This аppeal is taken from the District Court’s refusal to issue an order permitting civil discovery of certain Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) files that are subject to the Privacy Act (the “Act”). 1 We hold that the District Court applied the wrong legal standard in ruling that, as a prerequisite to invoking discovery at all, the parties seeking access to the files must establish a specific “need” for thе documents beyond mere relevance to the underlying litigation. Accordingly, we vacate and remand to the District Court for further proceedings consistent with the discovery standards set forth in the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (“FRCP”).
I. Background
The appellants are newspapers and their employees who have been named as defendants in a libel action brought by appellee Paul Laxalt in federal district court in Nevada. In April, 1986, the appellants brought a proceeding in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, Laxalt v. McClatchy, Misc. No. 86-0140 (D.D.C. filed Apr. 30, 1986), for production of certain FBI records to be used in defending the libel suit. The appellants contend that these records are relevant to the truth of the allegedly libelous statements that they printed, which suggested that cеrtain of Laxalt’s associates and campaign contributors had ties to organized crime. 2
Of the two articles that are the subject of the libel action, the first discussed the alleged organized crime associations of individuals (including intervenor-appellee Coleman) associated with a casino owned in part by Laxalt, and discussed in particular the relationship of Coleman (who helped arrange the casino’s financing) with Laxalt and intervenor-appellee Korshak, who was described in the article as “one of organized crime’s strongest welds to politics and big business.”
3
The second article listed eight of Laxalt’s senatorial campaign contributors — including intervenors-appellees Dalitz and Binion — reported to have
On January 16, 1986, the appellants filed a notice of deposition pursuant to a subpoena duces tecum issued by the United States District Court for the District of Columbia and served оn the FBI’s custodian of records in Washington, D.C. The appellants served a second subpoena on March 14 that complied with the FBI’s request for greater specificity. 6 In his March 24 deposition, however, the FBI custodian refused to provide full information regarding the responsive files without a court order authorizing disclosure under exemption 11 of the Privacy Act. 7 The FBI and the appellants then agreed to a proposed order authorizing limited disclosure. 8 The appellants filed a motion for entry of the proposed order, 9 and the FBI filed a response of non-opposition, stating that the appellants had “made a sufficient showing of relevancy.” 10 When Laxalt moved to deny the appellants’ motion and transfer the discovery proceеding to Nevada, 11 the FBI opposed the transfer proposal on the ground that the federal district court in Nevada did not have jurisdiction over discovery of FBI records in Washington, D.C. 12 On June 4, 1986, the District Judge granted the appellants’ motion and issued the order, which authorized discovery of specific records — including files on intervenors-appellees Coleman, Dalitz, and Bin-ion — and permitted disclosure of the existence and general subject matter of other files on Coleman, Dalitz and Korshak. 13
After Laxalt’s counsel notified Coleman’s counsel of this order,
14
Coleman, Dalitz, Binion, and Korshak intervened to block discovery. On June 17, after oral argument, the District Court entered an order denying the appellants’ discovery motion and dismissing the proceeding, on the ground that the libel “defendants have failed to sustain their burden of demonstrating that they require the reports in question.”
15
Specifically, the trial court held: “[Ujnder the Privacy Act, Government agencies can release information about individuals only under certain cir
II. Analysis
A. Privacy Act
Although the District Court did not expressly hold that the Privacy Act creates a qualified discovery privilegе, the clear effect of its judgment was to recognize such a privilege by refusing to permit any discovery of the requested documents absent a showing by the appellants of specific “need” beyond mere relevance to the underlying litigation. The Privacy Act, however, does not create a qualified discovery privilege as that concept is generally understood, and we find no basis in the statute or its legislative history for inferring one. Nor does the Act create any other kind of privilege or bar that requires a party to show actual need as a prerequisite to invoking discovery. Rather, the plain language of the statute permits disclosure “pursuant to the order of a court of competent jurisdiction.” 5 U.S.C. § 552a(b)(ll) (1982). Neither the statute nor anything in its legislativе history specifies the standards for issuance of such a court order. We therefore find no basis for inferring that the statute replaces the usual discovery standards of the FRCP — in particular, Rules 26 and 45(b) — with a different and higher standard.
Once again, we indiсate that, absent an express congressional intent to the contrary, the standards set forth in the FRCP must be followed with respect to discovery requests in District Court. We therefore hold that a party can invoke discovery of materials protected by the Privacy Act through the normal discovery process and according to the usual discovery standards, and the test of discovеrability is the relevance standard of Rule 26(b)(1) of the FRCP.
The fact that a document is subject to the Privacy Act is not, however, irrelevant to the manner in which discovery should proceed. Although discovery standards under the FRCP permit access to relevant documents protected by the Act, those same FRCP standards give the District Court ample discretion to fashion appropriate protective orders upon a showing of “good cause.” Fkd,R.Civ.P. 26(c). Where the records sought are subject to the Privacy Act, the District Court’s supervisory responsibilities may in many cases be weightier than in the usual discovery context.
We have noted in the past that while a statutory ban on publication is not a bar to discovery,
[nevertheless, statutory publication shelters may have sоme application to discovery. These protected interests reflect a congressional judgment that certain delineated categories of documents may contain sensitive data which warrants a more considered and cautious treatment. In the context of discovery of government documents in the course of civil litigation, the courts must accord the proper weight to the policies underlying these statutory protections, and ... compare them with the factors supporting discovery in a particular lawsuit.
Friedman,
The courts can limit, and in actual practice do limit, the persons having access to information, their freedom to discuss the information to which they are given access, and the uses to which the information may be put. No great outcry has arisen that information thus restricted has been leaked, or put to improper uses, by attorneys who are sworn officers of the court.
Freeman,
Procedurally, then, when the District Court considers a request fоr a Privacy Act order in the discovery context it must consider the use of protective orders and the possibility of
in camera
inspection. It should also consider, in its discretion, the wisdom of notifying the affected parties. Although the Privacy Act does not compel the FBI to give notice to the intervenors in
Substantively, even the appellants agree that it is appropriate for the court, in exercising its discretion under Rules 26 and 45(b), to undertake some substantive balancing of interests of the sort contemplated in
Perry v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co.,
Perry’s notiоn of balancing is unexceptional on its face: Where the actual content of the record has the potential to cause harm to the affected party, a court supervising discovery should consider this factor in determining how to exercise its traditional authority to limit disclosure. In our view, Perry does not mandate a test of necessity as a prerequisite to initiating discovery of records subject to the Privacy Act. 24 However, if Perry may be read to abandon or modify the standards of the FRCP in reviewing discovery requests under the Privacy Act, then we would disagree with its holding.
More relevant to this case than
Perry
are
Weahkee v. Norton,
[I]t has never been suggested that the Privacy Act was intended to serve as a limiting amendment to Part V of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and exception (11) to § 552a(b) make it completely clear that the Act cannot be used to block the normal course of court prоceedings, including court-ordered discovery.
Id. Our holding today is consistent with the decisions in both of these cases.
B. Appellee Laxalt
Besides adding his voice to the Privacy Act arguments of the intervenors, appellee Laxalt raises several other objections to issuance of a court order permitting release of the FBI files. Principally, he asserts that the discovery proceeding should have occurred in the district court in Nevada. However, it is irrelevant whether
On the record before us, however, we question whether Laxalt has standing to assert any of the claims that he has advanced. The appellants seek access to records possessed by and pertaining to persons other than Laxalt, and he has not asserted any personal privacy interest in the contents of those records. A litigant “generally must assert his own legal rights and interests, and cannot rest his claim to relief on the legal rights or interests of third parties.”
Warth v. Seldin,
III. Conclusion
Because the District Court applied an erroneous legal standard in dismissing this matter, we vacate the dismissal and remand with instructions to apply the discovery standards and procedures set forth in the FRCP, with due regard for any genuine privacy interests that may be implicated, and to dismiss Laxalt’s claims unless he can establish some personal right or privilege with respect to the FBI files at issue.
So ordered.
Notes
. 5 U.S.C. § 552a (1982).
. The records are described in Deposition Subpoena, Record Document No. 1, Exhibit A.
. Defendants’ Exhibit I, reprinted in Appendix to Brief for Appellants ("A.A.”) 118, 121.
. Defendants’ Exhibit II, reprinted in A.A. 124.
. Complaint, reprinted in A.A. 126-80.
. Brief for Appellants 6-7.
. Id. Exemption 11 provides, in relevant part:
(b) Conditions of disclosure
No agency shall disclose any record which is contained in a system of records by any means of communication to any person, or to another agency, except pursuant to a written request by, or with the prior written consеnt of, the individual to whom the record pertains, unless disclosure of the record would be—
(11) pursuant to the order of a court of competent jurisdiction----
5 U.S.C. § 552a(b)(ll) (1982).
. Stipulation and Order Permitting the FBI to Disclose Information Pursuant to the Privacy Act, reprinted in A.A. 106 ("Stipulation and Order”).
. Motion for Entry of Stipulation and Order Permitting the FBI to Disclose Information Pursuant to the Privacy Act, reprinted in A.A. 1.
. Response by Federal Bureau of Investigation to Defendants’ Mоtion for Entry of Privacy Act Order at 3, reprinted in A.A. 8.
. Plaintiffs Memorandum in Answer to Defendants’ Motion for Entry of Stipulation and Order, reprinted in A.A. 9.
. Federal Bureau of Investigation's Memorandum to the Court, reprinted in A.A. 28.
. Stipulation and Order, supra note 8, at 2-4, reprinted in A.A. 107-09.
. There was no requirement that the FBI provide notice to the intervenors that their records were being released. Although the Privacy Act requires such notice generally, 5 U.S.C. § 552a(e)(8) (1982), the Act also allows the FBI to exempt certain records from that requirement, id. § 552a(j)(2), and the FBI has exempted the system of records containing the information sought by the appellants, 28 C.F.R. § 16.96 (1986). This exemption applies even when the records are subpoenaed. 28 C.F.R. § 16.53(a) (1986).
. Laxalt v. McClatchy, Misc. No. 86-0140, slip op. at 4 (D.D.C. June 17, 1986), reprinted in A.A. 113.
.
Id.
(citation omitted) (quoting, with a slight inaccuracy,
Perry v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co.,
. The District Court noted that the question whether the defendants-appellants could rely on the Nevada shield law and refuse to disclose their confidential sourсes was still being litigated in the main forum. Id. at 5, reprinted in A.A. 114.
. Id. at 4-6, reprinted in A.A. 113-15. The appellants apparently do not contest the District Court’s "fair report” determination in this appeal.
. Id. at 5-6, reprinted in A.A. 114-15.
. Id. at 3, reprinted in A.A. 112. The FBI’s protective order would have provided that the documents would be released only to counsel for the parties to the libel action, not to the parties themselves, that no disclosures would be allowed, and that, bеfore counsel could place any of those documents in the public record of the trial, counsel would have to obtain a separate court order. Upon receiving a request for such an order, the court would review the document to balance the interests of the libel defendants against the privacy interests at stake. Memorandum by Federal Bureau of Investigation Concerning Privacy Arguments Submitted by the Parties and the Proposed Intervenors, reprinted in A.A. 61.
. See note 14 supra.
. See note 16 supra and accompanying text.
. See note 20 supra.
. The Eleventh Circuit enunciated its balancing test in the course of reviewing a final judgment. In post-trial review of discovery rulings, courts normally look to whether a party was actually
harmed
by an erroneous ruling.
E.g., Voegeli v. Lewis,
. See note 24 supra.
. Laxalt also contends that the period of discovery authorized by the district court in Nevada had ended at the time the second subpoena was served, as if to suggest that the appellants were
legally barred
from pursuing discovery in the District Court in the District of Columbia. We note that this issue was not raised before the District Court and, therefore, it is not properly subject to consideration by this court.
District of Columbia v. Air Florida, Inc.,
Furthermore, his argument that the records sought by the appellants were not in fact located in Washington, D.C., is based on purported evidence that Laxalt failed to introduce in the District Court.
