Lead Opinion
Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge TATEL.
Oрinion concurring in part and dissenting in part filed by Senior Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.
Seeking to learn which federal agencies submit materials to Congress without pri- or clearance by the Office of Management
I.
The Office of Management and Budget (OMB), located in the Executive Office of the President and subject to FOIA, see 5 U.S.C. § 552(f)(1); Meyer v. Bush,
Unable to find a publicly available list of agencies that transmit their materials to Congress without prior OMB clearance— so-called “bypass agencies” — Public Citizen filed a FOIA request with OMB. The request asked for:
“(1) All records listing agencies that may directly submit legislative proposals, reports, or testimony to Congress without receiving OMB clearance; (2) [a]ll records listing agencies that may directly submit budget-related materials to Congress without receiving OMB clearance; and (3) [a]ll records explaining that agencies or an agency may directly submit legislative or budget-related materials to Congress without receiving OMB clearance or providing statutory authority for agenciеs or an agency to directly submit legislative or budget-related materials to Congress without receiving OMB clearance.”
Adina H. Rosenbaum Decl. Ex. A at 1.
In response, OMB identified two documents but refused to release them, claim
As described in OMB’s amended Vaughn index, see Vaughn v. Rosen,
The portions of the documents OMB released describe agencies with statutorily-based bypass authority. The released portions include straightforward lists of such agencies, as well as more detailed summaries of the statutory basis for their bypass authority. To take just one example, the Chemical Safety аnd Hazard Investigation Board appears as one of eleven agency names on a list of “Agencies with Statutorily-Based Budgetary and Legislative ‘Bypass’ Provisions.” Adina H. Rosenbaum Supp. Decl. Ex. E at 1. It also appears in a section entitled “Summary Description of Agencies’ Statutorily-Based Budgetary and Legislative ‘Bypass’ Provisions” and is described as follows:
2. Chemical Safety and Hazard Investigation Board P.L. 101-549, Sec. 301 (amending Sec. 112(F)(6)(R) of the Clean Air Act; 104 Stat. 2569; 42 USCA Sec. 7412(r)(6)(R)) provides that any budget estimate, request, supplemental request, or information, any legislative recommendation, or prepared testimony submitted to the President or a Federal Agency shall be concurrently transmitted to Congress. No Federal official or agency can require prior review of the Board’s budgetary or legislative communications to the Congress.
Id. at 3.
OMB moved for summary judgment as to the undisclosed portions of the documents, claiming that the information they contain is exempt from disclosure under Exemption 2 (predominantly internal documents) and Exemption 5 (predecisional and deliberative documents). Public Citizen also moved for summary judgment, claiming that neither exemption aрplies. After reviewing the documents in camera, the district court granted summary judg
Public Citizen appeals, arguing that neither exemption authorizes OMB to withhold the documents. Our review is de novo, Sussman v. U.S. Marshals Serv.,
II.
Enacted “to pierce the veil of administrative secrecy and to open agency action to the light of public scrutiny,” the Freedom of Information Act reflects “a general philosophy of full agency disclosure unless information is exempted under clearly delineated statutory language,” Dep’t of Air Force v. Rose,
Exemption 2
Exemption 2 allows agencies to withhold documents that are “related solely to the internal personnel rules and practices of an agency.” § 552(b)(2). Despite the statute’s reference to documents related “solely” to internal rules and practices, we have interpreted Exemption 2 to cover documents that are “predominantly internal” and that meet one of two additional requirements. Crooker v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms,
We have confronted the “high 2” exemption in two key cases. In Jordan v. United States Department of Justice,
Here the district court held that the OMB documents are рredominantly internal because they “offer guidance to OMB officials regarding other agencies’ ability to bypass presidential review of those agencies’ budgetary and/or legislative recommendations,” because the information they contain “is plainly intended for internal use only,” and because there is “no evidence that the documents have ever been circulated to (or relied upon by) individuals outside of the Agency.” Pub. Citizen,
We can easily dispense with several of these arguments. To begin with, the mere fact that the documents were intended for internal OMB use and have never been circulated outside the agency cannot alone render them “predominantly internal.” See Morley v. CIA,
Nor is the documents’ use in internal discussions conclusive. Agencies regularly refer to policies and regulations as part of internal discussions without rendering such policies (particularly those with significant external impact) predominantly internal. For example, one could easily imagine conversations within the U.S. Attorney’s office in which agency personnel discuss the prosecutorial guidelines we found not predominantly internal in Jordan. Such internal discussions would neither diminish the extent to which the guidelines “regulatе members of the public” nor reduce the significance of “Knowledge of those regulations ... to members of the public,” Crooker,
OMB’s claim that the documents qualify for Exemption 2 because they concern other government agencies rather than the public at large likewise fails. Exemption 2 covers documents that are “re
[T]he Federal Personnel Manual, issued by the Commission for government-wide application, could certainly not be withheld from the public in reliance on exemption 2; its subject is federal personnel policy, not internal personnel policy of an agency.... A construction of (b)(2) exempting the Civil Service Commission reports at issue in this case would ... totally remove the sphere of Civil Service Commission operations from the public eye.
Id. at 1151 (Leventhal, J., concurring) (footnotes omitted). So too here. If OMB documents concerning other government agencies were categorically exempt, OMB, which is subject to FOIA and whose primary function involves oversight and coordination of other government agencies, would be largely exempt from FOIA.
This leaves OMB’s argument that like the surveillance manual in Crooker, the documents at issue here “ ‘make no attempt to modify or regulate public behavior[,] only to observe it.’ ” Appellee’s Br. 17 (quoting Crooker,
But even if, as OMB insists, it never uses the documents to determine whether to enforce the clearance requirements for a particular agency, the documents do identify those agencies OMB treats differently in its clearance process. Indeed, much like the prosecutorial guidelines found subject to disclosure in Jordan, the documents determine OMB’s interaction with outsiders — an interaction having real-world effects on the behavior of both bypass and non-bypass agencies. For example, as part of the Circular A-19 clearance process, OMB refers proposed legislation to affected agencies for comment. When referring such materials to a bypass agency, however, OMB, acting pursuant to its “longstanding practice,” follows a different procedure: “In general, an OMB referral is not made to a ‘bypass’ agency unless the agency agrees to refrain from forwarding to Congress OMB-referred material or its response to an OMB referral.” 2001 Jukes Mem. 1. The documents thus list those agencies required by OMB to act differently than most federal agencies, either by agreeing not to forward OMB materials to Congress or by commenting only informally or not at all on submissions from other agencies. In addition to depriving listed bypass agencies of a full opportunity to submit formal comments, this policy affects the feedback that non-bypass agencies receive and must incorporate into their congressional submissions. The list of bypass agencies thus stands in marked contrast to the publicly available policy reflected in Circulars A-ll and A-19. As we have repeatedly explained, FOIA provides no protection for such “secret law” developed and implemented by an agency. See, e.g., Nat’l Treasury Employees Union v. U.S. Customs Serv.,
According to the dissent, the documents deal only with peripheral activity as opposed to agencies’ primary conduct. Specifically, the dissent views the referral process as mere “bureaucratic information exchange,” Dissenting Op. at 881, but Circular A-19 makes plain that this process is central to the clearance function. One of the main purposes of the clearance process is to “assure appropriate consideration of the views of all affected agencies.” Circular No. A-19 ¶ 3. Upon receiving a submission from a non-bypass agency, OMB “undertake[s] the necessary coordination with other interested agencies of an agency’s proposed legislation or report,” including requesting “other agency views within specified time limits.” Id. ¶ 8(a)(1). Referral of an agency submission to other agencies for comment thus represents a key part of the legislative clearance process. As such, the referral policy does more than merely “influence” the behavior of other agencies. It limits or even eliminates the role bypass agencies play in clearing proposals submitted by non-bypass agencies, even when such proposals affect the bypass agencies’ own functions. This policy in turn determines the scope of advice OMB provides to non-bypass agencies, advice that those agencies must incorporate into their congressional submissions.
The dissent also rejects the view that the documents in fact determine which agencies may bypass the clearance process, describing their “real purpose” as limited to the interagency referral process. Dissenting Op. at 878. As noted above, however, on their face the documents strongly suggest that they do in fact represent the list of agencies allowed
The dissent says that “we have no basis for inferring” that OMB has authority to subject informal bypass agencies to the clearance process. Dissenting Op. at 879. The documents themselves indicate otherwise. For example, document 1 notes that in some cases OMB “has made no effort in recent memory to subject the [agency] to the requirements of Circular A-19,” 2001 Jukes Mem. Attach, at 19. This strongly suggests that there are steps OMB can take to subject agencies to the clearance process. Moreover, at oral argument OMB counsel repeatedly insisted that OMB can require agencies to submit proposed legislation for clearance. For example, asked whether OMB “even with respect to these agencies not statutorily exempt will for particular pieces of legislation exercise its review function,” counsel respondеd, “[i]f it chooses that it should at a particular time, it will.” Oral Arg. at 35:35-36:00. Counsel later reiterated that as to proposed legislation, OMB “always [has] the power as granted by the Executive Order, by the Circular, by the memo of February 15, 2001, to say ‘we want to look at this,’ and [it] can always do that.” Id. at 37:24-37:33.
Returning, then, to our analysis, we note that our conclusion that the documents are not predominantly internal applies to the documents in their entirety. Neither the unelaborated list of agency names nor the summaries describing the basis of each agency’s informal bypass authority relate predominantly to OMB’s internal practices. Where, as here, documents are used to affect the behavior of other agencies, knowing the salient characteristics of agencies that receive differential treatment is as significant to those outside OMB as knowing the agencies’ identities. For example, portions of the summaries explain that a particular agency does not in fact submit materials for clearance or that OMB has not attempted to subject a particular agency to the clearance process. Such statements implicate the same concerns as the list of agency names; by explaining OMB’s policy of treating certain agencies differently, they have significant external effects on the behavior of other agencies and are thus not related predominantly to OMB’s internal practices.
As applied to the summary descriptions, OMB’s argument that the documents are predominantly internal because they embody OMB’s “interpretations of the views of certain agencies regarding legislative clearance requirements,” Appellee’s Br. 12, also fails. To begin with, the summaries hardly seem interpretive: they consist primarily of quotations from agencies’ governing statutes and statements that a given agency interprets a particular statute as authorizing bypass, that it lacks a statutory bypass, or that it declines to submit materials for clearance. Indeed, only one sentence in any of the summaries even hints at an OMB view or perspective: one
Finally, the documents at issue here lie at the core of what FOIA seeks to expose to public scrutiny. They explain how a powerful agency performing a central role in the functioning of the federal government carries out its responsibilities and interacts with other government agencies. As we have explained, “the strong policy of the FOIA [is] that the public is entitled to know what its government is doing and why.” Coastal States Gas Corp. v. Dep’t of Energy,
Because the documents Public Citizen seeks are not related predominantly to OMB’s internal practices, we have no need to decide whether they meet the high 2 exemption’s second element — that their release would significantly risk circumvention of the law. See Crooker,
Exemption 5
Exemption 5 allows agencies to withhold documents that would be protected from disclosure in litigation under one of the recognized evidentiary or discovery privileges, such as the attorney-client privilege. Coastal States,
serves to assure that subordinates within an agency will feel free to provide the decisionmaker with their uninhibited opinions and recommendations without fear of later being subject to public ridicule or criticism; to protect against premature disclosure of proposed policies before they have been finally formulated or adopted; and to protect against confusing the issues and misleading the public by dissemination of documents suggesting reasons and rationales for a course of action which were not in fact the ultimate reasons for the agency’s action.
Id. at 866. Thus, as embodied in Exemption 5, the privilege protects documents that are both “predecisional” and “deliberative.” Id. “We deem a documеnt predecisional if it was generated before the adoption of an agency policy and deliberative if it reflects the give-and-take of the consultative process.” Judicial Watch, Inc. v. FDA,
We begin with OMB’s response to Public Citizen’s argument that even if the documents were at one time predecisional and deliberative, OMB’s informal adoption and application of the documents as its “working law” render them final and thus subject to disclosure. See Coastal States,
OMB argues that the documents Public Citizen seeks are in fact predecisional because OMB “consider[s]” the documents “during the inherently deliberative process of legislative clearance.” Appellee’s Br. 41. But we agree with Public Citizen that an agency’s application of a policy to guide further decision-making does not render the policy itself predecisional. For example, in Tax Analysts v. IRS, we held that IRS documents containing legal advice to field offices were not predecisional because even though they “may precede the field office’s decision in a particular taxpayer’s case, they do not precede the decision regarding the agency’s legal position.”
Urging a second basis for classifying the documents as predecisional, OMB argues that they “serve as a starting point for discussions within OMB concerning possible changes to OMB’s practices.” Appellee’s Br. 35. This argument gets OMB only so far. As Public Citizen correctly notes, Appellant’s Reply Br. 18, whenever an agency seeks to change a policy, it logically starts by discussing the existing policy, and such discussions hard-
Moreover, agencies must disclose those portions of predecisional and deliberative documents that contain factual information that does not “inevitably reveal the government’s deliberations.” In re Sealed Case,
Because Exemption 5 covers only those portions of the documents that are both predecisional and deliberative, OMB has failed to meet its burden of demonstrating that Exemption 5 covers the documents in their entirety. Accordingly, OMB must release all responsive portions of document 2, as well as all portions of documents 1 and 3 to 14 that are not both predecisional and deliberative. Although the district court determined that all segregable portions of the documents had been released, Pub. Citizen, Inc.,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse in part and remand for the district court to order the release of document 2; to determine consistent with this opinion whether certain limited portions of documents 1 and 3 to 14 are predecisional and sufficiently reflect the give and take of the deliberative process to warrant continued redaction; and to order the release of those documents with appropriate redaction if necessary.
So ordered.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part:
This case concerns fourteen documents relating to the role of the Office of Management and Budget (“OMB”) in clearing executive (and “independent”) agencies’ legislative and budget proposals to Congress. The appellant, Public Citizen, contends that the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”) requires OMB to disclose these documents in their entirety. OMB argues that the undisclosed portions of the documents are exempt from disclosure under FOIA Exemptions 2 and 5. The district court granted summary judgment to OMB on the basis of Exemption 2. The majority today finds Exemption 2 inapplicable, and remands for further consideration of Exemption 5. I believe that OMB established the first of two requirements for withholding under Exemption 2, and that the case should be remanded for clarification as to the second requirement. I concur, however, in the court’s disposition of OMB’s assertion of Exemption 5.
Exemption 2 covers documents that are “related solely to the internal personnel rules and practices of an agency.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(2). We have long interpreted the exemption more broadly than its language immediately suggests. As currently understood, the exemption’s threshold requirement is that the documents must be “used for predominantly internal purposes.” Schiller v. NLRB,
Predominant internality. Whether these documents are predominantly internal depends on their content and function. Public Citizen understandably inferred from the titles of the documents — for example, “Agencies Exempt from the Legislative Clearance Process” — -that they contain OMB’s policies regarding which agencies may bypass the clearance process by which OMB reviews agency submissions to Congress. In addition, the documents were supplied by OMB in response to a request for records “listing agencies that may” directly submit legislative and budget proposals to Congress without OMB clearance. Plaintiffs inference, nonetheless, is a bit of an oversimplification.
Second, in camera examination shows that insofar as the documents guide the conduct of OMB personnel at all, they do so in relation not to the clearance process but to another aspect of OMB’s relation to agencies. The documents contain no instructions to OMB personnel to allow some agencies but not others to bypass the clearance process. Documents 1 and 3-14, which are memos from the OMB’s Assistant Director for Legislative Clearance to OMB staff, do contain other instructions making clear the documents’ real purpose. Specifically, the memos instruct the OMB staff not to automatically refer material to “bypass” agencies, so as to avoid letting the agencies forward such material to Congress. See, e.g., Jim Jukes, Memorandum for OMB Policy Officers and DADs [acronym unexplained] (Feb. 20, 2001) (“[The Legislative Reference Division’s] longstanding practice is to determine, on a case-by-case basis, whеther or not to refer material for review to a ‘bypass’ agency.... In general, an OMB referral is not made to a ‘bypass’ agency unless the agency agrees to refrain from forwarding to Congress OMB-referred material or its response to an OMB referral.”) In other words, to the extent that the documents had a function beyond explaining what bypasses are and which agencies have asserted a right to bypass, it was to instruct employees on how those agencies should be treated in the referral process.
The majority opinion hints that the memos contain a policy concerning which agencies may bypass the clearance process. It relies on Document l’s statement that “[f]orty four Federal agencies currently have some form of ... ‘bypass.’ ” Maj. Op. at 871 (quoting Jim Jukes, Memorandum for OMB Policy Officers and DADs (Feb. 20, 2001)). In context, though, it is clear that this is a statement of fact concerning which agencies have asserted bypass authority, not an endorsement of their claims or even a statement of OMB assessment of or response to those claims. See Bypass Agencies 5 (Feb.2001) (explaining that informal bypasses are asserted by several agencies without explicit authority, and that although Circular A-19 does cover these agencies they “generally do not comply with its provisions.”).
The panel’s next argument on this point similarly confuses a factual statement with a policy. It relies on the Assistant Director’s statement that the documents “seek to summarize the currently-held internal-OMB perspectives and views regarding which Federal agencies have a basis — in statute or in prior agency and OMB practice — for not submitting [materials for OMB clearance].” Jukes Am. Decl. at 13. All this means, however, is that the documents list all the agencies which may view themselves as exempt from the clearance process, whether this is because of a statute, the agency’s own prior practice, or some combination of the agency’s practice and OMB’s response to it. Consider, for example, Document l’s treatment of the Federal Trade Commission “FTC”: “The
The panel further argues that if the documents really just recorded past OMB practice' — rather than setting out a policy of OMB acquiescence in these agencies’ behavior — OMB would not worry about sharing information with them. As my colleagues put it, “If the listed agencies had no bypass authority, OMB would have no reason to avoid sharing other agency proposals with them.” Maj. Op. at 873. Again the analysis confuses a pattern of successful agency bypass with OMB policy. Even if OMB made every possible effort to subject the FTC or some other informal bypass agency to Circular A-19, it would still sensibly worry about sharing information with that agency — unless and until its efforts proved successful. The panel’s theory simply assumes that OMB has enforcement power; but we have no basis for inferring such power’s existence.
In support of its view the panel invokes a couple of passages from oral argument. I hesitate to draw serious conclusions from a muddled colloquy in which the judges more than once declared that they could not understand counsel’s answers. Oral Arg. at 35:30-35:35; id. at 36:05-36:15. As the panel’s conviction that the materials disclose “secret law” turns on an understanding of OMB enforcement power, we should at the very least remand for a determination that such power exists rather than rely on inferences from highly ambiguous statements at oral argument by a counsel to whom our questions appeared extremely unclear.
In any event, counsel’s answers fall far short of a clear claim to effective power to insist that all agencies submit proposals for OMB review before submission to Congress. The statement of OMB counsel at oral argument that OMB “always [has] the power as granted by the Executive Order, by the Circular, by the memo of February 15, 2001 to say ‘we want to look at this,’ and [it] can always do that,” see Maj. Op. at 873 (quoting Oral Arg. at 37:24-37:33), does nothing to establish enforcement power. Quite literally, counsel observed that OMB had the power to “say” to agencies that they should turn over the specified type of document. It brings to mind Hotspur’s famous rejoinder to Glendower:
Glendower: I can call spirits from the vasty deep.
Hotspur: Why, so can I, or so can any man; But will they come when you do call for them?
At most it suggests that OMB has a legal right to require certain agencies to participate in the clearance process, quite distinct from an effective enforcement power.
The majority also points to an exchange in which a judge asked counsel whether OMB “even with respect to those agencies not statutorily exempt will for particular pieces of legislation exercise its review function,” and counsel responded, “if it chooses that it should at a particular time, it will.” Maj. Op. at 873 (quoting Oral Arg. at 35:35-36:00). Counsel was primarily asserting that OMB can’t make “any decisions about agencies and their ability to go around OMB,” Oral Arg. at 34:30-34:38. But it does, he argued, have some discretion with regard to specific legislative proposals: “It can make a decision, for example, when a [proposed?] statute comes to it, that this particular statute does not need to go through a review process.” Id.
We must evaluate these documents under the predominant internality test established in Crooker v. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco & Firearms,
Crooker conceded that the investigatory technique policies described in the withheld portions of the BATF manual had an effect on the public at large, as would almost any agency policy. Id. at 1073. The court found “critical,” however, that “the manual is used for predominantly internal purposes; it is designed to establish rules and practices for agency personnel ...; it involves no ‘secret law' of the agency....” Id. The prosecutorial guidelines in Jordan, on the other hand, were “a source of ‘secret law,’ as important to the regulation of public behavior as if they had been codified.” Id. at 1075.
As applied to documents by which an agency guides its personnel in conduct affecting others, the distinction our cases draw seems a bit metaphysical, i.e., difficult to operationalize. As to any such document, it is possible to assert, with equal plausibility, that its “primary” purpose is to guide the agency’s employees or, by guiding the employees’ conduct, to affect the outside world. The puzzle is highlighted by Schiller v. NLRB,
Must we then throw up our hands and arbitrarily choose one of two contradictory assertions? I think not. Two features may usefully distinguish Jordan from the three later cases. As we described Jordan in Crooker, the strategies we characterized as secret law were “as important to the regulation of public behavior as if they had been codified.”
At bottom, the policy expressed in the documents here is no more than a set of instructions to agency staff on how to bargain with other agencies on an issue much less connected to their primary conduct than submission to OMB approval of then-legislative or budget proposals, to wit, the dissemination of information. See Jukes Memorandum (Feb. 20, 2001). This external effect seems about as remote from the public’s primary conduct as one can imagine. Nor do these documents regulate the primary conduct of other agencies (assuming for the moment that doing so would bring them within the scope of Jordan)', they deal only with the agencies’ horsetrading with OMB on issues of bureaucratic information exchange — the referral process. The panel characterizes that process as “a key part of the legislative clearance process.” Maj. Op. at 872. But OMB’s referral leverage strategies seem to stand in relation to the basic clearance process in much the way the criminal investigative procedures, administrative litigation strategies, and agency employment criteria at issue in Crooker, Schiller and NTEU relate to criminal law enforcement, administrative policy, and agency management of personnel, i.e., so peripherally to the affected subjects’ primary conduct that they are properly seen as “predominantly internal.”
Second, the documents are not at all comparable to any kind of codification; within their mandate, one can easily imagine temporary, partial accommodations. While the bargaining strategy may well force other agencies to make a choice, it is a far cry from the decriminalization of a whole class of conduct.
The majority summarizes its view with the declaration that where “agency documents have significant external effects on other government agencies, we cannot deem them ‘predominantly internal.’ ” Id. at 874. I note that this is the first case ever in which a document’s “external effects” operate in the first instance on other federal agencies. I do not regard that fact as dispositive: if the initial impact fell on another government agency in such a way as to have clearly defined effects on the public’s primary conduct, it would not make sense to view the documents as “predominantly internal.” And quite possibly an agency policy seriously impacting other
Circumvention of the law. The second prong of the “high 2” exemption is met if “disclosure would significantly risk circumvention of agency regulations or statutes.” NTEU,
Here OMB expresses the concern that if other agencies “knew OMB’s beliefs concerning their views or the views of sister agencies, they could use this information to impede and frustrate legislative clearance requirements,” Appellee’s Br. at 26, thus circumventing the legislative clearance process set out in Circular A-19. Thus the claim does not appear to relate to the documents’ normative instructions on referral of documents to bypass agencies. As in NTEU, in theory the information in the documents should not affect whether or not an agency is subject to the clearance process. In practice, however, this may hold only if agencies approach the process with meticulous integrity. It is not fanciful to imagine that they might change their behavior in response to the information. Indeed, the majority believes that the explanation of OMB’s policies has “significant external effects on the behavior of other agencies.” Maj. Op. at 873. To the extent that agencies are willing to game the system, the information in these documents could help them do so.
OMB’s submissions on this issue, however, are on the vague side. The Assistant Director for Legislative Reference of the OMB said in his affidavit that disclosure of these materials “would reveal aspects of OMB’s evaluative process concerning submission of agencies’ documents to Congress without OMB’s clearance and the manner in which relevant opinions and recommendations were formed.” Jukes Deck at 11. But this statement, rather than being addressed directly to circumvention, seems simply to assert the raw truism that forced disclosure will reveal something about OMB’s thinking process. Thе issue, though, is how agencies might use those insights to undermine OMB’s efforts to assure compliance. The record on that problem being too opaque for a well-founded decision, I would remand to the district court for further proceedings. See Sussman v. United States Marshals Serv.,
My colleagues argue that the documents at issue in this case “lie at the core of what FOIA seeks to expose to public scrutiny.” Maj. Op. at 874. Disclosure is, of course, FOIA’s primary policy. See Crooker,
