Smith v. United States Department of Justice

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedSeptember 8, 2022
Docket8:21-cv-01291
StatusUnknown

This text of Smith v. United States Department of Justice (Smith v. United States Department of Justice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. United States Department of Justice, (M.D. Fla. 2022).

Opinion

UMNIIDTEDDL ES TDAISTTERS IDCITS TORFI FCLTO CROIDURAT TAMPA DIVISION

DANIELLE SMITH,

Plaintiff,

v. CASE NO. 8:21-cv-1291-SDM-AEP

UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE,

Defendant. ___________________________________/

ORDER

In this action under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), Danielle Smith sues (Doc. 1) for an order compelling disclosure of non-exempt documents respon- sive to three requests to the FBI. Claiming that the disclosure of any withheld docu- ment would threaten a “pending law enforcement proceeding” and asserting that sev- eral other FOIA exemptions preclude disclosure, the DOJ moves (Doc. 22) for sum- mary judgment. Smith responds (Doc. 25) and principally argues that the “boiler- plate” affidavit (Doc. 22-1) attached to the motion fails to establish that the FBI rea- sonably searched for responsive documents or that a FOIA exemption protects each withheld document from disclosure. BACKGROUND On April 13, 2021, Smith requested from the FBI “[fourteen] specific items re- lated to Zackary Ellis Sanders.” (Doc. 22-1 at 3) In March 2020, the United States charged Sanders with production and possession of child pornography. United States v. Zackary Ellis Sanders, No. 1:20-cr-143-TSE (E.D. Va. 2020) (Doc. 1). The arrest and prosecution resulted after an undisclosed foreign law enforcement agency re- ported to the FBI that the IP address registered to Sanders’s residence had reached

on the “dark web” a website offering a particularly heinous form of child pornogra- phy known as “hurtcore.”1 In October 2021 after a trial and substantial litigation fo- cused primarily on the international investigation that resulted in the report to the FBI, Sanders was convicted of possessing and manufacturing child pornography. In April 2022, Sanders was sentenced to two-hundred sixteen months of imprisonment.

Sanders appealed (Sanders, Doc. 636) the conviction. The appeal pends before the Fourth Circuit. United States v. Sanders, No. 22-4242. In her FOIA letter to the FBI, Smith requested: 11. All records relating in any way to Zackary Ellis Sanders from May 22, 2019, to February 10, 2020. This includes all seri- als for the HQ casefile and all subfiles, and all serials for Mr. Sanders’s specific case file and subfiles[;]

12. All records pertaining to IP address 98.169.118.39 [Sand- ers’s IP address] from May 22, 2019, to February 10, 2020[; and]

14. Any records referencing ‘Hurtcore’ but which also contain the term ‘FLA’ or the actual identified foreign country.

(Doc. 22-1 at 4) After a search, the FBI located documents responsive to each of the three requests. The FBI released forty-three pages of “public source material” but

1 A pending protective order (Sanders, Doc. 28) prohibits Sanders from disclosing the identity of the foreign law enforcement agency that supplied the report or from disclosing any discovery that might reveal the identity of the foreign law enforcement agency. withheld every other responsive document under several exemptions to FOIA’s gen- eral disclosure obligation. In response, Smith sues (Doc. 1) the Department of Jus- tice for an order compelling the disclosure of any non-exempt document responsive to “categories #11, #12, and #14 in her [FOIA] request.”

Arguing that an exemption protects each withheld document from disclosure, the DOJ moves (Doc. 22) for summary judgment. In response (Doc. 25), Smith challenges the FBI’s search for responsive documents and the justification for with- holding several documents. DISCUSSION

To support summary judgment in a FOIA action, the DOJ must demonstrate (1) “that the search for responsive documents was adequate,” (2) that each claimed exemption “actually appl[ies]” to a withheld document, and (3) “that any reasonably segregable non[-]exempt information has been disclosed after deletion of exempt in- formation.” Sanders v. Obama, 729 F. Supp. 2d 148, 154 (D.D.C. 2010); see 5 U.S.C.

§ 552(a)(3); 5 U.S.C. § 552(b). In an affidavit appended (Doc. 22-1) to the DOJ’s motion, Michael J. Seidel, Section Chief of the FBI’s Record and Information Dis- semination Section, explains the FBI’s search for documents responsive to Smith’s requests and the FBI’s decision to withhold responsive documents. This declaration, the DOJ argues (Doc. 22 at 6, 14–15), satisfies the DOJ’s burden and thus entitles

the DOJ to summary judgment. In response (Doc. 25) Smith argues principally that the Seidel declaration fails to demonstrate an adequate search for responsive documents and fails to demonstrate that a claimed exemption “actually applies” to each withheld docu- ment. Smith concludes (Doc. 25 at 18) that summary judgment remains inappropri- ate “until the FBI corrects the deficiencies in its affidavits.” 1. The adequacy of the FBI’s search

First, Smith argues that the FBI’s motion for summary judgment fails to estab- lish a reasonable search for documents responsive to Smith’s requests. (Doc. 25 at 12) In assessing whether an agency conducted a reasonable search, the inquiry “is not whether there might exist any other documents possibly responsive to the re- quest, but rather whether the search for those documents was adequate.” Weisberg v.

Dep’t of Just. (Weisberg II), 745 F.2d 1476, 1485 (D.C. Cir. 1984) (emphasis in origi- nal). To demonstrate an adequate search, the FBI must establish that the agency conducted the response to Smith’s requests “in good faith using methods that are likely to produce the information requested.” Campbell v. Dep’t of Justice, 164 F.3d 20, 27 (D.C. Cir. 1998). That is, “the agency must demonstrate that it has conducted a

‘search reasonably calculated to uncover all relevant documents.’” Weisberg II, 745 F.2d at 1485 (quoting Weisberg v. Dep’t of Just. (Weisberg I), 705 F.2d 1344, 1350–51 (D.C. Cir. 1983)). Although the agency need not “search every record system,” the agency must respond to “the four corners of the request” and must search a system that the request suggests will contain responsive documents. Kowalczyk v. Dep’t of

Just., 73 F.3d 386, 389 (D.C. Cir. 1996). After interpreting Smith’s request number eleven, twelve, and fourteen “to seek records on which Sanders’[s] name appears,” the FBI searched for responsive documents by querying the general indices to the FBI’s central record system (CRS). (Doc. 22-1 at 11–12) The CRS “is an extensive system of records” that “spans the entire FBI organization.” (Doc. 22-1 at 6) At the start of each new investigation, the FBI creates in the CRS a case file, to which the FBI adds any record created or col-

lected during the investigation. (Doc. 22-1 at 6–7) To manage “the enormous amount of information contained in the CRS” and to collect information about a subject that might exist in several case files, the FBI maintains several “general indi- ces” to the CRS. (Doc. 22-1 at 7) The FBI might create an index about an individ- ual, about an organization (which the FBI defines to include “places and things”), or

about an event. The FBI creates a new index “at the discretion of FBI investigators when information is deemed of sufficient significance to warrant indexing for future retrieval.” (Doc. 22-1 at 8) The FBI normally responds to a FOIA request by querying these general indi- ces.

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