Lead Opinion
ORDER
On September 5, 2017, the Acting Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security (“DHS”), Elaine Duke, announced the end of DHS’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals policy (“DACA”), effective March 5, 2018. Begun in 2012, DACA provided deferred action for certain individuals without lawful immigration status who had entered the United States as children. Several sets of plaintiffs sued to enjoin the rescission of DACA under the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”) and under various constitutional theories not relevant here.
The merits of those claims are not before us today. The only issue is a procedural one, raised by the government’s petition for a writ of mandamus. The government asks us to permanently stay the district court’s order of October 17, 2017, which required it to complete the administrative record.
One note at the outset: We are not unmindful of the separation-of-powers concerns raised by the government. However, the narrow question presented here simply does not implicate those concerns. We consider only whether DHS failed to comply with its obligation under the APA to provide a complete administrative record to the court—or, more precisely, whether the district court clearly erred in so holding. See Citizens to Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe,
1. “The writ of mandamus is a drastic and extraordinary remedy reserved only for really extraordinary cases.” In re Van Dusen,
Our discretion is guided by the five factors laid out in Bauman v. U.S. District Court,
2. The district court’s order is not clearly erroneous as a matter of law. APA § 706 provides that arbitrary and capricious review shall be based upon “the whole record or those parts of it cited by a party.” 5 U.S.C. § 706. The whole record “includes everything that was before the agency pertaining to the merits of its decision.” Portland Audubon,
At the initial case management conference before the district court, the government agreed to produce the complete administrative record on October 6, 2017. On that date, the government submitted as “the" administrative record fourteen documents comprising a mere 256 pages, all of which are publicly available on the internet. Indeed, all of the documents in the government’s proffered record had previously been included in filings in the district court in this case,' and 192 of its 256 pages consist of the Supreme Court, Fifth Circuit, and district court opinions in the Texas v. United States litigation.
Faced with -this sparse record, and on the plaintiffs’ motion (opposed by the government), the district court ordered the government to complete the record to include, among other things, all DACA-relat-ed materials considered by subordinates or other government personnel who then pro-vidéd written or verbal input directly to Acting Secretary Duke. The district court excluded from the record documents that it determined in camera are protected by privilege. Order at *8.
3. • The administrative record submitted by the government is entitled to a presumption of completeness which may be rebutted by clear evidence to /the contrary. Bar MK Ranches,
■ The district court identified several specific categories of materials that were likely considered by the Acting Secretary or those advising her, but which were not included in the government’s proffered record. For example, the record contains no materials from the Department of Justice or the White House—other than a one-page letter from Attorney General Jefferson B. Sessions—despite evidence that both bodies were involved in the decision to end DACA, including the President’s own press release taking credit for the decision.
At oral argument, the government took the position that because the Acting Secretary’s stated justification for her decision was litigation risk, materials unrelated to litigation risk need not be included in the administrative record. Simply put, this-.is not what the law dictates. The administrative record consists of all materials “considered by agency decision-makers,” Thompson,
It was therefore not clear' error for the district court to conclude that the presumption of regularity that attaches to the government’s proffered record is rebutted, and that ordering completion of the record was necessary and appropriate.
4. Nor did the district court clearly err in identifying the materials that should have been included within the scope of, the complete administrative record. The government challenges the decision to include materials considered by subordinates who then briefed the Acting Secretary, but this decision was not. clear legal error. We have held that the record properly includes “all documents and materials directly or indirectly considered by agency decision-makers,” Thompson,
Moreover, as noted in the district court’s October 17 order, a Department of Justice guidance document directs agencies compiling the administrative ’ record to “include all documents and materials prepared, reviewed, or received by agency personnel and used by or available to the decision-maker, even though the final decision-maker did not actually review or know about the documents and materials.” U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Env’t and Nat. Res. Div., Guidance to Federal Agencies on Compiling the Administrative Record 3 (Jan. 1999) (emphasis added). It further provides that the administrative record should include “communications the agency received from other agencies ... documents and materials that support or oppose the challenged agency decision ... minutes of meetings or transcripts thereof ... [and] memorializations of telephone conversations and meetings, such as a memorandum or handwritten notes.” Id. at 3-4. The district court’s October 17 order complies with this Department of Justice guidance; the government’s proffered record does not.
We recognize that such guidance is not binding; we nevertheless find it persuasive as a statement by the Department of Justice as to what should be included in a complete administrative record. We also note that the guidance document DHS failed to comply with here was inexplicably rescinded the very same day that- the government filed this petition for a writ of mandamus.
Given that the district court’s interpretation of Thompson is consistent with the rulings of other district 'courts, comports with the Department of Justice’s guidance on administrative records, and is not foreclosed by Ninth Circuit authority, we cannot say that the district court’s interpretation was clearly erroneous as a matter of law. See In re Swift Transp. Co.,
5. The district court’s order that the government complete the record with documents considered by former DHS Secretary John Kelly in the course of deciding not to terminate DACA in February 2017 also withstands mandamus scrutiny. This is not because of some freestanding requirement that all the materials underlying a previous decision on a similar subject are always part of the administrative record; rather, it simply recognizes that both decisions were part of an ongoing decision-making process regarding deferred action: In February 2017, Secretary Kelly ended other prioritization programs, but left DACA and DAPA in place; in June 2017, Secretary Kelly ended DAPA but left DACA intact; finally, in September 2017, Acting Secretary Duke ended DACA. The materials considered by Secretary Kelly in the course of deciding against ending DACA in February 2017 did not cease to be “before the agency” for purposes of the administrative record during that seven-month evolution in policy. Thompson,
6. Finally, the government makes two categorical arguments with respect to privilege.
Moreover, the reasoning of Cheney appears to be based substantially on the fact that the Vice President himself was the subject of discovery. See id. at 381,
Second, the government argues that it was clear legal error to require a privilege log and to evaluate documents allegedly protected by the deliberative process privilege on an individual basis, since “deliberative” materials are not properly within the administrative record at all. As noted above, the district court reviewed in camera each of the documents as to which the government asserted the-deliberative process privilege, and ordered the inclusion of only those documents that met the balancing standard laid out in FTC v. Warner Commc’ns, Inc.,
As the government acknowledges, we have not previously addressed whether as-sertedly deliberative documents must be logged and examined or whether the government may exclude them from the administrative record altogether. However, many district courts within this circuit have required a privilege log and in camera analysis of assertedly deliberative materials in APA cases. See, e.g., Ctr. for Food Safety v. Vilsack, No. 15-cv-01590,
We further note that the “deliberative” materials at issue in the main case cited by the government, San Luis Obispo Mothers for Peace v. U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Comm’n,
⅛ ⅜ ⅝
The district, court’s October 17, 2017 order represents a reasonable approach to managing ,the conduct and exigencies of this important litigation-exigencies which were dictated by the government’s March 5, 2018 termination date for DACA. In order for the government to prevail in its request for the extraordinary remedy of mandamus, we must be “left with a definite and firm conviction' that a mistake has been committed.” In re Bundy,
Accordingly; the stay of proceedings entered on October 24, 2017 is lifted.
PETITION DENIED;
Notes
. Issues regarding supplementation—as opposed to completion—of the record and the propriety of discovery on the non-APA claims, including the propriety of depositions, are not properly before us at this time, and we do not address them here.
. That lawsuit challenged a related but distinct deferred action policy, Deferred Action for.Parents of Americans and Lawful Permanent Residents, or DAPA. See United States v. Texas, — U.S. -,
. See Ü.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, Number of Form I-821D, Consideration of Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals, by Fiscal Year, Quarter, Intake, Biometrics and Case Status Fiscal Year 2012-2017 (June 30) (Sept: 20, 2017), goo.gl/UcGJww.
.The dissent agrees that “a policy shift of that magnitude presumably would not have been made without extensive study and analysis beforehand." Dissent at 1211.
. See Press Release, White House Office of the Press Secretary, President Donald J. Trump Restores Responsibility and the Rule of Law to Immigration (Sept. 5, 2017), https://www. whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/2017/09/05/ president-donald-j-trump-restores-responsibility-and-rule-law.
. We also note that the government has conceded in other cases that documents relied on by subordinates are properly part of the administrative record. See Oceana, Inc. v. Pritzker, No. 16-cv-06784-LHK (SVK),
. There is tension within our decisions about whether controlling Ninth Circuit precedent is a necessary precondition to finding clear error as a matter of law. Compare In re Swift Transp. Co.,
. The government also appears to challenge the district court’s individual privilege determinations, but it has provided little in the way of argument regarding the specific documents ordered disclosed by the district court. We are unable to conclude that the government has met its burden of showing that the district court’s privilege analysis was clearly erroneous as a matter of law.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I understand why the district court ordered the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to provide a more fulsome administrative record. The agency’s decision to rescind DACA will profoundly disrupt the lives of hundreds of thousands of people, and a policy shift of that magnitude presumably would not have been made without extensive study and analysis beforehand. But the desire for greater insight into how DHS arrived at its decision is not a legitimate basis for ordering the agency to expand the administrative record, unless the plaintiffs make a threshold factual showing justifying such action. They have not done so here. As a result, I think the district court’s order constitutes “a clear abuse of discretion,” and the burden imposed by the order is exceptional enough to warrant the extraordinary remedy of mandamus. Cheney v. United States District Court for the District of Columbia,
The district court’s order violates two well-settled principles governing judicial review of agency action under the Administrative Procedure Act. The first is that a court ordinarily conducts its review “based on the record the agency presents to the reviewing court.” Florida Power & Light Co. v. Lorian,
The second principle is that documents reflecting an agency’s internal deliberative processes are ordinarily not part of the administrative record. See In re Subpoena Duces Tecum Served on the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency,
There are exceptions to these general rules. First, expansion of the record may be required when the agency fails to make formal findings and thus leaves the reviewing court unable to discern the agency’s reasons for taking the action that it did. See Public Power Council v. Johnson,
The plaintiffs have not made the showing necessary to trigger either of the latter two exceptions. They have not shown any likelihood that factual information considered by the Acting Secretary and relevant to her decision has been omitted from the record. Indeed, it would be implausible to think that any such material exists, given the nature of the reason asserted by the Acting Secretary for rescinding DACA. Concern over the program’s vulnerability to legal challenge would rest not on factual information but on the legal analysis of lawyers. Documents analyzing DACA’s potential legal infirmities, prepared to assist the Acting Secretary in assessing the gravity of the litigation risk involved, fall squarely within the category of deliberative process materials mentioned above. They are presumptively outside the scope of what must be included in the administrative record (and may be privileged in any event).
Nor have the plaintiffs attempted at this stage of the case to show bad faith or improper behavior on the part of the Acting Secretary. To be sure, they assert in their brief that they suspect her stated reason for rescinding DACA is pretextual. But bare assertions of that sort fall far short of the showing needed to overcome the presumption that agency decision-makers have acted for the reasons they’ve given.
Because the plaintiffs have failed to establish that any of these exceptions apply, I don’t think the district court’s order can stand. The court directed DHS to include in the administrative record all DACA-related “emails, letters, memoranda, notes, media items, opinions, and other materials” considered by the Acting Secretary, and all such materials considered by any other government official—including officials from the Department of Justice and the White House—who provided the Acting Secretary with written or verbal input on the decision to rescind DACA. The court further expanded the record to include “all comments and questions propounded by Acting Secretary Duke to ad-visors or subordinates or others regarding the actual or potential rescission of DACA and their responses.”
In my view, the district court exceeded the scope of its lawful authority to expand the administrative record. The order sweeps far beyond materials related to the sole reason given for rescinding DACA— its supposed unlawfulness and vulnerability to legal challenge. The order requires the inclusion of all documents mentioning DACA-related issues of any sort, and is overbroad for that reason alone. But even if the order had been limited to documents analyzing the risk that DACA might be invalidated, those materials are deliberative in character and thus could not be made part of the administrative record absent a showing of bad faith or improper behavior. And to the extent the order will compel the production of communications between the Acting Secretary and high-level officials in the White House—including, potentially, the President himself—the order raises the same sensitive separation-of-powers' concerns that made mandamus relief appropriate in Cheney. See
These departures from settled principles are enough to establish that the district court’s order is “clearly erroneous as a matter of law,” which is the most important of the factors we consider when deciding whether to grant mandamus relief. In re Bundy,
This strikes me as a classic case in which mandamus relief is warranted, and I would therefore grant the writ.
