UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
THE CORNUCOPIA INSTITUTE,
Plaintiff,
v.
Case No. 1:16-cv-00866-TNM
AGRICULTURAL MARKETING
SERVICE,
Defendant.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
This is a Freedom of Information Act case, in which the Plaintiff Cornucopia Institute
seeks the “entire investigative files for five operations” targeted for investigation by the National
Organic Program, a component of the Agricultural Marketing Service. Compl. ¶ 13; Tucker
Decl. ¶ 4. I conclude that the Government has fully satisfied its FOIA obligations, with a search
reasonably calculated to locate responsive records, and production of nearly all non-exempt
records. I will therefore grant the Government’s Motion for Summary Judgment as to the lion’s
share of the records at issue, but grant Cornucopia’s cross-motion as to three pages.
I. Background
In June 2015, Cornucopia Institute sent the Agricultural Marketing Service, an agency
within the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), a FOIA request for “the entire investigative
files for five operations targeted for enforcement actions by the NOP [National Organic Program]
since the beginning of fiscal year 2013.” Decl. of Jennifer Tucker Ex. 1, Def.’s Mot. Summ. J.,
ECF No. 14-2; Compl. ¶ 13. The request listed the operations as “Rosewood Products,” “The
Sixty,” “Serenigy,” “Magill Ranch,” and “Organic Avenue Juices.” Id. Cornucopia filed suit in
May 2016, having received no documents. Compl. 6.
1
“Between January 7 and May 26, 2016,” the Government searched for responsive
records. Tucker Decl. ¶ 8. The search focused on records held by the NOP’s Compliance and
Enforcement Division, since that division “process[es] incoming complaints alleging actionable
violations,” and investigates those complaints. Id. ¶¶ 4, 13. The search involved the NOP’s
FOIA specialist, specialists from the NOP’s Compliance and Enforcement Division “who were
in charge of the investigations at issue,” and the Compliance and Enforcement Division’s
director. Id. ¶ 9. A complaint’s corresponding investigative files are “store[d] and manage[d] . . .
on [the NOP’s] shared network computer drive,” and “each complaint is assigned a unique
number when it is received.” Id. ¶ 10. So the search team “identified the complaints, by number,
in an NOP database that tracks complaints, and searched for and retrieved investigative materials
stored under those complaint numbers by accessing the program’s shared drive.” Id. “NOP
employees also searched hard copy paper investigative records that were maintained in storage
cabinets” in the program’s Washington, District of Columbia office. This search yielded 881
responsive pages, of which the Government released 420 pages in full, 225 pages in part, and
withheld 236 pages in full. Id. ¶ 16. The Government invoked FOIA Exemptions 4, 5, 6, 7(C),
7(D), and 7(E) for the records withheld. Id.; see 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(4)-(7).
After the parties had filed and briefed two cross-motions for summary judgment, I
ordered the Government to “either search for and release to the Plaintiff all non-exempt portions”
of nine records or categories of records that the Plaintiff claimed were obvious omitted portions
of the five investigative files, or else to “submit a supplemental declaration describing in greater
detail the efforts that Defendant has taken with respect to these documents, including why []
additional efforts . . . are not required by law.” Order of Jan. 12, 2018, ECF No. 23; see also
Pl.’s Mem. In Support of Pl.’s Mot. Summ. J. and Opp. to Defs.’ Mot. Summ. J. 7-12, ECF No.
2
23. The Government then undertook an extensive supplemental search for the listed documents,
meeting with relevant officials and digging through pertinent hard copy investigative files,
shared drive folders, and email records. Decl. of Lynnea Schurkamp ¶¶ 4-16, Notice of Filing
Supplemental Decl., ECF No. 25-1 (Schurkamp Decl.). Eventually, the Government located and
produced nearly all the documents, except for five that they could not find. Schurkamp Decl. ¶¶
17-20. Three of the requested documents already been produced. Id. ¶ 18. When invited to
provide further briefing “in light of factual developments,” Minute Order, Mar. 19, 2018,
Cornucopia only repeated its objections to the Government’s original exemption determinations
and renewed its request for in camera review, reasoning that “the Court’s January 12, 2018,
Order ruled on Plaintiff’s adequacy of search objections.” Pl.’s Further Mem. 2 (Pl.’s Supp.
Mem). The Government rested on its prior briefing. Def.’s Response to Pl.’s Supp. Mem 2.
II. Legal Standards
To prevail on a motion for summary judgment, a movant must show that “there is no
genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of
law.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a); see also Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 247 (1986).
FOIA requires federal agencies to “disclose information to the public upon reasonable request
unless the records at issue fall within specifically delineated exemptions.” Judicial Watch, Inc.
v. FBI, 522 F.3d 364, 365-66 (D.C. Cir. 2008); see also 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(3)(A) (records sought
must be “reasonably describe[d]”). A FOIA defendant is entitled to summary judgment if it
proves “beyond material doubt [] that it has conducted a search reasonably calculated to uncover
all relevant documents,” Morley v. CIA, 508 F.3d 1108, 1114 (D.C. Cir. 2007) (citation omitted),
and that there is no genuine dispute over whether “each document that falls within the class
requested either has been produced, is unidentifiable or is wholly exempt from the Act’s
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inspection requirements.” Weisberg v. Dep’t of Justice, 627 F.2d 365, 368 (D.C. Cir. 1980)
(citation omitted). The “vast majority” of FOIA cases are decided on motions for summary
judgment. See Brayton v. Office of U.S. Trade Rep., 641 F.3d 521, 527 (D.C. Cir. 2011).
Searching for records requires “both systemic and case-specific exercises of discretion
and administrative judgment and expertise,” and is “hardly an area in which the courts should
attempt to micro-manage the executive branch.” Schrecker v. Dep’t of Justice, 349 F.3d 657,
662 (D.C. Cir. 2003). To establish the reasonableness of its search, an agency can submit a
“reasonably detailed affidavit, setting forth the search terms and the type of search performed,
and averring that all files likely to contain responsive materials (if such records exist) were
searched.” Oglesby v. U.S. Dep’t of Army, 920 F.2d 57, 68 (D.C. Cir. 1990). Agency
declarations are given “a presumption of good faith, which cannot be rebutted by ‘purely
speculative claims about the existence and discoverability of other documents.’” SafeCard
Servs. Inc. v. SEC, 926 F.2d 1197, 1201 (D.C. Cir. 1991) (citation omitted). “[S]ummary
judgment . . . is warranted if the affidavits describe the documents and the justifications for
nondisclosure with reasonably specific detail, demonstrate that the information withheld
logically falls within the claimed exemption, and are not controverted by either contrary
evidence in the record nor by evidence of agency bad faith.” Military Audit Project v. Casey,
656 F.2d 724, 738 (D.C. Cir. 1981).
III. Analysis
A. The Government’s Search Efforts Satisfy FOIA’s Requirements
To satisfy FOIA, the Government must conduct a “search reasonably calculated to
uncover all relevant documents.” Weisberg v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice, 745 F.2d 1476, 1485 (D.C.
Cir. 1984) (citation omitted). Here, the Government’s search team looked in the pertinent shared
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electronic drives and in headquarters hard-copy files, and then conducted extensive follow up
searches for specific documents. Tucker Decl. 3-4; Schurkamp Decl. ¶¶ 4-16. Cornucopia makes
(or has made1) three arguments challenging the legal adequacy of the Government’s extensive
search efforts, but each fail.
First, Cornucopia briefly contends that the Government failed to describe any pre-
litigation search, and “did not undertake a search until January 7, 2017.” Pl.’s Mem. In Support
of Pl.’s Mot. Summ. J. and in Opp. To Def.’s Mot. Summ. J. 6 (Pl.’s Opp.). But even if a pre-
litigation search is required—an assumption for which Cornucopia cites no authority—the
Government did perform such a search. “Between January 7 and May 26, 2016,” the
Government searched for responsive records. Tucker Decl. ¶ 8 (emphasis added). Cornucopia
seems to have simply misread Ms. Tucker’s affidavit on this point.
Second, Cornucopia argues that the Government’s original search was legally inadequate.
Because the Government “did not disclose the name of the database searched [or] disclose the
other databases that were considered but rejected for the search,” the Government did not search
by using the subjects of the investigations as keywords, and “there is no discussion of a search or
regional offices or other [Agricultural Marketing Service] offices,” Cornucopia concludes that “it
is fair to say that [Ms. Tucker] fails to provide any useful description whatsoever as the agency’s
search methodology.” Pl.’s Opp. 6-7. Not so. We must remember that Cornucopia specifically
requested “the entire investigative files for five operations targeted for enforcement actions by
the NOP.” Tucker Decl. Ex. 1 (emphasis added). The Government knows that it “stores . . .
1
One possible interpretation of Cornucopia’s supplemental brief is that given the Government’s
recent efforts, Cornucopia is now satisfied that the search was legally adequate. Pl.’s Supp.
Mem. 2 (declining to discuss the search, since “the Court’s January 12, 2018, Order ruled on
Plaintiff’s adequacy of search objections.”).
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investigative and other files . . . on [NOP’s] shared network computer drive,” and “hard copy
paper investigative records . . . in storage cabinets within NOP office space in Washington,
[District of Columbia].” Tucker Decl. ¶¶ 10-11. By searching these locations, the Government
conducted a search “reasonably calculated to uncover” the investigative files at issue. See
Weisberg, 745 F.2d at 1485. Cornucopia offers only speculation that the Government would
have been better served using search terms (even though investigative files are organized by
complaint number), or looking in other databases or offices, and speculation cannot rebut the
presumption of good faith given to agency declarations. SafeCard Servs. Inc., 926 F.2d at 1201.
Finally and most substantially, Cornucopia contends that the Government has failed “to
follow-up on clear leads indicating the existence of additional agency records responsive to
Plaintiff’s FOIA request.” Pl.’s Opp. 7. Cornucopia identified many documents that certainly
seem like part of pertinent investigative files, including the complaint that kicked off the Magill
Ranch investigation, and “exhibits” mentioned by various investigation summaries that the
Government produced. Id. 10-12. And the Government does have an obligation to “follow
through on obvious leads to discover requested documents.” Valencia-Lucena v. U.S. Coast
Guard, 180 F.3d 321, 325 (D.C. Cir. 1999). But the follow-up search that the Government has
conducted here satisfies this standard, and indeed appears to have been exhaustive and
successful. Schurkamp Decl. ¶¶ 4-20. Cornucopia seems to agree, above n. 1, and I conclude
that the Government has discharged any duty to track down obvious leads.
B. The Government Largely Applied FOIA’s Exemptions Correctly
FOIA “allows agencies to withhold only those documents that fall under one of nine
specific exemptions, which are construed narrowly in keeping with FOIA’s presumption in favor
of disclosure.” Pub. Citizen, Inc. v. Office of Mgmt. & Budget, 598 F.3d 865, 869 (D.C. Cir.
6
2010) (citations omitted). Plaintiff only contests records withheld under Exemptions 4 and 5,
and I conclude that the Government properly applied those exemptions except as to three pages.
1. Under Exemption 4, Cornucopia Is Entitled to One Disputed Page
Exemption 4 applies to “commercial or financial information obtained from a person and
privileged or confidential.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(4). Cornucopia contends that (1) the Government
has withheld a page of product labels that cannot be considered confidential because they have
“already [been] disclosed to the public,” Pl.’s Opp. 14, (2) the Government has withheld entire
organic handling plans when it could have produced some details, id. 18-21, and (3) the
Government has redacted the phrase “Aloha Medicinals” only occasionally, thus waiving the
privilege for that phrase, id. 17-18. Only the first of these arguments holds water.
The Government characterizes a page of product labels they have withheld as
“unpublished drafts of proposed product labels” sent to Organic Avenue’s certifying agent “as a
requirement of continued certification.” Vaughn Index 1 (citing bates-stamped page 6). But
Cornucopia persuasively argues that the labels are not “unpublished,” because the redacted page
is the enclosure to a “Notice to Cease and Desist.” Pl.’s Reply 10 (citing Supplemental Fantle
Decl., Exhibit C at 1-3 (bates stamped 4-6)). Reading the Notice to Cease and Desist confirms
the argument: Organic Avenue is told to stop using current product labels that used the term
“Organic Avenue,” since they have no certification from the NOP. The Notice references an
“Enclosure,” and the Government has redacted the following page. Vaughn Index 1. The
context makes it clear that page 6 constitutes the referenced “Enclosure,” and that the product
labels therein were published without certification, rather sent to Organic Avenue’s certifying
agent “as a requirement of continued certification.” Cf. Vaughn Index 1 with Supp. Fantle
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Decl., Exhibit C at 1-3 (bates stamped 4-6). In short, the context proves that the redacted
product labels were publicly posted, not unpublished.2
Since the labels were being publicly displayed, and thus the subject of the cease and
desist notice, the Government cannot invoke Exemption 4’s protection for “confidential”
information. Under D.C. Circuit precedent, the test for whether material is “confidential”
depends on whether the information was disclosed to the Government on a voluntary or
mandatory basis. Ctr. for Auto Safety, 244 F.3d 144, 147-48 (D.C. Cir. 2001). If voluntary, the
information is “confidential” for Exemption 4 purposes “if it is of a kind that [the provider]
would customarily not [] releas[e] to the public.” Id. at 147. But if mandatory, the information
is confidential “if disclosure would be likely either (1) to impair the Government’s ability to
obtain necessary information in the future; or (2) to cause substantial harm to the competitive
position of the person from whom the information was obtained.’” Id. at 148. The Government
seems to have obtained this information voluntarily, using product labels that were being
customarily (and illegally) displayed to the public. The labels were therefore not confidential.3
Since the Government has failed to establish that Exemption 4 applies, FOIA requires disclosure.
2
The Government’s only answer to this contextual argument was that the “Notice to Cease and
Desist . . . as described by Plaintiff . . . is nowhere to be found in the record.” Def.’s Reply at 16.
Although the Plaintiff then filed the relevant pages, Supp. Fantle Decl., Exhibit C at 1-3 (bates
stamped 4-6), and the Government could have responded in later briefing, it never did.
I do not rely on Cornucopia’s claim that regulations requiring public product labels are relevant
here, and so I do not address the Government’s rebuttal argument.
3
Even if the Government obtained the labels on a mandatory basis, they are still not
confidential. The Vaughn Index asserts that unpublished labels “can be used by the company’s
competitors in the organic industry . . . to duplicate formulations.” Tucker Decl., ECF No. 14-4
at 1 of 67 (bates stamped 00006). But if the labels are already public, further disclosure after a
FOIA request does not work “substantial harm to [a] competitive position.” Ctr. for Auto Safety,
244 F.3d at 148.
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The Government questions “why Plaintiff would seek items in a FOIA request it believes
to be already obtainable in the public domain,” and suggests that “the party favoring disclosure
has the burden of demonstrating that the information sought is identical to information already
publicly available.” Id. (quoting Ctr. for Auto Safety, 244 F.3d at 151) (emphasis original). But
“[t]he ‘identical information’ basis for disclosure is . . . entirely distinct from the ‘customary
disclosure’ standard.” Ctr. for Auto Safety, 244 F.3d at 151. Under the former, Cornucopia
would have the burden, while under customary disclosure analysis (and any Exemption 4 claim),
it is the Government that bears the burden. Id. The Government invoked Exemption 4 for these
product labels, and the Government has failed to carry its burden of showing that they were
confidential.
Cornucopia next claims that the Government’s decision to withhold entire organic
operation plans for several businesses under investigation is overbroad, contending that at least
some information should have been provided. See Pl.’s Opp. 16. Yet Cornucopia nowhere
identifies what specific information it wants (and neither does the underlying FOIA request),
despite the Government’s highly detailed description of what the plans contain.4 And nowhere
does Cornucopia rebut the Government’s claim that “The organic processor plan contains critical
information about internal business operations. Competitors can use this information to identify
and exploit weaknesses, or duplicate processes without investing resources.” Tucker Decl., ECF.
No. 14-4 at 8 (Vaughn Index). The case on which Cornucopia purports to rely does not apply. It
cites Animal Legal Def. Fund v. United States Food & Drug Admin., 2013 WL 4511936, at *9
4
See Tucker Decl. ¶ 23e (“These records are detailed plans outlining internal business and
operating procedures for organic operations. These plans may include . . . recipe and ingredient
lists; disclosure statements; supplier identifications; production steps . . . details on equipment
and transportation; and information relating to farm location and field cover.”).
9
(N.D. Cal. Aug. 23, 2013) for the proposition that “disclosure of limited, non-exempt
information within a [larger] document” is appropriate, because that disclosure would not work
“substantial competitive harm.” Pl.’s Opp. 18-20. Not only is that case in another jurisdiction,
but the Ninth Circuit has since reversed and remanded it, destroying any persuasive value.
Animal Legal Def. Fund v. U.S. Food & Drug Admin., 839 F.3d 750 (9th Cir. 2016). In any
event, I am convinced that the Government has carried its burden of showing that organic
production plans are commercial, obtained from investigated businesses, and confidential, and
thus subject to Exemption 4.
Third, Cornucopia argues that the Government “inconsistently applied (b)(4) exemptions
to [the phrase] ‘Aloha Medicinals,’” Pl.’s Reply 13, and that since Cornucopia has since posted
the revealed uses of the phrase on a permanent public website, the phrase now fits the “public-
domain doctrine,” under which “materials normally immunized from disclosure under FOIA lose
their protective cloak once disclosed and preserved in a permanent public record.” Cottone v.
Reno, 193 F.3d 550, 554 (D.C. Cir. 1999). But as the Government points out, this contention
rests on a false inference. Just because “Aloha Medicinals” preceded “/Serenigy” in a disclosed
email subject line, it is not true that every redaction of a phrase before “/Serenigy” must
represent a deletion of “Aloha Medicinals.” See Def.’s Opp. To P.’s Mot. Summ. J. and Reply
17 (Def.’s Reply). Emails regarding Serenigy may well mention other commercially-relevant
products or phrases. In other words, Cornucopia has not shown that the hidden phrase they want
to see has already been disclosed, and so fails to rebut the Government’s contention that the
information is commercial and confidential. See Davis v. U.S. Dep’t of Justice, 968 F.2d 1276,
1280 (D.C. Cir. 1992) (holding that under the public domain doctrine, “the requester [must] point
to “specific” information identical to that being withheld.”)
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2. Under Exemption 5, Cornucopia Is Entitled to Two Disputed Pages
“Exemption 5 excludes from mandatory release ‘interagency or intra-agency
memorandums or letters which would not be available by law to a party other than an agency in
litigation with the agency.’” Morley, 508 F.3d at 1126 (quoting 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(5)). The
exemption incorporates several evidentiary privileges, including “materials which would be
protected under the attorney-client privilege . . . [and] the executive ‘deliberative process’
privilege.” Coastal States Gas Corp. v. Dep’t of Energy, 617 F.2d 854, 862 (D.C. Cir. 1980)
(citations omitted). The Government has invoked Exemption 5 to protect several categories of
records, including “draft notices” of civil penalties and proposed settlement, “draft . . .
recommendations on whether to uphold adverse actions,” draft requests to investigate, internal
communications about investigations, proposed penalties, and settlements, and “communications
. . . between NOP and the USDA, Office of General Counsel regarding the investigations.”
Tucker Decl. 8. Cornucopia’s challenges to these withholdings fail except as to two pages.
Cornucopia begins with vague allegations that the Government has not identified
deliberative records “clearly” enough to establish that all fall within the deliberative process
privilege, Pl.’s Opp. 22, and that the Government “fail[s] to identify any of the specific people
[relating] to the withheld [attorney-client privilege] records as an attorney.” Id. at 23. But vague
claims do not rebut the presumption of good faith afforded the Government’s affidavits,
particularly when an affidavit and corresponding 67-page Vaughn index provide the reasonable
level of detail seen here. Tucker Decl. 8; see, e.g. Vaughn Index 4-5 (invoking Exemption 5).
Cornucopia then takes a more productive tack, and challenges specific withholdings. It
first argues that in describing a “Memorandum report from [an] NOP manager to agency Office
of General Counsel attorneys” about the “SereniGy” investigation, Vaughn Index 37, the
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Government “fails to identify specific people . . . as an attorney,” “does not specify why the
communication is entitled to ‘confidential’ treatment,” and gives a “wholly conclusory” basis for
invoking Exemption 5. Pl.’s Opp. 23. But these accusations are off-base. After describing the
information withheld as a “[m]anager’s policy and enforcement action recommendations and
questions to attorneys,” Vaughn Index 37, Ms. Tucker gives a thorough justification:
Deliberative process privilege – pre-decisional and deliberative.
The draft document contains the author’s recommendations about
prospective enforcement action options. The document was drafted
expressly for use by agency Office of General Counsel staff during
attorney-client communications with NOP staff. The record is pre-
decisional because it was developed before the agency took any
official action regarding the enforcement action at issue.
Attorney-Client Privilege: The withheld portions contain
information prepared by [Agricultural Marketing Service] and
provided to the USDA, Office of the General Counsel, for the
purpose of soliciting legal advice about the enforcement action at
issue.
Id. I am satisfied that these enforcement questions posed by the NOP to “attorneys” in the
“Office of General Counsel” are attorney-client privileged, and subject to the deliberative
process privilege. Ms. Tucker’s description easily satisfies the legal requirement that “affidavits
describe the documents and the justifications for nondisclosure with reasonably specific detail,
demonstrate that the information withheld logically falls within the claimed exemption, and are
not controverted by either contrary evidence in the record nor by evidence of agency bad faith.”
Military Audit Project, 656 F.2d at 738.
Next, Cornucopia argues that the Government has improperly redacted parts of four
“notices of non-compliance.” Pl.’s Opp. 23 (citing Exhibit A to Fantle Decl. in support of Pl.’s
Opp. at 62-63, 65, 72-73, 74-75 (referencing records that are bates stamped 84-85, 622, 290-291,
and 296-297)). The Government quickly explained that “Each and every notice of
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noncompliance cited by Plaintiff was excepted under either Exception 4 or Exception 6 . . . [and]
[n]one of them were excepted under Exception 5.” Def.’s Reply 22. Cornucopia had nothing to
say in response. Pl.’s Reply 13-14 (never mentioning Exemption 5). Reviewing Cornucopia’s
cited pages largely confirms the Government’s point: only two of the relevant pages are redacted
under Exemption 5 at all, Exhibit A to Fantle Decl. at 62-63 (bates stamped 84-85), and those
pages are not part of any notice of noncompliance.5 But review also reveals that the Government
has provided no description at all for those two pages, and appears to have simply invoked
Exemption 5 without explaining why in either the Vaughn Index or the Tucker Declaration.6
It is the Government’s “burden . . . to establish their right to withhold information from
the public and they must supply the courts with sufficient information to allow us to make a
reasoned determination that they were correct.” Coastal States Gas Corp., 617 F.2d at 861.
“[C]onclusory assertions of privilege will not suffice to carry the Government’s burden of proof
5
The two pages are fully redacted under Exemption 5, except for their respective titles:
“Request for Hearing” and “Waiver of Hearing.” See https://www.cornucopia.org/FOIA-
reading-room/2015%20NOP%20enforcement%20responsive%20records.pdf at bates stamped
pp. 84-85 (last visited May 14, 2018) (containing the full 881 pages of responsive records in
redacted form) (Full Record). There is a Notice of Noncompliance and Proposed Revocation
that immediately precedes the pages, but the “Hearing” documents are unrelated—the notice is
numbered “Page 1 of 2” and “Page 2 of 2,” and never mentions a hearing, any attachments, or
any exhibits. Id. at 82-83. The Vaughn index mistakenly says that the “Notice of
Noncompliance” is on bates stamped pages 84-85, Vaughn Index 7, but Ms. Tucker is actually
referring to pages 82-83. The index describes a two-page Notice for which the Government
invokes only Exemption 4 (not Exemption 5), id., a description that precisely matches bates
stamped pages 82-83. Cf. Full Record at 81-85 with Vaughn Index 7. In short, both parties have
erroneously characterized the pages bates stamped 84-85, but those pages are not a Notice of
Noncompliance, or any part thereof.
6
Because the Notice of Noncompliance is on pages 82-83, above n. 5, the “Request for
Hearing” and “Waiver of Hearing” on pages 84-84 remain completely un-described. The pages
simply bear the designation “(b)(5)” on a black square below each title, and I have searched in
vain through the Vaughn Index and the Tucker Declaration for another reference to either a
“hearing” or the pertinent pages.
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in defending FOIA cases.” Id. If the Government fails to carry this burden, then a court may
order release of the documents at issue. Id. at 870 (holding that “the defendant . . . has failed to
carry its burden of establishing that the documents involved in this appeal were properly
withheld . . . [and] [t]he decision of the district court ordering release of the documents is
therefore affirmed.”) “The limited exemptions provided in the Act, are to be ‘construed
narrowly, in such a way as to provide the maximum access consonant with the overall purpose of
the Act.’” Yeager v. Drug Enf’t Admin., 678 F.2d 315, 320 (D.C. Cir. 1982). Because the
Government has offered only the most conclusory of justifications here—an unexplained
“(b)(5)” claim without reference to even a specific privilege—the Plaintiff has established that
no genuine dispute on an issue of material fact precludes disclosure of this document.
Finally, Cornucopia argues that the Government improperly withheld portions of
“proposed settlement agreements” under the deliberative process privilege, since any final
agreements or communications with external, non-government actors would not be privileged.
Pl.’s Opp. 24. But as the Government has explained in detail, each of these draft settlement
agreements were “created within [the Agricultural Marketing Service],” and are “the author’s
recommendations about what the final version should state . . . created before the agency made
any decision regarding the settlement.” E.g. Vaugh Index 17; see also Def.’s Reply 23 (citing
the remaining entries). This amply satisfied the requirements for the deliberative process
privilege.
C. In Camera Review is Not Warranted
As part of its required de novo review, a court “may examine the contents of . . . agency
records in camera to determine whether such records or any part thereof shall be withheld under
any of the exemptions.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(B) (emphasis added). “[D]istrict courts have
14