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D.C. District Court Upholds VA FOIA Exemption 5 Withholdings

25th Mar 2026
The U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia has upheld the Department of Veterans Affairs’ reliance on FOIA Exemption 5. The court ruled that the agency properly withheld records concerning how certain veterans are reported to the National Instant Criminal Background Check System. The decision, issued on March 24, 2026, follows a D.C. Circuit remand that required the VA to provide more detailed, document-specific justifications for its withholdings. The court found that the agency had now met that burden. The Dispute in Brief The case stems from FOIA requests submitted in 2015 seeking records on how the VA determines whether veterans and other beneficiaries are reported to a federal background check system that identifies individuals prohibited from possessing firearms after being adjudicated as lacking mental capacity. Following partial disclosures, the plaintiff challenged both the adequacy of the agencies’ searches and the VA’s decision to withhold certain documents under FOIA Exemption 5, which protects privileged internal government communications. Earlier rulings resolved claims involving other agencies. On remand, the dispute narrowed to whether the VA had properly withheld records under Exemption 5 and whether it had released all reasonably segregable information. What the Court Decided The court granted summary judgment in favour of the Department of Veterans Affairs and denied the plaintiff’s cross-motion. It held that the VA had met its burden to justify withholding documents under FOIA Exemption 5. In particular: The attorney-client privilege applied to the majority of disputed records The deliberative process privilege independently supported withholding across the document set The VA’s late attempt to invoke attorney work product protection was rejected as procedurally improper Although two documents did not qualify for attorney-client privilege, the court found they were nonetheless protected under the deliberative process privilege. The court also concluded that the VA had released all reasonably segregable information. How the Court Got There The decision turned on whether the VA had corrected deficiencies identified by the D.C. Circuit. On appeal, the D.C. Circuit held that the VA had failed to adequately justify its withholdings because its explanations were too general and did not link specific documents to claimed exemptions. The court required more detailed, document-specific reasoning. On remand, the VA submitted a revised Vaughn Index and supporting declaration. The district court found that this updated material provided “reasonably specific detail” demonstrating that the withheld records fell within Exemption 5. The court accepted that most records consisted of legal advice exchanged between agency lawyers and officials concerning compliance with statutory reporting obligations, including how and when information should be shared with federal systems. It also found that many records reflected draft policies, recommendations, and internal deliberations prepared to assist agency decision-making. These materials were therefore both predecisional and deliberative, satisfying the requirements for the deliberative process privilege. However, the court rejected the VA’s attempt to newly assert attorney work product protection. It held that FOIA exemptions must generally be raised at the outset, and that the agency’s explanation—described as conclusory—did not justify introducing a new exemption at this stage. Finally, the court accepted the VA’s evidence that it conducted a line-by-line review and found no meaningful segregable information outside the applicable exemptions. Key Takeaways for Business Detailed justification is critical in FOIA disputes. Courts require document-specific explanations linking each record to a claimed exemption, rather than high-level descriptions. Privilege claims must be procedurally disciplined. Late reliance on new exemptions may be rejected unless exceptional circumstances are clearly established. Internal legal advice remains strongly protected. Communications between agency lawyers and officials will typically fall within Exemption 5 when properly documented. Drafts and policy deliberations are sensitive disclosure areas. Predecisional materials used to shape policy are likely to be protected if their role in decision-making is clearly explained. Segregability is a separate and ongoing obligation. Agencies must demonstrate a granular, line-by-line review and cannot withhold entire documents where non-exempt material can reasonably be separated. What Happens Next The court stated that a separate order would issue following its decision. Beyond that, the opinion does not specify any further procedural steps. The ruling resolves the remaining claims before the district court, subject to any further appeal. Case details CourtUnited States District Court for the District of Columbia DateMarch 24, 2026 Case nameWatkins Law & Advocacy, PLLC v. United States Department of Justice Docket numberCivil Action No. 17-1974 (ABJ) Area of lawAdministrative law ResultSummary judgment granted for the VA; plaintiff’s cross-motion denied People Also Ask What is FOIA Exemption 5?FOIA Exemption 5 protects certain internal government communications that would be privileged in civil litigation. These include attorney-client communications and predecisional deliberations. Why did the D.C. Circuit remand the case?The appellate court found that the VA’s explanations for withholding documents were too general. It required the agency to provide more specific, document-level justifications. Did the VA succeed on all its privilege claims?The VA largely succeeded, although the court rejected its attempt to introduce attorney work product protection at a late stage. Other privileges still supported the withholdings. What is a Vaughn Index in FOIA cases?A Vaughn Index is a document that describes withheld records and explains why each falls within a FOIA exemption. It helps courts assess whether withholding is justified. What does “segregable information” mean under FOIA?It refers to portions of a document that can be released even if other parts are exempt. Agencies must disclose non-exempt material unless it is inseparable from protected content.

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