Prechtel v. Federal Communications Commission

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedSeptember 13, 2018
DocketCivil Action No. 2017-1835
StatusPublished

This text of Prechtel v. Federal Communications Commission (Prechtel v. Federal Communications Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prechtel v. Federal Communications Commission, (D.D.C. 2018).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

JASON PRECHTEL

Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 17-cv-01835 (CRC)

FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION, et al.

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

In spring of 2017, the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC” or “Commission”)

promulgated a proposed rule to establish regulations for broadband internet service providers.

Captioned “Restoring Internet Freedom,” the rulemaking sought to repeal prior regulations

promoting “net neutrality”—the principle that internet service providers afford equal access to all

internet-enabled data. The proposal received significant public attention, garnering an

unprecedented twenty-four million public comments on the administrative record. The number

of fraudulent, duplicative, or otherwise dubious comments was equally unprecedented. These

questionable comments have drawn the attention of FCC Commissioners, Members of Congress,

and journalists including Jason Prechtel, the plaintiff in this case.

Prechtel filed Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”) requests seeking details about the

use of two electronic comment-submission tools that the FCC had enabled to facilitate public

participation in the regulatory process: comma-separated value (“.CSV”) files and an Application

Programming Interface (“API”). These tools allowed members of the public to comment on the

proposal without going directly to the Commission’s website and accessing its comment

1 platform (or Electronic Comment Filing System (“ECFS”)). A .CSV file is a template provided

by the FCC—essentially, a spreadsheet in which every row contains a separate comment—that

allows an individual or organization to solicit and compile multiple comments and upload them

into ECFS in one fell swoop. These submissions are sometimes referred to as “bulk comments.”

By way of example, if an organization wanted its membership to submit comments supporting

the FCC’s proposed actions, it might ordinarily be forced to encourage each member to access

the ECFS website and submit an individual comment. The bulk comment submission process

enabled the organization to collect its members’ comments, format them into the .CSV

spreadsheet, and submit them all at once by transmitting that spreadsheet to ECFS.

An API, in turn, is a mechanism that facilitates communication between ECFS and other

websites. As relevant here, it allows website developers to place comment-submission tools on

third-party websites, meaning that visitors to those websites can submit comments to ECFS

directly from those websites. For example, if a group opposing the Commission’s proposed

actions wanted visitors to its website to submit comments into the record, it might ordinarily

include a link to ECFS, forcing a visitor to leave its website to submit a comment. The API

instead enabled the group to place a comment form directly on its own website, allowing a

visitor to type a comment and submit it into ECFS without leaving the site. Those seeking to

host an API capable of communicating with ECFS must register for a “key,” which confirms to

ECFS that the information being transmitted comes from a registered source—essentially, a

unique code that opens the door to ECFS so a comment can be left inside.

Prechtel filed two FOIA requests: one with the Commission and one with the General

Services Administration (“GSA”), the executive agency that manages the Commission’s API

system. See Compl. Ex. A; Pl.’s Statement of Undisputed Material Facts (“SUMF”) Ex. B. In

2 this suit, Prechtel challenges how the agencies handled his requests. Specifically, he challenges

the adequacy of the FCC’s search for the requested records, its invocation of several statutory

exemptions to withhold or redact those records, and the GSA’s constructive denial of his FOIA

request. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 24, 27-28; Pl.’s Mot. Summ. J. & Opp’n at 1. The Court addresses only

the second challenge, aimed at the Commission’s withholdings. Prechtel belatedly served the

GSA and it has not had the opportunity to submit an affidavit clarifying its response to his FOIA

request. Accordingly, the Court reserves judgment on the GSA’s actions. And because a GSA

affidavit should clarify ownership of the API keys, which implicates the adequacy of the FCC’s

search, the Court also reserves judgment on Prechtel’s challenge to that search. The Court will

thus deny without prejudice all parties’ motions for summary judgment on those issues.

Regarding Prechtel’s challenge to the Commission’s withholdings: The Court will grant the

Commission’s motion for summary judgment on its withholding of certain privileged emails and

its server logs; grant Prechtel’s motion for summary judgment on the email addresses used to

submit .CSV files; and direct the parties to confer regarding the .CSV files themselves.

I. Background

On June 4, 2017, Prechtel filed FOIA requests with the GSA and the FCC. Am.

Compl. ¶¶ 9, 16. His request to the GSA sought two sets of documents: (1) all public API keys

used to submit online comments relating to the “Restoring Internet Freedom” proceeding,

including the associated registration names and email addresses, and copies of all data files

submitted through those API keys; and (2) logs of all dates and times that those API keys were

used to submit comments. Id. ¶ 9. Prechtel’s FOIA request to the FCC sought the same

information as well as: (1) “the email addresses associated with .CSV comment uploads, along

with all .CSV files uploaded in response to [the] Proceeding”; (2) “logs of all dates and times the

3 email addresses submitted comments”; and (3) “all email inquiries to ECFSHelp@fcc.gov

regarding .CSV comment submissions to the Proceeding.” Id. ¶ 16.

On June 5, the GSA informed Prechtel that the requested files were not within its

“jurisdiction.” Pl.’s SUMF Ex. B, at 1 (GSA response to Prechtel’s FOIA request). After

several email exchanges, the GSA elaborated that the FCC was the “API owner” and therefore

that Prechtel’s request was “more appropriate[ly]” addressed to the FCC. Id. at 7.

After receiving no substantive response from the FCC, Prechtel filed this suit on

September 7, 2017. See Compl.; id. ¶¶ 9-12. Twenty days later, the Commission released

fifteen pages of documents responsive to the fifth part of his request—that seeking

communications to the ECFSHelp@fcc.gov “help desk” email address. See Defs.’ SUMF Ex. B,

at 2 (FCC response to Prechtel’s FOIA request). It redacted several emails within these records

and withheld all records responsive to other aspects of Prechtel’s request, invoking several of

FOIA’s statutory exemptions to justify its redactions and withholdings. Id. at 2-4. Further, it

indicated that it did not maintain documents responsive to Prechtel’s request for the API keys

and associated information, asserting that the GSA maintains these records. Id. at 1-2.

The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, after which Prechtel amended his

complaint to add the GSA as a defendant. See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 9-15, 21-24. However, Prechtel

did not serve the GSA until after briefing had commenced. The GSA has joined the FCC’s

motion for summary judgment. But it has not provided an affidavit or declaration explaining its

response to Prechtel or the extent to which it is in tension with the FCC’s response regarding API

keys and attendant information.

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