SDNY Maxwell GJ (Civil Cases)
SDNY Maxwell GJ (Civil Cases)
SDNY Maxwell GJ (Civil Cases)
VIA ECF
The Government respectfully submits this letter in opposition to the defendant’s letter of
August 17, 2020 (the “Defense Letter”), requesting that the Court enter an order permitting the
defendant to file under seal in certain civil cases (the “Civil Cases”) discovery materials produced
by the Government in the instant criminal case, and to refer to, but not file, additional other
discovery materials produced by the Government in the Civil Cases. Those applications should
be denied.1
As an initial matter, the Government has already produced, and will continue to produce,
substantial volumes of materials in discovery consistent with its obligations. Those include
materials the Government obtained via search warrant, grand jury subpoenas, or other investigative
methods available only to the Government. Indeed, the Government has already produced more
than 165,000 pages of discovery to the defense, including the materials relevant to the Defense
Letter. Through her most recent application, the defendant seeks permission to use, in unrelated
civil litigation, materials produced pursuant to the protective order in this case and designated
“Confidential” thereunder. As detailed herein, the Government’s designation is entirely
appropriate given that the materials—court orders and applications—have been kept under seal by
the issuing judges, and pertain to an ongoing criminal investigation.
1
The Government has drafted this letter in a manner that avoids revealing the contents of sealed
materials and grand jury information. Accordingly, the Government does not seek permission to
seal or redact this submission. Because the Defense Letter repeatedly references, and attaches as
exhibits, materials that are sealed and that would jeopardize an ongoing grand jury investigation if
filed publicly, the Government intends to submit a separate letter, under seal, proposing redactions
to the Defense Letter and requesting that the attachments to the Defense Letter be filed under seal.
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In particular, the Defense Letter seeks this Court’s authorization to use materials relating
to applications the Government made seeking the modification of certain protective orders in other
judicial proceedings. By way of background, the Government sought such modifications to permit
compliance with criminal grand jury subpoenas (the “Subpoenas”). Those Subpoenas were issued
to a certain recipient (the “Recipient”) after the Government opened a grand jury investigation into
Jeffrey Epstein and his possible co-conspirators. For obvious reasons and in keeping with its
standard practice, the Government did not notify the defendant or her counsel that it had issued
the Subpoenas. In response to receiving the Subpoenas, the Recipient advised the Government
that it believed that certain existing protective orders precluded full compliance. Accordingly, in
or about February 2019, the Government applied ex parte and under seal to each relevant court to
request modification of the respective protective orders to permit compliance with the Subpoenas.
In or about April 2019, one court (“Court-1”) granted the Government’s application, and permitted
that the Government share its order—and only that order, which itself prohibited further
dissemination—to the Recipient. 2 Subsequently, the second court (“Court-2”) denied the
Government’s application. Because the relevant grand jury investigation remains ongoing, both
Court-1 and Court-2 have ordered that the filings regarding the Subpoenas remain under seal,
except that both have expressly permitted the Government to produce those filings to the defendant
as part of its discovery obligations in this criminal case. The Defense Letter now seeks to use
those discovery materials in the Civil Cases.
At base, the defendant’s application fundamentally misapprehends the nature and process
of criminal proceedings, and it further reflects an inappropriate effort to blur the lines between the
criminal discovery process and civil litigation. To be clear: the purpose of criminal discovery is
to enable the defendant to defend herself in the criminal action, not to provide her with a trove of
materials she can mine to her advantage in civil discovery. Her motion is nothing more than an
effort to evade the directives of the protective order entered by this Court just three weeks ago. It
should be denied for multiple reasons.
First, and as the defendant concedes, the protective order in this case expressly provides
that any and all discovery material produced to the defendant by the Government, regardless of
designation, “[s]hall be used by the Defendant or her Defense Counsel solely for purposes of the
defense of this criminal action, and not for any civil proceeding or any purpose other than the
defense of this action.” Protective Order ¶¶ 1(a), 10(a), 14(a) (emphasis added) (Dkt. 36). Indeed,
the defendant included that same provision, word-for-word, in her own proposed protective order.
This was not a provision about which the defendant and the Government disagreed. See
Defendant’s Proposed Protective Order ¶ 1(a) (Dkt. 29-1). Yet less than a month later, the
defendant is asking the Court to sanction her effort to utilize materials produced by the
2
In the Defense Letter, the defendant argues that the Government “must have given a copy of the
sealed order” to the Recipient, which defense counsel suggests is inconsistent with the
Government’s statement that it rarely provides discovery material to third parties. The defendant’s
suggestion is patently incorrect. The relevant order was signed in April 2019 and was issued for
the purpose of being provided to the Recipient. Indeed the order contained an explicit provision
that it could be transmitted to the Recipient. Accordingly, the order was conveyed to the Recipient
well over a year before it became “discovery” in this criminal case.
Case 1:20-cr-00330-AJN Document 46 Filed 08/21/20 Page 3 of 5
Government in discovery in this criminal case, and to which the protective order unquestionably
applies, to litigate her Civil Cases. There is no basis to modify the Protective Order here.
Second, there is good reason why both parties proposed, and the Court ordered, a protective
order that prevents the defendant from using materials obtained through the process of criminal
discovery in any of the many civil cases in which she is, or could become, a party. To allow the
defendant to do so would permit the dissemination of a vast swath of materials, including those
that are confidential due to witness privacy interests, personal identifying information of third
parties, and relevance in ongoing grand jury investigations. Here, the Government was particularly
concerned about the defendant’s interests in blurring these lines because, among other reasons, her
counsel in the criminal case are also her counsel in the Civil Cases. It would be grossly
inappropriate for defense counsel to be permitted to sift through the criminal case discovery and
cherry-pick materials they may believe could provide some advantage in their efforts to defend
against accusations of abuse by victim plaintiffs, delay court-ordered disclosure of previously-
sealed materials, or any other legal effort the defendant may be undertaking at any particular time.
And yet that is what the defendant proposes.
Third, the specific documents at issue pertain to ex parte applications made as part of an
ongoing grand jury investigation. Those documents were filed under seal and presently remain
under seal because the relevant judicial officers have ordered that all filings regarding those
matters, including the discovery materials referenced in the Defense Letter, remain sealed.3 As
the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York has stated publicly, the
investigation into the conduct of the defendant in this case and other possible co-conspirators of
Jeffrey Epstein remains active. The full scope and details of that investigation, however, have not
been made public.4 Accordingly, the materials the defendant seeks to file in the Civil Cases were
produced under a “Confidential” designation. Any argument that such materials are not
“confidential” would not only run contrary to the sealing orders entered by other courts, but also
misapprehends the importance of maintaining the confidentiality of criminal investigations.5 See,
3
The only exceptions to those sealing orders are (1) as noted above, the permission from Court-1
to provide the April 2019 order alone to the Recipient, and, (2) pursuant to separate permissions
the Government has obtained in connection with its discovery obligations, that the entirety of the
record relating to the Subpoenas may be provided to the defendant as discovery in this case. The
defendant’s claim that the relevant materials were produced to the defendant in discovery without
any application to the sealing courts, Def. Ltr. at 7, is incorrect.
4
To the extent it would be useful to this Court for the Government to further elaborate on the
nature of the ongoing grand jury investigation, the Government is prepared to file a supplemental
letter specifically on that subject ex parte and under seal should the Court request such an
explanation.
5
Moreover, if counsel for the defendant in her Civil Cases believe that certain documents are
improperly sealed, there is no impediment to counsel making sealed applications to Court-1 and
Court-2, respectively, to unseal the relevant materials. Presumably they have not done so because
Case 1:20-cr-00330-AJN Document 46 Filed 08/21/20 Page 4 of 5
e.g., United States v. Smith, 985 F. Supp. 2d 506, 531 (S.D.N.Y. 2013) (“As a general proposition,
courts have repeatedly recognized that materials, including even judicial documents which are
presumptively accessible, can be kept from the public if their dissemination might ‘adversely affect
law enforcement interests.’”) (citing United States v. Amodeo, 71 F.3d 1044, 1050)); see also
United States v. Park, 619 F. Supp. 2d 89, 94 (S.D.N.Y. 2009) (holding that the need to “maintain
the secrecy of the Government’s investigation” outweighed the public’s right of access to certain
sentencing documents).
Fourth, defense counsel cites not a single case to support the argument that a criminal
defendant should be permitted to use criminal discovery materials in her civil cases. Nor is the
Government aware of any. Though precedent on this issue appears to be somewhat sparse—
perhaps because few defendants attempt such a maneuver—see United States v. Calderon, 15 Cr.
025, 2017 WL 6453344, at *3 (D. Conn. Dec. 1, 2017) (discussing the relative lack of specific
guidance in the context of an application to modify protective orders in criminal cases), see also
United States v. Morales, 807 F.3d 717, 721 (5th Cir. 2015) (“[m]otions to modify protective
orders in criminal cases appear to be infrequent”), decisions that do exist have rejected the kind of
blurring of the line between criminal and civil proceedings that the defendant attempts here. See
Calderon, 2017 WL 6453344, at 5-6 (denying a defendant’s application for modification of a
criminal protective order so he could use certain discovery materials in a FOIA suit); United States
v. DeNunzio, --- F. Supp. 3d ---, 2020 WL 1495880, at *2-3 (D. Mass. March 27, 2020) (denying
a defendant’s motion to modify two protective orders in his criminal case for the purpose of
pursuing claims in a civil action, even following the completion of trial).
Absent any authority upon which to rely, the defendant, in urging a contrary conclusion,
makes various assertions and accusations, none of which warrant a different outcome. In
particular, there is no merit or particular relevance to the defendant’s argument that the
Government secretly obtained a volume of materials relevant to its criminal case without telling
the defendant. That is how grand jury subpoenas and investigations frequently work. Defense
counsel’s overheated rhetoric notwithstanding, there is simply nothing nefarious about the
Government obtaining materials through grand jury subpoena process, let alone anything about
the manner in which the Government obtained these materials that warrants the relief requested.
Certainly to the extent the defendant asserts that her adversary in civil litigation has
engaged in some sort of improper conduct—assertions the Government by no means intends to
suggest agreement with—such arguments even if credited would not be a proper basis to
circumvent the plain language of the protective order (or the existing sealing orders) in this case.
In any event, of the materials at issue, the only document the defendant’s civil adversary has access
to is the lone April 2019 order, meaning any purported imbalance between the parties in the Civil
Cases at this stage is significantly overstated. And to the extent the defendant may seek to make
similar accusations against the Government or challenge the manner in which the Government
obtained the materials at issue—a challenge that itself would not justify the relief presently
they recognize that the materials are appropriately sealed as relating to an ongoing grand jury
investigation.
Case 1:20-cr-00330-AJN Document 46 Filed 08/21/20 Page 5 of 5
requested—the defendant can make such arguments, and the Government can and will vigorously
oppose them, at the appropriate stage in this case.
Finally, to the extent the defendant contends that the relief requested is somehow necessary
to her ability to bring issues to the attention of other courts, the Defense Letter completely fails to
explain what legal argument she wishes to make in her Civil Cases based on the discovery
materials she has identified or what relevance those materials have to the litigation of the Civil
Cases. The fact that the Government issued grand jury subpoenas and obtained court authorization
for compliance with one of those subpoenas has no conceivable relevance to disputed issues in the
Civil Cases. To the extent the defendant argues that the requested relief is necessary to ensure that
courts adjudicating the Civil Cases are aware of the existence of the documents at issue, the
defendant identifies no specific reason why these materials are relevant to the issues pending in
those cases, other than to falsely accuse the Recipient and the Government of some sort of
malfeasance.6
In sum, the defendant’s arguments in favor of her application offer no explanation of the
relevant legal theory the materials would support, not to mention a compelling reason for this Court
to permit an end-run around the protective order and permit the use of criminal discovery to litigate
a civil case. Accordingly, the application in the Defense Letter should be denied.
Respectfully submitted,
AUDREY STRAUSS
Acting United States Attorney
By: /s
Maurene Comey / Alison Moe / Lara Pomerantz
Assistant United States Attorneys
Southern District of New York
Tel: (212) 637-2324
6
If anything, the Defense Letter suggests that the defendant intends to use criminal discovery
materials to attack the Government in the Civil Cases, attacks of no discernable relevance in those
cases and made in a forum in which the Government is not a party and would have no opportunity
to respond.