MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plaintiff, Judicial Watch, Inc. (“Judicial Watch”), brings this action against defen *255 dant, United States Postal Service (“USPS”), pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), 5 U.S.C. § 552. Plaintiff seeks access to various records related to defendant’s decisions regarding the discovery of anthrax at USPS facilities in October 2001. In response, defendant seeks to withhold and redact certain documents by invoking certain privileges under FOIA Exemption 5, 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(5).
Before this court are the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. Upon consideration of the motions, the respective oppositions thereto, and the record of this case, the court concludes that defendant’s motion for summary judgment must be granted in part and denied in part without prejudice, and that plaintiffs cross-motion must be denied without prejudice.
I.BACKGROUND
On October 25, 2001, Judicial Watch, pursuant to FOIA, requested that USPS provide certain records relating to the discovery of anthrax at U.S. Postal Service facilities. In particular, Judicial Watch requested access to
all correspondence, memoranda, documents, reports, records, statements, audits, lists of names, applications, diskettes, letters, expense logs and receipts, calendar or diary logs, facsimile logs, telephone records, call sheets, tape records, video recordings, notes, examinations, opinions, folders, files, books, manuals, pamphlets, forms, drawings, charts, photographs, electronic mail, and other documents and things that refer or relate to the following in any way:
1. The process for identification of postal workers infected and/or exposed to anthrax.
2. The decision to conduct tests at the Brentwood USPS facility.
3. The decision to quarantine portions of the Brentwood USPS facility.
4. The decision to test other USPS facilities for anthrax contamination.
5. The decision to suspend mail delivery to zip codes 20007, 20005, 20004.
6. The decision to keep the Brent-wood USPS facility open.
7. The decision to test Brentwood USPS facility employees for anthrax.
.... The time frame for this request is from September 11, 2001 to the present.
Pl.’s Ex. 1 at 1-2 (Judicial Watch Ltr. to Post Master, Oct. 25, 2001) (“October Letter”). Perhaps ironically, USPS claimed not to have received the October Letter because of mail service disruptions caused by the anthrax scare and the need to sanitize (irradiate) mail. In December 2001, having received no response, Judicial Watch faxed USPS a copy of the October Letter. In January 2002, USPS replied to the October Letter and attempted to identify the documents responsive to Judicial Watch’s seven requests. See Pl.’s Ex. 2 at 1-2 (Faruq Ltr. to Calabrese, Jan. 22, 2002) (“USPS Letter”). USPS’s response letter indicated that Judicial Watch could appeal to USPS’s General Counsel if it construed the USPS response to be a denial of the FOIA requests in the October Letter. Id. at 2. In February 2002, Judicial Watch appealed to USPS’s General Counsel. On June 6, 2002, after receiving no response from USPS’s General Counsel, Judicial Watch filed the present action.
In October 2002, USPS released to Judicial Watch 1,228 pages in their entirety and 124 redacted pages related to the October 2001 anthrax contamination. In addition to redacting 124 pages, USPS withheld 401 otherwise relevant pages pursuant to various FOIA exemptions. The present action concerns only 15 *256 pages redacted and 399 pages withheld pursuant to FOIA Exemption 5. 1
II. ANALYSIS
A. Legal Standard
Under Fed.R.Civ.P. 56, summary judgment shall be granted if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, admissions on file and affidavits show that there is no genuine issue of material fact in dispute and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Material facts are those “that might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing law.”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
In FOIA cases, agency decisions to withhold or disclose information under FOIA are reviewed
de novo
by this court.
Mead Data Cent., Inc. v. U.S. Dep’t of Air Force,
B. FOIA Background
Congress enacted FOIA “to open up the workings of government to public scrutiny through the disclosure of government records.” Ste
rn v. FBI,
When an agency refuses to disclose certain documents pursuant to a FOIA exemption, it must ordinarily produce a
*257
“Vaughn
Index,” a description of each document withheld or redacted and an explanation of the reasons for non-disclosure.
See Vaughn v. Rosen,
An agency’s failure to provide a
Vaughn
Index is not, by itself, reason to reject a claim of exemption.
See Gallant v. NLRB,
However, as a purely practical matter, document-by-document justification will usually be necessary. This is because, in addition to distinguishing exempt from non-exempt documents, an agency must perform a “segregability analysis”: It must also distinguish exempt from non-exempt material
within
each document.
See Vaughn I,
C. Exemption 5
The only exemption at issue in this case is 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(5) (“Exemption 5”). Judicial Watch contests USPS’s use of Ex *258 emption 5 to redact 15 pages and withhold 399 pages.
Under Exemption 5, an agency may withhold “inter-agency or intra-agency memorandums or letters which would not be available by law to a party ... in litigation with the agency.” Id. Under the umbrella of Exemption 5, USPS invokes three different privileges: (1) the deliberative process privilege, (2) the attorney-client privilege, and (3) the attorney work-product privilege. The court analyzes the sufficiency of USPS’s affidavit 2 to support these privilege claims, see generally Be-nowitz Supp. Decl., and analyzes each privilege in turn.
I. Deliberative Process Privilege
USPS invokes the deliberative process privilege in redacting seven pages 3 (of 15 pages redacted under Exemption 5) and in withholding 398 pages 4 (of 399 pages withheld under Exemption 5).
Exemption 5 protects from disclosure any documents that reveal an agency’s deliberative process in reaching policy decisions.
See NLRB v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
To invoke the deliberative process privilege, an agency must show that an allegedly exempt document is both “prede-cisional” and “deliberative.”
Access Reports v. Dep’t of Justice,
Second, a “deliberative” document is one that is “a direct part of the deliberative process in that it makes recommendations or expresses opinions on legal or policy matters.”
Vaughn v. Rosen,
Since the applicability of the deliberative process privilege depends on the content of each document and the role it plays in
*260
the decisionmaking process, an agency’s affidavit must correlate facts in or about each withheld document with the elements of the privilege.
See Senate of Puerto Rico,
In this case, USPS invokes the deliberative process privilege for six different categories of documents: (1) drafts of anthrax sampling procedures, (2) draft chronologies, (3) materials prepared for congressional testimony, (4) meeting notes, (5) employee correspondences and memo-randa, 6 and (6) draft informational documents. With regard to each document in each category, USPS’s affidavit is insufficient to decide the claims of privilege on summary judgment either in favor of USPS or Judicial Watch. The court analyzes each category in turn.
a. Draft Procedures for Anthrax Sampling.
USPS withholds 12 pages of documents pursuant to the deliberative process privilege because they are “drafts of procedures related to environmental sampling of anthrax.” Benowitz Supp. Decl. ¶ 5. USPS provides other details that simply document the fact that the pages are drafts. Id. ¶¶ 6 (“The document is designated as a draft, and it may have been revised prior to the issuance of a final version. Therefore, the document reflects the process through which a final version of the procedures may have been developed .... ”), 7 (noting that Pages 251-52 were “designated as a draft” and also were “subject to revision” and contained handwritten corrections). Only the titles provided by USPS hint at the specific content of these documents. See id. ¶ 6 (identifying Pages 94-103 as draft of document sent to the Center for Disease Control entitled “Procedures for Collecting Environmental Samples of Anthrax”), 7 (noting Pages 251-52 as draft of document entitled “USPS Sampling Strategy: A Chronology-”).
These descriptions are inadequate to prove the elements of the deliberative process privilege. First, it is unclear if the drafts are predecisional. The most basic requirement of the privilege is that a document be
antecedent
to the adoption of an agency policy.
See Jordan,
Second, even had USPS shown the documents to be predecisional, drafts are not presumptively privileged.
See Arthur Andersen & Co. v. IRS,
Finally, USPS failed to indicate whether these drafts were (1) “adopted formally or informally, as the agency position on an issue;” or (2) “used by the agency in its dealings with the public.” See id. at 257-58 (internal quotation omitted). Either will defeat a claim of privilege, for both actions involve the exposure of the withheld documents to third parties.
These ambiguities, with regard to each element of the deliberative process privilege, prevent the court from granting summary judgment in favor of USPS. These ambiguities, at the same time, do not foreclose the possibility that USPS has properly withheld the documents. Therefore the court must deny summary judgment to both USPS and Judicial Watch.
b. Chronologies, Timeliness, and Summaries
USPS withheld or redacted nearly 200 pages of draft chronologies, timelines or summaries related to the discovery of anthrax in 2001. See Benowitz Supp. Decl. ¶¶ 8-13 (noting that 192 documents were withheld because they were drafts of chronologies, timelines or summaries of events related to the discovery of anthrax), 31 (noting that two pages were withheld as a chronology of events drafted by USPS attorneys), 7 34 (noting that USPS redacted Pages 204, 205, 208, and 209 because they are parts of a draft chronology). Some of these documents were comments, opinions, and recommendations about the chronologies. Id. ¶¶ 8,10-13.
For some of the reasons previously expressed with regard to the descriptions of the draft anthrax procedure documents, USPS’s affidavit is inadequate with regard to the draft chronologies. It does not specify whether these draft chronologies were antecedent to final policies, and therefore are predecisional; whether the drafts were adopted as final policy (and therefore are no longer predecisional); and whether the agency has not already used the documents in communications with the public.
However, USPS’s affidavit raises other material ambiguities unique to the chronologies. Generally, factual accounts of events do not fall under Exemption 5.
See Petroleum Info. Corp.,
Specific to these documents, the D.C. Circuit found that agencies must disclose purely factual chronologies.
See Mapother,
The Mapother court had enough information to decide a summary judgment motion. See id. at 1539-40 (examining the Waldheim chronology in camera and finding them reasonably segregable and subject to disclosure). This court does not. The following is all of USPS’s description of 172 pages of withheld chronologies, timelines, etc.:
[The pages] all consist of chronologies of events related to the discovery of anthrax in the mail that are designated as drafts. These drafts were created by and/or circulated among various Postal Service offices for the purpose of inputting, updated, and correcting information contained in the draft chronologies. Some of the draft chronologies contain handwritten corrections to the typed text. Therefore the documents reflect the preliminary views of the authors that may have been altered or rejected, and they also reflect editorial judgments. These pages are being withheld pursuant to the deliberative process privilege. A final version of the chronology has been released to Plaintiff.
Benowitz Supp. Decl. ¶ 9. USPS is similarly vague in describing the other chronologies, though a bit longer, are similarly vague. Id. ¶¶ 12-13, 31, 34.
It is entirely unclear, from USPS’s declaration, if the draft chronologies simply list facts and involve no judgment, as in Mapother, or if they involve the sort of fact-winnowing-sifting wheat from chaff-that required the judgment of agency employees. Furthermore, USPS’s descriptions say nothing about purpose of the draft chronologies. 8 The court simply lacks the specific information it needs to decide, de novo and on summary judgment, whether these documents are “deliberative.” Such ambiguities require the *263 court to deny summary judgment to both USPS and Judicial Watch.
USPS also invokes the privilege with regard to 5 other pages of opinions and comments about the chronologies and their creation, as well as revisions made by employees.
See id.
¶¶ 10-11. The court must also deny summary judgment to both parties with regard to these documents. These 5 pages seem “deliberative” because they involve a “give-and-take” between employees.
See Senate of Puerto Rico,
c. Materials for Congressional Testimony
USPS withheld 55 pages because they were prepared for the congressional testimony of USPS officials. Benowitz Supp. Deck ¶ 14. USPS’s describes the documents as follows: “These documents contain information compiled specifically to assist the officials in testifying at hearings, sample questions and answers, and key points of focus for anticipated testimony.”
Id.
This passage is as ambiguous as the descriptions of the draft chronologies. First, USPS has not shown, one way or the other, that the prepared testimony was “antecedent” to USPS policy. If the testimony simply justified or explained USPS reactions to the anthrax outbreak to Congress, the materials are not antecedent and therefore are not protected.
See Petroleum Info. Corp.,
Secondly, even if the testimony were “antecedent” to policy, USPS does not indicate one way or the other whether the compilation of information itself was deliberative. On one hand, USPS officials merely “compiled” information, which seems to involve little or no judgment at all.
See Petroleum Info. Corp.,
Finally, USPS fails to identify what, if any, of the prepared testimony actually was read by USPS employees in public or appeared in published records. USPS must waive the privilege with regard to the materials it made available to other parties, whether by reading or publishing them.
See Arthur Andersen,
d. Meeting Notes
USPS withheld 28 pages of documents which it categorizes as “consist[ing] of notes of meetings or discussions during which postal employees and employees of other federal agencies discussed, recommended, or proposed ways of responding to the discovery of anthrax in the mail.” See Benowitz Supp. Deck ¶ 15. USPS purports to provide more specific details about each document. Id. ¶¶ 16-19. One page “lists the names of several Postal *264 Service officials, and contains notes of proposed actions in response to the discovery of anthrax in the mail.” Id. ¶ 19. Two pages are “primarily related to environmental testing and safety measures” and “are in the form of questions or are followed by question marks.” Id. ¶ 17. Seventeen pages are “to do” lists that “contain entries related to actions taken or proposed in response to the discovery of anthrax in the mail” and again, some “entries are followed by question marks.” Id. ¶ 18. Finally, three pages “appear[ ] to be notes of a meeting between CDC and Postal Service officials to discuss how to respond to the discovery of anthrax in the mail.” Id. ¶ 19.
These descriptions do not indicate whether or not the documents are both predecisional and deliberative. First, USPS does not identify
specific
final decisions or decisionmaking processes to which the documents contributed. It is not enough to say that the documents relate, in some way, to “actions taken or proposed in response to the discovery of anthrax in the mail,”
id.
¶ 18, for if they did not, the documents would not be before the court at all. USPS must identify particular deci-sionmaking processes, or else the court cannot recognize the documents as “prede-cisional.”
See Am. Petroleum Inst.,
e. Employee Comspondences and Memoranda
USPS withheld 26 pages and redacted 7 pages 9 involving correspondences or mem-oranda, notable mainly because they were written by employees.
As a general matter, employee-to-supervisor correspondences (all e-mails, in this case) are more likely than other intra-agency communications to be protected under the deliberative process privilege.
See Access Reports,
More problematic, however, is that USPS’s affidavit mostly fails to identify particular decisionmaking processes or final policies to which the employee e-mails contributed. For instance, USPS indicates that employees identified “priorities for incidents related to anthrax in the mails [sic],” Benowitz Supp. Decl. ¶ 21, and “generally describe[d] the issues” to be discussed at employee meetings.
Id.
¶22. In two instances, USPS identifies specific deliberative process or policy.
Id.
¶¶ 23 (explaining that in one document, employees “made a recommendation regarding a particular method of testing for anthrax spores.”), 36 (indicating that an e-mail message addressed an employees opinion on “how to responded to requests for information about the test results” of a USPS facility). However, USPS does not identify the specific harm in disclosing any these documents, reiterating only that each “reflects the predecisional thoughts, judgments, and recommendations” of USPS employees.
See id.
¶¶ 21-24 (using the same language for each set of employee e-mails); 36-38 (using similarly conclu-sory language). Though even a conclusory allegation of harm would be insufficient,
Mead Data Cent.,
USPS’s descriptions of the legal correspondences (analyzed again under the attorney-client or the attorney work-product privileges) also fail to provide enough information for a proper de novo review. Two documents involve legal advice on specific situations from USPS attorneys to USPS managers.
See
Benowitz Supp. Decl. ¶¶ 27, 29. These descriptions are
almost
detailed enough to be privileged. They are predecisional in that they are antecedent to policy-the documents are from employees (attorneys) to managers.
See id.
Furthermore, USPS identifies specific decisionmaking processes-what USPS should do about media requests for access to USPS facilities,
id.
¶27, and what to do about potential USPS employee lawsuits to close USPS facilities.
Id.
¶ 29. In addition, these documents are deliberative to the extent that they provide advice on matters of agency policy; they bear on the exercise of agency policy judgments.
See Petroleum Info. Corp.,
With regard to all other legal correspondences, USPS has not provided enough specific information. USPS withheld one other document, “draft talking points” from a USPS official to USPS attorney. Benowitz Supp. Decl. ¶ 28. USPS identifies nothing more specific about the content of this document, does not specify its place in a particular decisionmaking context, and does not indicate whether, as a draft, these talking points were actually *266 used in a communication with the public. See id. USPS also redacted four pages of a chronology summarizing legal correspondences by USPS attorneys. See id. ¶ 34 (Pages 204, 205, 208, 209). While some descriptions involve “legal advice” or “messages between managers,” USPS identifies nothing more specific about any of these pages, nothing about the general purpose of the legal advice, whether or not USPS ultimately adopted this advice as policy, and what of these correspondences were already shared with the public via any actual litigation. Id. Because these descriptions are insufficient to conduct a de novo review, the court must deny summary judgment to both USPS and Judicial Watch.
f. Informational Documents and Comments
USPS withholds 83 pages of what it characterizes as informational documents or comments on them by USPS employees: “drafts of news releases, published guidance of postal employees, and similar informational documents” as well as “postal employees’ comments, suggestions, and recommendations concerning such drafts.” Benowitz. Supp. Decl. ¶25. After explaining the general category of documents withheld, the affidavit provides slightly more detail about the documents-fifteen individual descriptions. Even the most comprehensive of these descriptions falls short of helping this court determine whether or not the documents are privileged: “Pages 1677-87 consists of draft versions of an emergency action plan memo, and e-mail containing the comments and suggestions of Postal Service employees regarding the draft versions.”
Id.
¶ 25(a). This is the most elaborate description of any of the 83 pages and still fails to pinpoint particular decisionmaking processes or policies these documents contributed to. More often, these descriptions provide less information and simply indicate that the documents are drafts.
See, e.g., id.
¶¶ 25(f), (i) (identifying withheld Pages 1452-53 as “a draft briefing sheet” and Pages 1588-89 as “a draft press release”). The court cannot identify specific details that allow it to conclude, one way or the other, whether or not these documents are predecisional and deliberative. Furthermore, as with every other document it identifies as a draft, USPS fails to indicate whether these documents were adopted as final policies or previously disclosed to third parties,
see Arthur Andersen,
In sum, the general insufficiency of USPS’s declarations with regard to each category of documents compels the court to deny USPS’s and Judicial Watch’s cross-motions for summary judgment with regard to all documents withheld or redacted pursuant to the deliberative process privilege. Without more information, this court can not conduct the required de novo review of the validity of USPS’s withhold-ings and redactions.
See Mead Data Cent.,
2. Attorney-Client Privilege
USPS invokes the attorney-client privilege in redacting nine pages 10 (of 15 pages redacted in total) and in withholding eight pages 11 (of 399 pages withheld in total).
*267
The attorney-client privilege exists to protect a client’s confidences to her attorney so that the client may have “uninhibited confidence” in the inviolability of her relationship with her attorney.
Coastal States,
USPS describes two pages in
almost
enough detail to invoke the privilege, but ultimately not enough detail to allow the court to grant summary judgment in its favor. Pages 981-82 are emails from a USPS attorney to USPS managers, with the heading “Privileged Information-Attorney/Client Communication” and containing “legal advice regarding how to respond to requests from the news media for access to Postal Service facilities.” Be-nowitz Supp. Deel. ¶27. This description fulfills the elements of the privilege by identifying the pages as (1) a confidential lawyer to agency-client communication and (2) regarding professional legal advice. These details are specific enough for the court to determine, on its own, that the elements of the privilege are fulfilled. However, USPS fails to offer a segregability analysis. USPS cannot withhold an entire document,
Vaughn I,
The court must also deny summary judgment to both parties with regard to the other documents USPS attempts to privilege. See Benowitz Supp. Decl. ¶¶ 28, 30. USPS does little more than identify these documents as attorney-client communications without establishing that they involve the provision of legal advice. See id. USPS fails to show that these documents involved the provision of specifically legal advice or that they were intended to be confidential. See id. ¶¶ 28 (indicating that Pages 1187-91 “consist of draft talking points forwarded by a Postal Service official to the Postal Service General Counsel”), 30 (noting that Page 1591 “concerns issues raised by a union representing Postal Service employees”). These documents might well contain legal advice and confidential information, but USPS does not say so. As a result, the court cannot grant summary judgment in favor of either party with regard to these pages.
USPS’s justifications for its redactions are similarly insufficient.
See id.
¶ 34 (justifying individual redactions on Pages 191, 197, 200-05, 207-09). All the materials USPS redacted under the attorney-client privilege are contained in a “chronology that summarizes correspondence related to
*268
the discovery of anthrax.”
Id.
¶ 34. All of these pages apparently involve communications to or from USPS attorneys regarding the discovery of anthrax in USPS locations in New York and matters of actual or potential litigation.
Id.
Though each redaction is mentioned by page number, USPS simply concludes that each redaction involves legal advice and relates to actual or potential litigation.
See id.
These descriptions are not detailed enough for the court to determine meaningfully, on its own, whether these documents are privileged. Without impugning USPS’s honesty, the court is not allowed to grant summary judgment based on such conclu-sory statements. To do so would be tantamount to shirking the court’s obligation to conduct a de novo review.
See Mead Data Cent.,
3. Attorney Work-Product Privilege
USPS invokes the attorney work-product privilege in withholding five pages
12
(of 399 pages withheld in total) and in redacting six pages
13
(of 15 pages redacted in total). The attorney work-product privilege protects disclosure of materials prepared by attorneys, or non-attorneys supervised by attorneys, in contemplation of litigation, that reveal information about an attorney’s preparation and strategy relating to a client’s case.
See Coastal States,
The privilege is limited in scope. It only exempts those documents prepared in contemplation of litigation, not to “every written document generated by an attorney.”
Senate of Puerto Rico,
USPS identifies three pages that come close to being privileged, but the court, deprived of certain details, cannot grant summary judgment in favor of either party. Pages 1192-94 consist of a memorandum of legal advice from a USPS attorney to the USPS General Counsel “prepared for the purpose of responding to actual or potential attempts by Postal Service employees to take legal action to close Postal Service facilities.” Benowitz Supp. Deel. ¶ 29. These details are particular enough to indicate that “specific claims had arisen” (the USPS employee litigation) such that USPS would be forced to engage in litigation.
Coastal States,
Other documents USPS identifies are not even “almost” privileged. USPS identifies Pages 1746-47 as a chronology of the discovery of anthrax prepared by a USPS attorney in New York “for the purpose of responding to actual or potential litigation arising from the discovery of anthrax in the mail.” Benowitz Supp. Decl. ¶ 31. Unlike the documents involving USPS employee litigation, however, the description of these chronology documents, do not identify a specific claim to which USPS is responding; it does not even suggest that the chronology was prepared for a specific litigation. See id. USPS does not indicate anything about the nature of the litigation for which these chronologies were prepared. Again, without information allowing for an independent determination that the chronology somehow related to the strategy of USPS attorneys regarding specific litigation, the court must deny summary judgment to both parties. Yet again, USPS fails to present a segregability analysis.
Finally, all redacted documents were all part of a “chronology” that summarizes correspondence related to the discovery of anthrax. Id. ¶ 34. Yet USPS identifies no specific litigations in justifying the redac-tions. See id. (indicating that redactions on Pages 197, 200-04, 206 involved “actual litigation” or “potential litigation” but identifying no specific claims for which these documents were prepared). Again, the court is unable to grant summary judgment in favor of either party with regard to the document redacted pursuant to the work-product doctrine.
D. Resolution: Detailed Vaughn Index
The court has found that USPS’s declaration is, with regard to every docu
*270
ment, insufficiently detailed to allow the court to reach a proper determination regarding the sufficiency of USPS’s justifications for withholding or redacting documents. The court is now faced with a number of options.
See Spirko v. USPS,
First, the court has the discretion to order the documents produced for an in camera inspection.
See id.
at 998. The court declines to do this for the 414 documents USPS has redacted or withheld. This refusal is proper even when such a task would merely
appear
to be too burdensome for the court.
King,
Second, the court may allow plaintiff discovery.
See Spirko,
Third and finally, the court may remand back to the agency for further review and consideration. This option is the most appropriate at this point.
See Pollard v. FBI,
It is said that
Mead Data Central
provides the best general advice on how much and what kind of detail the
Vaughn Index
should contain.
See Senate of Puerto Rico,
Finally, for each and every document, the revised Vaughn Index must include a segregability analysis for every document withheld in full, identifying the proportion of privileged and non-privileged information, and must explain specifically why the documents can not be redacted and produced. Documents containing privileged information that USPS can reasonably segregate must be disclosed and redacted.
Understandably, producing a properly detailed Vaughn Index is a considerable burden for USPS. However, Congress, in enacting FOIA, has chosen to place this burden upon agencies, giving them a clear, if difficult, choice:
Those burdens [of providing a sufficiently detailed Vaughn Index] may be avoided at the option of the agency ... by immediate disclosure. Congress has encouraged the agencies to disclosure exempt material for which there is no compelling reason for withholding, and an agency’s own balancing of the resource costs of justifying nondisclosure against the value of secrecy may provide a rough estimate of how compelling is its reason for withholding.
Mead Data Cent.,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the court concludes that defendants’ motion for summary judgment must be granted in part and denied in part and without prejudice, and it is further
ORDERED that Plaintiffs’ cross-motion for summary judgment must be similarly denied, also without prejudice; and it is further
ORDERED and ADJUDGED that USPS has properly invoked Exemptions 2, 3, 6 and 7(c); and it is further
ORDERED that, by no later than March 1, 2004, USPS shall disclose any previously withheld document, or any portion thereof, that does not fall within the proper scope of the privileges under Exemption 5, as described above; and it is further
ORDERED that for all documents withheld or redacted, the USPS shall produce a comprehensive Vaughn index, describing each document withheld or redacted and explaining the reason for the agency’s nondisclosure in terms of the elements of the privileges USPS intends to invoke; and it is further
ORDERED that for any document withheld or redacted entirely that USPS shall detail, in this index, the proportion of exempt and non-exempt materials, and explanations as to why the wholly withheld materials cannot simply be redacted; and it is further
ORDERED that this index and affidavit shall correlate claimed exemptions with particular passages within each document; and it is further
ORDERED that this index shall be filed by no later than March 19, 2004.
Notes
. USPS also invoked Exemptions 2, 3, 6 and 7(c) to redact 112 pages and withhold 2 pages of documents, but Judicial Watch has conceded the proper application of those exemptions. Pl.’s Cross-Mot. for Summ. J. at 2. The court therefore grants summary judgment in favor of USPS with regard to these documents.
. The court refers exclusively to the Mitchell J. Benowitz Supplemental Declaration ("Be-nowitz Supp. Decl.”), which is simply an elaboration on the Exemption 5 coverage in .the original Benowitz Declaration. Compare generally Benowitz Supp. Decl. with Benowitz Decl. ¶¶ 33, 37. Furthermore, all page citations (e.g., "Pages 197-99”) refer to "the Bates page numbers stamped on the records located in response to Plaintiff’s Freedom of Information Act request.” Benowitz Supp. Decl. ¶ 3.
. Three pages were redacted exclusively under the deliberative process privilege. See Benowitz Supp. Decl. ¶ 35-38 (Pages 1341, 1426, 1734). Four more pages were redacted under the deliberative process privilege in addition to the attorney-client or attorney work-product privileges. See id. ¶ 34 (Pages 204-05, 208-09).
.Of the 398 pages, 386 pages were withheld solely under the deliberative process privilege. See id. ¶¶ 5-7 (withholding Pages 94-103, 251-52), 8-13 (withholding Pages 104-80, 212-28, 247-50, 253-64, 278-89, 345-91, 1266-69, 1748-1766), 14-19 (withholding Pages 454-508), 15 (withholding Pages 576, 825-29, 1298-1314, 1316-20), 20-24 (withholding Pages 1282-84, 1332, 1496-98, 1538-40, 1545, 1549-50, 1593, 1604-05), 25 (withholding Pages 1324-29, 1353-55, 1371-72, 1438-53, 1506-10, 1524, 1580-84, 1588-89, 1607, 1631-37, 1641-42, 1664-75, 1677-90, 1700-06). The other 12 pages are withheld under the deliberative process privilege in addition to the attorney-client or attorney work-product privileges. See id. ¶¶ 27-29, (withholding pages 981-82, 1187-91, 1192— 94), 31 (withholding Pages 1746-47).
. See Def.’s Reply at 9 (“[P]laintiff has not rebutted the presumption that documents such as these [inter-agency memoranda] are protected under the deliberative process privilege.”) (emphasis added).
. USPS identified seven categories. However, for purposes of the deliberative process privilege, the court analyzes correspondences between USPS attorneys and USPS employees in the same category as general correspondences written by employees. USPS also invokes the attorney-client or attorney work-product privileges with regard to USPS attorney-employee correspondences. They are, as a result, analyzed below in light of these privileges.
. These two pages are also analyzed under the attorney work-product privilege.
. USPS indicates that Judicial Watch possesses die final version of the chronology, id. ¶ 9, without actually identifying the Bates page numbers of the final chronologies. See id.
. USPS withheld 16 pages (Pages 1282-84, 1332, 1496-98, 1538-40, 1545, 1549-50, 1593, 1604-05), Benowitz Supp. Decl. ¶¶ 20-24, and redacted three pages (Pages 1341, 1426 and 1734), id. ¶¶ 35-38, of correspondences and memoranda by USPS employees regarding the anthrax contamination and USPS’s response. These documents are only considered under the deliberative process privilege. USPS further withheld 10 pages, id. ¶¶ 27-29 (Pages 981-82, 1187-94), and redacted four pages of various communications between USPS attorneys and other USPS employees. Id. ¶ 34 (Pages 204, 205, 208, 209). These documents are also analyzed under the attorney-client and attorney work-product privileges below.
. Two pages were redacted solely under the attorney-client privilege. See Benowitz Supp. Decl. ¶ 34 (referring to redacted Pages 191 and 207). Seven more pages were redacted under the attorney-client privilege in addition to the deliberative process or attorney work-product privileges. See id. ¶ 34 (referring to redacted Pages 197, 200-04, 208).
. Only one pages was withheld solely under the attorney-client privilege. See id. ¶ 30 (referring to withheld Page 1591). The re *267 maining seven pages were withheld under the attorney-client privilege in addition to the deliberative process or attorney work-product privileges. See id. ¶¶ 27-28 (referring to withheld Pages 981-82, 1187-91).
. No pages were withheld solely under the attorney work-product privilege. Five pages were withheld under the attorney work-product privilege in addition to the attorney-client or deliberative process privileges. See Be-nowitz Supp. Deck ¶¶ 29 (referring to withheld Pages 1192-94), 31 (Pages 1746-47).
. One page was redacted solely under the attorney work-product privilege. See Benow-itz Supp. Decl. ¶ 34 (referring to Page 206). Five more pages were redacted under the attorney work-product privilege in addition to the attorney-client or deliberative process privileges. See id. ¶ 34 (referring to redacted Pages 197, 200-03, 209).
