In re Grand Jury Investigation

244 F. Supp. 3d 574, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 94998
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Texas
DecidedJuly 2, 2013
DocketMiscellaneous H-13-606
StatusPublished

This text of 244 F. Supp. 3d 574 (In re Grand Jury Investigation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Grand Jury Investigation, 244 F. Supp. 3d 574, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 94998 (S.D. Tex. 2013).

Opinion

Opinion bn Petition to Suspend Limitations

Lynn N. Hughes, United States District Judge

1. Introduction.

The government has applied ex parte for an order to suspend the running of the limitations period for offenses that it has been investigating. The period will not be extended. The statute allows the government additional time to recover evidence from abroad when it has been asked for responsibly. The statute does not serve to extend the period simply because the government has delayed, asking for records that it has known for years were both needed and were abroad.

2. Background.

In 2005, the Drug Enforcement Administration and the Internal Revenue Service began investigating .the company and its owner—a man—because they think that money from a drug deal had been deposited in a bank account belonging to the company. The account’s records may show transfers of more than $73 million from a company account in Mexico with HSB.C. The investigation also may have shown that the man and the company had four other accounts with banks in Mexico.

Since 2001, neither the man nor the company has reported a foreign bank account to the Department of Treasury. The [575]*575man’s tax returns from 2006 to 2010 do not list his interests in a foreign account.

On August 24, 2012—yes, about seven years later—the government sent Mexico a formal request for records from two banks in Mexico. In November, Mexico responded that the banks did not find documents for those accounts nor did they find accounts held by the company or the man.

At the end of November, the government sent Mexico a second, more expansive, request for records from four banks. In February and March of 2013, the government received documents for accounts at one bank but nothing from the others.

3. Delay.

The government’s theory is that a small deposit connected to drugs taints every transaction. The government had to send a second request because it forgot to include all of the accounts. Its first application to extend the limitations period—from Washington, D.C.—was unintelligible. While the current application is improved, it neither justifies nor explains the delay in asking for the records from Mexico.

When it asked for the records, the government had been investigating the company and the man for seven years. From the beginning,- the government knew that they held a bank account in Mexico from which millions of dollars had been sent to their account in the United States. It has had records showing transfers through other bank accounts in Mexico. During those seven years, the Department of Justice has had the opportunity and resources to ask Mexico for the records.

Limitations periods serve an important function. They compel governments to investigate and prosecute crimes promptly. They are statutes of repose, freeing people from a permanent threat of prosecutorial initiative and from having to defend themselves after records and people are no longer available. The process that is due an accused includes notice, hearing, and promptness—not perpetual jeopardy.

When the United States learns that it is plausible that a crime may have been committed, it investigates. When it has concluded that facts support a claim of criminal responsibility, its first duty is to ascertain whether it is in the public interest to prosecute it. Only after that has been decided, it must gather, preserve, and ultimately disclose the evidence to a grand jury. All of this must be accomplished within the statutory time.

Courts are not authorized to suspend the time limit to excuse inept investigations and bureaucratic sloth. The opportunity for the government to bring these crimes will pass for reasons unconnected to the timing of Mexico’s response to requests for documents. Mexico responded within five months to the first request for documents and responded with documents within six months to the second request. The time will pass because of what the United States has not done. Three agencies—Internal Revenue, Drug Enforcement, and Justice—have had seven years.

To hold otherwise would be to eviscerate the statutes of limitations for crimes with evidence abroad. As in this case, it would get a three-year extension by filing a request for records abroad. Rather than prosecuting cases with vigor and duty, the government could defer a decision to charge crimes by requesting documents from another country on the eve of the deadline for filing. The only reason to suspend limitations must be because the government is waiting on another country to respond to a prompt, responsible request—not because the government waited until the last minute to ask.

4. Ex Parte.

The government has applied for this extension without notice to the people whom [576]*576it would affect. The court can easily imagine circumstances justifying secrecy. The government has not suggested one; it has not supplied a fact in justification.

The public administration of justice should be, well, public. Proceedings should be closed only when absolutely necessary for only as long as absolutely necessary. Notice and an opportunity to be heard is the essence of regular process—the process that is due. With few, narrow exceptions, people should be told when a legal action is being taken against them, including making them subject to criminal charges after the statutory time limit.

A. Grand-Jury Secrecy.

The government usually says the targets should not know that it has asked to suspend limitations against them because the application “concerns grand jury matters.” The government expansively misreads Rule 6 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure.

For sound reasons that have been recognized for centuries in England and the United States, the rule says that “matter occurring before the grand jury” must not be disclosed. The secret that needs to be protected is those things that happen in the presence of the assembled grand jurors among themselves and with the government; the duty silences the participants—like grand jurors and prosecutors.

The information that may have been revealed to it has an independent existence. It will have existed and will have been known by others. People who are subpoenaed before a grand jury are free to talk about that fact. People who testify are free to tell the news media and others about what they were asked.1 The duty of secrecy binds only those who are in the room hearing from witnesses and those who deliberate,

Governments frequently call press conferences to announce that they are taking or have taken cases to the grand juries. Announcements of case openings may be even more common, and they all necessarily imply an impending grand jury.

A request by the United States to suspend limitations to get evidence that is in Mexico is not a matter before a grand jury in Texas. The grand jury has no authority over the conduct of the case outside of the grand jury room, and the duty of secrecy applies only to those matters that are secretly conducted before the grand jurors.

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Related

New York Times Co. v. United States
403 U.S. 713 (Supreme Court, 1971)
United States v. Flemmi
233 F. Supp. 2d 113 (D. Massachusetts, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
244 F. Supp. 3d 574, 2013 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 94998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-grand-jury-investigation-txsd-2013.