On September 30, 1998, BankAmeriea and NationsBank merged to form Bank of America Corporation (the “Bank”). Fifteen days later, the Bank disclosed a $372 million charge-off and the likelihood of substantial additional losses arising out of BankAmerica’s $1.4 billion loan to hedge fund operator D.E. Shaw, Inc. (“Shaw”). Securities law class action suits were then filed and consolidated in the Eastern District of Missouri, and the district court denied (in large part) defendants’ motions to dismiss.
See In re BankAmeriea Corp. Sec. Litig.,
Though mandamus is an extraordinary remedy, we will issue the writ when the district court has committed a clear error of law or abuse of discretion in ordering the disclosure of privileged materials “[bjecause maintenance of the attorney-client privilege up to its proper limits has substantial importance to the administration of justice, and because an appeal after disclosure of the privileged communication is an inadequate remedy.”
In re Bieter Co.,
I. The Crime-Fraud Exception.
The attorney-client privilege encourages full and frank communication between attorneys and their clients so that clients may obtain complete and accurate legal advice. But the privilege protecting attorney-client communications does not outweigh society’s interest in full disclosure when legal advice is sought for the purpose of furthering the client’s on-going or future wrongdoing. Thus, it is well established that the attorney-client privilege “does not extend to communications made for the purpose of getting advice for the commission of a fraud or crime.”
United States v. Zolin,
In
Zolin,
the Supreme Court clarified the procedure that district courts should adopt in deciding motions to compel production of allegedly privileged documents under the crime-fraud exception. First, the Court resolved a conflict in the circuits by holding that the district court has discretion to conduct an
in camera
review of the allegedly privileged documents. Second, concerned that routine
in camera
review would encourage opponents of the privilege to engage in groundless fishing expeditions, the Court ruled that the dis
*642
cretion to review
in camera
may not be exercised unless the party urging disclosure has made a threshold showing “of a factual basis adequate to support a good faith belief by a reasonable person” that the crime-fraud exception applies.
Zolin,
Prior to
Zolin,
it was settled in this circuit that a party seeking discovery of privileged communications based upon the crime-fraud exception must make a threshold showing “that the legal advice was obtained in furtherance of the fraudulent activity and was closely related to it.”
Pritchard-Keang Nam Corp. v. Jaworski,
II. Plaintiffs’ Threshold Showing.
In the underlying actions, plaintiffs allege that the Bank violated various federal securities laws when BankAmerica failed to disclose before the merger its full relationship with Shaw and the losses it was sustaining on its loans to Shaw. To support these claims, plaintiffs rely heavily on a September 15, 1998, press release which failed to disclose the Shaw losses; on Shaw’s August and September 1998 profit and loss statements reflecting its losses; and on testimony by BankAmerica employees that they urged or recommended disclosure of BankAmerica’s relationship with Shaw and the magnitude of Shaw’s third quarter losses. According to the Bank’s privileged document log, most or all of the eleven documents in question were created between August 28 and October 30, 1998, and contain or reflect attorney-client communications relevant to these disclosure issues. The documents themselves are not in the record before us.
Plaintiffs argue that the district court properly ordered disclosure of the eleven documents under the crime-fraud exception because “discovery in this case has established that the bank had extensive knowledge of the losses suffered prior to the shareholders’ vote on the merger but that, acting in coordination with its attorneys, decided to delay recognition and *643 public disclosure of the losses until after [ ] the merger closed.” The Bank argues that plaintiffs have made no showing that it communicated with counsel in furtherance of an on-going fraud, as opposed to merely seeking legal advice as to its disclosure obligations under the federal securities laws.
III. The District Court’s Ruling.
After correctly stating the general principles underlying the crime-fraud exception, the district court granted plaintiffs’ motion to compel discovery without examining the eleven documents in camera, based upon the following analysis:
The Court holds that the evidence submitted by the plaintiffs in their initial brief and reply brief in support of the motion to compel demonstrates the pri-ma facie showing required under the crime/fraud exception. Specifically, plaintiffs demonstrate through testimony and the daily profit and loss statements that the defendants knew of the significant Shaw losses in August and September 1998. While the defendants’ knowledge of the potential losses does not necessarily suggest fraudulent conduct, the Court finds that the plaintiffs’ proffered evidence is sufficient to support discovery of the documents at issue. Each of the eleven documents sought could be construed as a “specific document providing legal advice [that] was made in furtherance of [the] alleged fraud and closely related to it.” Ra-bushka,122 F.3d at 565 .
We conclude that the district court’s analysis was an insufficient basis for invoking the crime-fraud exception for the following reasons:
1. The district court focused only on plaintiffs’ threshold showing of fraud. The court then assumed, without any further showing by plaintiffs, that all contemporaneous attorney-client communications “could be construed” as in furtherance of the alleged fraud. This was error.
See Rabushka,
2. The district court failed to relate plaintiffs’ threshold showing to a cause of action requiring proof of the Bank’s fraudulent intent. Plaintiffs’ evidence tended to show that BankAmerica knew of Shaw’s third quarter losses, considered whether to disclose those losses prior to the merger, and sought legal advice regarding its disclosure obligations. That is not enough to overcome the attorney-client privilege. The district court had previously ruled that some of plaintiffs’ theories do not require proof of fraudulent intent, only negligent or unintentional but material non-disclosure (those rulings are not before us).
See Bank-America,
Companies operating in today’s complex legal and regulatory environments routinely seek legal advice about how to handle all sorts of matters .... There is nothing necessarily suspicious about the officers of this corporation getting such advice.... Showing temporal proximity between the communication and a crime is not enough.
3. The district court failed to conduct an
in camera
review of the eleven documents in question. In
Zolin,
the Supreme Court cautioned against routine use of the
in camera
review procedure but did not consider whether a district court should ever invoke the crime-fraud exception and order disclosure without conducting
in camera
review of the privileged materials. We have found no case in which this court affirmed an order to produce documents under the crime-fraud exception where the district court did not first review the documents
in camera. See, e.g., In re Berkley & Co.,
Requiring a threshold showing of facts supporting the crime-fraud exception followed by in camera review of the privileged materials helps ensure that legitimate communications by corporations seeking legal advice as to their disclosure obligations under the federal securities laws are not deterred by the risk of compelled disclosure under the crime-fraud exception. Therefore, district courts should be highly reluctant to order disclosure without conducting an in camera review of allegedly privileged materials. In this case, given the above-described shortcomings of plaintiffs’ threshold showing, the district court abused its discretion in ordering disclosure without in camera review of the eleven documents.
IV. Conclusion.
For the foregoing reasons, we grant the Bank’s petition for a writ of mandamus and vacate the district court’s order of April 11, 2001. On remand, the district court is directed to determine, separately for each document, whether plaintiffs have made the threshold showing required in
Zolin
— “a factual basis adequate to support a good faith belief by a reasonable person” that the Bank was engaged in intentional fraud and communicated with counsel in furtherance of the fraud.
A number of circuits have adopted somewhat different standards regarding the quantum of proof required to satisfy the crime-fraud exception, an issue the Supreme Court declined to reach in
Zolin,
Notes
. The attorney's intent may become relevant in cases where a party invokes the crime-fraud exception to discover documents protected by the attorney work product rule.
See In re Grand Jury Subpoenas Duces Tecum,
