OPINION
Defendant has moved to quash a grand jury subpoena pursuant to Rule 17(c) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. For the reasons set forth below the motion is granted.
The Instant Motion
Defense counsel accepted a grand jury subpoena duces tecum on behalf of mov-ant, requiring movant to appear before the grand jury on May 18,1990. The subpoena orders production of “any and all diaries, appointment books and telephone and address books” maintained by movant during the period from January 1, 1978 through December 31, 1984 and all tape recordings of conversations between movant or co-defendant and any vendor or contractor who did or sought to do business with a certain corporation (the “corporation”) during the same time period. The government represents that it has cause to believe that these materials may contain evidence of movant’s *1060 soliciting and receiving kickbacks from various vendors who did business with the corporation, including those named in the indictment and others unnamed or unknown to the government.
By consent of the government, the appearance date was adjourned to enable movant to make this motion which was heard on May 25, 1990 and, along with the letters of May 31, June 4, and June 6,. considered submitted as of that date.
At the hearing, the government offered movant immunity for the act of production of the subpoenaed materials. Movant established by affidavit that the subpoenaed materials were personal to him and that the tape recordings were made after the termination of his employment with the corporation.
Prior Proceedings
On April 27, 1990, the government in a four-count indictment, charged movant with one count of conspiracy to defraud the United States, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, and two counts of subscribing to false income tax returns for tax years 1983 and 1984, in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1). The indictment alleges that movant extorted kickbacks from two vendors who did business or sought to do business with the corporation. The indictment further alleges that movant failed to report those kickbacks as income on his income tax returns for tax years 1983 and 1984.
In the fourth count, the indictment also charges co-defendant with subscribing to a false income tax return for the tax year 1983. Co-defendant pled guilty to this count on June 4, 1990 and entered into a cooperation and plea agreement with the government.
Since the return of the initial indictment, the government has continued its investigation of movant’s activities at the corporation with the alleged intent of seeking a superseding indictment against him should additional evidence of criminal conduct be uncovered. As a result of this ongoing investigation, the government obtained information concerning additional vendors involved with kickbacks and other payments to movant and now possibly seeks to indict others. 1
The government has alleged that it seeks the materials subpoenaed to bring a superseding indictment which would broaden the scope of the conspiracy charge in the existing indictment and add additional tax fraud charges against movant and possibly others.
On April 20, 1989, one week before charges were filed against movant, mov-ant’s counsel met with a trial attorney at the Tax Division of the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C. to present evidence to the government on behalf of mov-ant in an attempt to dissuade the government from bringing the indictment. Counsel’s representations included assertions about vendors interviewed by counsel who stated that they had never provided gratuities of any sort to movant and information about various persons already known to the government.
The Issues
Movant seeks to quash the subpoena on the grounds that the government’s dominant and improper purpose in issuing the subpoena is to discover evidence for use at trial against movant and that the materials sought to be produced in the grand jury are private and as such will fall within movant’s invocation of the Fifth Amendment's protection against self-incrimination.
I. The Purpose of the Grand Jury Subpoena
It is well-settled that “[i]t is clearly ‘improper to utilize a Grand Jury for the sole
*1061
or dominating purpose of preparing an already pending indictment for trial.’ ”
United States v. Vanwort,
In the absence of a factual showing to the contrary, however, there is a presumption of regularity of the grand jury proceedings,
see In re Grand Jury Proceedings,
Of course, it “is difficult, if not impossible, to enforce” the rule barring use of the grand jury to gather evidence improperly for trial in view of the propriety of the authority to use the grand jury to garner evidence for a superseding indictment.
Simels,
Movant urges that because the indictment was returned one week after mov-ant’s counsel demonstrated to the Department of Justice the “many weaknesses and flaws in the Government’s case” and because one week after the indictment the government was told that trial would be set for June 25, just seven weeks away, that the government “suddenly found itself facing imminent trial on a case riddled with problems.” Although movant’s self-serving interpretation of the sequence of events may be entirely plausible, the government has represented to the court that the grand jury investigation is continuing and that after the return of the indictment, additional evidence developed indicating that mov-ant received kickbacks from vendors not named in the current indictment. 2
According to the government, this new information, when developed, is likely to result in the government’s request for the grand jury to vote a superseding indictment against movant and possibly others. Although the subpoena calls for the production of recordings and documents which relate to the charges contained in the initial indictment, the government believes that the evidence contained in these materials may enable the grand jury to revise the conspiracy count to charge additional overt acts involving the vendors already named in the indictment. The government also believes that the material may contain evidence of specific payments to movant which might enable the grand jury to charge movant with income tax evasion, in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7201, in addition to the false subscribing charges already contained in the initial indictment.
Accordingly, although the materials requested may well relate to issues relevant to the existing indictment, because of the government’s representations, there is no basis on which to conclude that the government’s dominant purpose is preparation for trial, rather than investigation for the purpose of superseding the existing indictment. The motion to quash on the basis of improper purpose is denied.
II. The Fifth Amendment
Movant also claims that the grand jury subpoena calling for the production of tape recordings and documents prepared *1062 by movant and characterized by him as personal violates his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination despite the government’s assurance that the government will seek a court order granting mov-ant act-of-production immunity.
A. The Fisher-Doe Approach
The Fifth Amendment provides in relevant part that no person “shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself_” U.S. Const. Amend. V. Since 1886, when the Supreme Court enunciated in
Boyd v. United States,
In
Fisher v. United States,
*1063
The
Fisher
Court concluded the act of production did not involve testimonial self-incrimination because the existence and location of the papers were a “foregone conclusion” and thus production added “little or nothing to the sum total of the Government’s information....”
Id.
at 411,
Eight years later, the Court applied the
Fisher
analysis in
United States v. Doe,
Although these cases concerned the subpoena of business records, the Court’s recent and apparent abandonment of the traditional Fifth Amendment inquiry into the nature of the contents of documents,
see e.g., Bellis v. United States,
In 1988, the First Circuit, recognizing this question to be an open question of law, surveyed the Circuits’ diverging opinions regarding Justice O’Connor’s conclusion
*1064
that
Fisher
and
Doe
implicitly had overruled Boyd’s protection for private papers.
5
See In re Steinberg,
In
United States v. (Under Seal),
The Second Circuit has followed the
Fisher-Doe
analysis in
In Re Proceedings before August 6, 1984 Grand Jury,
B. Boyd Remains the Law
In
Boyd,
the Boyds contested a government order directing the Boyds to produce an invoice allegedly containing proof that the Boyds were guilty of tax evasion and the Supreme Court found that the statute pursuant to which the order was issued violated the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination.
Boyd,
The Boyd opinion rested heavily on the English case Entick v. Carrington, 19 How.St.Tr. 1029 (C.P.1765), in which Lord Camden invalidated a “paper-search” as a trespass at common law when conducted against the party with a superior property right. Lord Camden found that a search of an individual’s allegedly seditious private papers was tantamount to compelling the individual to testify against himself and that the search was offensive in that “[pjapers are the owners goods and chattels; they are his dearest property; and are so far from enduring a seizure, that they will hardly, bear an inspection.... ” Id. 19 How.St.Tr. at 1066. Justice Bradley in, Boyd stated that:
The principles laid down in [Entick ] affect the very essence of constitutional liberty and security. They reach farther than the concrete form of the case then before the court, with its adventitious circumstances; they apply to all invasions on the party of the government and its employees of the sanctity of a man’s home and the privacies of life. It is not the breaking of his doors, and the rummaging of his drawers, that constitutes the essence of the offense; but it is the invasion of his indefeasible right of personal security, personal liberty and private property, where that right has never been forfeited by his conviction of some public offense, — it is the invasion of this sacred right which underlies and constitutes the essence of Lord Camden’s judgment. Breaking into a house and opening boxes and drawers are circumstances of aggravation; but any forcible and compulsory extortion of a man's own testimony or his private papers to be used as evidence to convict him of a crime or to forfeit his goods, is within the condemnation of that judgment. In this regard the Fourth and Fifth Amendments run almost into each other.
*1066
Boyd,
as the first significant Court case
10
on the meaning of both the Fourth
11
and Fifth Amendments, has been woven into constitutional case law throughout the twentieth century and Fifth Amendment analysis for the production of documents as recently as 1988, inevitably begins with
Boyd. See Braswell v. United States,
Commensurate with the advance of technological ability and the increased need to detect more sophisticated forms of crime, 13 the Court has altered the principle that the accused should not provide the evidence that may self-incriminate and, accordingly, has strained to carve exceptions out of the analysis in Boyd. In addition to the overruling of the Fourth Amendment aspects of the opinion, over the century, the Court has chipped away from Boyd’s protection two other large blocks of formerly unobtainable self-incriminating evidence — “nontestimonial” evidence 14 and business records. 15
*1067
With respect to business records, the
Beilis
Court demonstrated how the Fifth Amendment privilege forced courts into a hairsplitting analysis of the character and size of the business organization and the status of the person having access to those documents.
United States v. Bellis,
This narrowing of the former, firmly held vision of the Fifth Amendment and a straightforward application of the
Fisher-Doe
analysis according to the government compels a contents-blind approach to the Fifth Amendment.
See, e.g.,
Bradley,
Constitutional Protection for Private Papers,
16 Harv.C.R.C.L.L.Rev. 461, 475 (1981) (“Despite the reservations expressed in
Fisher
and
Andresen,
the thrust of those opinions is that diaries, datebooks, letters, and other papers of the most private nature are not protected anymore than were Andresen’s business records.”). The Court in
Doe
did not reserve the business/personal contents
16
dichotomy as it did in
Fisher,
and the
Doe
reasoning appears to apply with equal force to all preexisting voluntarily prepared documents. Comment,
The Right Against Self-Incrimination by Producing Documents: Rethinking the Representative Capacity Doctrine,
80 Nw.L. Rev. 1605, 1619 n. 123 (1986). Coupled with footnote ten, according to the government, the Court has laid the groundwork for a contents-blind analysis and has appeared to all but bring itself to overrule the vestiges of
Boyd’s
Fifth Amendment protection for the contents of private papers.
See also Bouknight,
493 U.S. at -,
If the Fisher-Doe definition of compelled self-incrimination is limited to apply only to documents not voluntarily produced or utterances forcibly extracted, then the contents of movant’s personal diaries, private non-business tape recordings, appointment books, and myriad personal papers, voluntarily created at one time, to the extent that movant already has admitted their existence and his possession of such documents, would not be protected by the Fifth Amendment. However, a mechanical application of the Fisher-Doe analysis to bar the invocation of the Fifth Amendment for private papers is inappropriate.
The Court’s own reluctance to overrule
Boyd
explicitly, to narrow consistently its
*1068
discussion to the topic of “business records,”
see Bradley, Constitutional Protection for Private Papers,
16 Harv.C.R.C. L.L.Rev. 461, 473 n. 58 (1981-82);
Braswell v. United States,
Boyd’s holding with respect to private papers should be preserved, because the underpinning for the protection against the use of private papers to incriminate is more than a relic of a property-laden construction of the Fourth and Fifth Amendments and the now discarded legal analysis of the intimate relation between them. Boyd contains a “kernel of truth” and an appealing, defensible analytical proposition that the compelled production of one’s personal papers is testimonial to the extent that those papers are no more than an extension of one’s thoughts. See, Documents and the Privilege Against Self-Incrimination, 48 U.Pitt.L.Rev. 27, 39 (1986) {Boyd has endured “because its reasoning contained a kernel of truth ... forcing an individual to give up possession of these intimate writings may be psychologically comparable to prying words from his lips.”) Bradley, Constitutional Protection For Private Papers, 16 Harv.C.R.C.L.L.Rev. 461, 480-81 (1981-82) (the most private papers are the “sanctum sanctorum” of the personality). Indeed, such papers and statements are statements of the witness and thus among the most powerful forms of proof in the law.
Implicit in
Boyd
are the corollary realities that one’s papers can be an extension of oneself and may exist to some extent because of the limitations of one’s faculties — the ability to remember and the need or desire to write down thoughts to clearly formulate and to record them for future use. If all minds could recall perfectly a month’s worth of lunch appointments, remember what was said in Father’s Day cards of yesteryear, or draft cogently a letter on first attempt, there would be little need to write but for the desire to share these mental processes with others or to see the satisfaction of words on paper.
See
Bradley,
Constitutional Protection For Private papers,
16 Harv.C.R.C.L.L. Rev. 461, 494 (“[GJiven the limitations of the human brain, many thoughts, often fleeting and impermanent, are of little importance unless they are recorded.... Just as mental input is protected in
Stanley [v. Georgia,
As Justice Brennan stated in Fisher:
I perceive no principle which does not permit compelling one to disclose the contents of one’s mind but does permit compelling the disclosure of the contents of that scrap of paper by compelling its production. Under a contrary view, the constitutional protection would turn on fortuity, and persons would, at their peril, record their thoughts and the events of their lives. The ability to think private thoughts, facilitated as it is by pen and paper, and the ability to preserve intimate memories would be curtailed *1069 through fear that those thoughts or the events of those memories would become the subjects of criminal sanctions however invalidly imposed.
Fisher,
To the extent that ones private papers reveal the contents of one’s mind, there is no defensible line to be drawn between extracting a confession from one’s lips and doing the same by subpoenaing the thoughts one recorded in one’s diary this morning.
See Boyd,
The Balance of Interests Compels Protection
If the Fifth Amendment is not read to protect against the subpoena of private papers, then, to the degree that Fifth Amendment analysis permits the balancing of interests to arrive at the extent to which a person must participate in their own incrimination, the interests of privacy, the desire to preserve the autonomous functioning of the individual, and practical considerations outweigh the need for incriminating evidence and support the retention of the privilege for private papers. 20
*1070
Although the Fifth Amendment is worded absolutely, like the similarly absolute First Amendment, the privilege against compelled self-incrimination has been subject to both explicit and implicit balancing analyses weighing the need for tools to procure evidence for law enforcement and the interests of those invoking the privilege against self-incrimination. Arenella,
Schmerber and the Privilege Against Self-Incrimination,
20 Am.Cr.L.Rev. 31, 38 (1982).
See also
Note,
The Supreme Court, 1987 Term: Leading Cases I.A. Constitutional Law: Criminal Law and Procedure, If. Right Against Self-Incrimination—Product of Documents.,
102 Harv.L.Rev. 170, 173 (1988) (“To augment the doctrinal justification, the [Braswell] Court appealed to policy considerations.... The prosecution of white collar crime ... would be hampered by allowing custodians [of documents] to invoke the fifth amendment, and thereby to shroud evidence of wrongdoing.”);
California v. Byers,
Accordingly, the government’s interest in securing evidence for law enforcement, although compelling, is not absolute,
see Weeks v. United States,
Although the
Fisher
Court limited privacy considerations to the extent that it could not “cut the Fifth Amendment completely loose from the moorings of its language, and make it serve as a general protector of privacy”
22
the Court just two years earlier in
Beilis
stated that “ “[protection of individual privacy was the major theme running through the court’s decision in
Boyd
”
Beilis,
reflects many of our fundamental values and most noble aspirations: our unwillingness to subject those suspect of crime to the cruel trilemma of self-accusation, perjury or contempt; our preference for an accusatorial rather than an inquisitorial system of criminal justice; our fear that self-incriminating statements will be elicited by inhuman treatment and abuses; our sense of fair play ...; our respect for the inviolability of the human personality and of the right of each individual “to a private enclave where he may lead a private life” ...; our distrust of self-deprecatory statements; and our realization that the privilege, while sometimes “a shelter to the guilty,” is often “a protection to the innocent.”
Murphy v. Waterfront Comm’n,
Consequently, even if a zone of privacy is not imputed into the Fifth Amendment, the fundamental right to privacy can certainly be said to buttress an exemption for personal communications.
See, e.g., Stanley v. Georgia,
Moreover, in consideration of the extent to which an individual should be made to produce documents the contents of which are personal and self-incriminating, not only privacy, but concerns of moral autonomy are present. Gerstein, The Demise of Boyd: Self-Incrimination and Private Papers in the Burger Court, 27 U.C.L.A. L.Rev. at 396 (1979) (privilege “is part of the overall structure of rights which is directed precisely at maintaining a private life, and thereby individual freedom, possible.”). Not only is a dimension of one’s character forfeited 23 but one’s “autonomy is attacked at its source when the government purports to control, not only particular actions, but the process of reflection by which we work out the values underlying our decisions to act.” Gerstein, The Demise of Boyd: Self-Incrimination and Private Papers in the Burger Court, 27 U.C.L.A.L.Rev. at 390.
*1072
Finally, in addition to privacy and moral autonomy, practical reasons, when addressed in the balancing analysis, also militate toward the retention of the privilege for private documents. First, unlike business records, there will be few instances where the government knows for certain of the existence of the private records and even fewer instances where the nonproduction of records, as in regulated and thereby required business records, is in itself incriminating. Consequently, unless the government can prove that an individual actually has the documents requested, the individual may invoke the Fifth merely by denying the existence or possession of the documents.
See
Alito,
Documents and the Privilege Against Self-Incrimination,
48 U.Pitt.L.Rev. 27, 471-81 & n. 239 (“Precisely because such records are private, their existence is seoldom [sic] known to law enforcement authorities. Even if the authorities suspect or have some evidence that such documents may exist, unless there is substantial proof of the documents’ existence, the witness possessing the records will be able to disobey the subpoena with substantial impunity.”); Cf.
Doe,
Second, if act of production immunity is construed to immunize the contents insofar as production attests to existence, and the contents are the fruits of the existence,
see Fisher,
Finally, because broad subpoena power is subject to relevance and scope requirements rather than Fourth Amendment limitations, absent Fifth Amendment protection, subpoenas for private documents can be used as an end run around probable cause and warrant requirements.
See
McKenna,
The Constitutional Protection of Private Papers: The Role of A Hierarchical Fourth Amendment,
53 Ind.L.J. 55, 90 (1977-1978) (heightened showing for subpoena of private papers may be necessary to prevent circumvention of warrant clause requirements);
cf United States v. (Under Seal),
Conclusion
The history and purpose of the Fifth Amendment, the Supreme Court’s repeated attempts to preserve the sanctity of private papers, the recognition that one’s personal documents are no more than an extension of one’s thought processes, the fundamental right of privacy, as well as practical considerations, all militate toward preventing an application of Fisher-Doe to personal documents and quashing the government’s subpoena for those possessed by the movant.
Accordingly, movant’s motion to quash is granted to the extent that the subpoenaed materials are personal “non-business” records and movant is ordered to produce the subpoenaed materials for in camera inspection.
It is so ordered.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
On Motion To Modify or Withdraw
The request pursuant to correspondence from the government to modify or witlu draw the opinion in In Re Grand Jury Subpoena Duces Tecum Dated May 9, *1073 1990 (M-ll-189) (June 20, 1990) (the “Opinion”) is denied for the reasons set forth below.
Prior Proceedings
On June 20, 1990 this court issued the Opinion granting the defendant’s motion to quash a grand jury subpoena duces tecum on the ground that the Fifth Amendment would preclude the production of certain personal records allegedly within the defendant’s possession. The Opinion directed delivery of the documents in question to chambers for in camera review.
In mid-August, after the parties briefed and argued the question over which of the documents fell within the scope discussed in the Opinion, but prior to the application of the June 20 opinion to the specific documents in question, it was agreed between the parties that the defendant would enter a guilty plea which was taken on August 28, 1989. The government was given ten days to address the question of the status of the Opinion. All of the letters on this issue were considered fully submitted as of September 19, 1990.
The Government’s Request to Withdraw or Modify the Opinion is Denied
The government argues, and the court agrees, that at the time the Opinion was issued the court lacked a sufficient factual record to apply the legal principles set forth in the Opinion to the documents in this case. Indeed, the lack of the factual record prompted the direction for in camera review. The government and the court also agree that defendant’s subsequent guilty plea mooted the motion to quash. According to the government the Opinion will be “misinterpreted and inappropriately cited in future cases” and therefore should be modified or withdrawn.
Upon review, this request is denied. The Opinion contains a discussion of the legal issues presented to the court at the time of the motion to quash and eschews any application of the law discussed to any particular documents involved in this case. Moreover, the Opinion held that the application of the law to the facts there presented required a review of the documents and that the court was awaiting the development of a complete factual record before applying the discussion to the documents involved. The Opinion is neither “preliminary” nor “incomplete.” Whether the Opinion is subject to misinterpretation because the circumstances of this particular case precluded the court from applying the Opinion to the facts on this record is not within the further control of the court.
Accordingly, the government’s informal request is denied.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. By letter of May 31, 1990 movant also seeks to quash a Government subpoena issued to a non-party, a former vendor to the corporation named in the indictment against movant. Although considered as part of the evidence submitted in movant's motion to quash his own subpoena, movant has no standing to quash the non-party's subpoena.
Ponsford. v. United States,
. Although movant finds the failure of the government to name the additional vendors as indicative of an improper motive, the government is not obliged to name those suspected as additional co-conspirators to justify the issuance of the subpoena.
. In the companion case of
Andresen v. Maryland,
. For example, in footnote ten of
Doe
the Court stated "[i]f the party asserting the Fifth Amendment privilege has voluntarily compiled the document, no compulsion is present and the contents of the document are not privileged.”
Doe,
"Contrary to what Justice O’Connor contends [citation omitted], I do not view the Court’s opinion in this case as having reconsidered whether the Fifth Amendment provides protection for the contents of "private papers of any kind.” This case presented nothing remotely close to the question that Justice O'Connor eagerly poses and answers. First.... Second, the documents at stake here are business records which implicate a lesser degree of concern for privacy interest than, for example, personal diaries.
"Were it true that the Court’s opinion stands for the proposition that "the Fifth Amendment provides absolutely no protection for the contents of private papers of any kind,” [quoting Justice O’Connor] I would assuredly dissent. I continue to believe that under the Fifth Amendment ‘There are certain documents no person ought to be compelled to produce at the government’s request’.’’
Id. at 619,
. The First Circuit did not reach the issue.
See In re Steinberg,
. The Second Circuit noted that the tapes contained conversations pertaining "primarily to business matters” and that "since the witness’ communications were disclosed to several persons (also recorded on the tape), they necessarily do not touch on the more intimate aspects of [Doe’s] life. Under these circumstances, the Court finds that these subpoenaed materials are not what some members of the Supreme Court had in mind in suggesting that the contents of some intimate documents may still enjoy Fifth Amendment protection." Id. at 41.
*1065
production of personal diaries a defendant could assert a privilege against self-incrimination and has no obligation to respond to the subpoena except to indicate that he has no corporate diaries.
In Re Grand Jury Proceedings,
. In 1988, when discussing the duty of a principal of a corporation to relinquish a business tape, the Circuit implied that there still existed a distinction between the availability of the Fifth Amendment privilege that turned on the contents of the documents sought. In
In re Three Grand lury Subpoenas,
No doubt the contents of the tape, which Roe was properly ordered to produce for in camera inspection, will assist the district judge in determining whether the tape is property of Roe or the entities, but the duty to produce the tape, even for this limited purpose, may not be imposed on the entities until the judge has determined, at least preliminarily, that it is their property. Were this not the case, the government could obtain any personal document of any principal of a corporation or partnership merely by subpoenaing it from the business entity, upon penalty of contempt. Principals of such entities would thereby lose the Fifth Amendment privilege.
Id. at 1030 (emphasis added). Although this language would imply that this Circuit recognizes a continued distinction with respect to the protection of personal as opposed to business documents, the language in the opinion merely may have referred to a Fifth Amendment privilege with respect to the act of producing the document, as opposed to a privilege asserted with respect to the contents of the document.
In a post-Fisher, pre-Doe case, Judge Owen held that where a subpoena commanded the
. "[Compulsory production of incriminating books and papers] is contrary to the principles of a free government. It is abhorrent to the instincts of an Englishman; it is abhorrent to the instincts of an American."
Boyd,
. The "private papers" in
Boyd
was a business invoice regarding a shipment of glass while the papers in
Entick
were seditious documents. Thus, the notion of privacy announced in
Boyd
did not reflect the importance of the contents of the writings but was inextricably woven in the law of property and that the owner Boyd had greater title to his
private property.
Indeed, thirty-five years later in
Gouled,
Justice Clarke, writing for the Court stated that "there is no
*1066
special sanctity in papers” and thereby reasoned that any type of personal property could not be seized because that would render the accused as the "unwilling source of the evidence” used to incriminate.
. The Supreme Court has referred recently to
Boyd’s
holding as a “rule [the prohibition against forcing the production of private papers] searching for a rationale consistent with the proscription of the Fifth Amendment against compelling a person to give 'testimony' that incriminates him."
Fisher,
. The Supreme Court has held that a subpoena
duces tecum
issued to obtain business records is not subject to more stringent Fourth Amendment standards.
United States v. Miller,
. See, e.g., Alito, Documents and the Privilege Against Self-Incrimination, 484 U.Pitt.L.Rev. 27, 37 (court later required to later label a subpoena a "constructive search” to avoid subjecting the subpoena to Fourth Amendment probable cause and warrant requirements and immunity for Fifth Amendment not held to diminish Fourth Amendment protection).
. See e.g., Geyh, The Testimonial Component of the Right Against Self-Incrimination, 36 Cath.U. L.Rev. 611, 626 ("The emergence and eventual acceptance of the testimonial requirement closely parallels advances in forensic science, developed in response to the changing character of criminal conduct... .").,
. Although once protected,
see
Geyh,
The Testimonial Component of the Right Against Self-Incrimination,
36 Cath.U.L.Rev. 611, 621 nn. 46-49 (citing state cases around the turn of the century prohibiting compelled testimony such as forced making of footprints and submission to physical examination or identification), the compelled transfer of physical evidence or “sufficiently nontestimonial” evidence from the accused to the accuser has been excepted from fifth amendment protection insofar as such communications do not implicate the accused's "testimonial capacities."
Schmerber v. California,
. Since
Wilson v. United States,
. Indeed, the
Doe
Court instead indicated that the documents summonsed in
Fisher
related to the personal tax liability of the claimant and thus were arguably much more personal than the business documents considered in
Doe. See Doe,
. The dissent in the same case can also be read to support the retention of the privilege for private documents to the extent that it recognizes that one of "the critical foundations of the constitutional guarantee against self-incrimination .. is an explicit right of a natural person, protecting the realm of human thought and expression_’’
Braswell,
. Before the Fifth Amendment was applied to the states in
Malloy v. Hogan,
. Not only would a reading of Fisher-Doe be underinclusive if it fails to protect divulgence of the contents of one’s mind to self-incriminate, it is also overinclusive to the extent that the Court’s emphasis on compulsion would permit all voluntarily created testimonial communications. For example, should lie detector and computer technology advance to permit an analysis of brainwave function and physiological effects to reflect thought, a machine might be developed to read the mind. See Schnapper, Unreasonable Searchers and Seizures of Papers, 71 Va.L.Rev. 869, 927 (1985). Under a strict reading of Fisher-Doe, one could be given act-of-production immunity for subjecting oneself to the mind-reading machine. Nonetheless, because the existence of one’s thoughts, one’s cognitive process, is a “foregone conclusion," the contents of any thoughts one voluntarily creates could be used against one in a criminal proceeding under the Fisher-Doe analysis.
.Although this retention of the privilege for private documents continues the private-personal inquiry and thus imposes upon courts the burden of determining the characterization of documents, the burden is no more than what has existed since
Boyd,
not without parameters,
see e.g.
McKenna,
the Constitutional Protection of Private Papers: the Role of Hierarchical Fourth Amendment,
53 Indiana L.Rev. 54, 54 n. 1 (1977-1978) (citing cases and commentaries defining the scope);
United States v. Fisher,
. The zone of privacy technically does not stem from
Boyd, see
Note,
The Life and Times of
Boyd v. United States
(1886-1976),
76 Mich.L Rev. 184, 193-95 (1977) (Justice Brandéis' dissent in
Olmstead
marked the beginning of the shift from the Fourth Amendment emphasis on property to privacy), but subsequent cases relying upon
Boyd
have imputed a "zone of privacy" into the Fifth Amendment that now encompasses a nascent notion of individual and inviolate privacy.
See e.g., Roe v. Wade,
. In
Fisher,
the Court acknowledged that “the Court has often stated that one of the several purposes served by the constitutional privilege
*1071
against compelled testimonial self-incrimination is that of protecting personal privacy.”
Fisher,
. See also Gavison, Privacy and the Limits of the Law, 89 Yale L.J. 421, 443 (1980) (footnote omitted):
Some human activities only make sense if there is some privacy. Plots and intrigues may disappear, but with them would go our private diaries, intimate confessions, and surprises. We would probably try hard to suppress our daydreams and fantasies once others had access to them. We would try to erase from our minds everything we would not be willing to publish, and we would try not to do anything that would make us likely to be feared, ridiculed, or harmed. There is a terrible flatness in the person who could succeed in these attempts. We do not choose against total lack of privacy only because we cannot attain it, but because its price seems much too high.
.
See also
Alito,
Documents and the Privilege Against Self-Incrimination,
48 U.Pitt.L.Rev. 27, 54 n. 137 (there may be First Amendment limitations on subpoenas impinging on speech/religious interests, (citing,
inter alia, Zurcher v. Stanford Daily,
