In January 2002, Dennis Walsh sent a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request to the United States Department of Veteran Affairs seeking “all records maintained by your agency pertaining to myself, covering the period January 1,1973 to current date.” Walsh received a set of documents from the VA several months later. Although he also received a letter saying he had been given his “entire VA claims file,” Walsh actually did not receive the rest of the records he requested for over another year. That delay forms the basis of this appeal.
Walsh knew that the first set of records he received was incomplete because it did not include documents associated with his treatment during 1977 and 1985-86 at the Department of Veterans Affairs Blind Rehabilitation Center in Hines, Illinois. In April 2002, Walsh wrote to the FOIA officer at the VA regional office in Milwaukee to inform him that the file he received was incomplete and to request the records from the rehabilitation center in Hines. Walsh also sent an FOIA request for those records directly to the VA hospital in Hines. The hospital informed Walsh that it could not retrieve his records with the information he provided. Walsh filed an administrative appeal, which included more specific information about his stay in the Hines hospital. He received eight documents from the hospital on June 3, 2002.
Knowing that there were still more records, Walsh traded several letters with the Hines facility over the summer, with Walsh requesting records and the hospital denying that it had them. In September the hospital informed Walsh that his records were transferred (when, we don’t know) to Milwaukee, but the VA regional office there told Walsh it was up to him to find the records. Walsh filed an FOIA administrative appeal in December 2002. He filed this suit in March 2003. Two months later Walsh received a packet of medical records, along with a letter stating that the VA was continuing to look for additional documents. On June 24, 2003, Walsh received what he acknowledges are all the remaining records covered by his various requests. Still, Walsh went ahead with his suit, seeking a judicial declaration that he was entitled to those records, along with costs and attorney fees. The district court granted the VA’s motion for summary judgment, finding' that Walsh’s claim was moot. Walsh appeals the grant of the VA’s motion and the denial of his motion for summary judgment, arguing that his claim is not moot under the FOIA and that he is entitled to judicial review under the Administrative Procedures Act (APA).
We review the district court’s decision
de novo. See Allen v. City of Chicago,
Walsh contends that two related exceptions to the mootness doctrine apply to his claim: cases involving “voluntary cessation,”
see Milwaukee Police Ass’n v. Jones,
The theoretical possibility that Walsh might again have to wait for requested records is not enough to keep his claim alive.
See In re Associated Press,
Walsh also argues that the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. §§ 701 et seq., gives him an independent cause of action. He claims this separate action is necessary because the FOIA’s citizen suit provision provides only injunctive relief and has no remedy for cases such as this one in which an agency is late in producing the requested records.
Walsh cites
Bennett v. Spear,
Although Walsh is correct when he argues that our ruling leaves someone making a FOIA request without recourse if an agency belatedly complies with that request, he is wrong when he argues that Congress must not have intended that result. The judgment of the district court is Affirmed.
