The Commonwealth of Massachusetts, in name of the Justices of the Superior Court of the Massachusetts Trial Court, asks us to exercise our mandamus authority under the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651, to order the district court to decide or otherwise dispose of a pretrial petition for habe-as corpus relief which the Commonwealth claims is interfering with state criminal proceedings. Although this power is used exceedingly sparingly, we determine that this case poses an issue of such importance, and one so elemental to the proper role of the federal judiciary in our constitutional scheme, as to warrant the issuance of an advisory mandamus granting the requested relief.
I. Factual Background
James N. Ellis, Jr., Nicholas Ellis, James N. Ellis, Sr., and Leonora Ellis 1 are four former employees of the Worcester, Massachusetts law firm of Ellis & Ellis. In 1997, they were indicted by a Massachusetts grand jury on numerous counts of insurance fraud and related charges following a lеngthy investigation by the Insurance Fraud Bureau of Massachusetts (“IFB”). The presentation to the grand jury, and the ongoing criminal prosecutions, were and are being handled by assistant attorneys general in the Insurance Fraud Division of the Massachusetts Attorney General’s Office.
In November of 1997, defendant James N. Ellis, Jr., filed a motion to dismiss the indictments or to disqualify prosecuting counsel; the motion was subsequently joined by the other three defendants. Defendants argued that the assistant аttorney generals prosecuting their state criminal cases were impermissibly biased, due to the unusual statutory scheme by which the IFB and the Insurance Fraud Division are funded.
As expressly authorized by statute, see Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 427, § 13 (1996), the IFB is a quasi-governmental entity created by two voluntary associations of Massachusetts insurance carriers, the Automobile Insurance Bureau and the Workers’ Compensation Rating and Inspection Bureau, for the prevention and investigation of fraudulent insurance transаctions. The governing board of the IFB consists of fifteen members, five from each rating bureau and five specified public officials. The costs of administering the IFB are borne equally by the two rating bureaus.
In addition to bearing the costs of administering the IFB, the two rating bureaus are also subject to annual assessments, which are used to partially fund the investigatory and prosecutorial actions of the Insurance Fraud Division of the Attorney General’s Office. By statute, the Attorney General is required to dedicate the funds so received to matters referred to him by the IFB, and he must further designate a total of at least thirteen assis
Following a nonevidentiary hearing, the judge presiding over the state trial proceedings denied the motion to dismiss the indictments or disqualify counsel. Construing all facts in the light most favorable to defendants, the court found that the statutory scheme did nоt violate defendants’ constitutional or statutory rights to a disinterested prosecutor. Upon defendants’ request, the trial judge reported his decision to the Massachusetts Appeals Court, and the Supreme Judicial Court granted defendants’ application for direct appellate review.
On April 14, 1999, the Supreme Judicial Court affirmed the denial of the motion to dismiss or disqualify, as well as the denial of defendants’ request for an evidentiary hearing.
See Commonwealth v. Ellis,
On May 4, 1999, defendants filed a joint pretrial habeas corpus petition in the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts. In the petition, dеfendants claim that their “custody” on personal recognizance is in violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment because their prosecutors are impermissibly “interested” in their cases due to the relationship between the IFB and the Insurance Fraud Division and because they were denied a constitutionally sufficient opportunity to establish such unlawful influence. The petition specifically requested discovery and an еvidentiary hearing, claiming that they had been denied the ability to develop the facts in the state court. An initial hearing was held by the district court on October 27, 1999, at which the Commonwealth argued that the defendants’ claim was not an appropriate subject for pretrial habeas relief.
On December 8, 1999, approximately one month before the first state court trial date, the district court issued an order (1) requiring the Commonwealth to respond to defendants’ discovery requests by December 15, 1999 and (2) preliminarily setting an evidentiary hearing date for December 22, 1999, but not addressing the underlying issue of whether the court would accept jurisdiction over the habeas petition. On December 17, 1999, the court issued a second order, in which it asserted jurisdiction over the petition and rescheduled the evidentiary hearing for December 30,1999.
On December 16, 1999, the Commonwealth filed a petition for extraordinary relief with this Court, seеking relief from the district court’s order scheduling an evidentiary hearing. This Court ordered defendants to respond, and they did so on December 20, 1999, on which date they also moved the district court to postpone the hearing. The district court vacated the December evidentiary hearing, thus mooting the Commonwealth’s petition, which was subsequently withdrawn.
The district court then set a January 31, 2000 deadline for in camera production of privileged documents requested in discovery by defendants, and rescheduled the evidentiary hearing for Aрril 3, 2000. While preserving its objection to the imposition of discovery in the habeas proceedings, the Commonwealth complied with the January 31, 2000 deadline for in camera production.
Defendants then, without seeking leave of court, noticed the depositions of four
The Commonwealth filed this second petition for extraordinary relief on February 7, 2000, claiming that the pretrial habeas proceedings in federal court are interfering with the criminal proceedings before the Massachusetts trial court. Since the petition was filed, the first trial of James N. Ellis, Jr. resulted in a hung jury and a mistrial after ten weeks; no retrial has yet been scheduled. Nicholas Ellis was scheduled to begin trial on two indictmеnts on June 15, and James Ellis, Jr. will undergo a second trial on two separate indictments beginning on July 17. Further trials involving defendants have not yet been scheduled. It appears that the federal court evidentiary hearing scheduled for April 2000 was not held, due to the pen-dency of this petition for extraordinary relief.
II. Law and Application
1. Standard for Advisory Mandamus
The Commonwealth’s petition seeks a writ of prohibition
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under the All Writs Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1651, prohibiting the district court from asserting jurisdiction over defendants’ pretrial habeas petition. As the parties have correctly noted, mandаmus relief is a “drastic remedy,” to be used sparingly and only in unusual circumstances.
In re Recticel Foam Corp.,
Advisory mandamus has its roots in the Supreme Court’s reference to mandamus review of “basic, undecided question[s].” Schlagenhauf
v. Holder,
In
United States v. Horn,
2. Advisory Mandamus Is Appropriate in this Case
Like the issue presented in Horn, the issue raised by the Commonwealth’s petition is a prime candidate for advisory mandamus. Not only is the availability of pretrial federal habeas relief for “disinterested prosecutor” claims an issue of first impression, but the greater issues of federalism underlying this case implicate the concerns with judicial overextension of jurisdiction that the mandamus writ has traditionally been used to correct. See id. (and cases cited therein).
a. Federal Policy Ayainst Interference with State Court Proceedinys
The federal courts have long recognized the “fundamental policy against federal intei’ference with state criminal proceedings.”
Younger v. Harris,
As early as 1793, Congress manifested its understanding and intention that the state courts be allowed to -conduct state proceedings free from interference by the federal courts, when it prohibited the federal courts from issuing injunctions to stay proceedings in state court.
See
1 Stat. 335, ch. 22, § 5 (current version at 28 U.S.C. § 2283);
Younger,
As the Supreme Court has recognized, the policy against federal interference with state judicial proceedings is premised on
a proper respect for state functions, a recognition of the fact that the entire country is made up of a Union of separate state governments, and a continuance of the belief that the National Government will fare best if the States and their institutions are left free to perform their separate functions in their separate ways.... The concept does not mean blind deference to “States’ Rights” any more than it means centralization of control over every important issue in our national Government and its courts.... What the concept does represent is a system in which there is sensitivity to the legitimate interests of both Stаte and National Governments, and in which the National Government, anxious though it may be to vindicate and protect federal rights and federal interests, always endeavors to do so in ways that will not unduly interfere with the legitimate activities of the States.
b. Applicability of Abstention Principles to Habeas Cases Generally
Defendants argue that the abstention doctrine and its underlying principles do not apply to this case, emphasizing that they are not seeking an injunction or other equitable relief against the state proceedings (such as was involved in Younger), but rather are pursuing a habeas remedy рrovided for and governed by statute. We find this position unavailing primarily for two reasons.
First, although we appreciate the difference between a request for equitable relief and a request for statutory relief generally, the practical difference between the relief requested in defendants’ habeas petition and an ordinary injunction is minimal. Defendants’ petition for writ of habeas corpus specifically asks the district court to “grant thе writ and discharge petitioners from custody.” Pet. for Writ of Habeas Corpus,
Commonwealth v. Ellis,
Case No. 99-CV-10915-NG (D.Mass.), at 9. Such discharge, of course, would be tantamount to an injunction requiring the defendants’ release and prohibiting the state from proceeding with the current prosecution. Whatever distinctions might exist between the two remedies, the difference in this case is essentially “semantic.”
Davis v. Lansing,
Second, even acсepting the distinction between equitable relief and statutory remedies,
Younger
speaks of the policy against federal
interference
with state court proceedings, a reference which we do not read as limited exclusively to equitable relief.
See Younger,
c. Abstention Principles in Pretrial Habeas Context
The apрlicability of comity and abstention principles to habeas proceedings is amply demonstrated by the courts’ treatment of habeas petitions brought pri- or to conviction in the state proceedings. With only two exceptions to date,
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the
d. Abstention Is Required in this Case
Given the importance of the federalism concerns at issue in this case, and the degree to which the district court’s orders threaten the delicate and important balance between vigorous protection оf federal rights and an appropriate respect for the state conduct of state matters,
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this case is “a classic case for abstention.”
Davis,
In light of the foregoing, the need for federal abstention in this case is “ ‘perfectly clear.’ ”
Davis,
III. Conclusion
For the reasons stated, the Commonwealth’s petition is granted, and a writ of advisory mandamus will issue forthwith instructing the district court to dismiss the defendants’ petition for writ of habeas corpus without prejudice to refiling aftеr trial if any defendant is convicted and sentenced in the state proceedings.
Petition granted. Costs to the Commonwealth of Massachusetts.
Notes
. In this Court, these four individuals are technically respondents to the writ for extraordinary relief. In the district court, however, they were petitioners, with respect to the underlying petition for habeas corpus relief. And in state court, of course, they were defendants in the criminal trial and appellants in the appellate proceedings. In an effort to avoid confusion, we will endeavor to refer to them as "the defendants,” or to make explicit to whom we refer if other terminology is used.
. This does not mean that the Attorney General is required to investigate or prosecute all matters referred by the IFB, only that these particular funds and prosecutors shall not be allocated to matters initiated by means other than a referral from the IFB.
See Commonwealth v. Ellis,
. As our prior сases have recognized, the distinct writs of prohibition and mandamus are often discussed interchangeably. See United States v. Horn, 29 F.3d 754, 769 n. 18 (1st Cir.1994). The two writs derive from the same statutory basis and incorporate the same standards, so we will continue the practice of referring to them interchangeably. See id.
. As in previous cases, we hasten to distinguish between supervisory mandamus and advisory mandamus. Supervisory mandamus is used to correct an established, but significantly improper, trial court practice. Advisory mandamus, in contrast, is appropriate for issues of particular importance and novelty, such as that raised in this case. See Horn, 29 F.3d at 769 n. 19; 16 Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller, Edward H. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3934.1, at 573 & n. 5 (1996).
. Notwithstanding- the general rule against pretrial habeas petitions, we will "in appropriate circumstances entertain a claim that permitting a nascent (but as yet incomplete) state court prosecution to go forward would violate the Double Jeopardy Clausе.”
Allen v. Attorney General of Maine,
. Although we conclude that the district court should not have аsserted jurisdiction over defendants' habeas petition at all, our conclusion is bolstered by the court’s imposition of discovery and its apparent intention to conduct an evidentiary hearing in the habeas action. The practical burden of such proceedings is not insignificant, and the inquiry by a federal court into the prosecutorial decisions of a state attorney general poses “separation of powers” issues in addition to fеderalism issues.
. As the Seventh Circuit noted, the decision of the highest state court "is, without doubt, the law of the case, and [defendant] cannot realistically anticipate a different result on this issue at trial or on direct appeal.”
Neville,
. Although we are not greatly impressed by the Commonwealth’s allegations of harm to the Attorney General’s Office in this case,
see, e.g., In re Justices of the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico,
