Case Information
*1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA )
VINCENT MICHAEL MARINO, )
)
Plaintiff, )
) v. ) Civil Action No. 12-865 (RMC) )
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, et al. , )
)
Defendants. )
) MEMORANDUM OPINION
Vincent M. Marino currently is incarcerated in federal prison on racketeering and
drug-related convictions. He maintains his innocence, claiming that assorted mobsters, aided
and abetted by rogue federal agents and prosecutors, pinned false charges on him. Last year, Mr.
Marino brought yet another
pro se
action under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), 5
U.S.C. § 552, Privacy Act,
id.
§ 552a, and Sunshine Act,
id.
§ 552b.
[1]
Compl. [Dkt. 1] at 1-3.
This time he sues eight agencies of the Department of Justice,
[2]
claiming that Defendants erred in
failing to release the following records: (1) sealed records from
United States v. Salemme
, 91 F.
Supp. 2d 141 (D. Mass. 1999),
rev’d in part
,
United States v. Flemmi
,
At issue in this phase of the litigation is whether Mr. Marino must pay certain fees associated with his records request. Mr. Marino contends that he should receive a fee waiver because the records he requests will benefit the public’s interest in how its government operates. At the same time, he concedes that the information he seeks already exists in the public domain. Moreover, Mr. Marino fails to provide sufficient information concerning how he will disseminate the records that he requests. Because these deficiencies are fatal to Mr. Marino’s fee waiver request, the Court will deny Mr. Marino’s motion.
I. FACTS
In March 2013, Defendants moved to dismiss Mr. Marino’s suit, or in the
alternative, for summary judgment. The Court
sua sponte
dismissed with prejudice Mr.
Marino’s Sunshine Act claim,
Marino
,
As relevant here, the Court faulted Defendants for their handling of the search fees that Mr. Marino owed in connection with his records request to EOUSA and USAO-MA. *3 The Court observed that USAO-MA had conducted searches for responsive records, but had refused to complete its review until Mr. Marino paid $8,960.00 in search fees. Defendants claimed that Mr. Marino was ineligible for a fee waiver, but Mr. Marino was not seeking such a waiver. Instead, Mr. Marino had asked EOUSA to cap his search fees at $1,000.00. EOUSA and USAO-MA ignored this request. Further, there was no indication in the record that Mr. Marino could not have made a $1,000.00 advance payment or that he would have sought a fee waiver in this amount. Id. at *9. Accordingly, the Court found that Defendants had not established that EOUSA and USAO-MA had conducted an adequate or reasonable search for responsive records. Id.
Defendants filed a motion for renewed dispositive briefing, which the Court granted. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Marino filed a Motion for Fee Waiver, Dkt. 29. He asked the Court to order Defendants to “correct” the “[v]erdict [s]heet” from his “jury trial” and waive $5,796.00 in search fees. [3] at 14-15. The Court directed Defendants to treat Mr. Marino’s Motion as a request made directly to them. See Dec. 30, 2013 Minute Order.
On February 10, 2014, Mr. Marino filed a Motion to Compel, Dkt. 30, and a Motion Requesting Copy of Docket Sheet, Dkt. 31. Mr. Marino asked the Court to direct Defendants to respond to his fee waiver request, Mot. to Compel at 1, and renewed his request for a “correct[ion] [of] the . . . [i]naccurate [r]ecord[s]” from his trial in the District of Massachusetts, Mot. Requesting Copy of Docket Sheet at 2. The Court granted the Motion to Compel and ordered Defendants to respond no later than March 5, 2014. Feb. 12, 2014 *4 Minute Order. However, the Court granted Mr. Marino’s Motion Requesting Copy of Docket Sheet only in part. It directed the Deputy Clerk to mail a copy of the docket sheet in this case to Mr. Marino and denied without prejudice his request for a correction of the records from his jury trial. See Feb. 12, 2014 Minute Order.
Defendants filed a timely response to Mr. Marino’s Motion to Compel, submitting a declaration from Tricia Francis, an EOUSA Attorney-Advisor charged with responding to FOIA requests. See EOUSA Notice [Dkt. 32], Francis Decl. [Dkt. 32-1]. Ms. Francis averred that EOUSA had calculated that it would take approximately 207 hours to conduct a search for the records that Mr. Marino had requested, computed a fee estimate of $5,796.00 based on the agency’s normal search fee of $28.00 per hour, and mailed this fee estimate to Mr. Marino in December 2013. Francis Decl. ¶¶ 5-7; see also Notice of Exhibits [Dkt. 37], Fee Letter to Mr. Marino [Dkt. 37-1] at 1-3. Ms. Francis adds that upon learning of Mr. Marino’s Motion for a Fee Waiver, EOUSA evaluated his request and deemed Mr. Marino ineligible for a fee waiver. Francis Decl. ¶ 8. EOUSA notified Mr. Marino of its decision on January 16, 2014, id. , explaining that Mr. Marino had not sufficiently established that his FOIA request was in the public interest, see Notice of Exhibits, Jan. 16, 2013 Letter to Mr. Marino [Dkt. 37-1] at 4-5. EOUSA informed Mr. Marino that he could either notify EOUSA of the amount he was willing to pay or administratively appeal the denial of his waiver request. Francis Decl. ¶ 8; see also Jan. 16, 2013 Letter to Mr. Marino at 5.
Mr. Marino opted to appeal EOUSA’s fee waiver denial. OIP received the appeal, but declined to act. Resp. to Show Cause [Dkt. 38], Ex. 1 [Dkt. 38-1] (OIP Letter to Mr. Marino). On April 3, 2014, OIP informed Mr. Marino that it was closing his appeal pursuant to 28 C.F.R. § 16.9(a)(3) because his waiver request was part of the litigation he had brought *5 before this Court. Id. at 1. Section 16.9(a)(3) provides that “[a]n appeal ordinarily will not be acted on if the request becomes a matter of FOIA litigation.” 28 C.F.R. § 16.9(a)(3).
On March 21, 2014, Mr. Marino filed a Reply, Dkt. 33, and Supplemental Reply, Dkt. 34, to EOUSA’s Notice and Francis Declaration. The Court then entered an Order explaining that EOUSA’s Notice would be construed as an opposition to Mr. Marino’s Motion to Compel, and Mr. Marino’s Reply and Supplemental Reply would “complete the record on [Mr. Marino’s] eligibility for a fee waiver.” Mar. 26, 2014 Minute Order. The Court vacated the existing schedule for summary judgment briefing pending the Court’s determination of Mr. Marino’s eligibility for a fee waiver. [4] Accordingly, the issue of Mr. Marino’s eligibility for a fee waiver is now ripe.
II. ANALYSIS
A. Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies
At the outset, the Court finds that Mr. Marino has exhausted his administrative
remedies in connection with his request for a fee waiver. It is well-established that a party must
first exhaust his administrative remedies before bringing an action under FOIA.
Stebbins v.
Nationwide Mut. Ins. Co.
,
B. Requested Fee Waiver
FOIA requesters generally cannot obtain judicial review of their FOIA claims
until they either pay any fees associated with their records request or establish their entitlement
to a fee waiver.
See Oglesby
,
Although the Court’s review of a fee waiver denial is
de novo
, it is limited to the
record that was before the agency at the time of the request.
See Larson v. CIA
,
As a component of the Department of Justice, EOUSA properly applied the Department’s regulations governing fee waivers set forth in 28 C.F.R. § 16.11(k). That provision requires the furnishing of responsive records “without charge or at a [reduced] charge . . . where a component determines, based on all available information, that the requester has demonstrated” the requisite level of public interest and is not seeking the information primarily for a commercial interest. 28 C.F.R. § 16.11(k)(1). EOUSA determined that Mr. Marino had not satisfied the first requirement of a public interest, which involves consideration of the following four factors:
(i) The subject of the request: Whether the subject of the requested records concerns ‘the operations or activities of the government.’ The subject of the requested records must concern identifiable operations or activities of the federal government, with a connection that is direct and clear, not remote or attenuated.
(ii) The informative value of the information to be disclosed: Whether the disclosure is ‘likely to contribute’ to an understanding of government operations or activities. The disclosable portions of the requested records must be meaningfully informative about government operations or activities in order to be ‘likely to contribute’ to an increased public understanding of those operations or activities. The disclosure of information that already is in the public domain, in either a duplicative or a substantially identical form, would not be as likely to contribute to such understanding where nothing new would be added to the public’s understanding.
(iii) The contribution to an understanding of the subject by the public likely to result from disclosure: Whether disclosure of the requested information will contribute to ‘public understanding.’ The disclosure must contribute to the understanding of a reasonably broad audience of persons interested in the subject, as opposed to the individual understanding of the requester. A *8 requester’s expertise in the subject area and ability and intention to effectively convey information to the public shall be considered. It shall be presumed that a representative of the news media will satisfy this consideration.
(iv) The significance of the contribution to public understanding: Whether the disclosure is likely to contribute ‘significantly’ to public understanding of government operations or activities. The public’s understanding of the subject in question, as compared to the level of public understanding existing prior to the disclosure, must be enhanced by the disclosure to a significant extent. Components shall not make value judgments about whether information that would contribute significantly to public understanding of the operations or activities of the government is ‘important’ enough to be made public. § 16.11(k)(2). As the Circuit has explained, “[f]or a request to be in the ‘public interest,’ [all]
four [public interest] criteria must be satisfied.” Judicial Watch v. Dep’t of Justice , 365 F.3d 1108, 1126 (D.C. Cir. 2004).
EOUSA denied Mr. Marino’s fee waiver request because he had not satisfied all of the factors of the public interest analysis. In its letter to Mr. Marino, EOUSA faulted him for (1) not explaining with sufficient specificity to which operations or activities of the government his records request pertained, (2) failing to detail how his records request would significantly increase public understanding of government operations or activities, and (3) not providing an adequate plan for disseminating the requested records to the public. Jan. 16, 2013 Letter to Mr. Marino at 4-5. The Court agrees as to the latter two points.
While Mr. Marino’s briefing is often difficult to follow, his position is clear that
the records he requests will reveal information about the inner workings of the FBI, and, perhaps,
U.S. Attorneys’ Offices. However, Mr. Marino has not specifically stated how disclosure of
such records would add anything new to the public’s understanding of these federal entities,
which is the primary goal of FOIA.
U.S. Dep’t of Justice v. Reporters Comm. for Freedom of
*9
Press
,
Mr. Marino’s vague statements about disseminating the information are similarly
tenuous. A key consideration in evaluating a public interest fee-waiver request is whether the
FOIA requester has the “ability and intention to effectively convey or disseminate the requested
information to the public.”
Prison Legal News v. Lappin
,
Here, Mr. Marino indicates that he will disseminate any responsive records on the Internet. He specifically names the following websites as platforms for distribution: *11 “PROJECTMARINO.COM, PROJECTMARINO.NET, PROJECTMARINOgmail.com, . . . Face Book [sic], Twitter, U-Tube [sic], [and] Google.” Reply at 18. The only data he provides on viewership of these websites is that “over 150,000 people WORLD-WIDE” have visited “PROJECTMARINO.” Id. at 22 (internal quotation marks omitted).
The accuracy and utility of this response is questionable. Mr. Marino does not
explain which PROJECTMARINO web site has been viewed, and makes the fantastical assertion
that “the White House [has] view[ed] the websites from three different terminals.” at 23.
Further, Mr. Marino does not explain whether the 150,000 figure represents merely the total
number of views since the inception of the websites or the number of website hits per day.
Cf.,
e.g.
,
Judicial Watch, Inc. v. Rossotti
,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court will deny Mr. Marino’s request for a search fee waiver. A memorializing Order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.
/s/ ROSEMARY M. COLLYER Date: June 19, 2014 United States District Judge
Notes
[1] As this Court has noted previously, Mr. Marino is a repeat FOIA litigator. In
Marino v. Central
Intelligence Agency
, Civ. No. 11-813,
[2] The named defendants (collectively, Defendants) are the Office of the Attorney General (OAG); the Criminal Division of the Department of Justice (CRIM); the Executive Office of the U.S. Attorneys (EOUSA); the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI); the Office of Enforcement Operations (OEO); the Office of Information and Policy (OIP); the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia (USAO-DC); and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts (USAO-MA).
[3] The Court notes that, in the same paragraph in which he asked for a fee waiver, Mr. Marino also requested an order that would “allow [him] to pay the $5,796.00 within 60 days from this Court’s Order . . . .” Mot. for Fee Waiver at 15. The Court presumes that this request is borne out of a misunderstanding of the law and is not a concession as to Mr. Marino’s capability and willingness to pay the accrued search fees.
[4] On March 28, 2014, Mr. Marino submitted a Supplemental Motion for Fee Waiver, Dkt. 35, which the Court accepted.
[5] Mr. Marino also claims that the requested FOIA information will correct “inaccurate records”
associated with his criminal conviction, Mot. for Fee Waiver at 3, and will cast doubt on the
evidence presented at his trial,
id.
at 5. The Court notes that Mr. Marino’s focus on the ways in
which the requested records allegedly will undermine his conviction and term of incarceration
greatly undercuts the supposed benefit that will accrue to the
public
if the records are released.
Supp. Reply at 4-5 (explaining that the requested records are needed in order to secure Mr.
Marino’s “immediate release from custody”). As this Circuit has observed, “[i]nsofar as [a
prisoner] seeks information to facilitate a challenge to his conviction, the court considers
disclosure less likely to contribute to public understanding.”
Ortloff v. Dep’t of Justice
, No. 02-
5170,
