JOEL SCHNEIDER, Magistrate Judge.
This matter is before the Court on plaintiff's application to strike relevant documents produced by Atlantic City on the last day of discovery. In the alternative, plaintiff wants discovery relevant to the documents.
By way of brief background, this is a § 1983 excessive force lawsuit against Police Officer Michael Jones and Atlantic City. Although the case has been pending since March 28, 2013, Atlantic City produced on October 30, 2015 four (4) pages of Police Department Internal Affairs documents relating to "early warnings" given to Jones.
The Court is faced with a difficult choice. On the one hand the Court could bar the use of the documents because they were produced late. However, this runs counter to the Third Circuit's preference for cases to be decided on their merits.
Given the difficult choice the court has to make, it reluctantly comes out on the side of not barring Atlantic City's use of the documents and permitting plaintiff to take more discovery. Although the Court is reluctant to further delay the case, it has a strong preference for presenting all relevant evidence to the jury and letting the case be decided on its merits.
The Court adds that it has no reason to question the integrity of Atlantic City's lawyers in the case, and is confident they used reasonable and appropriate efforts to respond to discovery. Not surprisingly, as soon as counsel learned about the early warning documents they were produced. Unfortunately, the Court's confidence in Atlantic City's lawyers cannot be said for Atlantic City. Atlantic City's conduct leaves a lot to the desired. How and why the documents at issue were not produced earlier in the case is almost beyond comprehension. The documents are central to the case, the documents were easily retrievable, and the documents concern issues that have been at the forefront of the case since its outset. Moreover, the documents were located in the same room where the other Internal Affairs documents produced in the case were located. It is also perplexing why the subject early warning documents were not located in Jones' personnel file. After all the § 1983 litigation Atlantic City has been involved in, Atlantic City has no excuse for failing to produce key documents unquestionably central to the case. Given this situation the Court can understand why lawyers for the plaintiffs in Atlantic City's § 1983 cases have a deep seated skepticism that Atlantic City properly responds to discovery.
Even though the Court will not bar the subject documents, the Court will not permit Atlantic City to "skate by." The Court will Order Atlantic City to reimburse plaintiff's fees and costs occasioned by its inexcusable delay. Atlantic City's late production is not substantially justified. Further, no circumstances exist to make an award of fees and costs unjust.
Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, it is HEREBY ORDERED this 9th day of November, 2015, as follows:
1. By no later than December 15, 2015, plaintiff is granted leave to depose Chief Jubilee, Chief Mooney, Capt. T. Friel, Capt. R. Roff and a Fed. R. Civ. P. 30(b)(6) witness to testify about Atlantic City's "early warning system" from 2001-2012, and how it was used or applied to Officer Jones.
2. Purdunt to Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(g)
3. By December 31, 2015, plaintiff shall serve an affidavit pursuant to L. Civ. R. 54.2 setting forth the fees to be reimbursed. All objections shall be served by January 15, 2016.
4. A new Scheduling Order will be separately entered to account for the unfortunate extension of time the Court is granting.