EVELYN J. FURSE, District Judge.
Plaintiffs Tyler Pitman and Liliana Damaschin ("Pitman Plaintiffs") filed a Motion to Complete the Administrative Record. (Mot. to Complete Admin. R. ("Mot."), ECF No. 51.) The Pitman Plaintiffs ask the Court to (1) "order Defendants to immediately complete the administrative record and include therein every document and communication considered in the adjudication of the Pitman petition by Defendants," and (2) "find that any claims of privilege have been waived and order Defendants to produce the withheld documents, or at a minimum, order Defendants to immediately produce a privilege log." (Mot. 6.) Defendants United States Citizenship and Immigration Services, et al. ("USCIS Defendants") opposed the Motion (Mem. in Opp'n to Pls.' Mot. to Complete Admin. R. ("Opp'n") ECF No. 55), and the Pitman Plaintiffs filed a Reply in support of their Motion (Pls.' Reply to Defs.' Mem. in Opp'n to Pls.' Mot. to Complete Admin. R. ("Reply"), ECF No. 57). At the same time the USCIS Defendants filed their Opposition, they also filed nine previously redacted pages of the administrative record, indicating that they "have withdrawn their objections to providing unredacted versions of pages 951-59." (Notice of Filing re Admin. R., ECF No. 56.)
On April 20, 2018, the Court held a hearing on the Motion. (ECF No. 63.) At the hearing the Pitman Plaintiffs limited their request to an order requiring the USCIS Defendants to produce a privilege log detailing their privilege claims. The USCIS Defendants confirmed at the hearing that they withheld documents on the grounds that the deliberative process privilege protects them. The Pitman Plaintiffs argue that the USCIS Defendants should have to produce a privilege log to substantiate their privilege claims. The USCIS Defendants counter that documents protected by the deliberative process privilege do not form part of the administrative record in the first place and therefore they have no obligation to produce a log. Also, at the hearing, the USCIS Defendants indicated that they originally withheld the redacted documents subsequently produced concurrently with their Opposition on the basis of the deliberative process privilege.
The parties agree that neither the Tenth Circuit nor any other circuit court has determined whether privileged documents form part of the administrative record or whether the government must produce a privilege log in Administrative Procedure Act ("APA") cases such as this one. Given the focusing of the Pitman Plaintiffs' motion at the hearing and the lack of case law cited with respect to privilege logs in the parties' briefs, the Court asked the parties to submit a list of district court cases, particularly from the Tenth Circuit, supporting their positions on the privilege log issue. On April 27, 2018, the parties submitted a joint filing identifying cases that they claim support their respective positions. (Jt. Notice of Filing of Suppl. Authorities, ECF No. 64.)
Based on the parties' briefs, oral argument, and the supplemental authorities cited by the parties, and for the reasons addressed below, the Court GRANTS IN PART the Pittman Plaintiffs' Motion and will require the USCIS Defendants to produce a privilege log detailing their privilege claims.
"A district court reviews an agency action to determine if it was `arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.'"
Relying on cases from the District of Columbia and Virginia district courts, the USCIS Defendants argue that privileged materials do not become part of the administrative record in APA cases, and therefore they have no obligation to provide a privilege log.
On the other hand, the Pitman Plaintiffs cite cases from various other district courts, including within the Tenth Circuit, that have required the government to produce a privilege log to substantiate privilege claims made with respect to documents or portions of documents withheld from the administrative record.
The USCIS Defendants have not pointed to any binding authority in the Tenth Circuit holding that the administrative record does not include privileged documents. Therefore, consistent with other courts facing similar circumstances, the Court declines to follow the district court cases from the Districts of Columbia and Virginia and hold that privileged documents do not form part of the administrative record and therefore not require a privilege log in APA cases.
Furthermore, the Court finds the cases requiring the production of a privilege log more persuasive, particularly given the circumstances in this case. While courts generally afford the government's designation of the administrative record the presumption of regularity and completeness,
(Opp'n at 3, 5 (emphasis added)). In the Tenth Circuit, the administrative record, consists of all materials "directly or indirectly considered" by the government.
Relatedly, the USCIS Defendants' representation at the hearing that despite divergent views among the circuits as to what constitutes the administrative record, they do not take those varying standards into account when compiling the administrative record in any given case raises concerns about the completeness of the record.
Accordingly, the Court will require the USCIS Defendants to produce a privilege log in this case for all documents withheld from the administrative record on the basis of privilege. The Court does not intend to imply that the USCIS Defendants improperly withheld documents from the administrative record on the grounds of the deliberative process privilege. However, given the circumstances in this case, the Court finds that the Pitman Plaintiffs are entitled to a privilege log detailing the USCIS Defendants' privilege claims, which will then allow them to either confirm the privilege assertions or challenge the privilege assertions if they believe the USCIS Defendants improperly withheld certain documents from the administrative record on that basis.
For the foregoing reasons, the Court GRANTS IN PART the Pitman Plaintiffs' motion. The USCIS Defendants must produce within fourteen (14) days a privilege log which substantiates the assertion of the deliberative process privilege, or any other privilege, as a basis for withholding documents or portions of documents from the administrative record. The privilege log should, at a minimum, describe each document (including the author/sender, recipient(s), title, date, etc.), identify the basis for withholding each document, and otherwise include sufficient information to substantiate each privilege claim.