MEMORANDUM OPINION
World-renowned poker expert Kenny Rogers once sagely advised, “You’ve got to know when to hold 'em. Know when to fold ‘em. Know when to walk away.”
BACKGROUND
I. Facts
Freeman, as a regular part of its hiring process, conducted criminal background checks on all applicants who were offered a position, and conducted credit background checks on applicants who were offered financially sensitive positions.
II. Procedural History
After being rejected by Freeman based on information in her credit report, Katrina Vaughn filed a charge of discrimination with the EEOC. Id. at 789. Based on this charge, the EEOC filed a complaint in this Court alleging that Freeman’s use of background checks had a disparate impact on African-American, Hispanic, and male job applicants. Id. On April 27, 2010, the Court dismissed all claims relating to hiring decisions made before March 23, 2007, the date 300 days before the original charge of discrimination was filed on January 17, 2008. ECF No. 19. On January 31, 2011, the Court granted Freeman’s partial motion for summary judgment and dismissed all claims relating to hiring decisions based on criminal background checks made prior to November 30, 2007, the date 300 days before September 25, 2008, when the EEOC first notified Freeman that it was expanding its investigation to include race discrimination based on the use of criminal background checks. ECF No. 43. On August 24, 2012, the EEOC voluntary dismissed with prejudice its claim that Freeman unlawfully discriminated against Hispanics.
On July 18, 2012, the EEOC served Freeman with the expert report of Dr. Kevin R. Murphy. ECF No. 186 at 9. After Freeman pointed out various errors in the report, the EEOC served a second expert report that purported to fix those errors on July 26, 2012.
On August 9, 2013, the Court excluded the EEOC’s experts and granted Freeman’s motion for summary judgment. ECF No. 150. Freeman subsequently moved for attorneys’ fees. ECF No. 154. After filing its appeal, ECF No. 166, the EEOC moved to stay proceedings related to Freeman’s motion for attorneys’ fees. ECF No. 172. The Court granted that motion over Freeman’s opposition. ECF No. 176. The EEOC also moved to amend the record for appeal with Murphy’s report tendered at the motions hearing, ECF No. 177, and the Court granted that motion, again over Freeman’s opposition. ECF No. 181.
The Fourth Circuit affirmed the Court on February 20, 2015. EEOC v. Freeman,
ANALYSIS
The EEOC has, understandably, taken a keen interest in employers’ use of background checks to make hiring decisions.
However, before the EEOC can get to the question of business necessity, it must actually make out a prima facie case of disparate impact, and before it can make out a prima facie case of disparate impact, it must actually produce reliable statistical evidence showing that a particular employment practice has a disparate impact on a protected class. Id. at 791. The EEOC is not entitled to require an
I. The Availability of Attorneys’ Fees Under Title VII
Title VII provides that “the court, in its discretion, may allow the prevailing party ... a reasonable attorney’s fee (including expert fees) as part of the costs, and the Commission and the United States shall be liable for costs the same as a private person.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(k). By its terms, this provision allows either a prevailing plaintiff or a prevailing defendant to recover attorneys’ fees. However, the award of attorneys’ fees to a prevailing plaintiff involves different considerations than an award to a prevailing defendant. The prevailing plaintiff is acting as a “private attorney general” in vindicating an important federal interest against a violator of federal law, and therefore “ordinarily is to be awarded attorney’s fees in all but special circumstances.” Christiansburg Garment Co. v. EEOC,
In assessing whether to assess attorneys’ fees against a plaintiff, it is important that a court not engage in minute, post hoc questioning of a plaintiffs claims and conduct in light of plaintiffs failure on the merits. EEOC v. Great Steaks, Inc.,
II. Freeman is Entitled to Reasonable Attorneys’ Fees
A. The EEOC Needed to Present Reliable Statistical Evidence that Freeman’s Policies had a Disparate Impact to Make Out a Prima Facie Case of Discrimination
It is black letter Title VII law that, in order to make out a prima facie case of
Simply reciting this black letter law meets several of the EEOC’s arguments in its opposition to an award of attorneys’ fees. First, the EEOC asserts that its case is not factually groundless. ECF No. 191 at 5. The basis for this argument appears to be that it may have been possible for the EEOC to show evidence of a disparate impact, and it just so happened to fail here. Id. at 5-7. But the possible existence of evidence somewhere to back up a claim does not constitute reasonable grounds for continuing to litigate that claim. Cases are litigated based on evidence actually produced, not hunches, however reasonable those hunches may be. Without reliable statistical evidence produced by an expert, which is entirely absent here, the EEOC simply could not make out its prima facie case. The factual lack of reliable expert testimony showing a disparate impact was fatal to the EEOC’s disparate impact claim in this particular case, even if in some alternate universe (or simply by hiring a better expert), the EEOC could have made out a claim.
The EEOC also could not reasonably rely on general population statistics to make out its prima facie case. It is true that, in some circumstances, general population statistics will suffice to show that a particular policy has a disparate impact. See Griggs v. Duke Power Co.,
In addition to Griggs, the EEOC cites several cases for the proposition that “[l]ower federal courts have also accepted external population proof in a variety of contexts despite arguments that they did not perfectly match the facts of the case.” ECF No. 191 at 10. An examination of each of these cases reveals that none supports this argument, even by analogy.
In Peightal v. Metropolitan Dade County,
In Carpenter v. Boeing Co.,
The cases cited by the EEOC to support the reasonableness of its reliance on general population statistics are simply inapplicable. They support the proposition that general population statistics will be allowed where those statistics are completely congruent with an employment criteria, as in Griggs, or where a limited number of data points, in an otherwise refined sample, do not perfectly align with the general population data. The cases do not support the proposition that a plaintiff is entitled to rely on general population statistics divorced from any reference to the defendant’s employment practices without any attempt to control for those practices.
It has been clear since at least 1989, when the Supreme Court decided Wards Cove Packing Co., Inc. v. Atonio,
Even if general population statistics were appropriately tailored in this case, the EEOC overlooks a key issue, which is noted in the cases cited by the EEOC, yet ignored by it: in order to use general population statistics that do not match the particular employment criteria instead of statistics from the employer, the missing statistics must be impossible or extremely difficult to obtain. See Carpenter,
Here, it was not impossible for the EEOC to obtain the relevant data from Freeman that it needed to do the appropriate statistical analysis. The data necessary to determine the impact of Freeman’s use of background checks was available, because it was provided by Freeman in discovery. Freeman,
The upshot, then, is that the EEOC could not reasonably pursue its claims un
B. It was Unreasonable for the EEOC to Continue to Litigate on the Basis of Obviously Flawed Expert Reports
As made clear in the opinions of this Court and the Fourth Circuit, Murphy’s report was severely flawed. His conclusions were drawn from an unrepresentative sample, even though data was available from which a representative sample could be drawn. Freeman,
1. The EEOC should have been aware of the unreliability of Murphy’s analysis no later than after Freeman’s motion to exclude was filed
Freeman’s motion to exclude Murphy’s expert report revealed the alarming number of flaws in his report, without which the EEOC had no case. That motion detailed flaws on the face of the report, flaws with the data set used in the report, and multiple material errors in the report. ECF No. 108-1. Given those deep and obvious flaws, the EEOC could not possibly continue to rely on Murphy’s initial report, which is likely why the EEOC had Murphy submit yet another report, which still had many of the same flaws as the original report.
It is difficult to read the opinions this case has generated, in this Court and in the Fourth Circuit, and come away with any notion that the EEOC had any reasonable basis to rely on Murphy’s reports. This Court described Murphy’s analysis as “completely unreliable,” noted the “plethora of errors and analytical fallacies,” and called his attempt to correct his analysis “laughable.” Freeman,
All of which is to say, no set of objective eyes has yet looked at Murphy’s work and considered it anything but inexcusably slipshod and wholly unreliable. The Court recognizes that exclusion of evidence does not always mean that a defendant is entitled to attorneys’ fees. But this is not a case where a questionable or novel scientific method was challenged and an expert was excluded on that basis in a close case, or where an expert’s understandable failure to cross a few “t’s” and dot a few “i’s” necessitated exclusion. This was not close and it was not excusable. This was a case where an expert employed no method whatsoever (except to disingenuously cherry pick data), and seemed to go out of his way to introduce errors into his analysis. These flaws were
2. Murphy’s supplemental reports were flawed
Although the EEOC defended Murphy’s initial report, it also submitted a series of supplemental reports in an attempt to stave off exclusion and preclude summary judgment. ECF No. 121-1. Freeman and the EEOC dispute whether it was reasonable for the EEOC to believe it could supplement Murphy’s report. That argument is moot, however, if the supplemental reports could not save Murphy’s analysis, which is the case here. As Freeman demonstrated, Murphy’s first supplemental report suffered from many of the same flaws as his initial report. Murphy claimed to augment his analysis to include more background checks from the relevant time period and from branches not covered in his initial analysis. Id. at 14. While this was true, a review of the data Murphy used shows that he still did not attempt to construct a representative sample, but yet again simply included data in his sample without any regard for whether that data fairly represented the population he was studying. For example, Murphy’s new data set, while it included data from all of Freeman’s branches, underrepresented the number of background checks performed at some branches and overrepresented the number of background checks performed at others. E.g. ECF No. 130-1 at 12. And Murphy failed again to use all of the discovery materials available to him to construct a more complete sample. Id. at 11. Finally, his supplemental report still contained an unreasonably large number of errors.
The EEOC attempted to supplement Murphy’s report yet again, with a declaration by Murphy served on Freeman a month after briefing closed, and proffered to the Court at the hearing on Freeman’s motions. ECF No. 177-1. Amazingly, the EEOC attempts to rely on this report even
Moreover, there is absolutely no reason to take Murphy at his word that his third attempt at doing a passable statistical analysis was any better than his first two attempts. In this regard, Murphy’s first supplemental report was accompanied by a declaration which he swore “under penalty of perjury” was “true and correct to the best of my knowledge.” ECF No. 121-1 at 24. Yet, that declaration contained a number of blatant falsehoods. For example, Murphy claimed that any errors in his original report originated in Freeman’s data. ECF No. 121-1 at 5. Yet, in most cases this was not true. Freeman,
[13] The EEOC did not face a high burden to avoid paying Freeman’s reason
III. The Reasonableness of the Fee Request
To determine the reasonableness of a fee request, courts calculate a lodestar figure by multiplying the number of reasonable hours expended by a reasonable rate. Robinson v. Equifax Info. Svcs., LLC,
(1) the time and labor expended; (2) the novelty and difficulty of the questions raised; (3) the skill required to properly perform the legal services rendered; (4) the attorney’s opportunity costs in pressing the instant litigation; (5) the customary fee for like work; (6) the attorney’s expectations at the outset of the litigation; (7) the time limitations imposed by the client or circumstances; (8) the amount in controversy and the results obtained; (9) the experience, reputation and ability of the attorney; (10) the undesirability of the case within the legal community in which the suit arose; (11) the nature and length of the professional relationship between attorney and client; and (12) attorneys’ fees awards in similar cases.
Id. at 243-44.
A. The Hourly Rates Sought by Freeman are Generally Reasonable
The fee applicant bears the burden of establishing the reasonableness of a requested hourly rate. Plyler v. Evatt,
• Donald Livingston (admitted to bar for 20+ years) — $545 ($70 above guidelines)
• W. Randolph Teslik (admitted to bar for 20 + years) — $480 ($5 above guidelines)
• Hyland Hunt (admitted to bar for 5 years) — $480 ($180 above guidelines)
• John T. Koerner (admitted to bar for 1 year) — $290 ($65 above guidelines)
• Amy H. Glad (admitted to bar for 1 year) — $290 ($65 above guidelines)
• Paralegals — $155 ($5 above guidelines)
• Litigation support staff — $155
ECF No. 186-1 at 5-6.
With the exception of Hyland Hunt, more fully discussed below, these rates are reasonable. The EEOC argues that these rates are unreasonable because “Defendant and its witnesses have failed to identify what the prevailing rates (or range of
This case involved a complex legal question with potentially serious ramifications for Freeman’s business interests. Not only was Freeman facing over $3 million in liability in this lawsuit, but also its ability to control the quality of its applicant pool was threatened, which could have realistically led to such negative consequences as more frequent incidents of embezzlement and fraud, workplace violence, and exposure to negligent hiring claims. Also, the EEOC had made challenging background checks a priority, indicating that the litigation could be particularly difficult. Finally, Freeman’s attorneys had a high level of skill and expertise commensurate with their experience. In light of all of these factors, the slightly above-guidelines rates requested by Freeman are reasonable. Life Technologies,
However, a rate of $480 for Hy-land Hunt, who was admitted to the bar for only five years when the appeal in this case began, is not reasonable.
B. Reasonableness of Attorney Hours
Once a reasonable hourly rate is determined, a reasonable number of hours must be determined. “A prevailing party may not recover fees for excessive, redundant, or unnecessary hours.” Id. Freeman’s attorneys have exhaustively documented the hours spent on this litigation. ECF No. 193-6 (hours spent in this Court); ECF No. 193-7 (hours spent on appeal); ECF No. 197-1 (hours spent defending fee petition). The EEOC has just as exhaustively documented its objections to those hours. ECF No. 191-4. Instead of reviewing each item and objection line-by-line, the Court will review the EEOC’s general objections, and indicate whether those objections have merit and warrant an across the board reduction in the fee
1. Work with amici
The EEOC objects to Freeman’s entries reflecting its work with amici on appeal, constituting a total of $15,233 in attorneys’ fees.
Freeman responds with two unpublished district court opinions allowing fees for work dealing with amici. Riter v. Moss & Bloomberg, Ltd.,
The Court does not see any value in a rule that categorically excludes all attorneys’ fees incurred dealing with amici. Rather, whether time spent dealing with amici is reasonable turns on the degree to which amici could be reasonably helpful to the resolution of issues in a case.
Here, .the intersection between background checks and Title VII is an evolving area of the law, one in which the EEOC has taken a keen interest, and which has potentially far-reaching consequences for employers throughout the country. Amici could reasonably have been expected to present various relevant arguments in support of Freeman’s position to the Fourth Circuit to help it resolve the complex issues presented. Thus, the Court will allow these fees to be recovered, in the amount of $14,303, which reflects Hyland Hunt’s reduced hourly rate.
2. The PowerPoint Presentation
The EEOC objects to the hours spent by Freeman’s legal team preparing a PowerPoint presentation for the motions hearing, hours that represent $42,629.50 of its fee request. ECF No. 191 at 32-33. The EEOC cites Firestine v. Parkview Health System, Inc.,
3. Summary judgment briefing
The EEOC objects to excessive hours spent on ' summary judgment briefing. There are two aspects to the EEOC’s argument. First, to the extent Freeman repeated the same arguments in its summary judgment motion as it did in its motion to exclude, it argues that those
Having filed a motion to exclude that would, if granted, have vitiated a necessary element of the EEOC’s prima facie ease of discrimination, Freeman understandably filed a motion for summary judgment. But however confident Freeman may have been that the motion to exclude would succeed and thus would entitle it to summary judgment, it was not required to present only that ground as a basis for summary judgment, nor was it required to wait until after a ruling on its motion to exclude to move for summary judgment, especially where it had identified several alternative arguments supporting its request for summary judgment. “[T]here is no requirement that counsel pursue potentially dispositive issues in a case in a piecemeal fashion, rather than presenting all potentially dispositive claims at one time in a properly filed motion for summary judgment.” Reeves v. United Parcel Services,
Nor was Freeman’s motion for summary judgment so duplicative of the motion to exclude as to render the time spent on it unreasonable. Freeman advanced a number of alternative, non-frivolous arguments unrelated to its motion to exclude, including that white males could not sustain a Title VII cause of action under a disparate impact theory, that it was entitled to summary judgment for male claimants who applied for jobs prior to May 31, 2008 because those claims were time-barred, and that it was entitled to summary judgment for claimants who lied about their criminal history on their employment application. ECF No. 114-1 at 2. Indeed, the bulk of the argument section of Freeman’s summary judgment brief is dedicated to these alternative arguments. Id. That the Court ultimately did not need to reach these arguments does not justify reduction of the fee. See Stark v. PPM America, Inc.,
4. Fees related to ancillary, unsuccessful, or unfiled motions
The EEOC objects to fees sought by Freeman in presenting its unsuccessful opposition to the EEOC’s motion to stay
“Where a [party] has obtained excellent results, his attorney should recover a fully compensatory fee. Normally this will encompass all hours reasonably expended on the litigation ... In these circumstances, the fee award should not be reduced simply because the plaintiff failed to prevail on every contention raised in the lawsuit.” Hensley v. Eckerhart,
In regards to Freeman’s unsuccessful oppositions to the EEOC’s motions to stay briefing on the motion for attorneys’ fees and to supplement the record, neither of those oppositions appears to have been frivolous, so there is no justification for denying those fees outright. See Cross v. Fleet Reserve Ass’n Pension Plan,
The Court will allow in full the hours spent considering filing an opposition to the EEOC’s motion to stay execution of costs, notwithstanding that it did not ultimately file an opposition. “A competent attorney will explore various theories and lines of argument, some of which may entail motions of one kind or another, but not all of which will—in the end— prove to be advisable courses of action.” Alfano v. CIGNA Life Ins. Co.,
5. Fees related to staffing at hearings
The EEOC objects to $3,840 for Teslik’s attendance at the motions hearing, and $1,015 for Koerner’s attendance, even though neither attorney offered argument. Generally, the guidelines allow recovery for the attendance of only one attorney at hearings. However, departure from this guideline is appropriate where there is a valid reason to have multiple attorneys attend a hearing. Here, the complexity of the case, the number of arguments pre
6. Fees related to the appeal
Freeman seeks $211,146 for 450 hours expended on the appeal. ECF No. 193-7 at 43. The EEOC objects to many of the hours expended on appeal as “dupli-cative and excessive,” because the issues on appeal were fully briefed before this Court. ECF No. 191 at 51-52. While it is true that the legal issues presented on appeal were the same as those briefed in this Court, that does not necessarily make the number of hours expended on appeal excessive. District court proceedings and appellate proceedings are different. Although, in the most general manner, the facts and legal arguments are the same, presenting a persuasive appeal requires much more than simply reformatting the briefs presented to the district court to conform with the style requirements of the appellate court, and 450 hours is not an unreasonable amount of time to research and prepare proper arguments to present on appeal.
The EEOC cites Goodwin v. Metis,
7. Fees for preparing the fee petition
As supplemented, see ECF No. 197, Freeman seeks $164,713.50 in fees for time spent preparing its fee petition. The EEOC objects that this is “plainly unreasonable” because the motion “simply re
Thus, at the merits phase of this case, Freeman won so long as it was right. To be entitled to attorneys’ fees, it must show not only that it was right, but that it was so right that the EEOC’s continuation of the litigation was unreasonable. If the EEOC can cite any authority whatsoever to support the positions it put forth in the merits phase — and it has tried — Freeman is not entitled to recover its attorneys’ fees. That it would need to spend a significant number of hours ensuring it could credibly argue that the EEOC’s positions were meritless is not surprising. Moreover, the-EEOC lodged over 1,000 objections to Freeman’s fee request, ECF No. 191-4, which Freeman had to address in its reply.
C. Reasonableness of Expert Fees
In addition to attorneys’ fees, Freeman is seeking the following in experts’ fees:
• Dr. Donald Deere — $387 an hour
• Dr. Mary Dunn Baker — $430 an hour
The EEOC objects to these fees on various grounds.
1. Dr. Donald Deere
Freeman seeks recovery of $223,455 incurred by Donald Deere for 584.8 hours of work, primarily related to analyzing the data used by Murphy to support his conclusions. ECF No. 186-1 at 6. The EEOC objects to this amount.
The first basis for this objection is that Freeman previously represented to the Court that Freeman employee Suzanne Bragg conducted the analysis necessary to reveal the plethora of errors in Murphy’s reports, yet now claims that it used expert Dr. Deere to conduct that analysis. ECF No. 191 at 44-45. Thus, it argues that Freeman should be estopped from recouping the fees it spent on a “hidden expert” who actually performed the work where it misrepresented to the Court the true source of that work. Id. However, Bragg’s declaration does not state that she, and only she, conducted the analysis necessary to reveal the errors in Murphy’s data set. It states that this analysis was conducted under her direction, and states
The EEOC’s second basis for objection is that Freeman had no need to retain an expert to review Murphy’s report when the flaws of the report were, according to Freeman, so obvious that continuing to litigate on the basis of that report was unreasonable. ECF No. 191 at 45-46. This argument is a red herring. Murphy’s report was facially flawed in obvious ways. It was also flawed in less obvious ways, as Freeman discovered when it conducted a deep dive into the data. Freeman was not required to rely solely on the obvious facial flaws to support its motion to exclude Murphy’s report. It was reasonable to engage experts to expose in detail just how flawed Murphy’s report was. Freeman cannot be faulted for litigating hard just because the EEOC litigated unreasonably.
The EEOC also argues that Freeman has not submitted evidence of the reasonableness of the rate charged by Dr. Deere. Id. at 46. However, Freeman submitted a declaration by Donald R. Livingston indicating not only that the rates charged by Dr. Deere were reasonable, but also that those were the rates actually charged to Freeman. ECF No. 186-1 at 7-8. This is sufficient evidence to demonstrate the reasonableness of Dr. Deere’s rates. Cf. Life Technologies Corp.,
Although the Court’ finds that the EEOC’s objections are without merit, the award for Dr. Deere’s work will be reduced by $126,875 to $96,580, which reflects the amount of work done before Freeman filed its motion to exclude.
2. Dr. Mary Baker
Freeman seeks $11,124.50 in fees paid to expert Dr. Mary Baker, but only $643.50 survives the Court’s decision to award only those fees incurred after Freeman filed its motion to exclude. Nevertheless, the Court assumes the EEOC would maintain its objections and will consider them.
The EEOC objects that Dr. Baker’s work was duplicative of Dr. Deere’s work. ECF No. 191 at 47-48. It does appear that much of Dr. Baker’s work consisted of confirming Dr. Deere’s work. However, that is reflected by the fact that Freeman is only seeking to recover $11,124.50 for Dr. Baker’s work — and is only recovering $643.50 — compared to $223,455 for Dr. Deere. It was reasonable for Freeman to have a second expert confirming the complex work undertaken by another expert.
The EEOC also objects to several of Dr. Baker’s billing entries such as “review documents” and “literature review and research” as impermissibly vague. ECF No. 191 at 47. Vague as they are, Dr. Baker’s declaration, submitted with Freeman’s motion to exclude, provided detail about what documents she reviewed and what literature she consulted. ECF No. 108-28. This is sufficient information to allow an award of fees. EEOC v. Peoplemark, Inc.,
IV. The Final Fee Award
• The Court must show its math. Altogether, Freeman seeks a total of $1,583,762 in fees. That fee is being ■ reduced as follows:
• $388,768.50, reflecting attorneys’ fees incurred between July 18, 2012, and December 18, 2012. See supra, Section II.B.l;
• $225,356, reflecting experts’ fees incurred between July 18, 2012 and December 18, 2012 ($126,875 for Dr. Deere, $10,481 for Dr. Baker, and $88,000 for Dr. Outtz). See supra, Section III.C;
• $17,270, reflecting the reduction in Hunt’s hourly rate from $480 per hour to $380 per hour (reducing total fees awarded for Hunt’s work from $82,896 to $65,626). See supra, Section III.A;
• $9,756, reflecting a 50% reduction in fees awarded for unsuccessful oppositions to the EEOC’s motions to stay briefing on Freeman’s motion for attorneys’ fees and to supplement the record. See supra, Section III.B.4; and
• $3,840, reflecting the amount for Tes-lik’s attendance at the motions hearing in this court. See supra, Section III. B.5.
With those reductions taken into account, the total fee the Court will award to Freeman is $938,771.50.
CONCLUSION
The EEOC needed to stop pursuing this case after Freeman showed that the EEOC’s dog did not hunt. Once Freeman filed its motion to exclude, it should have been obvious to the EEOC that its dog had a variety of debilitating infirmities. The hunt was lost. Instead, the EEOC continued pursuing a lost cause. As a result, Freeman is entitled to its reasonable attorneys’ fees. By separate Order, the Court will award Freeman $938,771.50 in attorneys’ fees.
ORDER
Upon consideration of Defendant’s Renewed Motion for Attorneys’ Fees [ECF No. 185], the opposition and replies thereto, argument of counsel, and for the reasons set forth in the accompanying memorandum opinion, it is, this 3rd of September, 2015, by the United States District Court for the District of Maryland,
ORDERED, that Defendant’s Renewed Motion for Attorneys’ Fees [ECF No. 185] is GRANTED; and it is further
ORDERED, that Defendant will be awarded attorneys’ and expert fees in the amount of $938,771.50; and it is further
ORDERED, that judgment for $938,771.50 be entered in favor of Defendant and against Plaintiff Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.
Notes
. Kenny Rogers, The Gambler (United Artists 1978).
. The facts of this case are set out in full in the Court’s previous opinion disposing of this case on the merits. EEOC v. Freeman,
. Freeman stopped conducting credit checks in 2011. Id. at 787 n. 2.
. Arrests were only considered to the extent that, if a background check turned up an outstanding arrest warrant, the applicant was afforded an opportunity to have the warrant withdrawn. Id. at 788.
. This was apparently because the EEOC's experts could not find a disparate impact on Hispanics. Freeman,
. This second report only fixed minor clerical errors. ECF No. 186-16. For convenience, the July 18, 2012 and July 26, 2012 reports will be referred to interchangeably as the "initial report.”
. Dr. Huebner’s report purported to replicate the findings of Dr. Murphy, and focused largely on general population statistics regarding minorities and the criminal justice system. This Opinion will focus primarily on Dr. Murphy's report.
. See Scott Thurm, Employment Checks Fuel Race Complaints, Wall St. J., June 12, 2013, at Al, available online at http://www.wsj.com/ articles/SB 100014241278873234956045 78539283518855020
. The Court notes that, since it is not awarding attorneys' fees from the inception of this litigation, an award of attorneys' fees here cannot be fairly said to reduce incentives to bring claims. No one has argued that it was unreasonable for the EEOC to bring this lawsuit, and the award of attorneys’ fees here should not be construed as an implication that it was.
. The Fourth Circuit’s 1990 decision in Thomas v. Washington Cty. Sch. Bd.,
. Freeman seeks attorneys' fees from the date the EEOC served Murphy’s report on Freeman, arguing that the report contained enough facial flaws that it was unreasonable to even serve it on Freeman. It is certainly true that Murphy's initial report was significantly flawed on its face, even without digging into the data. However, the Court is at least somewhat persuaded by the EEOC's argument that it should not have been required to wholly reconstruct Murphy’s data set to avoid attorneys' fees. It is a close question, but considering all of the circumstances of this case, the Court will not award attorneys’ fees from the date Freeman served Murphy’s report on Freeman. As a result, the total fee will be reduced by $388,768.50, reflecting the fees incurred prior to December 18, 2012. These fees are reflected in the following entries in ECF No. 193-6: entries 1-7, entry 9, entries from pages 4-7 (ending at entry 73), all entries from pages 8-22, entries from pages 26-111 (ending at entry 699), and entries 1067-1081.
. Even if the EEOC was not required to reconstruct Murphy's data set based on the original report, it should have done much more to ensure Murphy's attempted supplements actually were arguably reliable once it became aware of the inexplicably shoddy work in Murphy’s first report.
. Although Freeman has not done a full rebuttal of Murphy’s final report, it does contend that this report continues to omit all of the data from 2009, and that the EEOC conceded that point at the motions hearing. ECF No. 186 at 25. While the EEOC takes exception to the assertion that it conceded the point, ECF No. 191 at 7 n. 2, it does not directly refute the assertion that Murphy’s report continued to exclude data-from 2009.
. While it was arguably reasonable for the EEOC to expect it could supplement Murphy’s analysis once, it was unreasonable to think it could supplement it yet a third time, and to expect it could do so by filing a surre-ply. Murphy’s third analysis was not based on any new facts, as required to supplement a report, but was simply a response to criticisms raised by Freeman in response to Murphy's supplemental report. And even though expert discovery was currently stayed, the EEOC’s deadline for submitting expert reports had long since passed, so the report was plainly untimely. Allowing the third report would have prejudiced Freeman, as it had already filed a motion to exclude and a motion for summary judgment based on the initial report filed nearly a year earlier. See Freeman,
.The EEOC argues vigorously that its appeal was reasonable. To be sure, its appeal involved several non-frivolous issues, including issues of first impression in the Fourth Circuit. However, just as the inability to produce reliable expert testimony was fatal to its claim in this Court, so was that failure fatal to its appeal. Even if the EEOC had the better of every other argument on appeal, its lack of reliable expert testimony ensured those arguments would never be reached. Thus, the EEOC's entire appeal was unreasonable even
. While Hyland Hunt was licensed in 2008, which would have given her one year of bar admission when this lawsuit began, she did not become involved until the appeal was filed in 2013. The EEOC has not challenged her as belonging in the 5-8 years admitted bracket for purposes of the hourly rate guidelines.
. Hunt's total hours are reflected in entries 76, 83, 85, 87, 98, 99, 102, 105, 106, 109-111, 113, 114, 116, 118, 119, 121-123, 126, 131, 135, 138, 143, 145, 148, 151, 156, 159, 162, 173, 175, 177, 180, 182, 183, 193, 202, and 206 of ECF No. 193-7, and in entries 4, 12, 20, 22, 26, 27, 39, 42, 45, 46 and 48 in ECF No. 197-1.
. Freeman voluntarily withdrew $2,819 in attorneys’ fees related to work with amici.
. The Court remains mindful, as always, that the hours spent dealing with amici must be reasonable and necessary, not duplicative and wasteful. A party may not increase its fee award by having its attorneys essentially act as stand-in counsel for amici. Cf. Glassroth,
. Hunt’s work with amici is reflected in entries 123, 159, and 162 in ECF No. 193-7.
. The EEOC also states that "under 28 U.S.C. § 1920, production costs are not even recoverable for such slides absent court approval and demonstration that slides are necessary to such an understanding.” It then cites Advance Bus. Sys. & Supply Co. v. SCM Corp.,
.The bulk of fees related to summary judgment briefing are being disallowed simply because the Court is only awarding fees from the date Freeman filed its motion to exclude. However,, the Court will still address .the EEOC’s broader objections, because those objections also apply to the hours Freeman spent on its reply brief.
. The EEOC also objects to Freeman's seeking fees for a non-filed motion to exclude certain claimants. All work on that motion occurred before December 18, 2012, so the Court will not award any of those fees.
. As reflected above, the total fee sought for appeal will be reduced slightly as a result of Hunt’s reduced hourly rate.
. Freeman obviously reviewed the EEOC's numerous objections in some detail, as it voluntarily withdrew $145,260.50 from its fee request based on those objections. ECF No. 193 at 8.
. Freeman requests $88,000 in fees paid to Dr. James Outtz. ECF No. 186-1 at 7. All of Dr. Outtz's work came before Freeman filed its motion to exclude. ECF No. 186-6. Since the Court is not awarding fees before that date, none of Dr. Outtz's fees will be awarded.
. The Court also notes that the EEOC retained a second expert to confirm Murphy’s analysis.
