Brady Issues

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On January 4, 2010, the U.S. Department of Justice (“DOJ”), through outgoing Deputy Attorney General David Ogden, issued a Guidance for Prosecutors Regarding Criminal Discovery (“Guidance”) and announced related organizational and training measures. These steps were widely seen as a response to several recent embarrassing episodes in which DOJ prosecutors failed to disclose exculpatory evidence to white collar criminal defendants in high profile cases.

The Guidance is codified at Section 165 of the DOJ’s Criminal Resource Manual. The Criminal Resource Manual is part of the U.S. Attorney’s Manual. Although provisions in the U.S. Attorney’s Manual do not have the force of law and do not create rights, they must be followed by federal prosecutors, and failure to do so may result in disciplinary proceedings. Moreover, many of the policies in the new Guidance relate to constitutional and statutory mandates that clearly do have the force of law.

Failure of federal prosecutors to turn over exculpatory and impeaching information to defendants is a growing crisis in the criminal justice system. The Guidance and related organizational and training measures should help to stem that crisis, but do not go far enough.

According to the DOJ, “the guidance is intended to establish a methodical approach to consideration of discovery obligations that prosecutors should follow in every case to avoid lapses that can result in consequences adverse to the Department’s pursuit of Justice.” By explicitly ordering federal prosecutors to consult the Guidance “in every case,” the DOJ is forcing even the most obtuse Assistant U.S. Attorneys to carefully and routinely consider their discovery obligations. In the future, a rogue prosecutor who suppresses clearly exculpatory information will have to explain why he or she ignored both the substance of the law and the DOJ procedures established to insure compliance.

In addition, since prosecutors now know that a very detailed review and disclosure of potentially exculpatory information is the established DOJ norm, they will arguably be less likely to rush to indict high-profile white collar cases, before carefully considering the pros and cons of such action.

The DOJ has also directed each U.S. Attorney’s Office (and each DOJ litigating component handling criminal matters) to develop and implement, by Mach 31, 2010, a Discovery Policy “with which prosecutors in that office must comply.” The Discovery Policy should be consistent with the Guidance, but must take into account “controlling precedent, existing local practices, and judicial expectations.” The individual office Discovery Policy is intended to recognize local variations in discovery practices while eliminating “inconsistent discovery practices among prosecutors within the same office.” Each office’s Discovery Policy “must set forth procedures prosecutors are required to follow to obtain supervisory approval to depart from the [office’s] uniform practices in an appropriate case.”

Each U.S. Attorney’s Office (and each DOJ litigating component handling criminal matters) must also name a Discovery Coordinator. These Discovery Coordinators have already been named and trained and must, in turn, train “their respective offices no less than annually” and must “serve as on-location advisors with respect to discovery obligations.”

The detailed steps laid out in the Guidance for gathering, reviewing, and disclosing discoverable information put much-needed meat on DOJ’s pre-existing discovery guidelines.

The Guidance contains several welcome improvements that will clearly be pertinent to white collar investigations: (1) in cases involving parallel proceedings with regulatory agencies, the prosecutor must consider whether the agency in question is part of the “prosecution team” and therefore subject to having its files reviewed for exculpatory information; (2) the prosecutor must be granted access to and review all of a law enforcement investigatory agency’s files, including the entire confidential informant file; (3) “generally speaking, witness interviews should be memorialized by the agent” and “material variances” in a witness’s statements must be disclosed, even if the variances occur within the same interview session or in a pre-trial prep session; (4) all substantive case-related internal communications, including emails, must be preserved and reviewed; and (5) if exculpatory information is discovered, the information itself must be produced, regardless of the format in which it was maintained.

The Guidance also continues certain troubling DOJ policies. Prosecutors are still charged with determining whether exculpatory and impeaching information is material in nature and therefore subject to production. Such self-certifying procedures are inherently inappropriate, because the prosecutor becomes judge and jury of what will be provided to the defense. All potentially exculpatory and impeaching information (including variances in witness statements) should be provided to the defense as a matter of course irrespective of materiality.

The Guidance also declares that case agent notes, which are not typically part of the official file, should only be reviewed “if there is a reason to believe that the notes are materially different from the memorandum, if a written memorandum was not prepared, if the precise words used by the witness are significant, or if the witness disputes the agent’s account of the interview.” In truth, case agent notes are virtually always Jencks Act material if the agent testifies at trial, and should be provided in such situations whether or not a memorandum has been prepared. More importantly, it is the rare official memorandum of interview that is fully consistent with the case agent’s interview notes. Since such inconsistencies are the norm, prosecutorial review is in order.

In summary, the new DOJ Guidance and related measures establish important substantive and procedural mechanisms that should reduce prosecutorial suppression of favorable evidence in white collar cases. But much remains to be done. Efforts are currently underway within the Judicial Conference of the United States to amend the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure to insure that prosecutors turn over all exculpatory and impeaching information to the defense, regardless of materiality. Such efforts should continue unabated until binding reform is achieved.

The DOJ yesterday issued, through outgoing Deputy Attorney General David Ogden, a Guidance for Prosecutors Regarding Criminal Discovery. Here is a copy of the memo from DOJ’s website. The Guidance primarily relates to Brady-Giglio issues. I will provide some analysis in a later post.

Hat Tip to Professor Ellen Podgor, over at White Collar Crime Prof Blog, who reports here that Judge Sullivan issued two new Orders this evening in U.S. v. Theodore F. Stevens.

The first Order states as follows:

“MINUTE ORDER as to THEODORE F. STEVENS. The Court, sua sponte, directs that by no later than 10:00 a.m. on April 6, 2009, the government shall provide to the Court copies of all material gathered post-trial and produced to the defendant. The government shall also provide to the Court all exculpatory evidence, witness interviews, 302s, and affidavits gathered, created and/or reviewed as part of the investigation into the Joy Complaint, and the attorneys notes regarding the April 15, 2008 interview with Bill Allen, whether or not that material has been produced to the defendant. Signed by Judge Emmet G. Sullivan on April 5, 2009.”

The second Order states as follows:

“MINUTE ORDER as to THEODORE F. STEVENS. The Court, sua sponte, ORDERS that the Department of Justice, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Internal Revenue Service, and any and all other government agencies involved in the investigation and/or prosecution of Senator Stevens immediately preserve any and all documents related to this matter, including but not limited to emails, notes, memoranda, investigative files, audio recordings, and any and all electronically stored information, until further Order of this Court. Signed by Judge Emmet G. Sullivan on April 5, 2009.”

My guess is that Judge Sullivan wants to keep control of the process and certainly doesn’t want DOJ’s Office of Professional Responsibility (”OPR”) to have sole responsibility for ferreting out any wrongdoing.

Lesson #1: Don’t ever conduct a pre-indictment witness interview that fails to generate a 302 or similar report. In fact, don’t ever conduct a post-indictment witness interview that fails to generate a 302, unless it is a genuine testimony prep session. If exculpatory information is revealed during a testimony prep session, turn it over to the defense.

Lesson #2: Look to the exculpatory information and not the format, if any, in which it is memorialized. If a witness reveals exculpatory information and the only written record of it is contained in privileged attorney notes, you may not have to reveal the notes but you damn well better reveal the exculpatory information. 

Lesson #3: In a white collar case, unless there are issues of witness intimidation, turn over all 302s to the defense before the trial. Yes, I know, most 302s do not constitute Jencks material, unless the agent who prepared them is testifying. But every 302 of a testifying witness contains potential Brady material. Do you really want to be worrying during trial whether a witness’ real time testimony is inconsistent with the information contained in his six previous 302s? Turn the stuff over and concentrate on winning your case. The federal criminal trial system is already heavily weighted in favor of the prosecution. If your case is so weak that you are afraid of turning over the 302s to the defense, maybe it is time to re-think your case.

Judge Emmitt Sullivan has had it again with the DOJ. Here (Pacer subscription required) is his Friday Order to Show Cause issued in Batarfi, et al. v. Bush, et al., the habeas case of a Guantanamo prisoner detained for seven years without any adjudication. The DOJ has until Tuesday to explain why it violated an Order issued several months ago requiring the turning over of Brady (that is, exculpatory) material to the Petitioner. It turns out that an exculpatory document created in March 2002 was belatedly produced by the government in violation of the Court’s earlier Order. The government has failed to offer any explanation or excuse for its late production.

Judge Sullivan appears even angrier at the government’s violation of the Court’s January 16, 2009 Order requiring the DOJ to file a declaration affirming that: Department of Justice attorneys have reviewed Petitioner’s statements for exculpatory evidence and have produced or will produce all statements containing exculpatory evidence to Petitioner’s counsel.” (Emphasis added.) The DOJ declaration instead indicates that the DOJ continues to rely on Department of Defense (DOD) attorneys to conduct an initial review of documents for Brady material. To do otherwise, according to the DOJ declaration, would be “not feasable.”  

You heard me right. DOJ  attorneys were ORDERED to file a declaration affirming that DOJ attorneys had reviewed all of Petitioner’s statements for Brady material. They instead filed a declaration saying in effect: “We didn’t do that, because we didn’t want to. It would be too hard.” 

According to Judge Sullivan: “The government’s argument raises the disturbing implication that the attorneys conducting the review in this and other habeas cases (who presumably are not criminal prosecutors from DOJ) do not have the necessary experience with and knowledge of the government’s Brady obligations.”

The government’s response is due by noon Tuesday.

America is our beat.