JEROME B. SIMANDLE, Chief District Judge.
This matter is before the Court on Plaintiff's motion for an order to show cause why Defendant Office of Information Policy should not be held in contempt [Docket Item 28] and Plaintiff's subsequently filed motion to hold Defendant in contempt [Docket Item 36]. THE COURT FINDS AS FOLLOWS:
1. This matter involves Plaintiff's request, pursuant to the Freedom of Information Act ("FOIA"), 5 U.S.C. § 552, for certain records related to a criminal investigation. Plaintiff fully exhausted his request for such records before the Department of Justice; his request was denied by the agency without conducting a search for responsive documents based on certain categorical exceptions. May 25, 2011 Opinion at *3-4 [Docket Item 18].
2. Plaintiff then brought this action seeking judicial review of Defendant's denial of his request. Defendant moved for summary judgment based on the claimed categorical exceptions; the Court denied, in part, Defendant's motion on May 25, 2011.
3. On May 30, 2012, Plaintiff then filed his instant motion for an order to show cause, stating that he had received no response to the Court's order and no indication that the particularized analysis, commonly known as a
4. Defendant represents that a comprehensive search for responsive documents in the Southern District of New York will take an estimated 20 hours of search time, which would then be reviewed by the EOUSA in Washington, and could be completed by November 1, 2012. Defendant further explained that Plaintiff will be required to pre-pay the anticipated cost of the search before Defendant will conduct the search for records responsive to Plaintiff's request.
5. Plaintiff then filed the instant motion for civil contempt. [Docket Item 36.] Plaintiff objects to both the requirement that he pay the cost of the search and the proposed timeline, suggesting that an additional delay of several months is unwarranted and demonstrates bad faith on the part of Defendant.
6. The Court will deny Plaintiff's motion for contempt, finding the proposed timeline and fee schedule to be in accordance with relevant FOIA statute and regulations, and seeing no evidence of bad faith on the part of Defendant.
7. The FOIA statute, 5 U.S.C. § 522(a)(4)(A)(ii)(III), permits the agency conducting a search to charge "reasonable standard charges for document search and duplication" according to published agency regulations. The Department of Justice has promulgated regulations specifying the costs of searches based on the qualifications of the personnel needed to conduct the search.
8. When the estimated cost of a search exceeds $250, the agency may require payment of the estimated fee before beginning the search.
9. As to the length of the delay, the Court is concerned about Mr. Kornheiser's erroneous certification but finds no evidence of bad-faith delay or that the amount of time proposed is unreasonable for a comprehensive search for records responsive to Plaintiff's request. The Court trusts that Defendant has located the potentially responsive documents and will proceed with all due haste when the Plaintiff has paid his search fee. Plaintiff points to no statute or regulation, and the Court finds none in its own research, that would suggest that Defendant's proposed schedule is unusually or unacceptably slow. The Court herein sets a firm date for Defendant's compliance, which will be 45 days after the date Plaintiff tenders his search fee payment.
10. Therefore, for the reasons stated above, the Court will deny Plaintiff's motion for contempt. Defendant's revised response to Plaintiff's FOIA request, including an updated