MEMORANDUM
At issue in this Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) ease is whether the Department of Energy (DOE) has adequately responded to plaintiffs request for documents that relate to a DOE study of regional petroleum needs in the Northeastern United States. Specifically, plaintiff questions the adequacy of DOE’s search for responsive documents. Plaintiff also challenges DOE’s assertion of the deliberative process privilege, asserting that DOE has waived the privilege by disclosing its deliberations to members of the petroleum industry. Because I find that DOE performed a reasonable search for the requested documents and that plaintiff has not produced evidence of DOE’s disclosure of relevant materials, DOE’s motion for summary judgment will be granted.
Background
Plaintiff submitted a request on July 9, 1997 seeking “all records — draft reports, memoranda, analyses,' meeting minutes, briefing documents, e-mail messages, etc. pertaining to a report to Congress on the costs and benefits of a regional petroleum product reserve [RPPR Study].” DOE responded by letter on September 5; 1997, stating that the RPPR Study was still under review, and that any responsive documents were therefore predecisional, deliberative documents that need not be produced. 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(5).
Unsatisfied with these results, plaintiff requested that DOE perform an additional search. DOE did so, and also performed an additional review of the withheld documents to determine whether any of them could be released. The additional review turned up two documents. DOE released some of the previously withheld materials, even though the RPPR Study had not yet been completed.
Plaintiff then initiated this suit. DOE answered, produced an index of the documents withheld and the privileges claimed,
see. Vaughn v. Rosen,
Plaintiff concedes that the withheld docu.ments are both pre-decisional and deliberative and focuses his challenge on the adequacy of the DOE search and on his assertion that. the deliberative process privilege has been waived. In support of the first point, he appends 14 documents to his opposition which he believes to be responsive and within the possession of DOE but which were neither listed in DOE’s Vaughn index nor released to him. In support of the second point, he appends a document memorializing a meeting about the RPPR Stúd'y between a DOE subcontractor and representatives of the petroleum industry.
DOE replies that most of the documents appended to plaintiffs opposition are in fact non-responsive to his FOIA request. If it missed a few documents in its search, DOE argues, its affidavits still establish that the search was reasonable and adequate. As for the meeting memorandum, DOE argues, it does not reveal what, if any, privileged information was .disclosed to DOE outsiders, and it does not show that the disclosures, if any, were authorized by DOE.
Analysis
1. Adequacy of search
Where the adequacy of an agency’s search for documents under FOIA is chai-
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lenged, “the issue to be resolved is not whether there might exist any other documents possibly responsive to the request, but rather whether the
search
for those documents was
adequate.” Weisberg v. United States Department of Justice,
Plaintiff does not attack the adequacy of defendant’s affidavits, resting his opposition instead upon “copies of or references to documents in the possession of [DOE] which are relevant to [plaintiffs] FOIA request but which have not been listed on [DOE’s] ‘Vaughn Index.’” Declaration of Edwin S. Rothschild, ¶ 2, appended to Opp. to Mot. for Summ. Judg.
Of the fourteen such documents plaintiff identifies as “relevant,” eleven do not mention or specifically discuss the RPPR Study.
See Steinberg v. United States Department of Justice,
Thus, plaintiff has identified at most two responsive documents which may be in DOE’s possession but were neither turned over to him nor listed in the Vaughn index. Such a showing demonstrates that the government’s search was not perfect. Perfection, however, is not the standard, and the government’s failure to locate two responsive documents does not defeat the government’s showing — which is not otherwise challenged — that its search was adequate.
2. Waiver of deliberative process privilege
Plaintiffs argument that DOE waived its deliberative process privilege rests upon a memorandum from Asa Janey to Zeta Rosenberg, dated June 9, 1997, and captioned “Feedback from API.” Plaintiff asserts that this memorandum discusses a meeting in which Mr. Janey, the DOE subcontractor responsible for preparing the RPPR Study cost-benefit analysis, revealed information about DOE’s deliberative process in conducting the RPPR Study to members of the American Petroleum Institute (API).
DOE denies that there has been a waiver, arguing that the document does not identify any specific information about its deliberative process that was revealed during the meeting.
2
See Public Citizen v. Department of State,
An appropriate order accompanies this memorandum.
ORDER
Upon consideration of defendant’s motion for summary judgment, the opposition thereto, the entire record, and for the reasons stated in the accompanying memorandum, it is this 1st day of May, 1998,
ORDERED that defendant’s motion for summary judgment [# 13] is Granted.
Notes
. Plaintiff's exhibit 1, a memorandum to the Secretary of Energy from Patricia Godley dated October 9, 1996, labeled "REVISED DRAFT,” and captioned “Regional Petroleum Product Reserves," is clearly an earlier version of the entry in the Vaughn index dated October 11, 1996, and summarized as a "Memorandum for the Secretary from Patricia Fry Godley, Assistant Secretary for Fossil Energy, entitled Response on [sic] Congressman Kennedy on a Regional Petroleum Product Reserve (PPPR) [sic] for heating oil."
. DOE also asserts that Mr. Janey was not a DOE employee, but a subcontractor, and that plaintiff has failed to show that any disclosure he may have made was authorized by DOE. Because I find that plaintiff has failed to present sufficient evidence of waiver, the question of authorization need not be resolved.
. Plaintiff asserts that the Janey memorandum creates a disputed issue of material fact requiring a trial. While the government of course retains the burden of
persuasion
on its assertion of privilege,
see Washington Post Co. v. U.S. Dept, of Justice,
