Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge GARLAND.
The plaintiffs brought this action against the Department of Justice under the Freedom of Information Act, seeking to obtain documents relating to the government’s use of cell phone location data in criminal prosecutions. The district court directed the release of certain specified documents and upheld the Department’s decision to withhold others. We affirm the court’s order requiring the release of the specified documents. Because there are too many factual uncertainties regarding the remaining documents, we vacate the balance of the court’s decision and remand the case for further development of the record.
I
Cell phones generate several types of data that can be used to track their users’ past or present locations with various degrees of precision. 1 Concerned by reports that federal law enforcement agencies were obtaining these data from telecommunications companies without a judicial determination of probable cause, 2 the American Civil Liberties Union and the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation (ACLU) filed Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests with the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Executive Office for United States Attorneys, seeking information relating to the use of warrantless cell phone tracking by certain U.S. Attorneys’ Offices. As is relevant to this appeal, the plaintiffs requested records relating to:
*4 [1] The case name, docket number, and court of all criminal prosecutions, current or past, of individuals who were tracked using mobile location data, where the government did not first secure a warrant based on probable cause for such data, [and]
[2] Policies, procedures, and practices followed to obtain mobile phone location information for law enforcement purposes.
App. 20, 28.
On July 1, 2008, the plaintiffs brought suit against the Department of Justice (DOJ) to compel production of the requested records. See FOIA, 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(B). Thereafter, the Department agreed to conduct a search for the requested case names, docket numbers, and courts (“docket information”). It did this by first asking the relevant U.S. Attorneys’ Offices to identify applications granted by judges (or magistrate judges), on or after September 12, 2001, to permit the government to obtain cell phone location data from telecommunications companies, where the judge did not make a determination of probable cause. It then asked those offices to provide the docket information for any case in which an individual was prosecuted after such an application was granted. This inquiry generated a list of docket information for 255 criminal prosecutions. Def.’s Statement of Material Facts Not in Dispute at 3^1 (App.37-38). The Department then withheld the list from disclosure, asserting that it fell within FOIA Exemptions 6 and 7(C). See 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(6), (7)(C). 3
The Justice Department also produced a
Vaughn
index describing documents responsive to the plaintiffs’ request for “policies, procedures, and practices,” and invoking various FOIA exemptions to justify the redaction or withholding of some of those documents.
See Vaughn v. Rosen,
The parties filed cross motions for summary judgment. In assessing the Justice Department’s invocation of Exemptions 6 and 7(C), the district court began by “allocating] a greater privacy interest to persons who were acquitted, or whose cases were dismissed or sealed (and remain under seal), and a considerably lesser privacy interest to persons who were convicted, or who entered public guilty pleas.”
ACLU v. Dep’t of Justice,
With respect to the two government applications for cell phone data, the court concluded that the Department had properly withheld the case name and docket numbers under Exemption 7(C). In light of the plaintiffs’ concession that any personally identifiable information about surveillance targets who had not yet been prosecuted could be redacted from the case name, the court refused to order the “meaningless production” of a case name in which “nothing would be left but variants of the phrase ‘In re: Application for Cell Site Authority.’ ” Id. at 166-67. The court also rejected the plaintiffs’ argument that, because such applications are invariably filed under seal, disclosure of the applications’ docket numbers would not reveal any personally identifying information. The court found that disclosure “could reveal surveillance targets yet to be prosecuted, ... either because the cases are not actually sealed, or because the plaintiffs’ promised motion to unseal could be successful.” Id. at 167.
Both parties appeal. The Justice Department challenges the portion of the district court’s decision directing it to release docket information in prosecutions of persons who were convicted or entered public guilty pleas. The plaintiffs challenge the portion of the decision denying their request to require the production of docket information in prosecutions of persons who were acquitted, or whose cases were dismissed or sealed (and remain under seal). The plaintiffs also challenge the court’s denial of their request to require disclosure of the case name in the “Draft Application” (Document 22), and the docket numbers in both that document and the “Template Application” (Document 29).
II
We review the district court’s disposition on summary judgment
de novo. See Students Against Genocide v. Dep’t of State,
FOIA was intended “to pierce the veil of administrative secrecy and to open agency action to the light of public scrutiny.”
Dep’t of the Air Force v. Rose,
*6
FOIA Exemptions 6 and 7(C) seek to protect the privacy of individuals identified in certain agency records. Under Exemption 6, “personnel and medical files and similar files” may be withheld if disclosure “would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(6). Under Exemption 7(C), “records or information compiled for law enforcement purposes” may be withheld “to the extent that” disclosure “could reasonably be expected to constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(7)(C). Although the Justice Department relied on both exemptions in the district court, we need only consider whether it properly invoked Exemption 7(C). The plaintiffs concede that the requested records are subject to that exemption because they are “records compiled for law enforcement purposes.”
See ACLU,
In deciding whether the release of particular information constitutes an “unwarranted” invasion of privacy under Exemption 7(C), we “must balance the public interest in disclosure against the [privacy] interest Congress intended the Exemption to protect.”
U.S. Dep’t of Justice v. Reporters Comm. for Freedom of the Press,
In this Part, we examine the material the district court ordered the Justice Department to disclose: docket information (case name, docket number, and court) from criminal cases in which the government prosecuted individuals after judges granted applications for cell phone location data without a determination of probable cause, and in which those individuals were subsequently convicted or entered public guilty pleas. In Subpart A we consider the privacy interest and in Subpart B the public interest attendant to disclosure. In Part III, we consider the material that the district court declined to order the Department to disclose.
A
1. The first question we must ask is whether there is any privacy interest at stake here. In a given case, after all, the disclosure of the docket number, case name, and court may alone reveal little or nothing about an individual: the number and court plainly would not, and although the case name might (if it included more than just a relatively common last name), *7 by itself it would disclose neither the charges nor the disposition. Nonetheless, in evaluating the privacy impact of the release of information, the courts have taken into consideration potential derivative uses of that information. 6 And here, it would take little work for an interested person to use the docket information on the government’s list to look up the underlying case files in the public records of the courts, and therein find the information of interest. Although this can be done manually, it can also be readily accomplished using the federal court system’s own public-access database, Public Access to Court Electronic Records (PACER), 7 or private databases like Westlaw or LexisNexis. Indeed, the plaintiffs have made clear that they intend to use the docket information in this way. ACLU Reply Br. 23-24.
There is also the question of just how much of a privacy interest a defendant retains regarding the facts of his or her conviction or public guilty plea. We tend to agree with the district court that the disclosure of convictions and public pleas is
at the lower end of the privacy spectrum. The parties agree as well.
See
ACLU Reply Br. 11; DOJ Br. 19. This is not to say that a convicted defendant has
no
privacy interest in the facts of his conviction. As the government points out, disclosure of a criminal conviction may be “embarrassing [and] stigmatizing,” and may endanger one’s prospects “for successful reintegration into the community.” DOJ Br. 20-21, 26. But it is to say that those interests are weaker than for individuals who have been acquitted or whose cases have been dismissed.
Accord
ACLU Reply Br. 11; DOJ Br. 19. And they are plainly substantially weaker than the privacy interests of individuals who have been investigated but never publicly charged at all.
See Fund for Constitutional Gov’t v. Nat’l Archives & Records Serv.,
*8
Nonetheless, there is no real dispute that the scope of Exemption 7(C) can extend even to convictions and public pleas. In
U.S. Department of Justice v. Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press,
the Supreme Court held that release of the contents of an FBI “rap sheet” — which may have included a record of the subject’s convictions — constituted an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy under FOIA Exemption 7(C).
See
2. The privacy interests at stake in this case, however, are considerably weaker than those at issue in
Reporters Committee.
The law enforcement records at issue there were rap sheets that revealed the subjects’ “date of birth and physical characteristics, as well as a history of arrests, charges, convictions, and incarcerations” in every jurisdiction in the country.
Here, the information sought is quite different. As already noted, the list alone contains little that is personal. But even if the docket information is used to find the underlying proceedings, for any particular individual it most likely would reveal only a single prosecution, rather than a comprehensive scorecard of the person’s entire criminal history.
9
It would disclose only information concerning a conviction or plea; it would not disclose mere charges or arrests. It would disclose only information that has already been the subject of a public proceeding (either a trial or public guilty plea), rather than actions (like arrests) that may not have taken place in public. It would disclose only information that is available in public records, which post-indictment filings always are and arrests may not be.
Cf. Reporters Comm.,
The fact that information about these proceedings is readily available to the public reduces further still the incursion on privacy resulting from disclosure. In
Reporters Committee,
the Court recognized that “the extent of the protection accorded a privacy right at common law rested in part on the degree of dissemination of the allegedly private fact,” and that “information may be classified as ‘private’ if it is ... not freely available to the public.”
Id.
at 763-64,
3. Of course, information that is technically public may be “practicably] obscur[e].”
Reporters Comm.,
In
Reporters Committee,
the Court emphasized that there is an important “distinction, in terms of personal privacy, between scattered disclosure of the bits of information contained in a rap sheet and revelation of the rap sheet as a whole.”
Id.
at 764,
In this case, however, disclosure will reveal only the “bits,” not the “whole.” As already discussed, the most that disclosure is likely to lead to is the fact of a single conviction, not a comprehensive scorecard of a person’s entire criminal history across multiple jurisdictions. Nor is there a web of statutory or regulatory policies obscuring that information, nor much expense nor logistical difficulty in gathering it. To the contrary, computerized government services like PACER make it possible to access court filings concerning any federal defendant from the comfort of one’s home or office, quite unlike the “diligent search of courthouse files, county archives, and local police stations throughout the country” that a citizen would have had to undertake to replicate the contents of a rap sheet,
Reporters Comm.,
We also disagree with the Department’s suggestion that the disclosures sought here will draw renewed attention to individuals in a way that the initial disclosures did not. It is little more than speculation to suggest that friends or associates who did not learn of a conviction at the time it occurred (whether through press accounts, press releases, or other means) will hear of it for the first time merely because the Justice Department releases a list of docket numbers, courts, and case names.
See Norton,
The Justice Department maintains that the information the plaintiffs seek is practically obscure because they cannot identify the prosecutions in which they are interested without the government’s assistance. But all that is practically obscure is information regarding the government’s policy — that is, which prosecutions involve the Department’s use of warrantless cell phone tracking, and what the underlying records show about that policy. What is not obscure is information that raises issues of personal privacy — that is, the fact that particular individuals have been convicted of or pled guilty to crimes. Reporters Committee was concerned solely about the latter; any interest in keeping the government’s own policies obscure runs directly counter to FOIA’s central purpose.
4. Finally, the Department calls our attention to a derivative use of the requested material that it regards as particularly harmful to privacy interests: the plaintiffs’ suggestion that they may contact convicted “defendants and/or their counsel to determine whether [the] defendants ever learned that they were the targets of warrantless cell phone tracking.” ACLU Reply Br. 24. There is no doubt that the courts have held that the risk of unwanted contact following a FOIA disclosure is a privacy interest that must be weighed in the privacy interest/public interest balance.
See Dep’t of Defense v. FLRA
5. In sum, although the disclosure at issue here is sufficient to warrant consideration under Exemption 7(C) because it would compromise more than a de minimis privacy interest, it would not compromise much more. 17 Neither the specific list actually at issue, nor information that might be derived from the docket information on that list, will disclose personal information that is not already publicly available and readily accessible to anyone who might be interested in it. Nor will disclosure under FOIA make that information any more accessible than it already is through publicly available computerized databases. At most, it will simply provide one more place in which a computerized search will find the same person’s name and conviction— and even that is only on the assumption that someone takes the docket information from the list, looks up the underlying cases, and then puts that underlying information on the internet.
B
On the other side of the balance, we find a significant public interest in disclosure, something altogether absent in
Reporters Committee.
Because the disclosure of private citizens’ criminal histories “reveals little or nothing about [the] agency’s own conduct,” and because that was all that was at issue in
Reporters Committee,
the “public interest in disclosure [was] at its nadir” in that case.
Reporters Comm.,
1. The use of and justification for warrantless cell phone tracking is a topic of considerable public interest: it has received widespread media attention
18
and has been a focus of inquiry in several
*13
congressional hearings considering, among other things, whether the Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986, Pub.L. No. 99-508, 100 Stat. 1848 (1986), should be revised either to limit or to facilitate the practice.
19
Courts are divided as to whether the government must show probable cause before it can obtain cell phone location data,
20
as well as on related questions regarding warrantless GPS surveillance.
21
The Supreme Court has recently granted certiorari to address the GPS issue.
See United States v. Jones,
— U.S.-,
The disclosure sought by the plaintiffs would inform this ongoing public policy discussion by shedding light on the scope and effectiveness of cell phone tracking as a law enforcement tool. It would, for example, provide information about the kinds of crimes the government uses cell phone tracking data to investigate. As the plain *14 tiffs note, with respect to wiretapping Congress has balanced privacy interests with law enforcement needs by permitting the government to use that technique for only the more serious offenses, see 18 U.S.C. § 2516, and the plaintiffs (and others) may decide to argue for similar legislation to govern cell phone tracking. Disclosure would also provide information regarding how often prosecutions against people who have been tracked are successful, thus shedding some light on the efficacy of the technique and whether pursuing it is worthwhile in light of the privacy implications. Information from suppression hearings in these cases could provide further insight regarding the efficacy of the technique by revealing whether courts suppress its fruits, and would disclose the standard or standards the government uses to justify warrantless tracking. Information from suppression hearings would also provide facts regarding the duration of tracking and the quality of tracking data, facts that would inform the public discussion concerning the intrusiveness of this investigative tool.
There are obviously many caveats about the value of the information that might be derived from the requested disclosure. For example, defendants may have been charged with lesser offenses than the ones upon which the tracking was originally predicated, thus making it appear that the technique was used for less serious crimes than was actually the case. And for a host of other reasons, the sample of prosecutions at issue here may be unrepresentative of the Justice Department’s overall practice. But the fact that the data will not be perfect does not mean that there is no public interest in their disclosure.
Nor are we persuaded by the government’s contention that the interest in informing the public discussion is deficient because the plaintiffs have insufficient evidence that disclosure will show government wrongdoing. Whether the government’s tracking policy is legal or illegal, proper or improper, is irrelevant to this case. It is true that, where “the public interest being asserted is to show that responsible officials acted negligently or otherwise improperly in the performance of their duties, the requester must establish more than a bare suspicion in order to obtain disclosure.”
Favish,
Finally, the Justice Department contends that the incremental contribution of disclosure to the public interest is negligible “given the extensive public attention that this issue is already receiving.” DOJ Br. 32. This is nothing more than a Catch-22 argument: if public attention were not already focused, the government would argue that shows there is no public interest in disclosure; because there is public attention, it argues that no more is needed. 23 But there is no doubt that much *15 of the information the plaintiffs seek to develop from the FOIA disclosure here— the connection between tracking applications and actual prosecutions — is not currently in the public domain. For the reasons stated above, there is also no doubt that the information interested parties can derive from that connection will yield further information about the government’s policy that is not now readily available. The fact that the public already has some information does not mean that more will not advance the public interest.
2. The Department protests that, because any benefit to the public interest accrues from derivative use of the docket information and not from that information itself, that benefit cannot be considered as part of the public interest analysis. And it is true that the case names and docket numbers standing alone generate no public benefit; only through derivative uses can information valuable to the public be obtained. But this court takes derivative uses into account in evaluating the impact of disclosure on the public interest, 24 just as both this court and the Supreme Court do in evaluating the impact of disclosure on personal privacy. 25
The government claims that “the Supreme Court has questioned but not decided whether ... a ‘derivative use’ theory is valid.” DOJ Br. 38 n. 4 (citing
Ray,
*16
Moreover, the derivative use issue gives the Justice Department a Catch-22 headache of its own. The Department correctly notes that Justice Scalia, in his opinion concurring in the judgment in
Ray,
“opined that such ‘derivative use’ ‘to establish a public interest’ is improper under FOIA.” DOJ Br. 38 n. 4 (quoting
Ray,
Accordingly, even under the authority the government cites, if we may not consider derivative use in determining the impact of disclosure on the public interest side, we also may not consider it in determining disclosure’s impact on privacy interests. And without derivative use, the Department would fail to meet the threshold for invoking Exemption 7(C) at all. If we do not consider the possibility that the plaintiffs or others will follow the path from the list of docket information to the underlying court records, the only question left is whether there is any privacy interest in a list of docket numbers, case names, and courts. Of these, only uncommon names (e.g., United States v. Merrick Garland, rather than United States v. John Smith) would have any chance at all of identifying particular individuals, and the district court could eliminate even that possibility by redacting the names. That would still leave the plaintiffs with all they need (the docket number and court) to pursue their planned derivative use, but it would extinguish any privacy interest. And if there is no privacy interest, Exemption 7(C) simply does not apply. Perhaps for this reason, the Department acknowledged at oral argument that, if we consider derivative use for evaluating privacy concerns, we must do the same for the public interest. See Oral Arg. Recording 27:16-:37.
In sum, because disclosure of the information considered in this Part would “shed[] light on [the government’s] performance of its statutory duties,” it “falls squarely within [FOIA’s] statutory purpose.”
Reporters Comm.,
*17 III
In this Part, we consider the plaintiffs’ challenge to the district court’s refusal to direct the government to produce: (A) the list of docket information for criminal cases in which the defendants were acquitted, or for cases that were dismissed or sealed (and remain under seal); and (B) the case name in the “Draft Application” (Document 22), and the docket numbers in both that document and the “Template Application” (Document 29). As to both, we conclude that a remand for further development of the record is in order.
A
In balancing the public and private interests implicated by disclosure of the Department’s list of docket information, the district court found dispositive the distinction between indictments resulting in convictions or guilty pleas, and those resulting in acquittals or dismissals, or cases that remain sealed. As we noted in Part II, this distinction makes some intuitive sense, as both parties agree that the disclosure of information regarding acquittals, dismissal of charges, or sealed cases raises greater privacy concerns than the disclosure of information regarding public convictions or public pleas. See ACLU Reply Br. 11; DOJ Br. 19; Oral Arg. Recording 3 8:10 (agreement by plaintiffs’ counsel that there is a distinction between the privacy interest implicated by disclosure of convictions and public guilty pleas and that implicated by disclosure of acquittals and dismissals). But whether that is enough of a distinction to justify withholding under Exemption 7(C) is a harder question. It is a question we need not answer today.
The plaintiffs acknowledge that:
This case is in an odd posture because neither party argued below that the district court should split the difference by withholding some docket information and disclosing other docket information. The district court sua sponte devised its distinction between cases ending in conviction or guilty pleas and cases resulting in acquittal or dismissal or that remain sealed.
ACLU Reply Br. 3 n. 3. As a consequence, the record does not reveal whether there are any cases that fall into the latter category. At oral argument, neither party could tell us whether there are any, and the Justice Department acknowledged that it is possible there are none. See Oral Arg. Recording 22:10.
Rather than attempt to resolve a question that may turn out to be purely academic, we conclude that the better course is to vacate this portion of the district court’s decision and remand the case for that court to determine whether any of the docket numbers refer to cases in which the defendants were acquitted, or to cases that were dismissed or sealed (and remain sealed). The court may develop this information by requiring affidavits of the government or additional entries in the government’s Vaughn index. See Oral Arg. Recording 22:57 (acknowledgment by government counsel that the district court may resolve the question by insisting on a more detailed Vaughn index that would indicate the status of the cases). Needless to say, if there are no such cases, that will resolve this particular request.
B
The plaintiffs also seek disclosure of the docket number and case name (with personally identifiable information redacted) of one application to engage in warrantless cell phone tracking that the government withheld in full (Document 22), and the docket number of another application that the government produced in partially redacted form (Document 29). The plaintiffs intend to use this information to locate the
*18
applications and the underlying case files, and to move to unseal them if they are currently sealed. ACLU Br. 32. The district court was concerned that, among other things, this disclosure “could reveal surveillance targets yet to be prosecuted, ... either because the cases are not actually sealed, or because the plaintiffs’ promised motion to unseal could be successful.”
ACLU,
Once again, the record is inadequate to resolve this issue. The
Vaughn
index labels the documents as, respectively, a “Draft Application” and a “Template Application,” which suggests they are internal drafts containing information that may be covered by the deliberative-process or work-product privileges cognizable under FOIA Exemption 5, 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(5).
See Rockwell Int’l Corp. v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice,
The plaintiffs’ appellate briefs do not argue for disclosure of documents that are merely drafts or templates. They ask only for disclosure of docket information in “cases in which prosecutors filed an application for warrantless cell phone location tracking.” ACLU Br. 12 (emphasis added). Accordingly, if neither Document 22 nor Document 29 fits that description, this issue, too, will resolve itself.
But even if the applications were filed, we do not know whether they relate to pre-indictment investigations or to cases that have already been indicted. Nor do we know whether, even if the latter, there are still ongoing investigations regarding other targets of the applications. Indeed, the district court worried that disclosure could “lead to release of personally identifiable information about surveillance targets who have yet to be prosecuted.”
ACLU,
Nor do we know whether, if filed, the applications are currently under seal.
See
ACLU Reply Br. 35 (“Plaintiffs have no way of determining whether the docket numbers correspond to sealed cases or whether the targets were indicted.”). The district court thought there was a possibility that “the cases are not actually sealed.”
ACLU,
In their reply brief, the plaintiffs suggest that “[i]f anything hinges on the characterization of the record, this Court should remand to the district court for consideration in the first instance.” ACLU Reply Br. 35 n. 12. Because we think quite a lot may hinge on the record, we accept this suggestion. We will vacate and remand this portion of the district court’s decision as well, and direct the court to determine the status of the two withheld documents with respect to the distinctions described above. The court may develop this information by requiring affidavits of the government or additional entries in the
Vaughn
index, or by in camera examination of the underlying documents.
See Mays v. DEA,
IV
One final note. At oral argument, Justice Department counsel suggested that, rather than producing the requested documents, the Department might be able to provide the plaintiffs with more of the data they are really interested in without disclosing information that could intrude upon personal privacy. This might include, counsel suggested, information such as the nature of the charges in all 255 cases on the government’s list, whether suppression motions were filed in those cases, and the outcome of both the motions and the prosecutions. See Oral Arg. Recording 22:15-:33; 29:46-31:28.
This is an interesting offer, in part because it could require the Department to provide certain information — by using the docket information and PACER to find the underlying documents, and then extracting information from those documents and creating a summary document — that the plaintiffs might not be able to obtain through a FOIA request.
See Forsham v. Harris,
V
We affirm that portion of the district court’s decision directing disclosure of docket information from criminal cases in which the government prosecuted individuals after judges granted applications for cell phone location data without determining probable cause, and in which those individuals were ultimately convicted or *20 entered public guilty pleas. We vacate and remand the remainder of the district court’s decision for that court to develop the factual information discussed in Part III above and, thereafter, to reconsider the appropriate disposition of the remaining aspects of the case.
So ordered.
Notes
. For descriptions of the different kinds of data available, see
In re Application of U.S. for an Order Directing Provider of Elec. Commc’n Serv. to Disclose Records to Gov't,
. When the government wants to track an individual's location through his or her cell phone, it submits an application to a judge (usually a magistrate judge) seeking an order compelling a telecommunications company to provide access to the location data. The plaintiffs contend that "[pjrosecutors appear to routinely take the view that the government can obtain cell site location information without a warrant, by simply presenting to a magistrate 'specific and articulable facts showing ... reasonable grounds to believe that ... the records or other information sought, are relevant and material to an ongoing criminal investigation.' " ACLU Br. 9 (quoting
In re Application of U.S. for an Order for Disclosure of Telecomms. Records & Authorizing Use of Pen Register & Trap & Trace,
. Although FOIA only requires a government agency to disclose "agency records improperly withheld,” 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(B), and does not "impose[ ] [any] duty on the agency to create records,”
Forsham v. Harris,
. Other documents listed in the index, or portions thereof, were either produced to the plaintiffs' satisfaction before the district court ruled,
see ACLU v. Dep’t of Justice,
. As a consequence, we do not address the parties’ dueling post-argument letters discussing the manner in which the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Milner, see
. See Dep’t of Defense v. FLRA,
In virtually every case in which a privacy concern is implicated, someone must take steps after the initial disclosure in order to bring about the untoward effect. Disclosure does not, literally by itself, constitute a harm; it is the requester’s (or another’s) reaction to the disclosure that can sting. This is only more obvious where disclosure of the information invades someone’s privacy not because it is embarrassing but because it invites unwanted intrusions. Where there is a substantial probability that disclosure will cause an interference with personal privacy, it matters not that there may be two or three links in the causal chain.
. PACER, provided by the federal judiciary, "is an electronic public access service that allows users to obtain case and docket information from [all] federal appellate, district and bankruptcy courts.” PACER: Public Access to Court Electronic Records, http://www. pacer.gov.
. The Justice Department correctly notes this court has held that disclosure of records revealing that an individual was involved or mentioned in a law enforcement investigation implicates a significant privacy interest.
See Schrecker v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice,
. Disclosure would reveal more than one prosecution only if there were multiple prosecutions of the same individual among the 255 prosecutions listed. The Justice Department has not suggested that is the case.
. The Justice Department insists that these distinctions are irrelevant. After all, it notes, "the information that the Court held had been properly protected” in
Reporters Committee
"related to a single individual, Charles Medico, who may or may not have actually been prosecuted,” and "nowhere did the Court suggest that ‘rap sheets’ of individuals who had only been prosecuted on one occasion could not be withheld.” DOJ Br. 24-25. But
Reporters Committee
considered rap sheets as "a categorical matter” — "without regard to individual circumstances” — and barred disclosure in the absence of a cognizable public interest because of "the practical obscurity” of their contents.
. The Justice Department compiled the list of docket information by asking U.S. Attorneys’ Offices about applications for location data that were granted after September 12, 2001. Def.'s Statement of Material Facts Not in Dispute at 3 (App.37); see Oral Arg. Recording 23:48-24:04. Since the docket information at issue here comes only from cases that subsequently led to indictments, and hence that had to have been filed after that date, and then only when the indictments led to pleas or convictions, which had to have come later still, it is likely that the information at issue relates to cases that are substantially less than ten years old.
. The Justice Department insists that "the fact that the government voluntarily chooses to inform the public of certain prosecutorial activities that it deems newsworthy does not mean that it is insensitive to the FOIA privacy interests of the individuals it prosecutes.” DOJ Reply Br. 4. But no one is questioning the government’s sensitivity. We point out the Department’s press release practice not to pass judgment on it, but to show that it has further diminished whatever practical obscurity there might have been with respect to the names of indicted and convicted individuals.
. Google searches for variations of the phrase “the United States Attorney ... announced the indictment of,” restricted to the last ten years, yield thousands of results. The same is true of searches substituting "conviction" or "guilty plea” for “indictment." A review of the first twenty pages of results for each such search shows that they consist primarily of news reports or press releases that identify the names and charged offenses of indicted or convicted individuals.
. This is not to discount the possibility that a FOIA request might be worded in such a way as to generate a list of convictions that, because of particularly stigmatic associations or otherwise, could draw special attention to the names on the list and so create heightened privacy concerns. But the government has made no such argument with respect to the list of docket information at issue in this case.
.
See Dep't of Defense v. FLRA,
Department of State v. Ray,
. Dep’t of Defense v. FLRA,
.
Cf. Multi Ag Media, LLC v. Dep’t of Agric.,
. See, e.g., Adam Cohen, What Your Cell Phone Could Be Telling the Government, Time, Sept. 15, 2010; Editorial, Should Police Use Your Cellphone to Track You?, Denver Post, June 27, 2010, at D3; PBS Newshour: With *13 Location-Tracking Technology, Cell Users Paying Price of Privacy (television broadcast June 22, 2010), transcript available at http://www. pbs.org/newshour/bb/science/an-junelO/cell_ 06-22.html; Steve Chapman, Big Brother in Your Cell, Chi. Trib., Apr. 1, 2010, at 17; Miguel Helft, Technology Coalition Seeks Stronger Privacy Laws, N.Y. Times, Mar. 31, 2010, at Bl; Michael Isikoff, The Snitch in Your Pocket, Newsweek, Mar. 1, 2010, at 40; Ellen Nakashima, Judges Urge Standard Cellphone-Tracking Policy, Wash. Post, Nov. 14, 2008; Ellen Nakashima, Cellphone Tracking Powers on Request, Wash. Post, Nov. 23, 2007, at Al; Orin Kerr, Applying the Mosaic Theory of the Fourth Amendment to Disclosure of Stored Records, The Volokh Conspiracy (Apr. 5, 2011, 4:54 PM), http://volokh.com/2011/04/ 05/.
. See, e.g., The Electronic Communications Privacy Act: Promoting Security and Protecting Privacy in the Digital Age: Hearing Before the S. Judiciary Comm., 111th Cong. (2010); ECPA Reform and the Revolution in Location Based Technologies and Services: Hearing Before the Subcomm. on the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties of the H. Comm, on the Judiciary, 111th Cong. (2010); The Collection and Use of Location Information for Commercial Proposes: Hearing Before the Sub-comm. on Commerce, Trade, and Consumer Protection and the Subcomm. on Commc’ns, Tech., and the Internet of the H. Comm, on Energy & Commerce, 111th Cong. (2010).
.
Compare In re Application of U.S. for and Order ... Authorizing Disclosure of Location-Based Servs.,
. Compare Maynard,
. That distinguishes this case from cases like our recent decision in
Blackwell v. FBI,
. See Joseph Heller, Catch-22, at 46 (paperback ed. 2004) ("There was only one catch and that was Catch-22, which specified that a concern for one's own safety in the face of dangers that were real and immediate was the process of a rational mind. Orr was crazy and could be grounded. All he had to do was ask; and as soon as he did, he would no longer be crazy and would have to fly more missions.... Yossarian was moved very deeply by the absolute simplicity of this clause of Catch-22 and let out a respectful whistle. *15 'That’s some catch, that Catch-22,’ he observed.”).
. For example, in
Multi Ag Media LLC v. Department of Agriculture,
. See cases cited supra note 6. As we discuss in the text that follows, the two kinds of derivative use go hand in glove.
. The Justice Department also urges that, in evaluating the public interest, we may not consider the plaintiffs’ contemplated derivative uses because it is “well settled that the 'identity of the requesting party’ and the ‘purposes for which the request for information is made’ have 'no bearing' on whether such information must be disclosed under FOIA.”
*16
DOJ Br. 35 (quoting
Dep’t of Defense
v.
FLRA,
. As we have noted, the district court was also concerned that, even if sealed, "the ACLU’s promised motion to unseal could be successful.”
ACLU,
