In this аppeal, Plaintiff-Appellant Robert Pierce (“Pierce”) challenges the district court’s summary judgment rendered against him and in favor of Defendant Appellee Department of the Air Force (the “Air Force”) concluding that the Air Force did not violate Pierce’s rights under the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. § 552a(b) (the “Privacy Act”). The district court held that the documents at issue were not “records” contained within a “system of records” for purposes of the Privacy Act and granted summary judgment on that ground. We agree with the district court and affirm.
I.
In February 2001, Col. (Ret.) Joe Bryant (“Bryant”), a former pilot in the 186th Air Refueling Wing of the Mississippi Air National Guard, once stationed at the Key Field Air National Guard Base in Meridian, Mississippi, filed a complaint that alleged wrongful conduct and improprieties by several officers of his unit. Included in the complaint were allegations against Pierce. 1
In February 2003, Colonel Kenneth Emmanuel (“Emmanuel”) was designated by the Air Force Inspector General to investigate some of Bryant’s allеgations, and he did so over a period of several months. On May 31, 2004, Emmanuel issued his findings in a Report of Investigation (“ROI”). Additionally, and pursuant to regulation, Emmanuel prepared a Sum *186 mary Report of Investigation (“SROI”), a version of the ROI that omits names and personally-identifying information of individuals in the report. Ant Force InstRuCtion (AFI) 90-301, §§ 2.61, 2.49 (January 30, 2001). In the SROI, Emmanuel did not name the officers against whom Bryant lodged his complaints (including Pierce). Instead, consistent with regulation guidance, he identified them by duty titles. Id. § 2.49, Figure 2.6 (“Do not use names in the SROI. Use duty titles .... ”). Pertinently, Pierce was referred to in the SROI as C-26 Program Manager and Counterdrug Coordinator. 2
In July 2004, Colonel Ronnie Rogers (“Rogers”) took over and assumed the responsibility for closing the investigation of Bryant’s allegations. In the course of closing the investigation, he determined that Bryant was a “complainant” per Air Force regulations. As a “complainant” for the allegations, Bryant was entitled to a final response letter and an SROI. Id. § 2.61.4 (Complainant “will receive a final response, in writing, with the findings оf the investigation and a copy of the SROI (if available).”). On October 15, 2004, Rogers sent Bryant the final response letter and a copy of the SROI, in compliance with the Air Force regulations he considered applicable. After receiving the final response letter and the SROI, Bryant or his wife allegedly leaked information contained in those documents and informed the press that Pierce was the individual listed under the duty titles C-26 Program Manager and Counterdrug Coordinator. On October 22, 2004, The Meridian Star and The Clarion Ledger reported information from the final response letter and SROI and listed Pierce by name as a subject of the investigation.
Pierce filed suit against the Air Force alleging a violation of the Privacy Act. The parties later filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court held that the final response letter and SROI provided to Bryant were not records protected by the Privacy Act and dismissed the suit. Pierce now appeals.
II.
A. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review a grant of summary judgment
de novo,
viewing all evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and drawing аll reasonable inferences in that party’s favor.
See Crawford v. Formosa Plastics Corp.,
B. DISCUSSION
To establish that an agency failed to comply with the Privacy Act, a plaintiff must demonstrate that: (1) the information is a “record” within a “system of records;” (2) the agency disсlosed the information; (3) the disclosure adversely affected the plaintiff; and (4) the disclosure was willful or intentional. 5 U.S.C. *187 § 552a(g); Jacobs v. National Drug Intelligence Center, 423 F.Sd 512, 516 (5th Cir.2005). The Air Force moved for summary judgment on grounds that the summary judgment record demonstrated that Pierce could not establish prongs one, two, or four. The district court held that Pierce could not satisfy the first prong because duty titles used in lieu of names were not “identifying particulars,” and thus the use of duty titles did not make the final response letter and SROI “records” within a “system of records.” 3 Specifically, the district court found that the response that Bryant received did not include Pierce’s name and held that a duty title is not unique to an individual because many people have the same or similar duty titles. The district court reasoned that duty titles change over time and that individuals typically have both a predecessor and a successor at any specific duty title. Thus, the district court found that although the newspapers were able to connect Pierce to the allegations against him, the newspapers could not have made such a connection without information found outside of the final response letter and SROI. As such, the final response letter and the SROI were not protected records per the Privacy Act, and Pierce’s claim failed to meet the first prong. As discussed below, we agree that the newspapers could not have identified Pierce without additional information not released by the Air Force and that the duty titles released here аre not the equivalent of names of particular individuals.
Appellant first relies on the plain language of the Privacy Act which states that a “record” is “any item ... that contains his name, or the identifying number, symbol, or other identifying particular assigned to the individual, such as a finger or voice print or a photograph.” 5 U.S.C. § 552a(a)(4). Appellant argues that this language suggests that duty titles are the equivalent to the names of particular individuals. We disagree. Although the Privacy Act protects more than just doсuments that contain a person’s name, it does not protect documents that do not include identifying particulars. Here, the district court found that the duty titles were not numbers, symbols, or other identifying particulars. Similarly, the district court found that duty titles were not comparable to captured immutable characteristics such as finger' or voice prints or photographs. The district court reached these conclusions because an individual’s duty title changes over time, because multiple рeople can concomitantly have the same or similar duty titles, and because each individual has predecessor and successor holders of the same duty titles. We agree with the reasoning and conclusions of the district court. In circumstances where duty titles pertain to one and only one individual, such as the examples of identifying particulars provided in the statutory text (finger or voice print or photograph), duty titles may indeed be “identifying particulars” as that term is used in the definition of “record” in the Privacy Act. For the reasons detailed by the 'district court, however, the duty titles in this *188 case are not “identifying particulars” because they do not pertain to one and only one individual. See, e.g., 32 C.F.R. § 806b.45 (2007) (permitting disclosure of an individual’s past and present position title and stateside duty assignments without written consent of that individual); 32 C.F.R. Pt. 505, App. H (defining “personal identifier” as “name, number, or symbol that is unique to an individual, usually the person’s name or SSN”). And the plain language of the Privacy Act does not support the conclusion that duty titles are identifying particulars.
Appellant next relies on an Office of Management and Budget regulation to argue that to be a “record” under the Privacy Act, the information does not have to be unique to an individual, only that it be “about” that individual. Guidance on the Privacy Act Implications of “Call Detail” Programs, 52 Fed.Reg. 12,990-91 (April 20, 1987). This regulation was promulgated to provide guidance to agencies creating “call detail programs” that collect and use information relating to their employees’ use of long distance telephone systems. Id. at 12,990. The regulation provides that call detail records that contain only telephone numbers are not records under the Privacy Act, but that when linked with a name they become such records. Appellant correctly notes that the Privacy Act’s definition of “record” is thus not limited to purely unique or immutable identifying information, as telephone numbers can be protected. Id. at 12,991.
The regulation, however, does not support the conclusion that the final response letter and SROI are records protected by the Privacy Act. The regulation states that identifying information alone, unless accompanied by a link between the identifying information and a specific individual, is insufficient to make a record protected.
Id.
(“Standing alone, a telephone number, is not a Privacy Act record. To achieve the status of a Privacy Act record, a telephone number must be maintained in a way that links it to an individual’s name or some other identifying particular such as a Social Security Account Number. When an agency assigns a specific phone number to an employee and maintains that information in a way that the name and number are inseparably connected, there is sufficient identification linkage that a Privacy Act record is created.”). Thus, the regulation confirms what has been recognized by other courts: To be a Privacy Act record, the information must be bоth (1) “about” the individual and (2) linked to that individual by name or identifying particular.
See, e.g., Tobey v. N.L.R.B.,
In support of the argument that duty titles are not unique to an individual, Ap-pellee points out that at the time the newspaper articles were printed Pierce no longer held the duty title of C-26 Program Manager, his duty title prior to 2001. The newspaper articles were printed on October 22, 2004. At that time Pierce held the duty title of Counterdrug Coordinator, his assignment after his C-26 Program Manager position, and against which only one allegation from the final responsе letter and SROI pertained. Thus, Pierce’s duty title had changed, and all but one of the eight allegations listed in the October 15, 2004 final response letter pertained to a *189 duty title he no longer held. As such, Appellee argues that the link to Pierce was not so simple as identifying the current holder of the listed duty titles because that inquiry would not have identified Pierce except for as to one of the allegations. The inclusion of one allegation involving Pierce’s then-current duty title does not mean that the report specifically identified only Pierce for this allegation, because a person reading the report would have to know which allegations pertained to military personnel in their current positions instead of their previous positions. Had the report included both duty titles and dates for the allegations, the report very well might have linked specifically to Pierce because only one person could have held his duty title on those dates. But simply listing allegations by duty titles without specifying when the personnel involved held those duty titles is insufficient to turn Pierce’s then-current duty title into an “identifying particular.”
To answer this argument, Appellant relies on
Quinn v. Stone,
In holding that the documents were not “records,” the district court relied on
Fleming v. United States R.R. Ret. Bd.,
No. 01-C-6289,
Appellant argues that
Fleming
is inconsistent with
Dep’t of the Air Force v. Rose,
disclosure of the summaries without names or other identifying information would not subject any former cadet to public identification and stigma, and the possibility of identification by another former cadet cоuld not, in the context of the Academy’s practice of distribution and official posting of the summaries, constitute an invasion of personal privacy proscribed [by Exemption 6],
Rose,
Most importantly,
Rose
does not apply in the context of the instant Privacy Act case.
Rose
deals with the privacy interest of an individual under a FOIA exemption
*191
that the Supreme Court has stated should be construed narrowly.
See United States Dep’t of Justice v. Tax Analysts,
One court, however, has cоntemplated applying the Exemption 6 framework in the Privacy Act context.
See Tobey,
Also, to accept Appellant’s reading of Rose would eviscerate the entire response framework the Air Force has established with regard to complainants. Complainants will almost certainly know the identity of the person against whom they lodge a complaint. Under Appellant’s reading of Rose, the Air Force would be required to investigate every complainant as well as the subject of each investigation, to determine whether the complainant could identify the subject before deciding on the response. Using this reasoning, the Air Force should have released little or no information to Bryant because it should have ascertained that Bryant knew Pierce’s identity and would likely leak his name to the press. We are satisfied that Rose does not mandate this outcome.
Finally, Appellant relies on
United States Department of State v. Ray,
We agree with the district court that the final response letter and SROI released by the Air Force were not “records” within a “system of records” per the Privacy Act. Emmanuel generated the SROI, a type of report specifically designed to omit identifying particulars, pursuant to Air Force regulation. Later, and again pursuant to regulation, Rogers sent the SROI along with a final response letter to Bryant. The fact that the newspapers made the connection to Pierce and identified him does not establish a Privacy Act violation. If we were to accept Appellant’s interpretation of the Privacy Act, the Air Force would not have been able to respond to Bryant about the results of its investigation of activities of persons against whom Bryant complained. To be sure, any update regarding the status of the investigation would have allowed Bryant to divulge information to the press about the individuals being investigated. The Air Force, however, followed its regulation and released information it was required to release after omitting the names and identifying particulars of the subjects of the investigation, аnd it cannot be held accountable for Bryant’s intervening act. The district court correctly granted summary judgment to the Air Force.
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the district court is AFFIRMED.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Bryant alleged that Pierce improperly disposed of government property, cheated on examinations and research papers, wrongfully fraternized with, had an unprofessional relationship with, or sexually harassed a subordinate enlisted female, wrongfully referred one of his subordinatе pilots for a mental health evaluation, wrongfully used aircraft for unauthorized flights and funds for improper expenditures, wrongfully received Air Force wings, wrongfully manipulated the merit selection process, wrongfully falsified or failed to update his military medical records and failed to take sick leave, and wrongfully threatened subordinates with unspecified adverse actions if they cooperated with investigators.
. Pierce was C-26 Program Manager from 1996 to 2001, after which he became a Coun-terdrug Coordinator.
. The Privacy Act defines "record” as "any item, collection, or grouping of information about an individual that is maintained by an agency, including, but not limited to, his education, financial transactions, medical history, and criminal or employment history and that contains his name, or the identifying number, symbol, or other identifying particular assigned to the individual, such as a fingerprint or voice print or a photograph.” 5 U.S.C. § 552a(a)(4). The Privacy Act defines “system of records” as "a group of any records under the control of any agency from which information is retrieved by the name of the individual or by some identifying number, symbol, or other identifying particular assigned to the individual.” Id. § 552a(a)(5).
