6 CFR §13.21
Verified against eCFR.gov as of June 20, 2026View official text on eCFR.gov ↗
- (a)In general.
- (b)Documents defined.
- (c)Motions for discovery.
- (1)A party seeking discovery may file a motion. Such a motion will be accompanied by a copy of the request for production of Documents, request for admissions, or interrogatories or, in the case of depositions, a summary of the scope of the proposed deposition.
- (2)Within ten days of service, a party may file an opposition to the motion or a motion for protective order as provided in § 13.24.
- (3)The Presiding Officer may grant a motion for discovery only if he or she finds that the discovery sought:
- (4)The burden of showing that discovery should be allowed is on the party seeking discovery.
- (5)The Presiding Officer may grant discovery subject to a protective order under § 13.24.
- (d)Depositions.
- (1)If a motion for deposition is granted, the Presiding Officer will issue a subpoena for the deponent, which may require the deponent to produce Documents. The subpoena will specify the time and place at which the deposition will be held. Deposition requests for senior level DHS officials (including career and non-career senior executive level employees) shall not be approved absent showing of compelling need that cannot be met by any other means.
- (2)The party seeking to depose will serve the subpoena in the manner prescribed in § 13.8.
- (3)The deponent may file a motion to quash the subpoena or a motion for a protective order within ten days of service. If the Presiding Officer has not acted on such a motion by the return date, such date will be suspended pending the Presiding Officer's final action on the motion.
- (4)The party seeking to depose will provide for the taking of a verbatim transcript of the deposition, which it will Make available to all other parties for inspection and copying.
- (e)Each party will bear its own costs of discovery.