PETER C. ECONOMUS, District Judge.
This matter is before the Court for consideration of Defendant Tobias H. Elsass's "Request for Reconsideration of Magistrate['s] Order of June 8, 2012." (Doc. # 136.) Plaintiff United States of America filed a response to the motion (doc. # 137) to Mr. Elsass did not reply. Defendants Sensible Tax Services, Inc. ("Sensible Tax") and Fraud Recovery Group, Inc. ("FRG") did not join in the motion.
The complete background of this case has been set forth before. (See Opinion and Order, doc. # 62; Mem. Opinion and Order, doc. # 98; Opinion and Order, doc. # 122.) The background relevant to this decision is as follows:
Plaintiff United States of America brings this action for injunctive and declaratory relief pursuant to 26 U.S.C. §§ 7402, 7407, and 7408 against defendants Elsass, Sensible Tax, and FRG (collectively "Defendants"). Plaintiff asks that Defendants "be enjoined from acting as tax return preparers, from providing advice concerning federal tax matters, and from promoting their claimed expertise as to the application of the `theft-loss' deduction under Internal Revenue Code § 165." (Order, doc. # 122, page 2, citing Complaint, doc. # 1, at ¶¶ 34-37.) According to Plaintiff, "the tax revenue lost as a result of improper theft-loss claims engineered by the Defendants is significant." (Complaint, ¶ 64.) As part of Plaintiff's Third Set of Interrogatories propounded on Defendants, Interrogatory No. 5 and its subparts ("the Interrogatory") request additional information regarding non-party FRG Nevada's clients, the purported theft-loss scam, claimed amount of theft loss, and amount paid by each client for FRG Nevada's services.
On May 9, 2012, Magistrate Judge King granted the motion to compel, ordering Defendants "to provide a supplemental, more detailed answer" to the Interrogatory no later than May 18, 2012. (Order, doc. # 122, page 8; see also footnote 3.) Plaintiff's request for fees and costs were denied, however, as Magistrate Judge King noted that Defendants had represented to the Court that they had believed the Court's denial of Plaintiff's motion for leave to amend the Complaint to add FRG Nevada as a defendant rendered "moot" their need to supplement Interrogatory 5. (Id.) "Under these circumstances, the Court concludes that an award of fees would not be just." (Id.)
On May 18, 2012—the deadline for complying with the May 9th Order—Defendants filed a joint motion for an extension of time to comply. (Doc. # 125.) In that motion, the Defendants stated as follows:
(Doc. # 125.) Plaintiff filed a response in opposition (doc. # 126), and the Court, on May 31, 2012, ordered Defendants to file a reply in support of the motion for extension of time, if any, no later than June 7, 2012 (Order, doc. # 127). No defendant filed a reply. Instead, on June 4, 2012, Defendant Elsass filed a "Response to Court's Opinion and Order of May 9, 2012" in which he chastises Plaintiff for failing to submit "a new interrogatory, more skillfully prepared[.]" (Doc. # 133, page 2.) In addition, he argues that (1) the Court had ruled that FRG Nevada is not a party and, therefore, any "books or records" of FRG Nevada are not discoverable; (2) Plaintiff has proceeded to "take further discovery" after the Court permitted Plaintiff to explore any relationship between named parties and other entities; and (3) the Court had made it clear that the discovery deadline of April 30, 2012 will not be extended. (Id.) "In conclusion," Mr. Elsass states, "the Government has had its discovery and opportunity to inquire within the discovery period so this matter is moot." (Id.)
On June 8, 2012, Magistrate Judge King put on an order, noting that no party had filed an objection to or motion for reconsideration of her May 9, 2012 Order. (Order, doc. # 134.) Additionally, she observed that in her May 9th Order she had issued an "express order directing response to [P]laintiff's interrogatory; the time for objecting to that order has passed." (Id., page 3.) Finally, Magistrate Judge King denied the joint motion for an extension of time (doc. # 125) as moot and, once again, ordered Defendants to provide the information requested in the Interrogatory no later than June 13, 2012. Moreover, the judge ordered Defendant Elsass to show cause why he should not be held in contempt of court.
Defendant Elsass filed the instant motion for reconsideration on June 13, 2012. (Doc. # 136.) Mr. Elsass returns to his original argument that the Interrogatory cannot be answered "as presented." (Id., page 2.) Mr. Elsass also introduces a new argument that federal law prohibits his disclosure of the requested information, citing to the "Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, 15 U.S.C. Subchapter 1, Sec. 6801-6809[,] Disclosure of Nonpublic Personal Information." (Id., page 3.) Mr. Elsass requests "that he not be held in contempt, that he not be required to answer Interrogatory 5a that is not answerable as presented, that he not be ordered to violated [f]ederal law and that Magistrate King['s] Order of June 8, 2012 be over[-]ruled by this Court." (Id., page 4.) Plaintiff filed a response on June 18, 2012. (Doc. # 137.)
Under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 72 states as follows:
In her June 8th Order, Magistrate Judge King correctly notes that time had passed for filing objections to her May 9th Order. According to the docket, the Clerk of Courts mailed a copy of the May 9th Order to Defendant Elsass at his address of record. Certainly, he received the Order no later than May 18, when he with the other defendants in a request for more time to comply. Fourteen days after that later date—the time permitted for filing objections—was June 1. No objections were filed on or before that date. Instead, on June 4, 2012, Defendant Elsass filed a "response" to the Order, reiterating his argument that no supplemental answers to the interrogatory were possible. (Doc. # 133.) Notably, however, this response does not object to the Order.
To the extent that Defendant Elsass attempts to lodge any objections to the May 9th Order, those objections are not timely and will not be considered by this Court. However, even if Defendant Elsass's objections
Finally, this Court finds that Defendant Elsass fails to show cause why he should not be held in contempt of court. Despite Magistrate Judge King's clear order to provide more detailed responses to the Interrogatory, Defendant Elsass has steadfastly refused. This Court directs Magistrate Judge King to determine what sanctions are just under the circumstances presented.
Defendant Elsass's Motion for Reconsideration (doc. # 136) is