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Litigation
Texas Public Policy Foundation v. U.S. Department of State
About this case
Documents
Filing Date
Type
Action Taken
Document
Summary
05/05/2025
Decision
District court's summary judgment for Department of State reversed and judgment rendered in favor of plaintiff as to applicability of FOIA Exemption 6.
In a split decision, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals held that the U.S. Department of State was required to disclose previously redacted names and agency email addresses of career staff members who participated in the development of the national emissions reduction pledge that the Biden administration set in 2021 after rejoining the Paris Agreement. The Fifth Circuit concluded that this information could not be withheld under the Freedom of Information Act’s Exemption 6, which applies to information in “personnel and medical files and similar files the disclosure of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.” The Fifth Circuit found that even if the names and email addresses constituted “similar files,” disclosure did not constitute “a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.” The court said the State Department did not establish that its employees had a “significant interest” in keeping private their work on the emissions reduction target, distinguishing this case from others in which courts found a privacy interest in being protected from “proven danger, public association with a fatal and heavily criticized incident, and targeting by bad actors for highly sensitive information.” The court also found that the Department had “not effectively contested” the plaintiff’s “position that disclosing email addresses would provide at least some marginal public benefit,” including by helping the plaintiff and others “craft more precise follow-up FOIA requests.” Judge Haynes dissented, writing that the employees at issue did not have “policy-making authority” but were “career civil service employees” who could be “subject to harm or harassment if their names and email addresses were provided.” Judge Haynes disagreed with the plaintiff’s argument that this was “not a controversial situation.” She described “climate policy, including the greenhouse-gas-reduction target,” as “a high-profile and controversial matter.” She also characterized the benefits of disclosure as de minimis.
02/05/2025
Letter
Letter filed by the Department of Justice.
On February 5, 2025, the day after oral argument, the Department of Justice informed the court that the State Department’s new leadership had determined that the names of two individuals previously withheld could be released but that their email addresses and names and email addresses of other employees would continue to be withheld.
01/29/2025
Brief
Letter brief filed by appellant regarding impact of Trump executive order.
In an appeal challenging the U.S. Department of State’s redaction of names and official email addresses in its disclosure of records related to the development of the U.S.’s “nationally determined contribution” under the Paris Agreement, the Fifth Circuit asked the parties to submit supplemental briefing on the question of whether President Trump’s executive order directing the withdrawal from the Paris Agreement mooted the case. The Department of Justice contended that the decision to withdraw diminished any public interest in knowing the names or email addresses of employees who corresponded about the State Department’s recommendations. The plaintiff-appellant argued that neither the withdrawal decision nor the transition to a new administration mooted the appeal.
01/29/2025
Brief
Letter brief filed by Department of Justice regarding impact of Trump executive order.
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Summary
Freedom of Information Act lawsuit to compel disclosure of records related to efforts to support the Biden administration’s Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) under the Paris Agreement.