Jackson v. Nassau County et al
Filing
351
ORDER granting 335 Motion to Compel. Plaintiff's motion to compel is GRANTED in its entirety. Defendants are directed to produce all documents listed in their revised privilege log. See attached Order for details. So Ordered by Magistrate Judge Anne Y. Shields on 3/14/2022. (Mucciaccio, Dina)
Case 2:18-cv-03007-JS-AYS Document 351 Filed 03/14/22 Page 1 of 17 PageID #: 3061
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
---------------------------------------------------------X
JOSEPH JACKSON
Plaintiff,
ORDER
CV 18-3007 (JS)(AYS)
-against-
NASSAU COUNTY, ET AL.,
Defendants.
---------------------------------------------------------X
ANNE Y. SHIELDS, United States Magistrate Judge:
Plaintiff Joseph Jackson (“Plaintiff” or “Jackson”) served more than twenty years in
prison for the 1994 murder of Steven Jason. His conviction was vacated in 2018 after the Nassau
County District Attorney’s Conviction Integrity Unit (the “CIU”) investigated Jackson’s claim of
innocence and later moved to vacate his sentence.
In May of 2018, shortly after his release from prison, Jackson commenced this lawsuit
alleging violation of his civil rights in connection with his vacated murder conviction. The
presently operative pleading is Plaintiff's third amended complaint (the “TAC”), appearing as
Docket Entry (“DE”) [339] herein. The TAC was filed after the District Court ruled on several
motions to dismiss. See Jackson v. Nassau Cty., 2021 WL 3207168, *1 (E.D.N.Y. July 28,
2021). Briefly, the TAC alleges claims of malicious prosecution, fabrication and withholding of
evidence, forcing an unconstitutional confession, failure to train and supervise, conspiracy,
suppression of evidence, and state law claims of malicious prosecution and false imprisonment.
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Named as Defendants in the various counts of the TAC are the County of Nassau and eight
Nassau County police officers who were involved in Plaintiff’s accusation and conviction of
murder.
Presently before this Court is Plaintiff's motion to compel production of documents as to
which Defendants assert work product privilege. For the reasons set forth below, all claims of
privilege are rejected, the motion is granted and Defendants are ordered to produce all
documents at issue.
BACKGROUND
I.
Procedural Background of the Motion
The present motion to compel is addressed to documents set forth in Defendants’ revised
privilege log (the “Documents”). See DE [341]. The motion was briefed before the previously
assigned Magistrate Judge, see DE [335], and the Documents have been provided to this Court
for in camera inspection. On March 8, 2022 this Court held a conference to set discovery
deadlines and to discuss the motion. During that conference defense counsel clarified the identity
of certain individuals referred to in the Documents and confirmed that a certain document was
referred to twice. In a letter submitted following the March 8, 2022 conference the County
clarified the identity of an individual referred to in one of the Documents. The Court is confident
that it now understands the Documents and the context in which each was created.
II.
Facts
The Court outlines here only the facts necessary to comprehend the discoverability of the
Documents and to provide a proper backdrop to determine the claims of privilege. As noted,
Plaintiff’s murder conviction was vacated upon request of the CIU of the office of the Nassau
County District Attorney. The CIU investigation of Plaintiff’s conviction was undertaken in
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2017, at Plaintiff’s request. Jackson, 2021 WL 3207168, *4. As the name implies, the CIU
investigates the “integrity” of past convictions. Defendants did not provide any documents
setting forth a mission statement with respect to the CIU. In the context of the present case it is
clear to the Court that the CIU is charged with determining whether a person was properly
charged and/or convicted. With the exception of one document generated in 1997, all of the
Documents were generated during the course of the CIU investigation.
Defendants claim that the Documents are protected by the attorney work product
privilege. Specifically, they claim that all were created in anticipation of litigation in that they
were created, at least in part, to determine whether to re-try Jackson on the charge of murder. All
Documents are also said to contain some type of legal analysis. The revised privilege log, which
is the subject of the present motion, groups the Documents into two categories: those Defendants
argue contain “express legal analysis” (emphasis added; provided to the Court as Exhibit A for in
camera review) and those described to “reflect legal analysis” (emphasis added; provided to the
Court as Exhibit B for in camera review). The Documents, identified by Bates Stamp numbers,
are described by the Court below.
III.
The Documents
A.
Documents Alleged to Contain ‘Express” Legal Analysis
1.
Bates Nos. 2843-2853; 2899 and 3438-3448:
“Memorandum on the Case People v. Joseph Jackson” (the “Anania Memo”)
This document is an eleven page memorandum. It was authored by Sheryl Anania, Esq.,
(“Anania”). Anania is an Assistant District Attorney within the CIU who investigated Plaintiff’s
conviction. The Court refers to this document as the “Anania Memo.” The Anania Memo also
appears as the document bearing Bates Nos. 2899 (first page only) and 3438-3448 (entire
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document). Bates No. 2843 and 2899 also contain handwritten notes (presumably notes written
by Anania). The handwritten notes are barely legible. As described below, the Anania Memo is
divided into subsections.
First, the Anania Memo contains background information about Jackson’s conviction,
including reference to his letter requesting that the CIU review his case. The first six pages of the
Anania Memo detail the facts of the Steven Jason murder case and evidence introduced at
Jackson’s trial. It is clear that this section of the Anania Memo is nothing more than a summary
of the pretrial and trial proceedings at Jackson’s trial, which Anania prepared after reading the
file and transcripts. It contains no legal analysis as to the prosecution’s case or any retrial; it
merely recounts the evidence. Thus, the Anania Memo states that the prosecution introduced the
testimonies of Skwanitra Witherspoon (“Witherspoon”) and Peddie Jackson and summarizes
their testimonies. The Anania Memo also notes that Jackson’s confession (which in this action he
alleges was coerced) was introduced at trial. The Anania Memo refers to two other witnesses to
the murder of Steven Jason. It appears that these witnesses, Glenn Montes (“Montes”) and
Maurice Larrea (“Larrea”) were not disclosed to Jackson and were not referred to at his trial.
After outlining the facts of the trial, the Anania Memo recounts the 2017 interviews of
several witnesses and summarizes their statements. During her investigation, Anania interviewed
Larrea, Montes, Witherspoon, Peddie Jackson, Roy Isaacs, Detective Gary Abbondandelo
(“Abbondanelo”), and Detective Bob Dempsey (“Dempsey”). Anania also travelled to Plaintiff’s
then place of incarceration. Along with Assistant District Attorney Caryn Stepner (“Stepner”)
she interviewed Jackson and his lawyer Scott Brettschneider. At that interview Jackson stood by
his claim of innocence, and detailed the circumstances surrounding his allegedly false
confession.
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The final section of the Anania Memo is entitled “Next Steps.” That section does not set
forth any step to be taken. Instead, it simply sets forth the texts of Rule 3.8(g) of the Rules of
Professional Responsibility applicable to prosecutors, and Section 440.10 of the New York State
Rules of Criminal Procedure, which refers to motions to vacate judgments. After setting forth
these texts, the Anania Memo states the questions to be decided, i.e., whether statements of
Larrea and Montes constitute material that should have been disclosed to the defense under
Brady v. Maryland. It goes on to state the next question, which is whether there is a reasonable
probability that disclosure of those statements would have affected the outcome of Jackson’s
trial, if such statements were known to the defense. The “next question” stated is “whether or not
to retry the defendant after his judgment has been vacated.” Importantly, the Anania Memo
reaches no legal conclusion as to these questions - it merely states the questions without
analyzing or advocating for any legal position whatever.
2.
Bates No. 3043
This document dated October 26, 2017, is an inter-office memo from Tammy Smiley,
Esq., Chief of the Appeals Bureau of the Nassau County District Attorney's Office (“Smiley”) to
Anania regarding Dempsey. This memo relates Smiley’s attempts to retrieve certain records. It
does not analyze those records. It also refers to judicial opinions in other cases involving
Dempsey and offers to contact another Deputy County Attorney. This memo contains no legal
opinion or analysis regarding Jackson’s conviction or Dempsey - it only restates Dempsey’s
position denying allegations as to his conduct.
3.
Bates Nos. 3192-3206
These documents are handwritten notes authored by Anania and Stepner. The quality of
copies provided to the Court makes it difficult to state dates with certainty. However the dates on
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Bates No. 3192 appear to reflect interviews conducted between late 2017 and early 2018. These
documents are summaries of witness and Jackson’s interviews. The witnesses referred to in these
notes are Witherspoon, Larrea, Montes and Peddie Jenkins. These notes are summaries. They
contain no legal analysis.
4.
Bates No. 3207
This document dated October 26, 2017, is an inter-office memorandum, from Smiley to
Anania. It attaches a judicial opinion. It mentions the difficulties in retrieving documents in
sealed cases. It contains no legal analysis.
5.
Bates Nos. 3436-3437
This document, dated January 22, 1997, is an inter-office memorandum from Mike
Walsh, Esq. the Nassau County Assistant District Attorney who prosecuted Jackson, to Dan
Looney, Esq. At oral argument of the motion to compel Defense Counsel was unable to identify
who Dan Looney is, but the County has since clarified that Looney is an attorney who was
involved in Plaintiff’s murder prosecution. See DE [350]. The memo references the date of
Jackson’s sentencing and mentions two individuals who had an interest in that proceeding.
Handwritten notes on this document may have been written by Walsh. They appear to refer to
possible sentences. This document contains no legal analysis of those possible sentences; they
are only stated in numbers and acronyms that are not explained.
B.
Documents Argued to “Reflect” Legal Analysis
1.
Bates No. 3157-4124
These documents are all notes of witness interviews conducted during the course of the
CIU investigation of Jackson’s murder conviction. The bottom half of Bates No. 3162 contains
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handwritten notes relating to a mortgage and related amortization assessment and shares. These
notations are either personal notes of the writer or refer to a different matter.
DISCUSSION
I.
Legal Principles
A.
Burden of Proof
Whatever the privilege asserted, the burden is on a party claiming privilege to
provide evidence sufficient to establish the essential elements of the privileged relationship. In re
Grand Jury Subpoena, 750 F.2d 223, 224-25 (2d Cir. 1984) (citing In re Bonanno, 344 F.2d 830,
833 (2d Cir. 1965); United States v. Kovel, 296 F.2d 918, 923 (2d Cir. 1961)) (internal quotation
marks omitted); see also United States v. Stern, 511 F.2d 1364, 1367 (2d Cir. 1975) (citing
Bonanno, 344 F.2d at 833) (applying standard to attorney-client privilege). Here, the burden is
on Defendants to show that the claimed privilege applies.
B.
The Work Product Privilege
Defendants seek to shield the Documents from discovery as “work product” under the
descriptions above, i.e., those that “contain” legal analyses and those that “reflect” legal
analyses.
“The attorney work product privilege protects ‘the files and the mental impressions of an
attorney ... reflected, of course, in interviews, statements, memoranda, correspondence, briefs,
mental impressions, personal beliefs, and countless other tangible and intangible ways’ prepared
in anticipation of litigation.” Tankleff v. Cty. of Suffolk, 2011 WL 5884218, at *2 (E.D.N.Y.
Nov. 22, 2011) (quoting Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. 495, 510–11, 67 S. Ct. 385, 393, 91 L. Ed.
451 (1947)). The work product doctrine creates “a ‘zone of privacy’ that allows an attorney to
prepare for litigation ‘free from unnecessary intrusion by his adversaries.’” Id.; see Gonzalez v.
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City of N.Y., No. 08–CV–2699, 2009 WL 2253118, at *3 (E.D.N.Y. July 28, 2009) (quoting
United States v. Adlman, 134 F.3d 1194, 1196 (2d Cir. 1998)).
The work product doctrine is codified by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(3), which
affords protection to party documents, but is also available to non-parties pursuant to the
common law. See Tankleff, 2011 WL 5884218, at *2 (allowing assertion of the work product
privilege by the office of the New York State Attorney General, which assumed responsibility
for possible prosecution of a case previously handled by party defendant therein Suffolk
County).
1.
Rule 26(b)(3)
Rule 26(b)(3) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides that “[o]rdinarily, a party
may not discover documents and tangible things that are prepared in anticipation of litigation or
for trial by or for another party or its representative,” save that “those material may be
discovered if: (i) they are otherwise discoverable under Rule 26(b)(1); and (ii) the party shows
that it has substantial need for the materials to prepare its case and cannot, without undue
hardship, obtain their substantial equivalent by other means.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(3)(A)
(emphasis added).
“In order to be protected as work product, the materials must be (1) documents or
tangible things, (2) that were prepared in anticipation of litigation, and (3) were prepared by or
for a party, or by or for his representative. Documents prepared in anticipation of litigation are
those that, ‘in light of the nature of the document and the factual situation in the particular case ...
can fairly be said to have been prepared or obtained because of the prospect of litigation.’”
Sovereign Cape Cod Investors LLC v. Eugene A. Bartow Ins. Agency, Inc., 2022 WL 624553,
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*1 (E.D.N.Y. Mar. 3, 2022) (quoting United States v. Adlman, 134 F.3d at 1202 (emphasis in
original).
2.
Common Law Work Product Privilege
Like Rule 26(b)(3), the common law work product protection applies to documents
prepared in anticipation of litigation. The doctrine is appropriate to apply where disclosure of
documents would “(1) alter attorney behavior, (2) reward sloth, or (3) interfere with ongoing
litigation.” Tankleff, 2011 WL 5884218, at *2. The third factor to consider in the common law
work product analysis (interference with ongoing litigation), has been interpreted to include
instances where there is a possibility of future litigation. In particular, work product has been
applied to shield documents from disclosure in a case where documents were prepared in
anticipation of the possible future prosecution of an exonerated defendant. See Tankleff, 2011
WL 5884218, at *3.
The common law work product privilege is also qualified. Thus, it may be overcome. If
documents are deemed to contain “core” work product, i.e., those documents “that contain the
mental impressions, opinions, or legal theories of counsel”, the privilege is overcome only by a
showing of a “strong” presumption of what has been described as a privilege that is “near
absolute.” Tankleff, 2011 WL 5884218, at *5. Where documents reflect so-called “core” work
product, protection from disclosure is necessary to avoid the “chilling effect on when and how”
prosecuting attorneys “commit their thoughts to paper.” Tankleff, 2011 WL 5884218, at *2. On
the other hand, where privileged documents contain facts that cannot be obtained elsewhere, the
party seeking disclosure may overcome the presumption by the showing of “substantial need” for
the documents. Tankleff, 2011 WL 5884218, at *5.
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II.
Status of the Documents as Party or Non-Party Documents
Here, Defendants seek protection of the Documents - which are either CIU documents or
those of the office of the District Attorney - as “party” documents that are entitled to protection
pursuant to Rule 26(b)(3) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Defendants take this position
even though neither the Office of the Nassau County District Attorney nor any individual
Assistant District Attorney is a defendant herein. Defendants make this “party” argument on the
ground that the Nassau County Charter provides for the County Attorney to represent all
“departments, institutions, officers, agencies or offices" of the County. Since the District
Attorney’s Office (and presumably the CIU thereof) falls within the category of entities “to be
represented” by the County Attorney, Defendants argue that the office of the District Attorney is
a party, and that therefore its documents (and those of the CIU) are those of a party herein.
Defendants make this argument even while asserting during the March 8, 2022 conference that
counsel to the County does not represent Assistant District Attorney Anania in connection with
her likely upcoming deposition. Defendants also make an alternative argument seeking to attach
work product protection to the Documents as those of a non-party under the common law work
product privilege. See DE [340].
Before turning to discussing the Documents and the merits of the claims of privilege the
Court makes clear its rejection of the notion that because the County Attorney is empowered to
represent all branches of the County of Nassau it necessarily follows that the District Attorney’s
documents are always “party” documents within the meaning of Rule 26(b)(3). This is in accord
with prior similar cases. See Gonzalez, 2009 WL 2253118, at *2 (rejecting application of Rule
26(b)(3) where the New York City Corporation Counsel did not represent the District Attorney
in the matter before the court); accord Kogut v. Cty. of Nassau, 2011 WL 13284713, *2
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(E.D.N.Y. Nov. 9, 2011). cf. Tankleff, 2011 WL 5884218, *2 (“there is no dispute that the
[Attorney General] as a non- party, may not invoke Rule 26”).
Accordingly, the only work product claim available to Defendants is pursuant to the
common law. However, because the Documents are, as discussed below, not covered by any
work product doctrine, it matters not whether Rule 26 or the common law applies - neither
doctrine affords protection to any of the Documents.
III.
Disposition of the Motion
A.
Scope of Discovery; Facts Are Not Protected Under the Work Product Doctrine
No party argues that the Documents are outside of the scope of discovery in this matter.
The Court agrees. Further, no party argues that documents containing only facts are outside of
any iteration of the work product doctrine. Indeed, Defendants have already once revised their
privilege log to reflect reversal of their earlier position as to certain documents -- they now
concede that such documents contain no legal analysis. While these documents have not been
provided to the Court as part of its in camera review, the descriptions thereof make clear that
they contain only factual information or publicly available records. See, e.g., DE [340]
(abandoning claims of privilege because documents “contain no legal analysis”, including
documents described as, inter alia, “emails re: factual investigation and email exchange” “re Bob
Dempsey and Gary Abbondandelo” and “Criminal History info re Roy Isaacs, printed November
14, 2017”).
The abandonment of claims of privilege as to certain documents was correct. As
recognized by Defendants, documents containing only facts are unquestionably not privileged.
See Moroughan v. Cty. of Suffolk, 2018 WL 11268801, at *6 (E.D.N.Y. Feb. 6, 2018). Indeed,
the law is clear that documents devoid of legal analysis, including notes of factual interviews
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which are summaries and not verbatim transcripts, fall outside of any work product doctrine. Id.
at *7. This is true even if such interview notes are written by an attorney. Id. (noting that witness
statements are treated as “factual rather than opinion work product, even where those statements
have been summarized by counsel”).
B.
Rulings As to Bates Nos. 3157-4124
Application of the foregoing legal principles disposes of the present motion with respect
to all of the Documents argued to “reflect” legal analysis, i.e., those bearing Bates Nos. 31574124 (Exhibit B to Documents provided in camera; DE [340]). These documents fall squarely
within the category of non-privileged material. They are nothing more than notes of factual
interviews. As such, they are not entitled to any work product protection.
Defendants’ reliance on S. E. C. v. Nadel, 2012 WL 1268297 (E.D.N.Y. Apr. 16, 2012)
to distinguish these documents from the general principal that interview notes are not privileged
is misplaced. In Nadel, the court held that SEC interview notes were protected by the work
product privilege because they were created during the course of an investigation by the SEC, at
a time when the agency was contemplating an enforcement action. In that case there was no
question but that the interview notes were prepared in anticipation of litigation. As held below,
that is not the case here. Further distinguishable from this case, the court in Nadel held that the
interview notes revealed the mental impressions of lawyers. This was because the attorneys
preparing the notes exercised judgment regarding which witnesses to interview, “what subject
areas to cover (and what not to cover), how to frame specific questions and in what order, and
how much time to devote to particular topics.” Nadel, 2012 WL 1268297 at *7-8. The
considerations underpinning the Nadel holding are completely absent in this case. Here, the
identity of witnesses to be interviewed in connection with determining whether Jackson was
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wrongfully convicted was no secret to Jackson or anyone else. The subject matter of inquiry - the
Steven Jason murder - is likewise no mystery known only to lawyers. The questions asked to
each witness can be described as simply as “tell me what you remember.” Such a question was
likely preceded or followed by Anania’s explanation of the mission of her interview, which
appears on one of the Documents, i.e., she was investigating Jackson’s claim of innocence. See
Bates No. 4108. In sum, Nadel is completely inapposite, and for the foregoing reasons none of
the witness interview notes appearing as Bates Nos. 3157-4124 are protected by the work
product privilege.
As to the remaining Documents (those provided as Exhibit A for in camera review) the
Court’s review reveals, as discussed below, that they also fall outside of the zone of protection
claimed. Some are unprotected for the same reason that Bates Nos. 3157-4124 are unprotected.
All are unprotected because they were not prepared in anticipation of any litigation (neither this
civil case or a retrial of Jackson). Moreover, none contain any legal analysis.
C.
The Documents Were Not Prepared in Anticipation of Litigation
None of the documents at issue were prepared in anticipation of litigation which, as
noted, is essential to any claim of work product protection. In their effort to satisfy this element
of the privilege asserted. Defendants rely almost exclusively on the decision in Tankleff. This
reliance is the focus of Defendants’ claim of privilege with respect to the Anania Memo and, by
extension, to all documents created in connection with the CIU investigation. To fit within the
decision in Tankleff, Defendants argue that one of the aims of the CIU investigation was to
determine whether to re-try Jackson for murder. But there is no evidence of this supposed goal of
the CIU - with respect to Jackson or any defendant whose conviction is under review. Indeed, as
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earlier noted, when introducing herself to witnesses Anania stated that the purpose of her
interviews was to investigate Jackson’s claim of innocence. See Bates No. 4108.
A review of Tankleff and the nature of the investigation of the Tankleff murders readily
limits and distinguishes that case. In Tankleff, the documents at issue were created pursuant to a
particular investigation created under an executive order of the Governor of the State of New
York. That order appointed the Office of the Attorney General to a specific prosecutorial
function, directing that it “'investigate the alleged commission of any indictable offense or
offenses'” in relation to the Tankleff murders and ‘prosecute the person or persons believed to
have committed’ the crimes." Tankleff, 2011 WL 5884218, at *3. Here, unlike Tankleff, there is
no evidence that the CIU was charged with determining whether to re-try Plaintiff or anyone else
in connection with the murder of Steven Jason. Nor is there any document appointing the CIU to
such a purpose. Instead, it was the purpose of the CIU in Jackson’s case, and presumably in any
case it investigates, to determine whether there was a wrongful conviction - not to cynically
prepare for the fallout of seeking justice.
In weak support of its argument relying on Tankleff, Defendants state with confidence
that the “Next Steps” section of the Anania Memo states that ADA Anania “was charged with”
investigating “whether or not to retry the defendant.” (emphasis in DE [340], but not in original
Anania Memo appearing as Bates No. 2853). But the Anania Memo states no such mission.
Indeed, apart from relying on one-half of a sentence on the last page of the Anania Memo,
Defendants have submitted no document in support of their claim of Anania’s prosecutorial
intent.
For the foregoing reasons the Court holds that neither the Anania Memo, nor any of the
documents created in connection therewith (which, with the exception of the 1997 document,
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constitute the remainder of the Exhibit A documents) were prepared in anticipation of litigation.
This finding is fatal to any claim of work product privilege. Cf. Galloway v. Cty. of Nassau, 19CV-5026, Electronic Order dated 9/22/21 (rejecting work product privilege with respect to
Anania’s work in the CIU in a different case and holding “[s]aid differently, the opinion sought
by Plaintiff’s counsel was not prepared by [ADA Anania] with an eye toward [this] litigation.
Hickman, 329 U.S. at 511). As stated in Galloway, “ADA Anania’s peripheral involvement in
this case stems only from her work to exonerate Plaintiff, work that was not completed at the
behest of Defendants in anticipation of this litigation. Defense counsel’s reliance on the work
product privilege was therefore improper.” 19-CV-5026, Electronic Order dated 9/22/21.
As a final word on this matter, the Court notes that it is aware that Defendants argue that
the Documents were prepared in anticipation of future criminal prosecution of Jackson, and not
in anticipation of this civil litigation. The Court holds, however, that the Documents were not
prepared in anticipation of any litigation; but only to investigate a claim of innocence.
D.
The Documents Contain No Legal Analysis
Even if the Court were to accept the notion that the Anania Memo was created in
anticipation of litigation, neither that document nor any of the other Documents contain any legal
analyses whatever. This is another reason to reject Defendants’ claims of privilege.
The Documents contain neither legal analyses nor the mental impressions of lawyers. The
most detailed document, the Anania Memo, is nothing more than a summary of Anania’s
investigation into Jackson’s claim of innocence. Thus, for example, when the Anania Memo
discusses Jackson’s pretrial and trial proceedings it simply details what happened during those
proceedings. The Anania Memo then turns to summarizing the notes of her factual interviews of
witnesses and Jackson. These notes fall squarely outside of the scope of material protected by
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any privilege. Even if deciding whether to re-try Jackson was one of Anania’s instructions
(which the Court above has already rejected), the Anania Memo reflects no legal analysis
whatever as to what course to take.
Defendants again rely on the “Next Steps” section of the Anania Memo in support of
their work product claims. Thus, in addition to supporting their prosecutorial function argument
Defendants rely on this section to show legal analysis. The passing reference to the procedural
basis for vacating a conviction and retrial fails because the “Next Steps” section does nothing
more than set forth the text of a Rule of Professional Responsibility, and a provision of the New
York State Criminal Procedure Law.
To be clear, the Anania Memo never enters into a legal analysis as to whether any rule or
law was violated in Jackson’s case. The single half sentence relied upon by Defendants states no
decision, analysis or recommendation as to whether to seek an order vacating Jackson’s
conviction or re-try him for murder. While the facts here make it obvious that such a decision
was made, there is nothing in the Anania Memo that recommends taking that, or any action,
much less any legal analysis in support thereof.
The remainder of the documents argued to “contain express legal analysis” similarly
contain no such analysis. Bates No. 3043 is an interoffice memorandum that refers to prior
judicial opinions without comment. The mere fact that such communications were occurring
between lawyers does not reveal legal strategy. Bates Nos. 3192-3206 are notes of witness
interviews. Like earlier referred to documents, they contain nothing more than facts not entitled
to protection. Bates No. 3207 is an inter-office memorandum transferring a judicial opinion from
the sender to the recipient. Bates No. 3046 is an interoffice memorandum and handwritten notes
referring to Jackson‘s sentencing. As to that document, in addition to being devoid of legal
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analysis, as stated above, it strains credulity to characterize a 1997 memorandum as being
prepared in anticipation of 2018 post-exoneration litigation or a retrial of a recently convicted
defendant. Finally, Bates No. 3438-3448 are duplicates of the Anania Memo.
E.
Plaintiff’s Need for the Documents
While the holdings above make it unnecessary to determine whether any work product
privilege is overcome by a showing of need, the Court nonetheless finds that Plaintiff’s need for
the documents is sufficient to require their production. This is true whether the Documents were
protected by Rule 26(b)(3) or the common law. As all agree, the documents sought to be
produced are certainly within the scope of discovery. Information gleaned during the course of
the CIU will be important to any determination regarding the legality of the conduct alleged in
the TAC. The Court is well aware that the information regarding witness statements is factual in
nature, and that many witnesses interviewed by the CIU have, or will soon be deposed. Still,
memories fade over time, and Plaintiff will certainly need to compare earlier testimony of
witnesses to properly prepare for their trial testimony. Thus, Defendants’ arguments are no
answer to the issue of need under any standard.
CONCLUSION
Plaintiff‘s motion to compel appearing as Docket Entry [335] herein, is granted in its
entirety. Defendants are directed to produce all documents listed in their revised privilege log.
Dated: Central Islip, New York
March 14, 2022
/s/ Anne Y. Shields
ANNE Y. SHIELDS
United States Magistrate Judge
17
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