218 U.S. App. D.C. 231 674 F.2d 74

674 F.2d 74

Frank Derek GREENTREE, Appellant, v. U. S. CUSTOMS SERVICE, et al. Frank Derek GREENTREE, Appellant, v. DRUG ENFORCEMENT ADMINISTRATION, et al.

Nos. 81-1829, 81-1830.

United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit.

Argued Feb. 22, 1982.

Decided March 26, 1982.

Cornish F. Hitchcock, Washington, D. C., with whom Richard Manning Ricks, Washington, D. C., was on the brief, for appellant.

Douglas Letter, Atty., Dept, of Justice, Washington, D. C., with whom Charles F. C. Ruff, U. S. Atty., Washington, D. C., at the time the briefs were filed, and Leonard Schaitman, Atty., Dept, of Justice, Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for appellees. Kenneth M. Raisler and John C. Martin, Asst. U. S. Attys., Washington, D. C., also entered appearances, for appellees.

David C. Vladeck and Katherine A. Meyer, Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for amicus curiae, Freedom of Information Clearinghouse urging reversal.

Before BAZELON, Senior Circuit Judge, and WALD and GINSBURG, Circuit Judges.

Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WALD.

WALD, Circuit Judge:

This is a case of first impression in this circuit. It questions whether the Privacy *232Act, 5 U.S.C. § 552a, is an exempting statute within the meaning of subsection (b)(3) (“Exemption 3”) of the Freedom of Information Act (“FOIA”), 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(3), which bars access under FOIA to information “specifically exempted from disclosure by [any other] statute.”1 Although the government (assuming a position based upon a longstanding policy), as well as appellant Greentree, urged otherwise, see Joint Appendix (J.A.) at 29, 39, the district court held that criminal law enforcement information exempt from disclosure under section (j)(2) of the Privacy Act, see n.15 infra, is automatically exempt under Exemption 3 of FOIA. Greentree v. United States Customs Service, 515 F.Supp. 1145 (D.D.C.1981); J.A. 41. The government has now reversed its position and here supports the decision of the district court. Even so, we cannot accept the district court’s interpretation. Our reading of the relevant statutes and their legislative history convinces us that material unavailable under the Privacy Act is not per se unavailable under FOIA. Therefore, we reverse the decision of the district court and remand so that the district court may consider appellant’s FOIA request independently of the Privacy Act.2

I. BACKGROUND

After being indicted and convicted in federal district court in Louisiana for attempting to import several tons of marijuana into the United States, appellant Greentree brought suit to enjoin state prosecution based upon the same events. Greentree sought to gather information relevant to his civil action by filing FOIA and Privacy Act requests with the Drug Enforcement Administration (“DEA”) and the United States Customs Service (“Customs”). Relying upon specific exemptions both in FOIA (not including Exemption 3) and in the Privacy Act, DEA and Customs refused to release certain material. Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. §§ 552(a)(4)(B) and 552a(g)(l), Greentree sued in federal district court. Both agencies then moved for summary judgment. In the case against Customs, the district court, on its own initiative, requested briefs on the question of whether records protected from disclosure to the subject of the records (first party requester) under the Privacy Act are automatically exempt from disclosure to the same individual under FOIA Exemption 3. J.A. 28.

Both Greentree, J.A. 39, and the government, J.A. 29, argued to the district court that the Privacy Act was not an Exemption 3 statute. Nevertheless, the district court granted summary judgment to both DEA and Customs on the ground that the Privacy Act does qualify as a withholding statute.3 In reaching this conclusion, the district court relied upon the statutory language and legislative history of the Privacy *233Act. Further, the district' court’s analysis was supported by decisions from the fifth4 and seventh5 circuits, and by dictum in an earlier opinion of this court.6 Nevertheless, we cannot uphold the decision. The question presented is a difficult one,7 but we believe that Congress did not intend the Privacy Act to bar disclosure under FOIA Exemption 3.

II. ANALYSIS

A. The Statutory Scheme

Both FOIA and the Privacy Act evidence Congressional concern with open government, and especially, accessibility of government records. Each seeks in different ways to respond to the potential excesses of government. Each, therefore, has its own functions and limitations. 1 K. Davis, Administrative Law Treatise § 5:2 (2d ed. 1978 & Supp. 1980); R. Bouchard & J. Franklin, Guidebook to the Freedom of Information and Privacy Acts 21-22 (1980). While the Privacy Act was designed to provide individuals with more control over the gathering, dissemination, and accuracy of agency information about themselves, FOIA was intended to increase the public’s access to governmental information. Id. The Privacy Act limits access to any “record”8 contained in a “system of records”9 without the consent of the individual to whom the record pertains unless disclosure is requested by Congress,10 a court,11 an authorized agency,12 or certain specifically qualified *234persons,13 or is required by FOIA.14 Moreover, even first party access is limited under the Privacy Act for reasons of, inter alia, national security and law enforcement.15 Similarly, public access to information under FOIA is also limited; excluded *235from FOIA’s disclosure requirements are national security and internal agency matters, matters “specifically exempt” by other statutes, confidential business information, deliberative internal communications within the executive branch, information about individuals disclosure of which would constitute a “clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy,” certain investigatory records compiled for law enforcement purposes, records relating to the examination of financial institutions and records containing oil well information.16

It is readily apparent from the foregoing review that the Privacy Act and FOIA substantially overlap. However, it is apparent also that the two statutes are not completely coextensive; each provides or limits access to material not opened or closed by the other. For example, while both restrict access to investigatory material, they do so to a different degree and under different conditions. Compare 5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(7) with 5 U.S.C. §§ 552a(j)(2) and (k)(2) and (5).

The present case questions the relationship between section (j)(2) of the Privacy Act and Exemption 3 of FOIA. After holding that the material sought was unavailable to Greentree under section (j)(2) of the Privacy Act, the district court began its statutory analysis of this question by examining the language of section (b)(2) of the Privacy Act:

No agency shall disclose any record which is contained in a system of records by any means of communication to any person, or to another agency, except pursuant to a written request by, or with the prior written consent of, the individual to whom the record pertains, unless disclosure of the record would be—
(2) required under section 552 of this title [FOIA]

5 U.S.C. § 552a(b)(2). The court summarily rejected the argument that this provision *236indicated that the Privacy Act was not designed to affect obligations under FOIA, concluding that the notion merely “begs the question ... of whether information exempt under the Privacy Act can, in fact, be required to be disclosed under FOIA.” Greentree, 515 F.Supp. at 1147. For the district court, that question was resolved by FOIA Exemption 3.

Since the Privacy Act does refer to particular types of matters to be withheld— all material generated by the exempt systems — the Privacy Act is, by the plain language of FOIA, within the (b)(3) statutory exemption.

Id. at-1147.

Our statutory analysis both begins at a different point and reaches a different conclusion. Under our analysis, there is no need to determine whether section (j)(2) of the Privacy Act meets any of the alternative qualifications of an Exemption 3 statute.17 Further, we see no need to dwell long upon the apparent circularity of section (b)(2) of the Privacy Act in mandating disclosure of only that which is “required” by FOIA (including its Exemption 3).18 Frankly, we are unimpressed with the discovery that section (b)(2) is somewhat circular. Why was that section inserted into the Privacy Act at all if that act were meant to be a FOIA 3 withholding statute? We must conclude, contrary to the district court, that section (b)(2) of the Privacy Act represents a Congressional mandate that the Privacy Act not be used as a barrier to FOIA access.

The government acknowledges that section (b)(2) of the Privacy Act does safeguard FOIA access to the public, but it asks us to deny that access to first party requester. However, we are not at liberty to limit the safeguards of (b)(2), which extend to requests by “any person.” Our understanding of the extent of (b)(2)’s coverage is reenforced by the very language of section (j) of the Privacy Act. The authority granted an agency head by that section is, with exceptions not relevant here, specifically limited to exempting “any system of records within the agency from any part of this section ....” 5 U.S.C. § 552a(j) (emphasis added). In context, the words “this section” can only refer to section 552a, i.e., the Privacy Act. The specific exceptions to the general exemption, “subsections (b), (c)(1) and (2), (e)(4)(A) through (F), (e)(6), (7), (9), and (11), and (i),” are subsections of the Privacy Act.19 This portion of the statute thus appears to be self-contained: the general exemptions, as well as the specific exceptions, limit only other provisions of the Privacy Act itself.

Further, were we to accept the government’s argument, a so-called “third party anomaly” would result. That is, a third party might gain access to material under FOIA about an individual unavailable to that individual himself, because of Privacy Act section (j)(2). Such a result would comport with neither logic nor common sense. If such material were allowed into the public domain, how could it be kept from the party whom it concerned? Obviously, any such barrier to first party access could easily be circumvented by the first party’s simply locating someone else to act as a third party FOIA requester.

The government acknowledges the anomaly, but suggests that it would arise too rarely to justify concern:

*237In the vast majority of cases, a third party would be prevented from obtaining access to records about another individual covered by the Privacy Act (particularly if they are law enforcement records) because of the FOIA privacy exemptions (FOIA Exemptions 6 and 7(c)). Under the balancing test used to implement these exemptions, such an invasion of privacy is permitted only where it is outweighed by a countervailing strong public interest in disclosure. Dept. of Air Force v. Rose, 425 U.S. 352, 370-76 [96 S.Ct. 1592, 1603-06, 48 L.Ed.2d 11] (1976). Moreover, a “third party anomaly” can only occur where records can and actually have been exempted from access under the Privacy Act, but are nonetheless available through the FOIA. Thus, putting aside its value for academic discussion, the “third party anomaly” is in actuality a minor problem at best.

Government’s Brief at 36 n.18.

We find both parts of the government’s response unsatisfactory. First, we are not convinced that by balancing “an invasion of privacy” against a “strong public interest in disclosure” under FOIA, third party access will be barred when the third party is hand chosen by a first party who has, in effect, waived all privacy interests. Even the Privacy Act allows third party access to material, normally protected from public access, with the consent of the individual to whom the material pertains. 5 U.S.C. § 552a(b). Second, while we agree that the anomaly would occur only when records were exempt under the Privacy Act but publicly available under FOIA — indeed, as we understand it, that is the definition of the “third party anomaly” — we are not comforted by the reminder. Since the district court did not address itself to whether the material sought here would be publicly available under FOIA, we must assume that we are now confronted with a rare case. The “third party anomaly,” therefore, does indeed suggest to us that Congress could not have intended section (j)(2) of the Privacy Act to serve as a withholding statute under FOIA Exemption 3.

The district court and the government, however, have raised a different “anomaly,” which they say will result if an individual denied access to his records under section (j)(2) of the Privacy Act is allowed to obtain at least some of that material under FOIA.20 By allowing first party requesters to pursue alternative access routes, it is suggested that section (j)(2) would be “render[ed] meaningless.” Greentree, 515 F.Supp. at 1148; Government’s Brief at 17. We consider this to be a false anomaly, readily recognized as such by noting that the exemptions of the Privacy Act and FOIA differ in purpose and, therefore, in scope. Although both section (j)(2) of the Privacy Act and Exemption 7 of FOIA limit access to law enforcement records, they do so to a different extent. Unless section (j)(2) is implemented, first party access under the Privacy Act to law enforcement records would be broader than such access under FOIA. Access under FOIA can be restricted if production of records would

(A) interfere with enforcement proceedings, (B) deprive a person of a right to a fair trial or an impartial adjudication, (C) constitute an unwarranted invasion of personal privacy, (D) disclose the identity of a confidential source and, in the case *238of a record compiled by a criminal law enforcement authority in the course of a criminal investigation, or by an agency conducting a lawful national security intelligence investigation, confidential information furnished only by the confidential source, (E) disclose investigative techniques and procedures, or (F) endanger the life or physical safety of law enforcement personnel....

5 U.S.C. § 552(b)(7). On the other hand, although personal privacy, 5 U.S.C. § 552a(b), and confidential sources, 5 U.S.C. § 552a(k)(2), could be protected under the Privacy Act even if section (j)(2) exempting authority were not exercised, a law enforcement agency might be subject to other onerous and, in some instance, impractical requirements. For instance, sections (e)(1)-(3), (e)(4)(GHI), (e)(5) and (e)(8) of the Privacy Act would impose the following requirements on law enforcement agencies: (1) to maintain only such records about an individual as necessary to accomplish a purpose required by statute or executive order, (2) to get information directly from the individual to the greatest extent practicable when information may be adverse, (3) when it seeks information from an individual, to tell him its authority and whether disclosure is mandatory or voluntary, the purpose for which the information will be used, the routine uses which may be made of it, and the effects on him of not providing the information, (4) to maintain records accu-rately and fairly, and (5) to try to serve notice on an individual when any record' about him is disclosed under compulsory legal process.21 Considering the wider access and administrative rigors of the Privacy Act, we have no difficulty understanding why Congress allowed law enforcement agencies to restrict individual access to whole systems of records under the Privacy Act, while allowing the public, including the first party, more limited access to some of the same material under FOIA.

B. The Legislative History

We agree with the district court that the legislative history of the Privacy Act is not without ambiguities. Contrary to the district court, however, we feel that, on balance, the legislative history supports our interpretation that section (j)(2) of the Privacy Act ought not be considered a FOIA withholding statute for first party requesters.

In support of its decision that section (j)(2) was a FOIA Exemption 3 statute, the district court relied on the fact that

[A] provision [S. 3418, 93d Cong., 2d Sess., § 205(b) (1974)] of an earlier bill passed by the Senate [, which] clearly prohibited use of the Privacy Act to withhold information diselosable under other statutes, including, presumably, FOIA ...[,] was deleted from the final version of the bill, suggesting that Congress did not intend to prohibit use of the Privacy Act for such purposes.

Greentree, 515 F.Supp. at 1148.

We do not agree with the district court’s reading of the legislative history. Our reading indicates that throughout its consideration of the Privacy Act, the Senate struggled to hold separate the Privacy Act and FOIA, and further, that that effort was ultimately successful.

The privacy bill that emerged from the Senate Committee contained two provisions that could be read to safeguard disclosure rights under FOIA: (1) Section 205(b), which remained in the final Senate bill, prohibited agencies from “withholding ... any personal information which is required to be disclosed by law or any regulation thereunder,” reprinted in Legislative History of the Privacy Act of 1974, S. 3418 (Public Law 93-579), Source Book on Privacy 143 (1976) (hereinafter Source Book); and (2) Section 202(c), subsequently eliminated by a “perfecting amendment,” Source Book at 765, which provided that certain requirements for disclosure did “not apply when *239disclosure would be required or permitted pursuant to ... [the] Freedom of Information Act .... ” Reprinted in Source Book at 139. The Senate Report explained that

[Section 202(c) ] was included to meet the objections of press and media representatives that the statutory right of access to public records and the right to disclosure of government information might be defeated if such restrictions were to be placed on the public and press. The Committee believed it would be unreasonable and contrary to the spirit of the Freedom of Information Act to attempt to keep an accounting of the nature and purpose of access and disclosures involving the press and public or to impose guarantees of security and confidentiality on the data they acquire.
While the Committee intends in this legislation to implement the guarantees of individual privacy, it also intends to make available to the press and public all possible information concerning the operations of the Federal Government in order to prevent secret data banks and unauthorized investigative programs on Americans.

S.Rep.No.1183, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. 71 (1974), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1974, p. 6916, 6985, reprinted in Source Book at 224. Accompanying section 202(c) was a provision that prohibited agencies from relying upon FOIA to withhold information under the Privacy Act, S. 3418, 93d Cong., 2d Sess., § 205(a), reprinted in Source Book at 143. That provision, which survived at section 205a(q) of the final Act, was explained by the Senate Report as follows:

Subsection 205(a). Shows the Committee’s intent that the exemptions provided in the Freedom of Information Act to the required disclosure of Federal information on certain subjects, and that permitted for protection of personal privacy may not be used as authority to deny an individual personal information otherwise available under this Act.

S.Rep.No.1183, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. 71, 77 (1974), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 1974, p. 6991, reprinted in Source Book at 230. These provisions in the Senate bill clearly indicate to us that the Senate wanted to insure that FOIA and the Privacy Act not interfere with one another. On the one hand, the Privacy Act’s limits or conditions on disclosure were not to impede access under FOIA, section 205(b), and on the other, FOIA’s exemptions were not to limit the availability of personal information accessible under the Privacy Act, section 205(a).

The privacy bill that emerged from the House Committee, was tilted more toward securing personal privacy than the Senate bill. The House bill, H.R. 16373, 93d Cong., 2d Sess., § 552a(b) (1974), stated that “[n]o agency shall disclose any record which is contained in a system of records by any means of communication to any person, or to another agency, except pursuant to a written request by, or with the prior written consent of, the individual to whom the record pertains ... . ” Reprinted in Source Book at 279. That provision, identical to the one now found in the Privacy Act, 5 U.S.C. 552a(b), did not exempt information required to be disclosed under FOIA. However, the House Committee, recognizing the impact this legislation would have on FOIA by making “all individually identifiable information in Government files exempt from public disclosure,”22 expressed its desire that agencies continue to make some kinds of individually-identifiable records available to the public:

[The Committee] believes that the public interest requires the disclosure of some personal information. Examples of such information are certain data about government licensees, and the names, titles, salaries, and duty stations of most Federal employees. The Committee merely intends that agencies consider the disclosure of this type of information on a category-by-category basis and allow by *240published rule only those disclosures which would not violate the spirit of the Freedom of Information Act by constituting “clearly unwarranted invasions of personal privacy.”

H.R.Rep.No.1416, 93d Cong., 2d Sess. 13 (1974), reprinted in Source Book at 306.

After negotiations between the House and Senate, the House bill was adopted, but with two significant amendments. One amendment — now section 552a(b)(2) — modified the House’s restriction on disclosure so that the Privacy Act would not interfere with public access under FOIA. The other amendment — now section 552a(q) — mirrored 552a(b)(2) by prohibiting agencies from relying upon FOIA to withhold any record otherwise available under the Privacy Act. See n.14 supra. The compromise was explained to both Houses of Congress in this way:

The compromise amendment would add an additional condition of disclosure to the House bill which prohibits disclosure without written request of an individual unless disclosure of the record would be pursuant to Section 552 of the Freedom of Information Act. This compromise is designed to preserve the status quo as interpreted by the courts regarding the disclosure of personal information under that section.
A related amendment taken from the Senate bill would prohibit any agency from relying upon any exemption contained in Section 552 to withhold from an individual any record which is otherwise accessible to such individual under the provisions of this section.

Source Book at 861 (explained to Senate by Senator Ervin), 989 (explained to House by Representative Moorhead). The net effect of the compromise was to reinstate the essence of the Senate Committee’s original provisions, sections 202(c) and 205(a) and (b), holding separate each act’s exemptions from disclosure. And we find no reason to rule that first party requesters were intended to be an exception to that general Congressional “hold sepárate” policy. In the absence of persuasive evidence to the contrary, we conclude from this review that Congress meant to continue business as usual with respect to access under FOIA.23

Finally, we cannot accept the district court’s announcement that “[s]ince the Privacy Act was passed after the amendments to (b)(7) of FOIA, any conflict between the two., sections must be resolved in favor of the Privacy Act.” Greentree, 515 F.Supp. at 1148. The temporal relationship of the FOIA Exemption 7 amendment and the Privacy Act suggests to us that no such conflict exists. The FOIA Exemption 7 amendment, which increased access to some of the same law enforcement records that might be totally exempt from access under Privacy Act section (j), was passed only a few weeks before the Privacy Act. See 1974 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin.News 6267, 6290-92. Indeed, Congress was considering the Privacy Act while it was preparing to override President Ford’s veto of the 1974 FOIA amendments. See Source Book at 887 (Remarks of Rep. Erlenborn: “I think it is rather fitting that this [Privacy] bill comes to the floor today on the same day that we considered a motion to override and have overridden the President’s veto of the Freedom of Information Act.”). Presi*241dent Ford’s veto was, for the most part, a response to the increased accessibility of national security and law enforcement documents allowed by these 1974 amendments of Exemptions 1 and 7. 10 Weekly Comp, of Pres.Doc. 1318 (1974). Therefore, we are hard pressed to accept an interpretation of the Privacy Act that in effect repeals, for first party requesters, those amendments only a few weeks after they were enacted over a Presidential veto. Repeal by implication is not generally favored; less so in this instance.

C. Post-Passage Developments 24

Shortly before the Privacy Act took effect, Deputy Assistant Attorney General Mary C. Lawton of the Office of Legal Counsel advised the Internal Revenue Service that the Privacy Act was the exclusive means available to an individual who sought information about himself. Source Book at 1177-78. The Office of Management and Budget — which was required by section 6 of the Privacy Act to develop guidelines and regulations for agencies implementing the Act and to provide assistance and oversight of the Act’s implementation — circulated Lawton’s opinion to federal agencies. Id. at 1178. When it came to the attention of Senator Edward Kennedy, the Senator forwarded a strong letter of protest to Attorney General Edward Levi. Kennedy charged that the opinion was “pernicious and destructive.” His understanding was that

access under the Privacy Act is to be complete and not subject to FOIA exemptions, where the Privacy Act grants access. But where the Privacy Act does not grant access, the FOIA — and its exemptions — apply.

Id. at 1180. Senator Kennedy attached to his letter of protest a Congressional Research Service Study for the Senate Subcommittee on Administrative Practice and Procedure on the relationship between FOIA and the Privacy Act, which took issue with the position taken by Deputy Assistant Attorney General Lawton. That study concluded:

There is nothing in the terms of the Privacy Act or its legislative history which indicates that the Privacy Act is the exclusive means by which an individual can gain access to his own records contained in a system of records. Many of the so-called “inconsistencies” listed in the Justice Department’s letter have been reconciled with the FOIA in the OMB guidelines issued pursuant to the Privacy Act. Furthermore, they do not seem to constitute the clear repugnancies which are necessary before a court will hold that one statute has implicitly repealed or superseded another.
The primary purpose of the Privacy Act is the protection of individual privacy by controlling the collection, management, and dissemination of individually identifiable records. Access to such records by the individual is one method by which control is achieved and is a necessary adjunct to the accurate maintenance of records. It flies in the face of the whole legislative effort in this area to construe the Privacy Act as a backhanded method to limit individual access to records while at the same time preserving potentially greater access rights to third parties.

Id. at 1187.

Until this appeal, the dispute had resolved itself into a mere matter of form. Deputy Attorney General Harold R. Tyler, Jr., replying to Senator Kennedy for the Attorney General, admitted that he himself and others in the Department of Justice had “substantially similar” “concern[s]” about the Lawton opinion and so had drafted a Privacy Act regulation, see id. at 1187-88 (draft form), which, as slightly revised, now provides:

Any request by an individual for information pertaining to himself shall be processed solely pursuant to this Subpart *242D. To the extent that the individual seeks access to records from systems of records which have been exempted from the provisions of the Privacy Act, the individual shall receive, in addition to access to those records he is entitled to receive under the Privacy Act and as a matter of discretion as set forth in paragraph (a) of this section, access to all records within the scope of his request to which he would have been entitled under the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S.C. 552, but for the enactment of the Privacy Act and the exemption of the pertinent systems of records pursuant thereto.

28 C.F.R. § 16.57(b). That regulation was, however, accompanied by a statement claiming that release of records beyond those mandated by the Privacy Act was at the sole discretion of the Associate Attorney General.25 The government now seeks to recapture its purported authority. The Lawton letter and the “discretionary” nature of the regulation are cited as “contemporaneous construction by the Justice Department ... that the Privacy Act exemptions could not be circumvented through use of the FOIA.” Government’s Brief at 40.

Although agency interpretations are entitled to judicial respect, courts need not be oblivious to the context in which those interpretations are made.26 In the case of major parts of the Privacy Act, as well as the FOIA amendments, the executive branch had opposed passage. See, e.g., Source Book at 772-75. The post-passage events reviewed above may illustrate executive department efforts to moderate the impact of an unwelcome enactment. Of course, we are not unaware that the post-passage views of members of Congress and Congressional staffs may also be distorted by conflicting interests. See Zipes v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,-U.S.-,-, 102 S.Ct. 1127, 1132, 71 L.Ed.2d 234 (1982). We are, therefore, wary of placing too much reliance on the Lawton-Kennedy-Tyler dialogue. More impressive to us is the fact that the predominant government policy since initial implementation until this appeal27 has been to allow an individual to seek access to information about himself through both the Privacy Act and FOIA.28

*243D. Case Law

Although decisions in two other circuits, on which the district court relied, have resolved questions similar to this one in a different manner, neither has explicated a convincing rationale. The Seventh Circuit *244in Terkel v. Kelly, 599 F.2d 214 (7th Cir. 1979), cert. denied, 444 U.S. 1013, 100 S.Ct. 662, 62 L.Ed.2d 642 (1980), interpreted section (k)(2) of the Privacy Act to exempt information from required disclosure under FOIA, concluding:

Although the Freedom of Information Act does not contain a comparable exemption, we agree with the lower court that the two statutes must be read together, and that the Freedom of Information Act cannot compel the disclosure of information that the Privacy Act clearly contemplates to be exempt.

Id. at 216. Unfortunately, we do not have the benefit of the court’s statutory analysis, review of the legislative history or any other aspect of its reasoning. Had such reasons been disclosed, we would certainly have paid them close attention.29

*245The Fifth Circuit in Painter v. Federal Bureau of Investigation, 615 F.2d 689, 691 & n.3 (5th Cir. 1980), relied heavily upon Terkel to hold section 552a(k)(5) a FOIA Exemption 3 statute. In so holding, the court reversed a district court decision containing a more detailed review of the legislative history of the Privacy Act.30

We have been persuaded to break stride with the Fifth and Seventh Circuits by the language and legislative history of the Privacy Act. We have sought a coherent statutory relationship between the Privacy Act and FOIA that reflects a steady intent by Congress throughout the short period between enactment of the Privacy Act and the 1974 FOIA amendments. That intent was to open access to first party requesters under the Privacy Act without closing ex-' isting avenues of access under contemporaneously enacted and liberalizing amendments to FOIA. In reality, however, our departure from the position of other circuits may turn out to be of more academic interest than practical consequence. Upon remand, it may well be found that the material sought by Greentree is unavailable to him (or anyone else) under FOIA’s Exemption 7 as well as the Privacy Act. Whether this dispute deserves such an anticlimactical ending, we leave to the district court.

*246CONCLUSION

For the foregoing reasons, we hold that section (j)(2) of the Privacy Act is not a FOIA Exemption 3 statute. Therefore, the decision of the district court is reversed and the ease is remanded so that the court may consider access to the documents in question under other applicable sections of FOIA.

Reversed and Remanded.

Greentree v. U. S. Customs Service
218 U.S. App. D.C. 231 674 F.2d 74

Case Details

Name
Greentree v. U. S. Customs Service
Decision Date
Mar 26, 1982
Citations

218 U.S. App. D.C. 231

674 F.2d 74

Jurisdiction
District of Columbia

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