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IN RE APPLICATION TO UNSEAL CIVIL DISCOVERY..., Slip Copy (2021)
2021 WL 1164272
Only the Westlaw citation is currently available.
United States District Court, S.D. New York.
USAO Reference No. 2o18Ro1618.
19-MC-00179 (SN)
Filed 03/24/2021
SEALED ORDER
SARAH NETBURN United States Magistrate Judge
*1 The United States Attorney for the Southern District of
New York has moved, pursuant to the All Writs Act, Title 28,
United States Code, Section 1651, for an order relieving Boies
Schiller & Flexner LLP (the "Law Finn") of its obligations
under the protective order issued on November 29, 2018,
in Jane Doe 43 v. Jeffrey Epstein. et al. I7-CV-616 (IGK)
(SN) (S.D.N.Y.). The purpose of such order is to permit the
Law Firm to comply with a grand jury subpoena and provide
materials to the Government in connection with a federal
grand jury investigation. The motion is DENIED without
prejudice.
BACKGROUND
The Law Firm represented Jane Doe 43, a plaintiff in a civil
suit against Jeffrey Epstein and others. The case involves
allegations of sex trafficking. Because of the sensitive nature
of some of the discovery, the parties entered into a Protective
Order that deemed certain information to be "Confidential
Information."' Protective Order, at ECF No. 177. As
relevant here, the Protective Order provides that Confidential
Information shall not be disclosed or used for any purpose
other than the civil case. Id. at 1 4. At the conclusion of
the case, the Protective Order requires the destruction of
Confidential hard-copy documents or electronic files. Id. at 1
12. The Protective Order further prohibits the distribution of
Confidential electronic non-file copies without a court order.
Id. The Protective Order contemplates that a subpoena for
Confidential Information may be received and precludes the
receiving party from complying with the subpoena absent a
court order. Id. at ¶ 13. Finally, the Protective Order permits
modification by the Court "at any time for good cause shown
following notice to all parties and an opportunity for them to
be heard." Id. at 1 15.
The United States Attorney has served a grand jury subpoena
on the Law Firm for documents that are covered by the
Protective Order. 2 The Government has represented that
the subpoena was validly issued as part of an ongoing
investigation into Jeffrey Epstein and others for possible
violations of, Title IS, United States Code, Section 591 and
I 594(c) (unlawfully trafficking minors) and Section 2422(b)
(unlawfully enticing minors). The production of the materials
pursuant to the subpoena is solely for the purposes of the
Investigation and is subject to the protections and restrictions
of Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 6(e). The Law Finn
has indicated its willingness to comply with the subpoena so
long as it is authorized to do so by a court order modifying
the Protective Order.
DISCUSSION
*2 The All Writs Act provides, in relevant part, that "all
courts established by Act of Congress may issue all writs
necessary or appropriate in aid of their respective jurisdictions
and agreeable to the usages and principles of law." 28
U.S.C. § 1651(a). The All Writs Act permits a court, in its
"sound judgment," to issue orders necessary "to achieve the
rational ends of law" and "the ends of justice entrusted to
it."
United States v. New York Telephone Co 434 U.S.
159, 172.73 (1977) (internal quotation marks and citations
omitted). The All Writs Act provides a "residual source of
authority to issue writs that are not otherwise covered by
statute."
Penn. Bureau of Con. v. U.S. Marshals Serv.
474 U.S. 34, 43 (1985). "Although the Act empowers federal
courts to fashion extraordinary remedies when the need arises,
it does not authorize them to issue ad hoc writs whenever
compliance with statutory procedures appears inconvenient
or less appropriate." Id. The Court finds that it is authorized
under the All Writs Act to modify the Protective Order.
The Court, however, declines to exercise its discretion to
modify the Protective Order on the record before it. Before
modifying a protective order on which parties to a civil
action presumptively relied, the Court of Appeals for the
Second Circuit has directed district courts to find either
that: (1) the protective was improvidently granted or (2) the
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government has established exceptional circumstances or a
compelling need. In re Grand Jury Subpoena Duces Tecum,
945 F.2d 1221, 1224 (2d Cir. 1991); see also ? Martindell
v. International Tel. and Tel. Corp. 594 F.2d 291 (2d
Cir. 1979). Because the Government does not argue that
the Protective Order was improvidently granted (nor could
it), and because the Government has not, on this record,
established exceptional circumstances or a compelling need,
the motion to modify is denied.
The Government argues that the presumption against
modifying protective orders articulated in Martindell and In
re Grand Jury does not apply here for two reasons. First, the
Government argues that the standard from those cases applies
only to their specific procedural posture, specifically a motion
to quash (In re Grand Jury) or an informal request without a
grand jury subpoena (Martindell). This is a distinction without
a difference. Nothing in those decisions cabins the rule to
the procedural posture presented, and there is no logical
reason to think a different standard should apply when the
subpoena's recipient does not move to quash. If anything,
the presumption of confidentiality applies more forcefully
where, as is the case here, the Government's confidential
application deprives the interested party of the chance to
quash the subpoena.
Second, the Government argues that the presumption does not
apply because the Protective Order protects only documents
exchanged in pretrial litigation. It is true that the Court of
Appeals has said the presumption may not apply in some
cases because the expectation of continued confidentiality
was unreasonable. See ? SEC v. TheStreet.com 273 F.3d
222, 231 (2d Cir. 2001) ("[S]ome protective orders may
not merit a strong presumption against modification. For
instance, protective orders that are on their face temporary
or limited may not justify reliance by the parties."); see also
In re "Agent Orange" Prod. Liah. Litig., 821 F.2d 139,
147 (2d Cir. 1987) ("[A]ppellants ... could not have relied
on the permanence of the protective order. The ... order by
its very terms was applicable solely to the pretrial stages of
the litigation."). But this is not a case where the "conditions
contemplated by the Court for revisiting the Protective Order
have now occurred." ? Allen v. City of N.Y. 420 F. Supp. 2d
295, 301 (S.D.N.Y. 2006). All parties to the Protective Order
have not been given notice and an opportunity to be heard. See
Protective Order ¶ 15. And although the Order contemplates
the disclosure of Confidential Information during trial, see id.
1 14, that condition never arose. Instead, the parties settled,
thereby foreclosing the possibility of atrial. Reliance on the
continued effect of the Protective Order was and is, therefore,
entirely reasonable. See
SEC v. TheStreet.com 273 F.3d
222, 230 (2d Cir. 2001) ("In some cases, settlement would not
be possible but for the parties' reliance on a protective order....
Thus, another compelling reason to discourage modification
of protective orders in civil cases is to encourage testimony in
pre-trial discovery proceedings and to promote the settlement
of disputes.").
*3 In response to an identical application seeking to modify
a protective order in a different case between Epstein and an
alleged victim, another judge in this District has reached a
different conclusion. That judge found that Epstein's reliance
on the protective order in that case was not reasonable, and
therefore modified its terms to allow the Law Firm to respond
to the grand jury subpoena. I reach a different conclusion.
Courts look to four factors when assessing whether reliance
on a protective other was reasonable: "(I) the scope of the
protective order; (2) the language of the order itself; (3) the
level of inquiry the court undertook before granting the order,
and (4) the nature of reliance on the order"? I In re Ethylene
Propylene
255
F.R.D. 308, 318 (D. Conn. 2009). The Protective Order is
not a blanket order that might be disfavored; instead, the
definition of Confidential Information is limited and subject
to objective standards, and the parties may designate material
only in "good faith" after attorney review. Protective Order
113, 8. The Court entered the Protective Order after briefing,
oral argument, and a direction from the Court to make
modifications to their proposals. See ECF Nos. 163-177. The
Protective Order's language also specifically contemplated
that confidentiality would not be waived a parte where the
government has subpoenaed documents that were exchanged
in discovery but never used at trial. Protective Order ¶ 15
("This Protective Order may be modified ... following notice
to all parties and an opportunity for them to be heard.").
Finally, no Confidential Information was filed with the Court
after the entry of the Protective Order such that the parties
could anticipate its public disclosure. 3 On this record, the
Court finds that the parties' reliance on the Protective Order
was reasonable and the presumption of confidentiality should
apply.
Thus the Martindell/In re Grand Jury Subpoena test applies
here. Under that standard, the Government's arguments
for exceptional circumstances and compelling need are
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unpersuasive. The Government argues that it needs the
protected documents because issuing subpoenas to other
sources would alert the investigation's targets, possibly
leading them to destroy evidence or flee prosecution. But
the Government has not offered any affirmations or facts
suggesting that the evidence in the Law Firm's possession
cannot be obtained from other sources without compromising
the investigation. Instead, it relies on the general desire
for secrecy. That abstract concern, which applies to all
confidential grand jury investigations, is not "a showing
of exceptional circumstances or compelling need." In re
Grand Jury, 945 F.2d at 1224.4 Indeed, if anything, the
extraordinary posture of the case requires the Court to police
carefully government intrusions into areas of protections
agreed to by civil litigants and so-ordered by the Court.
The Government is attempting to side-step these protections
by serving a subpoena only upon a party who is willing
(and perhaps eager) to comply with the Government's
investigation.
*4 The subject matter of the Government's investigation
is obviously serious. But to pierce the Protective Order, the
Government must demonstrate not that this investigation is
an extraordinary circumstance, but that the reason for seeking
the documents is so extraordinary or compelling that there is
a need to modify the Protective Order. The Government has
not met that standard.
CONCLUSION
The motion for an order relieving the Law Firm of its
obligations under the Protective Order to comply with the
grand jury's subpoena is DENIED without prejudice. This
order does not preclude the Law Firm from producing
material in its possession responsive to the subpoena that
is not covered by the Protective Order. It also does not
preclude the Law Firm from disclosing to the Government
an inventory of material in its possession that was marked
confidential pursuant to the Protective Order in order to allow
the Government to renew its application to the Court to
establish extraordinary circumstances or a compelling need
for the materials it seeks.
Because the Government's application is filed in connection
with an on-going criminal investigation, this Order and all
other documents filed within this Miscellaneous Case will
remain UNDER SEAL until further Court Order.
SO ORDERED.
All Citations
Slip Copy, 2021 WL 1164272
Footnotes
1
The Protective Order covers "information whose public release would violate common law and
statutory privacy interests, including information reflecting medical or psychological conditions, medical or
psychological treatment, prescriptions for controlled substances, non-public personal financial information,
sexual activity or sexual contact, education records, email addresses, telephone numbers, home addresses,
social security numbers and similarly personally identifying information for parties and third-party witnesses,
any information subject to? I NY. Civil Rights Law § 50 or? 151, or any other information deemed private by
a Court of competent jurisdiction to include the tort of publication of private facts." Protective Order, 1 3.
2
Because the Government has not provided the Court with a copy of the subpoena, the scope of that subpoena
is unknown.
3
The other decision found that reliance on a protective order is not reasonable when the order contemplates
that the confidential material may become public if used at trial. But that is an argument in favor of finding
reliance on all protective orders unreasonable. The public has a strong presumption in favor of accessing
trial documents. See Under Seal v. Under Seal, 273 F. Supp. 3d 460, 468 (S.D.N.Y. 2017) ("[The First
Amendment] provides the public and the press a constitutional right of access to all trials, criminal or civil.")
(citing r Richmond Newspapers. Inc. v. Virginia, 448 U.S. 555, 580 (1980)) (alterations omitted).
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4
The Government also argues that the Confidential Information covered by the Protective Order is not the
sort of sensitive information that has been protected in the past, such as trade secrets. The fact that the
protected material here is not of a specific type that has arisen in prior cases does not suggest that this case
is extraordinary.
End of Document
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