MEMORANDUM OPINION and ORDER
By my оrder of April 24, 2007,1 ordered Plaintiffs to submit a detailed affidavit listing the fees and expenses incurred in responding to motions filed by thе Defendants that I found worthy of sanction.
See Novak v. Capital Mgmt. Dev. Corp.,
I. Preparation of the Fee Petition
According to his affidavit, Patrick M. Regan, Esq., prepared the fee petition by reviewing the file, “including the documentation set forth in our computer and case management system.” Affidavit of Patrick M. Regаn ¶ 2 (attached to Plaintiffs’ Bill of Costs in Response to this Court’s April 2Jf, 2007 Order) (“Regan Aff.”). He made “good faith estimates” of the time spеnt by his then partner, Jonathan E. Halperin, and from that information he was able to represent the hours that he and Halperin spent on each pleading that Plaintiffs submitted. Regan Aff. ¶ 3. He then made a draft of his affidavit -available to Halperin, who reviewed it and concluded that the *158 hours representing Halperin’s work were about 25 percent less than the actual hours spent. Id. Regan also indicated that legal assistants “spent approximately 10.5 hours, preparing exhibits, сopying the various pleadings, mailing them to defense counsel and filing with the court.” Regan Aff. ¶ 10. The results of Regan’s analysis are illustrated in the following chart:
HOURS HOURS SPENT BY SPENT BY TOTAL PLEADING_PAGES HALPERIN REGAN HOURS
Plaintiffs’ Opposition to Defendants’ 20 13.25 2.75 16 Motion to Strike Untimely Witnesses_
Plaintiffs’ Opposition to Defendants’ 18 9.5 3 12.5 Motion to Strike Supplemental Answers to Defendants’ Interrogatories_
Plaintiffs’ Opposition to Defendants’ 6 3.75 1 4.75 Motion to Strikе Plaintiffs’ Second Request for Admissions_
Plaintiffs’ Opposition to Defendants’ 10 5.25 1.75 7 Objection to Plaintiffs’ Subpoena to Chubb Insurance_
Plaintiffs’ Rеply to Defendants’ 10 4.5 2.25 6.75 Opposition to Plaintiffs’ Motion to Strike Defendants’ Expert Witnesses_
Plaintiffs’ Response to Order to Show 34 17.25 3.25 20.5 Cаuse_
Plaintiffs’ Reply to Defendants’ 6 2.75 1.25 4 Response to Order to Show Cause_
Paralegal Work_10.5
II. Defendants’ Opposition
Defendants do not quarrel with the reasonableness of the amount of time spent by Regan, Halperin, or the legal assistants. Instead, Defendants demand that the entire amount of fees be denied because (1) the fees are not based on “any contemporaneous complete or standardized time records that accurately reflect work done by the two attorneys at issue” and (2) there is nothing to establish that the rates Regan seeks for himself, Halpe-rin, and the legal assistants were the rates at which they aсtually charged the firm’s clients or are within what Defendants call “accepted community rates given the attorney’s yеars of practice.” Defendants’ Response to Plaintiffs’ Bill of Costs in Response to the Order of April 2Jp, 2007 (“Defs.Resp.”) at 2, 4.
III. Sufficiency of the Petition
This fee petition differs from the ones usually submitted to the Court in which the time spent is recounted by date, the nature of the work performеd, the attorney performing the work, the hours spent on the task, and the billing rate.
See e.g., Yazdani v. Access ATM,
But, there simply is no challenge to reasonableness here. To deny the entire petition because the dates the services were prоvided were not given to me is hopelessly arbitrary and unreasonable.
IV. The Rate Requested
As noted, Defendants’ primary objection to thе rates sought is that Regan did not submit adequate evidence of the firm’s actual billing practices or hourly rates. But, in fact, Rеgan did. He stated under oath the billing rates that he, Halperin, and the legal assistants charged, and I do not know what additional evidence Defendants can possibly demand.
As also noted, Defendants claim that Regan did not submit evidence that thе attorneys’ rates were, as Defendants put it, commensurate with community rates for the services rendered. Defs. Resp. at 2. But there is no standard rate for attorneys in the District of Columbia. The so called
Laffey
matrix is promulgated by the Civil Division of the Unitеd States Attorney’s Office to indicate to the bar those rates to which the government will not object when fees are sought are under a fee-shifting statute.
See M.R.S. Enterprises, Inc. v. Sheet Metal Workers’ Int’; Assoc.,
Civ. No. 05-1823,
V. Conclusion
For the reasons stated herein, it is hereby ordered Defendants shall pay the fee petition in full for a total of $30,710 in fees and costs to Plaintiffs. A separate judgment to enforce this Order shall be entered by the clerk forthwith.
