This is an appeal of an order holding Jeffrey Steinberg in contempt of court for failing to produce certain notebooks for use by the government at a trial in which he and his wife are codefendants. 1 We affirm.
Appellant Steinberg, his wife Michelle, and others are awaiting trial on charges of conspiracy to obstruct a grand jury investigation of fraud in the fund-raising activities for the 1984 presidential campaign of Lyndon LaRouche. The initial indictment was issued on October 6, 1986. Also on that date, government officials executed search warrants on various LaRouche offices. Among the items seized were hundreds of notebooks containing references to the charged conspiracy to obstruct justice. These notebooks were maintained by Jeffrey and Michelle Steinberg and other members of LaRouche’s security staff. Entries in the notebooks were in chronological order and often referred to ongoing government investigations of the La-Rouche organization. Approximately 80 notebooks prepared by Michelle Steinberg and 20 notebooks prepared by Jeffrey Steinberg were found. However, only two of the Jeffrey Steinberg notebooks found cover the period of the alleged conspiracy to obstruct justice. The government seeks to compel Steinberg to produce other note *528 books he has prepared covering the period in question.
In an effort to secure these papers for use against Steinberg, his wife, and other codefendants, the government has issued a trial subpoena which now requires appellant to produce
[a]ll notebooks in [his] custody or control and of whatever kind containing any writing made on or after October 1, 1984 which mentions unauthorized credit card charges, Boston Grand Jury Investigation, FBI investigation, IRS, FBI, William Weld, Dan Small, Small, Richard Egan, Egan, Jim, Lee Fick, Fick, Baron, Gelber, Park or Sanders or John Scial-done or Scialdone.
The district court, on November 17, 1987, ordered Steinberg to comply with the subpoena and to produce the notebooks “forthwith.” The order also granted immunity to appellant from any evidence which may be derived, directly or indirectly, from the act of producing the records (“production immunity”). This immunity did not extend to the contents of the notebooks nor did it explicitly contain any guarantee that they would not be used against appellant’s wife.
Only two of appellant’s arguments merit extended discussion. 2 First, appellant argues that the fifth amendment prohibition against compelled self-incrimination bars the use of the contents of his notebook at his criminal trial. He asserts that it is not sufficient that he has been given “production immunity”; rather, he claims that, because the documents are “personal,” non-business records, he cannot be compelled to make them available for use at his trial absent full immunity, covering both the act of production and the contents of the notebooks. Second, because he claims the records are “testimonial” in nature, he argues that use of those records against his wife is barred by the common law adverse spousal rule embodied in Fed.R.Evid. 501.
The Fifth Amendment Privilege
The principle that the fifth amendment protects the contents of private papers originated over one hundred years ago in
Boyd v. United States,
The scope of the
Boyd
doctrine, however, has recently undergone significant erosion. Only two years after
Beilis
was announced, the Court held that the fifth amendment provided no protection for the contents of tax records prepared by a taxpayer’s accountant.
Fisher v. United States,
In
Andresen v. Maryland,
The Court’s most recent pronouncements in
United States v. Doe,
Only Justice O’Connor found, at least expressly, that
Doe
“sounded the death knell of Boyd.”
We recognize that no other justice used the opportunity presented in
Doe
to join Justice O’Connor in an explicit final burial of
Boyd.
4
Nonetheless,
Fisher, Andresen,
and
Doe
clearly signal that
Boyd,
at best, must be read in a very limited fashion. If the contents of private papers are protected at all — a matter as to which we express no opinion today — “it is only in rare situations, where compelled disclosure would break ‘the heart of our sense of privacy.’ ”
Butcher v. Bailey,
Appellant has presented no evidence to rebut the government’s substantial showing that the records it seeks are not intimate personal papers. A former associate of appellant has testified at length that the notebooks were kept as records of regularly conducted activity of the LaRouche security staff. The two notebooks already in possession of the government show no “highly personal” entries. An inspection of these documents confirms the district court’s finding that they were maintained for the purpose of briefing, consultation, and planning within the LaRouche organization. Indeed, the district court itself stated that the notebooks “are records of a regularly conducted activity.” Even if the fifth amendment protects the contents of some voluntarily prepared personal papers, it certainly does not protect organizational records of this type.
Adverse Spousal Privilege
Appellant’s argument on this issue is based on the assumption that the subpoenaed documents are “testimonial.” As the preceding discussion indicates, however, appellant’s assumption is erroneous. Whether a person’s actions are “testimonial” for purposes of the adverse spousal privilege generally is determined by whether those actions would be “testimonial” under the fifth amendment if they were used against that person.
See, e.g., In re Grand Jury Proceedings (Rovner),
Only the act of producing the documents is testimonial in nature. The government correctly concedes that this act cannot be used “at all” against appellant’s wife. The contents of these notebooks, however, may be used as evidence against both appellant and his wife.
The order of the district court in Appeal No. 87-2031 is affirmed. Appeal No. 87-1954 is dismissed as moot.
Notes
. This case originally came to us as a consolidation of appeals from two separate orders, each of which orders held Jeffrey Steinberg, petitioner-appellant herein, in contempt of court for failing to produce the notebooks. The first such subpoena was issued in connection with the trial of Roy Frankhauser, a codefendant of Steinberg’s, whose trial was severed from the main case by the district court. Frankhauser’s separate trial was scheduled in advance of the main trial. Inasmuch as Frankhauser’s trial was concluded shortly before oral argument in this court, the appeal from the ruling in that case has become moot. The second subpoena, however, was issued in connection with the main trial, which has yet to conclude. The contempt order in that matter presents a live controversy, and we address it in this opinion.
. Appellant also contends (1) that the documents in question are protected by a journalist's privilege; (2) that the order of immunity was invalid because the Acting United States Attorney did not have statutory authority to request it; (3) that the. subpoena of October 27, 1987 was overbroad; and (4) that, under the reciprocal discovery rule of Fed.R.Crim.P. 16(b)(1)(A), the government cannot "discover” appellant’s documents unless appellant has first requested discovery from the government. These arguments are without merit. First, appellant has made no showing whatsoever that these documents are related to a journalistic endeavor. Second, at the time the application for the current order of immunity for the Stein-berg trial had been submitted to the district court, the United States Attorney had been confirmed and sworn in. Third, the subpoena is very specific and requests only material which is relevant to the government's prosecution. Finally, the government is not conducting discovery but has secured a trial subpoena for appellant to produce evidence for the government’s use at trial. .
. This court, in the case of
In re Kave,
. With the same circumspection, the Court in Doe specifically noted that the records in question were business records and of a less personal nature than the documents at issue in Fisher. As noted above, the Court in Fisher expressly reserved decision on whether truly private papers may receive some protection under the fifth amendment.
