This exemption is cited to withhold any personal information, “the
                        disclosure of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion
                        of personal privacy.” It applies in any situation in which the privacy interest in the requested information
                        outweighs the public interest (if any) served by disclosing the information.
                     
                     GN 03316.105, GN 03316.110, GN 03316.115, GN 03316.120, GN
                           03316.125 lists disclosures which have been determined not to be unwarranted invasions of personal privacy.
                     
                     A U.S. Supreme Court decision in 1989 (U.S. Department
                           of Justice vs. Reporters Committee on Freedom of the Press) ruled that this exemption applies to personally identifiable information about living
                        individuals unless:
                     
                     
                        - 
                           
                              • 
                                 Disclosure would inform the public about a Federal agency's performance of its statutory
                                    duties, and
                                  
 
 
- 
                           
                              • 
                                 This public interest outweighs the privacy interests of the individuals to whom the
                                    information pertains.
                                  
 
 
                        EXAMPLE: A requester wants to know whether his neighbor receives Social Security benefits.
                           Disclosure would not serve the public interest and would constitute an invasion of
                           the neighbor's privacy, so Exemption 6 applies.