This matter presents an issue of first impression: whether the nascent psychotherapist-patient privilege encompasses a so-called “crime-fraud exception,” parallel to that which we previously have recognized anent the attorney-client privilege. We hold that the privilege entails such an exception and that the exception applies here. We therefore affirm the district courtís order enforcing grand jury subpoenas served upon a pair of psychiatrists.
I. BACKGROUND
To protect the secrecy of ongoing grand jury proceedings, we limit our review of the facts to the bare essentials. Since at least October 1997, Gregory P. Violette has been the target of a federal grand jury investigation focused on possible bank fraud and related crimes. The government says that Violette made false statements to financial institutions (presumably in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1014) for the purpose of obtaining loans and credit disability insurance; that he trumped up an array of disabilities, which he communicated to selected health-care providers; and that he caused information from these providers to be transmitted to the companies that had underwritten the credit disability policies (presumably in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341), thus fraudulently inducing payments.
*73 In February 1999, the United States subpoenaed two licensed psychiatrists, Dr. Carol M. Spencer LeMay and Dr. Epi-phanes K. Balian, to appear before the grand jury and provide evidence relating to Violette. The doctors appeared in March and asserted the psychotherapist-patient privilege on Violette’s behalf. The government promptly sought enforcement of the subpoenas and buttressed its effort with an affidavit of the case agent, Michael Kelly, filed under seal. Violette countered by moving to intervene and to secure access to all the investigative information, or, alternatively, to Kelly’s affidavit.
The district court allowed Violette to intervene but denied the motion for access. Violette then opposed enforcement of the subpoenas. After hearing argument, the district court enforced both subpoenas. Violette appeals, alleging: (1) that the denial of access to the investigative materials violates due process; and (2) that there is no crime-fraud exception to the psychotherapist-patient privilege, or, alternatively, that the evidence sought by the government falls outside the scope of any such exception.
Because the grand jury term is set to expire in early September and because additional delay threatens to exacerbate statute-of-limitations problems, we granted the government’s request for expedited review. We consider Violette’s claims in reverse order inasmuch as the analysis underlying our resolution of the second claim informs our resolution of the first.
II. THE PSYCHOTHERAPIST-PATIENT PRIVILEGE
The Supreme Court recently recognized the psychotherapist-patient privilege as a matter of federal common law, holding “that confidential communications between a licensed psychotherapist and her patients in the course of diagnosis or treatment are protected from compelled disclosure.”
Jaffee v. Redmond,
As a general matter, a party asserting a privilege has the burden of showing that the privilege applies.
See
3 Jack B. Weinstein & Margaret A. Berger,
Weinstein’s Federal Evidence
§ 503.06[7] (2d ed.1997). To do so, the proponent of the privilege must set forth facts sufficient to establish all the elements of the claimed privilege.
See Holifield v. United States,
The first two of these requirements are not in dispute here. The district court found that the information to which the subpoenas related was confidential, and the government does not now challenge that finding. 1 Nor does the government question the credentials of the two psychotherapists. The battleground thus narrows to the privilege’s third furculum.
The district court found that the communications to which the subpoenas related were not made in the course of diagnosis or treatment, and that a crime-fraud ex *74 ception applied. The court’s implicit rationale appears to have been that because the communications were made in furtherance of fraud, they could not have served a bona fide therapeutic purpose.
We find the district court’s logic compelling on the rather extreme facts of this case. We nonetheless are constrained to note that the court blurred two distinct bases for enforcing the subpoenas. The court might have reached that result either by concluding that the communications in question do not satisfy the requirements of the privilege or by concluding that the communications satisfy the requirements of both the privilege and an exception thereto. Such blurring is understandable and, in this instance, unimportant.
Cf. United States v. Zolin,
We will not dwell unduly on this largely epistemological conundrum. In this appeal, the government offers only the crime-fraud rationale. For simplicity’s sake, we therefore assume (without deciding) that Violette’s communications can be said to have been made presumptively in the course of diagnosis or treatment. On this assumption, Violette established the essential elements of the privilege and the communications are protected unless an exception pertains. It is to this question that we now turn.
III. THE CRIME-FRAUD EXCEPTION
The government urges wholesale importation of the crime-fraud exception, as delineated in the context of the attorney-client privilege, into the emerging jurisprudence of the psychotherapist-patient privilege. Violette, in contrast, exhorts us to refuse to recognize such an exception.
The
Jaffee
Court did not envision the psychotherapist-patient privilege as absolute or immutable. Rather, the Court suggested the possibility of exceptions to the operation of the privilege and prophesied that the details would emerge on a case-by-case basis.
See Jaffee,
We start our exploration of this virgin terrain with a methodological point. When a court is called upon to consider modifying a privilege or adopting a new exception to it, the appropriate inquiry is whether protecting a particular class of confidential communications “promotes sufficiently important interests to outweigh the need for probative evidence.”
Trammel v. United States,
[T]he recognition of a privilege does not mean that it is without conditions or exceptions. The social policy that will prevail in many situations may run foul in others of a different social policy, competing for supremacy, It is then the function of a court to mediate between *75 them, assigning, so far as possible, a proper value to each, and summoning to its aid all the distinctions and analogies that are the tools of the judicial process.
Clark v. United States,
In considering whether to recognize a previously unannounced privilege, “a court must first decide whether a qualified privilege exists or should exist before deciding how to apply it to a particular case.”
In re Grand Jury (Granite Purchases),
Against this methodological backdrop, we ponder the proposed crime-fraud exception. This exception grew up in the shadow of the attorney-client privilege. It ensures that the attorney-client privilege will “not extend to communications made for the purpose of getting advice for the commission of a fraud or crime.”
United States v. Reeder,
To bring the crime-fraud exception to bear, the party invoking it must make a prima facie showing: (1) that the client was engaged in (or was planning) criminal or fraudulent activity when the attorney-client communications took place;
and
(2) that the communications were intended by the client to facilitate or conceal the criminal or fraudulent activity.
See United States v. Jacobs,
We caution, however, that stating the justification for the crime-fraud exception in this almost syllogistic fashion is potentially misleading. There is more at work than a simple dichotomy between crime or fraud, on the one hand, and justice, on the other. We think that it is essential to clarify the rationale behind the crime-fraud exception before considering transplantation of the exception into new soil.
In the attorney-client environment, this court has justified the crime-fraud exception on the ground that protecting communications made in furtherance of crime or fraud withholds relevant information from the factfinder.
See Reeder,
To summarize, the attorney-client privilege exists as matter of policy, not as a matter of logic. The benefits of full and frank communication between clients and attorneys generally have been deemed to outweigh the costs of probative evidence foregone. The balance shifts, however, when a client communicates for the purpose of advancing a criminal or fraudulent enterprise. Because such communications do not create a net benefit to the system, the rationale that underpins the privilege vanishes (or, at least, diminishes markedly in force).
This is not say that courts delude themselves into thinking that the effects of the crime-fraud exception on the administration of justice are unambiguously positive. It surely can be argued that if the veil of secrecy were totally opaque, lawyers might have more opportunities to discourage illegal behavior. But the crime-fraud exception reflects a policy judgment that this potential discouragement does not justify the costs of shielding highly probative evidence of antisocial conduct from the fact-finders’ eyes.
This brings us full circle. The
Jaffee
Court justified the psychotherapist-patient privilege in terms parallel to those used for the attorney-client privilege. Indeed, the Court embarked on its examination of the privilege by noting that, “[l]ike the spousal and attorney-client privileges, the psychotherapist-patient privilege is Tooted in the imperative need for confidence and trust.’ ”
Jaffee,
As the Supreme Court has framed the issues, the parallels are striking. The attorney-client privilege and the psychotherapist-patient privilege both exist to foster the confidence and trust required for effective counseling relationships (legal and psychiatric, respectively). The private interests served by these relationships, however, do not justify a privilege. Rather, we customarily respect the confidentiality of communications made in the course of these relationships because, on balance, doing so serves the public weal. The attorney-client privilege promotes “the observance of law and administration of justice,”
Upjohn,
This sense of parity carries over to the crime-fraud exception. In the attorney-client context, we exclude from the privilege communications made in furtherance of crime or fraud because the costs to truth-seeking outweigh the justice-enhane-
*77
ing effects of complete and candid attorney-client conversations. In the psychotherapist-patient context, we likewise should exclude from the privilege communications made in furtherance of crime or fraud because the mental health benefits, if any, of protecting such communications pale in comparison to “the normally predominant principle of utilizing all rational means for ascertaining truth.”
Trammel,
First, it is difficult to conjure up a case in which both mental health and criminal or fraudulent purposes might simultaneously be advanced. In our view, communications that are intended to further a crime or fraud will rarely, if ever, be allied with bona fide psychotherapy and, thus, protecting such communications will not promote mental health. In this regard, it is important to emphasize that the crime-fraud exception will apply only when the patient’s purpose is to promote a particular crime or fraud.
Cf. Jacobs,
On the other side of the balance, we believe that the potential for abuse of the psychotherapist-patient privilege, absent the engrafting of a crime-fraud exception, is a matter of substantial concern. Psychotherapists could use the privilege to deflect investigations into health insurance fraud.
See In re Zuniga,
In campaigning for reversal of the district court’s ukase, Yiolette ascribes great significance to the absence of a crime-fraud exception from Rule 504 of the proposed Uniform Rules of Evidence. In support of this argument by negative implication, he points to proposed Rule 503(d)(1), the crime-fraud exception to the attorney-client privilege. It is true that courts sometimes look to the proposed rules for guidance,
see, e.g., Jaffee,
IV. APPLYING THE CRIME-FRAUD EXCEPTION
Having concluded that an exception to the privilege exists, we next mull its applicability here. As explained above, a party invoking the crime-fraud exception must make a prima facie showing that the exception applies. The Supreme Court has described the required quantum of evidence as “something to give colour to the charge ... that has some foundation in fact.”
Clark,
Although we have not had occasion to flesh out this rather sketchy standard, other courts of appeals have offered varying interpretations.
Compare, e.g., In re Grand Jury Proceedings,
We review the district court’s determination that particular communications come within the crime-fraud exception for abuse of discretion.
See Reeder,
Violette’s fallback position is that the district court erred in applying the crime-fraud exception because the psychiatrists were not coconspirators, but at most unwitting pawns. The argument appears to be that since the psychiatrists believed at the time that they were engaged in the professional treatment of an authentic patient, the privilege should remain inviolate. It is true that the doctors’ innocence distinguishes this case from
In re Grand Jury Subpoena,
V. THE DUE PROCESS CLAIM
We next consider Violette’s contention that the district court infracted his right to due process because it did not afford him access to evidentiary materials (in particular, the Kelly affidavit). This contention lacks merit.
The short of it is that denying Violette access to grand jury materials did not deprive him of due process. The public interest in the secrecy of grand jury proceedings generally outweighs a party’s interest in obtaining such materials.
See, e.g., In re Grand Jury Subpoenas,
The law seems well-settled that, in the context of grand jury proceedings, the government may proffer
ex parte
the evidence on which it bases its claim that a particular privilege does not apply, and that the court may weigh that evidence, gauge its adequacy, and rule on the claim without affording the putative privilege-holder a right to see the evidence proffered or an opportunity to rebut it.
See, e.g., In re Grand Jury Subpoenas,
VI. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. For the reasons stated, we hold that the psychotherapist-patient privilege, like the attorney-client privilege, is subject to a crime-fraud exception; that the district court did not abuse its discretion either in finding the crime-fraud exception applicable to the subpoenaed evidence or in enforcing the subpoenas issued to the two psychiatrists; and that Violette’s due process rights have not been abridged by denying him access to the records of an ongoing grand jury investigation.
The orders appealed from, are affirmed. Mandate shall issue forthwith.
Notes
. The government previously had questioned the confidentiality of the material by asserting that voluntary disclosure to insurers effectively waived the privilege. The United States Attorney has abandoned this argument on appeal, however, and we do not consider its merits.
. When a court believes that a crime or fraud has already been committed, it may seem self-evident that keeping evidence of it away from the factfinder would thwart rather than promote justice. But the crime-fraud exception is not based on this ex post reasoning; rather, it represents an ex ante policy judgment.
. For a lay treatment of this phenomenon, see generally Analyze This (Warner Bros. 1999) (spinning a cinematic yarn in which an organized crime boss seeks psychiatric care).
. The drafters' use of this precise phrase, in contrast to Jaffee's more expansive formulation (“in the course of diagnosis or treatment,”
. The
Jaffee
Court apparently felt similarly disposed when it suggested that the privilege may be set aside when disclosure could prevent a serious harm,
see
. The Second Circuit, like the Sixth, has advocated a "probable cause” standard.
See In re Richard Roe, Inc.,
