United States v. Rakes ( 1998 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 97-1693

    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

    Appellant,

    v.

    STEPHEN M. RAKES,

    Defendant, Appellee.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Reginald C. Lindsay, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Selya, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Aldrich, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Boudin, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________

    Richard L. Hoffman, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom ___________________
    Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, and James D. Herbert, ________________ __________________
    Assistant United States Attorney, were on brief for the United States.
    Michael F. Connolly with whom Francis X. Bellotti, Valerie B. ____________________ ____________________ __________
    Robin and Mintz, Levin, Cohn, Ferris, Glovsky and Popeo, P.C. were on _____ ____________________________________________________
    brief for appellee.


    ____________________

    February 11, 1998
    ____________________



















    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. In May 1996, Stephen Rakes was _____________

    indicted by a federal grand jury and charged with perjury and

    obstruction of justice. Prior to trial, Stephen Rakes moved

    to suppress conversations between him and his former wife,

    Julie Rakes, and between him and his one-time attorney, John

    P. Sullivan. The district court granted the motion, except

    for one conversation, and the government now appeals.

    The facts are readily gleaned from testimony taken by

    Judge Lindsay in an in camera hearing on the motion to __________

    suppress.1 Stephen and Julie Rakes were married in 1978 and

    engaged in various business ventures together. In 1983, with

    the help of their attorney, John Sullivan, the Rakes couple

    established a corporation named Stippo's, Inc., as their

    jointly owned company to operate a liquor store business at a

    site on Old Colony Avenue in South Boston. The store opened

    shortly before Christmas 1983.

    The government believes that not long thereafter, the

    Rakeses were threatened by unnamed people in South Boston who

    were angry that the Rakeses were underpricing competitors.

    Then, in early January 1994, the government believes that

    James "Whitey" Bulger visited Stephen Rakes at home while

    Julie was at the liquor store and threatened to kill Stephen

    ____________________

    1The hearing was conducted in camera to avoid public _________
    disclosure of the assertedly privileged materials, and the
    briefs in this court have been filed under seal. This
    opinion was filed under seal and the parties, having now
    reviewed it, have no objection to its publication.

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    unless Bulger or his associates were made partners in the

    liquor store. By May 1984, again with the assistance of

    Sullivan, the Rakeses had transferred Stippo's, Inc., to

    another individual, whom the government believes was

    associated with Bulger, for a fraction of what the government

    says was its real value.

    In May 1991, the government summoned Stephen Rakes

    before a federal grand jury in Massachusetts investigating

    extortion, racketeering and money laundering. The government

    questioned Rakes about the transfer of Stippo's, Inc., to the

    alleged Bulger associate. Rakes testified that he had sold

    the store to make a profit and because it was too much work,

    and said that no one had threatened him to make him sell the

    store.

    In September 1995, Stephen Rakes gave similar testimony

    before a second federal grand jury. Thereafter, the

    government called Julie Rakes and Sullivan before the same

    grand jury. Although Sullivan initially refused to discuss

    his conversations with Stephen and Julie Rakes, the

    government secured an order from district judge compelling

    Sullivan's testimony. Stephen Rakes was not advised that the

    proceedings to compel Sullivan's testimony were under way.

    In May 1996, the grand jury indicted Stephen Rakes,

    charging him with five counts of perjury based on his grand

    jury testimony, 18 U.S.C. 1623, and two counts of



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    obstruction of justice, 18 U.S.C. 1503; the obstruction

    counts charged that Rakes' grand jury testimony had been

    false and intended to obstruct the grand jury. Three counts

    of the indictment were later dismissed as multiplicitious but

    four others remain pending.

    Asserting the privilege for confidential marital

    communications, Stephen Rakes moved to suppress evidence of

    conversations in December 1983 and January 1984 between him

    and Julie Rakes concerning alleged threats and the sale of

    Stippo's. He also asked the court to suppress, on grounds of

    attorney-client privilege, conversations between Stephen

    Rakes or both Rakeses and Sullivan concerning the sale of

    Stippo's, Inc. and the purpose of the sale. The district

    court held four days of hearings on the motion.

    In April 1997, the district court granted Stephen Rakes'

    motion with one exception: it denied the motion as to one

    conversation between Stephen and Julie Rakes, apparently

    because it took place in the presence of a third party. The

    district court identified the materials to be suppressed but,

    presumably because of the risk of disclosure of privileged

    information, did not write a supporting opinion or make

    separate findings of fact. The government then brought this

    interlocutory appeal. See 18 U.S.C. 3731. ___

    We will assume arguendo the relevance of the suppressed ________

    conversations to the government's prosecution. At the same



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    time, most of the formal requisites for the attorney-client

    and marital communications privileges are clearly met; the

    government's main claim is that the privileges were waived or

    forfeited. In a federal criminal case, privileges take their

    content from the common law as it may be altered from time to

    time in the light of reason and experience. Fed. R. Evid.

    501. No brief version of either the marital

    communications or attorney-client privilege can be both

    complete and accurate. But, broadly stated and subject to

    exceptions, the former privilege permits an individual to

    refuse to testify, and to prevent a spouse or former spouse

    from testifying, as to any confidential communication made by

    the individual to the spouse during their marriage.2 The

    latter privilege, again with exceptions, protects at the

    client's behest confidential communications between lawyer

    and client made to facilitate legal services for the client.3

    The communications suppressed by the district court

    between Stephen and Julie Rakes were made in the absence of

    third parties and in the course of their marriage; that the

    ____________________

    2See, e.g., Unif. R. Evid. 504(a); J. Strong, et al., ___ ____
    McCormick on Evidence 78-86 (4th ed. 1992); Blau v. United _____________________ ____ ______
    States, 340 U.S. 332 (1951). The separate marital privilege- ______
    -to refuse to testify against a spouse in a criminal case--is
    not pertinent here. Trammel v. United States, 445 U.S. 40, _______ _____________
    51 (1980).

    3Unif. R. Evid. 502(b); McCormick 87-97; Upjohn Co. _________ __________
    v. United States, 449 U.S. 383, 389-90 (1981); United States _____________ _____________
    v. United Shoe Machinery Corp., 89 F. Supp. 357, 358 (D. ____________________________
    Mass. 1950) (Wyzanski, J.).

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    Rakeses later divorced is irrelevant, and the government

    properly makes nothing of the possibility that one of the

    conversations occurred in the presence of their infant

    children. Similarly, Stephen Rakes' communications with

    Sullivan were made during the course of Sullivan's

    representation of Rakes and were related to legal services,

    and no one was present except one or both of the Rakeses and

    attorney Sullivan.

    Both the content and context of the communications

    support the implicit finding by the district judge that Rakes

    intended his conversations, with both his wife and his

    attorney, to be confidential. Further, if Stephen Rakes had

    been threatened, as the government alleges, he had ample

    reason over and above any ordinary interest in privacy to

    want them to be kept confidential. We reserve for discussion

    below the government's claim that later disclosures by _____

    Stephen Rakes undermine the claim of confidentiality.

    The government suggests that some general rule deprives

    spousal conversations of the privilege if they relate to

    financial matters; needless to say, it does not make this

    claim in respect to the attorney-client privilege. The

    marital communications privilege contains no such limitation:

    the cases say, at most, that a discussion of financial

    matters between husband and wife may not be intended to be

    confidential. E.g., In re Witness Before Grand Jury, 791 ____ __________________________________



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    F.2d 234, 239 (2d Cir. 1986). In this case, however, the

    subjectwas manifestlysensitive,albeit notforthe usualreasons.

    Nor do we agree with the government's suggestion that

    communications were not privileged insofar as Stephen Rakes

    may have been relating to his wife events that occurred prior

    to the communication. It is true that "communications"

    privileges typically prevent inquiry into communications and

    not into the underlying facts, Upjohn Co. v. United States, __________ ______________

    449 U.S. 383, 395-96 (1981), although the subject is more

    complicated than this generalization suggests.4 But the

    district court's suppression order was directed to

    communications, not to facts, and that is enough for present

    purposes.

    This brings us to the main thrust of the government's

    argument, namely, that "[t]he suppressed communications are

    not privileged because they occurred during an ongoing

    extortion scheme." A crime of extortion, says the

    government, extends from the initial threat through the

    actual obtaining of the property. See 18 U.S.C. ___

    1951(b)(2); United States v. Bucci, 839 F.2d 825, 829-30 (1st _____________ _____

    Cir. 1988). Here, the government says that the crime


    ____________________

    4Where an attorney knows facts only because they were
    confidentially communicated by the client, the government
    cannot circumvent the privilege by asking the attorney about
    "the facts." See Upjohn, 449 U.S. at 395. The same rule ___ ______
    applies to the marital communications privilege. Blau, 340 ____
    U.S. at 333.

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    extended from the first alleged threat in December 1983

    through the completion of the property transfer in May 1984,

    a period embracing all but one of the communications that the

    government seeks to use.

    No general rule withdraws the privilege from

    communications that occur in the same time frame as criminal

    act conduct. See In re Grand Jury Subpoenas Duces Tecum, 798 ___ ______________________________________

    F.2d 32, 34 (2d Cir. 1986). But both the privileges involved

    here are subject to some type of crime-fraud exception.

    Thus, the attorney-client privilege is forfeited inter alia __________

    where the client sought the services of the lawyer to enable

    or aid the client to commit what the client knew or

    reasonably should have known to be a crime or fraud. E.g., ____

    Unif. R. Evid. 502(d)(1); McCormick, supra, 95. _________ _____

    The counterpart limitation in the case of marital

    communications is not necessarily identical; it is expressed

    in somewhat different terms in different jurisdictions.5

    However, we will assume for present purposes--favorably to

    the government--that the privilege for marital communications



    ____________________

    5See, e.g., Unif. R. Evid. 504(c); McCormick, supra, ___ ____ _________ _____
    78. In federal courts, the marital communications privilege
    typically is forfeited only where both husband and wife are
    jointly engaged in criminal activity or where the victim is
    the other spouse or some other family member. See United ___ ______
    States v. Picciandra, 788 F.2d 39, 43-44 (1st Cir. 1986); ______ __________
    United States v. Mavroules, 813 F. Supp. 115, 119-20 (D. ______________ _________
    Mass. 1993).


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    would be lost to Stephen Rakes if he made the communications

    in question to Julie for the purpose of carrying out a crime.

    The government concedes that Stephen and Julie Rakes

    were the "victims" of an extortion scheme. But to invoke the

    crime-fraud exception, the government also says (the emphasis

    is ours) that "the communications suppressed by the District

    Court occurred while the Rakeses were participating in _____________________________________

    carrying out the [extortion] scheme and covering it up, and ____________________________________

    while Stephen was persuading Julie to do so." This, says the

    government, entails loss of the privilege.

    Yet, on the government's own version of events, the

    Rakeses were not participants in the extortion in any

    capacity other than that of victim. The Rakeses were

    participants only in the very specialized sense that the

    victim of a robbery "participates" by handing over his wallet

    under threat of violence, or the victim of a rape

    "participates" by offering no further resistance when

    resistance appears futile or dangerous. This is not the kind

    of participation in an offense that, in our view, vitiates

    the privilege.

    It is no accident that the government's case law is

    remote from the present facts and consists of cases where one

    spouse enlisted a second spouse in a criminal venture, e.g., ____

    United States v. Parker, 834 F.2d 408, 412-13 (4th Cir. ______________ ______

    1987), or a wife knowingly assisted a husband in criminal



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    conduct, e.g., United States v. Picciandra, 788 F.2d 39, 43- ____ _____________ __________

    44 (1st Cir. 1986). Here, even the government shrinks from

    flatly asserting that the Rakeses were criminally liable for __________

    extortion.

    We have considered the government's further suggestion

    that Stephen Rakes engaged in misconduct by inducing his wife

    not to report the threat against him. It is enough to say

    that the fragments of evidence cited do not even approach

    misprision of felony or accessory after the fact. The

    government's theory would make a criminal of anyone who, as

    the victim of a crime or faced with a criminal threat,

    resisted a spousal suggestion that the police be called.

    The government's underlying notion may be that the

    privilege is lost for any communication that plays a

    functional role in a crime--regardless of whether the parties

    to the communication are entirely innocent and otherwise

    protected by the privilege. On this view, the parents of a

    kidnapped child could be compelled to testify after the event

    about their intimate conversations with each other concerning

    the kidnapping and possible payment of a demanded ransom. It

    is not an attractive picture, and it is hard to believe that

    the suggestion is seriously intended.

    In all events, it is not the law. Under the crime-fraud

    exception, we think that it takes wrongful complicity by the

    privilege holder, not innocent or involuntary action, to



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    forfeit the privilege. This is so even though, as with many

    applications of privilege, law enforcement may be hampered in

    the interest of other values. The victims of kidnapping or

    extortion have problems enough; loss of otherwise applicable

    privileges is not part of the package.

    The government's remaining argument is that Stephen

    Rakes himself disclosed the alleged threats to others, most

    importantly, to one Brian Burke. According to the

    government, Rakes had promised to pay Burke for construction

    and related work on the liquor store and owed him a

    substantial sum. When in early 1984 Burke called about the

    debt, the government says that Rakes told Burke in dramatic

    terms that he (Rakes) had been forced out of the business.

    This, says the government, shows that the information was

    never confidential, and, in any event, the disclosure waived

    the privilege.

    The disclosure to Burke is weak, and to us wholly

    unpersuasive, evidence that the communications suppressed by

    the district court were never intended to be confidential.

    For reasons already indicated, there is every reason to think

    Stephen Rakes' conversations with Julie Rakes and with

    Sullivan were intended to be confidential. The limited

    disclosure to Burke, however dramatic, was obviously made to

    ward off a debt collection effort and not because Stephen





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    Rakes had any interest in broadcasting information that might

    endanger his life.

    The waiver issue is more complicated. Ordinarily,

    deliberate disclosure of a privileged communication, where no

    privilege protects this further disclosure, waives a

    communications privilege. See United States v. MIT, 129 F.3d ___ _____________ ___

    681, 684-85 (1st Cir. 1997). The restriction is directed

    against selective disclosures by reserving protection for

    only those communications that the privilege holder himself

    is prepared to keep confidential. SEC v. Lavin, 111 F.3d ___ _____

    921, 929, 933 (D.C. Cir. 1997). The restriction is one of

    public policy, and applies regardless of the privilege

    holder's subjective intent. MIT, 129 F.3d at 684. ___

    As already noted, the privileged communication and the

    facts recounted within it are two different things. Upjohn, ______

    449 U.S. at 395. Thus, a client does not normally lose the

    privilege as to communications with his attorney merely

    because he testifies at trial to the same events discussed

    with his lawyer. United States v. El Paso Co., 682 F.2d 530, _____________ ___________

    538-39, n.10 (5th Cir. 1982). Here, there is no suggestion

    that Stephen Rakes ever told Burke or anyone else about his

    communications with Julie or with attorney Sullivan. ______________

    Nevertheless, we agree that (on a theory of waiver) a

    disclosure of information might be so complete as to defeat a

    claim of privilege. We so held in United States v. Billmyer, _____________ ________



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    57 F.3d 31 (1st Cir. 1995), but in peculiar circumstances:

    the information had been collected by the attorney for the

    client and then voluntarily disclosed in full by the client

    to the government; the issue was whether this same

    information, already possessed by the government, should also

    be made available to the third parties whom the government

    was prosecuting.

    The present case is not remotely comparable. The

    communications by Stephen Rakes to his wife and his attorney

    apparently contained much that was not disclosed to Burke,

    whom the government can always call as a witness. Nor, in

    contrast to Billmyer, is Rakes making a disclosure to the ________

    government while trying to withhold the information from

    defendants whom the government is trying to prosecute.

    Billmyer is the exception, and we have no trouble letting the ________

    camel's nose into the tent without letting in the camel.

    At oral argument the government accused Rakes of trying

    to invoke a "victim's privilege." There is, of course, no

    such privilege. A defense of "duress" exists but its

    requirements are stringent. See 1 W. Lafave and A. Scott, ___

    Substantive Criminal Law, 5.3 (1986). In any event, the _________________________

    duress defense has not been invoked in this appeal and forms

    no part of our decision. We simply agree with the district

    court that the suppressed communications were originally





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    privileged, and that there was no later loss of the privilege

    as claimed by the government.

    The government's arguments are, as is usual in this

    district, presented with skill, and its zeal to pursue an

    alleged extortionist is understandable. But skill and zeal

    are to be harnessed by common sense. The notion that the

    Rakeses could properly be treated as participating in their

    own extortion is Orwellian. An appeal for which such a

    proposition had to be the linchpin ought never to have been

    brought.

    Affirmed. _________































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