KAREN L. STEVENSON, Magistrate Judge.
Pursuant to Rule 26(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and based on the parties' Proposed Stipulated Protective Order ("Stipulation") filed on July 26, 2018, the terms of the protective order to which the parties have agreed are adopted as a protective order of this Court (which generally shall govern the pretrial phase of this action) except to the extent, as set forth below, that those terms have been modified by the Court's amendment of paragraphs E(4)(6), E(4)(7), E(4)(8), and G(1) of the Stipulation.
1. The parties expect that information protected by the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. § 552a, as amended, will be disclosed to Petitioners in the course of discovery and produced to the Court in pleadings, motions, and other documents. Specifically, Respondent represents that it has in its possession one or more alien files (hereinafter "A-files") of individuals who are or may be citizens or lawful permanent residents of the United States. These A-files may contain information that is discoverable in the instant litigation, but Respondent believes that the files are protected from disclosure under the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. § 552a, as amended. These A-files also contain personal data identifiers that are subject to redaction under Local Rule 5.2-1. Additionally, Respondent has in its possession Petitioners' A-files, which contain identifying information, which is or may be discoverable, concerning individuals other than Petitioners. Respondent believes that this information is also protected from disclosure under the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. § 552a, as amended and is subject to redaction under Local Rule 5.2-1.
2. Thus, with the agreement of the parties, the Court having determined that there is good cause for issuance of a protective order pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(c) to govern the disclosure, use, and handling by the parties and their respective agents, successors, personal representatives and assignees of certain information and items produced and received in discovery in the above-captioned action, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED as follows:
1. "Action" shall mean the case captioned, Apolonia Pam Domingo-Marcos et al. v. Jefferson B. Sessions III, 2:18-cv-03451-AB-KS, CDCA.
2. "Confidential Information" shall mean information that, at the time of its production in discovery in the action, or thereafter, is designated confidential by the Producing Party because of a good faith belief that the information: (a) is not in the public domain, or if in the public domain, is improperly in the public domain; and (b) is (i) a trade secret or other confidential research, development, or commercial information as such terms are used in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(c)(1)(G), (ii) personal financial, medical or other private information relating to an individual that would properly be redacted from any public court filing pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 5.2., or (iii) information protected by the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. § 552a, as amended, including, but not limited to information about an individual regarding his or her education, financial transactions, medical history, criminal or employment history and that contains his or her name, or the identifying number, symbol, or other identifying articular assigned to the individual, such as a finger or voice print or photograph.
3. "Disclose" (or forms thereof) shall mean to distribute, provide, or otherwise make available for access, viewing, or copying. "Disclose" shall include the actual covered document or item as well as the contents or information contained therein, such that disclosing a copy, summary, paraphrasing, or characterization would be considered a disclosure of the document itself for purposes of this Protective Order.
4. "Document" shall mean all items listed in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 34(a)(1)(A) & (B).
5. "Challenging Party" shall mean any party who challenges the designation of information as Confidential Information under this Protective Order.
6. "Designating Party" shall mean the party or other person producing in discovery in the Action any information that the Producing Party seeks to designate and have treated as Confidential Information pursuant to this Protective Order.
7. "Producing Party" shall mean the person or party producing in discovery in the Action.
8. "Receiving Party" shall mean any party who receives information that has been designated as Confidential Information.
1. This Protective Order applies to discovery, pre-trial and (to the extent approved by the Court) trial and post-trial proceedings in this action, whether the Documents are produced by a party or a person or entity who is not a party to this action (a "non-party"). It is also hereby ORDERED that Respondent may: (a) produce documents to Petitioners that are protected by the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. § 552a, and Respondent's production of such documents shall be considered to be "pursuant to the order of a court of competent jurisdiction" and authorized by 5 U.S.C. § 552a(b)(11) so long as Respondent designated the documents as CONFIDENTIAL-SUBJECT TO PROTECTIVE ORDER and (b) produce documents without redactions as required under Local Rule 5.2-1. This Order binds the parties and their respective agents, successors, personal representatives, and assignees.
2. Nothing in this Protective Order supersedes existing independent statutory, law enforcement, national security, or regulatory obligations imposed on a Party, and this Protective Order does not prohibit or absolve the parties from complying with such other obligations.
3. This Protective Order shall not prejudice in any way any party's ability to challenge the use or disclosure of information other than information designated as Confidential Information under this Protective Order in this Action. A party's compliance with the terms of this Protective Order shall not operate as an admission that any particular material is or is not (a) confidential, (b) privileged, or (c) admissible in evidence at trial.
4. The protections conferred by this Protective Order do not cover any information (a) properly in the public domain; (b) that becomes part of the public domain after its disclosure to a Receiving Party as a result of publication not involving a violation of this Protective Order, including becoming part of the public record in this Action through trial or otherwise; or (c) known to the Receiving Party prior to the disclosure or obtained by the Receiving Party after the disclosure from a source who obtained the information lawfully and under no obligation of confidentiality to the Producing Party.
5. This Protective Order does not govern the use by the parties of Confidential Information in open court at any hearing or trial, but the parties reserve the right to seek relief from the Court in connection with the intended use of Confidential Information in any such hearing or trial. Reference by the parties to confidential documents or information at trial, pursuant to an order entered by the Court as described in this paragraph, shall be considered to be: (a) "pursuant to the order of the court of competent jurisdiction" and authorized by 5 U.S.C. § 552a(b)(11); and (b) pursuant to an order permitting disclosure and filing of materials without redaction as required by Local Rule 5.2-1. See also paragraph (E)(9) below (providing advance notice to Producing Party prior to use of Confidential Information in open court or in support of a dispositive motion).
6. This Protective Order governs the disclosure, use, and handling of all Confidential Information, regardless of the format or medium in which such Confidential Information is generated, stored, or maintained.
7. Any Confidential Information referenced in any pleading or contained in any Document filed with the Court in this Action by the Producing Party shall at the time of filing cease to be Confidential Information unless the Producing Party files the un-redacted pleading or Document under seal.
8. Nothing in this Protective Order shall restrict the right of any Producing Party to use its own Confidential Information for any purpose whatsoever, but if any such use results in a disclosure that causes the Confidential Information to lose its designation as Confidential Information, then it shall no longer be subject to any protection under this Protective Order.
9. This Protective Order applies only to disclosures, uses, and handling of Confidential Information occurring after the entry of this Protective Order.
10. Neither the termination of this Action nor the termination of employment of any person who has had access to any Confidential Information shall relieve such person of his or her obligations under this Protective Order, which shall survive.
11. Any party may at any time seek modification of this Order by agreement or, failing agreement, by motion to the Court.
1. Designations of Confidential Information shall be made by the Producing Party, prior to or at the time of production, except as otherwise provided by this Protective Order.
2. The Designation of Confidential Information should be limited only to those Documents or portions of Documents that qualify under the appropriate standards or under the definition of "Confidential Information" in Section A(2) of this Protective Order.
3. Documents produced in discovery in this Action shall be designated as containing "Confidential Information." For documents produced in paper or an electronic form that allows endorsements or similar designation on the image, the designation shall appear by the inclusion of the marking of Confidential, Subject to Protective Order Dkt. No. 2:18-cv-03451-AB-KS, CDCA on each page of the document asserted to contain Confidential Information, or on a cover sheet appended to the document. For electronic information that is provided in native form or a format that is not amenable to visible endorsement on the image, the file name(s) shall begin with Confidential, Subject to Protective Order Dkt. No. 2:18-cv-03451-AB-KS, CDCA.
4. For interrogatory answers and responses to requests for admissions, designation of Confidential Information shall be made by placing within each interrogatory answer or response to requests for admission asserted to contain Confidential Information the following: CONFIDENTIAL pursuant to the Court's Protective Order dated MM/DD/YYYY (Doc. XX).
5. Because this case may require the use of Confidential Information in litigation, deposition testimony shall automatically be deemed CONFIDENTIAL-SUBJECT TO PROTECTIVE ORDER, unless the parties stipulate otherwise or the Court rules otherwise in response to an appropriate motion. Documents that are designated CONFIDENTIAL-SUBJECT TO PROTECTIVE ORDER, including deposition transcripts and associated exhibits, may be disclosed to deponents who have been given a copy of this Protective Order and have signed a declaration in the form attached hereto as "Exhibit A," in accordance with paragraph (E)(5) of this order.
6. For any other Document or item produced in discovery in this Action not falling within subparagraphs C(3), (4) or (5) above, designation of Confidential Information shall be made by labeling the item or the item's container with CONFIDENTIAL, Subject to Protective Order Dkt. No. 2:18-cv-03451-AB-KS, CDCA. If only a portion or portions of the information contained in the item warrant protection as Confidential Information, it shall be accompanied by a cover letter identifying the specific portion or portions so designated.
7. If it comes to a Producing Party's attention that information designated as Confidential Information does not qualify or no longer qualifies for protection, the Producing Party must promptly notify all parties that it is withdrawing the designation for the applicable information.
1. A Challenging Party shall not be obliged to challenge the propriety of a Confidential Information designation at the time made, and a failure to do so shall not preclude a subsequent challenge thereto.
2. tHE cHALLENGING pARTY SHALL INITIATE A CHALLENGE TO THE DESIGNATION OF ANY cONFIDENTIAL Information under this Protective Order by providing to the Designating Party (a) written notice of each designation it is challenging and (b) a description of the basis of each challenge.
3. The Challenging Party and the Designating Party shall attempt to resolve each challenge in good faith and must begin a meet and confer process within seven (7) calendar days after the Designating Party receives notice from the Challenging Party. During the conferring process, the Challenging Party must convey its basis for the challenge and the Designating Party must have an opportunity to review the applicable documents and either keep or change the designation. If the challenged designation(s) total 100 pages or less, the Designating Party must communicate its decision to the Receiving Party within fourteen (14) calendar days after receipt of notice of the challenge. For designation(s) totaling more than 100 pages, the parties, acting in good faith, shall agree on a reasonable time for the Designating Party to advise the Challenging Party of its decision.
4. If the Designating Party decides to withdraw its designation, it shall give notice of this change to all parties.
5. If the Challenging and Designating Parties cannot come to a resolution within the time set forth in paragraph 3 above, or as otherwise agreed, the opponent bears the burden of seeking a determination from the Court.
6. Any information designated as Confidential Information pursuant to and after the entry by the Court of this Protective Order shall be treated as Confidential Information until such time as (a) the Designating Party agrees that it shall no longer be treated as Confidential Information or (b) the Court rules that such information should not be treated as Confidential Information.
1. Upon designating documents as Confidential Information, Respondent is authorized to release such documents to counsel for Petitioners and the Court in this case, including documents from government files which contain discoverable, unredacted third-party identifying information, without obtaining written consent of the third parties whose names, addresses, and other identifying information may be present in such documents.
2. A Receiving Party may use Confidential Information in connection with this Action only for prosecuting, defending, or attempting to settle this Action, and shall disclose such Confidential Information only in accordance with the terms of this Protective Order.
3. Counsel of record are responsible for employing reasonable measures, consistent with this Protective Order, to control access to and secure distribution of Confidential Information.
4. Confidential Information shall only be disclosed, summarized, described, characterized, or otherwise communicated or made available in whole or in part to the following persons:
5. Disclosure to the persons referenced in subsections (E)(4)(e)-(i) above may only occur after the person to whom the disclosure is being made has been given a copy of this Protective Order and has signed a declaration in the form attached hereto as "Exhibit A."
6. Persons
All Confidential Information that is filed with the Court must be (a) filed under seal or in camera in accordance with the Court's Local Rules and procedures, or (b) redacted from any filing that is publicly available. However, the parties are not required to follow such filing requirements when a brief or memorandum merely cites to documents marked as CONFIDENTIAL-SUBJECT TO PROTECTIVE ORDER without revealing Confidential Information, or references information contained within documents marked CONFIDENTIAL-SUBJECT TO PROTECTIVE ORDER without revealing Confidential Information.
8. If a Receiving Party or anyone subject to this Protective Order receives a subpoena as designated in this Action,
the Receiving Party or such individual shall promptly notify the Designating Party shall not disclose any Confidential Information until the Designating Party has had a reasonable opportunity to inform the subpoenaed person either (a) the Designating Party does not object to the production of the Confidential Information or (b) that that the Designating Party will seek appropriate relief or protection from the proper Court to prevent the production. The Designating Party shall bear the burden and expense of seeking protection of its designated Confidential Information, and nothing in this Protective Order should be construed as authorizing or encouraging a subpoenaed person
9. If the need arises for any party to disclose Confidential Information in a proceeding in open Court or in support of a dispositive motion, it may do so only after giving seven (7) days' notice to the producing party who, after a good faith effort to meet-and-confer, may seek additional relief from the Court.
1. Nothing herein shall be deemed or construed as a waiver of any applicable privilege, right of privacy, or proprietary interest with respect to any information or item. The parties agree to follow Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(5)(B) with respect to any inadvertently or unintentionally produced or disclosed Confidential Information.
2. If a Receiving Party learns that, by inadvertence or otherwise, it, or a person to whom it has disclosed Confidential Information in accordance with this Protective Order, has disclosed Confidential Information to any person or in any circumstance not authorized under this Protective Order, the Receiving Party shall, upon learning of the unauthorized disclosure: (a) promptly notify the person(s) to whom the unauthorized disclosure was made that the unauthorized disclosure contains Confidential Information subject to this Protective Order; (b) promptly make all reasonable efforts to obtain the return of the Confidential Information and to prevent further unauthorized disclosures of the Confidential Information, including requesting the person who received the unauthorized disclosure to agree to be bound by the terms of this Protective Order by executing a declaration in the form attached as "Exhibit A"; and (c) within five (5) calendar days notify the Producing Party and all other parties of the identity of the person(s) to whom the unauthorized disclosure was made, the circumstances surrounding the disclosure, and the steps taken to prevent any use or further disclosure of the Confidential Information that was the subject of the unauthorized disclosure.
1. Except as provided in this Protective Order, within 90 days of the final termination of this Action, and termination of case No. 17-71611,
FOR GOOD CAUSE SHOWN, IT IS SO ORDERED.
1. My name is________________________________________________________
2. I have read the Protective Order that has been entered in this case, and a copy of it has been given to me. I understand the provisions of the Protective Order, and agree to comply with and to be bound by its provisions. I also consent to the jurisdiction of this Court for purposes of enforcement of the Protective Order.
3. I declare under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and correct.