Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge RANDOLPH.
This case began as an action to enforce subpoenas
duces tecum
sеrved on various federal agencies, including the Departments of Defense and State and the Central Intelligence Agency. The agencies are not parties to the Florida lawsuit generating these discovery requests. Aspects of the сase were before this court in
Linder v. Department of Defense,
In this round, the Linders, plaintiffs in the Florida case, object to the district
*180
court's ruling compelling the Defense Department, the State Department, and the CIA to comply with the exрanded subpoenas on condition that the Linders pay "half the reasonable copying and labor costs." Linder v. Calero-Portocarrero,
I.
After considering the supplemental briefs we have concluded that federal agencies cannot, in view of our precedents, claim sovereign immunity to avoid compliance with third-party subpoenas. Whether, as a matter of interpretation, the word "person" in Rule 45 includes the federal government is a non-jurisdictional question the government failed to raise in the district court and we therefore express no opinion on it.
In authorizing parties to serve subpoenas on "persons" who are not parties to litigation, Rule 45 states: "Every subpoena shall command each person to whom it is directed to attend and give testimony or to produce and permit inspection and copying" of documents or tangible things. FED.R.CrV.P. 45(a)(1)(C). The courts of appeals are not entirely in agreement on their approach to Rule 45 when the object of the third-party subpoena is the federal government.
In Exxon Shipping Co. v. U.S. Department of Interior,
In COMSAT Corp. v. National Science Foundation,
We too have determined that sovereign immunity is not a defense to a third-party subpoena.
Northrop Corp. v. McDonnell Douglas Corp.,
Our doubts about the applicability of Rule 45 stemmed from
Al Fayed v. CIA,
Athough our past decisions have assumed that “person” in Rule 45 included the federal government, we have never expressly so held and our assumрtion may need to be reexamined in light of
Al Fayed.
But this is not the case in which to undertake the reexamination. Sovereign immunity provides no defense to the government and so there is no jurisdictional problem we need to address. Whether Rule 45’s use of the wоrd “person” should exempt the federal government, as
Al Fayed
held in regard to § 1782, is purely a
*182
question of statutory interpretation, a question the government did not raise before the district court. We therefore decline to decide it. See Marymount Hosp., Inc. v. Shalala,
II.
The lAnders offer four reasons why we ought to reverse the district court's imposition of costs. The first is that the court misapplied Rule 45, contradicting existing case law. As amended in 1991, FED. R.Cw.P. 45(c)(2)(B) provides that when a district court compels production by a non-pаrty the court "shall protect" that person from "significant expense resulting from the inspection and copying commanded." Before the amendment, costs could be shifted, but the decision to do so was within the discretion of the district court. See United States v. CBS, Inc.,
There are relatively few rеported cases applying the new Rule 45. In re The Exxon Valdez,
The Linders claim the court erred in concluding that fee shifting was mandatory. But Rule 45 requires precisely that-the district court "shall protect" a non-party from "significant expense." TJn-der the revisеd Rule 45, the questions before the district court are whether the subpoena imposes expenses on the non-party, and whether those expenses are "significant." If they are, the court must protect the non-party by requiring the party seeking disсovery to bear at least enough of the expense to render the remainder "non-significant." The rule is susceptible of no other interpretation.
The estimated expenses of compliance here amounted to $199,537.08. Is this amount "significаnt"? We have no trouble concluding that it is. compare Williams v. City of Dallas,
According to the Linclers, two statutes preclude imposing expenses on them even if Rule 45 means what we think it
*183
means. The first is the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 1998. Pub.L. No. 105-107, 111 Stat. 2252 (1997), codified at 22 U.S.C. § 2715a. Section 307 of the Intelligence Authorization Act states that “it is in the national interests of the United States to provide information regarding the killing, abduction, torture, or other serious mistreatment, of United States citizens abroad,” 22 U.S.C. § 2715a(a)(l), and directs federal agencies to “take all appropriate action” to identify information pertaining to such crimes and make it available to the family members of the victims.
Id.
§ 2715a(b). The Linders believe this means they are entitled to the subpoenaed material without charge. We think nоt. The Act creates no enforceable rights on behalf of any party. It provides no cause of action. It is simply a general statement of policy.
See Cort v. Ash,
The Linders’ second statute is the Freedom of Information Act, or more precisely, the public interest exception in FOIA, 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(A)(iii), requiring documents to be furnished to the requester at no charge or at a reduced charge when this is in the public interest. They also rely on § 552(а)(4)(A)(ii)(III) and argue in the alternative that, at the most, they should only have to pay the search and duplication costs of the documents. We see no basis for believing that FOIA affects the cost-shifting provisions of Rule 45. Rule 45 was amended to include cоst-shifting provisions in 1991 — long after the relevant FOIA sections became law. See Pub.L. No. 99-570, § 1803, 100 Stat. 3207-48, 3207-49 (1986). If the Linders wish to proceed under FOIA, they are of course free to do so. Whether they then could be required to bear some or any of the costs is not for us to say in this case.
The Linders’ last argument is that our previous decision in this case compels release of these documents at no cost. There is nothing to this. In that opinion we dealt only with the scope of the subpoenas, not who should bear the costs of production.
The judgment of the district court that the CIA and Departments of State and Defense need not comply with plaintiffs’ subpoenas is affirmed.
