LAUREL BEELER, Magistrate Judge.
This is a civil-rights suit under the Fourth Amendment and 42 U.S.C. § 1983. It is more specifically an excessive-force and officer-involved-shooting (OIS) case. It grows from a November 2015 incident in which Oakland police officers fatally shot the plaintiff's decedent. The plaintiff has asked the defendants to produce various categories of information, such as complaint histories for the relevant officers, training material, text messages, and social-media posts. The defendants do not deny that some of this material must be produced. They do argue that the plaintiff's requests are excessive, in several ways, and should be limited. This dispute can be resolved without oral argument. See Civil L.R. 7-1(b). The court reaches the following conclusions.
Civil discovery is bounded primarily by procedural Rule 26. Under that rule:
Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). "The relevance standard is extremely broad, especially in civil rights excessive force cases." James v. Hayward Police Dep't, 2017 WL 2437346, *1 (N.D. Cal. Feb. 27, 2017) (Illston, J.) (citing Soto v. City of Concord, 162 F.R.D. 603, 610 (N.D. Cal. 1995)). This court too, in this case, has expressed its understanding that police personnel files are generally discoverable in such cases, and are usually covered by a protective order.
Throughout this order, the court has mostly addressed only those specific requests that are discussed in the parties' joint letter. The language of the requests themselves is sometimes turbid, making it hard to grasp exactly what is being sought. The court has thus stuck closely to the discussion in the joint letter.
The plaintiff calls this a request for "complaint," "disciplinary," and "misconduct histories" for all "involved officers."
The defendants allow that "personnel records are routinely produced."
The court holds as follows. The defendants must produce anything related to complaints or "misconduct" in excessive-force cases. They must produce anything concerning "`shoot/don't shoot training" or "any . . . retraining." This would encompass general use-of-force training; that is to say, it is not limited to only deadly-force training. Training on "bias" and "arrest procedure" must also be produced. The parties also seem to agree that material involving "truthfulness," "veracity," and "report-writing" should be produced.
Material relating to "detentions" and "detention procedure" requires better specificity. Insofar as "detention" in the plaintiff's requests means pre-arrest detentions (say, in the manner of a Terry stop), this material must be produced. To the extent that "detention" refers to post-arrest detainment (such as confinement in jail), this requests exceeds what is proportional to the needs of this case; such material need not be produced.
The defendants need not produce material related to "discourtesy" or "professionalism and decorum."
This request seeks training materials on 21 topics.
The defendants need not produce training material on "(s) discourtesy" or "(t) professionalism and decorum."
The defendants also suggest that this request is temporally "overbroad," because it covers training that the subject officers received "at any time."
Request #6 asks for all documents "concerning" the "hiring, appointment and promotion" of the four defendant officers.
Performance evaluations and supervision-related material (RFP #8) is potentially relevant and must be produced. So must material touching upon the "promotion" (RFP #6) of the defendant officers: promotions being a subset of job evaluations.
Material concerning the "hiring" or "appointment" of the defendants must be produced. In a Monell claim, the plaintiff alleges that the municipal defendants "failed to properly hire" the defendant officers.
Documents relating to the involved officers' "mental and physical condition" at the time of the incident may yield relevant evidence. Such material is inherently sensitive, however, and calls for extra care. First, the court accepts the plaintiff's assertion that it seeks only such information as was "already in the custody of the OPD in connection with their job performance."
Requests 1 and 25 broadly seek information concerning the incident in question. Request #1 asks for: "[A]ll DOCUMENTS regarding the INCIDENT . . . and any investigation [of] and/or follow-up to the INCIDENT. . . ."
The parties have several disputes over these requests. The plaintiff first complains that the defendants have wrongly restricted the term "reports" as used in Request #1(a). The plaintiff did not define this term.
The court basically agrees with the plaintiff. The defendants seem to confine the term "report" to such material as meets a threshold test for admission.
The parties next disagree over ESI discovery. They argue mainly over how ESI must be searched. The plaintiff's request can be broken down into three heads, gathered from Requests 1(j) and 25. In the language of the joint letter:
Embedded in these requests is a dispute over how the defendants must search the target ESI. Only the second request above contemplates that the defendants can use keyword searching to find responsive documents. The other two items imply that the defendants must search all such material individually to find responsive items. The plaintiff indeed calls keyword searching "inadequate."
The plaintiff cites National Day Laborer Org. Network v. United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement Agency, 877 F.Supp.2d 87 (S.D.N.Y. 2012) to support the view that keyword searches are "inadequate."
Id. at 108-09 (footnotes omitted) (quoting S. Scheindlin et al., Electronic Discovery and Digital Evidence: Cases and Materials at 327 (2nd ed. 2012) and M. Grossman & T. Sweeney, What Lawyers Need to Know About Search Tools: The Alternatives to Keyword Searching Include Linguistic and Mathematical Models for Concept Searching, Nat. L.J. (Aug. 23, 2010)). But National Day Laborer envisaged more robust automated searching. See id. at 109-10. It pointed "beyond . . . keyword search" to "computer-assisted" and "predictive"-coding approaches like "latent semantic indexing, statistical probability methods, and machine learning tools to find responsive documents." Id. at 109. It did not propose falling back on attorneys physically poring over every piece of ESI created in the relevant period.
Additionally, Magistrate Judge Corley of this court has distinguished National Day Laborer in a way that applies here. In Bothwell v. Brennan, 2015 WL 6689387 (N.D. Cal. Nov. 3, 2015), aff'd, 677 F. App'x 335 (9th Cir. 2014), Magistrate Judge Corley rejected a plaintiff's invocation of National Day Laborer to deem keyword searching "not enough":
Bothwell, 2015 WL 6689387 at *5. The same essential reasoning applies here. The court has seen nothing that convinces it that keyword searching will be inadequate in this case.
Two final thoughts. At least one district court has found the enhanced computer-search techniques suggested in National Day Laborer to "exceed" the "reasonableness" standard applied to FOIA searches in the relevant circuit. Bigwood v. United States Dep't of Defense, 132 F.Supp.3d 124, 142 (D.D.C. 2015). And, as the defendants point out, this district's ESI "checklist" contemplates that keyword searches will be at least one ESI-search method that litigants will consider.
The court thus agrees with the defendants. The defendants may search for this material using the plaintiff's suggested terms — except that the defendants need not use the terms "gun" and "weapon." Those words would surely return too much that is irrelevant. The other search terms should adequately capture anything that is relevant to this case and responsive to the plaintiff's substantive request. Such a search would be proportional to the needs of this case.
The court adds the following observation. Toward the end of discovery, when parties' roles and communications are more obvious, it can be helpful to do targeted ESI searches among identified parties and identified times. (For example, all communications among these three people in this two-week period.) This level of specificity is usually possible later in discovery. The court thinks that the initial ESI production may illuminate subsequent targeted searches.
Finally, there is the question of the involved officers' text messages and social-media posts. The dispute over this request partly involves the question of how this material must be searched. The defendants say that compelling defense counsel to pore through the officers' text messages and social-media accounts to ferret out responsive material would violate the officers' privacy and would be unduly burdensome.
That last suggestion seems unsatisfying. Two concerns are interwoven here: the mode of the search and the officers' privacy. As with the requested ESI generally, the court holds that keyword searching is a sufficient method for tackling the text messages and social-media posts. That should answer the defendants' concern about the burden of the search. And it should partly relieve concerns about the defendants' lawyers rummaging through the officers' private information. But this assumes that it is technically possible to conduct such a search on the officers' devices and social-media accounts. The defendants have not suggested that searching these things is technically impracticable. But the parties do not broach the issue.
The record allows the court only to say that the defendants may respond to Request #25 by keyword searching the involved officers' text messages and social-media posts — the yield of such a search being subject to the existing protective order. If the parties wish to more fully address the legal and technical issues attendant to discovering material from such sources, then they may do so in a joint letter directed to that specific issue.
Production is ordered or denied according to the preceding discussion. This disposes of ECF No. 56.