MEMORANDUM OPINION
This сase comes before the Court on defendant Environmental Protection Agency’s motion for summary judgment and for a stay [66] and supplement [78], Landmark’s response [77], and EPA’s reply [82]. Also before the Court is Landmark’s cross-motion for summary judgment [76], EPA’s response [83], and Landmark’s reply [86] and supplemental memorandum [93]. Upon consideration of the briefing, the law, and the record in this case, EPA’s motion for summary judgment will be granted, and Landmark’s cross-motion will be denied.
I. Background
This case originated when Plaintiff filed a FOIA request with defendant EPA on *62 September 7, 2000, seeking “[ijdentifieation of all rules or regulations for which public notice has not been given, but which public notice is planned by the EPA between September 7, 2000 and January 20, 2001, including but not limited to the rules or regulations referenced in the attached news article” and various types of documents relating to those rules and regulations. The news article indicated that EPA was attempting to push through certain regulations before the administration change. Dissatisfied with EPA’s response, Plaintiff filed the instant suit on September 29, 2000. While the suit was pending and Landmark was awaiting EPA’s response tо its FOIA request, Landmark requested this Court to enter a preliminary injunction to ensure that all material potentially responsive to its FOIA request would be preserved during the administration change. The Court issued the injunction on January 19, 2001. As explained in detail in the Court’s opinion and order on Landmark’s motion for contempt issued this day, that injunction was not obeyed and potentially responsive material contained on hard drives and email backup tapes was destroyed. Upon discovering this massive noncompliance, EPA took action tо rectify the situation by initiating an investigation by the Inspector General that included efforts to recover material from reformatted hard drives-efforts that bore some fruit. The Court has held EPA contempt and ordered it to pay Landmark’s costs and fees caused by EPA’s contumacious conduct. Having conducted search of all records now in its possession, EPA has moved for summary judgment in this case.
II. EPA’s Motion for Summary Judgment
A. Summary Judgment Standard
Reasonableness is the “guiding princi-for a court faced with a FOIA summary judgment motion.
Weisberg v. U.S. Department of Justice,
Landmark raises several arguments in opрosing EPA’s summary judgment that are simply irrelevant to this standard. First, it argues that EPA did not comply with the timelines provided in the FOIA for expedited processing, nor the timelines agreed upon by the parties for the completion of EPA’s search. However, a lack of timeliness does not preclude summary judgment for an agency in a FOIA case. The only question for summary judgment is whether the agency finally conducted a reasonable search, and whether its withholdings are justified. WTien exactly a reasonable search was conducted is irrelevant.
See, e.g., Atkins Dep’t of Justice,
Landmark also argues that some documents <were released to it after further searching was conducted, and that this indicates the first search was not reasоnable. This is contrary to precedent, which teaches that continuing discovery and release of documents does not prove that the original search was inadequate, but rather shows good faith on the part of the agency that it continues to search for responsive documents.
Meeropol v. Meese,
Landmark continues by arguing that EPA is in violation of the provision of the FOIA which requires agency records to be maintained in such a manner as to be readily reproducible.
1
5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(3)(B). EPA informed Landmark, in response to a subsequent FOIA request not part of this litigation, that former Administrator Carol Browner’s email was not available in an electronic form, and that the paper copies were not maintained in a central location, but were filed according to relevance and could be located in any of the agency’s files. Landmark Response [77] at exh. 1. Landmark takes this information to show a violation of the “readily reproducible” requirement. This is an incorrect reading of the statute. First, Landmark has not argued that the paper copies of Browner’s emails are not “readily reproducible”; the Court sees no reason why they could not be easily duplicated on a copy machine. Second, Landmark seems to argue that this provision requires the agency to maintain a central electronic file containing Browner’s email. Again, Landmark is mistaken. FOIA does not require an agency to reorganize its files in anticipation of or in response to a FOIA request.
Solar Sources, Inc. v. United States,
B. Adequacy of Search
1. Scope of Search
Landmark’s FOIA request seeks “[identification of all rules or regulations for which public notice has not been given, but which public notice is planned by the EPA between September 7, 2000 and January 20, 2001, including but not limited to the rules or regulations referenced in the attached news article” and various types of documents relating to those rules and regulations. EPA Motion for Summary Judgment [61] exh. 1. As an internal management tool, EPA had created a list of 88 аctions subject to statutory, judicial, or other deadlines or subject to being acted upon in the near future. Id. exh. 5. By comparing the list of 88 with the April 2000 Regulatory Agenda, EPA’s general method for giving public notice that it is developing regulations, EPA determined that 11 rules met the description in Landmark’s FOIA request. Id. exh. 4 at ¶ 5. The terms of EPA’s search were crafted with reference these 11 rules.
Landmark challenges the scope of EPA’s search, disputing that its request was limited to the 11 rules identified by EPA. Landmark argues that it “conditionally consented” to EPA’s list of 11 in ex
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change for EPA’s agreement to complete its search within 30 days of a November 16, 2000 teleconference between the parties. Landmark Response [77] at 22. Landmark chastises EPA for “not mak[ing] any effort to identify additional pending regulations responsive to Landmark’s request.”
Id.
A FOIA request must “reasonably describe” the records requested. 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(3)(A)(i). The agency’s obligation to search is limited to the four corners of the request.
Kowalczyk v. Dep’t of Justice,
Landmark’s briefing seems to assume that EPA was required to compile list of regulations meeting the parameters of its FOIA request, and to conduct its search from there. This is not the case. FOIA does not require an agency to create a document in response to a request.
Nat’l Labor Relations Bd. v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
Adequacy
As noted, reasonableness is the hallmark of an adequate FOIA search, and must be decided on the facts of the case.
Weisberg v. U.S. Department of Justice, 745
F.2d 1476, 1485 (D.C.Cir.1984). The amount of time and staff devoted to a FOIA request are relevant to the reasonableness inquiry.
Meeropol v. Meese,
Landmark contends that EPA’s search of its electronic systems was inadequate because certain declarations do not state that electronic records were searched. Landmark is correct that EPA was required to search both its paper and electronic files.
See, e.g., Campbell v. Dep’t of Justice,
The Court has reviewed the above-listed declarations from the divisions and regional offices above and finds that the affidavits describe adequate searches of all files likely to contain responsive materials. Valen
cia-Lucena v. United States Coast Guard,
3. Destroyed Documents
Landmark directs most of its energy in the summary judgment briefing to arguing that EPA’s destruction of potentially responsive documents precludes summary judgment in its favor. This is not the cаse. It is well settled that a FOIA request pertains only to documents in the possession of the agency at the time of the FOIA request.
Green v. Nat’l Archives & Records Admin.,
While this precedent is not exactly on point, as EPA possessed the intact hard drives and the email backup tapes 2 at the time of the FOIA request, it is instructive. Because EPA does not currеntly possess these documents, the Court does not find that it is wrongfully withholding them so as to preclude summary judgment. This is not to say that the Court has taken lightly EPA’s document destruction. The Court holds EPA in contempt in a separate opinion issued this day, and has ordered it to pay Landmark’s fees and costs caused by its contumacious behavior. EPA has remedied Landmark’s injury to the best of its abilities by providing access to top EPA officials-including former administrator Carol Browner-for deposition, by initiating an investigation by the Inspector General, and by recovering informаtion from the reformatted hard drives to the extent possible.
The situation facing the Court is much like that in
Jefferson v. Reno,
Civ. Action No. 96-1284(GK). In
Jefferson,
a federal prisoner filed a FOIA request for the United States Attorney’s file on his criminal case. The file was first withheld under FOIA exemption 7(A), the law enforcement exemption, because the case was on direct appeal.
Jefferson v. Reno,
123 F.Supp.2d. 1, 2 (D.D.C.2000) (Kessler, J.). After Jefferson lost the appeal of his conviction to the Circuit but before his petition for certiorari to the Supreme Court was denied, the Assistant U.S. Attorney on the case destroyed the file.
Id.
at 3. The court ordered the defendant to pay plaintiffs legal fees and costs and to obtain documents from the U.S. District Court in Florida and the St. Petersburg, Florida police department for plaintiff.
Id.
at 4. The relief ordered essentially what was ordered in this case, the payment of attorney’s fees occasioned by the document destruction; EPA in this case undertook to reconstruct the documents without a court order. When defendant completed its good faith effort to reconstruct plaintiffs file, the court dismissed plaintiffs case.
Jefferson v. Reno,
Civ. Action No. 96-1284(GK), Mem. Op. [120] & Order [121] of Aug. 27, 2001. Likewise, In
Grace v. Dep’t of Navy,
C. Propriety of Withholdings
EPA withheld documents under FOIA exemptions 5 (documents that would be privileged in discovery) and 6 (personal privacy). Landmark did not challenge any of these withholdings or the adequacy of the declarations supporting these with-holdings. Because Landmark has failed to contest them, the Court will treat these withholdings as conceded.
Fitzgibbon v. U.S. Secret Service,
III. Landmark’s Motion for Summary Judgment
Landmark has moved for summary judgment in its favor in this case. Howevеr, none of the grounds identified by Landmark are appropriate for granting summary judgment in favor of a FOIA requester. First, Landmark argues the EPA’s failure to meet deadlines in the Freedom of Information Act, to timely act on Landmark’s request for expedited consideration, and to comply with agreed timelines mandates summary judgment in its favor. As discussed above, a lack of timeliness or compliance with FOIA deadlines does not preclude summary judgment for an agency, nor mandate summary judgment for the requester.
See, e.g., Atkins v. Dep’t of Justice,
Second, Landmark asserts that EPA’s failure to take steps to ensure that records were preserved during the transition between administrations entitles it to summary judgment. However, FOIA does not mandate record retention.
Green v. Nat’l Archives & Records Admin.,
On a related note, Landmark argues that EPA has not conducted an adequate search for responsive records because no search was made of the hard drives before they were reformatted or the email backup tapes before they were erased. 3 The Court has already addressed this conten *69 tion, and determined that because EPA does not possess these records, summary judgment cannot be denied on the grounds that they were not searched. This does not mean that Landmark is left without a remedy for this untenable document destruction; EPA has attempted to reconstruct the hard drives, and has made available for deposition various EPA officials whose potentially responsive information was destroyed. Furthermore, this Court has ordered EPA to pay Landmark’s legal fees and costs caused by EPA’s contumacious behavior. Regrettably, EPA and this Court can do no more to make Landmark whole. Jefferson v. Reno, Civ. Action No. 96-1284(GK), Mem. Op. of Aug. 27, 2001[120] at 18.
Landmark’s final ground for seeking summary judgment is the Inspector General’s determination that former General Counsel Gary Guzy improperly withheld responsive records. While this situation is troubling,
4
the issue is now moot because the records have been released to Landmark. A FOIA action is designed to remedy the improper withholding of documents and to compel their disclosure; it does not providе an after-the-fact remedy once documents have been released, however tardily.
Tijerina v. Walters,
IV. Conclusion
The Court will grant EPA’s motion for summary judgment 5 [66], and deny as *70 moot its motion for a stay. EPA’s search in response to Landmark’s FOIA request was adequate and reasonable. The Court and the EPA have provided the best remedy possible-though it is still imperfect-for EPA’s doсument destruction, and summary judgment for EPA is not precluded. The Court will deny Landmark’s motion for summary judgment, as it does not provide any grounds on which summary judgment is appropriate.
A separate order shall issue this day.
ORDER
This case comes before the Court on defendant Environmental Protection Agency’s motion for summary judgment and for a stay [66] and supplement [78], Landmark’s response [77], and EPA’s reply [82]. Also before the Court is Landmark’s cross-motion for summary judgment [76], EPA’s response [83], and Landmark’s reply [86] and supplemental memorandum [93]. Upon consideration of the briefing, the law, and the record in this case, it is hеreby ORDERED that EPA’s motion for summary judgment [66-1] is GRANTED, and its motion for a stay [66-2] is DENIED as moot.
It is farther ORDERED that Landmark’s motion for summary judgment [76] is DENIED.
It is further ORDERED that summary judgment for defendant shall be entered on the record of this case, dismissing this action with prejudice.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. To the extent Landmark is referring to the document destruction, that issue is separately addressed.
. It is not exactly the case that EPA possessed the email backup tapes at the time of Landmark’s FOIA request. The tapes at issue were both created and destroyed during the pen-dency of the FOIA request and this litigation. However, Landmark argues (and its speculation cannot be rebutted because the contents of the tapes are unknown) that the email backed up onto the tapes-email that was created after the FOIA request and therefore outside its temporal scope-could have contained responsive forwarded material or attachments that were created within the temporal frame of the FOIA request.
. Even if the Court had not reached the conclusion that the document destruction does not preclude a grant оf summary judgment tor EPA, it is could not be grounds for a summary judgment in Landmark’s favor. If a court finds that a search was inadequate, the
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agency is ordered to continue searching.
See Valencia-Lucena v. United States Coast Guard,
. FOIA provides for referral of agency personnel to the Special Counsel for investigation where "circumstances surrounding the withholding raise questions whether agency personnel acted arbitrarily or capriciously with respect to the withholding.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(F). While Guzy's behavior unquestionably raises questions about his actions, the other requirements of this section are not met in this case. To refer an employee to the Special Counsel, the court must order the production of improperly withheld documents and award attorney’s fees and litigation costs, in addition to issuing a written finding of suspected arbitrary or capricious conduct.
Id.
Here, the agency released the documents without a court order, so the Court may not employ FOIA’s referral provision.
Id; Gabel v. IRS,
. EPA’s motion for summary judgment [66] is styled a "Partial Motion for Summary Judgment.” EPA's motion was partial because EPA, before claiming Exemption 4 for some material, was contacting companies whose information might be subject to Exemption 4 to determine whether the companies wished to invoke that exemption. EPA informed the Court in a supplementary filing that Landmark indicated it had no continuing interest in the information that was the subject of the Exemption 4 claim. Because the only portion of the case in which EPA was not seeking summary judgment at the time it filed its motion was that portion relating to Exemption 4, when the Exemption 4 issue dropped *70 out of the case the motion became one for summary judgment on the entire case.
