The only issue on this appeal is whether appellees have a right of access under the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552, to correspondence between the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and automobile manufacturers in connection with pend
*1074
ing safety defect investigations.
1
The District Court, in an opinion reported at
Exemption 7 involves investigatory files compiled for law enforcement purposes, 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(7). As the District Court recognized (at p. 1325), there is no dispute that the correspondence in question became part of NHTSA’s investigatory file. Although the court also recognized that the correspondence in question “could conceivably lead to a civil enforcement proceeding,” it went on to conclude that “the agency has not made the required showing that disclosure of the files sought is likely to create a concrete prospect of serious harm to its law enforcement efficiency,’ ” citing for this proposition, and quoting from, a decision of a division of this court. Weisberg v. Department of Justice, No. 71-1026 slip opinion dated February 23, 1973. 2
The division’s opinion in
Weisberg
was, however, subsequently vacated by an order granting rehearing
en banc;
and the
en banc
disposition by this court of
Weisberg,
160 U.S.App.D.C. -,
Reversed.
Notes
. At issue also in the District Court were claims to disclosure of Book D of the submission of Genefal Motors Corporation to NHTSA, and a' report of the Office of Standards Enforcement concerning the enforcibility of Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards. The District Court’s action, after examining these items in camera, in allowing the first such claim and denying the second has not been appealed.
. The District Court thought to find good reason to override the exemption in the circumstance that the correspondence was between the agency and the auto manufacturer being investigated. This suggested to it that there were “no apparent problems of confidential sources, premature revelation of suspects and the like;” and that there was “most certainly” no problem about the discovery of the information by the subject of the investigation.
