OPINION AND ORDER
Presently before me is a motion to quash a subpoena directed against the target of a grand jury investigation. The Government seeks to require the target to produce all records of any kind received from certain named individuals in connection with or reflecting moneys paid or lent to or received from those persons. The investigation apparently involves the illegal payment of moneys by the target, who is a major principal of a stevedoring operation, to labor union officials. Two of the persons whose writings the Government asks the target to produce are such union officials. The other persons are two vice presidents of the stevedoring company, three personal friends of the target and the target’s sister-in-law who also happens to be the wife of one of the vice presidents.
The Government invokes the rules laid down in
Fisher v. United States,
To be sure the target has raised a knotty question. In
Fisher
v.
United States, supra,
the Supreme Court cutback significantly on the ability of one under subpoena to restrict Government access to documents in one’s possession. In that case, it was determined that accountant’s work papers, in the possession of the taxpayer to whose tax returns they related, could be subpoenaed from the taxpayer without running afoul of the Fifth Amendment. According to the Court, the subpoenas seeking these records did not compel oral testimony, nor did the act of producing the documents compel the taxpayer “to restate, repeat, or affirm the truth of the contents of the documents sought.”
Id.
In
Fisher
the Court found that the act of producing the accountant’s work papers did not involve testimonial self-incrimination. The existence of the papers was a “foregone conclusion” and the taxpayer’s concession that he possessed such papers added “little or nothing to the sum total of the Government’s information.”
The question for my consideration thus narrows down to whether the compelled production of the papers sought herein amounts to “ ‘responses which are also com
*327
munications.’ ”
United States v. Beattie,
Thus, I am faced with a novel question. At oral argument I inquired of the Government what it expects will be produced as a result of its rather broadly worded subpoena. A number of possibilities were suggested, including the existence of a note from one of the labor union officials evidencing a payment by the target to him. Upon questioning, the Government appeared to concede that if the target himself had prepared the note, given it to the union official to sign and then taken it back, this would be a record received from the target that might be exempt from discovery. The fact that the subpoena herein would include such a document leads me to conclude that, at the very least, it is overly broad. However, I am inclined to go one step further and quash the subpoena on the grounds that the act of producing the documents sought would involve testimonial self-incrimination.
During the argument it became clear to me that the existence of the documents in question is not, as in Fisher, a “foregone conclusion.” Thus, requiring production by the target in this case will impel him to be a witness against himself by forcing him to compile papers and acknowledge their existence. In Fisher the taxpayer’s concession that he possessed the papers added little or nothing to the Government’s case against him. Conversely, in the situation at bar, such a concession adds everything to the case. The target’s possession of a note evidencing a debt is substantial evidence that such a debt existed and, in turn, that he committed a crime. Nor, as suggested by Government counsel, would the damage be obviated by presenting the evidence to the grand jury without designating its source. This deus ex machina approach cannot cure the constitutional infirmities of the subpoena, since the Government attorney would certainly know the source of the documents. Indeed, the Government’s suggestion clearly misconstrues its own function. For what is the meaning of the Fifth Amendment if any citizen can be forced to give self-incriminating testimonial evidence to a Government prosecutor with only a vague assertion that the information will be insulated from all others? In my view this production cannot be compelled absent a grant of immunity.
We are not dealing, in this case, with accountant’s work papers which are prepared by the accountant for his benefit to aid in his preparation of tax returns. Rather, the documents sought, if they are as the Government suggests, were prepared for the target’s benefit to memorialize transactions in which he engaged. In this sense, they are his personal papers and compelling their production will, in essence, compel him to be a witness against himself, just as it would if his own signature were on the documents. See In re Grand Jury Subpoena Duces Tecum Served Upon John Doe, M—11—188 (S.D.N.Y. October 12, 1978) (Sweet, J.).
*328 Accordingly, for the reasons set forth above, the target’s motion to quash the subpoena is granted.
SO ORDERED.
