(CN) - Noting that its lawsuit prompted a 700-page release on the use
of drones by Customs and Border Patrol, the Electronic Frontier
Foundation said it deserves $84,000 in attorneys' fees.
The
privacy-defending nonprofit sued the Department of Homeland Security in
2012 for information on, among other things, the policies that the
department and its Border Patrol component had in place for domestic
surveillance by unmanned aircraft.
Litigation
freed up three years of redacted "daily reports" that revealed the
department had arranged more than 500 flights for dozens of
law-enforcement organizations, and that more than a fifth of these
flights helped Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the Electronic
Frontier Foundation (EFF) said.
The government has characterized
the EFF's victory as "limited," however, and said the litigation's only
victory was in clearing "administrative backlog."
In a June 25 opposition brief
to the group's motion for attorneys' fees, Justice Department attorney
Jennie Kneedler said that EFF has "not shown that this litigation, as
opposed to an unavoidable backlog, caused the release of records after
plaintiff filed suit."
"Plaintiff offers nothing more than pure
conjecture to support its argument that its lawsuit caused CBP to
release the records when they were released," Kneedler added,
abbreviating Customs and Border Patrol. "To the contrary, there is no
reason to believe that CBP would not have responded to plaintiff's FOIA
request in the same way without litigation."
If the EFF is
entitled to fees, the court should award it only 5 percent of the figure
requested, or $2,951, the brief states.
The EFF replied
Wednesday that the government "ignores the fact that the 2007
amendments to FOIA were passed explicitly to provide for fees when a
plaintiff's lawsuit was a 'catalyst' that cause the agency to
voluntarily change its position."
The government's argument that
it might have released the requested documents on its own is purely
supposition, the nonprofit added.
"While it may not be
surprising that agencies, in general, suffer from administrative
backlog, simply stating that in a brief does not prove that backlog was
responsible for delaying CBP's response to plaintiff's FOIA request,"
the brief by EFF attorney Jennifer Lynch states. "It also does not
disprove the fact that plaintiff's lawsuit was the catalyst for
defendant to release these records."
Original Article: http://www.courthousenews.com
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