Case Information
*1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA AMERICAN IMMIGRATION LAWYERS
ASSOCIATION,
Plaintiff,
v. EXECUTIVE OFFICE FOR Case No. 1:13-cv-00840 (CRC) IMMIGRATION REVIEW et al.,
Defendants. OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff American Immigration Lawyers Association (“AILA”) asks the Court to clarify or enforce its Memorandum Opinion and Order of December 24, 2014 granting in part and denying in part cross motions for summary judgment by AILA and the Executive Office for Immigration Review (“EOIR”) in a Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”) dispute in which AILA sought records related to complaints against immigration judges. EOIR had produced approximately 16,000 pages of documents, but AILA additionally sought, in its motion for summary judgment, information related to immigration judges’ personal identities; the publication of immigration judge complaint resolutions; and information or entire records EOIR had withheld as non-responsive. EOIR insisted that identifying the immigration judges by name would unduly infringe their privacy interests; that FOIA does not require release of the complaint resolutions; and that its other redactions were proper, including those made on the basis that the redactions made it easier to understand the complaint files. The Court granted EOIR partial summary judgment as to the redaction of immigration judges’ personal identifying information and the publication of complaint resolutions, but it ordered EOIR to produce any material *2 withheld from complaint records “on the basis that withholding non-responsive information about other complaints made it easier to understand the subject complaint file.” Order at 1, December 24, 2014.
In response, EOIR produced 568 pages in full and 57 pages in part out of 665 pages of
records that had previously been designated “non-responsive.” AILA now seeks the release of
the information redacted from approximately 64 pages of remaining documents, arguing that the
Court ordered EOIR to “disclose
all
information originally redacted as ‘non-responsive’ from
responsive records[.]” Pl.’s Mot. to Enforce at 4 (emphasis added). AILA misreads the Court’s
Order, which addressed only “material withheld from complaint records
on the basis that
withholding non-responsive information about other complaints made it easier to understand the
subject complaint file
.” Order at 1, December 24, 2014 (emphasis added). The Court never
meant to suggest that EOIR could not redact
any
material as “non-responsive.” Indeed, as this
Court has previously noted, “[t]he practice of redacting non-responsive materials from
documents produced in response to FOIA requests has been approved by courts in this Circuit.”
Freedom Watch, Inc. v. Nat'l Sec. Agency,
AILA further argues that EOIR impermissibly invoked FOIA exemptions in the records it
produced in response to the Court’s Order because the Government has “missed its window” for
raising FOIA exemptions and is not permitted to “reprocess[]” the materials at this stage in the
litigation. Pl.’s Reply at 7–8. AILA relies on the “general rule” that the Government “must
assert all [FOIA] exemptions at the same time” in order to satisfy “the statutory goals of
efficient, prompt, and full disclosure of information” and the “interests of judicial finality and
economy.” Maydak v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice,
The Court therefore concludes that EOIR has properly complied with its December 24, 2014 Order. Accordingly it is hereby
ORDERED that [ECF No. 35] Plaintiff’s motion to enforce or, in the alternative, to clarify is DENIED .
SO ORDERED.
________________________ CHRISTOPHER R. COOPER United States District Judge Date: __June 23, 2015____
