United States v. Kpmg LLP

237 F. Supp. 2d 35, 91 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 317, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24830, 2002 WL 31894130
CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedDecember 20, 2002
Docket02-0295 (TFH)
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 237 F. Supp. 2d 35 (United States v. Kpmg LLP) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Kpmg LLP, 237 F. Supp. 2d 35, 91 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 317, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24830, 2002 WL 31894130 (D.D.C. 2002).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

THOMAS F. HOGAN, Chief Judge.

Pending before the Court is the United States of America’s Petition to Enforce Internal Revenue Service Summonses. In response to that- petition, Respondent KPMG LLP (“KPMG”) has filed a detañed privilege log. For the reasons set forth below, the Court is referring that privilege log to a Special Master in order to conduct an examination of the withheld documents and evaluate the asserted privñeges.

*36 I. BACKGROUND / PROCEDURAL HISTORY 1

Government’s July 9, 2002 Petition to Enforce IRS Summonses

As part of an Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) examination of KPMG’s promotion of and participation in transactions that the IRS contends are tax shelters, the IRS served a total of twenty-five administrative summonses on KPMG seeking information and materials relevant to the investigation. On January 28, 2002, the IRS issued a summons requesting information relating to two types of transactions, known as the Foreign Leveraged Investment Program (“FLIP”) and the Offshore Portfolio Investment Strategy (“OPIS”). This summons is referred to as the “FLIP/OPIS Summons.” See Petition to Enforce Internal Revenue Service Summons (“Pet. to Enf.”) at 2-8. On March 19, 2002, the IRS issued six additional summonses to KPMG. These summonses are also referred to by the transactions to which they are directed, as the “BLIPS/TRACT/IDV Summons,” the “401(k) ACCEL Summons,” the “ § 6111(c) Summons,” the “ § 6111(d) Summons,” the “Foreign Transactions Summons,” and the “MIDCO Summons.” Id. at 4-6. On May 3, 2002, the IRS issued two more summonses to KPMG, the “Tax Treaty Summons” and the “FOCUS Summons.” Id. at 6-7.

The IRS contends that although KPMG had produced eighty-four boxes of records [as of April 22, 2002] in response to the FLIP/OPIS Summons and had produced individuals who provided sworn testimony in response to this summons, KPMG failed to fully comply with the summons. See Pet. to Enf. at 2-4. The IRS also claims that despite granting KPMG additional time to comply with the summonses issued on March 19 and May 3, KPMG failed to produce all responsive materials for the BLIPS/TRACT/IDV Summons, the 401(k) ACCEL Summons, the § 6111(d) Summons, the Foreign Transaction Summons, the MIDCO Summons, and the Foreign Transaction Summons and has failed to respond at all to the § 6111(c) Summons and the Tax Treaty Summons. Id. at 7-9. Therefore, on July 9, 2002, the Government filed the Petition to Enforce Internal Revenue Summonses to enforce these nine administrative summonses issued to KPMG as part of the IRS examination. On July 11, 2002, this Court signed a “Show Cause Order” in response to the Government’s Petition.

KPMG’s Opposition to Petition

KPMG responded on September 6, 2002 with its Opposition to Petition (“Opp.”). 2 KPMG contends that the twenty-five IRS summonses served over a five month period are “extremely broad, incredibly burdensome, and, in many respects, unenforceable.” Opp. at 1. For example, the FLIP/OPIS Summons alone “demanded 50 categories of documents from every KPMG office in the nation (there are approximately 100) ... [and] required KPMG to provide persons to testify about 37 different topics.” Id. at 5. Despite this burden, KPMG claims that it has worked diligently to respond to the IRS summonses. Id. at 5-10. As of the date that the IRS filed the Petition to Enforce, KPMG had “continued its substantial efforts to comply in good faith” with the IRS re *37 quests, producing multiple witnesses, a total of 229 boxes of documents, and providing the IRS with a careful index of each box, even though this was not legally required. Id. at 8-10. KPMG asserts that it has continued to respond to the summonses even after the filing of this Petition to Enforce, producing an additional 183 boxes of documents. Id. at 11.

KPMG’s Privilege Log and Motion for Protective Order

KPMG withheld from the IRS certain documents that are responsive to the various summonses on grounds that these documents are privileged. Id. KPMG provided the IRS with a privilege log of the documents withheld in response to the FLIP/OPIS summons (“FLIP/OPIS privilege log”) and supplemented this log as KPMG has continued to produce materials responsive to the summons. Id.

The FLIP/OPIS privilege log provides a document-by-document description of the documents ■withheld from production, “setting forth the document number assigned to each privileged document, the date of the document, the names of the author(s) and recipient(s), a brief description of the contents of the documents, and the privileges applicable to each document.” Reply in Opp. to Protective Order at 4-5; see also Petition to Enforce at Ex. 3 (the FLIP/OPIS privilege log). As of September 23, 2002, this log includes 1,293 entries. Id. However, despite the level of detail included in the privilege log, the IRS asserts that these withheld documents “are not in fact privileged.” Petition to Enforce at 3.

KPMG filed a Motion for a Protective Order to avoid the additional burden of preparing a document-by-document privilege log of the materials responsive to the summonses that were withheld on privilege grounds. KPMG states that a document-by-document privilege log for transactions other than FLIP and OPIS would contain at least 8,500 entries, and requests this Court to permit it to prepare a categorical privilege log describing by category the documents withheld on privilege grounds. See Motion for Protective Order at 2-4. The Government claimed that it needed a comprehensive, document-by-document privilege log in order to assess the validity of KPMG’s claims of privilege. Opp. to Protective Order at 2-3.

Magistrate Judge Kay’s Resolution of the Protective Order

On September 11, 2002, this Court referred KPMG’s Motion for a Protective Order to Magistrate Judge Kay for resolution. At the motions hearing in front of Magistrate Judge Kay, counsel for the United States argued that KPMG has failed to demonstrate a valid claim of privilege in the FLIP/OPIS privilege log, which provides a document-by-document description, and contended that a category-by-category privilege log would be even less helpful in assisting the Court and the Government in assessing KPMG’s various claims of privilege.

However, KPMG argued that a document-by-document privilege log is not necessary, particularly in light of the Government’s blanket negative response to KPMG’s claims of privilege. Reply in Opp. to Protective Order at 2. KPMG argued that the additional details included in the FLIP/OPIS privilege log (e.g., names of KPMG personnel, names of client representatives, and dates of correspondence) would not assist the court in making the privilege determination.

Magistrate Judge Kay issued a Memorandum Opinion and Order on September 30, 2002 in which he denied KPMG’s motion for the following reason:

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Bluebook (online)
237 F. Supp. 2d 35, 91 A.F.T.R.2d (RIA) 317, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 24830, 2002 WL 31894130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-kpmg-llp-dcd-2002.