Case Information
*1 In the
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
Nos. 99-2032 et al.
In re: High Fructose Corn Syrup Antitrust Litigation Dellwood Farms, Inc., et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants/Cross-Appellees, v.
Archer Daniels Midland Company, Defendant-Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
James R. Randall,
Intervenor-Appellee/Cross-Appellant.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Central District of Illinois.
Nos. 95 C 1477, 97 C1203--Michael M. Mihm, Judge. Argued April 14, 2000--Decided June 19, 2000 Before Posner, Chief Judge, and Ripple and Rovner, Circuit Judges.
Posner, Chief Judge. These appeals grow out of a class action antitrust suit that is pending in a federal district court in Illinois. The suit is by purchasers from Archer Daniels Midland and other manufacturers and charges price fixing. In an earlier criminal investigation of the alleged price-fixing conspiracy, an investigation that led to criminal proceedings unnecessary to discuss here, an ADM vice president named Whitacre made a number of secret recordings both of face-to-face conversations, and telephone conversations, with persons who he thought might be (and most of them were, but not intervenor Randall) involved in the conspiracy. He did this under unusual circumstances. He had been defrauding ADM and apparently wanted to deflect the FBI’s suspicions and so reported his employer’s price fixing to the FBI and suggested that he tape record incriminating conversations. The FBI agreed. Some of the recordings were used in the criminal proceedings but many were not, and those that were not remain in the files of the Justice Department. The plaintiffs in the class action have subpoenaed those recordings. ADM resisted the subpoena, along with its former *2 employee Randall who though not implicated in the price fixing fears that some of the recordings contain embarrassing statements by him on unrelated matters. The Justice Department has no objection to releasing the recordings to the plaintiffs. The district judge ruled that the plaintiffs are entitled to them but, in the case of the telephone conversations, not until the trial. His ruling is before us under 28 U.S.C. sec. 1292(b).
A set of provisions of the federal criminal code
commonly known as "Title III" regulates
electronic surveillance both of "oral
communications" and "wire communications." 18
U.S.C. secs. 2510 et seq. The latter term is
broadly defined to include communications any
part of which goes over a wire; so cellphone and
satellite communications are covered. See 18
U.S.C. sec. 2510(1); H.R. Rep. No. 647, 99th
Cong., 2d Sess. 31 (1986); United States v.
Jackson,
The telephone conversations that Whitacre
recorded clearly fell within the statutory
definition of wire communications. But the judge
thought a limited disclosure of their contents to
the plaintiffs authorized by section 2517(3),
which allows a person to disclose the contents of
lawfully intercepted wire communications "while
giving testimony under oath or affirmation in any
*3
proceeding held under the authority of the United
States or of any State or political subdivision
thereof." The judge rejected the argument that
the only proceeding contemplated by this
provision is a government proceeding, not a
private suit such as we have here. But because he
interpreted "while giving testimony" literally,
to mean that the plaintiffs had no authority to
obtain the recordings of Whitacre’s wire
communications until the trial, he thought it
premature to decide whether those communications
had been intercepted lawfully, which would mean
in conformity with either section 2511(2)(c) or
section 2511(2)(d). The first of these
subsections provides that it is not unlawful
under Title III for a person acting under color
of law to record his own conversations, and the
second that it is not unlawful for a person not
acting under color of law to record his own
conversations provided that he is not doing so
for the purpose of committing a crime or tort.
The district judge was following the law of this
circuit in holding that in defining "oral
communications" by reference to a justifiable
expectation that they would not be intercepted,
Congress had limited the protection of the
statute to situations in which the interception
would violate the Fourth Amendment if done by the
government. In re John Doe Trader Number One, 894
F.2d 240 (7th Cir. 1990); see also Dorris v.
Absher,
Regardless of how any of these issues is
resolved, we think the plaintiffs are entitled to
all the recordings, to use as they see fit except
insofar as the district judge may exercise his
power under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure
to limit, by protective order or otherwise, such
disclosure of the contents of the recordings as
may infringe the privacy of parties to the
recorded conversations beyond what the plaintiffs
require to prosecute their antitrust case
effectively. Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c); Gile v.
United Airlines, Inc.,
Some states prohibit a person from recording his
telephonic or other conversations without the
other person’s consent, but Title III does not,
unless the person both is not acting under color
of state law and has a criminal or tortious
purpose. 18 U.S.C. secs. 2511(2)(c), (d).
"While Title III . . . regulates electronic
surveillance conducted without the consent of
either party to a conversation, federal statutes
impose no restrictions on recording a
conversation with the consent of one of the
conversants." United States v. Caceres, supra,
That interceptions exempted by sections
*5
2511(2)(c) or (d) are not subject to section
2517(3) is apparent from the structure of Title
III. Section 2511(1) forbids the interception of
covered communications (that is, oral, wire, or
electronic) "except as otherwise specifically
provided in [Title III]." There are two relevant
sets of "otherwise specifically provid[ing]"
provisions. One is in subsection 2 of section
2511 and includes, as we have been emphasizing,
most conversations intercepted by (or with the
consent of) one of the parties. The other
exceptions in subsection 2 include pen registers,
switchboard operators, marine distress signals,
and foreign intelligence surveillance--a
heterogeneous array. In each instance the
excluded practice is described in its own
subsection together with any exceptions to the
exception, such as, in the case of section
2511(2)(d), for recording one’s conversations for
a criminal or tortious purpose. Each of the
exception subsections in section 2511(2) is
complete and self-contained. But then there is
another set of provisions, sections 2516 to 2519,
defining and implementing the key exception for
interceptions pursuant to a warrant. It is in
that cluster of sections that section 2517(3)
resides. Its location indicates that it is
limited to cases in which an otherwise unlawful
interception is lawful by virtue of having been
made pursuant to warrant; the surrounding
provisions make clear that the "authorization" to
which the subsection refers is judicial
authorization, not exemption. See secs. 2516,
2518(9); Gelbard v. United States,
To subject interceptions made lawful by sections 2511(2) (c) and (d) to section 2517(3) would have absurd consequences. It would mean that Whitacre had violated the statute by turning his recordings over to the FBI, since on the district court’s reading of that section the only permissible disclosure of the contents of an interception made lawful by sections 2511(2)(c) or (d) is to play a tape of, or testify to, those contents in court. Section 2517(3) reflects a traditional sensitivity about wiretapping and related methods of electronically eavesdropping on other people’s conversations. As is implicit (and sometimes explicit) in the cases that hold that such eavesdropping violates the Fourth Amendment but that recording your own conversations does not, there just is not the same sensitivity about the latter practice. Title III does not require a warrant for such recording or regulate its use in any way. The matter has been left to the states, except for the flat prohibition of consensual recording for improper purposes.
So if Whitacre’s recordings were made lawful by
either of these subsections, Title III does not
restrict their use by the plaintiffs. It is clear
that they were. When the FBI agreed to Whitacre’s
suggestion that he make the recordings in order
to gather evidence of price fixing, the FBI made
him a government informant, and in then making
the recordings in that role he was acting under
color of law within the meaning of section
2511(2)(c). Thomas v. Pearl, supra,
The judgment of the district court is modified to eliminate the restriction that the court placed on the use of the recordings of the wire communications by the plaintiffs, though without prejudice to the judge’s considering whether to impose a protective order under Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(c). As so modified, the judgment is Affirmed.
