ANGELA CLEMENTE v. Plaintiff FEDERAL BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION, Defendant. Civ. No. 13-cv-108 (TFH). United States District Court, District of Columbia. January 27. 2014. Memorandum Opinion THOMAS F. HOGAN. District Judge. Plaintiff Angela Clemente filed the present suit against the Federal Bureau of Investigation seeking injunctive relief under the Freedom of Information Act (-FOIA"), 5 U.S.C. § 552, Clemente alleges that the FBI failed to comply with the statutory deadlines to respond to two FOIA requests Clemente had submitted in 2011. Both requests relate to the relationship between the FBI and several of its informants in the world of organized crime. This Memorandum concerns Clemente's Motion for and Order Requiring Prompt Review, ECF No. [11] ("PI. Moe); the FBI's Opposition and Motion for an Open America Stay, ECF No. [13] ('FBI Mot."); and Clemente's Reply supporting her motion and in opposing the FBI's motion for an Open America stay. ECF No. [14] ("Pl. Rep."). On October 22, 2013, this Court heard oral argument on the parties' motions. After careful consideration of the entire record, the Court orally granted Clemente's motion and denied the FBI's motion for an Open America stay. The Court then ordered the FBI to process 5,000 pages a month responsive to Clemente's FOIA requests beginning November 15, 2013. This Memorandum sets forth the reasoning behind that decision. 1. Background Angela Clemente is a forensic analyst who has conducted extensive research on alleged corruption resulting from the collaboration between the FBI and its so-called lop echelon* informants. For the past ten years, Clemente's research has focused Gregory Scarpa, a high ranking member of the mafia who served as an FBI informant beginning in 1961. ECF No. [1],113. Clemente states that her research has revealed that Scarpa's handler, Supervisory Special Agent Lindley Devecchio, and others at the FBI were complicit in or actively aided the cover-up of murders a