MEMORANDUM OPINION
This comes before the Court on the plaintiffs motion for civil contempt [50], the memoranda in opposition of EPA [55], Gary Guzy [54], Michael McCabe [56], and Carol Browner [59], and Plaintiffs reply [58]. Also before the Court is Plaintiffs Motion for Sanctions [26], which predates its motion for contempt, defendant’s response [30], and plaintiffs reply [32], Upon consideration of the briefing, the law, and the record in this case, the Court will deny the motion as to Gary Guzy, Michael McCabe, Carol Browner, and the United States Attorney’s Office. EPA will be held in contempt, and ordered to pay sanctions in the amount of Landmark’s legal fees and costs expended as a result of EPA’s contumacious conduct. Plaintiffs motion for sanctions [26] is moot in part as to legal fees and costs incurred as a result of EPA’s contumacious conduct, and will be denied in part as to fees and costs unrelated to the contempt.
I. Background
Plaintiff filed a FOIA request with defendant EPA on September 7, 2000, seeking “[i]dentifieation 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. Dissatis-
II. EPA
A. Specificity of Court’s Preliminary Injunction
A preliminary matter the Court must determine before proceeding to the merits of the contempt motion against EPA is whether the Court’s January 19, 2001 order satisfied the particularity requirement for contempt and the specificity mandated by Rule 65(d). Civil contempt lies only for violation of a clear and unambiguous order.
Armstrong v. EOP,
Courts are split on whether Rule 65(d) requires a strict interpretation.
See, e.g., Consumers Gas & Oil, Inc. v. Farmland Indus., Inc.,
The Supreme Court has explained that the Rule “was designed to prevent uncertainty and confusion on the part of those faced with injunctive orders, and to avoid the possible founding of a contempt citation on a decree too vague to be understood.”
Schmidt v. Lessard,
Other circuits agree. Where an injunction incorporates by reference a document with which the enjoined party is familiar, the primary purpose of Rule 65(d) is served, and adequate notice is provided to parties who could face contempt for violation of the order.
Davis v. City & County of San Francisco,
In this case, the injunction refers to Landmark’s FOIA request in defining the boundaries of what may not be removed or destroyed, and could be construed to be in conflict with Rule 65(d). However, this is not dispositive. At the January 19, 2001 hearing, counsel for EPA reviewed the order and stated, “I can live with this order.” Tr. of Jan. 19, 2001 hearing at 31. Counsel’s statements throughout the hearing indicate that EPA understood the nature of the FOIA request referenced in the order. For instance, counsel represented that EPA would complete its response to the request by February 16, less than one month from the hearing date. Tr. at 27-28. Counsel also stated that previous difficulties could have been resolved “if we had had the request refined early on,” Tr. at 26-27, indicating that by the time of the January 19 hearing the request (or at least EPA’s understanding of it) had been refined. Thus, the Court finds that the order satisfies the notice requirement of Rule 65(d), and is not too vague to support a finding of contempt.
B. Contempt Power
This Court has the inherent power to protect its integrity and to prevent abuses of the judicial process by holding those who violate its orders in contempt and ordering sanctions for such violations.
Cobell v. Babbitt,
Traditionally, whether a contempt is civil or criminal has depended on the character and purpose of the sanction. A sanction is considered civil if it is remedial, and for the benefit of the complainant. But if it is for criminal contemptthe sentence is punitive, to vindicate the authority of the court.
Evans v. Williams,
Because the purpose of a civil contempt proceeding is to vindicate the rights of the non-violating party, not to punish the violator, the relief granted will be either coercive or compensatory in nature. The Supreme Court has explained that the paradigmatic coercive sanction “involves confining a eontemnor indefinitely until he complies with an affirmative command such as an order to pay alimony, or to surrender property ordered to be turned over to a receiver, or to make a conveyance.”
Int’l Union, United Mine Workers of Am. v. Bagwell,
In criminal contempt proceedings, the putative eontemnor must have willfully violated the court’s order.
United States v. Young,
Finally, civil and criminal contempt differ in that the proceedings are directed by different parties. A civil contempt proceeding is initiated by the party alleging that it was harmed by the violation of a court order.
See In re Magwood,
C. Violation of the Court’s Order
The Court has already determined that the order was reasonably clear and specific. The next step in the contempt inquiry is whether, by clear and convincing evidence, EPA violated the order. On May 16, 2001, EPA submitted a status report [42] to the Court, detailing EPA’s response to Landmark’s' FOIA request and to the Court’s January 19 order. The status report notes that former EPA Administrator Carol Browner’s hard drive was reformatted on January 19, the date the preliminary injunction issued and in violation of that injunction. Status Report [42] at 4, ¶ 9. In addition, former Associate Deputy Administrator Dawn Martin’s hard drive was reformatted on or around February 2, 2001,
id.
at 5, ¶ 13, Michael McCabe’s on or around February 2, 2001,
id.
at 5 ¶ 14, and Gary Guzy’s on or around March 2, 2001,
id.
at 5-6, ¶ 15.
3
Corina Cortez’s hard drive had been reformatted because it had become corrupted and unuseable “sometime before” January 19, 2001, which was her last day in office.
4
Id.
at 5, ¶ 12. The status report states that Guzy’s computer had been checked for responsive
Each night, EPA backs up the email system to tape, capturing the emails sitting in each inbox at the end of that day. These backup tapes would therefore capture responsive documents that remained on the EPA email system at that time. Backup tapes are normally preserved for 90 days, and then erased and reused. Myra Galbreath, a division director of the Headquarters and Desk Top Services Division of the Office of Environmental Information, testified that the practice of erasing and reusing email backup tapes continued after January 19-despite the Court’s order-until late April. May 14, 2001 Deposition of Myra Gal-breath at 24-42. At the time the erasures finally ceased, the earliest remaining tapes were from on or about February 2. Id. These hard drive reformattings and email backup tape erasures were contumacious. EPA does not dispute that they occurred. Therefore, EPA acted in contempt of the Court’s order.
D. Good Faith Substantial Compliance Defense
EPA argues that it should not be held in contempt under the good faith substantial compliance defense to civil contempt. As the name implies, this defense has two elements. The contemnor must show “(1) a good faith effort to comply with the court order at issue; and (2) substantial compliance with that court order.”
Cobell v. Babbitt,
“Good faith” means that the party undertook “all reasonable steps within [its] power to comply with the court’s order.”
Cobell,
In its briefing, Landmark makes much of EPA’s efforts to preserve documents for the second-hand smoke tobacco litigation. In her deposition, Galbreath testified that the General Counsel’s office sent out a memo directing that all email backup tapes be preserved after a court order issued in that case. Galbreath Depo. 26-27, 87-88. EPA’s briefing explains that the order was a document preservation order in United States v. Phillip Morris, 99-CV-2496 (D.D.C.) Order #1 [9] ¶ 7 (“Each party shall preserve all documents and other records containing information potentially relevant to the subject matter of this litigation.”). EPA Response [55] at 22. A memo like the one issued in the tobacco litigation was not sent out in this case until May 5, 2001, months after the January 19 order. Galbreath Depo. at 38-41. Failure to issue a memorandum on the Court’s injunction-whieh was essentially a preservation order similar to the one entered in the tobacco litigation-proves up EPA’s concession that it did not take all reasonable steps.
The only post-January 19 step EPA recounts as constituting a good faith reasonable* effort was the January 26, 2001 email sent by John Heinz “to a wide distribution list” alerting the recipients that the Court had entered a preliminary injunction and cautioning that all EPA agents and employees were subject to the order. EPA Response [55] at 27. However, the distribution was not wide enough to include IT staff responsible for the preservation of the email backup tapes, Landmark Reply [58] at 22, and was thus ineffective to stop the erasure of the tapes. Nor was it sent to Michael McCabe, Acting Administrator at that time. McCabe depo. at 47. This single asserted effort to comply with the Court’s order did not constitute “all reasonable steps,” and thus does not satisfy the first prong of the good faith substantial compliance defense.
The second prong of the defense is substantial compliance with the Court’s order.
Cobell,
III. United States Attorney’s Office
Landmark argues that the United States Attorney’s Office should be held in contempt for its participation in the conduct of this lawsuit. Landmark asserts that the USAO made representations to the Court that time proved to be untrue. At the January 19, 2001 hearing, for instance, the USAO represented that EPA would complete its response to Landmark’s September 7 FOIA request by February 16; the response was not completed by that date. Also at that hearing, the USAO stated that the Court need not enter the injunction, as all responsive materials would be preserved under the National Archive and Records Administration (NARA) guide
There is no question that this Court is disappointed in the behavior of the USAO in this case. At the May 18, 2001 hearing, the Court chastised the USAO for its representations at the January 19 hearing on the injunction:
[Ejvery word spoken to me at that hearing [ ]turns out to be false as well. Every word spoken to me in that hearing was I did not need to enter the injunction, [Jjudge, because EPA can be trusted to do this. You don’t need to enter an order. Trust us. We are going to do this.
May 18 2001 hearing tr. at 5-6.
Likewise, the Court finds disappointing the USAO’s failure to immediately transmit the Court’s written order to EPA and lack of efforts to ensure that EPA officials were familiar with and followed the order. The USAO received a faxed copy of the Court’s order the afternoon of January 19, and faxed it to EPA January 28, several days later and only upon the request of an EPA employee. The USAO defends its failure to communicate with EPA in a more timely manner by noting that an EPA employee, Betty Lopez, Associate Director of Freedom of Information Operations, attended the hearing and thus EPA was aware that the Court would enter the injunction. EPA Response [55] at 24-25. In the same breath, however, the USAO concedes that Lopez had been at EPA only twelve days; Lopez is not an attorney. Reliance on a non-attorney two-week employee to immediately grasp the significance of the Court’s statement and communicate the order to the entire EPA is a slender reed indeed.
5
Furthermore, an injunction does not become an injunction until it is reduced to writing,
Bates v. Johnson,
Nonetheless, these actions do not violate the Court’s order, which proscribes removing, destroying, or tampering with potentially responsive information. While the Court finds the USAO’s behavior in this case far below what it expects of officers of the court charged with zealously representing their clients, the Court will
The Court notes the turnaround in the conduct of this case by the USAO since the January 19 hearing. When it was discovered that EPA had destroyed documents in contravention of this Court’s order, the newly assigned Assistant U.S. Attorney on the case immediately disclosed these activities to the Court in a written report. See May 16, 2001 Status Report [42]. The USAO has cooperated fully with the IG and this Court to uncover exactly what went wrong in this case. This forthrightness and cooperation are of the caliber of integrity and legal work the Court expects from the USAO.
TV. Individuals
For a variety of reasons, the Court finds that it is not appropriate to issue findings of contempt against the individuals named by Landmark: Carol Browner, Michael McCabe, and Gary Guzy. First, Browner and McCabe were not familiar with the terms of Landmark’s September 7, 2000 FOIA request, and thus as to them the January 19, 2001 order, which referred to the FOIA request in defining the parameters of the preliminary injunction, was not sufficiently particular to satisfy Rule 65(d). Second, none of the named individuals had any notice of the order. As agents and employees of EPA, they were subject to the order; however, the Court will practice restraint in invoking its inherent power to find contempt based on this circumstance. Finally, the evidence is not clear and convincing that Browner or Guzy violated the order.
A. Clear and Unambiguous
As the Court noted above, to form the basis for contempt an order must be clear and unambiguous.
Armstrong v. EOP,
While the order was specific enough to give EPA notice of what was enjoined, based on the collective knowledge of the entity, the Court must conduct a separate inquiry to determine whether the order was drafted with sufficient specificity to notify the named individuals against whom Landmark seeks contempt. Browner testified that she did not learn of Landmark’s FOIA request or lawsuit while she was at EPA, and thus was unfamiliar with the parameters of that request. June 22, 2001 Deposition of Carol Browner at 7-11 (first heard of Landmark litigation after she left EPA); 142-144 (did not learn of injunction until after she left EPA); 157-169 (did not hear of Landmark’s FOIA request or lawsuit during tenure at EPA). The term “September 7 Freedom of Information Act request” as used in the January 19 order did not have the specificity required by Rule 65(d) to give her notice of what was enjoined. Therefore, as to her, the order does not meet the standards of Rule 65(d), and a finding of contempt cannot be based upon it
Similarly, McCabe asserted that he was unaware of the specifics of Landmark’s
As to Guzy, however, the order is sufficiently specific. Guzy became familiar with the scope of Landmark’s September 7, 2000 FOIA request during his tenure at EPA; he testified that he printed out descriptive emails to facilitate his search for responsive documents. Tr. at 46-47, 77-79, 92. Because he was familiar with the FOIA request, the Court’s reference to the request does not violate Rule 65(d)’s notice requirement, and as to Guzy the order is clear and unambiguous. 6
B. Notice
The form of the January 19, 2001 Order [15] was proposed by Landmark, and was signed in the proposed form with some handwritten insertions. The relevant insertion for this discussion is in italics: “it is further ORDERED that Environmental Protection Agency
and its agents and employees are
enjoined from transporting, removing, or in any way tampering with information potentially responsive” to Landmark’s September 2, 2000 FOIA request. The Court explained that it was including the language “to make sure that people understand they’re personally accountable to the extent they learn of the order.” Tr. of Jan. 19, 2001 hearing at 29. To find contempt, it need not be proven that a party to an order had actual notice of that order.
NOW v. Operation Rescue,
Here, the named individuals were agents or employees of EPA at the time the order issued, and thus fell under its aegis. Violation of an order to which a person is subject is contempt of court. Whether the Court should take the step of holding individuals in contempt of an order of which they had no notice is another matter. A court must practice restraint in invoking its inherent power to sanction.
Shepherd v. American Broadcasting Cos., Inc.,
In order to appropriately limit its use of the contempt power, the Court will take the position in this case that “the putative contemnor should have reasonably definite advance notice that a court order applies to it.”
Project B.A.S.I.C. v. Kemp,
1. Carol Browner
At the time the order issued, Carol Browner was the Administrator of the EPA. January 19, 2001, the day the order issued, was Browner’s last day in office. The preliminary injunction hearing was held in the morning, beginning at 9:47 a.m. and concluding at 10:27 a.m. At the hearing the Court stated that it would issue a written order “this afternoon.” Jan. 19, 2001 hearing tr. at 29. There is no record of what time the order was signed, but a faxed copy was received by the United State’s Attorney’s Office between 2:00 p.m. and 3:45 p.m. Attachment to Motion of Browner to Supplement the Record. 8
Meanwhile, back at the agency, Browner requested sometime before noon that her computer be reformatted and/or that all her files be erased that day in preparation for the next administrator. Kevin Bailey Deposition Tr. at 40-41. The reformatting was performed by Kevin Bailey, a contractor with Lockheed-Martin. Mr. Bailey sent an email at 1:53 p.m., confirming that the hard drive had been successfully reformatted. Browner Response [59] Tab E.
In order to become effective, an injunction must be reduced to writing; “[a] judge who proclaims T enjoin you’ and does not follow up with an injunction has done nothing.”
Bates v. Johnson,
2. Michael McCabe
When the Court issued its order on January 19, 2001, Michael McCabe was Deputy Administrator of EPA. Upon expiration of Browner’s term when President Bush was sworn in on January 20, 2001, McCabe became Acting Administrator until Christine Todd Whitman was sworn in as the new Administrator. McCabe left EPA on February 2, 2001. McCabe Depo tr. at 5-6. McCabe was in violation of the Court’s order. He deleted emails after reading them without examining them for responsiveness to Landmark’s FOIA request (as he was unfamiliar with the specifics of that request). McCabe depo tr. at 17-20, 29-31. He believed all emails were captured by backup system, tr. at 30-31, although he did not know exactly how the backup system operated. Tr. at 71-75. At the end of his tenure, he asked that his computer be reformatted as part of his transition out of office. Tr. at 43-45.
However, as discussed above, McCabe was not familiar with the Landmark litigation or the specifics of the FOIA request. He was not sent the January 26, 2001 email that notified the recipients of the Court’s preliminary injunction. Tr. at 47. He never saw Landmark’s FOIA request. Tr. at 43. It was described to him by Maryann Froelich, but without any specificity. Tr. at 22-25. Therefore, both because he was not sufficiently familiar with the FOIA request such that the Court’s January 19 order satisfied Rule 65(d) as to him, and because he had no notice of the order, the Court will not hold McCabe in contempt.
3. Gary Guzy
Guzy became familiar with the scope of Landmark’s September 7, 2000 FOIA request during his tenure at EPA. Tr. at 46-47, 77-79, 92. Guzy was also aware of the litigation, tr. at 54-55, but did not get involved in the litigation and offered only general guidance. Tr. at 25-29, 35. He did not participate in negotiations to determine the scope of the September 7 FOIA request. Tr. at 41-46. However, he complied with the FOIA request by searching for responsive documents before leaving office. Guzy depo. tr. at 72, 77-79. Upon leaving EPA, he did not request that any files be deleted from his computer or that his hard drive be reformatted. Id. at 75-76. Before recycling any paper materials or deleting any emails, he examined them for responsiveness to Landmark’s FOIA request (and several other outstanding FOIA and discovery requests). Tr. at 76-79.
In urging that Guzy be held in contempt, Landmark again emphasizes the contrast between EPA’s (and Guzy’s) actions in the tobacco litigation, in which a preservation memorandum was issued, and this case, in which the preservation memorandum based on the January 19 order was not issued until May. Landmark argues that Guzy’s failure to issue such a memorandum on January 19-the day the order was issued and Guzy’s last day at EPA-was contumacious.
The Court’s previous discussion of the preservation memorandum indicates that failure to issue such a memorandum precludes a finding that all reasonable steps were taken to comply with the order. No doubt, issuance of such a memorandum would have been best practice, and perhaps the most effective way of complying with the order. However, while the Order admits of an interpretation that Guzy (or one in his position) must take affirmative steps to preserve potentially responsive items, given the D.C. Circuit’s teaching in its reading of the order in Armstrong, the Court will strictly adhere to the literal terms of the Order in determining whether contempt is appropriate for Guzy’s failure on his last day in the position of General Counsel to issue a preservation memorandum, and finds that it is not.
V. Sanctions
Having adjudged that EPA is in civil contempt of court, the Court must determine the proper remedy for that contempt. The D.C. Circuit explored three types of misconduct that justify sanctions in
Webb v. District of Columbia,
Second, sanctions are appropriate where there is prejudice to the judicial system in the form of “ ‘an intolerable burden’ on a district court” requiring the court to modify its docket to accommodate the delay caused by the contumacious party.
Id.
FOIA is intended to work without court intervention; in a perfect world, a requester submits a request to an agency, and the agency responds to the request.
See generally
5 U.S.C. § 562 (describing FOIA
Finally, sanctions are appropriate for “conduct that is disrespectful to the court and to deter similar misconduct in the future.” Id. Disobedience of a court order is inherently disrespectful, but the defendants’ conduct in this case has gone beyond disobedience and into disrespect. At the preliminary injunction hearing, EPA represented that there was no need for the injunction because EPA would preserve the responsive materials pursuant to its own procedures. Tr. of Jan. 19, 2001 hearing at 21. This, of course, turned out to be untrue as not even a court order was enough to spur the EPA to preserve potentially responsive materials. EPA also represented that it would complete its response to the request by February 16, 2001. Tr. at 27. And yet at the May 18, 2001 hearing, both parties indicated that the search of existing information-completely putting aside the reformattings and erasures-had not yet been completed. Tr. of May 18, 2001 hearing at 3-4, 12. EPA is a repeat player in the FOIA game, as are all federal agencies. See June 19, 2001 Deposition of Gary Guzy at 42 (stating that EPA receives thousands of FOIA requests each year). Sanctions are appropriate, then, to deter similar misconduct in the future, as well as for disrespectful conduct.
The Supreme Court has stated that while civil contempt sanctions are not punitive, they can be imposed to compensate the complainant for losses sustained as a result of the contumacious conduct.
United States v. United Mine Workers,
It is well-established that courts may award attorneys’ fees and expenses in conjunction with a civil contempt proceeding.
See Fleischmann Distilling Corp. v. Maier Brewing Co.,
The frequency and severity of abuses can be relevant to the extent of attorney’s fees that may be awarded.
Chambers,
VI. Landmark’s Separate Motion for Sanctions
Before the USAO brought Landmark’s and the Court’s attention to EPA’s viola
Rule 16(f) sets forth discrete activities for which the imposition of sanctions is appropriate under that Rule. Those activities relate to pretrial conferences and scheduling order. The merits of a case are irrelevant for the purposes of Rule 16(f).
Turner v. Georgetown Univ.,
Plaintiff has pointed the Court to no case that imposed sanctions under Rule 16(f) for any action other than violation of a court order, a court deadline, or a court timetable.
See, e.g., Rushing v. Kansas City Southern Ry. Co.,
VII. Conclusion
Concerned that documents responsive to its September 7 FOIA request would not survive the transition between administrations, Landmark asked this Court to enter a preliminary injunction prohibiting EPA from destroying, removing, or tampering with potentially responsive documents. The Court granted the motion, and issued the injunction on January 19, 2001. This order, however, was ineffective in preventing EPA from reformatting hard drives and erasing email tapes that contained potentially responsive material. These acts were in violation of the Court’s order, and for that the Court finds EPA in contempt. Landmark urges that several individuals and the United States Attorney’s Office should also be held in contempt, but this the Court declines to do. The appropriate sanction, given the length and breadth of EPA’s disobedience to the January 19 order, and given that the destruction of these documents goes to the heart of Landmark’s FOIA request that is the basis for this suit, is to order EPA to pay a sanction in the form of Landmark’s attorney’s fees and costs caused by EPA’s contumacious conduct.
A separate order shall issue this date.
ORDER
This comes before the Court on the plaintiff’s motion for contempt [50], the memoranda in opposition of EPA [55], Gary Guzy [54], Michael McCabe [56], and Carol Browner [59], and Plaintiffs reply [58]. Also before the Court is Plaintiffs Motion for Sanctions [26], which predates its motion for contempt, defendant’s response [30], and plaintiffs reply [32].
Upon consideration of the briefing, the law, and the record in this case, the Court hereby ORDERS that the motion for contempt [50] is DENIED as to Gary Guzy, Michael McCabe, Carol Browner, and the United States Attorney’s Office.
It is further ORDERED that the Environmental Protection Agency is ADJUDGED and DECREED to be in civil contempt of court for violation of this Court’s Order of January 19, 2001.
It is further ORDERED that EPA shall pay a sanction in the amount of Landmark’s legal fees and costs incurred as a result of EPA’s contumacious conduct. Landmark shall submit to the court within 30 days an appropriate filing detailing the amount of reasonable expenses and attorneys’ fees. Any response thereto shall be filed 10 days thereafter.
It is further ORDERED that plaintiffs motion for sanctions [26] is moot as to costs and fees associated with EPA’s contumacious behavior, and DENIED as to other costs and fees incurred up to April 4, 2001.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The individual defendants dispute that the order was clear and unambiguous.
. In addition to its decision that bad faith is not required for civil contempt, the
Food Lion
court also noted in dicta that bad faith is not required for an award of attorney's fees as a sanction for failure to obey a court order.
Food Lion,
. As explained in EPA's May 16, 2001 status report [42], Martin, McCabe, and Browner all requested that their hard drives be reformatted. Status Report [42] at 5 ¶ 13 (Martin), 5 1! 14 (McCabe), 4 ¶ 9 (Browner). Guzy’s, on the other hand, was reformatted well after his departure; he made no request that it be done. Guzy Depo. at 75-76.
.Because this occurred before the Court’s order was entered, that reformatting was not undertaken in contravention of the order. Of course, this does not excuse EPA from searching the hard drive for responsive documents. EPA stated in the status report that it would attempt to recover the reformatted information from Cortez's hard drive, as well as those of Browner, Martin, Guzy, and McCabe. Status Report [42] at 7, ¶ 22.
. This statement is in no way intended to diminish Ms. Lopez's efforts in this case and in EPA's FOIA compliance generally. On the contrary, at the May 18 hearing Landmark’s counsel noted that "Betty Lopez is one of the few people over there who actually tried to do something.” May 18, 2001 hearing tr. at 8.
. Although the order was sufficiently specific as to Guzy, the Court notes as a separate matter that Guzy did not have notice of the order itself.
. June 22, 2001 Deposition of Carol Browner at 7-11 (first heard of Landmark litigation after she left EPA; received call after May 18, 2001 hearing); 142-144 (did not learn of injunction until May 18, 2001 or May 21, 2001); 157-169 (did not hear of Landmark's FOIA request or lawsuit during tenure at EPA).
June 19, 2001 Deposition of Gary Guzy at 48-49 (did not know Landmark filed a motion for preliminary injunction until several months after leaving office); 56 (heard of January 19, 2001 preliminary injunction hearing only after leaving office); 74-75 (did not hear of the January 19 order at the time it
June 20, 2001 Deposition of Michael McCabe at 43, 47-48, 98-99 (had not been informed of Landmark’s filing for preliminary injunction nor Court's issuance of it before leaving office on February 2, 2001); 47 (was not sent the January 26, 2001 email informing the recipients of the Court's preliminary injunction).
. The attachment to this motion is the United State's Attorney's Office's fax log for faxes received from the court. The log has spaces for the date and time a fax was picked up from the fax machine, the attorney to whom it was directed, the case number and a description of the fax, and the time the fax was given to the attorney. The time is not filled in for every fax. The log for January 19, 2001, indicates that a fax was picked up at 2:00. Thereafter, two additional faxes were picked up, but no times were given. The entry for the order in this case was picked up from the fax machine at 3:45. Thus, it can be deduced that the fax was received sometime after 2:00, when the previous time-noted fax was picked up, and before 3:45, when the Order at issue here was picked up.
. The district court's order at issue in
Armstrong
stated that "the guidelines issued by and at the direction of the Defendant Agencies are inadequate and not reasonable and are arbitrary and capricious and contrary to law in that they permit the destruction of records contrary to the Federal Records Act.”
Armstrong,
. The Webb Court was writing in the context of a default judgment as a sanction, but the rationales provided apply to lesser sanctions as well.
. According to EPA’s May 16 status report [42], the total count for reformatted computers is five: Carol Browner (at 4, ¶ 9), Corina Cortez (at 5, ¶ 12), Dawn Martin (at 5, ¶ 13), Michael McCabe (at 5, ¶ 14), Gary Guzy (at 5-6, ¶ 15).
