MEMORANDUM ORDER
Bеfore the court is plaintiffs motion to compel compliance by Joel Wyler with requests for production of documents.
On June 28, 2001, plaintiff Bear Sterns & Company served its first set of requests for production of documents upon defendant Joel Wyler. Wyler responded by objecting to all requests for production, and asserting his Fifth Amеndment privilege against self-incrimination. Plaintiffs second set of requests produced the same results. Plaintiff now moves for an order compelling Wyler to comply with the document requests.
Defendant Wyler is a Dutch businessman, and a citizen and resident of the Netherlands. (Answer of Defendant Joel Wyler, ¶ 2). He was a director of, and a significant invеstor in, Interquest Incorporated, a Canadian corporation with its principal place of business in Toronto, Canada, which was the parent of a Barbadian corporation, Interquest International. (Complaint, ¶ 4). Through Interquest International, Interquest Incorporated was heavily invested in anothеr Canadian corporation, Middlegate Investment Group. Middlegate’s principal place of business was in Toronto, and it was involved in speculative investment ventures in China. (Complaint, ¶ 4). Plaintiff, a major brokerage firm, alleges that, in connection with raising funds for those ventures, Wyler induced one of plaintiffs managing dirеctors-James Sitlington-to make false oral representations to one of plaintiffs customers and breach his fiduciary duties. The document requests at issue seek records pertaining to the three investment firms — Interquest International, Inter-quest Incorporated, and Middlegate — as well as Wyler’s bank, wire trаnsfer, and phone records, all for the relevant period spanning parts of 1996 to 1997. 1
The matter presently before the court is whether defendant Wyler can stave off plaintiffs discovery requests by invoking the privilege against self-incrimination found in the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The parties have briefed this quеstion, but they seemed to have missed what the court believes might be a significant issue: where exactly does the U.S. Constitution come into play. The privilege against self-incrimination has been extended to resident aliens.
U.S. v. Balsys,
Ignoring for the moment whether Wyler has the right to invoke the Fifth Amendment, we turn to the application of the Self-Incrimination Clause to the document requests at issue. The Fifth Amendment protects the person asserting the privilege only from testimony that is compelled; as the preparation and maintenance of business records is voluntary, no compulsion is involved.
United States v. Doe (Doe I),
Beyond that, however, Wyler must demоnstrate that this “testimony” would be incriminating. The Fifth Amendment privilege extends not only “to answers that would in themselves support a conviction ... but likewise embraces those which would furnish a link in the chain of evidence needed to prosecute the claimant.”
Ohio v. Reiner,
As already noted, the documents at issue include wire transfer records, telephone records, bank records, and documents relating to Interquest, International, and Middlegate. The question is how the production of these dоcuments *682 will be incriminating. Wyler seeks to establish this, initially, through a footnote stating: “It is undisputed that a criminal investigation was opened relating to the events described in the Complaint — indeed, James Sitlington is now in federal prison as a result.” {Defendant Joel Wyler’s Response, at 3 n. 3). Wyler then elaborates as follows:
As to the potentially “incriminating” nature of the responses for purposеs of Fifth Amendment protections, Wyler need not show that each document produced could be introduced into evidence against him in a criminal proceeding. It is sufficient that the prosecution might use what it learns from the production to locate potentially incriminating information. Hubbell,530 U.S. at 37 ,120 S.Ct. 2037 ,147 L.Ed.2d at 37 . The Supreme Coui't in Hubbell found that the act of responding to a broadly worded document subpoena was incriminating because it informed prosecutors of the existence and location of potential sources of information. “[I]t is undeniable that providing a catalog of existing documents fitting within any of the 11 broadly worded subpоena categories could provide a prosecutor with a ‘lead to incriminating evidence, ’ or ‘a link in the chain of evidence needed to prosecute.’ ” Id. at 42,120 S.Ct. 2037 ,147 L.Ed.2d at 39 (emphasis added).
(Defendant Joel Wyler’s Response, at 6).
Wyler’s reliance on
United States v. Hubbell,
The district court dismissed the ensuing indictment, finding that the government had violated the immunity statute by making use of evidence gained in a “quintessential fishing expedition.”
On remand, the government could not satisfy the court that it had a “prior awareness” with “reasonable particularity,” and entered into yet another plea agreement with respondent.
Hubbell,
The Court concluded “that respondent’s act of production had a testimonial aspect, at least with respect to the existence and location of the documents” and, as a result, the “respondent could not be compelled to produce those documents without first receiving a grant of immunity under § 6003.”
As is perhaps suggested by Wyler’s failure to deal with the facts of this case, the matter before us is different in many respects from that in
Hubbell.
It is as if Wyler expects this court to make a leap of faith from his rather unadorned evocation' of
Hubbell
to the incriminating nаture of the production at issue in the instant case. To begin with, in
Hubbell,
the incriminatory nature of the production of the documents sought was obvious. The respondent was already incarcerated as a result of one investigation and he was the target of a second. Indeed, the second investigatiоn was directed at whether the respondent was in compliance with a plea agreement — resulting from the first investigation — requiring him to produce information relating to the Whitewater investigation. If the respondent had produced such information in response to the subpoena, it would have constituted testimony that he had Whitewater information that he had not provided-it would be an admission that he failed to comply with the plea agreement. Accordingly, it was the testimonial aspect of the production that concerned the Court in
Hubbell.
A witness is not exonerated from answering merely because he declares that in so doing he would incriminate himself; his assertion does not of itself establish the hazard of incrimination.
Hoffman v. United States,
In the end, Wyler’s response to the plaintiffs motion to compel raises mоre questions than it answers. He is a Dutch citizen residing in the Netherlands with business interests in Canada, China, and Barbados, yet he does not address the question of whether he can avail himself of the protection of the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. He asserts that, if he were to produce the documents sought in plaintiff mоtion to compel, that act of production would incriminate him, yet he does not tender a reason why that might be so. Based on the record before us, then, we have no choice but to x-eject his .assertion of the privilege against incrimination and grant the plaintiffs motion.
CONCLUSION
Plaintiffs motion to cоmpel compliance by Joel Wyler with requests for production of documents in GRANTED, as limited by this court’s order of November 15, 2001.
Notes
. This court's order of November 15, 2001, restricted the scope of the original document requests.
. The only case the court has found extending Fifth Amendment protection to aliens ovеrseas is
U.S. v. Bin Laden,
. In
Fisher,
the defendants had given records prepared by their accountants to their attorneys. The Court found that compulsory acquisition of voluntarily prepared records having incriminating content did not amount to compulsion of testimony any more than did the similar acquisition of incriminating physical evidence. While the Court acknоwledged that the act of producing such documents could have "communicative aspects" that might be testimonial, it found that the production of the documents at issue-which accountants had prepared in the course preparing defendants' tax returns-was not sufficiently testimonial as the existence of such records was a "foregone conclusion" and defendants' act of production added "little or nothing to the sum total of the Government's information.”
Fisher,
