Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge RANDOLPH.
A grand jury is investigating a psychiatrist who may have billed Medicaid for services he did not provide. In an attempt to exonerate his client, the doctor’s attorney showed patient records to the Assistant U.S. Attorney and FBI special agent investigating the matter. The government made and kept copies of these documents. The originals remained in the possession of the attorney. Several days later, the government served a subpoena on the attorney, seeking the original documents for forensic ink analysis in order to determine whether they were created at a later date than indicated on the documents. The doctor joined the attorney’s motion to quash, claiming that attorney-client privilege protected the documents. The district court denied the motion. We affirm.
Attorney-client privilege applies to a document a client transfers to his attorney “for the purpose of obtaining legal advice.”
Fisher v. United States,
Sharing the doctor’s records with the government destroyed whatever attorney-client privilege might have attached to them.
See In re Sealed Case,
Because the doctor has not met his burden of showing that the attorney-client privilege applies to his records,
see In re Lindsey,
Affirmed.
