MEMORANDUM OPINION
This is a FOIA 1 case concerning three requests for documents submitted to the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) by Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw LLP (“Mayer Brown”), a law firm. Mayer Brown wanted to obtain documents on the background to two revenue rulings, certain settlement guidelines, and an official IRS notice. After several years of litigation, and a prior decision by this Court, 2 the dispute over approximately 30,000 documents has resolved to only 27. Both parties move for summary judgment. See Dkt. ##38 & 40. The Court will grant the motions of the parties in part and deny them in part.
I. BACKGROUND FACTS 3
The documents at issue concern the tax treatment accorded by the IRS to LILOS, or lease-in/lease-out transactions. Under these LILOS, a transit agency would lease transit equipment to a lessor for an extended period under a “Headlease.” See Memorandum Opinion (“Mem.Op.”) at 2. The transit agency would then lease the property back under a Lease for a period significantly shorter than the terms of the Headlease. See id. at 2. According to Mayer Brown, the LILO structure was used as a financing method by transit agencies in a number of cities, including San Diego, Washington, D.C., and Dallas, among others. Id. Following an IRS revenue ruling that disallowed deductions for LILO transactions, lessees and lessors increased the use of sale-leaseback structures. In a sale-leaseback (called sale in/ lease out, or “SILO” by the IRS), the original owner of transit equipment would sell it and then lease it back. Id.
Mayer Brown sought information regarding two revenue rulings, settlement guidelines, and an IRS Notice. Specifically, in Revenue Ruling 99-14, 1999-
*133 II. LEGAL STANDARDS
Under Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, summary judgment must be granted when “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c);
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
FOIA cases are typically and appropriately decided on motions for summary judgment.
Harrison v. Executive Office for U.S. Attorneys, 377
F. Supp.2d 141, 145 (D.D.C.2005);
Miscavige v. IRS, 2
F.3d 366, 368 (11th Cir.1993);
Rushford v. Civiletti,
III. ANALYSIS
In response to each of Mayer Brown’s pleadings, the IRS has released more documents and submitted successive affidavits from Deborah Lambert-Dean explaining its reasons for not releasing more. Ms. Lambert-Dean is an attorney in the Office of Chief Counsel at the IRS, who is responsible for coordinating the defense of the IRS with the Department of Justice in this case. See 6th Declaration of Deborah Lamberb-Dean (“6th Decl.”) ¶¶ 1 & 2. On each occasion, Ms. Lambert-Dean has more fully explained the agency’s position *134 and refined her analysis. At this mature stage of the litigation, the only matter before the Court is the IRS’s withholding of records under the deliberative process privilege incorporated into FOIA exemption 5. See Mayer Brown’s Renewed Mot. for Summ. J. (“PL’s Mem.”) [Dkt. # 38] at 2.
This privilege “encompasses ‘documents reflecting advisory opinions, recommendations, and deliberations comprising part of a process by which governmental decisions and policies are formulated, as well as other subjective documents that reflect the personal opinions of the writer prior to the agency’s adoption of a policy.’ ”
Tax Analysts v. IRS,
A. Adoption, Incorporation, and Working Law
Mayer Brown challenges the repeated statements in Ms. Lambert-Dean’s Fourth Declaration that “[n]othing on the face of these documents indicated that the recommendations or conclusions contained in these documents were adopted, directly or indirectly, or incorporated by reference, by any final agency decision maker.” It argues that “one would not expect a document to state whether it was incorporated by
other documents.”
Pl.’s Mem. at 11 (emphasis in original). Because “[t]he Agency must ... carry the burden of establishing that documents contain the ideas and theories which go into the making of the law and not the law itself,”
Arthur Andersen & Co. v. IRS,
This interesting point of law has been mooted by Ms. Lambert-Dean’s 6th Declaration, in which she clarifies:
I am unaware that any of the opinions or analysis contained in the documents described in my Fifth Declaration as being withheld pursuant to FOIA exemption 5 and the deliberative process privilege *135 have been expressly or informally adopted or incorporated by reference in an agency position, referred to in a prec-edential fashion, used by the agency in its dealings with the public or otherwise treated as if they constitute agency policy-
6th Decl. ¶ 6. Inasmuch as Ms. Lambert-Dean has been the coordinator on this lawsuit since its inception and has repeatedly “personally reviewed ... all the documents at issue,” id. at ¶ 3, the Court finds that there is an absence of proof that these documents have been adopted, directly or indirectly, as secret or working law and that summary judgment on the point should be granted to the IRS.
B. Training Slide and Cover E-mail (pp. 6016-6017) 5
The IRS withheld in part material on one slide and a cover email from Chief Counsel LMSB field personnel to National Office Counsel attorneys for review. The slide was developed “for a training presentation for agency personnel with respect to Revenue Ruling 2002-69.” 6th Decl. ¶ 7.a. The Revenue Ruling “was still in the finalization process and had not yet been issued.” Id. The IRS does not argue that the slide in question was predecisional to the Revenue Ruling itself. Rather, Ms. Lamberh-Dean states that “[t]he deliberative process that is being protected by the nondisclosure of the withheld portions from these two pages is the process by which the agency deliberated and determined what information the slide should and should not convey to a wider audience.” Id. "What is withheld “consists of a summary discussion of alternative legal arguments that needfed] further development within the agency.” See Dkt. # 40, 5th Decl. at 4.
A document is predecisional if it is “ ‘generated before the adoption of an agency policy.’ ”
Judicial Watch, Inc. v. FDA,
The slide and cover e-mail at issue here were
not
prepared to assist in the formulation of any agency policy or decision regarding Revenue Ruling 2002-69. They were intended to brief IRS employees once the Ruling was issued. This raises a serious question of whether they are protected from disclosure by the deliberative process privilege.
See Skull Valley Band of Goshute Indians v. Kempthome,
Civ. No. 04-339CCKK),
An agency must identify the “final decisions or decisionmaking processes” to which a document contributed.
Judicial Watch, Inc. v. U.S. Postal Serv.,
Ms. Lambert-Dean’s declaration evidences why Exemption 5 does not cover the pages at issue. She points out that the “drafters of this slide presentation had not been intimately involved in the drafting of the Revenue Ruling,” and that “they wanted to reach out to their superiors to ascertain whether what they were representing in the slide were actually the positions reflected in the Revenue Ruling.” 6th Decl. at 3-4. “Predecisional documents are thought generally to reflect the agency ‘give and take’ leading up to a decision that is characteristic of the deliberative process; whereas post-decisional documents often represent the agency’s position on an issue ...”
Taxation With Representation Fund,
C. Anonymous Memo re LILO ASG (pp. 1464-1467)
The author of this particular document is unknown but may be Nick DeNo-vio or Jon Zelnick, who were Special Counsels in the Office of Chief Counsel when the final Lease In/Lease Out Appeals Settlement Guidelines (“LILO ASG”) were adopted. Id. ¶ 7.b. There is only one version of this document and David O’Connor, the only Special Counsel who was in the Office of Chief Counsel at the time and remains with IRS, has never seen it before. Id. Ms. Lambert-Dean attests:
There is no evidence this document was shared among the author’s colleagues or superiors. There is nothing to indicate that any of the opinions expressed in this document were ever incorporated in instructions to persons involved in settlement of LILO transactions. Nor is there any evidence that this document was shared with persons within the agency who had decision-making authority with respect to the settlement or designation for litigation of LILO cases.... I have no evidence that it was shared with anyone.
Id. “[T]his document was created after the LILO ASG was finalized by an employee of Chief Counsel in an attempt at clarifying the settlement ranges specified in that document.... [It] represents the opinion and views of the author .... ” 5th Decl. at 6.
*137
A document that is not shared with anyone else could not contribute to the decision process of agency policymak-ing except in its most existential terms: the unknown author might have coalesced his own thoughts through the process of writing them down and then, later and in a different document, contributed his mature ideas to the development of policy. It is thus difficult to see how this document might be considered “predecisional” in the context of Exemption 5. In fact, its timing makes it post-decisional as to the LILO ASG. IRS seems to assert that this post-decisional document should be exempt because it reflects the writer’s opinions, but “the deliberative process privilege does not support withholding material simply because it contains [the author’s] opinions; the fact that a document expresses its authors [sic] views is not dispositive if the agency has neither identified the deliberative process to which the document contributed nor explained how the materials are pre-decisional.”
ICM Registry, LLC v. U.S. Dep’t of Commerce,
Civ. No. 06-0949(JR),
D. Handwritten Notations on Released Article (pp. 3417 and 3247)
In her 6th Declaration, Ms. Lambert-Dean describes what is being withheld from these pages as:
handwritten notations made in the margins of an article written by Kenneth Kies and released to the plaintiff. This article had been provided to the IRS prior to finalization of the LILO ASG and was read and considered by those personnel within the agency who were involved with the drafting of the LILO ASG. The notations that have been withheld as predecisional data represent the author of the notations!’] opinions and questions with respect to the analysis provided in the article. These questions and opinions were related to issues that the agency personnel debated and tried to address and resolve while working toward the finalization of the LILO ASG.
6th Deck ¶ 7.c.
The Court finds that the IRS has sufficiently explained the nature of the withheld notations, the policy decision process to which they contributed, and the predecisional nature of the writings.
See Judicial Watch, Inc. v. Reno,
E. David O’Connor Handwritten Notes (p. 1215)
This document reflects notes that Mr. O’Connor was making with respect to a specific transaction as he was studying that transaction. It reflects those aspects of the transaction that he considered significant and worthy of more *138 study and analysis as the agency debated how best to address LILO transactions as the agency moved forward toward the issuance of the LILO ASG. Mr. O’Connor was highly involved in the creation of agency policy for addressing LILO transactions that ultimately resulted in the issuance of the LILO ASG. It is likely that he was reviewing documents associated with a transaction and making notes ... so that he could ... elaborate on the issues as he considered how to address these issues in the LILO ASG.
6th Decl. ¶ 7.d.
Given Mr. O’Connor’s unchallenged central role in the development of the LILO ASG, the Court considers his personal notes from relevant background documents to be quintessential predecisional documents. Summary judgment will be granted to the IRS with respect to page 1215.
F.Anonymous Handwritten Notes re LILO Transaction (p. 4288)
This document predates Revenue Ruling 2002-69 and reflects the personal notes of an unknown IRS employee reviewing a LILO transaction. Id. ¶ 7.e. Ms. Lambert-Dean says it is “likely” that the author was “making notes on what he was reviewing as to the questions he had about specific tax implications associated with that transaction so that he could refer to these notes as he considered how to address those issues in Revenue Ruling 2002-69 as it was being drafted.” Id.
The Court concludes that these anonymous notes reflect the travails of an IRS employee figuring out the complexities of LILO transactions, preparatory to developing Revenue Ruling 2002-69. The learning process by which individuals within the Office of Chief Counsel developed their understanding of LILO transactions and then translated that understanding into Revenue Ruling 2002-69 would reveal the predecisional process utilized by the agency. Inasmuch as there is a privilege protecting predecisional documents from release under FOIA, the Court concludes that page 4288 is so privileged and can be withheld.
G. Summary of Agency Actions (p. 6689)
A portion of page 6689, summarizing “the current status of the LILO and SILO Task Forces,” was withheld.
Id.
¶ 7.f. The withheld portion “states what a working group of agency personnel had decided to recommend with respect to the settlement of tax issues associated with those transactions.”
Id.
Also redacted is a discussion of “the status of ongoing determinations within the agency as to guidance with respect to SILO transactions and ... issues that need to be resolved.”
Id.
“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 lower courts should be wary of interfering with this process.”
Sears, Roebuck & Co.,
H. Drafts of Press Releases re SILO Notice (pp. 7930-31; 8048-49; 9767-68; 9781-82; 9788-89)
These draft press releases related to the public announcement of the SILO Notice have been withheld in full.
*139
Ms. Lambert-Dean suggests that “[t]he significant differences between the final version of this press release and these draft versions indicate there was much deliberation and consideration given as to how the [IRS and Treasury] wanted the public to perceive the Notice based on the impressions that would be made from the language of the press release.”
Id.
¶ 7.h. Defendants “ ‘must ... identify the “function and significance ... in the agency’s decision making process” of all redacted and withheld documents to qualify them as exempt under the deliberative process privilege.’ ”
Wilderness Soc.,
Ms. Lambert-Dean does point out “[t]he only portion of this 7 paragraph draft document that looks remotely like any of the final issued press release[sic] is the portion of that [final] issued release that discusses the American Jobs Creation Act.” 6th Deck at 8. Under this Court’s precedent, at least this portion of the documents is not subject to Exemption 5, because it was used in interactions with the public.
See Wilderness Soc.,
I. Draft Letters to Secretary of Department of Transportation (pp. 10847; 10883; 10917; 10925; 10959; 10962; 10995).
The Acting Deputy Assistant Secretary (Tax Policy) at Treasury desired to communicate with Norman Mineta, Secretary of the Department of Transportation (“DOT”). The purpose was to alert DOT to the SILO Notice, which identified SILO transactions as tax avoidance schemes. “While the decision reflected in this letter, i.e., the designation of SILO transactions as abusive, had been finalized at the time this letter was drafted, the manner in which this determination was to be conveyed to [DOT] was still under consideration.” 6th Deck, ¶ 7.h. The IRS and Treasury needed to be “sure the message was clear without any offense being given.” Id. Changes in the drafts, “no matter how seemingly insignificant and nuanced, ... are part of the deliberative process of the agencies as they moved toward the final signed version of this letter.” Id. “This was a communication from one Cabinet level Department to another and drafting such a document can be delicate in that Treasury wanted to carefully and clearly convey the message that they no longer wanted [DOT] to permit SILO transactions without challenging the authority of [DOT] to act in areas that fall within their subject matter expertise.” Id.
As Ms. Lambert-Dean explains, the documents at issue are draft letters. 6th Deck at 8. The District of Columbia Circuit has made it clear that simply designating a document as a “draft” does not automatically make it privileged under the deliberative process privilege.
Arthur Andersen,
J. David O’Connor Notes from Chief Counsel (p.12999)
This document is titled “Summary of Thoughts of B. John Williams Following Factual Presentation re: LILO Designation.” 5th Decl. at 73. The document was written by Special Counsel to the Chief Counsel, David O’Connor. Ms. Lambert-Dean in her Sixth Declaration explains that:
[t]his document captures information that was conveyed by then Chief Counsel B. John Williams to David O’Connor following a presentation to Mr. Williams and others by field LMSB Counsel personnel concerning the designation for litigation of a LILO transaction involving a specific taxpayer. Mr. O’Connor has indicated that these notes reflect B. John Williams’ concerns regarding the presentation as to shortcomings he saw in the development of factual analysis by agency personnel as they moved through the process of determining whether to designate this specific case for litigation and reflects specific areas and analysis the Chief Counsel would have like [sic] to see more fully developed by field personnel before such designation questions were brought into the National Office for his consideration as well as areas that he thought field functions should focus more completely on as they contemplated both settlement and litigation of LILO transactions.
6th Decl. at 9-10.
Plaintiff points out that Ms. Lambert-Dean’s 4th Declaration also described that the document “was meant as a reference for IRS personnel involved in the development of a response to the SILO transactions so that they could better understand how the Chief Counsel intended the agency to respond to LILO transactions.” 4th Decl. at 109. Although this particular assertion is not repeated in the 5th and 6th Declarations, it does seem to appropriately describe the document. Nevertheless, the document may properly be withheld by IRS. The Court finds that this document is analogous to those documents that the Supreme Court found were properly withheld in
NLRB v. Sears, Roebuck & Co.
K. Production of All Reasonably Segregable Non-Exempt Material
Mayer Brown contends that the IRS should be ordered to prepare a declaration or index that adequately particularizes the basis for segregability claims with regard to certain of the aforementioned documents. Specifically, Mayor Brown asserts that “Ms. Lamberb-Dean [ ] provides only conclusory assertions that ‘[a]ll non-exempt, segregable portions of this document have been released’ (see 5th Decl. 4, 5, 8, 17), or that ‘[t]o the extent there are any nonexempt portions of these documents, those portions are so inextricably intertwined with exempt material as to be non- *141 segragable (see 5th Decl. at 20, 21, 74).’ ” The law firm continues to adhere to the position that, under the prevailing case law in this Circuit, such conclusory claims are not sufficient. See Pl.’s Mem. at 9-10; see also PL’s Reply [Dkt. #47] at 24. The IRS counters that it has examined and reexamined the withheld documents to produce all reasonably segregable information and has released such information where possible. See Def.’s Mem. [Dkt. # 41] at 14.
In discharging its duties under FOIA, an agency must disclose “[a]ny reasonably segregable portion of a record ... after deletion of the portions which are exempt. ...” 5 U.S.C. § 552(b). FOIA’s focus is on disclosure of “information, not documents;” therefore “an agency cannot justify withholding an entire document simply by showing that it contains some exempt material.”
Mead Data,
Ms. Lambert-Dean in her 6th Declaration provides a more adequate description of the bases for her claim that all seg-regable non-exempt information has been released from each of the documents Plaintiff references. The Court need not belabor the point further in light of its in camera review and ruling as to each individual document in this Memorandum Opinion. The Court has found that Defendant IRS will have to produce some documents and has properly withheld others, so the later question of reasonably segregable material is moot.
IV. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons summary judgment will be granted in part and denied in part to Plaintiff Mayer Brown. Summary judgment will be granted in part and denied in part to Defendant IRS. A memorializing order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.
Notes
. Freedom of Information Act ("FOIA”), 5 U.S.C. § 552.
. See August 21, 2006 Memorandum Opinion ("Mem.Op.”) [Dkt # 24],
.The Court directs the reader to its prior opinion for a more extensive background to this case. See supra note 2.
.
See Sec. Fin. Life Ins. Co. v. Dep’t of Treasury,
No. Civ. 03-102(SBC),
. As with the parties’ convention, the Court identifies each document specifically by the number given it by the IRS. The Court by Minute Entry Order dated February 27, 2008, ordered Defendant IRS to submit 27 documents for in camera review. The Court’s decision with respect to these documents is based on the review of those documents in light of the FOIA exemptions.
