Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge ROGERS.
Guillermo Felipe Dueñas Iturralde appeals the grant of summary judgment to the State Department on Dueñas’s claim that it faded to conduct an adequate search for documents that he requested under the Freedom of Information Act, 5- U.S.C. § 552 (“FOIA”). Because Dueñas did not preserve a challenge to the sufficiency of the Department’s affidavit and, in attacking the adequacy of the Department’s search, has not presented evidence that would tend to show that a particular document was in the Department’s files, we affirm.
I.
Dueñas is a retired Ecuadorean admiral who was an executive of Banco de los Andes and of Banco de los Andes International, banks that operate in Ecuador and the Caribbean island of Montserrat, respectively. When he sought to purchase a bank in the United States, his application was rejected by the Office of the Comptroller of the • Currency because ■ Dueñas had allegedly not been truthful in revealing that Banco de los Andes International was under investigation for money laundering. Dueñas subsequently filed a request under the FOIA for all information relating to him and Banco de los Andes in possession of the Comptroller, ■ the Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”), and, as later clarified, the State Department. Dissatisfied with'the responses that he received, Dueñas filed suit in the United States District Court.
After the agencies had produced additional documents, the district court granted summary judgment, concluding that the agencies had properly withheld, certain documents under the FOIA exemptions and that the searches for documents had been adequate. Dueñas did not appeal the grant of summary judgment to the Comptroller and the DEA. In an unpublished order, this court summarily affirmed summary judgment with respect to the State Department’s invocation of various exemptions to justify withholding documents. Thus, the only issue in this appeal is Due-ñas’s contention that the State Department did not conduct an adequate search for various records.
II.
Our review of the district court’s grant of summary judgment is
de novo. Valencia-Lucena v. United States Coast Guard,
Dueñas contends that the State Department’s search was inadequate for two reasons: First, the search was inadequate because the Department concluded that there were no documents responsive to his FOIA request in the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs, even though the Bureau had published in 1993 an International Narcotics Strategy Report (“1993 Report”) that claimed that Banco de los Andes was involved in money laundering; Dueñas attached the relevant pages of the report to one of his requests to the Department. Second, the search was inadequate because the Department initially delayed its search for documents.
In addressing Dueñas’s contentions the court is not presented with a properly preserved challenge to the adequacy of the State Department’s affidavit. At oral argument in this court Dueñas challenged the sufficiency of the affidavit, which stated conclusorily that the Department had informed Dueñas by letter that a search of the files of the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs had been conducted, referencing several letters to Dueñas. As Dueñas pointed out in oral argument, at no point does the affidavit state under oath that a search of the files of the Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs was conducted or describe the nature of that search. Whatever deficiencies may exist in this affidavit,
see Valencia-Lucena,
Dueñas maintains that the State Department initially denied that it had any responsive documents in its files, and that this denial (later proven false) shows that the Department’s search was inadequate. However, the record reveals that the Department’s first response to Dueñas’s FOIA request was to send a form letter advising Dueñas to seek the materials from the Comptroller and the DEA. Apparently the Department read his FOIA
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request only to seek records from the Comptroller and the DEA, a reasonable conclusion given Dueñas’s initial letter to the State Department; only later did he clarify to the Department that he was also asking it to search its own records. Once Dueñas responded by letter with a more specific request, referring to the 1993 Report, the Department began its search. In these circumstances we conclude that there is no evidence of bad faith by the Department, particularly in view of the fact that initial delays in responding to a FOIA request are rarely, if ever, grounds for discrediting later affidavits by the agency.
See, e.g., Meeropol v. Meese,
Dueñas maintains further that the inadequacy of the search is obvious in light of the fact that the Department failed to find the 1993 Report referring to one of Dueñas’s banks as being involved in money laundering. Dueñas characterizes this fact as a “positive indication!] of overlooked materials” under
Valencia-Lucena,
especially since in correspondence with the Department he mentioned the 1993 Report in seeking associated documents. Arguably, such a “well defined request” would make a court wary of summary judgment for the government.
Valencia-Lucena,
In certain circumstances, á court may place significant weight on the fact that a records search failed to turn up a particular document in analyzing the adequacy of a records search.
See Krikorian v. Dep’t of State,
Accordingly, we affirm the grant of summary judgment to the Department.
