USMS’s motion, the Court will first consider the adequacy of the
    supplemental search, will then consider the redactions, and, finally, will address segregability.
    6
    A.     Adequacy of the Search
    “An agency fulfills its obligations under FOIA to conduct an adequate search ‘if it can
    demonstrate beyond material doubt that its search was reasonably calculated to uncover all
    relevant documents.’” Canning v. U.S. Dep’t of State, 
    346 F. Supp. 3d 1
    , 13 (D.D.C. 2018)
    (quoting Valencia-Lucena v. U.S. Coast Guard, 
    180 F. 2d 321
    , 325 (D.C. Cir. 1999)). “[T]he
    adequacy of a search is not determined by the initial results, but rather, by the totality of [a]
    defendant’s efforts to locate and respond to a FOIA request.” Airaj v. United States, No. 15-983,
    
    2016 WL 1698260
    , at *7 (D.D.C. Apr. 27, 2016); see also Hodge v. FBI, 
    703 F.3d 575
    , 580
    (D.C. Cir. 2013). “Although no single formula governs every case, the required details often
    ‘include search methods, locations of specific files searched, descriptions of searches of all files
    likely to contain responsive documents, and names of agency personnel conducting the search.’”
    Shem-Tov v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice, No. 17-2452, 
    2020 WL 2735613
    , at *5 (D.D.C. May 25,
    2020) (quoting Ferranti v. ATF, 
    177 F. Supp. 2d 41
    , 47 (D.D.C. 2001)).
    To support its motion, the USMS proffers a second declaration from USMS Associate
    General Counsel Clifford R.R. Krieger. Dkt. 34-1. The second Krieger declaration directly
    addresses the lacuna in his first declaration, which formed the basis of the Court’s previous
    opinion. To begin, Krieger describes the relevant databases that the USMS maintains.2
    According to Krieger, “[t]he primary electronic database used by the USMS to track information
    2
    Krieger describes each of the databases determined to be potentially responsive by the
    contacted divisions, which were in turn identified by the Office of General Counsel Government
    Information Specialist as housing potentially responsive records. Krieger’s database description
    is sufficient, given that “[t]here is no requirement that an agency search every record system,” so
    long as the agency demonstrates, “with reasonable detail, that the search method [including
    databases searched]. . . was reasonably calculated to uncover all relevant documents.” Oglesby,
    
    920 F.2d at 68
    ; see also Campbell, 
    164 F.3d at 28
    ; Hodge, 
    764 F. Supp. 2d 134
    , 141 (D.D.C.
    2011). Here, the Court concludes that the USMS has credibly shown “that no other record
    system was likely to produce responsive documents.” Oglesby, 
    920 F.2d at 68
    .
    7
    about prisoners is” the Justice Detainee Information Population Management/Prisoner Tracker
    System or “JDIS,” id. at 2 (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 6), which is the same system the USMS searched
    the first time around, Flete-Garcia I, 
    2020 WL 1695127
    , at *2. “These records pertain to USMS
    prisoners who are in USMS custody or have a federal arrest warrant issued[] or are scheduled for
    a move between detention facilities.” Dkt. 34-1 at 2 (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 6). “If an individual
    was [or is] in USMS custody, there will be a corresponding record in JDIS,” which catalogs each
    prisoner by his “Prisoner Number” or “USMS Number[],” “a unique identifier . . . only
    associated with one person.” 
    Id. at 3
     (2d Krieger Decl. ¶¶ 6–7). In addition to JDIS, the USMS
    also uses the Justice Prisoner and Alien Transportation System or “JPATS” Management
    Information System (“JMIS”) “database to manage prisoners’ movements.” See 
    id.
     at 3–4 (2d
    Krieger Decl. ¶¶ 8, 11).
    In light of the Court’s previous opinion, Krieger “asked the Office of General Counsel,
    FOIA/[Privacy Act] Unit [(“OGC”)] to conduct a new search for records responsive to
    [Plaintiff’s] requests.” 
    Id. at 3
     (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 10). Because the “Government Information
    Specialist with the OGC Freedom of Information Act/Privacy Act . . . Unit” who handled the
    first search for Plaintiff’s FOIA request was no longer with the USMS, a new Government
    Information Specialist was assigned to process Plaintiff’s requests, and she “identified three
    divisions . . . within the USMS which had the potential to have” responsive records: POD,
    JPATS, and the District Office for the District of Massachusetts.” 
    Id. at 2, 4
     (2d Krieger Decl.
    ¶¶ 5, 11). Kreiger’s declaration describes each office and explains why it was identified as
    possibly housing responsive records.
    8
    1.      POD
    The Prisoner Operations Division often fields prisoner FOIA requests “because it is the
    division within the USMS which is responsible for the oversight of prisoner operations and
    therefore, has a heightened likelihood of having . . . a recorded interaction with a prisoner.” 
    Id. at 4
     (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 12). POD conducted an unfruitful search as part of the USMS’s original
    search. 
    Id.
     (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 13). “On April 14, 2020, the OGC Government Information
    Specialist sent an [email] to the POD FOIA inbox inquiring how the original search was
    conducted,” and in response, the Executive Assistant to the Deputy Assistant Directors of POD
    explained that “the data sought is not the sort of data maintained by POD and that the USMS
    District Office for the District of Massachusetts would have records regarding dates of prisoner
    transport for court productions.” 
    Id.
     at 4–5 (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 15) (quotation omitted). As a
    result, POD did not conduct a new search, but Krieger exchanged emails between April 17 and
    21, 2020 with a Chief Inspector in the Office of Detention Operations, POD “to establish how
    they conduct FOIA searches.” 
    Id. at 5
     (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 16). He learned that MCI Cedar
    Junction, although “owned and operated by the Massachusetts Department of Correction,” has an
    agreement with the USMS allowing it to house USMS prisoners and that “USMS District Offices
    are generally responsible for the records of the prisoners they have or have had in custody when
    those prisoners are or were going through the judicial process.” 
    Id.
    9
    2.      JPATS
    JPATS “is the unit within [the] USMS which is responsible for long[-]distance
    transportation of prisoners.” 
    Id. at 6
     (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 17). As Krieger explains, Plaintiff’s
    “FOIA request was specific to his transportation as a prisoner in USMS custody” and, thus, the
    OGC Government Information Specialist contacted JPATS and requested that the unit search its
    records. 
    Id.
     at 5–6 (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 17). The Assistant Chief of Scheduling for JPATS
    responded the same day certifying that the unit had searched JMIS, “the database which JPATS
    uses to store records of the names of prisoners they transport and other information associated
    with transfers,” using Plaintiff’s Prisoner Number as the search term, and found no responsive
    documents. 
    Id. at 6
     (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 17).
    3.      District Office for the District of Massachusetts
    “USMS District Offices are responsible for carrying out the day-to-day operations of the
    USMS, including housing prisoners and transporting them to and from local courts.” 
    Id.
     (2d
    Krieger Decl. ¶ 19). The OGC Government Information Specialist sent Plaintiff’s FOIA request
    to the USMS District Office for the District of Massachusetts “because [Plaintiff] was housed in
    [that] [d]istrict during the relevant time frame[,] and” the office was “responsible for any
    transportation of him to and from the District Court, which is the subject of his FOIA request.”
    
    Id.
     (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 19).
    The Administrative Officer for the USMS District Office in the District of Massachusetts
    returned a search memorandum on April 14, 2020 “indicating that his office had searched two
    systems of records using the search term ‘Fluvio Flete-Garcia.’” 
    Id.
     (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 20).
    The search, which included efforts to locate both electronic and paper records, identified a
    database spreadsheet listing in chronological order twenty-three times that Plaintiff was
    10
    transported to court between May 4, 2015 and January 17, 2018. 
    Id.
     at 6–7 (2d Krieger Decl.
    ¶ 20); Dkt. 36-1 (Ex. A); Dkt. 36-2 at 4 (Ex. B). On April 17, 2020, Krieger called the District
    Administrative Officer to discuss what the office’s search had entailed. 
    Id. at 7
     (2d Krieger
    Decl. ¶ 21). The District Administrative Officer informed Krieger that an Investigative Analyst
    had searched the JDIS database and the Criminal Desk records, “the records . . . under their
    control [that] were likely to have responsive records.” 
    Id.
     Three days later, Krieger called the
    assigned Investigative Analyst to discuss his search. 
    Id.
     (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 22). The
    Investigative Analyst had searched the JDIS database, “limiting his query by the relevant date
    range and [Plaintiff’s] USMS [N]umber,” and that search uncovered the transportation
    spreadsheet. 
    Id.
     (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 23). The Investigative Analyst had also searched “[email]
    records for the Operations Desk,” which “is responsible for processing prisoner appearance
    requests and scheduling transportation to the court,” and found no emails related to Plaintiff. 
    Id.
    (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 22). When Krieger noted that the transportation spreadsheet suggested that
    information relevant to one of Plaintiff’s trips had been transmitted via email, the Investigative
    Analyst reaffirmed that no such record was found in the Operations Desk inbox, notwithstanding
    that the spreadsheet’s notation did suggest that an email should have been transmitted to that
    inbox. 
    Id.
     at 7–8 (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 24).
    4.      Additional Searches by OGC Government Information Specialist
    The OGC Government Information Specialist also searched the JDIS database herself,
    using “Fluvio Flete-Garcia” and Plaintiff’s “Fugitive Identification [N]umber” as the search
    terms. 
    Id. at 8
     (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 25). The search located “the previously disclosed USM-129”
    from the USMS’s original search, as well as a “USMS Subject Report and a USM-312 [Personal
    History] related to” Plaintiff. Id.; see Dkt. 36-2 at 5–15 (Ex. B). Although these documents do
    11
    not concern Plaintiff’s transport to the courthouse and are therefore not responsive to his request,
    the documents were, “out of an abundance of caution,” included in the response to Plaintiff. Dkt.
    34-1 at 8 (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 25); see Dkt. 36-2 at 5–15 (Ex. B).
    On April 22, 2020, the USMS OGC sent the updated search results—consisting of the
    transportation spreadsheet, the previously disclosed USM-129, the USMS Subject Report, and
    the USM-312 Personal History—to the USMS District Office for the District of Massachusetts
    with a request that the office mail the documents to Plaintiff. Dkt. 34-1 at 8 (2d Krieger Decl.
    ¶ 26). On May 18, 2020, the Administrative Officer in the District Office sent an email to the
    OGC Government Information Specialist stating that the response was sent to Plaintiff on April
    24, 2020 via first class mail without a tracking number. Id.; see Dkt. 36-2 (Ex. B).
    5.      Analysis of Adequacy
    In most respects, the Krieger declaration “demonstrate[s] beyond material doubt that [the
    USMS’s supplemental] search was reasonably calculated to uncover all relevant documents,”
    Canning, 346 F. Supp. 3d at 13 (quotation omitted). In contrast to the record that accompanied
    the USMS’s previous motion for summary judgment, the current record describes the nature and
    location of the records systems searched. The record also identifies the personnel who
    conducted the searches, albeit not by name, and explains why the particular divisions contacted
    were identified as potentially possessing responsive records. The Krieger declaration also offers
    sufficient detail for the Court to determine the nature of his communications with the divisions
    that conducted searches and their answers to his inquiries. These details address the deficiency
    that the Court highlighted in its previous decision. Flete-Garcia I, 
    2020 WL 1695127
    , at *4;
    Shem-Tov, 
    2020 WL 2735613
    , at *5.
    12
    In one respect, however, the Court remains unsure whether the supplement search was
    adequate, and this shortcoming highlights the importance of requiring agencies to disclose the
    search terms they use. See Flete-Garcia I, 
    2020 WL 1695127
    , at *4. As the careful reader might
    have noticed by now, the Plaintiff in this case is Fulvio Flete-Garcia, but, according to the
    Krieger declaration, the USMS District Office in the District of Massachusetts and the OGC
    Government Information Specialist used the name “Fluvio Flete-Garcia” when they conducted
    their searches. Dkt. 34-1 at 6, 8 (2d Krieger Decl. ¶¶ 20, 25) (emphasis added). The Court
    cannot discern whether the Krieger declaration merely contains an error, or whether the searches
    were also incorrect. Nor can the Court determine whether Plaintiff’s last name was sufficiently
    unique that use of it, alone, would have located any responsive records or whether only those
    records containing his entire name (first and last) were called for by the search. And, although
    use of Plaintiff’s prisoner or fugitive number might have been sufficient for the searches of the
    JDIS database, other searches relied exclusively on Plaintiff’s name. This may explain why a
    search of the email records for the Massachusetts “Operations Desk” failed to locate any emails
    relating to Plaintiff, even though the one record that was located as a result of the supplemental
    search included a notation reflecting that a movement request relating to Plaintiff was received
    by email. 
    Id.
     at 7–8 (2d Krieger Decl. ¶¶ 22, 24). In any event, the uncertainty regarding the
    search term precludes the Court from entering summary judgment at this time.
    Accordingly, the Court will deny the USMS’s motion for summary judgment with
    respect to the adequacy of the search.
    B.     Withholdings
    Turning to the redactions that the USMS made to the records that it did locate and
    release, the Court is persuaded that the USMS acted within the bounds of FOIA. The USMS
    13
    bears the burden of “describ[ing] the requested documents and ‘the justifications for
    nondisclosure with reasonably specific detail [and] demonstrat[ing] that the information withheld
    logically falls within the claimed exemption.’” Pronin v. Fed Bureau of Prisons, No. 17-1807,
    
    2019 WL 1003598
    , at *3 (D.D.C. Mar. 1, 2019) (quoting Larson v. Dep’t of State, 
    565 F.3d 857
    ,
    862 (D.C. Cir. 2009)). An agency can prevail on summary judgment only if its declarations
    “afford the FOIA requester a meaningful opportunity to contest, and the district court an
    adequate foundation to review, the soundness of the withholding.” King v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice,
    
    830 F.2d 210
    , 218 (D.C. Cir. 1987). As noted above, however, Plaintiff has failed to respond to
    the motion, leaving the Court to decide whether the USMS’s uncontroverted evidentiary showing
    suffices.
    The USMS made redactions pursuant to FOIA Exemptions 6, 7(C), 7(E), and 7(F).
    Because the Court concludes that the USMS properly invoked Exemptions 6, 7(C) and 7(E), and
    because those exemptions, taken together, cover all of the redactions, the Court need not address
    Exemption 7(F).
    Most of the material at issue was withheld under Exemptions 7(C) and 7(E), so the Court
    starts there. As an initial matter, Exemption 7 applies only to records “compiled for law
    enforcement purposes.” 
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    (b)(7); Campbell, 
    164 F.3d at 31
    ; Flete-Garcia I, 
    2020 WL 1695127
    , at *6. In Flete-Garcia I, the Court noted that the USMS’s principal function is
    law enforcement, and thus its assertions that redacted records were compiled for law
    enforcement purposes deserve “some deference.” 
    2020 WL 1695127
    , at *6. And, here, as in
    Flete-Garcia I, the USMS posits that the responsive records were compiled for law enforcement
    purposes because the agency generated the records “during the [Department of Justice]’s
    criminal investigation and prosecution of Plaintiff” and the records “pertain to the custody of
    14
    Plaintiff.” Dkt. 34 at 11. The Court agrees that the records fall squarely within the definition of
    records compiled for law enforcement. See McCall v. U.S. Marshals Serv., 
    36 F. Supp. 2d 3
    , 6
    (D.D.C. 1999) (finding that documentation of Marshals escorting prisoners within a federal
    courthouse were compiled for law enforcement purposes). The USMS, accordingly, easily clears
    the first hurdle to invoking Exemption 7.
    Exemption 7(C) protects records from disclosure if their release “‘could reasonably be
    expected to constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.’” Campbell, 
    164 F.3d at 33
    (quoting 
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    (b)(7)(C)). To make that determination, the Court “must balance the
    public interest in disclosure against the [privacy] interest[s] Congress intended the Exemption to
    protect.” U.S. Dep’t of Justice v. Reporters Comm. for Freedom of the Press, 
    489 U.S. 749
    , 776
    (1989). In this case, the USMS redacted (1) the names of law enforcement officials from the
    transportation spreadsheet; (2) the names of associates of Plaintiff from the Subject Report; (3)
    the names that the Court previously approved for redaction in the USM-129; and (4) the names
    of several individuals in the USM-312 Personal History, including the names of persons to be
    kept separate from Plaintiff, the name of a law enforcement official who administered a DNA
    test, the name of an enforcement officer and contact information, an unidentified address and
    phone number, and the name of one of Plaintiff’s associates. Dkt. 34-1 at 10–11 (2d Krieger
    Decl. Vaughn index). Each of these redactions was permissible for the same reasons the Court
    previously sustained the USMS’s redactions to the USM-129. “[T]he privacy interest of an
    individual in avoiding the unlimited disclosure of his or her name and address is significant.”
    Nat’l Ass’n of Ret. Fed. Emps. v. Horner, 
    879 F.2d 873
    , 875 (D.C. Cir. 1989). “On the other side
    of the balance, Plaintiff does not identify any public interest in release of the withheld
    information.” Flete-Garcia I, 
    2020 WL 1695127
    , at *7. “Where there is no asserted public
    15
    interest, even the slightest privacy interest will prevent disclosure under Exemption 7(C).” Willis
    v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice, 
    581 F. Supp. 2d 57
    , 76 (D.D.C. 2008). Because the USMS has proffered
    a legimate privacy interest supporting the redactions and because Plaintiff has failed to identify
    any countervailing interest, the Court concludes that the Exemption 7(C) redactions were
    permissible.
    The USMS also invoked Exemption 7(E), which permits the withholding of law
    enforcement records
    [t]o the extent that the production of such law enforcement records or
    information . . . would disclose techniques and procedures for law enforcement
    investigations or prosecutions, or would disclose guidelines for law enforcement
    investigations or prosecutions if such disclosure could reasonably be expected
    to risk circumvention of the law.
    
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    (b)(7)(E). This exemption “sets a relatively low bar for the agency to justify
    withholding.” Blackwell v. FBI, 
    646 F.3d 37
    , 42 (D.C. Cir. 2011). It does not “require[e] a
    highly specific burden of showing how the law will be circumvented” but rather, “only requires
    that the [agency] demonstrate logically how the release of the requested information might create
    a risk of circumvention of the law.” Mayer Brown LLP v. IRS, 
    562 F.3d 1190
    , 1194 (D.C. Cir.
    2009) (quotation omitted).
    Beyond any withholdings already covered by Exemption 7(C), the USMS employed
    Exemption 7(E) to withhold “internal data encoding” in each of the responsive records. Dkt. 34-
    1 at 10–11 (2d Krieger Decl. Vaughn index). The redactions include “information such as
    internal URLs, codes, and internal identifying numbers [that] could assist unauthorized parties in
    deciphering the meaning of the codes and numbers, aid in gaining improper access to law
    enforcement databases, and assist in the unauthorized party’s navigation of these databases.” Id.
    at 9 (2d Krieger Decl. ¶ 31). This information, the USMS contends “would not assist the public
    16
    in understanding how the agency is carrying out its statutory responsibilities” but could “permit
    people seeking to violate the law to gain sensitive knowledge and take preemptive steps to
    counter actions taken by [the] USMS during investigatory operations.” Dkt. 34 at 15. That
    explanation is sensible and, in the Court’s view, clears the “relatively low bar” of withholding
    under Exemption 7(E). Blackwell, 
    646 F.3d at 42
    ; see also Shem-Tov, 
    2020 WL 2735613
    , at *12
    (finding that withholding “internal website/url network path” was justified under 7(E)).
    Exemptions 7(C) and 7(E) cover all of the redactions at issue, save one: the USMS
    withheld “[a]n unknown name” on the transportation spreadsheet pursuant to Exemptions 6 and
    7(F). Dkt. 34-1 at 10 (2d Krieger Decl. Vaughn index). It is unclear why the USMS did not
    invoke Exemption 7(C) with respect to this name, but, in any event, the Court is persuaded that
    Exemption 6 also applies. That exemption shields “personnel and medical files and similar files
    the disclosure of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.” 
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    (b)(6). In assessing withholdings under Exemption 6, the Court “must first
    determine whether ‘disclosure would compromise a substantial, as opposed to a de minimis,
    privacy interest.’” Pejouhesh v. U.S. Postal Serv., No. 17-1684, 
    2019 WL 1359292
    , at *5
    (D.D.C. Mar. 26, 2019) (quoting Horner, 
    879 F.2d at 874
    )). “If the agency clears that first
    hurdle, the Court must ‘balance the privacy interest in non-disclosure against the public interest’
    in disclosure.” 
    Id.
     (quoting Consumers’ Checkbook Ctr. for the Study of Servs. v. HHS, 
    554 F.3d 1046
    , 1050 (D.C. Cir. 2009)).
    Here, the name at issue appeared on a printout of transportation dates. Although the
    Court would have benefited from some additional information about the “unknown name,” it
    would seem that the USMS lacks that information. But, even without the detail, it is safe to
    assume that the unknown person, like everyone else identified on the transportation printout, has
    17
    some non-de minimis privacy interest in his or her public association with the USMS
    transportation log. And, once again, Plaintiff has failed to offer any countervailing interest in
    public disclosure of this person’s name. Thus, although a closer question given the evidentiary
    gap, the Court concludes that the USMS has also carried its burden of showing that this
    disclosure would constitute “a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy” and that the
    agency permissibly invoked Exemption 6. See 
    5 U.S.C. § 552
    (b)(6).
    The Court will, accordingly, grant summary judgment in favor of the USMS with respect
    to these withholdings.
    C.     Segregability
    As the Court observed in Flete-Garcia I, “[w]ith regard to any document an agency
    believes falls under a FOIA exception, the agency must ‘separate[] the exempt from the non-
    exempt portions of the document[] and produce[] the relevant non-exempt information.’” Flete-
    Garcia I, 
    2020 WL 1695127
    , at *7 (quoting People for the Am. Way Found. v. Nat’l Park Serv.,
    
    503 F. Supp. 2d 284
    , 296 (D.D.C. 2007)). “The Court, for its part, [must] ‘make specific
    findings of segregability.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting Stolt-Nielsen Transp. Grp., Ltd. v. United States, 
    534 F.3d 728
    , 734 (D.C. Cir. 2008)). In Flete-Garcia I, the Court held that the USMS had satisfied
    the segregability requirement with respect to the records located and released in part because
    “the only information withheld [was] the personal information discussed above.” 
    Id.
     The same
    reasoning leads the Court to conclude that all reasonably segregable information relating to the
    newly discovered records was released. The redactions are limited to the personal information
    and internal encoding analyzed and found to be permissible above.
    18
    CONCLUSION
    The Court, accordingly, GRANTS in part and DENIES in part the USMS’s motion for
    summary judgment, Dkt. 34. The Court hereby GRANTS summary judgment in favor of the
    USMS in all respects, except the adequacy of those searches that misspelled Plaintiff’s name.
    After repeating those searches using the correct spelling or confirming that the searches, in fact,
    used the correct spelling, the USMS may renew its motion.
    SO ORDERED.
    /s/ Randolph D. Moss
    RANDOLPH D. MOSS
    United States District Judge
    Date: March 24, 2021
    19
    

Document Info

Docket Number: Civil Action No. 2018-2442

Judges: Judge Randolph D. Moss

Filed Date: 3/24/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/25/2021

Authorities (19)

Ferranti v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms , 177 F. Supp. 2d 41 ( 2001 )

Hodge v. Federal Bureau of Investigation , 764 F. Supp. 2d 134 ( 2011 )

Carl Oglesby v. The United States Department of the Army , 920 F.2d 57 ( 1990 )

Campbell v. United States Department of Justice , 164 F.3d 20 ( 1998 )

Brayton v. Office of United States Trade Representative , 641 F.3d 521 ( 2011 )

Scott v. Harris , 127 S. Ct. 1769 ( 2007 )

National Association of Retired Federal Employees v. ... , 879 F.2d 873 ( 1989 )

Safecard Services, Inc. v. Securities and Exchange ... , 926 F.2d 1197 ( 1991 )

Cynthia King v. United States Department of Justice , 830 F.2d 210 ( 1987 )

Blackwell v. Federal Bureau of Investigation , 646 F.3d 37 ( 2011 )

Mayer Brown LLP v. Internal Revenue Service , 562 F.3d 1190 ( 2009 )

Larson v. Department of State , 565 F.3d 857 ( 2009 )

Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc. , 106 S. Ct. 2505 ( 1986 )

United States Department of Justice v. Reporters Committee ... , 109 S. Ct. 1468 ( 1989 )

Stolt-Nielsen Transportation Group Ltd. v. United States , 534 F.3d 728 ( 2008 )

Consumers' Checkbook, Center for the Study of Services v. ... , 554 F.3d 1046 ( 2009 )

People for the American Way Foundation v. National Park ... , 503 F. Supp. 2d 284 ( 2007 )

Willis v. United States Department of Justice , 581 F. Supp. 2d 57 ( 2008 )

McCall v. United States Marshals Service , 36 F. Supp. 2d 3 ( 1999 )

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