No. 1:05CV2266 (D.D.C.), filed
November 23, 2005
Updated:
October 9, 2008
Issue: Whether HHS violated the Freedom of Information Act when it
failed to respond to a request for documents about the
videoconferencing technology to be employed in the new system for handling
Medicare appeals to ALJs.
Relief sought: The production of the relevant documents.
Status: HHS has produced several hundred pages of documents, but is
withholding many more contending that they are exempt from disclosure under
the attorney-client and/or deliberative process privileges. The
parties briefed cross-motions for summary judgment in the fall of 2006, with
the final brief filed on October 31, 2006. On March 28, 2008, the
court ruled largely in the defendant's favor, holding that HHS did not have
to produce the requested documents. The judge did grant plaintiff's
request for a fee waiver, however. The court stated that it would
later issue an opinion explaining its ruling, and that the order would not
take effect until that opinion was issued.
On September 17, 2008, the Court finally issued its decision. --- F. Supp.
2d ---, 2008 WL 4294283 (D.D.C. 2008). In a lengthy analysis, the Court
determined that, under the deliberative process and attorney-client
privileges, the government had no obligation to provide any additional
documents. In a minor victory for the plaintiff, the Court explained at some
length why plaintiff's fee should be waived. See id., at *13-*16. That
aspect of the decision, at least, may be of some use for future FOIA
requests by public interest entities, especially as the decision will be
published in the official reporter. Plaintiff has not yet determined whether
it will appeal the adverse decision on the document request. |