DE 20-IB33 2020-12-18

Can a Delaware agency invoke 'legal review' as a response extension within minutes of receiving my FOIA request and then go silent for weeks?

Short answer: Practically not. The AG ruled William Paskey's timeliness petition was moot because DSHS finally produced the off-duty firearms policies, but cautioned DSHS that immediately invoking a legal-review extension and then failing to respond until after a petition was filed 'violates the spirit of FOIA.'
Currency note: this opinion is from 2020
Subsequent statutory amendments, court decisions, or later AG opinions may have changed the analysis. Treat this page as historical context, not current legal advice. Verify current law before relying on any specific rule, deadline, or remedy mentioned here.
Disclaimer: This is an official Delaware Attorney General opinion. AG opinions are persuasive authority but not binding precedent. This summary is for informational purposes only and is not legal advice. Consult a licensed Delaware attorney for advice on your specific situation.
About this page: The plain-English summary, reader guidance, and Q&A below were written by Ezel based on the official AG opinion. The original opinion (linked at the bottom of this page, or PDF in the sidebar) is the authoritative source for any reliance.
View original AG opinion (PDF)

Official title

20-IB33 12/18/2020 FOIA Opinion Letter to Mr. William Paskey re: FOIA Complaint Concerning the Delaware Department of Safety and Homeland Security

Plain-English summary

William Paskey asked the Delaware Department of Safety and Homeland Security for the off-duty firearms policy for Delaware State Police, Capital Police, and Delaware Alcohol and Tobacco Enforcement (DATE) officers. DSHS replied within eleven minutes that the request had "been sent for legal review" and that a response would come within 15 business days. The 15-day window passed with no further response. Paskey filed a follow-up email and, when nothing came, filed a FOIA petition.

After the petition arrived, DSHS produced the DATE policy and asked for seven more business days to release the State Police and Capital Police policies. It met that supplementary deadline. The AG ruled the timeliness claim moot because Paskey now had the records, but explicitly criticized the agency's pattern: invoking a legal-review extension reflexively at the moment of receipt and then ignoring follow-ups until a petition is filed "violates the spirit of FOIA." The opinion did not find a hard violation, but the cautionary language is unusually pointed.

Currency note

This opinion was issued in 2020. Subsequent statutory amendments, court decisions, or later AG opinions may have changed the analysis. Treat this page as historical context, not current legal advice. Verify current law before relying on any specific rule, deadline, or remedy mentioned here.

Background and statutory framework

29 Del. C. § 10003(h) sets the 15-business-day response window. A public body that needs more time can extend, but only by citing one of the listed reasons (voluminous records, legal advice required, records in storage) and by providing a good-faith estimate of how much extra time is needed. Routine, automatic extensions on every request, without an actual basis for them, are the practice this opinion targets.

The mootness doctrine is well settled by Flowers v. Office of the Governor, 167 A.3d 530 (Del. Super. 2017), and a string of AG opinions: 17-IB35, 18-IB25, 18-IB30, 19-IB25. Once the records are produced, the timeliness controversy ceases to exist for AG-petition purposes. Flowers also stands for the principle the AG quoted here: "exemptions are to be narrowly construed and FOIA is to be construed to further open access to public records." That language framed the AG's willingness to call out the practice even while finding the issue moot.

Common questions

Q: Is "sent for legal review" always a valid extension reason?
A: It is a permitted reason under § 10003(h) when legal advice actually is needed, but it must come with a good-faith time estimate and an actual review. Reflexive use of the same boilerplate within minutes of receipt, especially across multiple requests, looks like a delay tactic and the AG signaled that here.

Q: What can a requester do if they suspect routine "legal review" extensions are pretextual?
A: Document the pattern. The AG's ability to call out abuse increases when there is a documented timeline showing immediate boilerplate followed by silence. A single late response is just a late response; a pattern across requests builds a case for either a stronger AG cautionary opinion or a § 10005(d) court action seeking declaratory relief.

Q: Did DSHS face any sanction here?
A: No formal sanction. The AG declared the petition moot once the records arrived. The remedies available in the AG petition process do not include fines or contempt. The accountability is the published opinion itself, which becomes part of the public record.

Q: Was the off-duty firearms policy actually a sensitive document?
A: The opinion does not assess the substance. DSHS produced all three agency policies after the back-and-forth, so any claimed exemption did not survive review. Off-duty firearms policies typically contain general carry rules and reporting requirements rather than tactical material, but agencies routinely run them through legal review before release because they touch on personnel and safety topics.

Q: How does this differ from the typical timeliness mootness opinion?
A: The cautionary language is sharper. Most mootness opinions stop at "moot, please be careful." Here the AG said the agency's behavior "violates the spirit of FOIA," language that nudges the analysis toward a finding without quite getting there.

Citations

  • 29 Del. C. §§ 10001-10007 (Delaware FOIA)
  • 29 Del. C. § 10003(h) (15-business-day response window; extensions)
  • 29 Del. C. § 10005 (FOIA petition process)
  • Flowers v. Office of the Governor, 167 A.3d 530 (Del. Super. 2017)
  • Chemical Industry Council of Delaware, Inc. v. State Coastal Zone Industrial Control Board, 1994 WL 274295 (Del. Ch. May 19, 1994)

Source

Original opinion text

DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE
NEW CASTLE COUNTY
820 NORTH FRENCH STREET
WILMINGTON, DELAWARE 19801

KATHLEEN JENNINGS
ATTORNEY GENERAL

CIVIL DIVISION (302) 577-8400
FAX: (302) 577-6630
CRIMINAL DIVISION (302) 577-8500
FAX: (302) 577-2496
FRAUD DIVISION (302) 577-8600
FAX: (302) 577-6499

OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF DELAWARE
Attorney General Opinion No. 20-IB33
December 18, 2020
VIA EMAIL
William Paskey
[email protected]
RE:

FOIA Petition Regarding the Delaware Department of Safety and Homeland
Security

Dear Mr. Paskey:
We write in response to your correspondence alleging that the Delaware Department of
Safety and Homeland Security ("DSHS") violated Delaware's Freedom of Information Act, 29
Del. C. §§ 10001-10007 ("FOIA") in connection with your request for records. We treat your
correspondence as a Petition for a determination pursuant to 29 Del. C. § 10005 regarding whether
a violation of FOIA has occurred or is about to occur. As set forth below, we determine this
Petition is now moot.
BACKGROUND
On October 12, 2020 at 10:45am, you submitted a request for "the off duty firearms policy
on carrying personal firearms for the Delaware State Police, Capital Police and DATE."1 DSHS
acknowledged receipt of the request eleven minutes later, stating your request "has been sent for
legal review" and "[w]ithin 15 business days from receipt of your request, we will either provide
you with access to the records, deny your request, or state that additional time is needed."2
1

Petition.

2

Id.

This Petition followed on November 17, 2020. You allege that you sent a follow-up email,
DSHS did not respond, and it has been well over fifteen business days without a response. On
November 30, 2020, DSHS's counsel replied to your Petition ("Response"). DSHS contends that
it complied with FOIA, "because it responded to [you] the same business day and cited to a
statutorily acceptable reason why more time was needed (i.e., legal review), and provided a goodfaith estimate of how much additional time was required to fulfill the request."3 DSHS admits that
there were no responsive communications since its October 12, 2020 email. DSHS attached one
responsive record to its Response, the off-duty firearms policy for the Delaware Alcohol and
Tobacco Enforcement ("DATE") officers carrying personal firearms, but noted it needed an
additional seven business days for legal review of the Delaware State Police and Capital Police
off-duty firearms policies on carrying personal firearms. By email dated December 1, 2020, you
noted DSHS's lack of response despite your follow-up communication on November 2, 2020 and
speculated that DSHS is engaged in a practice of routinely sending these notices for legal review
as a "delay tactic."4 On December 7, 2020, DSHS completed its response to your request,
providing copies of the off-duty firearms policy on carrying personal firearms for Delaware State
Police and Delaware Capital Police.5
DISCUSSION
FOIA requires a public body to respond to a request within fifteen business days or advise
of the need for additional time in compliance with the statutory requirements.6 In this instance,
DSHS responded to your request almost immediately to advise that the request had been sent for
legal review and it would respond within fifteen business days, reiterating the statutory deadline.
Despite your communication following up on the request, DSHS did not respond until several
weeks after this deadline and after you filed this Petition. FOIA is to be construed to further open
access to public records, and any extensions to the statutory time period for responses are the

3

Response.

4

Email from William Paskey to [email protected] dated Dec. 1, 2020.

5

Email from Deputy Attorney General Lisa Morris to [email protected]
dated Dec. 7, 2020.

6

A public body must "respond to a FOIA request as soon as possible, but in any event within
15 business days after the receipt thereof, either by providing access to the requested records,
denying access to the records or parts of them, or by advising that additional time is needed because
the request is for voluminous records, requires legal advice, or a record is in storage or archived."
29 Del. C. § 10003(h). "If access cannot be provided within 15 business days, the public body
shall cite [one] of the reasons hereunder why more time is needed and provide a good-faith estimate
of how much additional time is required to fulfill the request." Id.
2

exception, not the rule for responding to requests.7 DSHS's noticing of the need for additional
time so quickly after receipt of the request, and then failing to respond to the request until the
requesting party files a petition with this Office, despite the requesting party's follow-up inquiry,
violates the spirit of FOIA.
After receiving this Petition, DSHS provided you, on November 30, 2020, with one
document you sought and responded it would provide the remaining documents responsive to your
request within seven business days. Within that timeframe, DSHS provided you the remaining
records to complete its response. As such, the Petition's claim regarding timeliness is now moot,
but we caution DSHS to invoke extensions for additional time to respond to requests only when
needed and to timely communicate regarding requests in the future.8
CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, we find that your claim disputing the timeliness of DSHS's
response is now moot but caution DSHS as set forth above.

7

Flowers v. Office of the Governor, 167 A.3d 530, 545 (Del. Super. 2017) ("The Court is
mindful that exemptions are to be narrowly construed and that FOIA is to be construed to further
open access to public records . . . .").
8

See, e.g., Flowers, 167 A.3d at 546 ("[T]he Court finds that any claimed violation regarding
the Sample E-mails is moot because Appellants already possess them."); Chem. Indus. Council of
Del., Inc. v. State Coastal Zone Indus. Control Bd., 1994 WL 274295, at 13 (Del. Ch. May 19,
1994) (in response to plaintiffs' request for a declaration that the Board wrongfully denied them
timely access, stating "[b]ecause the documents that are the subject of [plaintiffs'] FOIA requests
were turned over to the plaintiffs on August 13, 1993, that claim is moot"); Del. Op. Att'y Gen.
19-IB25, 2019 WL 4538311, at
3 (May 10, 2019) ("Based on this record, it is my determination
that the allegations in your Petition are now moot, as DOC has completed its final response to your
FOIA request."); Del. Op. Att'y Gen. 18-IB30, 2018 WL 3118433, 2 (Jun. 7, 2018) ("Based upon
the record, it is my determination that your Petition is now moot, as OGov has completed its
response to your FOIA request."); Del. Op. Att'y Gen. 18-IB25, 2018 WL 2994703,
1 (May 15,
2018) ("Based on the facts as presented to this Office, it is our determination that your petition is
moot, as the City has provided a response to your April 11 FOIA Request."); Del. Op. Att'y Gen.
17-IB35, 2017 WL 3426275, 1 (July 31, 2017) (citing The Library, Inc. v. AFG Enter., Inc., 1998
WL 474159, at
2 (Del. Ch. July 27, 1998) (citation omitted)) (finding a challenge to the wholesale
denial of a request is moot and noting that a matter "is moot when there may have been a justiciable
controversy at the time a matter was commenced, but that controversy ceases to exist prior to the
arbiter's determination.").
3

Very truly yours,
/s/ Alexander S. Mackler


Alexander S. Mackler
Chief Deputy Attorney General

cc:

Lisa M. Morris, Deputy Attorney General
Dorey L. Cole, Deputy Attorney General

4