United States v. Singhal ( 2011 )


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  • FILED
    UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT  1 q
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    C|erk, U.S. Dlstrict & Bankruptcy
    Courts for the District of Columb|a
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
    S€S&SSSS€§
    v. Criminal Case No. 10-108 (RCL)
    SHELLY S. SINGHAL, UNDER SEAL
    Defendant.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    A grand jury returned an Indictment charging Shelly S. Singhal, owner and Chairman of
    SBI USA, LLC ("SBI"), with criminal activity in connection with stock manipulation schemes.
    Indictment, Apr. 27, 2010, ECF No. l. Singhal filed a Motion to Dismiss the Indictment,
    arguing that the government improperly received and used materials protected by the attomey-
    client privilege in investigating his alleged wrongdoing and in presenting its case against him to
    the grand jury. Mot. Dismiss Indictment, June 8, 20lO, ECF No. 4. Judge Kennedy denied the
    Motion as to the materials then before the Court but gave Singhal an opportunity to submit other
    documents for the Court’s consideration on the same issue. Mem. Order Op., July 27, 20l0, ECF
    No. 6. The case was subsequently transferred to the undersigned judge. Singhal filed a
    supplemental set of documents and an accompanying memorandum in ii,\rther support of his
    Motion to Dismiss the Indictment. Ex Parte Supplement Supp. Mot. Dismiss, August 4, 20l0.
    He submitted this filing to the Court ex parte, although the government received a redacted
    version of it. Upon consideration of the Motion, the Opposition, the Reply, the applicable law,
    1 /
    V/s
    and the entire record in this case, the Court will DENY the Motion to Dismiss for the reasons
    that follow.
    I. BACKGROUND
    Judge Kennedy’s previous Memorandum Opinion describes the relevant factual
    background. Mem. Op. Order l-3. The govemment accuses Singhal of coordinating a variety of
    schemes to manipulate stock prices illegally. One type of scheme, "scalping," involves
    disseminating publications promoting particular companies~specifically, Inf``1nium Labs, Inc.,
    IT&E International Group, and Aztec Oil & Gas, Inc.-of which SBI owned shares. Opp’n Mot.
    Dismiss Indictrnent 4, June 21, 2010. The government alleges that Singhal issued newsletters to
    inflate these companies’ stock prices but left out the legally required disclosures of SBI’s interest
    in the companies. Id. at 4-5.
    The other set of schemes involves Singhal’s alleged defrauding of a Chinese company,
    Xinhua Finance. Id. at 6. According to the govemment, Singhal_under false pretences-
    induced Xinhua Finance to send funds to companies in which it did not know he had an interest.
    1d. at 6-7. He allegedly used companies called Wiremill LLC, Entree Capital, LLC, and Regionl
    Partners LLC in carrying out his criminal activities. Id.
    The govemment contends that Singhal relied on Robert Brown’s assistance to carry out
    these schemes. Id. at 4-7. According to the govemment, Brown owned shares in several of the
    companies involved in the scalping schemes and assisted in transferring funds and concealing the
    source of publications in ii,lrtherance of thern. Opp’n Ex Parte Supplement 6-8, Aug. 16, 2010.
    Brown also, in the government’s view, had an interest in the companies involved in Xinhua
    Finance transactions and assisted in executing the fraud perpetrated against Xinhua Finance, in
    part by preparing false documents. Ia’. at 10, l4. The FBI began investigating Brown, and he
    eventually pled guilty to obstruction of justice. Having agreed to cooperate with federal
    authorities in their investigation, Brown, through his counsel, turned a variety of materials
    related to these schemes over to the government.
    Crucial to Singhal’s current Motion is that, for a number of years before his indictment,
    Brown served as counsel to Singhal and SBI. Ia’. at 2-3. Singhal objects to the govemment’s
    obtaining from Brown information and documents that he believes are protected by the attorney-
    client privilege. Ex Parte Supplement Supp. Mot. Dismiss l. In the course of communications
    between Singhal’s current counsel and the govemment about this issue, the govemment provided
    to Singhal three FBI reports of interviews with Brown as well as many documents Brown
    produced. Mem. Op. Order 2-3. The govemment, aware of Singhal’s objections but convinced
    they were invalid, proceeded to investigate and indict Singhal using the materials Brown
    provided. The government indicted Singhal after this Court denied his pre-indictment motion,
    which sought to prevent the government from relying on these materials. Mem. Op. Order, April
    l, 2010. Singhal hopes that his supplemental submission will persuade the Court to conclude that
    the govemment acted improperly. Ex Parte Supplement Supp. Mot. Dismiss l-3. If it does,
    Singhal contends the Court should dismiss the Indictrnent against him and require the
    govemment to start over with a new prosecution team. Id.
    II. LEGAL STANDARD
    A. Outrageous Government Conduct
    Singhal urges the Court to dismiss his Indictment because he contends that the
    government’s conduct in prosecuting this case was so outrageous that it violated his
    constitutional FiRh Amendment right to due process. See Rochz``n v. California, 
    342 U.S. 165
    (1952) (vacating the suspected drug-pusher-defendant’s conviction and dismissing the
    indictment where police had pumped his stomach to obtain incriminating evidence against him).
    In order to prevail on his claim, Singhal must show (1) the government’s objective awareness of
    an ongoing, personal attorney-client relationship between Brown and Singhal; (2) deliberate
    intrusion into that relationship; and (3) actual and substantial prejudice. Unz``ted States v. Voigt,
    
    89 F.3d 1050
    , 1067 (3d Cir. 1996).
    Although the Supreme Court recognized fifty years ago that law enforcement misconduct
    can rise to a level so outrageous that it violates the defendant’s Fiith Amendment due process
    rights, courts since Rochz'n have rarely applied the doctrine. As one court put it, "The banner of
    outrageous misconduct is often raised but seldom saluted." Unz``ted States v. Santana, 
    6 F.3d 1
    , 4
    (lst Cir. 1993) (observing further that "courts have rejected its application with almost
    monotonous regularity"). This reticence, which is grounded in separation of powers principles, is
    proper. Singhal asks the Court to hold that-as a matter of constitutional law-the law
    enforcement activity in this case was unacceptable. As the Voigt court rightly acknowledged,
    [w]e must necessarily exercise scrupulous restraint before we denounce law
    enforcement conduct as constitutionally unacceptable . . . . Unless the behavior of
    the FBI rose to the level of outrageousness which would bar conviction, the
    conduct of agents of the executive branch who must protect the public from crime
    is more appropriately considered through the political process where divergent
    views can be expressed in the ballot box.
    Voigt, 89 F.3d at 1065 (citing United States v. Jannotti, 673 F.Zd 578, 608 (3d Cir. 1982) (en
    banc)). With this legal context in mind, the Court must determine whether, as a matter of law, the
    conduct that Singhal alleges occurred in this case raises a cognizable claim of outrageous
    govemment conduct.
    B. Att0rney-Client Privilege
    The attorney-client privilege applies only if (1) the asserted holder of the privilege is or
    sought to become a client; (2) the person to whom the communication was made (a) is a member
    of the bar of a court, or his subordinate and (b) in connection with this communication is acting
    as a lawyer; (3) the communication relates to a fact of which the attorney was informed (a) by his
    client (b) without the presence of strangers (c) for the purpose of securing primarily either (i) an
    opinion on law or (ii) legal services or (iii) assistance in some legal proceeding, and not (d) for
    the purpose of committing a crime or tort; and (4) the privilege has been (a) claimed and (b) not
    waived by the client. United States v. Unitea' States Shoe Machinery Corp., 
    89 F. Supp. 357
    ,
    35 8~59 (D. Mass. 1950). The Supreme Court has held that because the privilege obstructs the
    search for truth, courts should construe it narrowly. See, e.g., Fisher v. United States, 
    425 U.S. 391
    , 403 (1976). Thus, where there are close calls, the Court will put a thumb on the scales in
    favor of narrow construction of the elements of the privilege. Moreover, the party asserting the
    privilege bears the burden of establishing that any allegedly privileged communication actually is
    privileged. In re Grand Jury Subpoena, 
    415 F.3d 168
    , 170 (4th Cir. 2005).
    III. ANALYSIS
    A. Singhal has failed to show the government’s objective awareness of an
    ongoing, personal attorney-client relationship between himself and
    Brown,
    Before getting into any arguments that the attorney-client privilege protects specific
    documents in the govemment’s possession, Singhal first argues that Brown obtained the
    information he provided to the government in his capacity as Singhal’s attomey. Singhal has
    filed his specific arguments as to this point ex parte, so the Court will not describe them here.
    The Court notes only that, as explained in Judge Kennedy’s previous Opinion, Singhal has not
    shown that Brown was providing him with legal advice in conducting the transactions that are
    the subject of the documents and information he submitted to the government. The case Singhal
    cites for the proposition that "[t]he mere fact that business considerations are weighed in the
    rendering of legal advice does not vitiate the attorney-client privilege" does not change the
    Court’s conclusion because it, like those cited in the Court’s prior Opinion, requires that the
    lawyer have given legal advice in order for the privilege to apply. Coleman v. Am. Broadcastz``ng
    Cos., 
    106 F.R.D. 201
    , 206 (D.D.C. 1985); see also Neuder v. Battelle Pac. Nw. Naz"l Lab., 
    194 F.R.D. 289
    , 292 (D.D.C. 2000) ("Where business and legal advice are intertwined, the legal
    advice must predominate for the communication to be protected.") (citation omitted); Unz``tea’
    States v. Philip Morris USA, Inc., 
    2004 WL 5355972
    , at *6 (D.D.C. 2004) (same) (citing Neuder,
    194 F.R.D. at 292). In short, the Court agrees with Judge Kennedy that the documents Singhal
    submitted in his original Motion to Dismiss the Indictment relate to business advice or business
    transactions in which Brown was simply following Singhal’s instructions, not to legal advice. lt
    further finds that the same can be said for all of the documents Singhal submitted with the
    Motion currently before the Court. None of these documents makes the requisite clear showing
    that Brown was acting as Singhal’s lawyer with regard to any of these transactions. In re Sealed
    Case, 
    737 F.2d 94
    , 99 (D.C. Cir. 1984). Furthermore, Singhal produces no evidence that the
    govemment knew of any such relationship between himself and Brown as is required.
    Accordingly, because the Court finds that (1) Singhal has not shown that Brown acted as his
    lawyer with regard to the transactions at issue in this case and (2) Singhal has not shown the
    government’s objective awareness of any such relationship, it concludes that Singhal has failed
    to establish the first element of his outrageousness claim.
    B. Singhal has failed to show an intentional government intrusion into
    any attorney-client relationship between himself and Brown,
    Singhal next argues that the attorney-client privilege protects certain particular
    documents in the government’s possession. The Court concluded above that Singhal has failed to
    show that Brown acted as his lawyer in connection with the transactions and communications in
    question here. Because the attorney-client privilege cannot possibly protect any of the documents
    Singhal has submitted absent such a clear showing, In re Sealed Case, 737 F.2d at 99, it is
    arguably unnecessary to look any further into the matter. The Court recognizes, however, that it
    is possible that the exhibits associated with this second section of Singhal’s Motion could
    accomplish independently what those associated with the first section could not_provide a clear
    showing that Brown acted as Singhal’s lawyer in connection with the communications in
    question. Therefore, out of an abundance of caution, the Court will consider each of the
    documents Singhal argues are protected by the attorney-client privilege. Importantly, Singhal
    filed his Motion ex parte. Thus, portions of the document were redacted so that only the Court
    could review them. Discussion of exhibits related to this redacted ex parte material will be filed
    in a separate, sealed, ex parte appendix to this Opinion.l
    Regarding the first three exhibits, Singhal’s Motion expressly says, "The three FBI From
    302s were attached as exhibits (1-3) to the govemment’s Opposition to the Emergency Motions
    for Kastigar Hearing filed on March 25, 2010 before Chief Judge Lamberth (l0-mc-21 l). We
    have reproduced those exhibits here for the Court’s convenience as exhibits 1 . . ., 2 . . ., and 3."
    Ex Parte Supplement in Supp. Mot. Dismiss 2 n.2, Aug. 4, 2010. Thus, Singhal does not argue
    that these documents contain privileged infor1nation. In light of the fact that it is his burden to
    1 Specifically, Exhibits 4-7, 14, and 16-17 are discussed in the ex parte, sealed appendix.
    7
    prove the existence of the privilege, the Court will not analyze these documents for privilege. In
    re Grand Jury Subpoena, 415 F.3d at 170. Furtherrnore, Judge Kennedy already considered these
    documents and ruled that they were not privileged. Mem. Op. Order 7. This Court agrees with
    his reasoning and conclusions.
    Exhibit 8 is a cover letter to the Assistant United States Attorney in this case from
    Brown’s lawyer announcing the production of certain documents related to Wiremill, LLC and
    Region 1 Partners. Ex Parte Supplement in Supp. Mot. Dismiss Ex. 8. As with Exhibits 1-3
    discussed immediately above, Singhal does not argue that the letter is privileged and instead
    relies on it to show that the government must have had access to more information,
    communications, and documents than it alleges. Id. Although this letter mentions attorney-client
    privilege concerns, it contains no communications between Brown and Singhal. Therefore,
    nothing in the letter is privileged.
    Exhibit 9 contains e-mails between Brown, Singhal, and others and attachments to those
    e-mails. Ex Parte Supplement Supp. Mot. Dismiss Ex. 9. Most of the e-mails have third party
    recipients or contain no communications from Singhal to Brown and therefore are not privileged.
    Ia’. at RB003 84-RB00385; RB01044~RB001047; RB1202-1204. Some of thern, though, are in
    fact between Singhal and Brown exclusively. Ia'. at RB01l15-RB001l33; RB01201. Of those,
    the one that gives Singhal his best avenue for arguing for the protection of the privilege is an e-
    mail he received from Brown that says, "As requested," and attaches an edited draft of a business
    document. Id. at RB01115-1133. Generally, the privilege protects communications from client
    to lawyer, but it is true that it also protects communications from lawyer to client when they are
    based on an underlying confidential client-to-lawyer communication. Brinton v. Dep ’t of State,
    
    636 F.2d 600
    , 603-04 (D.C. Cir. 1980). Because this e-mail and its accompanying attachment
    are representative of many of Singhal’s other submissions and because they afford him his best
    hope of attorney-client privilege protection, the Court will analyze them in some detail.
    Assuming, for the purposes of analysis and contrary to the Court’s finding above, that
    Brown and Singhal were in an attorney-client relationship, Brown, the lawyer, sent this e-mail to
    his client, Singhal. Accordingly, the privilege only protects it if it is based on an underlying
    confidential communication from Singhal to Brown, Id. Singhal claims that two words_"[a]s
    requested"_"reveal[] that Mr. Singhal asked his lawyer to draft legal documents for Region 1
    Partners." Ex Parte Supplement in Supp. Mot. Dismiss 9. lf the Court agrees, then Singhal
    would be correct that "[a]s requested" is a lawyer-to-client communication based on an
    underlying client-to-lawyer communication, and thus, this e-mail would at least be a candidate
    for attorney-client privilege protection. But Singhal produces no evidence to support his
    unstated assumption that he-Singhal_did the requesting referenced in the e-mail. lt is his
    burden to prove the elements of the privilege, In re Grana' jury Subpoena, 415 F.3d at 170, and
    the privilege is to be construed narrowly. Fz``sher, 425 U.S. at 403. Accordingly, the Court must
    hold Singhal to his burden and require him to prove that he actually requested the document
    transmitted in the e-mail in question, otherwise this document is not a candidate for privilege
    protection.z
    2 lt is easy to imagine a scenario in which Singhal did not request that Brown draft such a
    document, and yet he received the document in an e-mail from Brown that reads, "As requested."
    For example, Singhal and a third party could have been at a meeting discussing the potential
    drafting of the document. The third party could have mentioned to Singhal, "You know, I’m
    going to request that Bob Brown drafi this document for us and send it on to you." The meeting
    ends and the third party approaches Brown and updates him about the meeting and the discussion
    of the document. The third party mentions that he told Singhal he was going to request that
    Brown draft the document and send it along to Singhal and says, "So could you go ahead and
    draft it and send it on to She1ly." Brown then drafts the document and sends it to Singhal in an e-
    mail that reads, "As requested." Yet, Singhal did n0t, in this hypothetical, request that Brown
    9
    Moreover, even if the Court ignores this logical gap and assumes that Singhal requested
    that Brown draft the attached document, Singhal still cannot carry his burden of showing that this
    document warrants attomey-client privilege protection. Communications are only privileged if
    they were made for the purpose of securing legal advice. See In re Six Grand Jury Witnesses,
    
    979 F.2d 939
    , 943 (2d Cir. 1992) (holding that the privilege protects communications made in
    confidence to a lawyer to obtain legal counsel). Courts rely on many factors to determine
    whether a legal purpose underlies a communication, including:
    drafi the document. As another example, it is possible that Singhal, Brown, and several third
    parties were at a meeting like the one discussed above, and Singhal requested that someone-
    without naming anyone in particular-draft such a document. Then, one of the third parties
    drafted it and passed it on to Brown for his review, after which he was to pass it on to Singhal.
    Again, in this scenario, Brown would review-not draft-the document and send it on to Singhal
    in an e-mail "as requested," yet Singhal never requested anything of Brown in particular. These
    examples could go on forever, but one more should suffice to show just how unwarranted
    Singhal’s assumption is. imagine the meeting between Singhal, Brown, and several third parties
    again. This time, one of the third parties requests that Brown draft such a document and send it to
    Singhal for review. Brown does so, and sends the drafi along in an e-mail "as requested," yet
    Singhal did no requesting at all, much less any requesting of Brown. Thus, Singhal’s assumption
    is wholly unwarranted. Too much logical space separates the two words, "As requested," from
    Singhal’s conclusion that he requested that Brown drafi the attached document. The Court cannot
    make such a logical leap. Furthermore, it is unclear that requesting that a lawyer draft a
    document necessarily constitutes a confidential client-to-lawyer communication. Where the
    communications are of a mixed business and legal nature, the privilege will apply where the
    communication was primarily for the purpose of providing legal assistance and not for another
    purpose. ln In re Sealed Case, 
    737 F.2d 94
    , 99 (D.C. Cir. l984), the Court held that where in-
    house counsel was both lawyer and company vice president with responsibilities outside the
    lawyer’s sphere, the company was required to make a clear showing that the communications
    with in-house counsel were in a legal rather than business capacity in order to invoke the
    privilege. Thus, here, where, even giving Singhal’s argument every benefit of the doubt, Brown
    wore at least two hats like the in-house counsel discussed in In re Sealed Case, Singhal would
    have to make a clear showing that the communication he seeks to cloak in the shelter of the
    privilege sought primarily legal advice. lt is unclear whether a request that Brown draft a
    document satisfies that requirement. Luckily, because so many other considerations
    independently preclude the privilege’s application to this e-mail, the Court need not address this
    vexatious question.
    10
    (1) The extent to which the attomey performs legal and non-legal work for the organization,
    (2) The nature of the communication, and
    (3) Whether or not the attomey had previously provided legal assistance relating to the same
    matter.
    See, e.g., 24 Charles Alan Wright & Kenneth W. Graham, Jr., Federal Practice & Procedure §
    5478 (Supp. 2009); Rest. 3d § 72 cmt. c (2000). Communications made to or by attomeys for
    business or financial purposes are not privileged. See, e.g., In re Lindsey, 
    148 F.3d 1100
    , 1106
    (D.C. Cir. 1998) (holding that communications were not privileged where attorney acted as a
    policy advisor, media expert, business consultant, banker, referee, or friend); Ge0rgia-Pac. Corp.
    v. GAF Roofing Mfg. Corp., No. 93 Civ. 5125, 
    1996 WL 29392
    , at *4 (S.D.N.Y. 2001) (holding
    that the attorney-client privilege did not apply to communications made between an in-house
    attomey and his corporate client while the attomey was acting as a contract negotiator because
    the attomey was acting in a business capacity rather than executing a traditional function of an
    attomey). Even assuming that Singhal requested that Brown draft the document attached to the e-
    mail in question, he has not shown that his request sought primarily legal advice. This hurdle to
    the privilege protection Singhal requests is discussed more thoroughly above as well as in Judge
    Kennedy’s prior Opinion. Therefore, this e-mail is not privileged.
    Tuming to the many drafts Singhal submitted in Exhibits 9 and 10, courts in the D.C.
    Circuit have failed to settle upon a common rule governing whether drafts or attachments to
    them are privileged. This Court has no need to address this area of confusion, however, for at
    least three reasons. First, the Court cannot tell who drafied these documents. Without that
    ll
    inforrnation, the Court cannot determine whether the draft is3 or is at least based on a
    confidential client-to-lawyer communication. Brinton v. Dep ’t of State, 
    636 F.2d 600
    , 603-04
    (D.C. Cir. 1980). Second, Singhal has failed to make the requisite clear showing that Brown was
    acting as his lawyer in connection with these drafts. In re Sealea’ Case, 737 F.2d at 98-99. Third,
    Singhal has failed to show that any communication in these drafts seeks primarily legal advice.
    Id. Therefore, they are not privileged.
    Exhibit ll is a draft letter on SBI letterhead, which Singhal characterizes as a "draft
    demand letter" that "is precisely the type of work product that a lawyer would prepare for his
    client." Ex Parte Supplement Supp. Mot. dismiss 10. Singhal produces no evidence that Brown
    actually drafted this letter. Assuming he did, though, as a lawyer-to-client communication it is
    only privileged if it is based on an underlying client-to-lawyer communication. Brz'nton, 636 F.2d
    at 603-04. Singhal does not identify any such underlying communication. ln fact, nothing about
    this letter indicates that Brown or Singhal had anything to do with it, much less that Singhal
    sought the letter primarily for legal advice, that he sought that advice from Brown, or that it was
    not shared with third parties. Again, it is Singhal’s burden to prove the elements of the privilege,
    In re Grand jury Subpoena, 415 F.3d at 170, and the privilege is to be construed narrowly.
    Fisher, 425 U.S. at 403. Thus, the Court concludes that Exhibit ll is not privileged.
    Exhibit 12 is a five-page e-mail string, the first page of which has been redacted.
    Focusing on the redaction, Singhal argues that it clearly indicates that "all previous e-mails in the
    chain had been sent to Brown to obtain legal advice." Id. None of these e-mails is to or from
    Brown or Singhal, however, lndeed, none of the e-mails so much as mentions Brown or Singhal.
    3 At least one court has held that "[d]rafts, standing alone, are not ‘communications’ and hence
    normally are not within the attorney-client privilege." Loftin v. Bande, 258 F.R.D. 3l, 35 (2009).
    12
    The argument that the redacted page so clearly indicates that all prior e-mails in the chain had
    been sent to Brown to obtain legal advice strikes the Court as highly speculative. There is
    nothing to indicate (a) that these e-mails were ever sent to Brown or (b) that they were sent to
    him to obtain his legal advice. Accordingly, Exhibit 12 contains no privileged material.
    Exhibit 13 is a collection of e-mail strings, each of which is labeled "attomey-client
    confidential." lmportantly, Judge Kennedy has already ruled on this Exhibit and found that it was
    not privileged. Mern. Op. Order 8-9 & n.9. He concluded that these communications reflected a
    business relationship between Singhal and Brown and did not show that Singhal was seeking
    legal advice from Brown. Judge Kennedy properly noted that the attorney-client privilege label
    stamped on each of the e-mail strings makes no difference. Whatever other properties "Attomey-
    client privilege" stamps may have, they certainly do not carry the talismanic power to relieve a
    party of its obligation to prove each of the privilege’s elements in order to take shelter under its
    protection. In re Grand Jury Subpoena, 415 F.3d at 170. Accordingly, for the same reasons
    articulated in Judge Kennedy’s prior opinion, this Court finds that Exhibit 13 contains no
    privileged material.
    Singhal does not argue that Exhibit 15 is privileged. lnstead, he contends that it shows
    that Melissa Mahler "identified Brown as SBl’s transactional lawyer." Ex Parte Supplement
    Supp. Mot. Dismiss 11. Even assuming that is true, it is insufficient to establish that the attomey-
    client privilege protects this document.
    Exhibit 18 is a letter from Brown’s lawyer to the government. Ex Parte Supplement
    Supp. Mot. Dismiss Ex. 18. Singhal does not argue that this letter is privileged. lnstead, he relies
    upon it as evidence that this Court should require the govemment to produce more
    This Court takes no position on the issue at this time.
    13
    communications-both oral and written-in order to determine whether his attomey-client
    privilege has been violated. Given that Singhal does not contend that this document is privileged,
    the Court need not go into detail explaining why it is not. ln short, this is not (nor does it reveal)
    a communication between Singhal and Brown, it was sent to third parties, and it does not seek
    primarily legal advice. Accordingly, it is not privileged. The same can be said for Exhibit l9-a
    letter from Singhal’s counsel to the govemment requesting production of more materials. Ex
    Parte Supplement Supp. Mot. Dismiss Ex. 19.
    As to the third element necessary to show outrageous govemment conduct requiring
    dismissal of an indictment, namely, that Singhal show substantial prejudice as a result of the
    govemment’s alleged intrusion into his attomey-client relationship, because he has not shown a
    violation of his attorney-client privilege, he cannot show such substantial prejudice. Voigt, 89
    F.3d at 1070 ("Voigt failed to demonstrate that any of the information Travis provided the
    govemment . . . was in fact privileged. We think that alone is fatal to his claim of
    outrageousness.").
    C. The Court will deny Singhal’s request for an order requiring the
    government to produce all information-both documents and oral
    communications_it has received from Brown and his lawyers.
    Finally, Singhal argues that the govemment has tumed over an incomplete record of its
    communications with Brown and his representatives. He points out that the FBl’s summaries of
    its interviews with Brown do not substantiate all the allegations in the Brown lnforrnation. Thus,
    Singhal argues, for the govemment to be able to draft the Brown Statement of Offense, it had to
    have received more information fi'om Brown than is contained in the three 302s. Singhal argues
    that without the complete package of communications, he cannot determine the extent of the
    invasion of his attorney-client privilege. Accordingly, he requests that the Court order the
    14
    government to produce all information_both documents and oral communications-it has
    received from Brown and his lawyers. The Court will deny that request.
    The Court has now gone through two rounds of document review related to Singhal’s
    allegation that the govemment has invaded his attomey-client privilege, and both times, the
    search has yielded no privileged materials. At some point, the fishing expedition has to stop.
    Singhal has conceded that the govemment has been cooperative in producing documents related
    to this Motion, and the Court-open to his arguments-has reviewed his extensive document
    submissions patiently and thoroughly. His latest request, however, is unbounded in scope and
    therefore overbroad. Moreover, Singhal has failed to show clearly_as he must~that Brown was
    acting as his lawyer in connection with any of the transactions or communications in question.
    He has given the Court no reason to believe that the third time will be the charm and that he will
    be able to make such a clear showing if allowed one more chance to raise this issue. Therefore,
    the Court will deny his request.
    Because the Court concludes that none of these materials is privileged, it needs not
    consider either the crime-fraud exception or the related Zolin issues Singhal raises.
    III. CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, it is this 14th day of March 2011, hereby
    ORDERED that Singhal’s Ex Parte Supplement Conceming His Attorney-Client
    Privilege in Further Support of Motion to Dismiss lndictment is DENIED.
    March 14, 2011 /s/
    Royce C. Lamberth
    Chief United States District Judge
    15