The Post-Standard's Argument To Make OCC Settlement Public
The Post-Standard's Argument To Make OCC Settlement Public
The Post-Standard's Argument To Make OCC Settlement Public
TABLE OF CONTENTS
(2) The Parties’ Submit, Judge McAvoy Rejects, and Judge Dancks
Eventually Executes the Confidentiality Stipulation and Order. .................5
ARGUMENT ...................................................................................................................................7
CONCLUSION ..............................................................................................................................19
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TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
Daines v. Harrison,
838 F. Supp. 1406 (D. Col. 1993) ..................................................................................7, 17, 19
In re Herald Co.,
734 F.2d 93 (2d Cir. 1984).........................................................................................................8
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U.S. v. Salameh,
992 F.2d 445 (2d Cir. 1993).................................................................................................7 n.5
Vassiliades v. Israely,
714 F. Supp. 604 (D. Conn. 1989) .............................................................................................7
State Cases
Statutes
Other Authorities
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PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
Proposed Intervenor Advance Media New York, publisher of The Post-Standard and
Syracuse.com, respectfully submits this memorandum of law in support of its appeal pursuant to
Rules 72(a) and/or 72(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and Local Rule 72.1(b), from
the docketed text order entered on February 20, 2018, which denied for “lack of standing”
The Post-Standard’s motion to intervene for the limited purpose of modifying the December 11,
2017, Confidentiality Stipulation and Order agreed to by the parties to the extent it prohibits
Procedurally, as a threshold matter, The Post-Standard has standing to contest and a right
to be heard in opposition to the confidentiality that has been imposed over the parties’ settlement
agreement in this case. Federal courts have repeatedly held that notice and an opportunity for
interested parties to object are required in this context. Although the parties may have their own
reasons for seeking to conceal their settlement agreement from the press and public, The Post-
Substantively, there is no compelling need for maintaining wholesale secrecy over the
parties’ stipulated settlement agreement. The Complaint’s core allegations present controversial
and newsworthy charges of discrimination based on race − i.e., that Onondaga Community
College (“OCC”) mandated a strict thirty percent (30%) racial quota with respect to the
recruitment and selection of its men’s basketball team for the 2015-16 season in violation of both
federal law and its own policies. In addition, and as set forth more fully below, it is axiomatic
that settlement agreements entered into by government entities are subject to disclosure under
New York’s Freedom of Information Law (“FOIL”), Public Officers Law, Article 6, §§ 84 et
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seq. OCC would thus have this Court believe that government entities may refuse to provide the
public with government records whenever those records are subject to confidentiality in a prior
litigation. Absent more, however, the fact that the parties stipulated to confidentiality of the
settlement agreement at issue here is of little moment, as longstanding precedent makes clear.
This is nothing more than a thinly veiled attempt to evade FOIL. It is unfounded and should be
rejected. The Court should lift the confidentiality over the settlement agreement for this reason
alone.
The underlying litigation clearly affects a substantial range of public interests and
concerns. This Court should avoid being lured by the convenient after-the-fact claim that
confidentiality was “integral” to achieving settlement when the record suggests that the real
reason the Defendants seek to maintain secrecy over the settlement agreement is to keep the
public in the dark about the amount of public funds they spent − information otherwise and
routinely available to this State’s citizens under FOIL − to avoid a trial on the serious racial
In the final analysis, Pasiak v. Onondaga Community College, et al., involves a public
higher educational institution and public officials accused of violating federal anti-discrimination
laws, the payment of taxpayer dollars to settle the case, and a settlement agreement that, as a
matter of black letter law, is subject to disclosure under New York’s FOIL. It directly implicates
the public interest, and should be public to the maximum extent authorized by law. The
Confidentiality Order should be modified to prevent the stipulated settlement agreement from
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STATEMENT OF FACTS
Proposed Intervenor Advance Media New York publishes The Post-Standard (sometimes
referred to herein as the “Newspaper”), a daily and Sunday newspaper distributed in the City of
Syracuse, New York, and throughout the Onondaga County vicinity, and operates the
conformity with fair journalistic standards, the newsworthy information that they gather. (Id.
¶ 9) Consistent with this goal, the Newspaper often covers court proceedings and other public
affairs that have independent news value or have otherwise become a reasonable subject of
The civil rights lawsuit commenced by former OCC head men’s basketball coach David
Pasiak has generated a significant level of public attention and concern not only in the Syracuse
community but throughout upstate New York. (McMahon Dec. ¶ 9) Filed in November 2016,
the Pasiak Complaint alleges that the Defendants unlawfully terminated Plaintiff from the men’s
basketball coaching position at OCC based on his refusal to implement an alleged race-based
“quota mandate,” i.e., that the 2015-2016 men’s basketball team “was to have thirty percent
(30%) minority students.” (Compl. ¶ 24) Plaintiff sought an award of money damages and lost
wages from this publicly funded community college and its officers, “including, but not limited
to, front and back pay, emotional distress, pain and suffering, compensatory and punitive
1
The accompanying Affidavit of Julie McMahon, The Post-Standard’s public affairs reporter assigned to cover
the Pasiak lawsuit, is referred to herein by paragraph as “(McMahon Dec. ¶ __).”
2
The Newspaper reported on the Pasiak Complaint in its November 18, 2016, print and online editions.
(McMahon Dec., ¶ 11[d])
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Defendant OCC is a community college within the State University of New York
(“SUNY”) system with its campus in Syracuse, New York, the center of The Post-Standard’s
readership market. Since late 2015, the Newspaper has published multiple news articles
reporting on Plaintiff’s controversial termination as OCC’s head men’s basketball coach and his
ensuing lawsuit against OCC and certain of its officers involving explosive charges of mandated
During her newsgathering relative to the Pasiak lawsuit, Reporter McMahon learned that
the parties reached a comprehensive settlement of Plaintiff’s claims with the Court’s assistance
on September 28, 2017, (McMahon Dec. ¶ 4 and Ex. B), and that Senior U.S. District Judge
Thomas J. McAvoy entered an “Order of Dismissal By Reason of Settlement” the next day,
September 29, 2017. [Dkt. 23] (McMahon Dec. Ex. C) Reporter McMahon promptly filed a
Freedom of Information Law request with OCC’s designated Records Access Officer on
October 3, 2017, requesting public access to (1) the settlement agreement between OCC and
Pasiak, and any documents or correspondence related thereto; (2) check registers or other records
of payments OCC made to Pasiak in 2017; and (3) minutes and agendas from OCC Board of
Trustees meetings in which the lawsuit was discussed. (McMahon Dec. ¶ 12 and Ex. G)
On October 5, 2017 − while the Newspaper’s FOIL request was pending, but after the
Pasiak action had been settled and dismissed − OCC requested a telephone conference with the
Court “in furtherance of the parties’ mediation with you on September 28, 2017.” (McMahon
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Dec. ¶ 13 and Ex. H). 3 The next day, October 6, 2017, OCC denied the Newspaper’s October 3,
2017, FOIL request in part, stating “there are no existing records relating to a settlement between
[OCC] and [Pasiak], nor are there any board meeting minutes or agendas where the lawsuit was
(2) The Parties’ Submit, Judge McAvoy Rejects, and Judge Dancks
Eventually Executes the Confidentiality Stipulation and Order.
More than sixty days later, on December 6, 2017, OCC submitted for the Court’s
execution a proposed Confidentiality Order that the parties signed on December 4, 2017. [Dkt.
29] (McMahon Dec. ¶ 6 and Ex. D). Notwithstanding this two month delay in its submission,
(McMahon Dec. Ex. D) Later the same day, however, Senior Judge McAvoy “declin[ed] to
enter” the parties’ proposed Confidentiality Order. (Id. ¶ 7 and Ex. B, Text Notice, entered
December 6, 2017)
On December 11, 2017, Magistrate Judge Thérèse Wiley Dancks signed the same
Confidentiality Order that Senior Judge McAvoy had declined to enter on December 6, 2017.
[Compare Dkts. 29 and 30] (McMahon Dec. ¶ 8 and Ex. E) In pertinent part, the Confidentiality
Order entered on December 11, 2017, prohibits the parties from disclosing any information
“exchanged” or “provided to the Court in connection with the settlement negotiations,” as well
3
The parties to the Pasiak action participated in the Court’s Mandatory Mediation Program by appearing before a
third-party neutral on June 8, 2017. The “case did not settle” [Dkt. 18] and the docket shows “ADR
Completed” on that date. Upon information and belief, the proceedings conducted by Judge Dancks on
September 28, 2017, were therefore neither part of nor governed by the rules applicable to the Court’s
Mandatory Mediation Program.
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as prohibiting public disclosure of “any settlement related agreement, drafts thereof, or the terms
or any of the conditions of any settlement related agreement.” (Id.) The Confidentiality Order
also scripts the parties’ response to any inquiries, including from the Newspaper, about the
settlement: “In response to any inquiry about the settlement of Plaintiff’s claims against
Defendants, the Parties may state only that they reached a mutually satisfactory resolution of this
matter.” (Id.)
Upon learning that a settlement agreement had in fact been signed, the Newspaper
submitted a second FOIL request to OCC on January 4, 2018, again seeking public disclosure of
“[t]he settlement agreement between [OCC] and [Pasiak],” as well as “[a]ny documents or
correspondence related to the settlement” of the Pasiak litigation. (McMahon Dec. ¶ 15 and
Ex. J)
On January 9, 2018, OCC denied the Newspaper’s second FOIL request “based on the
fact that [OCC] is prohibited by Order of the United States District Court for the Northern
District of New York from disclosing any information exchanged by the parties to the Pasiak v.
[OCC, et al.] lawsuit or provided to the Court in connection with the settlement negotiations and
from disclosing any settlement related agreement, drafts thereof, or the terms or any of the
conditions of any settlement related agreement to any non-party.” 4 (McMahon Dec. ¶ 16 and
Ex. K)
4
The Newspaper submitted a third FOIL request, this time with the State University of New York directly, which
was also denied. (McMahon Dec. ¶¶ 17-18 and Exs. L, M).
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application to this Court on January 8, 2018, requesting that the Court lift the Confidentiality
Order, which OCC had cited as the sole ground for denying FOIL access to the settlement
agreement. [Dkt. 32] (McMahon Dec. ¶ 19 and Ex. N) In a Text Order entered on February 20,
2018 [Dkt. 36], Magistrate Judge Dancks ruled: “[i]nasmuch as Ms. McMahon, The Post-
Standard and Syracuse.com are all non-parties to the action, the Court denies their request to the
Court to ‘release and/or unseal the settlement agreement and terms of the settlement’ and for
‘a reversal of the confidentiality order which bars the parties from discussing or disclosing the
settlement agreement’ for lack of standing.” [Dkt. 36] (McMahon Dec. ¶ 20 and Ex. B)
ARGUMENT
Relevant case law clearly establishes that The Post-Standard has standing to contest the
Confidentiality Order, which has prevented it from reporting newsworthy information in the
controversial underlying litigation. 5 Daines v. Harrison, 838 F. Supp. 1406, 1407-08 (D. Col.
1993) (held, in litigation involving public officials as parties, newspaper had standing to
Records Act). As the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit reasoned in a leading press access
case, “[s]ince by its nature the right of public access is shared broadly by those not parties to the
5
To the extent the Confidentiality Stipulation and Order precludes the parties from discussing the settlement, it
constitutes an impermissible gag order. An order that would “prohibit the utterance or publication of particular
information or commentary imposes a ‘prior restraint’ on speech,” U.S. v. Salameh, 992 F.2d 445, 446 (2d Cir.
1993) which is the most serious and least tolerable infringement on First Amendment rights.” Nebraska Press
Ass’n v. Stuart, 427 U .S. 539, 559 (1976). The Post-Standard hereby reserves its right to challenge this portion
of the Confidentiality Stipulation and Order on First Amendment grounds.
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litigation, vindication of that right requires some meaningful opportunity for protest by persons
other than the initial litigants, some or all of whom may prefer closure.” In re Herald Co., 734
F.2d 93, 102 (2d Cir. 1984). Case law, policy considerations, and fundamental due process
rights to notice and an opportunity to be heard compel the conclusion that standing for this
purpose is appropriate and necessary. Simply put, “[i]mportant interests are best championed by
those most directly affected by their impairment.” Katzman v. Victoria’s Secret Catalogue, 923
F. Supp. 580, 583 (S.D.N.Y. 1996) (granting television network’s motion to intervene for
The denial of public access to the settlement agreement has had a substantial and
continuing effect upon the interests of The Post-Standard, other news media, and the public. In
similar contexts, courts have repeatedly held that members of the press and public have a right to
intervene in a judicial proceeding for the limited purpose of opposing closure orders, and “must
be given an opportunity to be heard.” Globe Newspaper Co. v. Superior Court, 457 U.S. 596,
609 n.25 (1982) (quotation marks and citation omitted, emphasis supplied). The controlling
principle is well established: “[w]e have routinely found, as have other courts, that third parties
or judicial proceedings.” Pansy v. Borough of Stroudsburg, 23 F.3d 772, 777 (3d Cir. 1994)
(footnote omitted); City of Hartford v. Chase, 942 F.2d 130, 134-37 (2d Cir. 1991) (allowing
intervening third parties to challenge confidentiality order over documents not part of court file);
see also Lugosch v. Pyramid Co. of Onondaga, 435 F.3d 110, 117-19 (2d Cir. 2006)
(recognizing the press’s right to oppose sealing of motion papers in civil litigation).
Federal courts routinely permit news organizations to intervene under Fed. R. Civ. P. 24
to challenge restrictions on the public’s right of access to civil courts and proceedings. Schiller
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v. City of N.Y., No. 04 Civ. 7921 (KMK)(JC), 2006 WL 2788256, at *2 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 27,
2006) (noting that a newspaper “may well have an absolute right” under Rule 24(a) to intervene
for access and granting permissive intervention under Rule 24(b)); In re NASDAQ Mkt.-Makers
Antitrust Litig., 164 F.R.D. 346, 351 (S.D.N.Y. 1996) (holding that newspaper met the criteria of
Rule 24(a) for intervention as of right in multi-district class action suit). In fact, “every circuit
court that has considered the question has come to the conclusion that nonparties may
permissively intervene for the purpose of challenging confidentiality orders.” EEOC v. Nat’l
Children’s Ctr., Inc., 146 F.3d 1042, 1045 (D.C. Cir. 1998); see also Lugosch, 435 F.3d at 117-
18, 126-27.
Some federal courts grant the press intervention as of right. See, e.g., In re NASDAQ
Mkt.-Makers Antitrust Litig., 164 F.R.D. at 351. Others, however, find that permissive
intervention is more appropriate. Pansy, 23 F.3d at 778 (“We agree with other courts that have
held that the procedural device of permissive intervention is appropriately used to enable a
litigant who was not an original party to an action to challenge protective orders entered in that
action.”) (collecting authorities). Here, even if this Court found that intervention was not as of
right, permissive intervention is still appropriate because The Post-Standard has a “direct interest
in collecting information about a matter of public interest” and none of the parties to this suit −
all of whom agreed to shroud the settlement agreement in secrecy − “adequately” represent the
press and public’s interest in the maximum extent of openness. Schiller, 2006 WL 2788256,
at *2-3. Intervention for this purpose is appropriate “even years after a case has been closed.”
United States v. Erie County, No. 09-CV-849S, 2013 WL 4679070, at *5 (W.D.N.Y. Aug. 30,
2013) (collecting cases), rev’d on other grounds, 763 F.3d 235 (2d Cir. 2014).
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As a surrogate for the public it serves, The Post-Standard is uniquely situated to present
to this Court arguments in favor of modifying the Confidentiality Order. It is clear, then, that
The Post-Standard should be permitted to intervene for the limited purpose of preventing the
public from continuing to be kept in the dark about the taxpayer-funded settlement in this matter.
Pansy, 23 F.3d at 778 (“By virtue of the fact that the Newspapers challenge the validity of the
Order of Confidentiality entered in the main action, they meet the requirement of Fed. R. Civ.
P. 24(b)(2) that their claim must have a ‘question of law or fact in common’ with the main
The Second Circuit has emphasized the need for careful and particularized scrutiny by
reviewing courts when the parties to litigation stipulate to the confidentiality of a settlement
agreement:
City of Hartford v. Chase, 942 F.2d at 136. The exercise of such probing scrutiny is especially
warranted here given the nature of the civil rights violations alleged in the Complaint against
OCC and its officers, which necessarily affect the public interest. Id. at 138 (“[B]ecause they
often involve information not in the control of the court, and may, as in this case, implicate
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public concerns, confidentiality orders, when not subject to proper supervision, have a great
potential for abuse. For this reason, judges should review such agreements carefully and
F.3d at 789 (footnote omitted). No such findings have been made on the record here. Rather, the
Magistrate Judge apparently “So Ordered” the Confidentiality Stipulation − the same document
that this Court had refused to enter five (5) days earlier (McMahon Dec. ¶ 7 and Ex. B) − without
taking account of the overriding public interest in the underlying litigation. Id. at 786 (“the
district court made no findings for the record when it initially granted the Order of
Confidentiality, and apparently did not balance the competing public and privacy interests before
entering the Order”). Thus, the Confidentiality Order “represents little more than an imprimatur
reflexively placed on determinations that have been made by the parties,” to the detriment of an
informed public. City of Hartford, 942 F.2d at 137 (Pratt, J., concurring). By failing to consider,
let alone explain, why The Post-Standard’s interest in obtaining FOIL access to the settlement
agreement was outweighed by the need for confidentiality, the December 11, 2017, Order was
“improvidently granted ab initio.” Palmieri v. State of New York, 779 F.2d 861, 865 (2d Cir.
1985).
The claimed need for blanketing the settlement agreement in confidentiality is belied by the
timing of events reflected in this action’s docket sheet. The parties reached an agreement in
principle to settle the case on September 28, 2017. (McMahon Dec. ¶ 4 and Ex. B) Judge
McAvoy dismissed the case on September 29, 2017. (Id. ¶ 5 and Ex. C) Four days later, The Post-
Standard made a FOIL request for the finalized settlement agreement. Two days after that, OCC
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contacted the Court to request a telephone conference. (Id. ¶¶ 12-13 and Exs. G-H) The following
day, OCC denied The Post-Standard’s FOIL request. (Id. ¶ 14 and Ex. I) Finally, two months
after the settlement had already been agreed to and the case dismissed, the parties submitted their
such as OCC are subject to disclosure under New York State’s FOIL:
Vill. of Brockport v. Calandra, 191 Misc.2d 718, 725 (Supr. Ct., Monroe Cnty. 2002), aff’d, 305
A.D.2d 1030 (4th Dep’t 2003). See also Washington Post Co. v. New York State Ins. Dep’t, 61
N.Y.2d 557, 567 (1984) (stating that promises of confidentiality by a state agency do not affect
the status of documents as records subject to required disclosure under FOIL, nor do such
promises affect the applicability of any exemption under FOIL’s provisions); Matter of LaRocca
v. Bd. of Educ. of Jericho Union Free Sch. Dist., 220 A.D.2d 424, 427 (2d Dep’t 1995) (held,
settlement agreement denying public access to its terms “is unenforceable as against the public
interest” since “as a matter of public policy, the Board of Education cannot bargain away the
public’s right to access to public records”); S-P Drug Co. v. Smith, 96 Misc.2d 305, 311 (N.Y.
Co. Sup. Ct. 1978) (held, state agency’s disclosure obligations under FOIL cannot be preempted
by the terms of a contract with a private party, an arrangement which would negate the public
Given this settled precedent, it stands to reason that OCC was aware that any final
settlement document memorializing the parties’ agreement would inevitably become a matter of
public record because of The Post-Standard’s FOIL request, in particular, and the abiding press
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and public interest in the case, in general. (McMahon Dec. ¶¶ 11-12 and Exs. F-G) On this
record, any claim that “a judicial assurance of confidentiality was a prerequisite to the parties’
decision to settle their dispute” (City of Hartford, 942 F.2d at 136) is at best implausible and at
worst manufactured post hoc to prevent disclosure of the settlement agreement and circumvent
OCC’s obligations under FOIL, thereby frustrating FOIL’s objective of maximizing access to
government records to promote “public accountability.” N.Y. Publ. Off. Law § 84. FOIL’s
purpose would be defeated if, through the simple expedient of stipulating as private that which is
required to be public, OCC remains the arbiter of whether the amount of taxpayer funds it
The above chronology strongly indicates that the parties’ ostensible reliance on the
Confidentiality Order − which, again, did not come into existence until two months after the
parties had reached a settlement in the case − as “integral” to resolving their dispute does not
insulate it from modification. Beckman Indus., Inc. v. Int’l Ins. Co., 966 F.2d 470, 475 (9th Cir.)
(“The extent to which a party can rely on a protective order should depend on the extent to which
the order induced the party . . . to settle the case.”), cert. denied, 113 S.Ct. (1992). As a general
proposition, “[r]eliance will be less with a blanket order, because it is by nature overinclusive.”
Id. at 476. Accordingly, the “reliance interest of the parties in the confidentiality of the
Settlement Agreement must be considered weak in this case.” Pansy, 23 F.3d at 792.
instructive. Plaintiff brought a § 1983 action alleging that the Borough had violated his civil
rights based on his suspension as its Chief of Police. Id. at 776. The parties eventually entered
into a Settlement Agreement that was reviewed by, but never filed with, the district court, which
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issued an order rendering the settlement terms confidential. Id. A local newspaper submitted a
request to the Borough for disclosure of the Settlement Agreement under the state’s open records
law, and then moved to intervene in the settled civil rights action for the purpose of vacating the
court’s confidentiality order. “Their reason for doing so is that if the Newspapers are successful
in vacating the Order of Confidentiality, they will then be able to seek access to the Settlement
Agreement under the Pennsylvania Right to Know Act, without interference by the federal court
Pansy premised its analysis on the recognition that a confidentiality order granted at any
cause. Id. at 786. “Good cause is established on a showing that disclosure will work a clearly
defined and serious injury to the party seeking closure. The injury must be shown with
specificity.” Id. (citation and internal quotations omitted). “Broad allegations of harm,
showing.” Id. (citation and internal quotations omitted). Here, the Confidentiality Order merely
recites that “good cause exists” because keeping the parties’ final agreement secret was “integral
to the resolution and settlement” of the action − a self-serving pronouncement belied by the two-
month gap between their agreement to settle and the eventual execution of the Confidentiality
Order. This conclusory recitation was summarily rejected in Pansy as insufficient to justify the
invocation of confidentiality: “[d]istrict courts should not rely on the general interest in
encouraging settlement and should require a particularized showing of the need for
For several reasons, there is no compelling need for maintaining confidentiality over the
settlement agreement challenged by The Post-Standard. The public interest factors stressed in
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Pansy weigh completely against secrecy. First, the settlement in question involves the resolution
of highly newsworthy race-based quota claims arising from OCC’s operation of its men’s
basketball team, as well as the expenditure of public funds to settle those claims. The
“settlement agreement [thus] involves issues or parties of a public nature, and involves matters of
public concern . . . .” Id. Accordingly, where the parties benefiting from the confidentiality
bestowed by the stipulated order include a public entity and its high-level officers, this “weigh[s]
Second, and as stated above, the defendants could not reasonably have relied on
confidentiality given the established FOIL precedent mandating the disclosure of settlement
agreements where a government agency is a party and the expenditure of public funds is
involved. The decision in Pansy recognized the “troublesome conflict between the governmental
entity’s interest as a litigant and its public disclosure obligations” in mandating that transparency
under state freedom of information laws must be factored into the determination to modify a
Id. at 791-92.
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maintaining the Confidentiality Order, “whose scope would prevent disclosure” of information to
which New York State citizens are routinely granted access under FOIL. Id. at 791. The
purpose of governmental transparency animating FOIL “tilts the scales heavily against” the
Confidentiality Order, the effect of which is to “frustrate, if not render useless,” New York
State’s open records law. Id. The message in Pansy could hardly be clearer: “This case
involves a government body, a public official, and a settlement agreement which is likely
available under the Pennsylvania Right to Know Act. Given these facts, it would be unusual if
. . . the district court were to find that circumstances exist which justify the Order of
Third, the Complaint’s allegations that OCC had imposed a racial quota system over the
recruitment and selection of players for its men’s basketball team ignited an ongoing public
controversy that was extensively covered by The Post-Standard. (McMahon Dec. ¶ 11 and
Ex. F) The circumstances of the underlying lawsuit thus support the suspicion that what OCC is
really concerned about is not protection of the information it exchanged in candid settlement
negotiations, but to sweep under the rug information relevant to Plaintiff’s claims that OCC
“mandated [he] recruit students for the 2015-2016 Men’s Basketball team based solely upon
their race” and that Defendant Murphy told him the team “had to be comprised of thirty percent
(30%) minorities” for the coming season. (Compl. ¶¶ 50-51) Needless to say, OCC’s fear that
disclosure of this information might damage its institutional integrity and reputation in the court
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United States v. Glens Falls Newspapers, Inc., 160 F.3d 853 (2d Cir. 1998), relied on in
OCC’s January 29, 2018, letter to the Court [Dkt. No. 34], is not to the contrary. In that case, the
court upheld a protective order rendering confidential “draft settlement agreements” and related
documentation exchanged between counsel for the parties in the course of settlement
negotiations. Id. at 854 (emphasis supplied). The opinion expressly distinguished the “draft
settlement documents” which had not been “ ‘presented to the court to invoke its powers or affect
its decisions’ ” from those “merged into a tentative final agreement for court action, thereby
becoming public.” Id. at 857 (quoting United States v. Amodeo, 71 F.3d 1044, 1050
(2d Cir.1995)). Importantly, the court noted that, distinct from finalized settlement agreements
entered into by government agencies, New York’s FOIL provisions “do not extend to settlement
discussions or draft documents prepared in aid of settlement” in narrowly concluding that “the
The narrow holding in Glens Falls, restricted to “settlement documents in draft form” (id.
at 858), is irrelevant to The Post-Standard’s motion to modify the Confidentiality Order here to
the extent it shrouds in secrecy the finalized settlement agreement signed off on by OCC. In
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contrast to Glens Falls, the instant motion is not seeking to divulge any information provided to
the Court in connection with the settlement negotiations conducted on September 28, 2017; any
“discussions and documents exchanged before an agreement ha[d] been reached” by the parties
on that date (id. at 854); or drafts of any settlement related agreements. Id. at 856-58. In
language equally applicable here, the Second Circuit has reaffirmed the Glens Falls court’s
The same can certainly be said here, where lifting the secrecy enveloping the parties’ final
settlement agreement cannot expose their private bargaining positions, chill their settlement
negotiations, or frustrate the public policy of “encourag[ing] the settlement of cases through a
negotiated compromise.” Glens Falls, 160 F.3d at 856 (internal quotations and citation omitted).
Further, public access to the settlement agreement will not impede the “fair and efficient
resolution” of the underlying litigation, divulge legally privileged information, or contribute to “the
uncertainty, expense and delay inherent in a trial.” Id. at 856, 857 (footnote omitted). Indeed, the
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Case 6:16-cv-01376-TJM-TWD Document 37-3 Filed 03/06/18 Page 23 of 23
than concealing the amount of public money paid by OCC to avoid facing trial on the serious
allegations that, by imposing a thirty percent (30%) racial quota on the school’s men’s basketball
team, it violated not only federal civil rights laws but its own policies prohibiting discrimination.
However, the expenditure of taxpayer dollars to settle the case independently supports openness:
In the instant case, the public has an interest in seeing that public
funds are utilized properly. This is an important concern, and
secrecy surrounding disbursement of such funds is contrary to
sound public policy.
CONCLUSION
For all of the foregoing reasons, The Post-Standard respectfully requests an Order of this
Court: (1) reversing Magistrate Judge Dancks’s February 20, 2018, Order denying its motion to
intervene for lack of standing; (2) granting intervenor status for the limited purpose of modifying
the Confidentiality Order; and (3) modifying the Confidentiality Order to the extent it prohibits
disclosure of the final agreement memorializing the settlement entered into by the parties on
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