Case Information
*3
KOZINSKI, Chief Judge:
Dеmocracy functions ill in shadow, yet government bureaucracies are notoriously reluctant to reveal their internal processes. Recognizing this tension, Congress passed the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”) in 1966. FOIA fosters transparency by adopting a baseline presumption that information in the hands of the government belongs to the people and must be disclosed on request. But some secrecy is necessary, so FOIA includes several narrow exemptions. We consider how much the government must explain to show that an exemption blocks the release of requested information.
I. Background
Mark Kowack teaches disadvantaged youth at the Trapper Creek Center in Darby, Montana as part of the Forest Serviсe Job Corps Program. Kowack claims that in 2008 he “began experiencing threats, aggression, and workplace hostility from certain of his co-workers.” He says he feared for the safety of himself and his students.
After Kowack filed a complaint and sought help from one of his senators, the Director of the Jobs Corps National Center launched an investigation intо “allegations of work place violence, threatening remarks and a negative work place culture” at the Trapper Creek Center. The investigator *4 interviewed and obtained statements from all four employees in the center’s education department including Kowack, the center’s director and two other individuals; the investigator also gаthered grievance records, disciplinary letters and informal complaints. These documents were compiled into a report that was presented to the Forest Service’s Misconduct Investigations Program Manager and the National Director of the Jobs Corps Program, among others. Ultimately, the Forest Service declined to take any actiоn and closed the investigation. It notified Kowack of its decision, but gave him almost no explanation for it.
Dissatisfied, Kowack filed a FOIA request to obtain copies of the investigative report and “all statements, interviews, photos, notes and any other documents that pertain to the ‘misconduct investigation.’” The Forest Service responded that it had locаted 173 responsive pages, 80 of which it withheld under the personal privacy exemption. See 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(6).
Kowack filed an administrative appeal, which resulted in the disclosure of 188 pages of documents, many of which were heavily redacted. The redacted documents fall into five categories: (1) statements made to the investigator by employees other than Kowack; (2) administrative documents and reports created by the investigator; (3) grievance-related documents created by the National Federation of Federal Employees; (4) disciplinary letters issued to employees other than Kowack; and (5) a complaint made by an employee other than Kowack to the Trapper Creek Jobs Cоrps Center Director.
Kowack sued, challenging the redactions and moved for in camera inspection of the documents. Instead, the district court ordered the Forest Service to create a Vaughn index describing each document and explaining why each document was exempt from disclosure. As its Vaughn index, the Forest Service submitted a declarаtion from Sherry Turner, the *5 6 K OWACK V . USFS Assistant Director of the Forest Service’s FOIA and Privacy Office. The district court granted the Forest Service’s motion for summary judgment. Kowack appeals.
II. Discussion
We employ a two-step standard of review when
considering a district court’s grant of summary judgment in
a FOIA case.
Yonemoto
v.
Dep’t of Veterans Affairs
,
But, if the affidavits are adequate, we review the district
court’s “conclusions of fact . . . for clear error, while legal
rulings, including [the district court’s] decision that a
particular exemption applies, are reviewed
de novo
.”
Lane
Kowack challenges the redactions to twenty-two pages of witness statements made to the investigator by employees other than himself. The government redacted the documents pursuant to Exemption 6, the personal privacy exemption. Exemption 6 protects information about individuals when contained in “personnel and medical” or other “similar files,” *6 if disclosurе would “constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(6).
Kowack argues that the government hasn’t proven that the
witness statements are “similar files” because they don’t
contain “information similar to that found in a standard
personnel file.”
Church of Scientology
,
Nonetheless, the district court erred in finding that the
Turner declaration provides an adequate factual basis for
concluding that disclosure of the witness statements would
“constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal
privacy.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(6). For, even personal
information must be disclosed unless doing so is “сlearly
unwarranted,” and this is true only when the individual’s
privacy interest outweighs the public interest.
See Yonemoto
Because the district court didn’t conduct an in camera review, wе have only Turner’s description of the withheld documents, as contained in her Vaughn index declaration, but this description is too vague to allow us to weigh either the privacy or the public interests at stake. Turner states that the witness statements contain “allegations of workplace violence, threatening remarks, and a negative workplace culturе,” and that the Forest Service redacted “names, job *7 titles, and other personal identifiers of [the witnesses] and their detailed accounts and allegations because disclosing such information would lead to their identification.”
We’ve recognized that a privacy interest exists in avoiding embarrassment, stigma and harassment, see Forest Serv. Emps. , 524 F.3d at 1026, and the knowledge that a specific employee was associated with the investigation could implicate the employee’s privacy interest. But that doesn’t help the government in this case because we already know the identities of most of the people interviewed—all employees of the Education Department, the center director and two other individuals. At leаst the department employees and the center director, then, have no privacy interests in preventing the public from knowing about their involvement with the investigation.
The witnesses may have a privacy interest in ensuring that their names aren’t associated with specific incidents reported to the investigator. But the government hasn’t provided enough information for us to make аn independent determination whether it’s necessary to withhold all details about the events the witnesses described in order to protect that interest. See Yonemoto , 686 F.3d at 694. The government justifies its redactions only by noting that the center is located in a small community and has a small staff: Because of the limited universe of possible suspects, the government argues, the public could easily identify who made which allegation, and which employee is being complained about. That’s fine in theory, but the government hasn’t told us anything about the type of incidents reported. It’s entirely possible that the substance of the witness statements could be disclosed without revealing who made them. The government asks us to take its word for it. FOIA requires more.
Nor do we have еnough information to assess the public
interest. The district court found that any public interest in
the witness statements is “marginal” because they “shed light
only on interpersonal and interoffice conflict.” But the
Turner declaration discloses that the misconduct investigation
“focused on allegations of workplace violence, threatening
remarks, and negative workplace culture.” For all we know,
the witness statements reveal that the Trapper Creek Center
is run by dangerous bullies who shouldn’t be allowed
anywhere near disadvantaged youth. That kind of
information would certainly “let citizens know ‘what their
*8
10
K OWACK V . USFS
government is up to.’”
Fed. Labor Relations Auth.
, 510 U.S.
at 497 (quoting
Reporters Comm. for Freedom of the Press
B. Administrative Documents and Reports Created by the Investigator
Kowack also challenges the redactions made to seventeen pages of administrative documents and reports created by the investigator. These redactions were made pursuant to Exemption 5, which protects “intra-agency memorandums or letters which would not be available by law to a party other than an agency in litigation with the agency,” 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(5), and Exemption 6, the personal privacy exemption. According to the Turner declaration, the documents “were created by the HRM Investigator and included the identity of all employees interviewed, case background, a list of issues/allegations, an index of documents contained in the investigative file, transmittal documents, and investigative summaries, findings and recommendations.” The government redacted, among other information, “names, identifiable portions of individual statements, cellular telephone numbers, and any references to disciplinary letters issued to employees other than Kowack.” Kowack doesn’t argue that thе redaction of the telephone number and names was improper, but he does challenge the withholding of the other information.
1. Personal Privacy Exemption The government justifies its invocation of the personal privacy exemption only by stating that “[t]he Forest Service *9 applied the same balancing test as described above [with regard to the witness statements].” There isn’t a sufficiеnt factual basis supporting the application of the personal privacy exemption to the documents created by the Investigator for the same reasons that there isn’t a sufficient factual basis supporting the application of the exemption to the witness statements. See pp. 7–10 supra . Therefore, the personal privacy exemption doesn’t justify thе non-disclosure of these documents.
2. Intra-Agency Communication Exemption
Nor is the Turner declaration sufficient for us to conclude
that Exemption 5,
the
intra-agency communication
exemption, applies. Exemption 5 allows the government to
withhold documents that fall within a recognized litigation
privilege.
Dep’t of Interior
v.
Klamath Water Users
Protective Ass’n
,
Turner states that the documents are predecisional because the “assessments were developed by a subordinate employee to inform and assist the decision-maker” and “the Forest Service had made no final decision with respect to any of the allegations at issue.” Because the documents were “prepared in order to assist an agency decisionmaker in arriving at his decision,” the Turner declaration adequately shows that the documents are predecisional. Id. (internal citation omitted).
But the Turner dеclaration doesn’t adequately show how
the disclosure of any portion of the redacted documents
*10
would “expose ‘the [agency’s] decision-making process
itself’ to public scrutiny.”
Nat’l Wildlife Fed’n
v.
U.S. Forest
Serv.
,
C. Other Categories of Documents Kowack also challenges the redaction of grievance-related documents created by the National Federation оf Employees and complaints made by employees other than Kowack to the center director pursuant to the personal privacy exemption. [1] The grievance documents were redacted to withhold “[a]ny information that would identify individual employees other than KOWACK including names, and dates and details of specific incidents.” The informal cоmplaint was redacted to “remove the name and other identifying information of the complainant and the content of the complaint and response.”
Because the public interest in disclosure of these
documents is minimal, the documents were properly
withheld. Courts have recognized that, where there is no
public interest, “we need not linger over the balance” between
the public and private interests implicated by a particular
document because “something, even a modest privacy
interest, outweighs nothing every time.”
Nat’l Ass’n of
Retired Fed. Emps. Horner
,
The grievance-related documents, which include “a notice
of intent to file an unfair labor practice charge on behalf of an
individual employee other than KOWACK and a pre-
grievance settlement agreement,” concern “the denial of
Weingarten rights to an individual employee other than
Kowack.”
Weingarten
guarantees the right of employees to
have union representation at investigatory interviews.
NLRB Weingarten, Inc.
,
The Turner declaration similarly demonstrates the lack of
public interest in the informal complaint to the center director
and the director’s response. Those documents “concern
unsubstantiated allegations and complaints made by one
employee and the response to the employee by the Center
Director.” Like the grievance documents, this category of
documents concerns only one complaint, and an
unsubstantiated one at that. The privacy interest in these
documents may be small—Turner doesn’t provide enоugh
detail for us to determine whether disclosure of any of the
information would allow for the identification of the
employee involved. But there is undoubtedly
some
privacy
interest in the submission of non-formal complaints.
See
Forest Serv. Emps.
,
* * *
We therefore remand for the district court to оrder the government to produce a more detailed Vaughn index with regard to the first two categories of documents, and, if that’s not sufficient, to conduct an in camera review. If the government can’t meet its burden, the district court must order the documents disclosed.
The remaining redactions were proper.
REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED. COSTS
TO APPELLANT.
[2]
For the first time on appeal, Kowack argues that the Forest Service’s
search for documents was inadequate. Because the argument is waived,
we decline to address it.
See Greger Barnhart
,
