In Rе: MOHAMED AL FAYED, Appellant, v. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Intervenor.
No. 99-1268
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
Decided: April 26, 2000
PUBLISHED. Argued: December 3, 1999. Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore. Frederic N. Smalkin, District Judge. (MISC-99-35). Before LUTTIG and MOTZ, Circuit Judges, and James H. MICHAEL, Jr., Senior United States District Judge for the Western District of Virginiа, sitting by designation.
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Motz wrote the opinion, in which Judge Luttig and Senior Judge Michael joined.
COUNSEL
OPINION
DIANA GRIBBON MOTZ, Circuit Judge:
Seeking information related to the death of his son in a Paris car wreck that became the focus of internatiоnal media attention, Mohamed Al Fayed filed an ex parte application with the district court for the issuance of a subpoena duces tecum to the National Security Agency (NSA). Al Fayed applied for the subpoena under
I.
In February 1999, Al Fayed asked the district court to issue a subpoena duces tecum for all NSA documents relating to two victims of a 1997 Paris car crash: Dodi Fayed and Diana, Princess of Wales. In addition, he sought all NSA documents relating to himself and to the principals in an alleged plot to sell him information supposedly originating in Central Intelligence Agency files.
Al Fayed contended that he had learned that NSA might possess information related to the crash after reading reports in the Daily Mail and the New York Daily News of surveillance by United States intelligence of Princess Diana, and after participants in the above-mentioned plot attempted to sell him supposed United States intelligence documents. In support of his application, Al Fayed offered a 1998 letter from NSA responding to a news agency‘s FOIA request for records related to Princess Diana. In that letter NSA acknowledged the existence of 182 documents in NSA files covered by the request, denied access to 39 classified NSA documents, and forwardеd the request for the remaining documents to the originating agencies.
Under FOIA, an agency need not make documents available to the public that are “(A) specifically authorized under criteria established by an Executive order to be kept secret in the interest of national defense or foreign policy and (B) are in fact properly classified pursuant to such Executive order.”
The district court assumed that the investigation by the French magistrate, then still ongoing, constituted “proceedings” to which
Al Fayed appeals, arguing in part that the district court erred because it assumed that his application sought the same material as the news agency‘s FOIA request, when in fact it did not. The United States intervened, and in doing so informed us of a fact that Al Fayed had failed to mention: prior to applying to the district court for a subpoena, Al Fayed‘s attorneys had submitted their own FOIA request to NSA, asking for precisely the same material as Al Fayed now seeks under
Al Fayed conceded at oral argument that in September 1999 Juge Stephan closed his investigation into the role members of the press may havе played in causing the car crash. According to press accounts, the investigation lasted eighteen months and involved over 200 interviews and 6,000 pages of evidence, after which the magistrate concluded that the driver‘s drunkenness was the “direct, immediate and certain cause of the accident.”
Apparently, Al Fayed has exercised his right under French law to appeal the termination of the investigation, but this appeal
We need not undertake this inquiry, because the district court did not abuse its discretion under
II.
Section 1782 affords the district courts “wide discretion” in responding to requests for assistance in proceedings before foreign tribunals. See In re Esses, 101 F.3d 873, 876 (2d Cir. 1996); Lo Ka Chun v. Lo To, 858 F.2d 1564, 1565 (11th Cir. 1988). The 1964 amendments to
In exercising its discretion under
The arguments and evidence Al Fayed did present in his application understandably elicited skepticism from the district court. Al Fayеd, a private party, asked the district court to issue a subpoena ex parte to an agency whose work involves some of the most sensitive and necessarily secretive operations of the United States government. Rather than asserting rights under FOIA, the typical route for private parties to gain access to government documents, he invoked a statutory provision typically utilized by foreign judicial officials, occasionally utilized by prosеcutors, plaintiffs and defendants in foreign judicial proceedings, and almost never utilized by persons in Al Fayed‘s position. He offered scant materials in support of his application, and he only summarily explained the purpose and function the requested documents would serve in the foreign proceeding. Disclosure of the documents sought in Al Fayed‘s application had already been identified by NSA as potentially causing “exceptionally gravе damage to the national security.” Under these circumstances, the district court was well within its broad discretion to deny the application. The statute explicitly commits to the district court‘s discretion the determination of whether to grant a request for
Al Fayеd argues that the district court erroneously assumed that the news agency‘s FOIA request asked for substantially the same material as Al Fayed‘s subpoena application. To the extent that that argument had any merit, it is now foreclosеd by Al Fayed‘s own December 1998 FOIA request, which asked for precisely the same material for which he now invokes
Congress‘s salutary purposes in enacting
Because we decide the matter on narrower grounds, we need not reach the Government‘s argument that, based on principles of sovereign immunity and statutory construction, the Unitеd States is not a “person” from whom testimony can be required under
III.
The judgment of the district court denying the ex parte application is
AFFIRMED.
