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Case 1:19-cr-00830-AT Document35 Filed 04/24/20 Page 28 of 34
been completed, let alone reached a point where the final version will be disclosed to the public.
It is also deliberative in that it will likely make recommendations about the BOP, and those
recommendations will be under discussion within the Office of the Inspector General prior to being
finalized and publicly announced. Internal deliberations are an important tool for agencies in
reaching decisions, including recommendations in DOJ-OIG reports. The ability to have these
discussions is important in identifying a broad range of policy and legal issues. Here, disclosure
of any draft report or other work product related to the preparation of the Report will undermine
the DOJ-OIG’s ability to engage in meaningful discussions of the issues at the BOP relating to
inmate security and staffing, among other topics, and will potentially stifle rigorous discourse on
the issues. Accordingly, Thomas’s motion should be denied for the reason that the materials
sought are protected by the deliberative process privilege. Klamath, 532 U.S. at 9.
Second, Thomas has offered no support for his contention that drafts of the Inspector
General’s Report itself (and any related work product)—as opposed to the underlying materials
upon which the Report is based—are subject to disclosure. To the extent that the forthcoming
Inspector General’s Report relies on information gathered during the instant investigation and
prosecution, those underlying materials—which focus primarily on the events of August 9 and 10,
2019, the incarceration of Jeffrey Epstein, and related MCC records—have already been disclosed
to the defendants. Thomas contends that those tasked with preparing the Report may “possibl[y]”
have generated additional witness statements and “other information” that has not been produced
by the Government to date. (Mot. 5). Thomas provides no support for such assertions besides
mere speculation. The prosecution has inquired of the Washington D.C.-based attorneys who are
preparing the Inspector General’s Report. Based on those conversations, it is the prosecution’s
understanding that those attorneys have not conducted any additional interviews or otherwise
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Document Details
| Filename | DOJ-OGR-00022090.jpg |
| File Size | 762.1 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 95.1% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 2,260 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-03 20:20:33.897542 |