The County of Orange, its sheriff, and various employees of the sheriff’s department (collectively, the County) seek extraordinary relief from an order allowing suspects in an ongoing criminal investigation to review the contents of the investigative file through the medium of civil discovery. The County argues the trial court abused its discretion in granting discovery of the file at this time. The County asserts the court should have stayed the civil action for a reasonable period to allow authorities to complete the investigation before having to divulge information that could compromise the investigation and derail a potential prosecution. We agree that the court erred in the breadth and timing of the discovery order and grant the writ requested, subject to specific limitations discussed below.
I
On the morning of August 12, 1996, Edith Marie and Feilong Wu reported the disappearance of Edith’s two-year-old son, C. T. Turner. The Wus claimed C. T. had either walked out of or been abducted from the family’s Mission Viejo home. A large search party of volunteers and military personnel did not find the child that day. The next morning, Orange County Sheriff’s Department investigators questioned the Wus. That afternoon the boy’s body was discovered under leaves and other debris in a ravine near their home. An autopsy determined the cause of death was suffocation.
To date the homicide remains unsolved. But according to the Wus, in several newspaper reports, sheriff’s department representatives have publicly indicated they are suspects.
On May 13, 1997, the Wus filed this action for defamation, conversion, spoliation of evidence, and various civil rights violations related to the sheriff’s department’s investigation, including their initial
With respect to their defamation claim, the Wus assert sheriff’s department representatives publicly identified them in four news accounts (and in an additional conversation with a local attorney) alternately as “among the suspects,” the sole remaining suspects, and the “focus of the investigation.” Each statement “was equivalent to an accusation plaintiffs killed C. T., which is false.”
Plaintiffs also allege deputies searched their home pursuant to an invalid search warrant obtained by submitting a false and misleading affidavit to the magistrate. While searching the Wus’ home pursuant to the invalid warrant, deputies wrongfully seized certain immigration documents belonging to Feilong Wu that he needed to apply for a green card and work permit. The County refused to return these documents, leading to loss of employment opportunities for Feilong Wu.
Three days after the complaint was served, on May 28, 1997, the Wus served a request for production, specifying 25 categories of documents and other items. In effect, they requested the sheriff’s entire investigative file relating to C. T.’s murder. For example, they sought production of “[a]ll documents generated by any police agency relating to the death of C. T. Turner . . . ,” including their own statements, autopsy reports, scientific testing, descriptions of physical evidence, and witness statements.
The County refused to produce any of the requested items on the ground that the investigative file is protected by the official information privilege. (Evid. Code, § 1040, subd. (b)(2).) 1 The Wus moved to compel production. The superior court conducted an in camera review of the investigative file and an in camera hearing on the applicability of the privilege. 2 After taking the matter under submission, the court ruled on March 24, 1998, that the County “failed to meet [its] burden under Evidence Code [section 1040]” and ordered production of all requested documents to the Wus’ counsel, subject to a protective order. This protective order allows the Wus to review the documents if their attorney “finds it necessary,” but prohibits anyone else from examining them or otherwise learning of their contents absent a court order.
The County sought writ relief and a stay. We stayed the order and issued an alternative writ.
II
The official information privilege set forth in section 1040, subdivision (b)(2) applies to “information acquired in confidence by a public employee in the course of his or her duty and not open, or officially disclosed, to the public prior to the time the claim of privilege is made.” (§ 1040, subd. (a).) The privilege is conditional and attaches only if “the court determines, in accordance with precise statutory standards, that disclosure is against the public interest. . . .”
(Shepherd
v.
The Supreme Court may have exaggerated a bit in referring to “precise statutory standards.” The statute states only that disclosure is against the public interest where “there is a necessity for preserving the confidentiality of the information that outweighs the necessity for disclosure in the interest of justice . . . .” (§ 1040, subd. (b)(2).) In other words, application of the privilege involves the always imprecise art of weighing competing interests.
Before we take up the trial court’s exercise of discretion in weighing the interests here, we must first consider the Wus’ argument that much of the information contained in the investigative file was not “acquired in confidence” and is thus not privileged. (§ 1040, subd. (a).) They argue, for example, their own statements to the police, as well as statements made by other witnesses, were not acquired in confidence. Similarly, they argue that photos, sketches, and police reports concerning the crime scene were not acquired in confidence because the scene itself was “a ravine open to the public.”
The Wus’ emphasis on the manner in which the file’s contents were gathered misses the point. Viewed individually, many of the pieces of information in the file may not have been “acquired in confidence” in the literal sense of that term. But the logic of the Wus’ argument does not withstand close scrutiny. Simply because the public may observe the police gathering evidence at a crime scene, or interviewing witnesses, it does not follow that the information obtained is public.
Evidence gathered by police as part of an ongoing criminal investigation is by its nature confidential. This notion finds expression in both case and statutory law. For example, in
People
v.
Otte
(1989)
The Information Practices Act of 1977 (Civ. Code, § 1798 et seq.) protects information compiled by law enforcement agencies for the purpose of investigating criminal activities, including reports of informants and investigators. (Civ. Code, §§ 1798.40, 1798.41.) Similarly, Penal Code section 11107, which states the obligation of each sheriff or police chief to report crime data to the Department of Justice, specifically recognizes the confidential nature of criminal investigations. That statute includes the proviso that “[t]he Attorney General may also require that the report shall indicate whether or not the submitting agency considers the information to be confidential because it was compiled for the purpose of a criminal investigation of suspected criminal activities.” (Pen. Code, § 11107.)
The Public Records Act (Gov. Code, § 6250 et seq.) includes a specific exemption from disclosure for law enforcement investigative files. This exemption permits the state to withhold “[r]ecords of . . .
In
Williams
v.
Superior Court
(1993)
Given the broadly recognized confidentiality of investigative files, we find no need to separately analyze the manner in which each element of the file was obtained for application of the official information privilege. Instead, we conclude that the contents of police investigative files sought in civil discovery must remain confidential so long as the need for confidentiality outweighs the benefits of disclosure in any particular case. (§ 1040, subd. (b)(2).) We thus proceed to that inquiry.
Ill
In
Shepherd v. Superior Court, supra,
For its part, the County paints a compelling picture of the dire consequences that could result from the disclosure of the contents of an investigative file to the suspects in a possible murder. The County invokes the powerful public interest in solving homicides and bringing killers to justice. Undoubtedly, that interest is at risk if confidential information about the homicide investigation is released to suspects. There is an obvious danger that they may learn crucial information that would enable them to avoid apprehension. More specifically, permitting suspects to review materials in an investigative file “will enable them to invent stories, explain away evidence thus far gathered, and intimidate or otherwise influence potential witnesses.”
The County and amici curiae also argue that witnesses will be fearful of providing incriminating information to police investigators if their statements may be disclosed to suspects, while the suspects are still at large. In
Daily Journal Corp. v. Superior Court
(1999)
The Wus counter with the premise that they are the innocent victims of police misconduct and their civil case is an attempt to expose that misconduct. They champion the significant interest of civil litigants in having their day in court, particularly where, as here, claims of civil rights violations and defamation are at stake. The Wus argue they have a compelling need for the requested information from the investigative file to prove their case against the County and discount law enforcement’s need to withhold the information.
The Wus also assert active investigation stopped by January of 1997, and there is no longer police activity concerning the homicide. They claim the sheriff’s department, by its own admission, has exhausted all leads. As a consequence, they argue the investigation has hit a dead end and there is no need to maintain the confidentiality of the sheriff’s file.
The County responds that there is no limitations period for murder. (Pen. Code, § 799.) Homicide cases remain open until they are solved, which sometimes occurs years after the crime with the help of new technology (e.g., DNA) or witnesses who become willing to provide new information because of some change of circumstances or because they no longer feel threatened by the suspect. The investigators remain hopeful for a break in the case. It is approaching four years since C. T.’s death, but an investigation of that length is common enough.
The Wus argue
Rider v. Superior Court
(1988)
The Rider decision is not dispositive. The police in Rider objected to production of their notes of the girl’s interview to protect her privacy. (199 Cal.App.3d at pp. 282-283.) While certainly important, a rape victim’s privacy interest is not as weighty a concern as the need to apprehend and convict a child killer. Rider was correctly decided, we think, but it is not this case.
We conclude on the record before us that the public interest in solving C. T. Turner’s homicide and bringing the perpetrator(s) to justice outweighed the Wus’ interest in obtaining the discovery sought, at least at the time this matter was considered below. We recognize the rather arbitrary nature of this conclusion, but the order we review was made less than a year after this civil action was filed. (And it is still less than three years since it was filed.) When one reflects that the lives of other children may be at risk with the killer(s) still at large, the important interests in vindicating wronged plaintiffs and clearing dockets do not seem quite so important. Consequently, we find the superior court abused its discretion in ordering production of the investigative file to the Wus’ attorney. And, parenthetically, we
This is not to say, however, that the Wus can never obtain the requested discovery. Law enforcement investigative files are not on equal footing with grand jury proceedings, which, except in very limited circumstances, remain forever secret where no indictment is returned. (Compare
Daily Journal Corp. v. Superior Court, supra,
20 Cal.4th at pp. 1127-1128 [only under three narrow exceptions will grand jury proceedings be made public] with
Swanner v. United States
(5th Cir. 1969)
The appropriate remedy in this case is for the trial court to stay discovery of investigative information in the civil action in order to allow the sheriff’s department the necessary time to investigate. (Pacers,
Inc. v. Superior Court
(1984)
In the future the trial court may determine that there has not been enough progress in the investigation to justify protecting most of the investigative file any longer. For example, the court may find the trail has grown cold and there is no reasonable probability the case will be solved. As noted above, we think it was simply to soon to have made that determination when the order under review was made. At that point the court may conclude the risk to the investigation from releasing confidential information from the investigative file is no longer a compelling concern. Instead, the balance will have
swung in favor of giving the Wus
limited
access to that information in the file which may help develop their case against the County. In other words, with the passage of time, changing circumstances will inevitably reverse the balance of competing interests under section 1040, subdivision (b)(2).
(Rubin v. City of Los Angeles
(1987)
What parts or how much of the file to disclose to the Wus is a question for the trial court.
4
The court will have to carefully assess the Wus’ actual need for the information against the public’s continuing need for confidentiality. That assessment must involve the requisite factors of “materiality
Let a peremptory writ of mandate issue directing the trial court to vacate its order compelling the production of the investigative file and reconsider in light of the views expressed above. Should the court withhold discovery of the entire investigative file, it shall reconsider the matter at reasonable intervals at plaintiffs’ request and continue in that fashion until such time as it may conclude that the Wus’ interest in disclosure outweighs any further public interest in retaining the entire file in confidence. When discovery is permitted, it shall be limited to those documents reasonably necessary to plaintiffs’ prosecution of their action. The alternative writ is discharged. Each side shall bear its own costs in this proceeding.
Sills, P. J., and Rylaarsdam, J., concurred.
Notes
All further statutory references are to the Evidence Code unless otherwise indicated.
We have declined to examine the file to avoid compromising the investigation. We do not need to look at it to understand, for example, that it contains details only the killer(s) would know. The more people who are aware of those details the less weighty would be any future confession or slip of the tongue by a suspect and the more likely that such information might end up in unauthorized hands or the press. And any effort we might make to describe the fruits of the investigation to date would simply provide potentially useful information to the perpetrator(s).
This is not to say that we would never review the file in assessing a lower court ruling. That time may come. But for now we find disclosure was premature in any event and, thus, there was no reason to examine the file in this proceeding.
At any time the Wus could request the trial court to lift a stay of the action and proceed to trial without discovery of the investigative file. Privilege issues certain to arise at trial would simply have to be dealt with as they might come up, including the knotty problem of the County attempting to rely on the investigative file in its defense.
ObviousIy, the file may contain sensitive information that should not be disclosed preindictment. Or there may be material relevant to the Wus’ civil action that could possibly be safely confided to their attorney only subject to a stringent protective order. In that event the trial court may choose to look for guidance from trade secret cases in fashioning a remedy that preserves confidentiality as much as possible. There will likely be relevant information that can be released without jeopardizing the investigation at all.
An evaluation of the legal sufficiency of the Wus’ various causes of action will be relevant to the weighing of the Wus’ need for the requested information. For example, as to the defamation claim, the court may consider whether the absolute privilege for acts in performance of official duty applies to a sheriffs department representative’s act of discussing the status of a murder investigation. (See
Kilgore
v.
Younger
(1982)
