Rigas et al v. USA
Filing
114
OPINION & ORDER re: 102 MOTION to Compel Patrick M. McLaughlin to Produce Documents in Response to Subpoena filed by Timothy J. Rigas, John J. Rigas. For the foregoing reasons, the Court GRANTS Petitioners' motion to compel production of the McLaughlin notes. The Court will produce copies of the documents to Petitioners by first-class mail. (As further set forth in this Opinion & Order.) (Signed by Judge Kimba M. Wood on 8/24/2016) (mro)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
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JOHN J. RIGAS and TIMOTHY J. RIGAS,
Petitioners,
11-CV-6964 (KMW)
OPINION & ORDER
-againstUNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Respondent.
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KIMBA M. WOOD, District Judge:
In connection with their ongoing habeas petition, Petitioners John and Timothy Rigas
seek to compel non-party Patrick M. McLaughlin to produce documents containing his notes
taken during a series of meetings that took place in 2004 between federal prosecutors and Carl
Rothenberger. (Mot. to Compel [Doc. No. 103]). After reviewing those documents in camera,
the Court GRANTS Petitioners’ motion to compel.
I.
RELEVANT BACKGROUND
Petitioners were tried in 2004 on charges of securities fraud, bank fraud, and conspiracy
related to their conduct as executives of Adelphia Communications Corporation (“Adelphia”).
See (Aug 25, 2015 Order, 1 [Doc. No. 87]). On February 20, 2004—shortly before the trial
commenced—the prosecution interviewed Carl Rothenberger, a Buchanan Ingersoll lawyer who
had served as Adelphia’s outside counsel. Id. Petitioners now claim that during the February 20,
2004 meeting, Rothenberger provided information to the prosecution that was materially
exculpatory, and that the prosecution failed to disclose this information in violation of its
obligations under Brady v. Maryland, 373 U.S. 83 (1963). (Mot. to Compel, 4). McLaughlin
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attended the meeting as Rothenberger’s personal attorney. (Opp’n to Pet’rs’ Mot. to Compel
(“Opp’n”), 6 [Doc. No. 106]).
On June 20, 2014, this Court granted Petitioners’ motion for discovery of notes of the
Government’s meeting with Rothenberger. (June 20, 2014 Order, [Doc. No. 39]); (Aug. 20, 2014
Order [Doc. No. 47]). Petitioners subsequently identified two sets of documents that they
believed were responsive to this order: (1) three memoranda in the possession of Buchanan
Ingersoll that were created in the days immediately following the interview and that contained
factual summaries of the interview (the “Buchanan Ingersoll documents”),1 and (2)
contemporaneous notes taken during the interview itself by McLaughlin (the “McLaughlin
notes”). Buchanan Ingersoll and McLaughlin refused to produce the requested documents, and
Petitioners filed separate motions to compel the production of each set of documents.2 See (Mot.
to Compel Buchanan Ingersoll, [Doc. No. 62]); (Apr. 15, 2015 Mot. to Compel Rothenberger
and McLaughlin, [Doc. No. 78]).
In August 2015, this Court granted Petitioners’ motion to compel the Buchanan Ingersoll
documents. After reviewing the documents in camera, the Court rejected Buchanan Ingersoll’s
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The documents identified by Buchanan Ingersoll are (1) a February 22, 2004 typewritten summary of the
Rothenberger interview, prepared by Jerry Richey, then Buchanan Ingersoll’s in-house counsel, based on his
conversation with Jerry Johnson, who attended the interview as Buchanan Ingersoll’s criminal counsel; (2) a
February 23, 2004 memorandum from Johnson to Richey, Sue Friedberg (another Buchanan Ingersoll attorney), and
Patrick McLaughlin summarizing and commenting on the interview; and (3) a February 26, 2004 response to
Johnson’s memorandum by McLaughlin, containing edits and a supplemental factual summary of the interview.
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After receiving the subpoena, Buchanan Ingersoll argued that it was not bound to produce documents in
McLaughlin’s possession because he attended the meeting in his capacity as a representative of Rothenberger
individually. Rather than litigate the scope of the original subpoena, Petitioners requested that the Court instead
issue a new subpoena, this time to McLaughlin, directing him to produce “All minutes, notes, memoranda, or other
writings in [his] possession that were taken at, or relate to, any meetings between the Government and Carl
Rothenberger during the period from March 27, 2002 to October 31, 2013.” (Pet’rs’ Mar. 16, 2015 Ltr., 2 [Doc. No.
75]). The Court did so, and McLaughlin refused to produce documents in response to the new subpoena. See (Mot.
to Compel, 2-3). Petitioners then brought a motion to compel in this Court, (Apr. 15, 2015 Mot. to Compel, [Doc.
No. 78]), but after learning that McLaughlin did not consent to litigate the motion here, rather than in the
compliance district (the Northern District of Ohio), Petitioners’ withdrew their motion. (Pet’rs’ June 12, 2015 Ltr.,
[Doc. No. 85]); (June 12, 2015 Order, [Doc. No. 86]).
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arguments that the factual summaries contained in the Buchanan Ingersoll documents were
shielded from discovery by attorney-client privilege and the work product doctrine, and ordered
that the documents be produced to Petitioners, subject to certain redactions. (Aug. 25, 2015
Order, 3). In particular, the Court held that the Buchanan Ingersoll documents did not qualify for
work product protection because, as a non-party, Buchanan Ingersoll was not entitled to claim
the protections afforded by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(3), and extending protection to
the factual summaries in the Buchanan Ingersoll documents via a Rule 26(c) protective order
would serve none of the purposes of the work product doctrine, as articulated in Hickman v.
Taylor, 329 U.S. 495 (1947). Id. at 5-6. The Court also held that, even if the factual summaries
did qualify for work product protection, Petitioners had made the necessary showing of
“substantial need” to overcome that protection. Id. at 6.
Meanwhile, Petitioners moved separately to compel the production of the McLaughlin
notes in the Northern District of Ohio, because McLaughlin lives and works more than 100 miles
from this District. (Mot. to Compel, 6-7). At the same time, Petitioners also moved to transfer the
motion to compel to this Court, pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 45(f). Id.
McLaughlin opposed the motion to compel on the ground that his notes were protected by the
work product doctrine. On February 9, 2016, the Northern District of Ohio ordered that the
motion to compel be transferred to this Court. (Mot. to Compel, Ex. A [Doc. No 103-1]). The
parties submitted updated briefing on the motion, and the Court ordered McLaughlin to produce
any responsive documents for in camera review. See (Apr. 4, 2016 Order [Doc. No. 110]).3
McLaughlin submitted two sets of notes to the Court for in camera review: those from Rothenberger’s
February 20, 2004 meeting, and those from a later meeting between Rothenberger and federal prosecutors that took
place on October 25, 2004.
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II.
DISCUSSION
McLaughlin’s arguments against disclosure are unpersuasive. The Court thus grants
Petitioners’ motion to compel the McLaughlin notes.
First, because McLaughlin is a non-party, he is not entitled to claim the protection against
disclosure articulated in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(3). See Crosby v. City of New
York, 269 F.R.D. 267, 276-77 (S.D.N.Y. 2010) (Scheindlin, J.). Rather, he may benefit from
work product protection only if the Court, in its discretion, chooses to apply the broader work
product doctrine first articulated in Hickman through a Rule 26(c) protection order. See id. In
exercising this discretion, courts are guided by the underlying purposes of the work product
doctrine, as described in Hickman, including: (1) “protecting an attorney’s ability to formulate
legal theories and prepare cases”; (2) “preventing opponents from ‘free-loading’ off their
adversaries’ work”; and (3) “preventing interference with ongoing litigation.” Id. at 277 (citing
Hickman, 329 U.S. at 510-11, 516).
None of these considerations is implicated here, for substantially the same reasons
discussed in this Court’s previous decision. (Aug. 25, 2015 Order, 5). As with the Buchanan
Ingersoll documents, disclosure of the McLaughlin notes will not facilitate free-loading by
Petitioners, who were not able to attend the meeting and take notes for themselves, nor is there
any indication that disclosure will interfere with ongoing litigation. And disclosure will not
impair any attorney’s ability to formulate legal theories or prepare cases, because the Court finds
that the notes do not reveal, in any meaningful way, the mental processes or legal theories of
McLaughlin.
McLaughlin disagrees, contending that his notes constitute opinion work product and
therefore are entitled to “virtually absolute protection.” (Opp’n, 16 (quoting Favors v. Cuomo,
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285 F.R.D. 187, 200 (E.D.N.Y. 2012))). McLaughlin asserts that because his notes “are not a
verbatim, or near verbatim, transcript of the Rothenberger interview,” they inevitably reveal his
mental impressions, conclusions, and opinions by virtue of the specific statements that he chose
to record. Id. However, “not every item which may reveal some inkling of a lawyer’s mental
impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal theories is protected as opinion work product.”
United States v. Weisman, No. S1 94-CR-760, 1995 WL 244522, at *5 (S.D.N.Y. Apr. 26, 1995)
(Haight, J.) (quoting In re San Juan DuPont Plaza Hotel Fire Litig., 859 F.2d 1007, 1015 (1st
Cir. 1988)); see also F.T.C. v. Boehringer Ingelheim Pharm., Inc., 778 F.3d 142, 152 (D.C. Cir.
2015) (“[T]he mere fact that an attorney ha[s] chosen to write a fact down [is] not sufficient to
convert that fact into opinion work product.”). The heightened protection afforded opinion work
product “is not triggered unless disclosure creates a real, nonspeculative danger of revealing the
lawyer’s thoughts.” Weisman, 1995 WL 244522, at *5.
The Court finds no such danger here. An attorney’s contemporaneous notes of a witness’s
statements do not rise to the level of opinion work product, even if those notes do not record
every word spoken or every point discussed during the interview.4 See In re John Doe Corp., 675
F.2d 482, 493 (2d Cir. 1982) (holding that attorney’s notes from an interview did not reflect the
attorney’s mental processes and therefore were subject to disclosure, even though the notes did
4
McLaughlin cites a number of decisions from other jurisdictions holding that notes of a witness interview
can be protected as opinion work product. See (Opp’n, 17-18). But, as those decisions acknowledge, Second Circuit
law is different, and therefore these decisions are unhelpful to this Court’s analysis. See Dir. of Office of Thrift
Supervision v. Vinson & Elkins, L.L.P., 168 F.R.D. 445, 446-47 (D.D.C. 1996) (noting that Second Circuit law is
contrary to D.C. Circuit law on this point, and that decisions from both the Second Circuit and the Southern District
of New York expressly acknowledge the inconsistency). Moreover, subsequent decisions of the D.C. Circuit have
made clear that an attorney’s notes of a witness’s statements do not automatically qualify as opinion work product,
but rather are entitled to heightened protection only if “there is some indication that the lawyer sharply focused or
weeded the materials.” F.T.C. v. Boehringer Ingelheim Pharmaceuticals, Inc., 778 F.3d 142, 152 (D.C. Cir. 2015)
(quoting In re Sealed Case, 124 F.3d 230, 236-37 (D.C. Cir. 1997) (finding that attorney’s notes summarizing
witness’s statements “could be classified as opinion only on a virtually omnivorous view of the term”)).
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not record the witness’s statements “word-for-word”); Abdell v. City of New York, No. 05-CV8453, 2006 WL 2664313, at *6-7 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 14, 2006) (Francis, Mag. J.) (“[L]ower courts
have consistently treated witness statements as factual rather than opinion work product, even
when those statements have been summarized by counsel.”) (collecting cases). This Court
already rejected Buchanan Ingersoll’s argument that factual summaries made in the days
following the interview should be protected from disclosure because they revealed the attorneys’
mental processes. See (Aug. 25, 2015 Order, 5). McLaughlin’s notes thus constitute—at most—
fact work product.
“Disclosure of [fact] work product may be ordered if the party seeking it can demonstrate
substantial need for the information and an inability to obtain the information, or a substantial
equivalent of it, by other means without undue hardship.” Crosby, 269 F.R.D. at 277. In its
previous decision, this Court concluded that “[i]n light of the ongoing dispute in this action over
what Rothenberger actually said during the interview . . . Petitioners have a substantial need for
those additional records [i.e., the Buchanan Ingersoll documents], which they cannot obtain by
any other means.” (Aug. 25, 2015 Order, 6). McLaughlin argues that because Petitioners are now
in possession of the Buchanan Ingersoll documents, they no longer have a substantial need for
his contemporaneous notes of the meeting because they have already obtained the substantial
equivalent. (Opp’n, 18-21). But different sets of notes can be expected to record different
statements or points from a conversation, particularly one as lengthy as the interview at issue
here.
As a contemporaneous record of the conversation at the heart of Petitioners’ Brady claim,
the McLaughlin notes represent the best possible source for Petitioners to discover what was
actually said during the Rothenberger interview. Thus, the Court finds that, even if the notes did
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qualify for work product protection, Petitioners have shown their substantial need for the
McLaughlin notes, and cannot obtain them by any other means.
III.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the Court GRANTS Petitioners’ motion to compel production
of the McLaughlin notes. The Court will produce copies of the documents to Petitioners by firstclass mail.
SO ORDERED.
Dated: New York, New York
August 24, 2016
/s/
Kimba M. Wood
United States District Judge
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