MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Plаintiffs, African-American current and former special agents of the United States Secret Service, brought this employment discrimination action individually and on behalf of a putative class of African-American special agents against the Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security. The defendant objects to the magistrate judge’s imposition of sanctions that were imposed under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37 after the magistrate judge granted a motion to compel a reasonable search for paper documents responsive to the plaintiffs’ document requests and after the defendant violated the compulsion order. The defendant has not shown that the magistrate judge erred in imposing sanctions under Rule 37 for the defendant’s discovery violation or violation of the order. The preclusion sanction, though, will be construed to preclude the defendant from offering any legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason for a nonpromotion in response to any prima facie case of disparate treatment discrimination against the individual named plaintiffs, but not otherwise preclude the defendant from defending the case.
BACKGROUND
On Octоber 29, 2007, after the defendant’s Rule 30(b)(6) designee testified that the Secret Service had not searched the records of any decisionmaker in response to the plaintiffs’ discovery requests served over a year earlier, the plaintiffs filed a motion for sanctions and to compel the defendant to comply with her discovery obligation “to conduct a reasonable search for and to produce all documents responsive to [the plaintiffs’] requests for production, including ‘print and save’ e-mails, ‘contemporaneous notes,’ and other documents ‘regarding the actual substantive promotion[ ] decisions made by the Secret Service supervisors and managers that adversely affected the Plaintiffs and the [putative] class.’ ”
Moore v. Chertoff,
The defendant has filed objections to the magistrate judge’s ruling, arguing that the magistrate judge erred because the defendant complied with the order compelling her to conduct a reasonable search, and because the magistrate judge’s order imposed “a severe sanction precluding [the] defendant from being able to thoroughly defend the merits of this case.” (Def.’s Obj’ns at 1.) In addition, the defendant objects to the magistrate judge’s order awarding costs to the plaintiffs, alleging that no cost sanction is appropriate under Rule 37(b)(2)(C) because the defendant complied with the court’s order, and that the defendant had already paid for plaintiffs’ costs incurred in filing their motion. (Id. at 44.)
DISCUSSION
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 72(a) and Local Civil Rule 72.2(b) allow a party to seek reconsideration of a magistrate judge’s decision in a discovery dispute. “On review, the magistrate judge’s decision is entitled to great deference unless it is clearly erroneous or contrary to law,
I. RULE 37 AUTHORITY
The defendant contends that the magistrate judge erred in issuing a sanction under Rule 37(b)(2) because the plaintiffs requested the sanction before the magistrate judge issued her December 21, 2007 order granting the plaintiffs’ motion to compel, and because the magistrate judge’s sanction opinion makes no finding that the defendant violated her December 21, 2007 order. (Def.’s Obj’ns at 29-31.)
The timing of a party’s request for sanctions does not determine a court’s authority to issue them. The federal rules, for the most part, do. Plaintiffs complained in a motion to compel that the defendant had not searched for and produced documents. The magistrate judge agreed, granted the motion to compel, and pending a further hearing to determine what if any additional sanctions were warranted, preliminarily assessed costs against the defendant, as the magistrate judge was authorized to do. Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(a)(5). The defendant makes no argument or showing that the magistrate judge lacked such authority.
For months thereafter, the magistrate judge held a hearing with a dual focus on additional sanctions for defendant’s discovery violation found at the December 21, 2007 hearing, and defendant’s compliance with the compulsion order issued that day. The defendant neither argues nor demonstrates that the magistrate judge lacked continuing authority under Rule 37(a)(5) to consider whether sanctions beyond the sanction preliminarily issued for the initial discovery violation were warranted.
The magistrate judge had authority to issue sanctions for violation of the compulsion order. “A district court may order sanctions, including a default judgment, for misconduct either pursuant to Rule 37(b)(2)
1
..., which authorizes a court to assess a sanction for violation of a discovery order, or pursuant to the court’s inherent power to ‘protect [its] integrity and prevent abuses of the judicial process.’ ”
Webb v. District of Columbia,
Contrary to the defendant’s assertion, the magistrate did find that the defendant
The magistrate judge has presided over proceedings involving discovery disputes in this case since 2005. She has found the defendant’s behavior regarding discovery obligations consistently over time to range from being lackluster to being recalcitrant and obdurate.
Moore,
II. DEFENDANT’S SEARCH EFFORTS
The defendant alleges that the magistrate judge erred in finding that the defendant failed to conduct reasonable searches for responsive decisionmaker documents. As a preliminary matter, the defendant alleges that the magistrate judge erroneously placed the burden of proof on the defendant, relying on the heading in the magistrate judge’s opinion stating that the “[defendant failed to adduce credible evidence of any reasonable search efforts in November and December, 2007 and January, 2008” as evidence that the burden of proof had shifted. (Def.’s Obj’ns at 27.) Contrary to the defendant’s objection, viewing the magistrate judge’s opinion in its entirety, the magistrate judge did not erroneously place the burden of proof on the defendant. When a plaintiff alleges that a defendant violated a discovery order compelling a search by failing to conduct an adequate search, a plaintiff invariably will call upon the defendant’s agents to explain what efforts were or were not made to comply with the court’s discovery
Here, the magistrate judge carefully considered all of the evidence presented by both parties to determine whether the plaintiffs had carried their burden, as the moving party, to justify imposing a sanction. If anything, the language of the heading identified by the defendant as significant — “[defendant failed to adduce credible evidence of any reasonable search efforts” — and the findings within that section of the magistrate judge’s opinion suggest that the defendant’s presentation of evidence in its defense actually bolstered the plaintiffs’ case for sanctions. They do not establish that the magistrate judge improperly placed the burden of proof on the defendant.
The defendant also contends that the magistrate judge did not assess the defendant’s search efforts under the correct legal standard, namely, reasonableness. (Def.’s Obj’ns at 27.) Under Rule 26, a party is obligated to make a reasonable effort to search for and produce documents responsive to the opposing party’s document requests.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(g) Advisory Comm. Notes (1983 Amendment). “Ultimately, what is reasonable is a matter for the court to decide on the totality of the circumstances[,]” and “[t]his standard is heavily dependent on the circumstances of each case.”
Id.
The magistrate judge’s opinion applies this reasonableness standard, explicitly finding that the defendant “failed to conduct a reasonable search in 2006” and similarly did not demonstrate “any reasonable search efforts in November and December, 2007 and January, 2008.”
Moore,
A. 2006 search
The magistrate judge found that the defendant had limited the search for responsive documents to only three Secret Service divisions — Personnel, EEO, and Management and Organization — and had not “searched thе records of any decision-maker” stored outside of these divisions prior to the December 21, 2007 order. (Id. at 21.) As the magistrate judge noted, the defendant acknowledged that it “could have gone to the individual supervisors ... within the Secret Service and queried them personally about what recommendation materials they may have [had] that would [have been] responsive to the Plaintiffs’ request.” (Id. (quoting May 29, 2008 Hrg. Tr. at 32) (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted).) The defendant contends that there was no evidence to support the magistrate judge’s conclusion that a reasonable search needed to include searches for documents outside of the three searched divisions.
The plaintiffs presented evidence demonstrating the likely existence of responsive documents in the records of other decisionmakers and recommenders in the promotion process, namely sworn testimony from Secret Service agents indicating that promotion recommendations were communicated through e-mail. (See Pis.’ Opp’n to Def.’s Obj’ns at 16 n. 7; Pis.’ Proposed Findings of Fact [Docket # 568] ¶¶ 299-301 (collecting deposition testimony).) The defendant concedes that there
B. 2007 and 2008 searches
The magistrate judge found that the defendant failed to conduct a reasonable search in November and December of 2007 and January of 2008, partly in violation of the order granting the plaintiffs’ motion to compel a reasonable search of the records of decisionmakers for responsive documents. In so finding, the magistrate judge reasoned that the defendant provided insufficient search instructions to the approximately 182 supervisors who were tasked with searching for responsive documents- in response to the December 21 order. Moore,
1. Search instructions
The magistrate judge found that the search instructions given to the individual agents сharged with carrying out the defendant’s search for documents in November and December of 2007 were ambiguous and deficient. After the plaintiffs filed their motion to compel, Secret Service Inspector Arthur Kuhn sent an e-mail on November 5, 2007 to approximately 182 supervisors at the GS-15 level or higher directing each individual
to search locations including “personal files,” “office files,” and “the office files for which [they] were previously assigned when involved in the decision-making process[]” for “notes, letters, memoranda, e-mails (both paper and electronically saved), or any other paper documents that specifically relate to the ‘selection decisions’ for GS-14 and GS-15 promotions and reassignments from 1991 to 2005.”
Id.
at 18 (quoting Def.’s Evid’y Hrg. Ex. 1) (alterations in original). After the magistrate judge granted the plaintiffs’ motion to compel searches, “[o]n December 26, 2007, the Secret Service’s Office of the Chief Counsel forwarded an e-mail to ‘all Assistant Directors [ADs], Special Agents in Charge [SAICs], Resident Agents in Charge [RAICs], and Division Chiefs’ directing a search ‘of their offices, including all personal and office files, for any paper documents related to decision-making or
The magistrate judge found that the ambiguity in the defendant’s instructions “became evident as Defendant’s own witnesses testified regarding their respective interpretations of the terms ‘personal files,’ ‘office files’ and ‘office’ in the context of the e-mail inquiries.” Id. at 16 n. 18 (listing several agents’ inconsistent interpretations of the files they were to search in response to the defendant’s two e-mail inquiries). For example, the magistrate judge discussed the testimony of Agent Faron Paramore, SAIC of the Director’s Office, who testified that he originally thought the November 5, 2007 e-mail required a physical search of only his personal office, and searched the files of the entire Director’s Office only after receiving clarification from the Secret Service’s Chief Counsel’s office about the intended scope of the requested search. Id. at 22-23. Nevertheless, the defendant used the same ambiguous term “office files” in the December 26, 2007 e-mail without further instructions to clarify for everyone else what “office files” meant. In addition, the magistrate judge found thаt defendant’s search instructions failed to adequately inform the e-mail recipients, including Inspectors Kuhn and Hunnicutt, whose “role [it was] to receive documents located during the searches and to answer any questions posed by the recipients of the email,” of the claims and defenses involved in this case even though the plaintiffs’ document requests sought documents “relating ... in any way to the claims and defenses raised in this case[.]” Id. at 23 (internal quotation marks omitted).
The defendant disputes the magistrate judge’s conclusion that the defendant’s search instructions were ambiguous, arguing that “however a witness may have initially interpreted [the search terms], all the witnesses cited [by the magistrate judge] testified that they ultimately understood that they were to search all of the office under their supervision where responsive records might be located.” (Def.’s Obj’ns at 14.) With testimony from only the small sample of the approximately 182 recipients of the November 2, 2007 email and 156 recipients of the December 26, 2007 e-mail, it was not error to infer from the different initial interpretations that there was ambiguity in the search instructions. The defendant has pointed to no evidence before the magistrate judge that demonstrates that the defеndant communicated with all of the e-mail recipients to ensure that they had not adopted an erroneous interpretation of the scope of the search requested and had not certified completion of a search based on an erroneous interpretation of what was required. In addition, as is discussed below, the testimony of the agents regarding their search efforts in response to the 2007 email search instructions revealed that they conducted inconsistent searches and, in some instances, inadequate searches. Thus, contrary to the defendant’s objection, it was not error to conclude from the evidentiary record that the defendant’s search instructions did not sufficiently inform recipients of what efforts needed to be made to satisfy the defendant’s obligation to conduct a reasonable search.
The magistrate judge found that the defendant’s search instructions were deficient for failing to include express search references to appropriate index numbers or off-site storage, including the Federal Records Center.
Moore,
The magistrate judge found that Inspectors Kuhn and Hunnicutt were not adequately informed about what constitutes a document responsive to the plaintiffs’ requests. The defendant counters that these inspectors were tasked with only gathering informatiоn on the defendant’s searches and that because of their minimal role, “[t]he fact that the inspectors ... were not involved in determining whether a document was responsive to plaintiffs’ requests does not indicate that defendant’s instructions ... were in any way deficient, or that the searches they performed were in any way inadequate.” (Def.’s Obj’ns at 15.) While it is far from clear that the evidentiary record supports the defendant’s characterization of Kuhn and Hunnicutt as mere information-gatherers, the magistrate judge also found that the e-mail recipients — who were tasked with searching — were inadequately informed about what constituted a responsive document.
Moore,
2. Inconsistent search efforts
In reaching the conclusion that the defendant failed to conduct a reasonable search in response to the December 21, 2007 order, the magistrate judge considered the search efforts of four of the defendant’s agents: SAICs Paramore and Bryant and RAICs Gavin and Mays. The magistrate judge found that the testimony of these four agents “exposed the widely varying extent of the searches conducted[,3” and that Bryant, Gavin, and Mays’ testimony revealed that they conducted inadequate searches for responsive documents, not reasonable ones consistent with the defendant’s obligation under the federal rules. Id. at 24.
a. Bryant
The magistrate judge found that Bryant “failed to search any of the administrative files of the Buffalo field office in November, 2007.”
Id.
She found that in response to the November, 2007 e-mail inquiry, Bryant asked his administrative supervisor if any files would contain any responsive information, and his administrative supervisor — without conducting a search of any files — indicated that the information he was seeking would not be in “ ‘an official capacity in [the] file room.’ ”
Id.
(quoting Mar. 6, 2008 Evid’y Hrg. Tr. at 14-15) (alteration in original). The magistrate judge further found that Bryant believed that his inquiry of the administrative supervisor constituted an adequate search.
The defendant alleges that Bryant reasonably relied upon information provided by the administrative supervisor who had worked in the office for over twenty-eight years and who had searched the Buffalo office records in May 2007 to prepare for an unrelated inspection. (Def.’s Obj’ns at 17-18.) Some reliance by Bryant upon his administrative supervisor to help conduct a search was not the problem. While the defendant has shown that the administrative supervisor had general familiarity with the files in the Buffalo office based upon her earlier unrelated review of office records, the defendant has not shown that the administrative supervisor ever reviewed office files for the purpose of identifying documents resрonsive to the November and December e-mail inquiries.
In addition, Bryant testified that he made promotion recommendations via personal e-mail but that where Bryant searched produced no hard copies of recommendation e-mails.
Moore,
b. Gavin
The magistrate judge found that Gavin largely relied upon his resident administrative manager’s word that there would be no promotion documents or promotion-related materials in the Wilmington office. However, the administrative manager did not conduct any confirming search for responsive documents. Id. at 25. Gavin also asked his staff whether they had any promotion-related materials in their office space, and took their word when they all said “no” without even confirming whether they had conducted a search for such materials and without conducting such a search himself. Gavin did look in a “small two-drawer filing cabinet in the resident administrative manager’s office” containing administrative filings and searched simply “by looking at the file folder labels affixed to each file” rather than opening them. Id. He also searched his own personal folder where he kept activity reports, travel vouchers and other miscellaneous documents, and looked in the closet and cabinets when he “happened to be in the closet” or “happened to look in cabinets.” Id. at 25-26. However, Gavin “did not specifically look for notes, notebooks, memos, calendar entries, or print-and-save e-mails in response to the December 26, 2007” e-mail inquiry. Id. at 26. Gavin, nevertheless signed a certificate that a thorough search was conducted.
Whatever the likelihood was of finding responsive documents, virtually no search was conducted, much less a thorough one. The magistrate judge found that RAIC Gavin’s search efforts were “lackluster.” Id. The record bears out that characterization, and was fair support for the magistrate judge’s negative assessment of the reasonableness of the defendant’s search.
c. Mays
The magistrate judge found that in response to the December 2007 e-mail, Mays
The defendant contends that the search was reasonable enough since Mays testified “that when he gives an order to his staff he expects them to comply.” (Def.’s Obj’ns at 20.) However, it was not error for the magistrate judge to find problematic that Mays certified that a reasonable search was performed without having surveyed his staff members to determine “the
scope
of any performed search[,]”
Moore,
3. Inspector Hunnicutt’s credibility
The defendant objects to the magistrate judge’s reliance on Inspector Hunnicutt’s credibility as evidence of whether or not a reasonable search was performed, contending that Hunnicutt’s testimony was irrelevant because Hunnicut was tasked with only “documenting] defendant’s search efforts,” and was not “in charge of searching for documents ... or play[ing] any role in the actual searches.” (Def.’s Obj’ns at 21-22.) Thus, the defendant contends, “[although defendant’s efforts through Inspector Hunnicutt to gather evidence about how the search was performed may have been flawed, it does not mean that a reasonable search was not performed.”
(Id.
at 22.) The defendant has not shown error in the magistrate judge’s finding that Hunnicutt’s testimony lacked candor and credibility,
Moore,
Overall, considering the magistrate judge’s findings regarding the ambiguity in the defendant’s search instructions, the inconsistent and inadequate search efforts of agents Bryant, Gavin, and Mays, and Inspector Hunnicutt’s failure to credibly explain the defendant’s search efforts, it was not clearly erroneous for the magistrate judge to find that the defendant violated the December 21, 2007 order compelling the defendant to conduct a reasonable search for paper documents. Nor was there error in finding that this evidence in light of the defendant’s chronic discovery misconduct during the pendency of this case warranted a severe sanction.
III. PRECLUSION SANCTION
The magistrate judge found that the defendant’s violation of the order compelling a reasonable search was willful, and ordered that “once Plaintiffs have established a
prima facie
case of disсriminatory non-promotion, Defendant may not defend any such
prima facie
case[.]”
Id.
at 37.
The “central requirement of Rule 37 is that any sanction must be just,” and the “choice of sanction should be guided by the concept of proportionality.”
Bonds v. District of Columbia,
Bonds
also cautions that a preclusion sanction may be so severe as to be litigation-ending, even if it is not described as such. The district court in
Bonds
precluded the defendant “from offering any fact witnesses at trial as a discovery sanction”
for
“failing to respond in a timely manner to an interrogatory requesting the names of all persons with knowledge of relevant events regarding the class action and then providing an inadequate response.”
Id.
at 803-04. Although recognizing that “the [broad] preclusion order did not operate with such assured effect as a default judgment[,]” the court of appeals nonetheless found that such a sanction “approaeh[ed] a default judgment in its severity.”
Id.
at 808-09. The court explained that “resolution of the plaintiffs’ sexual harassment and retaliation claims was likely to depend on the credibility of conflicting witnesses and the jury’s evaluation of [the defendant’s] employees’ motives.”
Id.
at 808. As a result, while it was “true that the [defendant] could still introduce documentary evidence and expert testimony, counter-designate portions of deposition testimony introduced at trial, cross-examine the plaintiffs’ witnesses, and make opening and closing arguments[,]” the preclusion order was still a severe sanction resulting in a “one-sided trial” where the defendant was left “with little ability to contest the plaintiffs claims.”
Id.
at 808-09. Upon reviewing the district court’s finding of prejudice to the plaintiffs and the court, and the need for deterrence, the
Bonds
court found that the district court’s findings were insufficient to persuade the
In imposing the sanction at issue, the magistrate judge intended that the chosen sanction neither be “ ‘litigation-ending,’ ” nor “ ‘approaeh[ ] a default judgment’ ... nor den[y] Defendant the right to a trial on the merits.”
Moore,
A. Prejudice to the plaintiffs
The magistrate judge held that the defendant’s “failure to timely search for and serve the documents responsive to Plaintiffs’ requests for production of documents ... has prejudiced Plaintiffs’ ability to conduct meaningful discovery and to prepare to address the merits of their claims.”
3
Moore,
First, as a matter of law, a court does not examine the merits of a case when determining whether to certify a class under Rule 23.
Wagner v. Taylor,
Moreover, regarding the defendant’s allegation that the magistrate judge gave insufficient consideration to the plaintiffs’
B. Deterrence and impact on court
The magistrate judge concluded that the defendant “has made a mockery of Rule 34, the case management orders of the court, the order granting Plaintiffs’ motion to compel, and the evidentiary hearing.”
Moore,
The defendant disputes the finding of an injury to the court because the defendant was not required to document her searches and because the witnesses who were not called were not identified by the magistrate judge or the plaintiffs as necessary to the evidentiary hearing. (Def.’s Obj’ns at 37-38.) While the defendant was not obligated to document her searches in any particular manner, a party vowing to demonstrate her absolute compliance with a court order should carry some responsibility to refrain from presenting testimony lacking candor. As is noted above, the defendant has shown no fault with the finding that Hunnicutt lacked candor and credibility. Regarding the defendant’s objection to the magistrate judge’s finding that the court was harmed by the defendant’s disregard of the rule on witnesses, defense counsel conceded that she did exclude witnesses who had been inappropriately exposed to press coverage of the evidentiary hearing.
Moore,
In finding a need to deter similar misconduct in the future, the magistrate judge fоund a severe such sanction was necessary because a “ ‘lesser sanction may also yield similar misconduct by other litigants by indicating that flagrant violations will yield only minor sanctions.’ ”
Moore,
The defendant objects to the magistrate judge’s reliance on the multiple lesser sanctions previously imposed by the court as justification for the need for the preclusion sanction at issue. The defendant contends that because her objections to two of the three previous sanction orders were pending at the time the magistrate judge issued the sanction at issue, it was “manifestly unfair and premature for the Magistrate Judge to sanction [the] defendant based on rulings” still subject to review by the district court. (Def.’s Obj’ns at 39.) A pending review of prior lesser sanctions does not obligate a magistrate judge to be blind to prior findings of misconduct and whether her imposition of previous, lesser sanctions was insufficient to deter the defendant’s subsequent discovery misconduct. The defendant’s argument is of particularly little weight here since the magistrate judge’s two previous sanctions orders, although slightly modified, have been largely upheld in substance.
See Moore v. Napolitano,
Civil Action No 00-953 (RWR/DAR),
C. Proportionality/no lesser alternative
In concluding that the instant preclusion sanction is “‘just,’ and is ‘guided by the concept of proportionality between offense and sanction[,]’ ” the magistrate judge “considered the extent to which ‘less dire alternatives have been explored without success’ or would obviously prove futilef.]”
Moore,
For all of the reasons discussed above, including the defendant’s history of protracted recalcitrance during discovery, the failure of previous, lesser sanctions to deter subsequent violations, the resulting prejudice to the plaintiffs, and the need to deter the defendant’s willful conduct, the magistrate judge had an adequate basis for rejecting the defendant’s suggestion that the appropriate sanction would be to give the defendant yet a third opportunity to comply with her latest discovery obligations, and had an adequate basis for imposing a significant sanction in response to the defendant’s violation of the order compelling a reasonable search for responsive documents. Her conclusion was, in essence, that enough is enough. That conclusion was fair at this stage in the litigation. Since the magistrate judge’s intent was that the preclusion sanction imposed not be litigation-ending, the sanction will be construed not to prevent the defendant from offering any defense to any prima facie cаse of discriminatory non-promotion. Rather, the defendant will be precluded from offering any legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason to rebut any prima facie case of disparate treatment discriminatory nonpromotion of the individual named plaintiffs.
. Construing the sanction in this manner tailors a proportional remedy .to the alleged harm, and does not produce an unsupported litigation-ending sanction. It is the individual named plaintiffs whose time, energy and resources have been most frustrated by the defendant’s discovery misconduct and most compromised in the effort to gather anecdotal evidence in support of their discriminatory nonpromotion allegations. And as Bonds recognized, defendants would have multiple methods available for mounting a defense against the individual named plaintiffs’ promotion discrimination claims: denying the factual accuracy of plaintiffs’ evidence, attacking the credibility of plaintiffs’ witnesses under Federal Rules of Evidence 602, 607, 608, 609, 613 and others; attacking the sufficiency of plaintiffs’ prima facie evidence in opening statements and closing arguments and under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 50, and others. Unlike the Bonds plaintiffs, however, plaintiffs here present a protracted history of repeated discovery misconduct by a defendant warranting a severe preclusion sanction.
Moreover, in a pattern and practice case, a plaintiff class seeking to carry its prima facie burden of offering evidence adequate to create an inference of discrimination will usually provide statistical evidence showing a disparity between the position of the class members and other similarly-situated individuals, and may also present anecdotal evidence to show that the statistical disparity is the result of unlawful discrimination.
Segar,
CONCLUSION AND ORDER
Based on all of the evidence presented, it was not clearly erroneous for the magistrate judge to find that the defendant violated the discovery order compelling the defendant to conduct a reasonable search for and produce responsive documents. Furthermore, the defendant has shown neither that the magistrate judge erred in imрosing sanctions under Rule 37 for the defendant’s failure to reasonably search for and produce responsive documents nor that the magistrate judge’s imposition of costs was unjust. The preclusion sanction will be construed to preclude the defendant from offering any legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason to rebut any prima facie case of disparate treatment discriminatory nonpromotion of the individual named plaintiffs. Accordingly, it is hereby
ORDERED that the defendant’s objections [605] to the magistrate judge’s imposition of sanctions be, and hereby are, OVERRULED. The defendant is precluded from offering any legitimate, nondiscriminatory reason to rebut any prima facie case of disparate treatment discriminatory nonpromotion of the individual named plaintiffs.
Notes
. Under Rule 37(b)(2)(A),
[i]f a party ... fails to obey an order to provide or permit discovery, ... the court where the action is pending may issue further just orders. They may include the following:
(i) directing that the matters embraced in the order or other designated facts be taken as established for purposes of the action, as the prevailing party claims;
(ii) prohibiting the disobedient party from supporting or opposing designated claims or defenses, or from introducing designated matters in evidence;
(iii) striking pleadings in whole or in part;
(iv) staying further proceedings until the order is obeyed;
(v) dismissing the action or proceeding in whole or in part;
(vi) rendering a default judgment against the disobedient party; or
(vii) treating as contempt of court the failure to obey any order except an order to submit to a physical or mental examination.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 37(b)(2)(A).
. In appropriate situations, a court also may find that a severe sanction is necessary to prevent some benefit to the sanctioned party.
Bonds,
. The magistrate judge also noted that the defendant argued that the plaintiffs premised their argument " ‘on the assumption that there is a huge cache of responsive paper recommendation documents previously undisclosed by defendant that is essential to [Pjlaintiffs' case.' ” Id. at 34 (quoting Def.’s Proposed Findings ¶ 34, at 90) (alteration in original). The magistrate judge expressly rejected the defendant’s claim that the plaintiffs' advanced this argument and disavowed making any finding with respect to the “volume of withheld documents[,]” reasoning that volume of withheld documents is not dispositive when determining an appropriate sanction under Rule 37. Id.
. Further, an ability to assess the volume and value of documents that the defendant has not yet adequately searched for and produced cannot otherwise stand in the way of assessing the degree of prejudice to the plaintiffs. It would not be inappropriate to resolve against the defendant any uncertainty regarding the volume and value of these documents since it was the defendant's failure to adequately search for and produce all responsive documents that impeded full evaluation of them.
. When discussing imposing a sanction to avoid "prejudice to the court," the D.C. Circuit has focused on potential prejudice
to the court’s calendar
— that is, where, absent an appropriate sanction, a party’s misconduct would "put an intolerable burden on a district court by requiring the court to modify its own docket and operations” and require the court to “expend considerable judicial resources in the future in addition to those it has already wasted!.]”
Shea v. Donohoe Constr.
Co.,
Inc.,
. In discussing the defendant's alleged violations of the rule on witnesses, the magistrate judge concluded that the defendant "failed to instruct the potential witnesses to refrain from reading press reports of testimony elicited during the hearing!,]” and that after learning that an agent transmitted a newspaper article to potential witnesses, "counsel for the
