Court Opinion

ID: 2668617
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-04-04 15:21:40.113566+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:01:43.814450
License: Public Domain

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                            FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

 AHCENE ZEMIRI,

         Petitioner,

         v.                                                 Civil Action No. 04-2046 (CKK)
 BARACK H. OBAMA, President of the
 United States, et al.,

         Respondents.

                                             ORDER
                                        (February 19, 2009)

       On February 9, 2009, the Court granted-in-part and denied-in-part Petitioner’s Motion for

Additional Discovery. See [146] Order at 1-3 (Feb. 9, 2009). The Court ordered the parties to

file a Joint Status Report setting forth the dates by which Respondents anticipate their being able

to ascertain the existence of, collect, and produce the documents identified in the Court’s Order.

On February 13, 2009, the parties timely filed a Joint Status Report in response to the Court’s

Order, and Respondents also filed a separate Status Report to supplement the information

provided in the Joint Status Report. Based on the information submitted by the parties, and

taking into account all relevant case law, statutory authority, and the entire record of this case as

a whole, this Order sets forth the dates by which Respondents must comply with their discovery

obligations set forth in the Court’s February 9, 2009 Order.

       As a preliminary matter, the Court recognizes that some of the discovery contemplated in

its February 9, 2009 Order requires Respondents to perform targeted searches that fall outside of

those contemplated by the Amended Case Management Order. For example, Section I.D.1 of the

Amended Case Management Order provides that “[t]he government shall disclose to the
petitioner all reasonably available evidence in its possession that tends materially to undermine

the information presented to support the government’s justification for detaining the petitioner.”

As discussed on the record at the Status Hearing held on February 9, 2009, Petitioners have met

their burden of showing that the Government should perform more extensive but targeted

searches to produce documents that are likely to be highly relevant to the allegations made

against Petitioner in the Factual Return and potentially exculpatory according to Petitioner’s

theory of defense. For this reason, the Court’s February 9, 2009 Order required production of

additional documents pursuant to the Amended Case Management Order’s provision for

additional discovery (i.e. Section I.E.2), and not simply the discovery that Petitioner may obtain

as of right pursuant to Sections I.D.1 and I.E.1 of the Amended Case Management Order.

       Respondents’ Supplemental Status Report explains that Respondents have identified

specific locations to search for the documents identified in the Court’s February 9, 2009 Order,

which include the United States Attorney’s Offices for the Western District of Washington and

the Southern District of New York and the Federal Bureau of Investigation field offices located

in Seattle and New York.1 Contrary to Respondents’ suggestion accompanying this information,

the Court finds that searching these locations for specific documents that is likely to be highly

relevant and potentially exculpatory does, in fact, reflect a “prudent and incremental” approach to

the factfinding process in this case. See Hamdi v. Rumsfeld, 542 U.S. 507, 538-39 (2004)

(plurality). Respondents had a full opportunity to argue to the contrary in their Opposition to

Petitioner’s Motion for Additional Discovery and at the Court’s Status Hearing on February 9,

       1
         The Court notes that Petitioner has not suggested that a search of these locations is
insufficient to meet Respondents’ obligations under the February 9, 2009 Order.

                                                 2
2009, and the Court balanced the parties’ arguments, as well as the interests and burdens on both

Petitioner and Respondents, when deciding to grant-in-part and deny-in-part Petitioner’s Motion

for Additional Discovery. Cf. id. (explaining that courts must balance multiple interests during

the factfinding process, including “matters of national security that might arise in an individual

case and [] the constitutional limitations safeguarding essential liberties that remain vibrant even

in times of security concerns”).

       The parties’ Joint Status Report reflects a disagreement concerning how much time is

required for Respondents to adequately comply with their additional discovery obligations.

Respondents have proposed a two-month deadline for production of some of the discovery, see

Joint Status Report at 1-3, and Petitioner has suggested, without any supporting reasons, that one

month should be sufficient, id. at 3. The Court accepts as reasonable Respondents’

representations concerning the amount of time necessary to search for, collect, and clear for

disclosure, the discovery located in the areas identified above. As other Judges in this district

have explained, a petitioner who requests additional discovery must necessarily decide whether

obtaining such discovery outweighs the often inevitable delays that follow. See, e.g., Al-Adahi v.

Obama, No. 05-280, Mem. Order at 4 n.3 (February 12, 2009) (explaining that petitioners’

counsel must decide, on a case-by-case basis, whether they “believe[] that the necessity for

additional searching outweighs the delay which such searching will most certainly entail”). In

this case, Petitioner has decided that the information identified in the Court’s February 9, 2009

Order is necessary for his defense, and he must therefore accept that Respondents’ searches for

such information will result in some delay – particularly where, as here, Petitioner has provided

no reasons to believe that the length of time proposed by Respondents for their additional

                                                 3
searches is unreasonable.2

        As a final matter, Petitioner filed a [150] Motion to Strike Respondents’ Supplemental

Status Report on the basis that Respondents improperly sought to re-argue their Opposition to

Petitioner’s Motion for Additional Discovery. See Pet’r’s Mot. at 1-2. Respondents have

opposed the Motion to Strike, and clarified that their Supplemental Status Report was filed “to

explain the information provided in the Joint Status Report” and “[i]t was not an attempt to

reargue the appropriateness of the discovery ordered by the Court on February 9, 2009.” Resp’ts’

Opp’n at 1. Because the Supplemental Status Report provides information that allows the Court

to assess whether the proposed deadlines in the parties’ Joint Status Report are reasonable, and

because the Court shall not construe the Supplemental Status Report as an improperly

denominated Motion for Reconsideration, the Court shall deny Petitioner’s Motion to Strike.

        Accordingly, it is, this 19th day of February, 2009, hereby

        ORDERED that Petitioner’s [150] Motion to Strike Respondent’s Supplemental Status

Report is DENIED; it is further

        ORDERED that Respondents shall produce all statements made by Petitioner, Ahmed

Ressam, and Mokhtar Haouari, relating to statements attributed to them in the Factual Return, no

later than April 15, 2009; it is further

        ORDERED that Respondents shall produce the original, untranslated letters from

Petitioner to his wife no later than March 13, 2009; it is further

        2
          The Court encourages the parties to have a continuing dialogue concerning the
additional discovery sought by Petitioner. It may be that once Respondents are able to describe
to Petitioners in greater detail the results of one or more of its searches, the scope of the
documents sought by Petitioners may be narrowed further.

                                                  4
       ORDERED that Respondents shall produce all exculpatory information concerning

Petitioner or Ahmed Ressam that the Canadian Government has previously provided to the

United States Government, no later than April 15, 2009; it is further

       ORDERED that Respondents shall produce any cooperation agreements entered into

between Ahmed Ressam and the United States Government relating to Ahmed Ressam’s

criminal prosecution or sentencing, and any related correspondence between Ahmed Ressam or

his counsel and the United States Government, no later than March 25, 2009; and it is further

       ORDERED that Respondents shall produce the exculpatory information that was

provided by the United States Government to Mokhtar Haouari’s defense counsel in connection

with the criminal prosecution or sentencing of Mokhtar Haouari, no later than April 15, 2009.3

       SO ORDERED.

Date: February 19, 2009

                                                             /s/
                                                     COLLEEN KOLLAR-KOTELLY
                                                     United States District Judge

       3
         Neither the Parties’ Joint Status Report nor Respondents’ Supplemental Status Report
reference Respondents’ obligation to “disclose all exculpatory information that has not
previously been disclosed concerning [Petitioner, Ahmed Ressam, Mokhtar Haouari, and Abdel
Ghani Meskini]” or, if no such documents exist, to “so represent to Petitioner’s counsel, in
writing.” See Order at 2 (Feb. 9, 2009). The Court therefore assumes that Respondents have
already complied with this requirement, except as specifically provided above.

                                                5