Prechtel v. Fed. Commc'ns Comm'n
Prechtel v. Fed. Commc'ns Comm'n
Opinion of the Court
In spring of 2017, the Federal Communications Commission ("FCC" or "Commission") promulgated a proposed rule to establish regulations for broadband internet service providers. Captioned "Restoring Internet Freedom," the rulemaking sought to repeal prior regulations promoting "net neutrality"-the principle that internet service providers afford equal access to all internet-enabled data. The proposal received significant public attention, garnering an unprecedented twenty-four million public comments on the administrative record. The number of fraudulent, duplicative, *324or otherwise dubious comments was equally unprecedented. These questionable comments have drawn the attention of FCC Commissioners, Members of Congress, and journalists including Jason Prechtel, the plaintiff in this case.
Prechtel filed Freedom of Information Act ("FOIA") requests seeking details about the use of two electronic comment-submission tools that the FCC had enabled to facilitate public participation in the regulatory process: comma-separated value (".CSV") files and an Application Programming Interface ("API"). These tools allowed members of the public to comment on the proposal without going directly to the Commission's website and accessing its comment platform (or Electronic Comment Filing System ("ECFS") ). A .CSV file is a template provided by the FCC-essentially, a spreadsheet in which every row contains a separate comment-that allows an individual or organization to solicit and compile multiple comments and upload them into ECFS in one fell swoop. These submissions are sometimes referred to as "bulk comments." By way of example, if an organization wanted its membership to submit comments supporting the FCC's proposed actions, it might ordinarily be forced to encourage each member to access the ECFS website and submit an individual comment. The bulk comment submission process enabled the organization to collect its members' comments, format them into the .CSV spreadsheet, and submit them all at once by transmitting that spreadsheet to ECFS.
An API, in turn, is a mechanism that facilitates communication between ECFS and other websites. As relevant here, it allows website developers to place comment-submission tools on third-party websites, meaning that visitors to those websites can submit comments to ECFS directly from those websites. For example, if a group opposing the Commission's proposed actions wanted visitors to its website to submit comments into the record, it might ordinarily include a link to ECFS, forcing a visitor to leave its website to submit a comment. The API instead enabled the group to place a comment form directly on its own website, allowing a visitor to type a comment and submit it into ECFS without leaving the site. Those seeking to host an API capable of communicating with ECFS must register for a "key," which confirms to ECFS that the information being transmitted comes from a registered source-essentially, a unique code that opens the door to ECFS so a comment can be left inside.
Prechtel filed two FOIA requests: one with the Commission and one with the General Services Administration ("GSA"), the executive agency that manages the Commission's API system. See Compl. Ex. A; Pl.'s Statement of Undisputed Material Facts ("SUMF") Ex. B. In this suit, Prechtel challenges how the agencies handled his requests. Specifically, he challenges the adequacy of the FCC's search for the requested records, its invocation of several statutory exemptions to withhold or redact those records, and the GSA's constructive denial of his FOIA request. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 24, 27-28; Pl.'s Mot. Summ. J. & Opp'n at 1. The Court addresses only the second challenge, aimed at the Commission's withholdings. Prechtel belatedly served the GSA and it has not had the opportunity to submit an affidavit clarifying its response to his FOIA request. Accordingly, the Court reserves judgment on the GSA's actions. And because a GSA affidavit should clarify ownership of the API keys, which implicates the adequacy of the FCC's search, the Court also reserves judgment on Prechtel's challenge to that search. The Court will thus deny without prejudice all parties' motions for summary *325judgment on those issues. Regarding Prechtel's challenge to the Commission's withholdings: The Court will grant the Commission's motion for summary judgment on its withholding of certain privileged emails and its server logs; grant Prechtel's motion for summary judgment on the email addresses used to submit .CSV files; and direct the parties to confer regarding the .CSV files themselves.
I. Background
On June 4, 2017, Prechtel filed FOIA requests with the GSA and the FCC. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 9, 16. His request to the GSA sought two sets of documents: (1) all public API keys used to submit online comments relating to the "Restoring Internet Freedom" proceeding, including the associated registration names and email addresses, and copies of all data files submitted through those API keys; and (2) logs of all dates and times that those API keys were used to submit comments. Id. ¶ 9. Prechtel's FOIA request to the FCC sought the same information as well as: (1) "the email addresses associated with .CSV comment uploads, along with all .CSV files uploaded in response to [the] Proceeding"; (2) "logs of all dates and times the email addresses submitted comments"; and (3) "all email inquiries to [email protected] regarding .CSV comment submissions to the Proceeding." Id. ¶ 16.
On June 5, the GSA informed Prechtel that the requested files were not within its "jurisdiction." Pl.'s SUMF Ex. B, at 1 (GSA response to Prechtel's FOIA request). After several email exchanges, the GSA elaborated that the FCC was the "API owner" and therefore that Prechtel's request was "more appropriate[ly]" addressed to the FCC. Id. at 7.
After receiving no substantive response from the FCC, Prechtel filed this suit on September 7, 2017. See Compl.; id. ¶¶ 9-12. Twenty days later, the Commission released fifteen pages of documents responsive to the fifth part of his request-that seeking communications to the [email protected] "help desk" email address. See Defs.' SUMF Ex. B, at 2 (FCC response to Prechtel's FOIA request). It redacted several emails within these records and withheld all records responsive to other aspects of Prechtel's request, invoking several of FOIA's statutory exemptions to justify its redactions and withholdings. Id. at 2-4. Further, it indicated that it did not maintain documents responsive to Prechtel's request for the API keys and associated information, asserting that the GSA maintains these records. Id. at 1-2.
The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, after which Prechtel amended his complaint to add the GSA as a defendant. See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 9-15, 21-24. However, Prechtel did not serve the GSA until after briefing had commenced. The GSA has joined the FCC's motion for summary judgment. But it has not provided an affidavit or declaration explaining its response to Prechtel or the extent to which it is in tension with the FCC's response regarding API keys and attendant information. The Court held a telephonic status conference with the parties regarding this issue, after which Prechtel served the GSA. Based on the status conference, the Court expects that the GSA will provide a declaration detailing how it handled Prechtel's FOIA request, which will clarify the issues surrounding the API keys and associated information. Consequently, the Court will deny without prejudice all parties' motions for summary judgment on matters not resolved in this opinion. The parties may renew such motions in the future, if necessary.
II. Legal Standards
FOIA requires federal executive agencies to produce their records upon *326request unless one of the Act's nine exemptions protects those records from disclosure. See
FOIA disputes are generally resolved on cross-motions for summary judgment. In evaluating each motion, the Court must view the record in the light most favorable to the non-movant. The agency may satisfy its burden of showing that a FOIA exemption applies through an affidavit or declaration that "describes the justifications for withholding the information with specific detail, demonstrates that the information withheld logically falls within the claimed exemption, and is not contradicted by contrary evidence in the record or by evidence of the agency's bad faith."
III. Analysis
The Commission withheld all or part of three categories of records responsive to Prechtel's request: email exchanges between agency staff regarding how to respond to an inquiry to [email protected]; .CSV files used to submit bulk comments and the email addresses of those who submitted them; and Commission server logs detailing the dates and times that .CSV files were submitted. The Court will evaluate each withholding in turn.
A. Email Threads
Prechtel requested all email inquiries to the Commission's [email protected] "help desk" email address regarding .CSV submissions to the Restoring Internet Freedom proceeding. Am. Compl. ¶ 16. The Commission released fifteen pages of responsive documents and invoked the deliberative process privilege under FOIA Exemption 5 to redact certain email threads.
*327Exemption 5 allows agencies to withhold "inter-agency or intra-agency memorandums or letters that would not be available by law to a party other than an agency in litigation with the agency."
The Commission invoked the deliberative process privilege protected by Exemption 5. An agency invoking that privilege must show that withheld documents are both "predecisional" and "deliberative." Coastal States Gas Corp. v. Dep't of Energy,
According to the Commission's declaration, the emails contain "internal deliberations among IT staff regarding how to respond" to an inquiry about comment submissions, and "include[ ] a back-and-forth conversation regarding the best method for handling [the] ... request, including options considered and discarded." Decl. of Ryan J. Yates Supp. Defs.' Mot. for Summ. J. ("First Yates Decl.") ¶ 15. The agency withheld the exchange after concluding "that its release would chill the candid exchange of ideas among staff."
Contrary to Prechtel's assertions, the Commission's explanation is not "generic." Pl.'s Mot. Summ. J. & Opp'n at 17. The Commission has explained who deliberated (the Commission's IT staff), the agency action about which they deliberated (a response to an outside inquiry), the role the deliberations played in crafting that action (determining the best way to handle the inquirer's underlying request, including possibilities that eventually were rejected), and the harms that would result from disclosure (a chill on agency staff's ability to weigh options candidly to make decisions). The declaration provides appropriate details and stands in contrast to invocations of the deliberative process privilege that courts in this district have rejected as insufficient. See, e.g., Hunton & Williams LLP v. EPA,
Prechtel claims that, even if some of the communications are privileged, any records reflecting the agency's final decision, the accompanying explanation,
B. The .CSV Files and Associated Email Addresses
Prechtel also requested the .CSV files used to submit bulk comments to the proceeding and the email addresses used to transmit those files. Am. Compl. ¶ 16. In response, the Commission invoked FOIA Exemption 6, which protects personal information from disclosure, to withhold the email addresses and instructed Prechtel that any other responsive information was already public. See Defs.' SUMF Ex. B, at 2.
An initial clarifying matter: Prechtel requested the .CSV files along with the email addresses used to submit them. The Commission's response that all non-exempt responsive information was already public appears to reveal a misunderstanding of Prechtel's request. While the submitted comments are publicly available on ECFS, the .CSV files themselves do not appear to be. See Defs.' Opp'n & Reply at 6 ("[A]s to Mr. Prechtel's request for the CSV files themselves , the FCC repeats that the information in those files other than the submitter email addresses is already publicly available on the FCC's website along with all other submitted comments.... Mr. Prechtel may access the content of those comments there." (emphases added) ). It is as though someone submitted hundreds of individual letters in an envelope and Prechtel has asked to inspect the return address on the envelope and the letters it contained. The Commission has declined to release the return address (on privacy grounds) and, instead of providing the envelope with return address redacted, has told Prechtel that copies of the letters are available among a pile of twenty-odd million letters.
But, as Prechtel points out, the .CSV files have independent value-principally, they reflect which comments were submitted together and, assuming disclosure of the bulk file submitters' email addresses, by whom. Whether or not the Commission properly withheld the email addresses of *329bulk submitters, it still must justify independently the withholding of the files themselves. If the Commission maintains access to the files and cannot show why they are independently exempt, it must disclose them. The Court will elaborate on each of these issues in turn.
1. Bulk Submitters' Email Addresses
The Court finds that the Commission improperly invoked Exemption 6 to withhold the bulk submitters' email addresses and orders the Commission to release those records.
Exemption 6 shields from disclosure "personnel and medical files and similar files the disclosure of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy."
The bulk submitters' privacy interest in their email addresses is minimal in this context. Importantly, bulk submitters had ample indication that their email addresses could be made public, mitigating any expectation of privacy. Cf. Alliance for Wild Rockies v. Dep't of Interior,
The Commission maintains that because bulk submitters merely transmitted files and did not necessarily comment on the proposal, they are more akin to "any other private individual[s]" than to public commenters and therefore have a "substantial" privacy interest in their email addresses. See Defs.' Opp'n & Reply at 4-5. The Court disagrees. While the Commission correctly notes that courts in this district have attached a "substantial" privacy interest to the email addresses of "private individual[s]," id. at 5, the facts of the cases cited by the Commission differ from *330those here. Judicial Watch, Inc. v. U.S. Department of State, for example, dealt with private email addresses used by government employees.
By contrast, the individuals here sought to influence agency decision-making by submitting scores of public comments into the administrative record. This makes them more akin to individual commenters who provide their email addresses when petitioning the government than to "any other private individual[s]" whose email addresses the government happens to possess. Any difference between public commenters' and bulk submitters' privacy interests is one of degree, not kind. And the degree of difference is minimal where, as here, a message directed to bulk submitters alerted them that "[a]ll information submitted" would be publicly available. In other words, when someone submits multiple comments to influence public policy and is told that her email address will become part of the public record, her privacy interest in that email address is not as strong as the Commission now suggests.
Still, bulk submitters have some privacy interest in non-disclosure of their email addresses. For Prechtel to successfully challenge the withholding, he must show that the public interest in disclosure of these email addresses outweighs that privacy interest. The "public interest" in this context must relate to FOIA's "core purpose" of "shed[ding] light on an agency's performance of its statutory duties." DOJ v. Reporters Comm. for Freedom of the Press,
Courts in this district have held that disclosing the identities of those seeking to influence an agency's actions can shed light on those actions. See, e.g., People for the Am. Way Found. v. Nat'l Park Serv.,
This case is closer to the former than the latter. Never mind the plaintiff; here, the defendant , through its actions, has shown the significance attached to email addresses. The Commission has released the email addresses of over twenty million public commenters on the rulemaking. See FCC Public Notice, FCC Facilitates Review of Restoring Internet Freedom Record, WC Docket No. 17-108 (Nov. 7, 2017). Outside groups have examined this information and highlighted the extent to which public comments were associated with clearly fraudulent or otherwise dubious email addresses, such as [email protected]. See, e.g., Pew Research Ctr., Public Comments to the Federal Communications Commission About Net Neutrality Contain Many Inaccuracies and Duplicates (2017), https://perma.cc/B9SZ-JUWC.
Moreover, after dissenting Commissioners had called for a delay in the vote on a final rulemaking due to concerns about the fraudulent comments, see Hamza Shaban, FCC Commissioner, New York Attorney General Call for Delay of Net Neutrality Vote Over Fake Comments, Wash. Post (Dec. 4, 2017), https://perma.cc/WRD7-S8WZ, the Commission assured the public that "those comments in no way impeded the Commission's ability to identify or respond to material issues in the record," FCC, Declaratory Ruling, Report and Order, and Order, Restoring Internet Freedom, WC Docket No. 17-108, at ¶ 345 (rel. Jan. 4, 2018). The Commission's assurances highlighted thousands of easily discounted comments from email addresses that were obviously created with fake email generators.
To illustrate, if someone had used [email protected] or an email address created with a fake email generator to submit a .CSV file containing hundreds or thousands of comments, it would be at least as relevant as individual comments bearing those same indicia of fraud. The disclosure Prechtel seeks would thus reveal information at the heart of FOIA's purpose of illuminating agency action: It would clarify the extent to which the Commission succeeded-as it assured the American people it had-in managing a public-commenting process seemingly corrupted by dubious comments. The relative public value of this information might have been a slightly closer call had the Commission not already released over twenty million *332email addresses. But it has, and that information has generated significant questions about the agency's procedures; it cannot now claim that the outstanding information is irrelevant to the public's scrutiny of those procedures. Thus, Prechtel has convincingly shown the independent significance attached to the email addresses associated with bulk comment submissions.
In addition to enabling scrutiny of how the Commission handled dubious comments during the rulemaking, disclosure would illuminate the Commission's forward-looking efforts to prevent fraud in future processes. The Commission, its Chairman, Members of Congress, and more than a dozen state attorneys general have all expressed concern about the extent to which fake comments were submitted into the rulemaking record. See Pl.'s SUMF Ex. F (letter from Members of Congress to FCC Chairman Ajit Pai);
The Commission maintains that the email addresses cannot illuminate its actions because they were stored by a third party and not accessed during the relevant agency action. See Defs.' Opp'n & Reply at 5. But knowing whether dubious email addresses were used to submit bulk comments will shed light on the relative wisdom of the Commission's non-scrutiny of this information. Given the controversy surrounding dubious comments and the Commission's subsequent assurances that its response was adequate, the public has an interest in knowing whether a keener eye (i.e. , accessing the information) could have revealed information that would have enabled the Commission to better distinguish between real and fake comments. The Commission notes that Prechtel has not explained why a .CSV file submitted with a fraudulent email address would compel the Commission to reject the underlying comments. Id. True, Prechtel has not argued that the Commission must discount such comments. But FOIA exists to illuminate not just whether an agency complied with its statutory duties, but also how it chose to do so. Prechtel need not allege that the Commission had to act a certain way to seek information about its chosen actions.
*333The public interest in disclosure of bulk submitters' email addresses is significant when compared to the privacy interest at stake. The Court therefore grants Prechtel's motion for summary judgment on this issue.
2. .CSV Files
To the extent that the Commission maintains access to the .CSV files themselves, their disclosure would further illuminate the agency's actions, particularly in light of the ordered disclosure of the email addresses.
Disclosure of the files would allow scrutiny of the Commission's success in combatting fraud. If, for example, a .CSV file contained 1,000 comments, 800 of which were dubious on their face, the public might question the validity of the remaining 200. Or, if a .CSV file containing 1,000 seemingly legitimate comments were submitted by a plainly suspicious email address, the public might question whether the Commission should have discounted those comments.
Moreover, disclosure of the full .CSV files alongside the email addresses could shed light on whose comments the Commission placed most weight. The Commission's release of over twenty million email addresses belies its argument that there is no public interest in the email addresses of those seeking to influence the Commission's actions here. The already released email addresses can reveal important information about the identity of commenters,
The Commission's non-use of the email addresses does not negate this value. Disclosure illuminates the relative weight an agency places on various constituencies' comments whether or not that weighing is conscious or overt.
Because the Commission's apparent misunderstanding of Prechtel's request left the issue unbriefed, it is unclear whether the Commission currently possesses the .CSV files themselves and, if so, how they are stored.
C. The Server Logs
Finally, Prechtel sought the release of FCC electronic server logs detailing all dates and times that .CSV files were submitted. Am. Compl. ¶ 16. The purpose of this request was apparently to examine the logs for signs of nefarious activity. The Commission withheld these logs in their entirety, claiming that some of the information in the logs is protected under FOIA Exemptions 6 and 7(E) and not reasonably segregable from the non-exempt information. See Defs.' SUMF Ex. B, at 3-4. The Court finds that the Commission has properly invoked Exemption 7(E) and has shown that the properly withheld information is not reasonably segregable from the other information; therefore, there is no need to address the invocation of Exemption 6. The Court will grant the Commission's motion for summary judgment on the server log withholding.
1. Exemption 7(E)
FOIA's Exemption 7(E), as relevant here, allows agencies to withhold "records or information" that "would disclose techniques and procedures for law enforcement investigations or prosecutions ... if such disclosure could reasonably be expected to risk circumvention of the law."
In this case, the Commission's IT staff fears that revealing the requested server logs would expose both general security measures and specific steps it has taken to fend off past cyber-attacks. The Commission explains in its declaration that its "IT staff concluded that release of the server logs would reveal sensitive information regarding [its] IT architecture, including security measures [it] takes to protect its systems from malicious activity." First Yates Decl. ¶ 18. Additionally, the Commission's IT staff explained that "the logs would also disclose detailed information about the steps the FCC took in response to the spike in ECFS traffic during the period in question, thereby giving future attackers a 'roadmap' to evade the Commission's future defensive efforts."
Prechtel does not question the risk of renewed attacks but maintains that disclosure will not aggravate the risk of any such attacks' success. He contends that "the techniques for detecting fraud, spam, and unique internet traffic are well known" and the Commission could have used only two well-known techniques. Pl.'s Mot. Summ. J. & Opp'n at 15. The Commission counters that "[t]he timing and nature of how [it] deployed those tools would provide malicious actors with insight into how exactly [it] protects its systems and improve their ability to defeat those protections." Suppl. Decl. of Ryan J. Yates Supp. Defs.' Mot. Summ. J. ("Second Yates Decl.") ¶ 13. Contrary to Prechtel's assertions, these are not legally inadequate "conclusory" and "vague or sweeping claims." Pl.'s Reply at 9. The Commission has explained its concerns and has rebutted specifically Prechtel's contention that they are misplaced. This more than suffices to meet its burden. " '[J]udges are not cyber specialists, and it would be the height of judicial irresponsibility for a court to blithely disregard ... a claimed risk' of cyber-attack or a security breach." Levinthal v. FEC,
2. Segregability
But the Commission does not claim that all information in its server logs is exempt. So why isn't Prechtel entitled to the non-exempt information? Because under FOIA, while an agency must provide "[a]ny reasonably segregable portion of a record ... after deletion of the portions which are exempt,"
*336that the non-exempt information is not reasonably segregable. See, e.g., Armstrong v. Exec. Office of the President,
The Commission has done so here. Its submissions explain that "[d]ue to the nature of how the server logs record information, non-sensitive information ... is interspersed throughout hundreds of millions of lines of .... exempt information, ... the disclosure of which would jeopardize the Commission's IT security." First Yates Decl. ¶ 18 n.4. Prechtel maintains that these submissions are insufficient because segregating server logs is an easy task, as demonstrated by the fact that another agency has done so in the past. Pl.'s Reply at 7-8. But another agency's action does not undermine the Commission's explanation. Agencies do not necessarily have parallel IT architectures or use identical techniques.
Prechtel also contends that, at most, the Commission's declaration indicates that segregation is possible, but involves multiple steps. Id. at 8. That may be the case, but the relevant statutory standard is whether the information can be reasonably segregated. The Commission has explained that "extracting any non-exempt information" is complicated "[d]ue to idiosyncrasies in how ECFS is built." Second Yates Decl. ¶ 15. Further, it notes that "[e]ven attempting to create the records [Prechtel] seeks would require substantial coding work by the Commission's IT staff to craft algorithms tailored to the Commission's server architecture." Id."Courts in this Circuit have held repeatedly that records [are] not reasonably segregable where the agency attest[s] that it lack[s] the technical capability to edit the records in order to disclose non-exempt portions." Milton v. DOJ,
IV. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Court will grant in part and deny in part both parties' cross-motions for summary judgment and directs the parties to confer regarding release of .CSV files in light of the analysis in this opinion. A separate order accompanies this memorandum opinion.
The Commission also redacted the name of the agency representative who printed out the emails that the Commission released to Prechtel, invoking Exemption 6. See Defs.' SUMF Ex. A. Prechtel does not appear to challenge this withholding. In any event, the Court finds this withholding to be proper. As described in more detail in Section III.B, infra, Exemption 6 requires courts to balance the privacy interest in non-disclosure with the public interest in disclosure. Here, Prechtel has not advanced any public interest in disclosure of the employee's name, and the Court cannot think of any benefit to the public in revealing the name. "[E]ven a modest privacy interest[ ] outweighs nothing every time." Nat'l Ass'n of Retired Federal Emps. v. Horner,
Prechtel's FOIA request sought "all email inquiries to [email protected] regarding .CSV comment submissions to the Proceeding." Am. Compl. ¶ 16 (emphasis added). It is unclear why emails internal to the agency are responsive to this request for communications from external parties to the agency, but the Commission has not raised this defense to its withholding. Because the parties have briefed the Exemption 5 issue, the Court will proceed as though the withheld emails were in fact responsive to Prechtel's request.
The Court understands Prechtel's argument to refer to a final decision and accompanying explanation sent internally among agency staff. Any final decision and explanation sent externally as a response to the outside inquirer is not privileged. See, e.g., Ctr. for Int'l Envtl. Law v. Office of U.S. Trade Representative,
The Commission also cites Cornucopia Institute v. U.S. Department of Agriculture and Bayala v. U.S. Department of Homeland Security for the proposition that "Exemption 6 applies to email addresses." Defs.' Mot. Summ. J. at 12 n.5. Insofar as the Commission's point is that an email address is the type of information that triggers an Exemption 6 balancing test, the Court agrees. But insofar as the Commission attempts to graft the outcome in those cases onto this one, the Court rejects its argument. Neither of those cases is analogous. As relevant here, Cornucopia Institute involved the personal email addresses of third parties conducting inspections on behalf of the Department of Agriculture, see
For example, a public comment submitted by someone with the email address domain @USTelecom.org might indicate affiliation with a large trade group of internet service providers supporting the Commission's actions; a public comment submitted by someone with the email address domain @InternetAssociation.org might indicate affiliation with a large trade group representing companies that opposed the Commission's actions.
This value depends on the email address disclosure: Because bulk submitters did not have to provide their names, the information to be gleaned from the email addresses is the only information from which the public can potentially learn something about their identities and the relative weight the Commission placed on the comments they submitted.
To be sure, courts have sometimes depicted the public interest in disclosure as "knowing who may be exerting influence on [agency] officials sufficient to convince them to" make policy changes, People for the Am. Way,
This case is distinguishable from Edelman v. SEC,
The Court is unsure whether the Commission maintains possession or control of the .CSV files after the comments they contain are placed into ECFS. Likewise, it is not clear whether, if the Commission maintains those files, it stores them in a manner that renders them reasonably segregable from otherwise exempt information such as that discussed in Section III.C of this opinion, infra.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Jason PRECHTEL v. FEDERAL COMMUNICATIONS COMMISSION
- Cited By
- 13 cases
- Status
- Published