Lynch v. Bharara et al
Filing
92
MEMORANDUM ORDER granting in part and denying in part 82 Motion for Reconsideration. For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiff's Motion for Reconsideration is granted to the extent it seeks an award of Plaintiff's costs incurred in this action, in the amount of $401.89, and is otherwise denied. Defendant shall reimburse Plaintiff's costs within thirty days of the date of this Memorandum Order. This Memorandum Order resolves docket entry no. 82. SO ORDERED. Copy mailed by chambers to: Plaintiff John Smith. (Signed by Judge Laura Taylor Swain on 6/22/2022) Copies Mailed By Chambers. (vfr)
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
JOHN SMITH,
Plaintiff,
19-CV-3572-LTS
-againstEXECUTIVE OFFICE FOR UNITED STATES
ATTORNEYS,
Defendant.
MEMORANDUM ORDER
The Court has received pro se Plaintiff John Smith’s motion for reconsideration
(docket entry no. 82 (“Motion”)) of the Court’s Memorandum Order dated February 9, 2022
(docket entry no. 76 (“Feb. 9 Ord.”)), which granted the renewed motion for summary judgment
filed by Defendant the Executive Office for United States Attorneys (the “EOUSA”) and
directed entry of judgment in the EOUSA’s favor. 1
The Court has considered the submissions of the parties carefully and, for the
following reasons, the Motion is granted to the extent it seeks an award of Plaintiff’s costs
incurred in this action and is otherwise denied.
DISCUSSION
A motion for reconsideration is not intended as “a vehicle for relitigating old
issues, presenting the case under new theories . . . or otherwise taking a second bite at the apple.”
Analytical Surveys, Inc. v. Tonga Partners, L.P., 684 F.3d 36, 52 (2d Cir. 2012) (internal
1
In a Sealed Order dated January 8, 2020, the Court granted Plaintiff’s request to proceed
anonymously, given the risks potentially posed to Plaintiff by public identification of him
by name.
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quotation marks and citation omitted). Indeed, reconsideration is an “extraordinary remedy to be
employed sparingly in the interests of finality and conservation of scarce judicial resources.” In
re Health Mgmt. Sys. Inc. Sec. Litig., 113 F. Supp. 2d 613, 614 (S.D.N.Y. 2000) (citation
omitted). To warrant reconsideration, the moving party bears the burden of showing “an
intervening change of controlling law, the availability of new evidence, or the need to correct a
clear error or prevent manifest injustice.” Virgin Atlantic Airways, Ltd. v. National Mediation
Bd., 956 F.2d 1245, 1255 (2d Cir. 1992) (citation omitted).
Liberally construed, Plaintiff’s motion seeks reconsideration of the Court’s
February 9 Order on five grounds, including (1) that the Court should reconsider its
determination that the EOUSA did not respond to Plaintiff’s FOIA requests in bad faith, (2) that
the Court should reconsider its FOIA Exemption 3 analysis because the information in the
documents withheld by the EOUSA has already been made public, (3) that some information in
those documents is segregable from any properly-withheld portions, (4) that certain non-parties
“fraudulently informed” Plaintiff about the basis of his transfer from state to federal custody in
2011, such that Plaintiff needs disclosure of the withheld documents to pursue claims arising
from that transfer, and (5) that Plaintiff should be awarded his costs in litigating this action.
Plaintiff’s first three arguments in favor of reconsideration raise issues which the
Court has previously considered and decided in the EOUSA’s favor, and do not present any
intervening change of controlling law, availability of new evidence, or need to correct a clear
error or prevent manifest injustice as to those issues. First, the Court held in its March 29, 2021,
Memorandum Order on the EOUSA’s first motion for summary judgment (docket entry no. 47
(“March 29 Ord.”)) that Plaintiff had not shown that the EOUSA responded to Plaintiff’s FOIA
requests in bad faith. (Id. at 14-15.) Plaintiff identifies no law or facts the Court overlooked in
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making that determination. 2 Second, the Court considered (in its February 9 Order) Plaintiff’s
proffers as to the already-public nature of some of the information in the documents withheld by
the EOUSA, and concluded that the EOUSA nonetheless properly withheld those documents
pursuant to FOIA Exemption 3 and Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 6(e). The transcripts
submitted by Plaintiff (Motion Ex. C) do not affect the Court’s conclusion that “the agency has
not waived Rule 6(e)’s protections over those documents . . . because Plaintiff’s identity remains
concealed, as do the details of the testimony sought to be presented before the grand jury, and
2
On reply, Plaintiff submits (1) a letter dated June 21, 2011, from his former counsel to
Assistant United States Attorney (“AUSA”) Nola B. Heller, referencing an email from
attorney Heller “wherein [she] requested a final proffer meeting” with Plaintiff “during
the week of June 20, 2011” (docket entry no. 90 (“Reply”) Ex. E), as well as (2) a letter
from Plaintiff’s former counsel to an Assistant District Attorney in the Bronx County
District Attorney’s Office, copied to AUSA Heller, requesting that Plaintiff be returned
from federal to state custody. (Id. Ex. F.) According to Plaintiff, these letters and the
referenced email should have been produced by the EOUSA as they “all fall under the
parameters” of Plaintiff’s FOIA requests (Reply at 3), and the failure to produce them
further evidences the EOUSA’s bad faith.
A reply in support of a motion for reconsideration is not a vehicle for the introduction of
supplemental evidence which a party has possessed since the outset of a case. Lima LS
PLC v. Nassau Reinsurance Grp. Holdings, L.P., 160 F. Supp. 3d 574, 578 (S.D.N.Y.
2015) (“A motion to reconsider is not supposed to treat the court’s initial decision as the
opening of a dialogue in which [the party making the motion] may then use such a
motion to advance new theories or adduce new evidence in response to the court’s
rulings.” (citation and internal quotation marks omitted)); Royal Park Invs. SA/NV v.
U.S. Bank Nat’l Ass’n, 324 F. Supp. 3d 387, 395 (S.D.N.Y. 2018) (“Courts in this
District have frequently declined to consider evidence first submitted on reply.” (citation
omitted)). Consideration of those submissions would not in any event warrant
reconsideration. First, there is no evidence that AUSA Heller’s June 21, 2011, email to
Plaintiff’s former counsel “wherein [she] requested a final proffer meeting” concerned
Plaintiff’s transfer between state and federal custody, the principal subject of his FOIA
requests to the EOUSA. Second, as explained in the February 9 Order, the adequacy of a
FOIA search is measured by its methods, not its results. (Feb. 9 Ord. at 6.) Third, given
Plaintiff’s submission of these letters on reply, the EOUSA has not had an opportunity to
respond as to, among other things, whether the agency’s record retention policies would
have required the EOUSA to retain the correspondence received by AUSA Heller for the
approximately seven-year period between the dates of those letters and Plaintiff’s
pertinent FOIA requests.
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there is no claim that any of the documents themselves are in the public domain.” (Feb. 9 Ord. at
8.) Third, Plaintiff’s general segregability argument that the EOUSA “can redact names and
witness[es] as applicable” is both too late, given that the Plaintiff did not make that argument in
response to the EOUSA’s proffer of admissible evidence that it complied with the FOIA’s
segregability requirements (see docket entry no. 52 at 9-10; docket entry no. 56 ¶ 20), and too
generic and speculative to overcome the EOUSA’s evidentiary proffer in that regard.
Plaintiff’s fourth argument in favor of reconsideration is that “[w]ithout the
information the EOUSA seeks to withhold, Plaintiff cannot challenge the validity” of the writ of
habeas corpus ad testificandum withheld by the EOUSA, or the legality of his transfer between
state and federal custody in 2011 “under a false pretense to be prosecuted.” (Motion at 6.) In
light of Plaintiff’s pro se status, the Court construes Plaintiff’s argument to be that the Court
should authorize disclosure of the writ of habeas corpus ad testificandum under Federal Rule of
Criminal Procedure 6(e)(3)(E)(i), which provides that the Court may authorize disclosure of a
grand jury matter “preliminarily to or in connection with a judicial proceeding”—namely,
Plaintiff’s claims based on the lack of any legal authority for his transfer from state to federal
custody given the purported deficiencies in the writ authorizing such transfer. (See docket entry
no. 43 at ECF page 9 (Plaintiff characterizing his claims in his Amended Complaint as based on
“two inescapable conclusions, either A) the agencies are improperly withholding FOIA
documents, or B) Defendants transferred Plaintiff between jurisdictional sovereignties illegally
on multiple occasions”).) However, a “‘judicial proceeding’ does not include a FOIA
proceeding instituted to obtain such disclosure,” Malizia v. U.S. Dep’t of Just., 519 F. Supp. 338,
346 n.40 (S.D.N.Y. 1981), and Plaintiff has not provided the Court with any non-speculative
basis to conclude that the writ authorizing his transfer to federal custody was invalid, or that he
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has a plausible basis to commence a separate “judicial proceeding” based on such invalidity.
Without more, Plaintiff’s speculation that disclosure of the withheld writ could theoretically
assist him in framing a separate claim in this or another proceeding does not warrant an order
from this Court directing disclosure of the withheld documents pursuant to Federal Rule of
Criminal Procedure 6(e)(3)(E)(i). See Fed. R. Crim. P. 6(e)(3)(E) (listing instances in which a
Court “may” authorize disclosure); McKeever v. Barr, 920 F.3d 842, 846 (D.C. Cir. 2019)
(“[T]his court’s precedents . . . require a district court to hew strictly to the list of exceptions to
grand jury secrecy[.]”).
Plaintiff’s final argument in favor of reconsideration is that the Court should
award him his costs incurred in litigating this FOIA action, which, Plaintiff proffers, consist of a
$350 filing fee and “more than $150.00 in mailing and copy fees.” (Motion at 7-8.) While the
February 9 Order denied Plaintiff’s application for an award of attorneys’ fees—which are not
recoverable by pro se parties in FOIA actions (see Feb. 9 Ord. at 10-11)—the Court did not
consider the question of costs.
Under 5 U.S.C. section 552(a)(4)(E)(i), “[t]he court may assess against the United
States reasonable attorney fees and other litigation costs reasonably incurred in any case under
this section in which the complainant has substantially prevailed.” A plaintiff has “substantially
prevailed” where that plaintiff has obtained relief through either “a judicial order, or an
enforceable written agreement or consent decree,” or “a voluntary or unilateral change in
position by the agency, if the complainant’s claim is not insubstantial.” Id. § 552(a)(4)(E)(ii).
Accord Warren v. Colvin, 744 F.3d 841, 845 (2d Cir. 2014) (“Congress intended this amendment
to prevent federal agencies from denying meritorious FOIA requests, only to voluntarily comply
with a request on the eve of trial to avoid liability for litigation costs.”).
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Once a plaintiff has shown his or her eligibility for an award of fees and costs
under section 552(a)(4)(E), many courts have applied a four-factor test long applied in the D.C.
Circuit to determine whether that eligible plaintiff is also “entitled” to such an award. Am.
Oversight v. U.S. Dep’t of Just., 375 F. Supp. 3d 50, 65 (D.D.C. 2019) (“Under the entitlement
prong, the Court must weigh four factors: (1) the public benefit derived from the case; (2) the
commercial benefit to the plaintiff; (3) the nature of the plaintiff’s interest in the records; and (4)
the reasonableness of the agency’s withholding of the requested documents.” (citation and
internal quotation marks omitted)). The Second Circuit Court of Appeals referenced that fourfactor test in passing in 2009 when addressing the separate question of whether a lawyer who
represents himself or herself may recover attorneys’ fees under FOIA’s fee shifting provision.
See Pietrangelo v. U.S. Army, 568 F.3d 341, 344 (2d Cir. 2009). The Second Circuit has never
been presented the explicit question whether to adopt the D.C. Circuit’s four-factor test,
however, and several judges within the D.C. Circuit have opined that the four-factor test should
be abandoned. See, e.g., Morley v. C.I.A., 719 F.3d 689, 690 (D.C. Cir. 2013) (Kavanaugh, J.,
concurring) (“We should ditch the four-factor standard. . . . [T]he four factors have no basis in
the statutory text. . . Rather than mandating a four-factor standard, FOIA grants courts discretion
to determine when attorney’s fees should be awarded.”); Davy v. C.I.A., 550 F.3d 1155, 1166
(D.C. Cir. 2008) (Randolph, J., dissenting) (“It is time to recognize that this test is a legal
relic.”). In any event, even where the four-factor test applies, “[n]o one factor is dispositive,
except that the court will not assess fees when the agency has demonstrated that it had a lawful
right to withhold disclosure.” Kwoka v. Internal Revenue Serv., 989 F.3d 1058, 1064 (D.C. Cir.
2021) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). See also Am. Oversight, 375 F. Supp. 3d
at 65 (D.D.C. 2019) (“The four-factor framework is ultimately ‘a heuristic, a somewhat crude
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mechanism for testing whether fees in a particular case are consistent with the purposes for
which Congress subsidized FOIA litigation.’” (citation omitted)). Its application is “left to the
Court’s discretion.” Pinson v. Lappin, 806 F. Supp. 2d 230, 235 (D.D.C. 2011); Bolze v. Exec.
Off. for United States Att’ys, No. 17-CV-2858-FYP, 2021 WL 5564633, at *9 (D.D.C. Nov. 29,
2021) (“The decision to award costs and fees is left to the Court’s discretion.”).
On the peculiar facts of this case, Plaintiff is both eligible for and entitled to an
award of costs. Twice this Court issued judicial orders granting Plaintiff some relief, first
through an Order directing the EOUSA to perform a search for responsive documents in the first
instance (docket entry no. 32) and second through an order directing the agency to perform a
more thorough search for responsive documents after its initial search was inconsistent and
incomplete (docket entry no. 47). These searches—which would not have occurred at all but for
Plaintiff’s lawsuit—yielded the production to Plaintiff of at least one document, as well as the
identification of the relevant writ of habeas corpus ad testificandum, the existence of which
Plaintiff had long sought to confirm. This relief may be relatively minimal—like the amount of
Plaintiff’s requested costs—but is sufficient to trigger section 552(a)(4)(E)(i). Edmonds v.
F.B.I., 417 F.3d 1319, 1327 (D.C. Cir. 2005) (“[T]he degree of the plaintiff’s success in relation
to the other goals of the lawsuit is a factor critical to the determination of the size of a reasonable
fee, not to eligibility for a fee award at all.” (citation omitted)).
Even assuming the applicability of the above-referenced four-factor test, Plaintiff
is also entitled to the small award he seeks. The public has little interest in this action, and the
second and third factors are essentially neutral given that disclosure was sought principally for
Plaintiff’s personal (albeit noncommercial) use, based on his interest in understanding the
process by which he was transferred to and from federal custody. Even if that interest did not
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overcome Rule 6(e)’s secrecy protections, it is a legitimate one. Moreover, the Court concludes
that the fourth factor—the reasonableness of the agency’s withholding of the requested
documents—weighs in favor of an award and outweighs the other factors in this case. While
they did not constitute bad faith, the EOUSA’s failure to conduct any search at all in response to
at least two separate FOIA requests from the Plaintiff until ordered to do so by the Court, and
subsequent flawed search for responsive records, were sufficiently unreasonable to justify an
award of costs against the agency. That is particularly so where Plaintiff’s FOIA requests were
relatively tailored to the issue as to which he sought information—the documentation (or lack
thereof) of his transfer to and from federal custody. The three-year period between Plaintiff’s
first FOIA request to the agency and the agency’s revelation that such documentation indeed
existed also warrants an award of costs to the Plaintiff here.
Plaintiff requests $500 in costs, consisting of Plaintiff’s $350 filing fee and “more
than $150.00 in mailing and copy fees.” (Motion at 7-8.) Plaintiff is entitled to reimbursement
of his statutorily required filing fee, which he paid in full on July 28, 2020. See 28 U.S.C.A. §
1915(b)(1) (“if a prisoner brings a civil action or files an appeal in forma pauperis, the prisoner
shall be required to pay the full amount of a filing fee”). (See also docket entry no. 5 (“[a]
prisoner bringing a civil action is required to pay the full $350 filing fee even when proceeding
in forma pauperis”).) Moreover, while the Court may not award costs which Plaintiff has not
documented (see Opp. at 7-8)—and Plaintiff has not proffered any admissible evidence of his
mailing and copy fees here—the envelopes of Plaintiff’s mailings to the Court evidence, by the
Court’s calculation, no less than $51.89 in postage fees incurred in litigating this case. The
Court therefore awards Plaintiff a total of $401.89 ($350 + $51.89) in costs incurred.
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CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiff’s Motion for Reconsideration is granted to the
extent it seeks an award of Plaintiff’s costs incurred in this action, in the amount of $401.89, and
is otherwise denied. Defendant shall reimburse Plaintiff’s costs within thirty days of the date of
this Memorandum Order.
This Memorandum Order resolves docket entry no. 82.
SO ORDERED.
Dated: New York, New York
June 22, 2022
/s/ Laura Taylor Swain
LAURA TAYLOR SWAIN
Chief United States District Judge
Copy mailed by chambers to:
Plaintiff John Smith
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