Lead Opinion
OPINION
As in the companion ease filed today, Maricopa Audubon Society v. United States Forest Service,
BACKGROUND
In November of 1993, thirteen environmental and conservation organizations sent a joint letter to appellee Jack Ward Thomas, Chief of the Forest Service. This letter contained a variety of allegations directed against the management of the Southwestern Region of the Forest Service and concluded by calling for the replacement of the Regional Forester and his deputy. In the letter, the groups alleged that the Regional Forester and his deputy had undermined the Endangered Species Act by attempting to prevent the listing of the Mexican spotted owl as a threatened species; that the two officials had failéd to comply with settlement agreements governing logging in certain National Forests; that they had created hostile relations with the environmental community; that they had alienated other state and federal conservation agencies; that they had failed to cheek timber theft from national forest land; and that they had ostracized one of their own employees, a biologist, in retaliation for the views expressed in his research. The environmental organizations also issued a press release alleging that the Forest Service had allowed racist attitudes toward its Native American firefighters in the Southwestern Region to go unchecked. In response, the Regional Forester wrote an eight-page letter to Thomas in which he denied each of the allegations and requested that an independent inquiry be conducted. Acting upon the Regional Forester’s request and his own concerns, Thomas engaged Dr. Laurence Jahn, an independent consultant, to visit the Southwestern Region and to evaluate the complaints. Jahn’s report, completed in February of 1994, recounts the factual background and discusses the merits of each allegation.
On March 22,1994, acting on behalf of the Maricopa Audubon Society, appellant Dr. Robin Silver wrote to Thomas to request “[a] complete copy of the March 1994 report by Laurence R. Jahn concerning Forest Service activities in Region 3” along with “all accompanying documents and documentation.” The Forest Service denied the request on the ground that the report was generated as part of the agency’s “deliberative process” and therefore fell within exemption 5. Thomas explained in a written declaration that he sought the report “as a tool to help [him] evaluate ongoing management operations” in the Southwestern Region, and that he select
Audubon lodged an administrative appeal of this decision on May 3, 1994, and eight weeks later, it filed suit in district court, challenging both the denial of its requests and the Forest Service’s failure to act on its administrative appeal within twenty working days as required by FOIA. See 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(6)(A)(ii). On October 21, the Forest Service finally responded to Audubon’s administrative appeal by releasing, inter alia, redacted copies of both the Jahn report and the Regional Forester’s letter.
After conducting an in camera review of the unredacted documents, the district court granted summary judgment in favor of the Forest Service. In a two-page order, it concluded that the Jahn report and the Regional Forester’s letter both fell within the scope of exemption 5 because they involved “policy making decisions of the Forest Service” and the “deliberative process” of Thomas himself.
DISCUSSION
In the companion case of Maricopa Audubon Society v. United States Forest Service, we summarized the general principles of law applicable to FOIA cases. We will not repeat them here except to elaborate on the government’s burden of proof. As we previously observed, FOIA imposes on agencies the burden of establishing that information is exempt from disclosure. 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(B). Courts must apply that burden with an awareness that the plaintiff, who does not have access to the withheld materials, “is at a distinct disadvantage in attempting to controvert the agency’s claims.” Ollestad v. Kelley,
The case before us involves exemption 5 of FOIA, which applies by its terms to “inter-agency or 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). The exemption is “cast in terms of discovery law,” Coastal States Gas Corp. v. Department of Energy,
To fall within the “deliberative process” privilege of exemption 5, the materials in question must be “predeeisional” in nature and must also form part of the agency’s “deliberative process.” Sears, Roebuck,
A “predeeisional” document is one “prepared in order to assist an agency deci-sionmaker in arriving at his decision,” and may include “recommendations, draft documents, proposals, suggestions, and other subjective documents which reflect the personal opinions of the writer rather than the policy of the agency.” A predeeisional document is part of the “deliberative process,” if “the disclosure of [the] materials would expose an agency’s decisionmaking process in such a way as to discourage candid discussion within the agency and thereby undermine the agency’s ability to perform its functions.”
Assembly of the State of Cal.,
As we note in the companion case,
I. The Government’s Alleged Failure To Carry Its Burden of Proof
Audubon argues that the Forest Service has failed to carry its statutory burden of proof that the redacted materials fall within the scope of exemption 5. The Forest Service does not counter this argument directly but emphasizes that the district court engaged in its own in camera review of the redacted materials and therefore had an adequate factual basis on which to conclude that they were exempt. Although an agency may not satisfy its burden of proof simply by producing the withheld materials for in camera review,
■ The Thomas declaration clearly explains the purpose and nature of Dr. Jahn’s report. The record indicates that the Forest Service furnished appellants with not only the redacted documents, but also a copy of the allegations in response to which both the report and letter were prepared. Even in
II. The “Deliberative Process” Privilege
The first step in resolving a claim of “deliberative process” privilege under exemption 5 is to determine whether the withheld materials are “predecisional.” We conclude that the redacted portions of the Jahn report and Regional Forester’s letter satisfy this requirement, although not for the reason offered by the government. The Forest Service argues that because agencies are involved in a continual process of self-examination, it need not identify a specific decision in which the Jahn report and the Regional Forester’s letter will culminate in order for those materials to be “predecisional.” For this position, it relies entirely on a footnote in the Supreme Court’s decision in NLRB v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
Our emphasis on the need to protect pre-decisional documents does not mean that the existence of the privilege turns on the ability of an agency to identify a specific decision in connection with which a memorandum is prepared. Agencies are, and properly should be, engaged in a continuing process of examining their policies; this process will generate memoranda containing recommendations which do not ripen into agency decisions; and the lower courts should be wary of interfering with this process.
Id. at 151 n. 18,
In this case, however, the Regional Forester’s letter and the Jahn report were not merely part of a routine and ongoing process of agency self-evaluation. Both documents were prepared for the purpose of advising Thomas as to how to respond to specific, allegations of unethical and even illegal conduct. The documents were “predecisional” because Thomas relied on them in deciding what action, if any, he was obligated to take in response to the particular allegations. The facts that the Regional Forester took early retirement and that his deputy left his position to work in a different region obscure the actual decision that Thomas reached: these developments may have been the result of action on his part, may have obviated action on his part, or may represent some combination of the two. Our inability to identify the actual decision that was made does not alter the fact that the withheld materials were “prepared in order to assist an agency decisionmaker in arriving at his decision.” Assembly of the State of Cal,
We turn then to the second step of the “deliberative process” privilege, which requires us to determine whether the materials are “deliberative” in nature. To do so, we focus on “the effect of the materials’ release”—namely, whether disclosure of the
CONCLUSION
The Forest Service has established that the redacted portions oí the Jahn report and Regional Forester’s letter are both predeci-sional and deliberative in nature. It is therefore entitled to withhold those materials under the “deliberative process” privilege of exemption 5. The judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Where necessary to facilitate the adversarial testing of a claim of exemption, the agency must also compile a so-called "Vaughn index” that identifies each document withheld and the statutory exemption claimed for each document, and sets forth "a particularized explanation of how disclosure of the particular document would damage the interest protected by the claimed exemption.” Wiener v. FBI,
. Although FOIA authorizes a district court to inspect withheld materials in camera in order to determine first-hand whether they are exempt, see 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(B), we have been clear that "the district court’s inspection prerogative is not a substitute for the government’s burden of proof.” Church of Scientology,
. This is also not a case in which a Vaughn index was necessary. Neither the volume nor the nature of the information at issue suggests that a Vaughn index would have been Useful either to the district court or to appellants: the Jahn report and Regional Forester's letter total only thirty-four pages, of which only a fraction was at issue, and all of the material is readily comprehensible to a layman.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I write separately because I cannot agree with the majority’s suggestion in Part II that subjective, recommendatory, deliberative work-product is not exempt under Exemption 5 if the work-produet is generated in a process of routine agency self-evaluation. As that issue is not presented here — the Jahn report was commissioned to help Director Thomas respond to specific allegations of mismanagement in the Southwestern Region, not to assist Director Thomas in a routine review of Forest Service Policy — the discussion is at best “cautionary dictum,” see Majority Op. at 2589, that should not bind a subsequent court which squarely faces the issue.
