MEMORANDUM ORDER ON PENDING MOTIONS
THIS CAUSE was heard by the Court on various pending motions filed by the parties, and the Court hereby enters this Order pursuant to its rulings in open court on March 1, 1989.
I
This ease is brought pursuant to thе Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. see. 552 (FOIA), under which plaintiffs seek from the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS), the Executive Office for Immigration Review (EOIR) and the United Stаtes Department of State (State Dept.) disclosure of (1) an alleged list of 600 Haitians who had been returned to Haiti and not mistreated after their arrival; and (2) invеstigative trip reports made by INS investigators who have visited Haiti.
Several searches conducted by each agency yielded responses that no records were found which fit the FOIA request made by plaintiffs. Subsequently, the State Dept, located and turned over to the plaintiffs twenty-five (25) responsive documents. Of these, seventeen documents were redacted to exclude the names of the Haitian individuals contained therein. The State Dept, claimed that release of the excised information could result in an invasion of privacy and, accordingly, asserted an exemption under the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), 5 USC seс 552(b)(6). 1 At all times, however, each agency has maintained that there exists no list of 600 Haitians returned to Haiti.
II
There are two issues confronting the Court. The first issue conсerns disclosure *504 requirements when an agency’s asserts that its search uncovers no documents which satisfy an FOIA request. The second issue focuses on disclosure requirements when an agency claims that information excised from the released documents is exempt under the invasion of privacy exemption of sec. 552(b)(6).
A. Documents Claimed Not to Exist
The underlying principle in FOIA cases is that the requestor must show that an agency improperly withheld records.
Kissinger v. Reporter’s Comm. for Freedom of the Press,
In this instance, the INS has responded that it did not conduct investigatory trips to Haiti nor have, in its possession, investigative reports. It has also maintained, by its answer, that the list of six hundred Haitians does not exists. The record indicаtes that there was a proper and adequate search, as demonstrated by the affidavits of the FOIA personnel. The record fails to disclose that аny documents have been improperly withheld of that they, indeed, exist. On the record, that principle has not been rebutted by the plaintiffs. In addition, the record indiсates there have been no requests directed to EOIR, and, therefore, there is no issue before the Court in connection with that party.
B. Documents Edited & Released by the State Department
Where a FOIA request triggеrs a claim of exemption under the Act, the burden is on the government agency to demonstrate the basis for nondisclosure. Thus, contrary to the agency’s assеrtion, a justiciable issue remains to be decided, and that is the propriety of the State Dept.’s claim of exemption under sec. 552(b)(6), because “the District Cоurt must do something more to assure itself of the factual basis and bona fides of the agency’s claim of exemption than rely solely upon an affidavit.”
Stephenson v. IRS,
There is a presumption, under the FOIA, that documents held by a government agency are subject to disclosure.
Currie v. IRS,
The degree of the invasion of privacy considers the potential harm to the individual from disclosure of the information. The critical aspect is that an invasion be actual rather than just theoretical; it must be more than a mere possibility.
Dept. of Air Force v. Rose,
*505 As to the public interest involved in this case, this country’s immigrаtion policy supports a finding that the public has a legitimate interest in the safe relocation of returned Haitians.
Any invasion of privacy from the mere act of disclosure of names and addresses would be de minimis and little more than speculation. The promise of confidentiality by the State Dept, is only one factor to be considered and, in this case, is not determinative of the outcome. Thus, weighing the public interest against the private interest, the balance tilts in favor of disclosure of the names because any intrusion into the privacy of the Haitian nationals would be minimal.
Ill
For these reasons, it is hereby
ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that summary judgment is GRANTED in favor of INS and EOIR with respect to the FOIA information requests explained or shown to be non-existent. It is
FURTHER ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that the State Department is required, within fifteen days from this Court’s ruling in open court, to supply the redaсted information contained in the seventeen documents. Final judgment as to the State Department is withheld until this time period has expired and a showing has been made to the Court that the names have been furnished to the plaintiffs, and, if they have not, then the Court will take further appropriate action forthwith. 3
DONE AND ORDERED.
ON MOTION TO COMPEL RELEASE OF UNREDACTED DOCUMENTS
THIS CAUSE having comе before the Court, and the Court having heard argument of counsel on April 12, 1989, and considered the same, it is hereby
ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that plaintiffs’ motion for pro hac vice appear-anee of Neil D. Kolner, Esq. is GRANTED and it is
FURTHER ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that defendants’ motion to alter or amend is DENIED. After weighing the public interest in disclosure against the claim of exemption pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(6), this Court Ordered the STATE DEPARTMENT on March 2, 1989 to produce to plaintiffs, no later than March 16, 1989 аs originally requested in plaintiffs June 15, 1985 Freedom of Information Act Request, unredacted copies of all documents in defendant’s possession which satisfy plaintiffs rеquest. Defendants did not comply but instead raised new arguments which the Court finds are wholly unfounded. Rather than exhibit due diligence the government has been neglectful in this mattеr by failing to raise these exemptions at the outset of this litigation. Consequently, the government has waived entitlement to those claims by invoking these belated exеmptions after this Court’s order requiring disclosure of the redacted information.
See, e.g., Senate of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico v. Dept. of Justice,
FURTHER ORDERED AND ADJUDGED that the STATE DEPARTMENT shall relеase the unredacted documents to plaintiffs no later than ten (10) days from this Court’s oral ruling on April 12, 1989.
DONE AND ORDERED.
Notes
. 5 U.S.C. sec. 552(b)(6) provides an exemption from disclosure for matters that are “personnel and medical files and similar files the disclosure of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy."
. Under sec. 552(b)(6), the requested files must be "personnel", "medical”, or "similar files”. Because plaintiffs did not challenge this classification, the Court assumes that the names of returned Haitians are sufficiently personal in nature to satisfy the "similar file” requirement.
. The remaining pending motions in this case are DENIED without prejudice. Plaintiffs’ request for this Court to enjoin INS deportation proceedings is also DENIED. This Court has no authority to enjoin those proceedings under the FOIA or the Administrative Procedure Act, Title 5 U.S.C. sec. 704-706.
