In re: Grand Jury Sb v. ( 2006 )


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  •                                   RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206
    File Name: 06a0245p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    X
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    In re: GRAND JURY SUBPOENAS 04-124-03 AND
    -
    04-124-05
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    ______________________________________
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    Nos. 05-2274/2275
    ,
    >
    N
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit.
    No. 04-73533—Paul D. Borman, District Judge.
    Argued: April 18, 2006
    Decided and Filed: July 13, 2006
    Before: BOGGS, Chief Judge; SUTTON, Circuit Judge; and SCHWARZER, District Judge.*
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: David M. Zinn, WILLIAMS & CONNOLLY, Washington, D.C., Kevin D. Finger,
    GREENBERG & TRAURIG, Chicago, Illinois, for Appellants. Stephen L. Hiyama, ASSISTANT
    UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: David M. Zinn,
    Craig D. Singer, WILLIAMS & CONNOLLY, Washington, D.C., Kevin D. Finger, GREENBERG
    & TRAURIG, Chicago, Illinois, Deborah L. Fish, ALLARD & FISH, Detroit, Michigan, for
    Appellants. Stephen L. Hiyama, Ross MacKenzie, ASSISTANT UNITED STATES ATTORNEYS,
    Detroit, Michigan, for Appellee.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    BOGGS, Chief Judge. These two cases, filed under seal, present a legal question regarding
    the conduct of reviews of documents for privilege.1 Specifically, we must determine who has the
    right to conduct a review for privilege of documents subject to a grand jury subpoena directed to a
    third party who possesses the documents but has not yet produced them to the government: the
    targets of the investigation whose rights of privilege are potentially implicated, or the federal
    government, operating a “taint team” behind a “Chinese wall” or protective screen.
    *
    The Honorable William W Schwarzer, United States District Judge for the Northern District of California,
    sitting by designation.
    1
    As the two cases present essentially identical issues of law and fact, we will address them together.
    1
    Nos. 05-2274/2275        In re Grand Jury Subpoenas 04-124-03 and 04-124-05                   Page 2
    These cases arise from events leading up to the 2003 bankruptcy filing of Venture Holdings
    LLC (“Venture”), a company once controlled by appellant Larry Winget. After Venture’s new
    (post-filing) management conducted an internal investigation, the company filed suit against Winget
    for allegedly fraudulent conveyances of goods and services from Venture to other entities that
    Winget owned or controlled. Shortly thereafter, a federal grand jury issued two subpoenas duces
    tecum, filed under seal, to Venture. Winget filed a motion to intervene, and seven companies
    affiliated with Winget (the “Affiliated Companies”) later joined this motion. The documents in
    question have not been examined by any of the parties, and they remain in locations under Venture’s
    control. Winget and the Affiliated Companies demanded the right to conduct their own privilege
    review of the documents responsive to the subpoenas, as both the government and Venture are
    actually or possibly litigation opponents of Winget’s or the Affiliated Companies’. The government
    opposed this motion, and asserted that any privilege review be conducted by its own “taint team.”
    The district court granted Winget’s and the Affiliated Companies’ motions to intervene, but agreed
    with the government with respect to the “taint team” review procedure. The district court issued an
    alternative holding that Winget had also failed to meet the threshold requirement of showing any
    rights of privilege in the requested documents. For the reasons stated below, we reverse and remand.
    I
    The circumstances leading to the instant controversy are sufficiently convoluted to require
    some summary description despite the fact that the documents in the suit remain under seal. Larry
    Winget was once the sole owner of Venture, a global automotive supplier, and had served as its
    Chairman and Chief Executive Officer. Winget also owned or controlled numerous other
    companies, including the Affiliated Companies. The headquarters of Venture and of each of the
    Affiliated Companies were located in the same office in Fraser, Michigan.
    In 1999, Venture purchased a German company called Peguform. In October 2002, a
    German court declared Peguform insolvent under Germany’s bankruptcy regime. This threatened
    Venture’s solvency and caused a group of bank creditors to assert more control over the company.
    Consequently, Joseph Day was installed as a director in January 2003. Venture then filed for
    bankruptcy on March 28, 2003 under Chapter 11 in the Eastern District of Michigan. At the same
    time, Day replaced Winget as Venture’s Chief Executive Officer. Six months later, on September
    22, 2003, Winget and Venture entered into a Contribution Agreement (“Contribution Agreement”),
    whereby several entities owned by Winget and certain of his affiliates would transfer their assets and
    ownership to a new company that would be formed in connection with Venture’s reorganization.
    Also in September 2003, Venture’s new management hired an accounting firm to conduct
    a forensic audit of related-party transactions between Venture and some of the many companies
    associated with Winget. In March 2004, Venture’s auditors concluded that Venture had in the past
    paid millions of dollars to some Winget-owned or -controlled companies for products and services
    whose fair market value was allegedly substantially less than the price paid, which would have
    contradicted certain statements in Venture’s SEC filings during the relevant years. The auditors’
    conclusions remain untested, and we will not venture to assess their accuracy.
    On April 5, 2004, as part of the bankruptcy proceedings, Venture and its official committee
    of unsecured creditors filed a still-pending civil suit against Winget, some of his family members,
    and numerous associated entities, asserting claims of unjust enrichment, breaches of fiduciary duties,
    and fraudulent transfers arising from Venture’s payment of funds to Winget’s affiliated companies.
    Venture v. Winget, Adversary Proc. 04-4374, In re Venture Holdings Company LLC, No. 03-48939
    (Bankr. E.D. Mich.). On May 13, 2004, Venture and Winget signed a Separation Agreement
    (“Separation Agreement”), whereby Winget agreed to terminate his employment by Venture and
    resign as officer and director. In exchange, he was to receive $50,000 every month while Venture
    remained under Chapter 11 protection, and he was further entitled to “continue the exclusive,
    Nos. 05-2274/2275        In re Grand Jury Subpoenas 04-124-03 and 04-124-05                       Page 3
    uninterrupted use of the office which he currently occupies” at James J. Pompo Drive. This
    agreement forms part of the substantive basis for Winget’s claims to privilege in the instant case,
    but we are in no position now to assess its substance or legal effect because the instant controversy
    involves a matter that is logically antecedent to the substance of any privilege disputes.
    On January 21, 2005, the bankruptcy court rejected Venture’s proposed reorganization plan,
    and, therefore, the Contribution Agreement as well. On April 8, 2005, with an April 29 amendment,
    New Venture Holdings LLC (“New Venture”) was formed by Venture’s pre-petition lenders, who
    agreed to buy the assets and assume the liabilities of (old) Venture and nine other companies owned
    or controlled by Winget that had filed for Chapter 11 in May 2004. The bankruptcy court
    subsequently approved this transaction. On May 2, 2005, (old) Venture and the nine affiliated
    companies formally transferred their assets and liabilities to New Venture. In October 2005, New
    Venture changed its name to Cadence Innovation LLC.
    Meanwhile, the federal government began investigating the matter. In the fall of 2004, a
    number of grand jury subpoenas duces tecum were issued. Relevantly to the case at hand, New
    Venture received two such subpoenas, and the company soon agreed to cooperate with the federal
    investigation, waiving its corporate attorney-client and work-product privileges in October 2004.
    As the subpoenas in question were filed under seal, and as their precise substance is not particularly
    relevant to the instant controversy, we will respect grand jury secrecy and exercise our discretion
    by not discussing their contents. Instead, we simply note that the subpoenas were directed to New
    Venture, and they demanded production of some documents that, all sides concede, may be
    protected by either Winget’s or the Affiliated Companies’ attorney-client or work-product
    privileges.
    On March 1, 2005, Winget filed a motion in the Eastern District of Michigan to intervene
    and to modify the subpoenas in order to preserve privilege. In this motion, he claimed that some of
    the records that New Venture had been called upon to produce were protected by Winget’s personal
    attorney-client or work-product privileges even though the documents remained in offices under
    Venture’s control. Winget therefore asked the court to approve a procedure, described in greater
    detail below, whereby his attorneys would conduct a privilege review of the responsive documents.
    On April 29, 2005, the Affiliated Companies filed a motion to join Winget’s intervention, arguing
    that the subpoenas called for documents that could be protected by their corporate attorney-client
    and work-product privileges.
    The government opposed Winget’s motion, claiming that he was
    requesting this Court to allow him to insert himself into the middle of a grand jury
    investigation so that he can be the first to screen documents produced . . . in response
    to the two subpoenas. . . . [S]uch a procedure would subvert the orderly functioning
    of the grand jury process and would be, to the best of the government’s knowledge,
    unprecedented.
    (emphasis in original). Instead, the government proposed that a “taint team” composed of
    government attorneys who are not involved in the grand jury investigation be established to
    segregate privileged documents from the residue of non-privileged material. As we discuss more
    extensively below, the proposed taint team would return to Venture any documents that it
    determined to be privileged, sending copies to Winget where appropriate, and would submit the
    materials it determined to be potentially protected by privilege to Winget and the district court for
    final adjudication. However, the taint team would send documents it deemed not to be protected by
    appellants’ privilege directly to the grand jury, and so they would not provide appellants with any
    opportunity to review or challenge the team’s privilege determinations with respect to those
    documents.
    Nos. 05-2274/2275         In re Grand Jury Subpoenas 04-124-03 and 04-124-05                       Page 4
    The district court conducted a closed hearing on August 3, 2003. At this hearing, the court
    sternly questioned the parties regarding the legal merit of any privilege claims, and criticized Winget
    and the Affiliated Companies for failing to provide a log that detailed specific documents that they
    claimed to be privileged. It is not clear how they could have done so, for it is certain that neither
    Winget, nor the Affiliated Companies, nor even the government, has yet had any access to the
    subpoenaed documents. On September 7, the district court issued an order denying Winget’s
    requested relief, and approved instead the government’s proposed taint team. The court issued an
    alternative ruling wherein it held that the appellants had failed to meet their burden of proving that
    one or more of them held a privilege over the documents. Winget and the Affiliated Companies
    filed a timely notice of appeal.
    II
    The appellants essentially moved to “modify” the grand jury subpoenas, Fed. R. Crim. P.
    17(c)(2), see Fed. R. Civ. P. 45(d)(2), and the resulting discovery order is immediately appealable.
    See In re Subpoena Duces Tecum, 
    439 F.3d 740
    , 743 (D.C. Cir. 2006). The district court’s denial
    of this motion is reviewed for abuse of discretion. See United States v. Hughes, 
    895 F.2d 1135
    , 1145
    (6th Cir. 1990). A district court abuses its discretion, inter alia, “when it applies the incorrect legal
    standard [or] misapplies the correct legal standard.” Deja Vu of Cincinnati, LLC v. Union Twp. Bd.
    of Trustees, 
    411 F.3d 777
    , 782 (6th Cir. 2005) (en banc), cert. denied, 
    126 S. Ct. 1023
     (2006)
    (quoting Schenck v. City of Hudson, 
    114 F.3d 590
    , 593 (6th Cir. 1997)). “A district court by
    definition abuses its discretion when it makes an error of law.” Koon v. United States, 
    518 U.S. 81
    ,
    100 (1996). As the district court rested its opinion on legal grounds alone, we review that decision
    de novo. Moreover, to the extent that the court below reached a substantive judgment regarding the
    waiver of attorney-client privilege, we also review that decision de novo. In re Powerhouse
    Licensing, LLC, 
    441 F.3d 467
    , 472 (6th Cir. 2006).
    The only question before us is whether the district court erred in preferring the government’s
    proposed taint team to the appellants’ own attorneys to make initial privilege determinations with
    respect to documents in the third-party subpoena recipient’s possession. We have not been asked
    to determine whether any of these documents are actually privileged, and the time is clearly not ripe
    to adjudicate the merits of any potential privilege claims. Instead, our duty here is to determine the
    logically antecedent issue as to which party – the government or the appellants – has the right to
    conduct a privilege screen of documents responsive to a grand jury subpoena issued to a third party.
    The government in fact concedes that some of the documents responsive to the subpoena may be
    protected by appellants’ privilege, does not challenge the appellants’ general rights of privilege, and
    does not seem to contest that the appellants would have had the right to conduct their own privilege
    review had the subpoena been directed to them instead of New Venture. Instead, the government
    complains that allowing the appellants’ own attorneys to conduct a privilege review of the
    subpoenaed documents at New Venture would interfere with a government investigation and
    undermine grand jury secrecy. This controversy thus calls for us to weigh, to some degree, grand
    jury investigations and grand jury secrecy against attorney-client and work-product privilege.
    A
    In the first step of the appellants’ proposed procedure,2 their own counsel would provide the
    government and New Venture with a “list of the law firms, attorneys, and agents” who represented
    them. Then, a paralegal retained by appellants’ counsel would review the implicated documents in
    2
    Winget proposed this procedure in his motion to intervene docketed on March 1, 2005. The Affiliated
    Companies joined in that motion, and in the requested procedure, in their motion filed on April 28, 2005.
    Nos. 05-2274/2275             In re Grand Jury Subpoenas 04-124-03 and 04-124-05                                  Page 5
    offices controlled by New Venture,3 and segregate those documents that had been “authored by,
    received by, copied to, or that mention anyone identified on the list” from the remainder. Third, the
    appellants’ attorneys would review “copies of the segregated documents and prepare a privilege log
    for any documents that [appellants] claim as privileged.” The appellants would thus create a log
    documenting materials for which they claim the protection of privilege, and this log would
    presumably include sufficient information about the privilege claims that the government could
    intelligently evaluate appellants’ assertions by reviewing the log. Finally, “the parties would bring
    any privilege disputes before the Court.” This seems to reflect a fairly standard practice by which
    law firms conduct privilege reviews when responding to government subpoenas or other discovery
    requests. See Cheney v. United States Dist. Ct. for D.C., 
    542 U.S. 367
    , 399 n.5 (2004); Lexicon, Inc.
    v. Safeco Ins. Co. of Am., 
    436 F.3d 662
    , 665-73 (6th Cir. 2006); McAlpin v. Lexington 76 Auto Truck
    Stop, Inc., 
    229 F.3d 491
    , 499 (6th Cir. 2000). See also In re Subpoena Duces Tecum, 
    439 F.3d at 751
     (“[Civil] Rule 45(d)(2) is generally satisfied by the submission of a privilege log detailing each
    document withheld and the reason.”). Alternatively, the 4appellants request that the district court
    appoint a Special Master to conduct the privilege review.
    While the government obviously has an interest in assisting the grand jury’s investigation,
    the government also has a genuine, if conflicting, interest in preventing investigators from accessing
    privileged materials. Indeed, the government concedes that the leaking of privileged materials to
    investigators would raise the spectre of Kastigar-like evidentiary hearings, see Kastigar v. United
    States, 
    406 U.S. 441
     (1972), and argues that it would therefore act conservatively, and err on the side
    of caution, in assessing the existence of privilege and in screening privileged documents from
    investigators. In the government’s proposed procedure, a taint team consisting of at least one
    Assistant United States Attorney (from the same Eastern District of Michigan office as the
    prosecutors) and at least one Postal Inspector would review for privilege all documents produced
    by Venture. Materials that the taint team finds clearly to be privileged would then be returned to
    New Venture, with copies provided to the appellants. However, materials that the taint teams finds
    clearly not to be privileged would be provided directly to the investigators and the grand jury, and
    the appellants would have no opportunity to review those documents. Finally, materials whose
    status is unclear in the taint team’s estimation would be submitted by the taint team to the district
    court for judicial determination, with copies provided to the appellants.
    The district court decided in favor of the government’s proposed taint team procedure. The
    court also reached a substantive finding, concluding that “any rights created between the parties in
    this [Separation Agreement] between [Winget] and Venture, do not undercut the grand jury’s right
    to secure evidence from Venture.” The district court framed the issue before it as one primarily of
    substance, rather than of procedure:
    The critical issue is whether Intervenor has a valid attorney-client privilege or work
    product protection with regard to documents located in Venture’s buildings sought
    by the subpoenas at issue, and further, if such protections could apply, whether
    examination of documents at issue should be done initially by the Court, a master
    3
    It is not, to be sure, a per se waiver of privilege for one entity to leave privileged materials on the premises
    of another entity. See Schwimmer v. United States, 
    232 F.2d 855
     (8th Cir. 1956). Actual determination of the merits
    of any claim of privilege must await adjudication after the parties have agreed to a subset of documents over which they
    disagree as to privilege.
    4
    No party seems to have offered a concrete procedural mechanism by which the suggested Special Master
    would segregate privilege documents, nor whether the master would be expected to perform the entire task or just
    portions of it. Although the government opposed the request, it did concede before the trial court that “it would be Uncle
    Sam one way in on way [sic] or the other” who paid for the Special Master.
    Nos. 05-2274/2275              In re Grand Jury Subpoenas 04-124-03 and 04-124-05                                    Page 6
    appointed by the Court . . . , a paralegal in the employ of Intervenor’s counsel, or a
    government privilege/taint team.
    Thus, the district court had it exactly backward: the parties do not presently dispute that there might
    be material in New Venture’s possession over which the appellants might have a right of privilege.
    The government explicitly concedes that there may be documents over which appellants hold
    privilege in New Venture’s offices. Rather, they disagree as to how to determine whether any of
    these documents are in fact protected by appellants’ privilege. Therefore, the district court’s
    extensive discussion of the agreements and contracts that may or may not have rendered the
    documents privileged to the appellants is almost wholly irrelevant to the inquiry properly before us.
    Until the parties raise concrete substantive disputes over whether particular documents are
    privileged, which they cannot do until a review of the documents for privilege is undertaken in some
    fashion, the question of privilege is simply not ripe for adjudication.
    In addition to its alternative holding that we now reverse in its entirety, the district court
    specifically granted the government’s motion to conduct the privilege review under the aegis of a
    taint team, holding that any documents that the taint team finds to be privileged “shall be submitted
    to the Court for a final determination. At that point, if the Court determines that the documents
    might be deserving of attorney client and/or work product protection(s),       the Court will require
    Intervenor to prove that they were not expose[d] to third parties.”5 The district court thus held that
    the public policy underlying grand jury secrecy and the effective investigation of criminal activity
    outweighed the appellants’ privilege claims.
    B
    This controversy requires us to address two rules of our common law inheritance that were
    already ancient when the Founders drafted the Constitution. In our inquiry, we must first determine
    whether the grand jury’s investigative authority trumps appellants’ claims of privilege. Answering
    that question in the negative, we must then discern whether the government’s claim regarding the
    importance of grand jury secrecy countervails the possible protections of privilege that appellants
    may enjoy. We also answer that question in the negative. Finally, we will outline a procedure that,
    we think, appropriately addresses the situation before us.
    Grand juries have lain at the very heart of our criminal justice system since time
    immemorial,6 so much so that the founders chose to incorporate the grand jury into our Constitution
    explicitly. It goes almost without saying that grand juries enjoy a broad delegation of authority to
    conduct investigations. “As a necessary consequence of its investigatory function, the grand jury
    5
    The court below thus substantially altered the government’s proposal. Whereas the government had proposed
    a procedure whereby the taint team would first identify and segregate (a) definitely privileged, (b) definitely not
    privileged, and (c) questionably privileged documents, providing only the questionably privileged documents to the court
    for adjudication, the district court effectively ordered that all documents deemed by the taint team to be definitely or
    potentially privileged were to be subject to the court’s independent determination. The court would thus require the
    appellants to prove that documents were actually privileged on a case-by-case basis. As there is no case or controversy
    regarding the substantive adjudication of privilege disputes, we take no position with respect to that portion of the district
    court’s original order.
    6
    This is literally so, for grand juries, albeit in their relatively inchoate nascence, predate the accession of King
    Richard I in 1189 A.D., which the Statute of Westminster I in 1275 established as the day demarcating “time
    immemorial” from historical (legal) time. 3 Edw. I. c. 39. See R v. Oxfordshire County Council ex parte Sunningwell
    Parish Council, (2000) 1 A.C. 335, 349 (H.L.) (appeal taken from C.A. (Civ. Div.)). See generally, Lipari v. Kawasaki
    Kisen Kaisha, Ltd., 
    923 F.2d 862
    , 
    1991 WL 3060
     at **3 (9th Cir. Jan. 11, 1991); Grace v. Koch, No. C-90802, 
    1996 WL 577843
     at *3 n. 7 (Ohio Ct. App. Oct. 9, 1996); Macy v. Ok. City Sch. Dist. No. 39, 
    961 P.2d 804
    , 813-14 (Ok. 1998)
    (Opala, J., concurring); Morning Call, Inc. v. Bell Atlantic-Pa., Inc., 
    761 A.2d 139
    , 143 n. 7 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2000);
    Mercer v Denne [1905] 2 Ch. 538, 577.
    Nos. 05-2274/2275        In re Grand Jury Subpoenas 04-124-03 and 04-124-05                     Page 7
    paints with a broad brush.” United States v. R. Enters., Inc., 
    498 U.S. 292
    , 297 (1991). As then-
    Judge Kennedy wrote, “[t]he grand jury is, to a degree, an entity independent of the courts, and both
    the authority and obligation of the courts to control its processes are limited.” In re Grand Jury
    Investigation of Hugle, 
    754 F.2d 863
    , 864 (9th Cir. 1985).
    Nevertheless, grand juries are not empowered to override private rights in all cases.
    Pertinently, we have held that grand juries may not use their investigatory authority “to violate a
    valid privilege, whether established by the Constitution, statutes, or the common law.” In re Grand
    Jury Investigation (Detroit Police Dep’t Special Cash Fund), 
    922 F.2d 1266
    , 1269-70 (6th Cir.
    1991) (citations and internal quotation marks omitted) (finding that informant privilege did not
    operate to prohibit witness from testifying to grand jury). Yet, as the assertion of privilege “may
    jeopardize an effective and comprehensive investigation into alleged violations of law,” courts must
    ensure that the “application of the privilege [does] not exceed that which is necessary to effect the
    policy considerations underlying the privilege.” In re Grand Jury Investigation No. 83-2-35, 
    723 F.2d 447
    , 451 (6th Cir. 1983). Thus, we have held that the government must make a preliminary
    showing to justify violating work-product privilege pursuant to a grand jury investigation, In re
    Grand Jury Subpoena Dated Nov. 8, 1979, 
    622 F.2d 933
     (6th Cir. 1980), and that grand juries may
    not breach a valid psychotherapist-patient privilege. See In re Zuniga, 
    714 F.2d 632
    , 639-40 (6th
    Cir. 1983). See also In re Grand Jury Subpoena (Maltby), 
    800 F.2d 981
     (9th Cir. 1986) (remanding
    because district court failed to rule on claims of attorney-client privilege); Schwimmer v. United
    States, 
    232 F.2d 855
     (8th Cir. 1956) (authorizing Special Master to make privilege determinations
    in grand jury context so long as attorney had a right of review).
    The two privileges that all sides concede to be potentially at stake – attorney-client privilege
    and the work-product doctrine – are well-established and integral to the proper functioning of our
    legal system. The privilege protecting confidential communications between an attorney and his
    client dates back to the Tudor dynasty at least, although the reasoning behind the early modern
    version of this privilege was different from, and far narrower than, that espoused in modern times.
    See Dennis v. Codrington, (1580) 21 Eng. Rep. 53 (Ch.) (regarding a motion to examine a Mr.
    Oldsworth, “touching a matter in variance, wherein he hath been of Counsel, it is ordered he shall
    not be compelled by subpoena or otherwise to be examined upon any matter concerning the same,
    wherein he the said Mr. Oldsworth was of counsel . . . .”); Onbie’s Case, (1642) 82 Eng. Rep. 422
    (K.B.) (“a lawyer who was of counsel may be examined upon oath as to the matter of agreement,
    not to the validity of an assurance, or to matter of counsel.”). See generally, 8 Wigmore on
    Evidence § 2290 et seq. (McNaughton rev. ed. 1961).
    The Supreme Court has thus justifiably recognized the attorney-client privilege as “the oldest
    of the privileges for confidential communications known to the common law.” Upjohn Co. v. United
    States, 
    449 U.S. 383
    , 389 (1981). The purpose of attorney-client privilege is to ensure free and open
    communications between a client and his attorney. See Fisher v. United States, 
    425 U.S. 391
    , 403
    (1976) (“Confidential disclosures by a client to an attorney made in order to obtain legal assistance
    are privileged. The purpose of the privilege is to encourage clients to make full disclosure to their
    attorneys.” (citations omitted)); Hunt v. Blackburn, 
    128 U.S. 464
    , 470 (1888) (“The rule which
    places the seal of secrecy upon communications between client and attorney is founded upon the
    necessity, in the interest and administration of justice, of the aid of persons having knowledge of the
    law and skilled in its practice, which assistance can only be safely and readily availed of when free
    from the consequences or the apprehension of disclosure.”).
    On the other hand, work-product privilege applies solely to attorney work product compiled
    in anticipation of litigation. Hickman v. Taylor, 
    329 U.S. 49
    , 511 (1947). Work-product privilege,
    while properly construed more narrowly than attorney-client privilege, nevertheless operates for a
    similar purpose: that is, that people should be free to make requests of their attorneys without fear,
    and that their attorneys should be free to conduct research and prepare litigation strategies without
    Nos. 05-2274/2275        In re Grand Jury Subpoenas 04-124-03 and 04-124-05                     Page 8
    fear that these preparations will be subject to review by outside parties. We apply a five-step
    analysis to determine whether the doctrine applies, In re Powerhouse Licensing, LLC, 
    441 F.3d at 473
    , though, as noted, that issue is not presently ripe for adjudication.
    Neither attorney-client nor work-product privilege is absolute, but the government must
    show sufficient cause for overcoming the privilege. In re Grand Jury Subpoena Dated Nov. 8, 1979,
    
    622 F.2d at 935-36
    . The fullest extent of the privileges are not necessarily mandated by the United
    States Constitution. See United States v. Goldberger & Dubin, P.C., 
    935 F.2d 501
    , 504 (2d Cir.
    1991) (“The [attorney-client privilege] doctrine protects only those disclosures that are necessary
    to obtain informed legal advice and that would not be made without the privilege. The privilege
    cannot stand in the face of countervailing law or strong public policy and should be strictly confined
    within the narrowest possible limits underlying its purpose.” (citations omitted)). Both privileges
    may be overridden, for instance, by the so-called crime-fraud exception, encompassing advice given
    with respect to ongoing or future wrongdoing. However, the Supreme Court has authorized even
    the mere use of in camera inspections by district judges of privileged documents to ascertain the
    applicability of the crime-fraud exception only when the moving party has made a “showing of a
    factual basis adequate to support a good faith belief by a reasonable person that in camera review
    of the materials may reveal evidence to establish that the crime-fraud exception applies.” United
    States v. Zolin, 
    491 U.S. 554
    , 572 (1989). Thus, even inspections by the district judge, which do not
    destroy privilege, require a prior showing that is weakly analogous to probable cause. In the instant
    case, the government has not suggested that the crime-fraud exception, or any other exception to
    privilege, is applicable, and, in any case, a government taint team’s review of documents is far
    riskier to the non-moving party’s privilege than is a judge’s in camera review.
    The government prefers a taint team procedure, whereby its lawyers, behind a protective
    screen or “Chinese wall,” would sift the documents for privilege. The government argues that grand
    jury secrecy requires this procedure, that the appellants’ alternative would present an inexcusable
    intrusion into the grand jury investigative process, and that appellants’ alternative would likely be
    ineffective because appellants’ attorneys would have an incentive to drag their feet. The first two
    arguments require us to weigh the potential protection of privilege against the potential violation of
    grand jury secrecy, and we find that the arguments have less merit than the government suggests.
    The last two arguments are well-taken, however, and so they must be addressed by our remedy.
    First, the government overstates the role of grand jury secrecy in the present controversy.
    It has long been recognized that grand juries require a generous zone of secrecy in order to perform
    their investigative functions. Although grand jury secrecy did not always go unchallenged, it seems
    to have been well-established long before our independence from Great Britain. As the foreman of
    the grand jury convened in 1681 for the treason trial of the Earl of Shaftesbury is reported to have
    said to the Lord Chief Justice, in response to the justice’s granting of a motion requiring grand jury
    evidence to be heard publicly:
    My Lord Chief Justice, it is the opinion of the jury, that they ought to examine the
    witnesses in private, and it hath been the constant practice of our ancestors and
    predecessors to do it; and they insist upon it as their right to examine in private,
    because they are bound to keep the king's secrets, which they cannot do, if it be done
    in court. . . . [I]t is contrary to the sense of what the jury apprehend. First, they
    apprehend that the very words of the oath doth bind them, it says, “That they shall
    keep the counsel’s, and their own secrets:” Now, my lord, there can be no secret in
    public; the very intimation of that doth imply, that the examination should be secret;
    besides, my lord, I beg your lordship’s pardon if we mistake, we do not understand
    anything of law.
    Nos. 05-2274/2275         In re Grand Jury Subpoenas 04-124-03 and 04-124-05                     Page 9
    Earl of Shaftesbury’s Trial, (1681) 8 How. St. Tr. 759, 771-74. That ancient rule crossed the
    Atlantic and has been preserved in some fashion since; the federal courts’ modern version is
    established by Rule 6(e)(2)(B) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, which states that certain
    persons, including government attorneys and grand jurors, “must not disclose a matter occurring
    before a grand jury.” Grand jury secrecy is thus a strong command, and federal courts must
    recognize that, “for the system to function properly, grand jury proceedings must be conducted
    essentially in a vacuum, free from outside influence and sufficiently enveloped so that grand jury
    information is not disclosed to the general public.” In re Grand Jury Investigation (90-3-2), 
    748 F. Supp. 1188
    , 1194 (E.D. Mich. 1990). Moreover, in general, “[a]ny holding that would saddle a
    grand jury with minitrials and preliminary showings would assuredly impede its investigation and
    frustrate the public’s interest in the fair and expeditious administration of the criminal laws.” United
    States v. Dionisio, 
    410 U.S. 1
    , 17 (1973). Indeed,
    A grand jury has broad investigative powers to determine whether a crime has been
    committed and who has committed it. The jurors may act on tips, rumors, evidence
    offered by the prosecutor, or their own personal knowledge. No grand jury witness
    is entitled to set limits to the investigation that the grand jury may conduct. And a
    sufficient basis for an indictment may only emerge at the end of an investigation
    when all the evidence has been received.
    
    Id. at 15-16
     (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
    But “[t]his is not to say that a grand jury subpoena is some talisman that dissolves all
    constitutional protections.” 
    Id. at 11
    . Although the rules of evidence do not fully operate before the
    grand jury, “[t]he investigatory powers of the grand jury are nevertheless not unlimited.” United
    States v. R. Enters., 
    498 U.S. at 299
    . While it is certain that matters before a grand jury are protected
    by Criminal Rule 6(e)(2)(B), see Douglas Oil Co. of Cal. v. Petrol Stops Nw., 
    441 U.S. 211
     (1979)
    (setting forth general standards for revealing matters occurring before a grand jury); In re Antitrust
    Grand Jury, 
    805 F.2d 155
     (6th Cir. 1986); In re Grand Jury Proceedings Relative to Perl, 
    838 F.2d 304
    , 306 (8th Cir. 1988) (the secrecy rule “is designed to protect from disclosure only the essence
    of what takes place in the grand jury room, in order to preserve the freedom and integrity of the
    deliberative process”), it is equally certain that not all documents reviewed by a grand jury constitute
    “matters occurring before a grand jury,” within the meaning of Criminal Rule 6. We have
    previously held that
    confidential documentary information not otherwise public obtained by the grand
    jury by coercive means is presumed to be [a] “matter[] occurring before the grand
    jury” just as much as testimony before the grand jury. The moving party may seek
    to rebut that presumption by showing that the information is public or was not
    obtained through coercive means or that disclosure would be otherwise available by
    civil discovery and would not reveal the nature, scope, or direction of the grand jury
    inquiry, but it must bear the burden of making that showing . . . .
    In re Grand Jury Proceedings, 
    851 F.2d 860
    , 866-67 (6th Cir. 1988) (alterations added). Thus,
    documents prepared by a company for ordinary business purposes become presumptively “matters
    occurring before the grand jury” only if they are obtained by the grand jury through coercion. FDIC
    v. Ernst & Whitney, 
    921 F.2d 83
    , 86-87 (6th Cir. 1990). This discovery exception to grand jury
    secrecy has been interpreted somewhat broadly. In re Grand Jury Proceedings, 
    196 F.R.D. 57
    , 62-
    64 (S.D. Ohio 2000); Phillips v. United States, 
    843 F.2d 438
     (11th Cir. 1988); In re Grand Jury
    Investigation, 
    630 F.2d 996
    , 1000 (3d Cir. 1980) (“Documents such as the business records sought
    by the Commission here are created for purposes independent of grand jury investigations, and such
    records have many legitimate uses unrelated to the substance of the grand jury proceedings.”);
    Nos. 05-2274/2275         In re Grand Jury Subpoenas 04-124-03 and 04-124-05                    Page 10
    United States v. Stanford, 
    589 F.2d 285
    , 291 (7th Cir. 1978) (“Unless [sought] information reveals
    something about the grand jury proceedings, secrecy is unnecessary”).
    Here, the government does not contend that the appellants would not have had the
    opportunity to review for privilege documents responsive to the subpoenas if the grand jury’s
    subpoena had been directed to them instead of New Venture. Nor can the government claim that
    the appellants would not have had independent access in the ordinary course of business to the
    documents in question. We therefore believe that the discovery exception to the secrecy requirement
    would apply. Moreover, the appellants are not necessarily demanding access to the entire set of
    documents responsive to the subpoena; rather, they seek only to conduct a privilege review of
    documents that contain the names of particular lawyers, law firms, and other entities. The marginal
    increase in the risk that the appellants could divine or reverse-engineer the grand jury’s investigative
    purpose by reviewing a set of their own documents that involved some sort of communication
    between them and their counsel seems to us to be minimal at best.
    Yet the taint team procedure would present a great risk to the appellants’ continued
    enjoyment of privilege protections. In the first place, government taint teams seem to be used
    primarily in limited, exigent circumstances in which government officials have already obtained the
    physical control of potentially-privileged documents through the exercise of a search warrant. In
    such cases, the potentially-privileged documents are already in the government’s possession, and
    so the use of the taint team to sift the wheat from the chaff constitutes an action respectful of, rather
    than injurious to, the protection of privilege. See United States v. Abbell, 
    914 F. Supp. 519
     (S.D.
    Fla. 1995) (after seizing law firm documents through a search warrant, the government employed
    a taint team to determine privilege; however, court appointed a special master to review the
    documents, with costs charged to the government). But the government does not actually possess
    the potentially-privileged materials here, so the exigency typically underlying the use of taint teams
    is not present.
    Furthermore, taint teams present inevitable, and reasonably foreseeable, risks to privilege,
    for they have been implicated in the past in leaks of confidential information to prosecutors. That
    is to say, the government taint team may have an interest in preserving privilege, but it also
    possesses a conflicting interest in pursuing the investigation, and, human nature being what it is,
    occasionally some taint-team attorneys will make mistakes or violate their ethical obligations. It is
    thus logical to suppose that taint teams pose a serious risk to holders of privilege, and this
    supposition is substantiated by past experience. In United States v. Noriega, 
    764 F. Supp. 1480
    (S.D. Fla. 1991), for instance, the government’s taint team missed a document obviously protected
    by attorney-client privilege, by turning over tapes of attorney-client conversations to members of
    the investigating team. This Noriega incident points to an obvious flaw in the taint team procedure:
    the government’s fox is left in charge of the appellants’ henhouse, and may err by neglect or malice,
    as well as by honest differences of opinion.
    It is reasonable to presume that the government’s taint team might have a more restrictive
    view of privilege than appellants’ attorneys. But under the taint team procedure, appellants’
    attorneys would have an opportunity to assert privilege only over those documents which the taint
    team has identified as being clearly or possibly privileged. As such, we do not see any check in the
    proposed taint team review procedure against the possibility that the government’s team might make
    some false negative conclusions, finding validly privileged documents to be otherwise; that is to say,
    we can find no check against Type II errors in the government’s proposed procedure. On the other
    hand, under the appellants’ proposal, which incidentally seems to follow a fairly conventional
    privilege review procedure employed by law firms in response to discovery requests, the
    government would still enjoy the opportunity to challenge any documents that appellants’ attorneys
    misidentify (via the commission of Type I errors) as privileged. We thus find that, under these
    circumstances, the possible damage to the appellants’ interest in protecting privilege exceeds the
    Nos. 05-2274/2275        In re Grand Jury Subpoenas 04-124-03 and 04-124-05                  Page 11
    possible damage to the government’s interest in grand jury secrecy and exigency in this case.
    Therefore, we reverse the district court, and hold that the use of a government taint team is
    inappropriate in the present circumstances. Instead, we hold that the appellants themselves must be
    given an opportunity to conduct their own privilege review; of course, we can presently make no
    ruling with respect to the merits of any claimed privilege that may arise therefrom.
    Finally, the government argues that the appellants’ proposal would allow them to delay the
    proceedings in an unreasonable manner that could threaten the grand jury investigation. This stance
    has some obvious merit, for the targets of a grand jury investigation would logically have an interest
    in delaying matters. However, we do not think this is necessarily dispositive, for the appellants have
    asked only to conduct a privilege review of the subset of documents that contain names of attorneys
    or law firms that they will place on a list that will then be provided to the government. Therefore,
    assuming this “first cut” proceeds apace, the government should obtain the bulk of the responsive
    documents rather quickly.
    To ensure that the first cut does, in fact, proceed in a timely fashion, and to address in
    addition the government’s legitimate interest in preventing the appellants from themselves reviewing
    the entire set of subpoenaed documents, we mandate that the district court employ a Special Master
    to perform this first segregation of documents. The Special Master should conduct a word search
    of the documents, searching for those words contained in the list to be provided by the appellants
    and approved by the district court, and should then separate documents containing any of those
    words from the rest. As this is done, the master should provide appellants with copies of the
    documents containing any of the words on appellants’ list, returning the originals to New Venture’s
    offices, and provide the responsive documents not containing any of the list’s words to the grand
    jury. As we have been led to believe that this first cut would be merely mechanical in nature, we
    hope that the Special Master should be able to perform the task rather quickly, thereby ensuring that
    the grand jury receives the bulk of the responsive documents in short order, and we think that the
    master’s production should be done on a rolling basis if practical. Appellants would then be
    authorized to conduct a privilege review of the documents given to them by the Special Master. As
    this review progresses, appellants should provide all documents that their attorneys find not to be
    privileged, as well as a standard privilege log respecting documents over which they claim privilege
    protection, on a timely and rolling basis to the grand jury. This log should contain summary
    information, as well as some intelligible explanation of their privilege claims, for each document.
    Finally, while we think it would be appropriate to charge the appellants for the Special
    Master’s services, as they would themselves have been responsible for the costs in the ordinary
    course, we leave it to the district court’s sound discretion to determine and enforce proper
    procedures for implementing our remedy. Moreover, we note that the district court retains its
    inherent authority to adjudicate legitimate disputes that may arise over issues such as, inter alia,
    cost, timing, the identity and makeup of the Special Master’s team, and the word lists. As there
    remains a legitimate concern regarding the possibility of unreasonable delays, we remind the
    appellants that the district court also possesses the authority to issue reasonable deadlines within
    which particular review tasks must be completed, and to sanction them, or their attorneys, or both,
    for failure to meet those deadlines.
    III
    For the reasons noted above, we REVERSE the district court’s order, MANDATE that the
    district court institute a procedure whereby a Special Master will conduct the first mechanical review
    of the implicated documents, and the appellants will then conduct a privilege review of the
    documents provided to them; and REMAND to the district court for further proceedings consistent
    with our opinion.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 05-2275

Filed Date: 7/13/2006

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/22/2015

Authorities (32)

Douglas Oil Co. of Cal. v. Petrol Stops Northwest , 99 S. Ct. 1667 ( 1979 )

Upjohn Co. v. United States , 101 S. Ct. 677 ( 1981 )

United States v. Zolin , 109 S. Ct. 2619 ( 1989 )

Matter of Grand Jury Investigation (90-3-2) , 748 F. Supp. 1188 ( 1990 )

united-states-v-goldberger-dubin-pc-paul-a-goldberger-lawrence-a , 935 F.2d 501 ( 1991 )

In Re Subpoena Served Upon Jorge S. Zuniga, M.D. In Re ... , 72 A.L.R. Fed. 380 ( 1983 )

In Re Grand Jury Subpoena Dated November 8, 1979 , 622 F.2d 933 ( 1980 )

Kastigar v. United States , 92 S. Ct. 1653 ( 1972 )

Harry I. Schwimmer v. United States , 232 F.2d 855 ( 1956 )

In Re. Subpoena Duces Tecum Issued to Commodity Futures ... , 439 F.3d 740 ( 2006 )

in-re-grand-jury-proceedings-relative-to-norman-perl-occurring-on-or-about , 838 F.2d 304 ( 1988 )

In Re Grand Jury Investigation. Appeal of New Jersey State ... , 630 F.2d 996 ( 1980 )

In Re Grand Jury Subpoena (Maltby). United States of ... , 800 F.2d 981 ( 1986 )

Hunt v. Blackburn , 9 S. Ct. 125 ( 1888 )

dottie-renee-mcalpin-v-lexington-76-auto-truck-stop-inc-a-kentucky , 229 F.3d 491 ( 2000 )

In Re Grand Jury Investigation of William B. Hugle. William ... , 754 F.2d 863 ( 1985 )

United States v. Bobbie Stanford, Louis Watson, Janice ... , 50 A.L.R. Fed. 656 ( 1978 )

United States v. Paul M. Phillips , 843 F.2d 438 ( 1988 )

United States v. Noriega , 764 F. Supp. 1480 ( 1991 )

In Re GRAND JURY INVESTIGATION , 723 F.2d 447 ( 1983 )

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