Case Information
*1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA RICHARD EDELMAN,
Plaintiff , v. Civil Action No. 14-1140 (RDM) SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION,
Defendant . MEMORANDUM OPINION
In 2014, Plaintiff Richard Edelman filed six requests under the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), 5 U.S.C. § 552, with Defendant, the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”), seeking documents related to the formation of a real estate investment trust. After the SEC failed to produce any responsive documents, Edelman filed this FOIA action, Dkt. 1, and, in turn, the SEC released over 2,000 pages of responsive records. The SEC then moved for summary judgment, arguing that it had “conducted a reasonable search for documents responsive to [Edelman’s] FOIA requests” and had “withh[eld] only information that was . . . protected by FOIA exemptions.” Dkt. 15 at 2. Edelman cross-moved for summary judgment, asserting that the SEC’s search for records was inadequate and that the SEC improperly withheld certain records. See Dkt. 16.
On March 24, 2016, the Court issued a decision, granting in part and denying in part both
parties’ motions.
Edelman v. SEC
,
I. BACKGROUND
As discussed at greater length in the Court’s prior oрinion, see Edelman I , 172 F. Supp. 3d at 138–41, “Edelman is a former investor in the Empire State Building,” and he “operate[s] a website that provides information to investors and the public regarding the contentious process of converting the ownership of the Empire State Building into a real estate investment trust.” Id. at 138. On his website, Edelman “has posted documents filed with and issued by the SEC, which was required to approve the creation of the trust, known as the Empire State Realty Trust, Inc., or ESRT for short.” Id. “This action arises out of six FOIA requests that Edelman submitted to the SEC in order to obtain documents about its review of the proposed transaction.” Id.
As relevant to the motiоns currently before the Court, Edelman submitted a “FOIA
request to the SEC on January 15, 2014,” seeking “[c]onsumer complaints.” at 140;
see also
*3
Dkt. 26-1 at 1–2 (Second Livornese Decl. ¶ 3).
[1]
In that request, Edelman “described a set of
complaints submitted by Empire State Building investors to the SEC during its review of the
proposed transaction,” and he “alleged that [three] SEC lawyers . . . interviewed the investors
who had submitted the complaints.”
Edelman I
,
In his initial opposition and cross-motion for summary judgment, Edelman challenged the
adequacy of the SEC’s production of records responsive to his Consumer Complaints request.
Dkt. 16. He argued that “the SEC construed his request too narrowly by searching only for
documents
about
consumer complaints, rather than for the complaints themselves” and that “the
*4
SEC erred in concluding that notes taken by SEC attorneys were not records subject to FOIA.”
Edelman I
,
In response to the Court’s order, the SEC now represents that it has “searched its record systems for the complaints that were the subject of Edelman’s [Consumеr Complaints] FOIA request,” Dkt. 26 at 12, and has “produced to Edelman 1,446 pages of consumer complaint documents that were unredacted or partially redacted, and [one] page that was redacted in full,” id. at 2. In addition, the SEC asserts that it “gathered and reviewed the 112 pages of attorney notes” and “produced [seventy-one] pages of attorney notes to Edelman, which were unredacted or partially redacted, and withheld [forty-one] pages of attorney notes in their entirety.” Finally, the SEC explains that it has complied with the Court’s prior direction that it “produce[] an unredacted version of [one document] to the Court for an in camera review” and has, additionally, provided Edelman with a “partially-redacted version” of that same document, withholding only the “names of two [SEC] staff members under FOIA Exemption 6.” Id. As a *5 result, the SEC asserts that it has complied in full with the Court’s prior ruling, and now renews its motion for summary judgment. Dkt. 26. Edelman disagrees and renews his cross-motion for summary judgment, arguing that the SEC’s search was inadequate and that its redactions are not appropriate under Exemptions 5 and 6. Dkt. 28-1.
II. ANALYSIS
In its renewed motion for summary judgment, the SEC asserts that its most recent search for and production of responsive documents has now remedied the deficienсies identified in the Court’s first summary judgment decision and order. See Dkt. 26. In his opposition and renewed cross-motion, however, Edelman challenges three aspects of the SEC’s search and production: First, he alleges that the SEC’s search for consumer complaints was inadequate, as evidenced by the fact that it failed to uncover several responsive documents, Dkt. 28-1 at 2–4; second, he argues that the SEC has not properly invoked the deliberative process privilege pursuant to Exemption 5, id. at 4–5; and, third, he claims that the SEC has failed to establish that it properly “with[e]ld[] the identities of those making complaints to it about the proposed [ESRT] transaction” pursuant to Exemption 6, id. at 5–7. The Court will address each contention in turn. [3]
A. Adequacy of the SEC’s Search for Consumer Complaints
In the order accompanying its prior decision, the Court instructed the SEC to “conduct *6 [an] additional . . . search for any records . . . responsive to Edelman’s [Consumer Complaints] request” and to “release any records that it determine[d] [we]re responsive” to that request. Dkt. 25 at 1–2. This task fell to the SEC’s Office of Freedom of Information Act Services, which is supervised by John Livornese. Dkt. 26-1 at 1 (Second Livornese Decl. ¶ 1). According to Livornese, he “determined that any [responsive] ‘consumer complaints’ would be located in the databases maintained by staff in the SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance (‘CF’),” and he was informed by CF staff that “any and all records of communications the CF staff received from any outside source that commented upon, ‘complained’ about, or criticized any aspect of . . . the proposed ESRT transaction were uploaded, by CF staff, to the Sharepoint database.” Id. at 2 (Second Livornese Decl. ¶ 4). Livornese further attests that the “Sharepoint database allows a staff member to create a site on the server, store sensitive information at that site[,] and grant access to that information [to] other staff or staff teams within the SEC.” Id. A search of the Sharepoint database, according to Livornese, located “1,447 pages of documents . . . that reflected [the] external consumer complaints” requested by Edelman, of which 1,446 pages were produced in unredacted or partially redacted form. Id. at 2–5 (Second Livornese Decl. ¶¶ 4–8).
Edelman contends that this search must have been “inadequate” because it failed to uncover consumer complaints from eight individuals, who have submitted declarations stating that they have “reviewed the consumer complaints sent to . . . Edelman” and “d[id] not see [their] complaint[s]” in the SEC’s production. See, e.g. , Dkt. 28-2 at 2 (Gaskill Aff., Ex. A); Dkt. 28-1 at 2–3. In addition, Edelman argues that, by searching only the Sharepoint database, the SEC failed to search for responsive documents in the “paper files” or email records of the SEC staff members “who worked on the transaction.” Dkt. 28-1 at 3. Both arguments are unavailing.
As to the first, the mere fact that Edelman has located complainants who assert that they
made complaints that do not appear in the SEC’s production does not, on its own, cast doubt on
the efficacy of the SEC’s search. It “is long settled that the failure of an agency to turn up one
specific document in its search does not alone render a search inadequate.”
Iturralde v.
Comptroller of Currency
,
Edelman’s second argument—that thе SEC failed to search the paper files and emails of
CF staff members and attorneys—also fails. Livornese asserts in his declaration that he “was
informed by CF staff that
any and all
records of communication the CF staff received from any
outside sources that commented upon, ‘complained’ about, or criticized any aspect of, the
disclosure or activities by solicitation participants related to the proposed ESRT transaction were
uploaded, by CF staff, to the Sharepoint database.” Dkt. 26-1 at 2 (Second Livornese Decl. ¶ 4)
(emphasis added). As a result, it was entirely reasonable for the SEC to focus its search on that
database. The SEC, moreover, went beyond the Sharepoint database and searched the emails of
the three CF attorneys who were responsible for reviewing the ESRT filings, but found no
written complaints from any of the eight declarants that had not previously been produced to
Edelman. Dkt. 30-1 at 1–2 (Barss Decl. ¶ 4). Although it is
possible
that responsive documents
might have been found in the filing cabinets and email accounts of other CF personnel, the SEC
is not required to “search every record system” in response to a FOIA request; it is only
obligated to “us[e] methods which can be reasonably expected to рroduce the information
requested.”
Oglesby v. U.S. Dep’t of the Army
,
The Court, accordingly, concludes that the SEC conducted an adequate search for the consumer “complaints themselves,” as the Court directed in Edelman I . See 172 F. Supp. 3d at 156 (emphasis removed).
B. Exemption 5 Withholdings
Next, Edelman contends that the SEC improperly redacted “deliberative” material from portions of the attorney notes and consumer complaints it produced to him. He makes two arguments. First, Edelman contends that the Court should reject the SEC’s reliance on the delibеrative-process privilege because the Commission “failed to identify the actual deliberative process . . . it [wa]s attempting to protect.” Dkt 28-1 at 4. Second, he argues that the SEC improperly withheld “factual material” and “comments made by SEC staffers” that were embarrassing but not deliberative. Id. at 5. The SEC responds that it provided a sufficiently detailed supplemental Vaughn index that describes the relevant decisions the SEC staff were deliberating over for each withholding and that it withheld only exempt material. Dkt. 30 at 5–7. Once again, the SEC’s position is convincing.
Exemption 5 shields from disclosure “inter-agency or intra-agency memorandums or
letters that would not be available by law to a party other than an agency in litigation with the
agency.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(5). The “deliberative process privilege is one of the litigation
privileges incorporated into Exemption 5,” allowing “an agency to withhold ‘all papers which
reflect the agency’s group thinking in the process of working out its policy and determining what
its law shall be.’”
Elec. Frontier Found. v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice
,
The SEC argues that it properly withheld portions of the attorney notes and consumer
complaints that described internal SEC “deliberat[ions] [about] how to respond to the various
issues raised in the ESRT filing” and that it adequately described those deliberations in the
supplemental
Vaughn
index it provided to Edelman.
[4]
Dkt. 26 at 3, 14. Edelman does not
seriously dispute that some of the redacted material could have been properly withheld on the
basis of Exemption 5, but instead argues that the SEC’s
Vaughn
index lacks sufficient detail to
support the invocation of the privilege,
see
Dkt. 32 at 3–4 (asserting that the
Vaughn
index “only
discuss[es] a type of action the documents were part of, not [the] role [they] played within a
policy formulation process” or how “the documents themselves were involved” in the “actual
deliberations”). The Court has already rejected an earlier version of this same argument,
see
Edelman I
,
Notations in the SEC’s
Vaughn
index like “internal predecisional deliberations about the
handling of a complaint by an investor about ESRT” and “predecisional deliberations of the
handling of financial issues raised by investors concerning ESRT filings,”
see, e.g.
, Dkt. 30-3 at
29, 33, clearly describe the decisions that were the subject of ongoing deliberations. And,
although the
Vaughn
index frequently uses the less elaborate phrase “notes reflecting
*11
predecisional deliberations about ESRT’s filing,”
see, e.g.
,
id.
at 25, 26, when considered in
context, this notation leaves little doubt that the deliberations were focused on whether to
“approve the creation of the [ESRT] trust,”
Edelman I
,
Edelman’s additional arguments fare no better. He accuses the SEC of failing to
segregate factuаl material from “otherwise pre-decisional document[s]” and suggests that “many
of the withholdings are not actual deliberations but comments made by SEC staffers about the
complainants themselves” that might “cause embarrassment” to the SEC. Dkt. 28-1 at 5. But he
offers no support for these contentions, and Livornese’s declaration directly refutes them,
asserting that, “[p]ursuant to Exemption 5, [the SEC’s] FOIA Office redacted certain pre-
decisional and deliberative information,” withholding “
only
information that was exempt.” Dkt.
26-1 at 3 (Second Livornese Decl. ¶¶ 7-8) (emphasis added). The Livornese declaration,
moreover, goes on to offer additional detail about each of the Exemption 5 redactions currently
at issue. at 3–5 (Second Livornese Decl. ¶ 8). “Agency affidavits—so long as they are
relatively detailed and non-conclusory—are accorded a presumption of good faith, which cannot
be rebutted by purely speculative claims.”
Mobley v. CIA
,
The Court, accordingly, concludes that the SEC properly withheld portions of the consumer complaints аnd attorney notes on the basis of the deliberative process privilege. [5] C. Exemption 6 Withholdings
Finally, Edelman challenges the SEC’s decision to withhold “the identities of those
making complaints to it about the proposed [ESRT] transaction” pursuant to Exemption 6. Dkt.
28-1 at 5. “Exemption 6 protects information about individuals in ‘personnel and medical files
and similar files’ when its disclosure ‘would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of
personal privacy.’”
Shapiro v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice
,
The SEC asserts that it withheld the personal identifying information of “members of the public who contacted the SEC” to lodge complaints “during the ESRT review” process in order to shield those complainants from “being harassed or ridiculed by any person they may” have criticized in their complaints. Dkt. 26 at 10–11. According to the SEC, releasing this information “would not shed light on how the government operates,” and, thus, the complainants’ privacy interest necessarily outweighs the public interest. at 11. For his part, Edelman acknowledges that the third-party complainants “do have a privacy interest in their identities and certain identifying information,” but he argues that their privacy interest is not particularly strong because the complaints are commercial in nature and because several of the *14 complainants have, in fact, agreed to the disclosure of their identities. Dkt. 28-1 at 6–7. Against this backdrop, he contends that the SEC failed properly to balance the complainants’ privacy interests against the public’s right to know “[w]ho communicated to the government” and whether “the government took those [communications] into consideration” before making any decisions regarding the ESRT transaction. at 7. The Court agrees that the SEC has not correctly performed the required balancing and, accordingly, will deny the SEC’s motion for summary judgment on this ground. But, because Exemption 6 implicates the interests of third parties, and because both the factual record and briefing on this issue are incomplete, the Court will not grant Edelman’s cross-motion at this time.
The SEC hinges its argument on the mistaken premise that publicly releasing the names
of the complainants “would not shed light on how the government operates.” Dkt. 26 at 11.
That conclusion ignores the “public interest in knowing who may be exerting influence on [SEC]
officials sufficient to convince them to” approve or disapprove a transaction.
People for the Am.
Way Found.
,
On the other side of the balance, Edelman argues that the records at issue “concern a
commercial transaction,” as opposed to “a personal issue,” and thus do not implicate a
particularly strong privacy interest. Dkt. 28-1 at 7. In support of that proposition, Edelman cites
a decision from this Court,
Washington Post Co. v. United States Department of Agriculture
, 943
*15
F. Supp. 31, 34–36 (D.D.C. 1996), and a decision from the district court in Oregon,
Oregon
Natural Desert Association v. United States Department of the Interior
,
In a case much like this one, the D.C. Circuit rejected reliance by the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (“CFTC”) on Exemption 6 as a basis for withholding from the Chicago
Board of Trade the names of those who had submitted complaints to the CFTC.
See Bd. of Trade
v. Commodity Futures Trading Comm’n
,
The
Board of Trade
Court, however, went on to consider the question whether, even if
the names at issue were considered “similar files” would “the privacy interests asserted by the
[CFTC] outweigh the public interest in complete disclosure,” and the Court held that it would
not.
The Court takes from this line of precedent that personal information that relates to
commercial activity is not categorically beyond the reach of Exemption 6, but that the Court
must engage in a case-specific weighing of the interests at stake and that it is likely, as Edelman
suggests, that the names of commenters on commercial matters implicate less weighty privacy
interests than the type of information that lies at the core of Exemption 6. The Court is aware
that “a number of [complainants] communicated with [the SEC] only with the understanding that
the SEC would try to keep their comments and complaints confidential,” Dkt. 30-2 at 2 (Kluck
Decl. ¶ 5), and that “release of information provided under a pledge of confidentiality”—if such
a pledge was mаde here—“involves a greater invasion of privacy than release of information
provided without such a pledge,”
Wash. Post. Co.
,
Given the fact-intensive nature of the required inquiry, the Court cannot accept the SEC’s invitation to sustain its application of Exemption 6 to all identifying information about all of the complainants. This is not to say, however, that the SEC cannot make a sufficient showing that the identities of some of the complainants implicate privacy interests that outweigh the public interest in disclosure. But because the current record lacks sufficient information for the Court to conduct the required balancing, and because the SEC (which mistakenly concluded that providing the complainants’ names “would not shed light on how the government operates,” Dkt. 26 at 11) should conduct the relevant balancing in the first instance, the Court will deny summary judgment at this time. [6] The parties are directed to meet and confer regarding this issue and if, after applying the analysis set forth above to the relevant facts, a dispute remains, the SEC may file a renewed motion for summary judgment addressing solely this issue. Any such renewed motion shall provide a detailed factual basis for the SEC’s conclusions and shall be supported by further legal analysis of the issues outlined above.
CONCLUSION
For these reasons, the Court will GRANT in part and DENY in part the SEC’s renewed motion for summary judgment, Dkt. 26, will DENY Edelman’s renewed motion for summary judgment, Dkt. 28, and will GRANT the SEC’s motion to file a sur-reply, Dkt. 33.
A separate Order will issue.
/s/ Randolph D. Moss RANDOLPH D. MOSS United States District Judge Date: March 6, 2017
Notes
[1] The Court’s earlier decision interchangeably refers to this request as “Request No. 14-03452” (the “processing number” assigned by the SEC to Edelman’s request), the “Consumer Complaints” request, and the “fourth FOIA request.” See, e.g. , Edelman I , 172 F. Supp. 3d at 140, 145, 147. For the purposes of this memorandum, the Court will refer to this FOIA request as Edelman’s “Consumer Complaints” request.
[2] As the SEC points out in its renewed motion for summary judgment, its “previous filings with the Court . . . mistakenly stated that there were 113 pages of attorney notes” when, actually, “there were only 112 such pages of attorney notes.” Dkt. 26 at 2 n.1.
[3] In its prior decision, the Court “order[ed] the SEC to produce an unredacted version” of
“Document 1”—an “internal memo to file drafted by SEC attorneys regarding the [transaction]
review process”—for “
in camera
review.”
Edelman I
,
[4] In response to Edelman’s argument that its supplemental Vaughn index “fail[ed] to describe what [deliberative] processes the withheld documents pertain[ed] to,” Dkt. 28-1 at 5, the SEC filed an updated supplemental Vaughn index, Dkt. 30-3, indicating the specific “decisions staff members were deliberating,” Dkt. 30 at 5 & 5–6 n.2. Acсordingly, the Court will assess the completeness of the SEC’s updated Vaughn index in determining whether it properly applied Exemption 5.
[5] In his reply brief, Edelman argues, for the first time, that “the SEC fail[ed] to establish that it
conducted a foreseeable harm analysis on [the records redacted under Exemption 5] as now
required by the FOIA Improvement Act of 2016.” Dkt. 32 at 4. The SEC seeks leave to file a
sur-reply so that it can address this “new argument” that it would not otherwise be “able to
contest.” Dkt. 33 at 1.
The “decision to grant or deny leave to file a sur[-]reply is committed to the sound discretion
of the court,”
Akers v. Beal Bank
,
[6] The Court also notes that, even though Edelman “underst[oo]d and expect[ed] the names of investors to be redacted to protect confidentiality” when he made his FOIA request, see 15-3 at 5 (Ex. 2), the SEC does not rely on this disclaimer to justify its withholding of the complainants’ names. Nowhere in its Vaughn index does the SEC explain that it withheld the complainants’ names “at Edelman’s request” or “consistent with Edelman’s FOIA request;” rather, the SEC justifies its withholdings with a reference to Exemption 6.
