I. BACKGROUND
Faced with a request to quash a grand jury subpoena, the federal district court in Houston was apprised that two months earlier, the movants’ premises had been searched in Colorado under a warrant with a sealed supporting affidavit. The district court disagreed philosophically that a search could be so conducted. Consequently, although the movants never objected to the search, the court went them one better on relief from the grand jury subpoena. He ordered that unless the search warrant affidavit was unsealed, he would suppress the evidence from the search. The government has appealed. Because this order lacks supporting authority and, indeed, flouts the governing procedures for contest of search warrants and grand jury subpoenas, we reverse.
On May 6, 1996, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of Texas requested two grand jury subpoenas, to be served on two Colorado organizations, Pro Vantage One International, L.L.C., and Pro Vantage One (collectively, “Pro Vantage”), requiring them to produce documents and appear before a Houston, Texas federal grand jury. In connection with the grand jury investigation, the government also applied to a federal magistrate judge in Colorado for a search warrant. The magistrate judge promptly issued the warrant, which was executed on May 15 at a house in Colorado. The printed search warrant form completed by the government did not list the objects of the search. Instead, the form stated:
[T]here is now concealed a certain person or property, namely (describe the person or property)
PLEASE SEE AFFIDAVIT
The only attachment described the premises with a photograph of the building to be searched. By request of the government, the Colorado magistrate judge sealed the application and affidavit supporting the search warrant except to law enforcement officials. Thus, Pro Vantage never received the affidavit that listed the objects of the search in the warrant. After a large volume of documents was seized pursuant to the warrant, however, Pro Vantage was given an inventory.
On July 25, Pro Vantage One International, L.L.C. and its manager Thomas Kiser (“Appellees”) moved to quash the grand jury subpoenas in the Southern District of Texas, arguing that the subpoenas are impermissi-bly overbroad and lacking in particularity in violation of the Fourth Amendment, and that by serving subpoenas simultaneously with search warrants, the government was seizing Appellees’ papers and effects without having to show the probable cause that a search warrant would require.
The federal district court held a hearing on this motion, during which the court requested to see the sealed affidavit that the government had filed in the Colorado federal court pursuant to its FED. R. CRIM. P. 41 search warrant application. The court reviewed the *1243 affidavit in camera. A day later, he ordered the government to disclose the search warrant affidavit to Appellees. That August 2nd order also stated that the scope of the subpoena was “excessive on the basis of the affidavit,” and required the government to revise its description of the documents being sought by subpoena. Responding to the government’s motion to reconsider, the court entered another order on August 7, which stated in part: “the government must disclose the affidavit supporting the search warrant by noon, Friday, August 9, 1996, or all the evidence from the search will be suppressed.” The district court reiterated this demand in an accompanying Opinion on Search Warrant issued on August 7, 1996. This court stayed the district court’s order pending appeal.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review subject matter jurisdiction
de novo
as a question of law.
DeCell & Assoc. v. Federal Deposit Ins. Corp.,
We have jurisdiction over a district court order quashing or modifying a grand jury subpoena pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3731.
See In re Grand Jury Subpoena,
III. ANALYSIS
1. Order to Revise Grand Jury Subpoenas.
The only issue properly before the district court in Houston was Appellees’ motion to quash the grand jury subpoenas. Appellees did not challenge the Colorado search based on Fourth Amendment grounds or pursuant to Fed. Rule Crim. Proc. 41(e), but rather argued that the documents requested by the subpoenas might be the same as those seized during the search, and that the subpoenas (not the warrants) were overbroad and lacking in particularity. Although the district court reviewed the search warrant affidavit in camera, the government never filed the sealed affidavit with the district court, and the government urged that it did not need to establish probable cause to support a grand jury subpoena. Thus, the subpoena alone, and not the search warrant, was properly before the court.
In general, courts have very little authority over the proceedings of a grand jury. As the Supreme Court has observed, “the grand jury is an institution separate from the courts, over whose functioning the courts do not preside.”
United States v. Williams,
*1244
In examining a grand jury subpoena, a court considers whether compliance “would be unreasonable or oppressive.”
See
FED. R. CRIM. P. 17(c);
United States v. R. Enterprises, Inc.,
The Appellees have failed to meet their burden. In their Motion to Quash Subpoenas to Testify Before Grand Jury, Appellees objected to the grand jury subpoenas on three grounds. First, they argued that certain items which the subpoenas required the Appellees to produce may have already been seized pursuant to the search warrant; they asserted they were hampered from confirming this by the sealing of the warrant affidavit. This complaint proves nothing in terms of unreasonableness or oppression. Appellees received a written inventory of the documents seized. Rather than seeking to quash the subpoenas, the Appellees could state to the grand jury that the documents are now in the government’s possession. Appellees’ administrative compliance problem is not the courts’ business.
Second, Appellees contended that the subpoenas were overbroad and lacking in particularity, in violation of their Fourth Amendment right to be free of unreasonable searches and seizures. A subpoena duces tecum is not itself a search or seizure, however, and the actual search that occurred on May 15, 1996 was conducted pursuant to a search warrant. Thus, Appellees’ argument conflates a grand jury subpoena with a magistrate judge’s search warrant. But the instruments are different in nature and issued from different authorities. Even if this court were to construe Appellees’ argument as an assertion that compliance with the subpoena would be unreasonable or oppressive, Appellees have faded to make the requisite showing. Appellees cite that the subpoena requested at least eighty-five kinds of documents relating to approximately one hundred and seventy-eight different persons and entities, but they do not explain how, if at all, production of the documents unreasonably burdens them. Simply citing the types of information sought by the government does not alone constitute a “strong showing” sufficient to counter the presumption that the grand jury was acting within the proper scope of its authority.
Third, Appellees asserted that because the subpoenas were issued simultaneously with a search warrant, they evidenced an attempt to seize and secure items belonging to the Appellees without showing probable cause for the issuance of a search warrant. This argument is a red herring; even if the search warrant was defective, there is no probable cause requirement for the issuance of a grand jury subpoena.
R. Enterprises,
For all these reasons Appellees failed to meet the standards of FED. R. CRIM. P. 17(c); therefore, the district court abused its discretion in ordering that the subpoenas be modified by revising the list of the documents being sought.
2. Order to Unseal Search Warrant Affidavit/Conditional Order to Suppress.
The government also appeals Judge Hughes’s actions in going beyond the motion to quash and granting, sua sponte, a conditional suppression order mandating that the government produce the sealed affidavit “or all the evidence from the search w[ould] be suppressed.” This order was problematic for several reasons. Most important, Appellees never contested the search warrant based on the Fourth Amendment; instead, they challenged the grand jury subpoenas. Appellees, however, had the burden of affirmatively challenging the search warrant based on Fourth Amendment grounds:
In order to effectuate the Fourth Amendment’s guarantee of freedom from unreasonable searches and seizures, this Court *1245 long ago conferred upon defendants in federal prosecutions the right, upon motion and proof, to have excluded from trial evidence which had been secured by means of an unlawful search and seizure.... However, we have also held that rights assured by the Fourth Amendment are personal rights, and that they may be enforced by exclusion of evidence only at the instance of one whose own protection was infringed by the search and seizure.
Simmons v. United States,
But even if Appellees had sought relief for the search and seizure, the Southern District of Texas was not the appropriate preindictment forum in which to proceed. The Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure govern these issues. FED. R. CRIM. P. 41(e) states:
A person aggrieved by an unlawful search and seizure or by the deprivation of property may move the district court for the district in which the property was seized for the return of the property on the ground that such person is entitled to lawful possession of the property.... If a motion for return of property is made or comes on for hearing in the district of trial after an indictment or information is filed, it shall be treated also as a motion to suppress under Rule 12 (emphasis added).
Rule 41(e) specifies that an aggrieved party’s preindictment remedy is a motion for the return of property, which should be filed in the district in which the property was seized — in this case the District of Colorado. Rule 41(f), on the other hand, states:
A motion to suppress evidence may be made in the court of the, district of trial as provided in Rule 12.
(emphasis added). The court of the district of trial cannot be determined prior to an indictment.
A district court in the Eighth Circuit recognized the limits imposed by Rule 41.
In re Grand Jury Proceedings,
Appellees have not defended the court’s order to unseal the search warrant affidavit on the basis of the Federal Rules. Instead, they urge various bases for his inherent authority to act. Appellees principally rely on an amorphous theory called anomalous jurisdiction. Anomalous jurisdiction was expressly recognized by this court in
Hunsucker v. Phinney,
A substantial body of precedent establishes that federal district courts have power to order the suppression or return of unlawfully seized property even though no indictment has been returned and thus no criminal prosecution is yet in existence.... The theory articulated by most of the cases is that jurisdiction to order suppression or return prior to indictment exists not by virtue of any statute but rather derives from the inherent authority of the court over those who are its officers.
Id. at 32. Despite this court’s recognition of anomalous jurisdiction, it has rarely been invoked or discussed since Hunsucker, and its very existence has been questioned. 2 Several considerations lead us to conclude the district court’s attempt to exercise this jurisdiction, if it exists, was inappropriate.
In
Richey v. Smith,
First, while this court has not yet determined whether the issuance of a search warrant combined with a sealed affidavit constitutes a violation of the Fourth Amendment, the Seventh Circuit has expressly affirmed the practice.
See In re Eyecare Physicians of America,
The next two factors promoting anomalous jurisdiction are likewise unsatisfied. Appel-lees have neither explained their specific interest in and need for the documents seized pursuant to the warrant, nor have they stated how they will be irreparably injured by denial of the return of the property. Appel-lees have not indicated, for example, whether they requested a copy of the documents seized, and whether the government refused to comply with such a request.
See, e.g., Eyecare Physicians,
*1247
Finally, unlike the situation in
Richey,
3
these Appellees have an adequate remedy at law. They failed to avail themselves of the preindictment remedy provided by Rule 41(e) in the Colorado federal court. Such a motion, if granted, might well have affected the government’s decision whether to continue seeking an indictment. Thus, this also was not a situation in which Appellees possessed no opportunity to avoid the stigma of a criminal indictment.
See Richey,
Having examined these factors, we find that even if Appellees had affirmatively moved to suppress in Judge Hughes’s court based on anomalous jurisdiction, its exercise was not warranted under these circumstances.
Appellees assert two other grounds to show the district court had jurisdiction to enter its order. First, Appellees cite several cases in which the media was the applicant for the unsealing of search warrant materials and jurisdiction was simply assumed. 4 Each of these cases, however, involved motions to unseal, not conditional suppression orders contingent on the government’s producing a warrant affidavit. Furthermore, each of the decisions regarding the access to warrant material arose in the district of seizure, and implicated no cross-jurisdictional concerns. None of these cases support the argument that a court in one district, which is neither the district of trial nor the district of seizure, has jurisdiction to issue a conditional suppression order based on a warrant issued in another district.
Second, Appellees cite two cases for essentially the same proposition: courts have a general supervisory power over records and files presented to them.
5
Both of these cases considered the question whether a court has the power to restrict access to documents properly filed with that court.
Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc.,
IV. CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, we REVERSE the district court’s ruling on the motion to quash the grand jury subpoenas and its sua sponte issuance of a conditional suppression order.
Notes
. Appellees inexplicably cite this case for the proposition that a district court that is not in the district of seizure has jurisdiction to decide a
preindictment
Rule 41(e) motion.
Grand Jury
stands for precisely the opposite proposition. Appellees also cite
Ex Parte Decious,
. Only five other decisions in this circuit have discussed this doctrine, even in passing.
See In re Grand Jury Proceedings,
. In
Richey,
the district court had determined that the issue whether the appellants were entitled to an order granting the return of property was moot, and also held that a motion to suppress could not be granted because no criminal prosecution was pending, thus leaving the appellants without a procedural leg on which to stand.
Richey,
.
See In re Application of Newsday, Inc.,
. See Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc.,
435 U.S: 589, 598,
