This appeal by the United States from an order by the district judge to turn over to private civil plaintiffs materials that the Department of Justice is holding for use in criminal investigations presents important questions concerning what is known as the “law enforcement investigatory privilege,” a' judge-fashioned evidentiary privilege. In 1992 the FBI began investigating charges that Archer Daniels Midland had conspired with other agricultural producers to fix the prices of feed and food additives, including lysine, citric acid,' and high-fructose corn syrup, in violation of section 1 of the Sherman Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1. In the course of its investigation, the FBI made more than 150 hours of audio and video tape recordings of conversations within ADM and between ADM and its competitors germane to the alleged conspiracy. In 1995 the Department of Justice began presenting evidence to grand juries. The grand jury investigating price fixing of lysine has returned several indictments to which ADM and several other defendants have pleaded guilty. ADM has also pleaded guilty to price fixing of citric acid. To induce ADM to plead guilty to these criminal antitrust offenses the government, without seeking or obtaining any kind of confidentiality agreement or protective order, played some of the tapes for the law firm representing ADM’s outside directors. The lawyers made notes of what they heard, and these notes were given to the law firm that represents ADM in class action suits brought against ADM and its suspected co-conspirators in the wake of the government’s investigation. We do not know who else may have seen the notes.
Some of these suits are scheduled to go to trial in August of next year. The plaintiffs have subpoenaed the tapes in the hope that they contain evidence of illegal conspiracy. They claim that the government waived its investigatory privilege by allowing the lawyers to listen to the tapes, make notes, and turn the notes over to the lawyers who are defending ADM in the civil suits, without insisting on a protective order or confidentiality agreement that would have forbidden the lawyers to whom the government played the tapes to show their notes to anyone except the outside directors and would have forbidden the outside directors to reveal the contents of the tapes or the notes to anyone else. The government does not claim that the tapes are protected from disclosure because they are before a grand jury. Fed. R. Crim. P. 6(e)(2). Maybe they haven’t been submitted to a grand jury yet.
The judge, without reaching the issue of waiver, held that the investigatory privilege was inapplicable and ordered the tapes (though only those the government had actually played to the lawyers) turned over to the plaintiffs. It is understood that this means that these tapes will also be made available to the defendants in the civil suits, some of whom are also targets of the government’s as yet uncompleted grand jury investigations. The plaintiffs argue in defense of the judge’s ruling that the notes of the tapes have given the defendants an unfair advantage in the civil litigation, which can be rectified only by turning the tapes over to the plaintiffs, and that if they must wait until the conclusion of the grand jury investigations before receiving them the trial of the civil suits will be delayed indefinitely, to the plaintiffs’ prejudice because witnesses may die or forget. They argue in the alternative that the government waived the privilege by playing the tapes to the outside directors’ lawyers without imposing any restriction on the use that the lawyers might make of the information they gleaned from the tapes.
The judge certified his ruling for an immediate appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b). A motions panel of this court agreed to hear the appeal, but the plaintiffs ask us to reconsider that decision, as we can do,
Sokaogon Gaming Enterprise Corp. v. Tushie-Montgomery Associates, Inc.,
The law enforcement investigatory privilege is not absolute. It can be overridden in appropriate cases by the need for the privileged materials.
Tuite v. Henry, 98
F.3d 1411, 1417-18 (D.C.Cir.1996). The balancing of that need—the need of the litigant who is seeking privileged investigative materials-—-against the harm to the government if the privilege is lifted is a particularistic and judgmental task. It is therefore confided to the discretion of the district judge, meaning that appellate review is deferential.
Id.
at 1415-16; cf.
United States v. Rainone,
Fundamentally they are asking the district court to mediate between their desire to expedite their civil litigation and the government’s conduct of its criminal investigation. That is not a proper judicial role. We know this from the cases that hold that (with irrelevant exceptions, based on constitutional rights) the exercise of prosecutorial discretion is not judicially reviewable.
United States v. Armstrong,
— U.S. -,-,
The district court did not listen to any of the tapes, did not ask what the notes contain or to whom they were shown, did not *1126 consider the alternative of setting a deadline for the grand jury investigations, did not explore the actual prejudice to the plaintiffs from a postponement of the trial, and seems to have been concerned above all, albeit understandably, about carrying this formidable civil litigation on its docket for longer than absolutely necessary. But these features of the district court’s evaluation of the subpoena are not at the heart of our concern with the ruling. The heart of our concern is with the principle that the control of criminal investigations is the prerogative of the executive branch, subject to judicial intervention only to protect rights — and no rights of the plaintiffs were invaded by the government’s assertion of its law enforcement investigatory privilege.
Still, a privilege can be waived and, once waived, is lost. E.g.,
United States v. Wimberly,
We may assume that like other privileges the investigatory privilege can be “waived” not only in the sense of a voluntary surrender, but also in the sense of forfeiture.
Cole Taylor Bank v. Truck Ins. Exchange,
The eases, however, generally reject a right of “selective” waiver, where, having voluntarily disclosed privileged information to one person, the party who made the disclosure asserts the privilege against another person who wants the information.
United States v. Hamilton,
What selective and inadvertent (also partial) disclosure have in common, however, is that neither is waiver in the standard sense in whieh the word is used in the law: the deliberate relinquishment of a right. See, e.g.,
United States v. Olano,
But failing to be careful — committing a mistake that while careless may also be harmless — is not by itself a compelling reason for stripping a person of his privilege; and when we consider the reasons that the courts give for imposing such a harsh sanction for mistake or incaution, we find that they are inapplicable to a ease such as this. The reasons, fully explained in the
Westinghouse
case, are a hostility to claims of privilege because if upheld they impede the search for truths a fear that selective disclosure will be used to obtain a strategic advantage, and puzzlement why if the information is really confidential it was disclosed except for some nefarious, strategic purpose. The first reason is not operative here because the issue is delay rather than the permanent suppression of probative evidence. The second is not operative because the- government is not an adversary of the persons seeking disclosure. As for the third, the puzzle is not why the government played the tapes for- the outside directors’ law firm but why it didn’t obtain a protective order against any further' disclosure. That was a mistake. But the severity of punishment for a mistake should be proportioned to the gravity of the mistake.
Israel Travel Advisory Service, Inc. v. Israel Identity Tours, Inc.,
“Or that the plaintiffs ... were hurt.” A distinct ground for finding waiver here might be the presence of conduct that warranted declaring a forfeiture. (We repeat that a rejection of “selective waiver” is best understood as an application of forfeiture doctrine, since it is not a waiver in the strict sense of the deliberate relinquishment of a right.) The government is not the adversary of these plaintiffs, using coy disclosure to gain litigating leverage over them; and because the plaintiffs have never used their unquestioned powers of pretrial discovery to obtain a list of the persons to whom the notes have been shown, they have failed to lay a factual foundation for showing that they have been hurt by the government’s , allowing the notes to get into the hands of the defense in the civil suits. Cf.
Cagan v. Mutual Benefit Life Ins. Co.,
The plaintiffs point out that three witnesses have died already. We cannot resurrect them by our ruling; we assume that the point of the plaintiffs’ reference to mortality is to remind us that the rest of the witnesses may die as well if the case is delayed indefinitely. But if the tapes contain as much good evidence for the plaintiffs as the plaintiffs think, it would be rather a detail if some more witnesses die before the trial; and their testimony can in any event be memorialized in depositions and used freely at trial if they do die. Fed.R.Civ.P. 32(a)(3)(A).
The district court’s order is reversed with instructions to quash the subpoena.
