PEGGY A. LEEN, Magistrate Judge.
Before the court is the parties' Stipulated Protective Order (Dkt. #45), which the court approved to facilitate the parties' discovery exchanges. This order is intended to remind counsel and the parties that there is a presumption of public access to judicial files and records. A party seeking to file a confidential document under seal must file a motion to seal and must comply with the Ninth Circuit's directives in Kamakana v. City and County of Honolulu, 447 F.3d 1172 (9th Cir. 2006).
Although the Court approved the blanket protective order, the parties have not shown, and this Court has not found, that any specific documents are secret or confidential. The parties have not provided specific facts supported by affidavits or concrete examples to establish that a protective order is required to protect any specific trade secret or other confidential information under Rule 26(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure or that disclosure would cause an identifiable and significant harm. The Ninth Circuit has held that parties seeking to maintain the confidentiality of documents attached to most non-dispositive motions must show good cause exists to overcome the presumption of public access. See Kamakana, 447 F.3d at 1179-80; but see Ctr. for Auto Safety v. Chrysler Grp., LLC, 809 F.3d 1092 (9th Cir. 2016) (standards courts apply to sealing requests turn on the relevance of the documents to the substantive merits of a case—not the relief sought). Parties seeking to maintain the secrecy of documents attached to dispositive motions must show compelling reasons sufficient to overcome the presumption of public access. Id. If a sealing order is permitted, it must be narrowly tailored. Press-Enterprise Co. v. Superior Ct. of Cal., Riverside Cty., 464 U.S. 501, 512 (1984). The sealing of entire documents is improper when any confidential information can be redacted while leaving meaningful information available to the public. In re Roman Catholic Archbishop of Portland, 661 F.3d 417, 425 (9th Cir. 2011).
Under Kamakana, the party who designates documents as confidential must submit a memorandum of points and authorities to the Court presenting articulable facts that identify the interests in favor of the documents' continued secrecy and showing that these specific interests outweigh the public's strong interest in transparency. Here, if an opposing party files a motion to seal certain documents based on the parties' Stipulated Protective Order (Dkt. #58), the designating party is required to file within 14 days an appropriate memorandum of points and authorities making a particularized showing why the documents should remain under seal or why the designating party should be allowed to file a redacted version. If the designating party fails to timely comply with this Order, the motion to seal will be denied and the Clerk of the Court will be directed to unseal the documents to make them available on the public docket.
In addition to Kamakana, the parties are required to follow the proper CM/ECF procedures for any requests to seal judicial records. The Local Rules of Practice provide that the electronic record is the court's official record and require the Clerk of the Court to maintain the official files all cases in electronic form. See D. Nev. LR IC 1-1 (amended May 1, 2016). Pursuant to LR IA 10-5, attorneys must file documents under seal using the court's electronic filing procedures:
See D. Nev. LR IA 10-5(a).
To streamline the process of sealing or unsealing documents as may be necessary, first, a party must file its underlying brief or motion. Second, the party files its motion to seal on the public docket without the confidential documents and "links" this motion to seal in CM/ECF to the underlying brief. See D. Nev. LR IC 2-2(d).
Each document or exhibit that a party seeks to file under seal must be filed as a separate, searchable Portable Document Format (PDF). D. Nev. LR IC 2-2(a), LR IA 10-3. When portions of a filing may be sealed, litigants must not combine their motion to seal, memorandum of points and authorities, declaration, and/or exhibits into one PDF document and then file that single PDF as the "main document" in CM/ECF's document upload screen. D. Nev. LR IC 2-2(a)(3)(A). This practice makes it impossible for the Clerk of the Court to unseal specific documents the Court finds should not be sealed because the docketing clerks cannot separate the pages for sealing purposes. See D. Nev. LR IA 10-5(b). Instead, the Local Rules require litigants to save each document or exhibit they want sealed as a separate PDF document and then file each PDF in CM/ECF's document upload screen as "attachments" to a main document. The shortcut of filing only one PDF inevitably causes additional work for the Court, the clerk's office, and litigants. Should leave to file under seal be granted for some but not all documents, the Court must then order litigants to refile the unsealed documents, rather than simply instructing the clerk's office to unseal the documents the Court has found should not remain sealed.
The Court's review of any motion requesting leave to file under seal will be complicated by the parties' failure to properly file their exhibits through CM/ECF. Counsel are responsible for instructing their staff regarding the correct procedures for filing under seal. The parties are encouraged to contact the CM/ECF Helpdesk at (702) 464-5555 prior to filing should they have any technical questions. For additional direction, the parties may also refer to the updated procedures in CM/ECF Version 4.0 Enhancements and Changes, which is available on the Court's website.
Accordingly,