In the Matter of Khalib Gould, Appellant,
v.
New York City Police Department et al., Respondents.
In the Matter of Harold Scott, Appellant,
v.
New York City Police Department, Respondent.
In the Matter of Joseph F. DeFelice ex rel. on Behalf of Christopher Barbera, Appellant,
v.
New York City Police Department, Respondent.
Court of Appeals of the State of New York.
Rosemary Herbert, New York City, E. Joshua Rosenkranz and Richard M. Greenberg for appellant in the first above-entitled proceeding.
Steven B. Wasserman, New York City, Robert M. Baum, Daniel L. Greenberg and Laura R. Johnson for appellant in the second above-entitled proceeding.
Joseph F. DeFelice, Kew Gardens, appellant pro se in the third above-entitled proceeding.
Paul A. Crotty, Corporation Counsel of New York City (Margaret G. King and Barry P. Schwartz of counsel), for respondent in the first, second and third above-entitled proceedings.
Robert M. Baum, New York City, Steven B. Wasserman and Laura R. Johnson for Legal Aid Society, amicus curiae in the first above-entitled proceeding.
Charles J. Hynes, District Attorney of Kings County, Brooklyn (Roseann B. MacKechnie, Virginia C. Modest and Thomas M. Ross of counsel), for New York State District Attorneys Association, amicus curiae in the first, second and third above-entitled proceedings.
Chief Judge KAYE and Judges SIMONS, TITONE, SMITH and LEVINE concur with Judge CIPARICK; Judge BELLACOSA dissents and votes to affirm in a separate opinion.
Chief Judge KAYE and Judges SIMONS, TITONE, SMITH and LEVINE concur with Judge CIPARICK; Judge BELLACOSA dissents in part and votes to affirm in a separate opinion.
*272CIPARICK, J.
The three separate proceedings on appeal all involve petitioners' efforts, pursuant to the Freedom of Information Law (FOIL), to obtain documents relating to their arrests from the New York City Police Department. In response to petitioners' FOIL requests, the Police Department furnished assorted documents to petitioners, but refused to disclose complaint *273 follow-up reports (commonly referred to as DD5's) and police activity logs (commonly referred to as memo books). We hold that the complaint follow-up reports are not categorically exempt from disclosure as intra-agency material and that the activity logs are agency records subject to the provisions of FOIL. Consequently, we remit these proceedings to Supreme Court to determine whether the Police Department can make a particularized showing that a statutory exemption applies to justify nondisclosure of the requested documents.
I.
In Matter of Gould, attorneys for petitioner Khalib Gould submitted a FOIL request to the Police Department for all documents pertaining to his arrest and the related police investigation leading to his conviction for murder in the second degree and attempted murder in the second degree. In response, the Police Department furnished arrest, complaint and ballistic reports to Gould, but withheld complaint follow-up reports on the ground that the reports are exempt from FOIL production as intra-agency material and withheld police activity logs on the ground that the logs are the officers' personal property. Gould instituted a CPLR article 78 proceeding challenging the Police Department's decision, which was dismissed by Supreme Court. The Appellate Division unanimously affirmed.
In Matter of DeFelice, petitioner Christopher Barbera, through his attorney, requested police reports relating to his 1993 arrest that led to his conviction for attempted murder in the second degree and assault in the first degree. The Police Department provided Barbera with complaint reports, property vouchers, and arrest reports, but refused to produce the requested complaint follow-up reports and activity logs. On Barbera's CPLR article 78 challenge, Supreme Court upheld the Police Department's action, finding that the complaint follow-up reports and activity logs are exempt intra-agency material. The Appellate Division unanimously affirmed.
In Matter of Scott, petitioner Harold Scott, in a series of FOIL requests, sought Police Department documents relating to his 1983 arrest and subsequent conviction for rape and homicide. In response to the latest of these requests, the Police Department refused to produce police activity logs and interviews of witnesses who had testified at Scott's criminal trial on the ground that the documents are exempt from disclosure under FOIL and further informed Scott that all *274 other responsive documents had been provided to him in response to prior FOIL requests. On Scott's subsequent CPLR article 78 challenge, Supreme Court upheld the Police Department's refusal to produce the activity logs, but ordered the Department to disclose the interview reports. As to Scott's request for additional documents which the Police Department certified it did not possess, Supreme Court denied the petition concluding that Scott only speculated that these documents existed. On Scott's appeal, the Appellate Division unanimously affirmed, holding that police activity logs are exempt intra-agency material and that the Police Department's certification sufficed to establish the nonexistence of other records. This Court granted leave to appeal in all three proceedings.
II.
To promote open government and public accountability, the FOIL imposes a broad duty on government to make its records available to the public (see, Public Officers Law § 84 [legislative declaration]). Moreover, access to government records does not depend on the purpose for which the records are sought. We recognize that petitioners seek documents relating to their own criminal proceedings, and that disclosure of such documents is governed generally by CPL article 240 as well as the Rosario and Brady rules. However, insofar as the Criminal Procedure Law does not specifically preclude defendants from seeking these documents under FOIL, we cannot read such a categorical limitation into the statute (see, Public Officers Law § 87 [2] [a]; accord, Matter of Farbman & Sons v New York City Health & Hosps. Corp.,
All government records are thus presumptively open for public inspection and copying unless they fall within one of *275 the enumerated exemptions of Public Officers Law § 87 (2). To ensure maximum access to government documents, the "exemptions are to be narrowly construed, with the burden resting on the agency to demonstrate that the requested material indeed qualifies for exemption" (Matter of Hanig v State of New York Dept. of Motor Vehicles,
In keeping with these settled principles, blanket exemptions for particular types of documents are inimical to FOIL's policy of open government (accord, Matter of Capital Newspapers Div. of Hearst Corp. v Burns,
Despite these principles, the courts below relied on the case of Matter of Scott v Chief Med. Examiner of City of N. Y. (
*276A.
A complaint follow-up report is a form document on which a police officer "report[s] additional information concerning a previously recorded complaint" (New York City Police Dept Patrol Guide § 108-8). The courts below held that the Police Department properly withheld these reports under the intra-agency exemption, which provides that an "agency may deny access to records or portions thereof that: * * * are inter-agency or intra-agency materials which are not: i. statistical or factual tabulations or data; ii. instructions to staff that affect the public; iii. final agency policy or determinations; or iv. external audits" (Public Officers Law § 87 [2] [g]). Petitioners contend that because the complaint follow-up reports contain factual data, the exemption does not justify complete nondisclosure of the reports. We agree.
Initially, we note that one court has suggested that complaint follow-up reports are exempt from disclosure because they constitute nonfinal intra-agency material, irrespective of whether the information contained in the reports is "factual data" (see, Matter of Scott v Chief Med. Examiner of City of N. Y.,
The question before us, then, is whether the complaint follow-up reports contain "factual data." Although the term "factual data" is not defined by statute, the meaning of the term can be discerned from the purpose underlying the intra-agency exemption, which is "`to protect the deliberative process of the government by ensuring that persons in an advisory role [will] be able to express their opinions freely to agency decision makers'" (Matter of Xerox Corp. v Town of Webster,
Against this backdrop, we conclude that the complaint follow-up reports contain substantial factual information available pursuant to the provisions of FOIL. Sections of the report are devoted to such purely factual data as: the names, addresses, and physical descriptions of crime victims, witnesses, and perpetrators; a checklist that indicates whether the victims and witnesses have been interviewed and shown photos, whether crime scenes have been photographed and dusted for fingerprints, and whether neighborhood residents have been canvassed for information; and a blank space denominated "details" in which the officer records the particulars of any action taken in connection with the investigation.
However, the Police Department argues that any witness statements contained in the reports, in particular, are not "factual" because there is no assurance of the statements' accuracy and reliability. We decline to read such a reliability requirement into the phrase "factual data," as the dissent would have us do, and conclude that a witness statement constitutes factual data insofar as it embodies a factual account of the witness's observations. Such a statement, moreover, is far removed from the type of internal government exchange sought to be protected by the intra-agency exemption (see, Matter of Ingram v Axelrod,
B.
We next address the Police Department's refusal to disclose police activity logs. The Police Department, which is indisputably an "agency" for FOIL purposes (see, Public Officers Law § 86 [3]), contends that the activity logs are the officers' personal property and, therefore, not agency "records." We disagree. Because the activity logs contain "information kept [or] held * * * for an agency," they are "records" available under FOIL (Public Officers Law § 86 [4]).[2]
Activity logs are the leather-bound books in which officers record all their work-related activities, including assignments received, tasks performed, and information relating to suspected violations of law. Significantly, the Police Department issues activity logs to all its officers, who are required to maintain these memo books in the course of their regular duties and to store the completed books in their lockers; the officers are obligated to surrender the activity logs to superiors for inspection upon request; and the contents of the logs are meticulously prescribed by departmental regulation (accord, Matter of Washington Post Co. v New York State Ins. Dept.,
C.
Supreme Court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that the Police Department adequately established the nonexistence of additional records requested by petitioner Scott. Once the records access officer for the Police Department certified to Supreme Court that the Police Department had provided Scott with all responsive documents in its possession, Scott was required to articulate a demonstrable factual basis to support his contention that the requested documents existed and were within the Police Department's control (see, Matter of Calvin K. v De Francesco,
Finally, we note the Police Department's argument and the dissent's concern that the requests serve not the underlying purposes of FOIL, but the quite different private interests of petitioners in obtaining documents bearing on their cases and will produce an enormous administrative burden. This argument, however, is unavailing as the statutory language imposes a broad duty to make certain records publicly available irrespective of the private interests and the attendant burdens involved. Should the Legislature see fit to do so, it might, as the dissent suggests, amend the statute to balance the rights accorded.
Accordingly, the order in Gould should be reversed, with costs, the order in DeFelice should be reversed, with costs, and the order in Scott should be modified, without costs, and, as so modified, affirmed, and all three proceedings remitted to Supreme Court for further proceedings in accordance with the opinion herein.
BELLACOSA, J. (dissenting).
The Freedom of Information Law (FOIL) (Public Officers Law § 84 et seq.) and this Court's implementing and interpretive precedents (see, e.g., Matter of Encore Coll. Bookstores v Auxiliary Serv. Corp.,
The net practical result is a super-discovery tool affecting criminal proceedings by overarching application of FOIL. This overshadows this Court's many specific precedents governing disclosure in criminal proceedings and the specific, calibrated remedies of the CPL (art 240) (see, e.g., People v Mobil Oil Corp.,
For these reasons and with the shared hope that legislative attention will be alerted promptly to restore, at least prospectively, a fair and sensible balance of proportionate rights in this discovery field, I respectfully dissent and vote to affirm.
The fundamental policy underlying FOIL is the "people's right to know the process of governmental decision-making and to review the documents and statistics leading to determinations" made by government (Public Officers Law § 84 [emphasis added]). The focus of this fresh and open air reform is to provide the public with access to the same information used by public officials to arrive at official "determinations." This statutory focus should be key in interpreting the inter-agency exemption contained in Public Officers Law § 87 (2) (g) as applied to these cases.
The petitioners here argue that criminal complaint follow-up reports (DD5's) and the personal memo books of individual police officers are subject to and not exempt from FOIL because *281 they are "statistical or factual tabulations or data" (see, Public Officers Law § 87 [2] [g] [i]). This proffered interpretation fails to consider this subsection of the statute in its particular context and full import (New York State Bankers Assn. v Albright,
The latter specifications are markedly different from those here. The contents of investigatory files which contain raw information gathered for the purposes of criminal investigation, and potentially prosecution, do not constitute the type of information upon which official determinations and actions are taken in the context framed and intended by FOIL. Raw evidence acquired by the police has not been "tabulated," or processed, but simply recorded. As such, it has not been filtered or subjected to any analysis, verification or protective shielding by the relevant agency under specific regulatory guidelines.
This Court, in effect, shifts the emphasis of FOIL so that it will functionally eclipse the nuanced procedural safeguards governing disclosure in criminal matters, as such. This is done with no evidence that the Legislature ever contemplated by language or history this significant joint availability.
Matter of Farbman & Sons v New York City Health & Hosps. Corp. (
*282In these cases, the official respondents do not seek exemption from FOIL because the petitioners are defendants in criminal proceedings, but because of the interagency nature of the requested documents themselves (DD5's and officers' memo books). Interestingly and perhaps ironically, the rule of this case should entitle victims, and others, to disclosure of these same materials under a fair-game-for-all application of these enhanced FOIL principles. That may well multiply the administrative difficulty and, perhaps, even impossibility of compliance.
Substantial public policy considerations underlie the encouragement of and incentives for members of the community to be forthcoming with information serving the investigation of criminal activity and the apprehension and prosecution of criminals. Accurate and complete recordkeeping by officers is also important. Granting general access to raw observations, suppositions, notations and opinions, as in these cases, cannot well serve those overriding objectives in the criminal jurisprudence arena.
Thus, I vote to affirm in each case.
In Matter of Gould v New York City Police Dept. and Matter of DeFelice v New York City Police Dept.: Order reversed, with costs, and matter remitted to Supreme Court, New York County, for further proceedings in accordance with the opinion herein.
In Matter of Scott v New York City Police Dept.: Order modified, without costs, and matter remitted to Supreme Court, New York County, for further proceedings in accordance with the opinion herein and, as so modified, affirmed.
NOTES
Notes
[1] The dissent reads Farbman to stand primarily for the proposition that an individual's status as a litigant in an action against a governmental entity does not preclude reliance on FOIL. Although the Court did make this important point in Farbman, the Court also concluded, as an independent ground of decision, that "[g]iven FOIL's purpose, its broad implementing language, and the narrowness of its exemptions, [CPLR] article 31 cannot be read as a blanket exception from its reach. * * * Nowhere in FOIL * * * is there specific reference to records already subject to production under article 31, and no provision of FOIL bars simultaneous use of both statutes" (
[2] Although it was suggested in the courts below that police activity logs could be withheld under the privacy and intra-agency exemptions (see, Public Officers Law § 87 [2] [b], [g]), the Police Department does not advance these positions on appeal. Neither does the Police Department make the argument that all documents relating to law enforcement are categorically exempt from FOIL. Indeed, the Police Department acknowledges that it routinely discloses law-enforcement documents pursuant to FOIL requests, which is evidenced not only by the arrest, complaint, and ballistic reports turned over to petitioners herein, but also by the myriad lower court cases evaluating whether the Police Department justifiably withheld particular law-enforcement documents requested under FOIL.
