The issue in this case 1 is whether disclosure of statements taken by the National Labor Relations Board during its investigation of an unfair labor practice charge may be compelled under the Freedom of Information Act, or whether exemption 7(A) of that Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(7)(A), protects *64 such statements until the Board’s order relating to the charge has been judicially reviewed. The District Court, in an unreported memorandum, held that the exemption applies. We affirm.
In order to prepare its defense against what it contended were vague allegations of unfair labor practices, plaintiff Abra-hamson Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc. requested the Regional Director to produce “copies of all written statements signed or unsigned contained in the Board’s case file.” That request was denied pursuant to the Board’s policy of denying pre-hearing discovery, and an administrative appeal was unsuccessful. The employer then filed a complaint in the District Court seeking production of those materials under the Freedom of Information Act and moved for a temporary restraining order to postpone the administrative hearing on the unfair labor practice charge until the District Court could rule. The latter request was denied, and the administrative hearing was held as scheduled. Subsequently the court granted summary judgment for the Board on the ground that the requested materials were exempt from compelled disclosure under 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(7)(A).
Section 552(b)(7)(A) exempts from compelled disclosure “investigatory records compiled for law enforcement purposes, but only to the extent that the production of such records would . . . interfere with enforcement proceedings.” It has repeatedly been held that this exemption allows the Board to refuse disclosure of statements made to Board investigators by employees or union representatives so long as those statements are relevant to a pending enforcement proceeding.
NLRB v. Harde-man Garment Corp.,
In
Climax Molybdenum Co. v. NLRB, supra,
At an unfair labor practice hearing, the Board’s
Jencks
rule, 29 C.F.R. § 102.-118(b)(1), entitles the employer to see a
*65
copy of a witness’ statement before cross-examination. In determining whether exemption 7(A) applies after an administrative hearing has been held, the District Court adopted the holding of the court in
Amerace Corp. v. NLRB,
“The Court of Appeals has the power to enforce, modify, set aside or remand the ' order of the N.L.R.B. If a remand is ordered, the case would be in the same posture as Title Guarantee, and we would be concerned with an ‘open’ investigatory file, precisely the type of file to which Title Guarantee held Exemption 7(A) is intended to apply.”
As six Courts of Appeals have held, the Freedom of Information Act was not intended to overrule the Board’s discovery procedures. Thus, until “the investigation is completed and all reasonably foreseeable administrative and judicial proceedings concluded” no files need be disclosed, see
Title Guarantee Co. v. NLRB, supra,
In the case at bar, the employer chose to absent itself from the first day of the hearing, and therefore failed to request production of the witness statements it now seeks through the Freedom of Information Act. 3 Because, at the time the District Court ruled, 4 those statements were relevant to a pending administrative proceeding, they therefore continued to be protected by exemption 7(A).
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the District Court is
Affirmed.
Notes
. This appeal was consolidated for hearing with Appeal No. 76-2008, in which the employer, the plaintiff in this FOIA suit, petitioned for review and the Board cross-petitioned for enforcement of an order to remedy certain unfair labor practices. The Board’s order was enforced in an unpublished order issued on this date under Circuit Rule 35.
. The employer’s argument that three witnesses should not be included in those categories is frivolous. One of the witnesses was the representative of the union that was later certified as the employees’ exclusive bargaining representative. Another was an employee who the Board found had been improperly discharged and ordered reinstated. The third witness remained an employee; the fact that he was identified as the victim of an unfair labor practice in the union’s charge against the employer was hardly sufficient to make him, as the employer argues, a “publicly declared complainant” whose statements could not be shielded from disclosure.
. The employer’s counsel did appear on the second day of the hearing and did receive at least one witness statement at that time. [Tr. 213.] However, on appeal the employer has not challenged the District Court’s statement that “[according to the undisputed representations of the defendant, plaintiff never formally moved for the materials at the hearing.” Thus, it appears that the employer has limited its request to the statements of the three witnesses, see note 2, supra, who testified on the first day of the hearing.
. In finding that disclosure of the statements would interfere with pending enforcement proceedings, the District Court also relied on the Board’s uncontested representation that the employer had engaged in new unfair labor practices by taking reprisals against employees who had given statements to the Board. Finding the pendency of the original case sufficient to support the exemption, we have no occasion to determine whether disclosure may be denied after this case is closed on grounds of relevancy to another pending proceeding.
