Source: https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=b0dfa56a-7536-4779-bd8b-5a4eb54ed298
Timestamp: 2019-04-25 12:11:55+00:00

Document:
But if the rule of law may be invoked to attack an agency’s decision as unpredictable, unlawful or untethered to binding regulation, it may also serve to shield an agency as well. Acting AAG Wood described how FOIA requests for agency documents can often solicit documents that are, in the end, irrelevant to an agency decision-maker’s final action because they are pre-decisional or “deliberative.” Although such documents may be subject to production under FOIA, they may never have even been seen by a final decision-maker. Reversing DOJ’s position from 1999, Acting AAG Wood recently issued a memo clarifying that they are not part of an agency’s final record for purposes of judicial review, and therefore should neither be produced at court nor listed as privileged information. Acting AAG Wood followed the views previously expressed by Attorney General Sessions that nationwide injunctions issued by federal district courts against agencies or federally permitted projects also frustrate the rule of law.
Rounding out his remarks, Acting AAG Wood reviewed ENRD’s cases before the Supreme Court for this term. Much of ENRD’s current Supreme Court activity involves amicus briefing on behalf the government. This term, the Court’s docket includes three cases — Carpenter v. Murphy, Washington State Department of Licensing v. Cougar Den, Inc. and Herrera v. Wyoming — involving various Native American treaty rights. The Court will also hear arguments about designating critical habitat under the Endangered Species Act in Weyerhauser Co. v. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and it will consider whether Virginia’s ban on uranium mining is preempted in Virginia Uranium, Inc. v. Warren and whether property owners must exhaust takings claims in state court before presenting federal takings claims in Knick v. Township of Scott, Pennsylvania.
Finally, Acting AAG Wood described the “kid’s climate suit” — more properly, Juliana v. United States — as an effort to involve Article III courts in redesigning the United States’ environmental policy. The Juliana plaintiffs assert that existing climate policy violates an unenumerated constitutional right to a “climate system capable of sustaining human life.” For Acting AAG Wood, these climate change-based claims seek to usurp the lawful roles that Congress, the Executive and administrative agencies have with regard to climate policy. The Supreme Court has most recently denied the government's petition for a writ of mandamus to dismiss the suit as outside the jurisdiction of Article III courts, reasoning that the extraordinary relief requested was more appropriately directed to the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.
Under Acting AAG Wood, emphasis on the rule of law is an animating and decision-making principle that has shaped ENRD actions over the past two years — a trend Wood was confident would continue under the leadership of ENRD’s new AAG, Jeffrey Bossert Clark.

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