Opinion for the Court filed by Chief Judge WALD.
WALD, Chief Judge:
In this appeal we decide whether the Department of Justice (the Department) has any duty under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA or Act), 5 U.S.C. § 552(a), to make available certain opinions and orders of United States District Courts that are regularly kept in its case files. Tax Analysts, a reporter and publisher of decisions and other news affecting federal . tax law, seeks access to district court decisions located in the Department’s Tax Division case files.
After limited discovery and cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court held that it lacked jurisdiction because the documents were not “improperly withheld” under the FOIA.
See Tax Analysts v. Department of Justice,
643 F.Supp. 740 (D.D.C.1986). The Department, in response to an earlier FOIA request, already makes available to Tax Analysts and other tax publishers logs of the names and originating courts of the tax cases sought here.
So identified, the documents sought by Tax Analysts are, at least in theory,
available from the district courts themselves. Therefore, the court concluded that the Tax Division’s refusal to make its copies available to the plaintiff did not constitute “improper withholding” forbidden by the Act.
Id.
at 745.
See
5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(A) (district court jurisdiction “to order production of agency records improperly withheld from complainant”).
The issue in this case, then, is whether the Department’s disclosure of the name, docket number, and other identifying information about tax cases is sufficient, in light of their availability as public documents from the district courts in question, to discharge its responsibility not to “improperly withhold” agency records.
We conclude that the district court decisions are agency records that must be made available to Tax Analysts by the Department itself and remand to the district court with instructions to enter an order requiring the Department to provide some reasonable form of access to its copies of the district court opinions and orders.
I.
Tax Analysts is a nonprofit organization that disseminates news and information about federal tax law through a number of printed and electronic media.
Since 1972, the organization’s principal publication has been Tax Notes, a weekly magazine that reports summaries of decisions and news affecting federal tax law to a readership of tax attorneys, accountants, and economists. As a supplement to the magazine, Tax Analysts offers full text reporting of all federal court tax decisions in microfiche form. Tax Analysts also compiles an electronic database, Tax Notes Today, comprised of news and commentary as well as all available federal tax decisions.
In the course of its reporting, Tax Analysts has had persistent difficulty obtaining the tax decisions of some United States District Courts. While decisions of the United States Supreme Court, United States Courts of Appeals, the United States Tax Court, and the United States Claims Court can apparently be easily obtained on request, Tax Analysts’ undisputed claim is
that securing the tax decisions rendered by the ninety-odd, far-flung federal district courts from their clerks’ offices on any timely or regular basis has proven impossible. The clerks often do not respond at all to telephone requests for copies of tax opinions; even when they do, mailings take too long for prompt reporting because reproduction costs generally must be calculated and paid in advance.
Tax Analysts also has been unsuccessful in its attempts to secure the decisions from taxpayers’ attorneys. As a last resort, it has sought them pursuant to the FOIA from the Tax Division of the Justice Department, which litigates, and consequently receives a copy of all decisions rendered, in the more than 20,000 tax cases filed in United States District Courts each year. Upon receipt, the Division classifies each decision as a win, partial win, or loss, and puts the decision in an individual case file. If the government prevails before the district court, and the taxpayer appeals, the case file, including the district court decision, is forwarded to the Division’s appellate staff. If the taxpayer prevails, the file and decision are sent to the Solicitor General, who decides whether to take an appeal. If an appeal is prosecuted, the Division’s appellate staff utilizes the case file and decision in appellate briefing and argument.
Tax Analysts’ initial FOIA request to the Justice Department, filed on July 20, 1979, sought all opinions and orders received by the Tax Division earlier that month from United States District Courts, United States Courts of Appeals, and the United States Claims Court. The request was denied by the Department on the ground that the decisions were not “agency records.” Tax Analysts appealed the denial but later withdrew its request. In December 1979, Tax Analysts sought and was granted access to the Division’s weekly log of tax cases decided by the federal courts. These weekly logs, which list the court, the name and nature of the case, the docket number, the attorneys for the taxpayer and the government, and the date and type of disposition, have been provided to Tax Analysts since that time.
In November 1984, Tax Analysts initiated a new request for copies of all district court decisions, opinions, and orders identified in the Division’s weekly log. The Justice Department denied these requests. Tax Analysts filed this suit on July 7,1985, seeking “weekly access” to all such district court decisions and a permanent injunction against future denial of access to such documents. After limited discovery, both parties filed motions for summary judgment.
The district court granted the Justice Department’s motion to dismiss the complaint, finding that 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(B), which confers jurisdiction in the district court only when “agency records” have been “improperly withheld,” did not apply here.
Tax Analysts v. Department of Justice,
643 F.Supp. 740 (D.D.C.1986). The documents sought by Tax Analysts, the court said, “already are available from their primary sources, the district courts,” and because they are “on the public record” cannot be deemed “improperly withheld.”
Id.
at 743-44. In the case of records already publicly available, the FOIA’s primary purpose, to prevent “secret agency law,” is not at risk.
Id.
The district court also concluded that the specific relief Tax Analysts sought,
i.e.,
an injunction against any future withholding of such decisions, is unavailable under the FOIA. The requested order or injunction, the court held, “amounts to giving [Tax Analysts] automatic access to the decisions without the need for making specific FOIA requests.
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Opinion for the Court filed by Chief Judge WALD.
WALD, Chief Judge:
In this appeal we decide whether the Department of Justice (the Department) has any duty under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA or Act), 5 U.S.C. § 552(a), to make available certain opinions and orders of United States District Courts that are regularly kept in its case files. Tax Analysts, a reporter and publisher of decisions and other news affecting federal . tax law, seeks access to district court decisions located in the Department’s Tax Division case files.
After limited discovery and cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court held that it lacked jurisdiction because the documents were not “improperly withheld” under the FOIA.
See Tax Analysts v. Department of Justice,
643 F.Supp. 740 (D.D.C.1986). The Department, in response to an earlier FOIA request, already makes available to Tax Analysts and other tax publishers logs of the names and originating courts of the tax cases sought here.
So identified, the documents sought by Tax Analysts are, at least in theory,
available from the district courts themselves. Therefore, the court concluded that the Tax Division’s refusal to make its copies available to the plaintiff did not constitute “improper withholding” forbidden by the Act.
Id.
at 745.
See
5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(A) (district court jurisdiction “to order production of agency records improperly withheld from complainant”).
The issue in this case, then, is whether the Department’s disclosure of the name, docket number, and other identifying information about tax cases is sufficient, in light of their availability as public documents from the district courts in question, to discharge its responsibility not to “improperly withhold” agency records.
We conclude that the district court decisions are agency records that must be made available to Tax Analysts by the Department itself and remand to the district court with instructions to enter an order requiring the Department to provide some reasonable form of access to its copies of the district court opinions and orders.
I.
Tax Analysts is a nonprofit organization that disseminates news and information about federal tax law through a number of printed and electronic media.
Since 1972, the organization’s principal publication has been Tax Notes, a weekly magazine that reports summaries of decisions and news affecting federal tax law to a readership of tax attorneys, accountants, and economists. As a supplement to the magazine, Tax Analysts offers full text reporting of all federal court tax decisions in microfiche form. Tax Analysts also compiles an electronic database, Tax Notes Today, comprised of news and commentary as well as all available federal tax decisions.
In the course of its reporting, Tax Analysts has had persistent difficulty obtaining the tax decisions of some United States District Courts. While decisions of the United States Supreme Court, United States Courts of Appeals, the United States Tax Court, and the United States Claims Court can apparently be easily obtained on request, Tax Analysts’ undisputed claim is
that securing the tax decisions rendered by the ninety-odd, far-flung federal district courts from their clerks’ offices on any timely or regular basis has proven impossible. The clerks often do not respond at all to telephone requests for copies of tax opinions; even when they do, mailings take too long for prompt reporting because reproduction costs generally must be calculated and paid in advance.
Tax Analysts also has been unsuccessful in its attempts to secure the decisions from taxpayers’ attorneys. As a last resort, it has sought them pursuant to the FOIA from the Tax Division of the Justice Department, which litigates, and consequently receives a copy of all decisions rendered, in the more than 20,000 tax cases filed in United States District Courts each year. Upon receipt, the Division classifies each decision as a win, partial win, or loss, and puts the decision in an individual case file. If the government prevails before the district court, and the taxpayer appeals, the case file, including the district court decision, is forwarded to the Division’s appellate staff. If the taxpayer prevails, the file and decision are sent to the Solicitor General, who decides whether to take an appeal. If an appeal is prosecuted, the Division’s appellate staff utilizes the case file and decision in appellate briefing and argument.
Tax Analysts’ initial FOIA request to the Justice Department, filed on July 20, 1979, sought all opinions and orders received by the Tax Division earlier that month from United States District Courts, United States Courts of Appeals, and the United States Claims Court. The request was denied by the Department on the ground that the decisions were not “agency records.” Tax Analysts appealed the denial but later withdrew its request. In December 1979, Tax Analysts sought and was granted access to the Division’s weekly log of tax cases decided by the federal courts. These weekly logs, which list the court, the name and nature of the case, the docket number, the attorneys for the taxpayer and the government, and the date and type of disposition, have been provided to Tax Analysts since that time.
In November 1984, Tax Analysts initiated a new request for copies of all district court decisions, opinions, and orders identified in the Division’s weekly log. The Justice Department denied these requests. Tax Analysts filed this suit on July 7,1985, seeking “weekly access” to all such district court decisions and a permanent injunction against future denial of access to such documents. After limited discovery, both parties filed motions for summary judgment.
The district court granted the Justice Department’s motion to dismiss the complaint, finding that 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(B), which confers jurisdiction in the district court only when “agency records” have been “improperly withheld,” did not apply here.
Tax Analysts v. Department of Justice,
643 F.Supp. 740 (D.D.C.1986). The documents sought by Tax Analysts, the court said, “already are available from their primary sources, the district courts,” and because they are “on the public record” cannot be deemed “improperly withheld.”
Id.
at 743-44. In the case of records already publicly available, the FOIA’s primary purpose, to prevent “secret agency law,” is not at risk.
Id.
The district court also concluded that the specific relief Tax Analysts sought,
i.e.,
an injunction against any future withholding of such decisions, is unavailable under the FOIA. The requested order or injunction, the court held, “amounts to giving [Tax Analysts] automatic access to the decisions without the need for making specific FOIA requests. The FOIA refers to existing documents, not to documents which [the Tax Division] may receive in the future.”
Id.
at 745 (citations omitted). This appeal followed.
II.
The government defends the district court’s dismissal of the complaint, contend
ing that none of the FOIA's three jurisdictional requirements has been met. “Under 552(a)(4)(B),” the Supreme Court has said, “federal jurisdiction is dependent upon a showing that an agency has (1) ‘improperly’; (2) ‘withheld’; (3) ‘agency records.’ Judicial authority to ... enjoin agencies can only be invoked, under ... § 552, if the agency has contravened all three components of this obligation.”
Kissinger v. Reporters Comm. for Freedom of the Press,
445 U.S. 136, 150, 100 S.Ct. 960, 968, 445 L.Ed.2d 267 (1980). The district court looked no further than the first two components, holding that the requested documents could not be deemed “improperly withheld” if they were publicly available from the courts, despite practical difficulties in obtaining them promptly by mail or phone.
Tax Analysts,
643 F.Supp. at 743-44. The government defends this rationale on appeal, and renews its additional argument that the decisions are not “agency records.”
A.
Have the Documents Been “Improperly Withheld”?
Agency records may normally be withheld only if the agency sustains its burden of proving that they fall within a specific exemption in the statute.
See Coastal States Gas Corp. v. Department of Energy,
644 F.2d 969, 975 (3rd Cir.1981). Neither an agency nor a court may impose its own additional criteria as to when disclosure is proper; the settled policy of the FOIA is one of “full agency disclosure unless information is exempted under clearly delineated statutory language.” S.Rep. No. 813, 89th Cong., 1st Sess. 3 (1965).
Indeed, we have said more than once that a “refusal to release documents that are in [an] agency’s ‘custody’ or ‘control’ for any reason other than those set forth in the Act’s
enumerated
exceptions would constitute ‘withholding.’ ”
McGehee v. CIA,
697 F.2d 1095, 1110 (emphasis added; footnote omitted),
affd in part and vacated in part on other grounds,
711 F.2d 1076 (D.C.Cir.1983). Most important, the statute itself is clear on the point: “This section does not authorize withholding of information or limit the availability of records to the public, except as specifically stated in this section.” 5 U.S.C. § 552(c).
No exemption applies to the district court opinions.
The Department maintains nonetheless that it need not affirmatively make them available to Tax Analysts because the documents have not
been
withheld
to begin with; it argues that with the information already provided through the Division’s logs, Tax Analysts can obtain the decisions from the originating courts themselves.
Although we can find no clear precedent on the issue, it strikes us as strange that an agency could in all cases deny access to records otherwise disclosable on the ground that they are available elsewhere. It is true that an agency need not respond to a FOIA request for copies of documents where the agency itself has provided an alternative form of access. For example, in
SDC Development Corp. v. Mathews,
542 F.2d 1116, 1119 (9th Cir.1976) (Kennedy, J.), the Ninth Circuit held that a computer database of medical information need not be disclosed in response to the FOIA request because it was already available from the agency through another statutorily prescribed means. And in
Lead Industries Ass’n, Inc. v. OSHA,
610 F.2d 70 (2d Cir.1979), Judge Friendly explained, albeit laconically, why material in an agency record that had previously appeared in the agency’s final published report need not be separately disclosed pursuant to a FOIA request: “If the segment appeared, it is already on the public record and need not be disclosed.”
Id.
at 86. Relying on
Lead Industries,
a Seventh Circuit district court similarly denied access to preliminary drafts of a later published report primarily on Exemption 5 grounds, stating that as to matters appearing in the final version, “Material already on public record need not be disclosed.”
City of W. Chicago v. Nuclear Regulatory Comm’n,
547 F.Supp. 740, 749 (N.D.Ill.1982). But whether the principle of alternative access by the same agency spills over to requests of one agency for “public record” documents obtainable from another independent source is not so clear.
For instance, at least one Supreme Court FOIA opinion seems to assume that public availability from a nonagency source is not sufficient by itself to justify an agency’s refusal to make its records available under the FOIA. In
Department of State v. Washington Post Co.,
456 U.S. 595, 102 S.Ct. 1957, 72 L.Ed.2d 358 (1982), while the Court opined that citizenship information which is “a matter of public record somewhere in the Nation” may make it
less
likely to be exempt from disclosure under Exemption 6, 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(6), as a clear invasion of personal privacy, it never hinted at the possibility that its public record status alone would suffice to exempt it.
Id.
at 602-03 n. 5, 102 S.Ct. at 1961-62 n. 5.
Similarly, in
Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press v. Department of Justice,
816 F.2d 730,
modified,
831 F.2d 1124 (D.C.Cir.1987),
cert. granted,
— U.S. - 108 S.Ct. 1467, 99 L.Ed.2d 697 (1988), we held that FOIA disclosure of criminal histories does not run afoul of the privacy exemption if they are
publicly available in the originating jurisdiction. No suggestion was made in this case either that the agency could meet its FOIA duty by directing the applicant to the original public source for the requested record. Indeed, it is common knowledge that agency records often contain publicly available information,
e.g.,
newspaper clippings, other government publications. Yet we are aware of no court which has denied access to such documents on the ground that they are available elsewhere, and several have assumed that such documents must still be produced by the agency unless expressly exempted by the Act.
The statute itself confers on the courts the power and responsibility to “enjoin the agency from withholding” disclosable records, 5 U.S.C. § 552(a)(4)(B), indicating that it is the
agency’s
responsibility to make its records available, whatever their source. In common parlance, if someone asks to borrow another’s newspaper, and she says, “No, go to the newsstand and buy your own,” she is “withholding” it. Similarly, it would be a novel interpretation of the FOIA’s prohibition on “withholding,” that permitted an agency to direct an applicant elsewhere for the information he sought from that agency’s files.
The Department predictably points out that making and sending copies of all federal district court tax decisions to Tax Analysts on a weekly basis would create large administrative burdens. This concern weighed heavily in the district court’s analysis and troubles us as well. Imposing an enormous and costly administrative burden on the Justice Department to secure already publicly available material for a commercial publication is certainly not the commonly perceived purpose of the FOIA.
Nonetheless, we cannot find in the words of the statute any exemption to cover such a situation and we are comforted somewhat by the knowledge that the burden in this case need not be so excessive as the Department makes out.
Compliance with the request for access to such decisions could involve no more than a memorandum to tax attorneys telling them to make an extra copy of district court decisions as they receive them and route such copies to a central file to which the plaintiffs would have access.
No file searches need be involved at all.
Thus our decision that district court opinions qualifying as “agency records” cannot be withheld means only that extra copies of these decisions must be made available in
an agency reading room.
The Department is not
required
by statute to mail copies of all such decisions to Tax Analysts nor even to provide a requester-convenient location for access.
See Mandel Grunfeld and Herrick v. U.S. Customs Service,
709 F.2d 41 (11th Cir.1983) (posting in Puerto Rican customshouse of agency records sufficient to meet FOIA obligation to Miami attorney applicant). The yoke of the FOIA in this instance may be lighter than it would appear at first glance.
At any rate, as we have incanted so often, the statute does not confer judicial discretion to balance its dictates against the administrative burdens of disclosure.
See Sears v. Gottshalk,
502 F.2d 122, 126 (4th Cir.1974) (burden and expense of disclosure does not justify withholding),
cert. denied sub nom. Sears v. Dann,
422 U.S. 1056, 95 S.Ct. 2680, 45 L.Ed.2d 709 (1975). Congress eliminated agency discretion to withhold information on administrative burden grounds when it substituted the FOIA for section three of the Administrative Procedure Act in 1974. 5 U.S.C. § 1002 (1964) (limiting disclosure to “persons properly and directly concerned” with information).
See Environmental Protection Agency v. Mink,
410 U.S. 73, 79-80, 93 S.Ct. 827, 832, 35 L.Ed.2d 119 (1973). Moreover, Congress explicitly dealt with the matter of administrative expense by providing for the payment of search and duplication costs by FOIA claimants.
See supra
note 13.
In sum, we hold that in response to a FOIA request, an agency must
itself
make disclosable agency records available to the public and may not on grounds of administrative convenience avoid this statutory duty by pointing to another public source for the information. We reject the Tax Division’s novel argument that it need only provide a log telling the applicant where these decisions can be obtained elsewhere.
B.
Are the Decisions “Agency Records”?
The district court never reached the question of whether the requested opinions and orders constituted agency records in the first place. On appeal the Justice Department renews its argument that the district court decisions sought by Tax Analysts are not “agency records” within the meaning of the FOIA.
“[T]he Freedom of Information Act, for all its attention to the treatment of ‘agency records,’ never defines that crucial phrase.”
McGehee,
697 F.2d at 1106. The legislative history of the FOIA is similarly unilluminating.
See id.; Forsham v. Harris,
445 U.S. 169, 182-87, 100 S.Ct. 977, 985-87, 63 L.Ed.2d 293 (1980) (limiting “agency records” to documents created or retained by an agency).
The Supreme Court, however, has necessarily had to probe the meaning of “agency record” on several occasions. In so doing, it has emphasized agency possession as one necessary facet.
See Forsham,
445 U.S. at 184-87, 100 S.Ct. at 986-87.
See also Kissinger,
445 U.S. at 150-55, 100 S.Ct. at 968-71 (agency possession necessary for “withholding” of former agency records). There is no doubt here that the Tax Division possesses the requested documents. The Court has made clear, however, that possession alone may not suffice to transform a nonagency document into an agency record.
Forsham,
445 U.S. at 185 n. 16, 100 S.Ct. at 987 n. 16 (citing
Kissinger,
445 U.S. at 157, 100 S.Ct. at 972). Accordingly, we have declined to hold that documents originating in a FOIA-exempted branch, like Congress or the courts,
see
5 U.S.C. § 551(1), become disclosable simply because they “eventually find their way into
the hands of an agency covered by the Act.”
McGehee,
697 F.2d at 1107.
Rather, we have held that information originating in a FOIA-exempt entity may only become an “agency record” if the agency’s eventual dominion over it includes the discretion to disclose it. Thus, we look for evidence surrounding the creation and transmittal of a document indicating that its creator intended to retain control. If there is none, and the document, though created elsewhere, is presently within the “free disposition of the agency with which [it] resides,” it may be deemed an “agency record.”
Lykins,
725 F.2d at 1459 (quoting
Goland v. CIA,
607 F.2d 339, 347 (D.C.Cir.1978), ce
rt. denied,
445 U.S. 927, 100 S.Ct. 1312, 63 L.Ed.2d 759 (1980)). For example, it has been finally determined that presen-tence reports, once they are transferred to the Bureau of Prisons, a FOIA agency, and used by that agency in its decisionmaking, are agency records.
The Justice Department maintains that this “control” analysis precludes disclosure of tax court decisions because there is no indication that the courts intended “to relinquish the inherent supervisory power [they have] over [their] own records.” Ap-pellee’s Brief at 28. The flaw in this argument is that it confuses control over document
content
with control over disposition and dissemination of the document itself. It is axiomatic that courts and Congress — and, for that matter, all agencies— retain ultimate control over the content of the records they create. But court orders, decisions and opinions may be used, duplicated and distributed by other agencies for their own purposes without detracting from the court’s basic authority to amend or vacate them.
Here, the courts retain no control over what happens to the copies of the tax decisions they distribute to the Tax Division.
Cf. Goland,
607 F.2d at 348 (documents not agency records where Congress intended to retain control). Indeed, the Tax Division already provides such documents to Tax Analysts once the government decides to prosecute an appeal.
See supra
note 7.
Of course, agency possession and power to disseminate a document are still insufficient by themselves to make it an “agency record.”
See Lindsey v. Bureau of Prisons,
736 F.2d 1462, 1465 (11th Cir.),
vacated,
469 U.S. 1082 105 S.Ct. 584, 83 L.Ed.2d 695 (1984). Agencies must use or rely on the document to perform agency business, and integrate it into their files, before it may be deemed an “agency record.”
See Wolfe v. Department of Health and Human Services,
711 F.2d 1077, 1081 (D.C.Cir.1983). The Justice Department admits use and reliance on the requested court decisions, reporting that the “opinions and orders may be read and used by some Tax Division employees and attorneys in performing their work as representatives of a party to the litigation, including deciding whether to appeal an adverse decision, deciding litigation positions and strategy and in framing legal arguments.” J.A. at 12. Moreover, the opinions and orders are classified and maintained in the official case files of the agency.
The Eleventh Circuit has conveniently distilled the essence of Supreme
Court and D.C.Circuit rulings into four relevant considerations for deciding whether an agency has sufficient “control” over a document to make it an “agency record.” They are:
the intent of the document’s creator to retain or relinquish control over the records; [2] the ability of the agency to use and dispose of the record as it sees fit; [3] the extent to which agency personnel have read or relied upon the document; and [4] the degree to which the document was integrated into the agency’s record system or files.
Lindsey v. Bureau of Prisons,
736 F.2d at 1465 (citations omitted). Our prior discussion indicates that the court decisions involved in this ease readily pass all four parts of the test. But, by requiring that all four factors be present, the test rebuts the slippery slope argument that the FOIA necessarily covers all public reference documents that may be found in agency libraries or offices, such as treatises, dictionaries and weekly news magazines.
Thus not everything in an agency library nor even every court decision received by the Department of Justice is by any means an “agency record” subject to disclosure under the Act. Only those tax decisions requested by Tax Analysts that have been incorporated into Department files, are relied upon by Tax Division attorneys in their work, and remain unencumbered by judicial limitations on dissemination, constitute diselosable “agency records.”
CONCLUSION
We reverse the district court’s decision granting the Justice Department’s motion to dismiss the complaint, and remand with instructions for the court to enter relief consistent with this opinion.