This is an appeal from a district court order releasing, for use in a civil case, transcripts of the grand jury testimony of potentially all witnesses who testified before the grand jury, based on a showing of need for the testimony of only three witnesses. 1 We reverse the district court’s decision, holding that: (1) a district court must evaluate the need for disclosure of grand jury testimony on a witness-by-witness basis; and (2) before releasing transcripts, the district court must • conduct аn in camera review in order to limit the disclosure to the claimed need and make appropriate redactions.
BACKGROUND
United States ex rel. Stone v. Rockwell Int’l Corp.,
Dist. Ct. No. 89-CV-1154, the qui tam action in which litigants wish to use grand jury testimony, concerns defendant Rockwell International Corporation’s operation of the Rocky Flats Nuclear Weapons Plant (Rocky Flats) near Golden, Colorado, under contract with the United States Department of Energy from 1975 through 1989. Plaintiff James S. Stone filed his complaint in July 1989, alleging that Rockwell violated the False Claims Act,
see
31 U.S.C. § 3729, by concealing and misrepresenting its environmental and safety performance in submissions for payment.
See United States ex rel. Stone v. Rockwell Int’l Corp.,
In November 1996,'the district court permitted the government to intervene in Stone’s qui tam action.
See Stone,
Stone then filed this action to obtain access to grand jury testimony. He sought disclosure of the testimony of ninety-eight persons whom he believed were “knowledgeable” on subjects “at the heart” of the qui tam case. Vullo Aff., Ex. 1 at 2. Stone’s primary claim was that release of the transcripts would prevent injustice in the qui tam action by providing a means to refresh witnesses’ memories. 3 He asserted that, at their depositions, key witnesses were having difficulty recalling details of important events. See id. at 2-6. The assertion was supported with excerpts from deposition transcripts showing that nine individuals- admitted varying degrees of memory loss in response to some questions. 4 Stone also submitted memoran-da documenting earlier interviews of these individuals, reflecting a more- detailed recollection, at the time of the special grand jury investigation.
The disclosure matter was assigned to the trial judge in the qui tam action. On February 10, 1998, he heard argument in support of disclosure from counsel for Stone and a trial attorney from the civil division of the United Statеs Department of Justice (DOJ). The DOJ civil attorney joined Stone’s motion and added a contention that disclosure was necessary to test the credibility of witnesses, as exemplified by one individual’s deposition statement that he wished to “recant” information in a debriefing memorandum. Appellants’ Joint Mot. for Stay, Ex. B at 6-8. Rockwell argued against the motion, claiming that Stone was making a wholesale request for disclosure without the requisite showing of particularized need. However, Rockwell also requested disclosure of the testimony of individuals it wished to depose.
The district court did not ascertain how many individuals on the .list of ninety-eight witnesses had actually testified before the grand jury and would be called for deposition or trial testimony under the limitations imposed in pre-trial orders in the civil case. It was plain that the district court believed that 'a review of grand jury transcripts would require a majоr investment of time. On appeal, however, it became clear that the task was not nearly as onerous as the district court contemplated. In fact, the requested disclosure could be limited to as few as nine persons.
Based on the information submitted by Stone and the DOJ, the district court judge made his ruling. He found that the deposition excerpts established particularized need for the grand jury testimony of those specific persons, see id.' at 19, and observed that he would “be very surprised if somebody had an accurate memory of something that happened ten years ago in the kind of detail that’s going to be' necessary for testimony at trial,” id. at 20. He ordered disclosure of the grand jury testimony of all witnesses that any party in the qui tam action had deposed, *569 intended to depose, or intended to call at trial. The transcripts were to be redacted so that the disclosure wаs limited to witness testimony on relevant issues. In addition, the court imposed a protective order so that the material could be used only for the purposes of the qui tarn litigation.
The court’s written order established disclosure and redaction procedures and formalized the protective order. The following steps were required for release of transcripts: (1) counsel for the parties were to provide to the United Statеs Attorney lists of witnesses, prioritized in order of deposition date; (2) the United States Attorney was to redact portions of grand jury transcript containing comment by the prosecutors or grand jurors, then provide to the parties’ representatives one copy of the redacted transcripts; and (3) the parties’ representatives were to review the redacted transcripts to excise portions of the transcript unrelatеd to the issues of pondcrete, salterete, spray irrigation, the sewage treatment plant, or the awards fee process to reach a “final redacted transcript” for use in the prosecution or defense of the qui tarn action. Id.; Ex. C at 3-4.
Several persons moved to intervene and request reconsideration of the disclosure order. Intervenors John Does Nos. 1, 2, and 3 were targets of the grand jury investigation; other intervenors wеre Rockwell employees who had testified before the grand jury and will be deposed in the qui tam action. In opposing the motion for reconsideration, Stone provided excerpts from one interve-nor’s May 1995 deposition, showing some degree of memory loss.
At a hearing on the motion for reconsideration, held February 27,1998, the court modified its previous ruling to allow witnesses to review their own transcripts. The court also stated that, later, it would work out a disclosure procedure for the grand jury testimony of trial witnesses.
Rockwell and the intervenors appealed the order to this court and requested a stay pending appeal. On March 2, we issued a temporary stay. The parties provided expedited briefing on the stay motion and participated in a lengthy oral argument on April 1. At oral argument, the parties agreed that this court reviews the merits of the distriсt court’s order under the abuse of discretion standard,
see In re Grand Jury 95-1,
DISCUSSION
The Supreme Court has consistently “recognized that the proper functioning of the grand jury system depends upon the secrecy of the grand jury proceedings.”
Douglas Oil Co. v. Petrol Stops Northwest,
A district court may properly order release of grand jury materials after a party demonstrates the necessity for them “with particularity.”
United States v. Procter & Gamble Co.,
Speсifically, a party seeking grand jury materials must show (1) the materials are *570 needed to avoid a possible injustice in' another judicial proceeding, (2) the need for disclosure is greater than the need for continued secrecy, and (3) the request is structured to cover only material so needed. Relevance alone is not sufficient; secrecy will not be broken absent a compelling necessity for the materials. Further, the request must amount to more than a request for authorization to engage in a fishing expedition:
In re Grand Jury 95-1,
The discussion below addresses the three elements of the disclosure burdеn in isolation. It should be kept in mind that, as in any balancing test, the relevant factors are interrelated. Competing interests, cannot be weighed without the identification of a recognizable need and an estimate of the interests in secrecy. “[AJs the considerations justifying secrecy become less relevant, a party asserting a need for grand jury transcripts will have a lesser burden in showing justification” for releasing them.
Douglas Oil,
A. PARTICULARIZED NEED
“The most significant” factor is the demonstration of “ ‘a particular, not a general, need for thé [grand jury] material’ ”
In re Lynde,
Almost uniformly, the federal courts have interpreted the requirement of particularized need literally, and rejected a blanket approach to the determination. Even in a “complex, long drawn out, and expensive” case, the Supreme Court disapproved of a general rеlease of an entire grand jury transcript.
Procter & Gamble,
*571
The common experience is that memories fade with the passage of time. However, “[a] mere statement that prior testimony will be less affected by loss of memory simply does not establish that any particular witness’s memory needs to be refreshed.”
Lucas v. Turner,
We cаnnot reconcile the sweep of the district court’s ruling with established case law. Stone and the DOJ substantiated their disclosure request with evidence of passage of time, recalcitrance by one person, and memory loss of nine deponents, only two of whom had actually testified before the grand jury. The district court extrapolated from this showing and issued an order permitting any party to obtain the testimony of any witness. In effect, the showing of need for the testimony of three grand jury witnesses unsealed the testimony of potentially all witnesses.
The district court erred in generalizing a need for the testimony of all, based on a showing relevant to a small sample. We hold that the district court must conduct a witness-by-witness analysis under the particularized need standard. It must also provide the supporting facts and the reasons for its determination, so that we may conduct a meaningful review.
See Fischbach & Moore,
Hеre, the district court was in the best possible position to evaluate the alleged need for disclosure, in that it supervises the grand jury matter and presides over the qui tarn action. See id. Moreover, it is apparent that the court used this expertise in finding memory loss or recalcitrance on the part of witnesses identified in written and oral submissions and in making a determination of particularized need for the testimony of these witnesses. To the extеnt that the court’s determination of need applied to the identified witnesses, it is sustainable. 7 As to the remaining witness, we remand for findings of fact and conclusions of law on the need for grand jury testimony. 8
B. BALANCING NEED AND INTERESTS IN SECRECY
Once a party makes the required showing of particularized need, the court must weigh the particularized need against public interests “served by safeguarding the confidentiality of grand jury proceedings.”
Douglas Oil,
In this case, an additional factor contributes to the weight of secrecy interests. The individual target defendants, John Does 1, 2, and 3, were investigated by the grand jury but not indicted.
See Douglas Oil,
In making its ruling, the district court did not explicitly enumerate or weigh the interests in continued secrecy. It did, however, name other appropriate policy concerns, such as the public interest in prosecuting the qui tam action.
See In re Catfish Antitrust Litig.,
C. STRUCTURE OF THE DISCLOSURE
“The disclosure order must be structured to cover only the material required in the interests of justice.”
United States v. Sobotka,
To prevent unnecessary disclosure, the district court must conduct an in camera review of the requested transcripts and determine what portions, if any, meet the claimed need.
See Lucas,
While we recognize the workload district court judges are faced with, this in camera procedure is necessary due to the paramount concern' of all courts for the sanctity and secrecy of grand jury proceedings. In undertaking this inquiry the district court should not determine what is useful to the litigants but rather should focus on the question of whether particularized need has been shown for each item to be released. See Dennis [v. United States], 384 U.S. [855], 874-75,86 S.Ct. 1840 , 1851-52,16 L.Ed.2d 973 [ (1966) ].
Lucas,
In declining to review the transcripts, the district court abused its discretion. As a consequence, there was a potential for the release of a broad range of grand jury information without the requisite showing of need. 10 The entry of a protective order restricting access to the transcripts does not cure this deficienсy.
The procedure the district court devised for redacting and releasing the grand jury transcripts is equally- troubling. Essentially,- the court delegated the work to a committee made up of the parties’ attorneys and the United States Attorney for the District of Colorado. As the Supreme Court has stated, it is the “judge’s function” to. “supervise the [production] process: for example, to cause the elimination of extraneous matter.”
Dennis,
The court must review the transcripts in the first instance to determine particularized need and to confine disclosure to portions related to the need. As noted above, in considering particulаrized need, the court’s task is limited to relevant information on material issues. Under these circumstances, the designation of extraneous material should not involve an excessive expenditure of court time or resources.
CONCLUSION
The matter is REVERSED and REMANDED to the district court for further proceedings consistent with the principles outlined above.
Notes
. Appellants filed their notice of appeal, then requested a stay pending appeal. After briefing and argument on the stay motion, and with the agreement of the parties, we proceed to resolve the merits of the appeal.
.
Stone,
which dealt with the issue of government intervention in the qui tam action, provides factual background on the criminal matter. There are other published cases discussing Rockwell's operation of Rocky Flats.
See Brever
v.
Rockwell Int'l Corp.,
. Another of Stone’s claims was that the transcripts should he disclosed because Rockwell had one-sided access to grand jury proceedings; in that its counsel had debriefed numerous individuals after government interviews or grand jury appearances and summarized the sessions in memoranda protected by the attorney-client privilege. Because the district court did not rely on this basis, we do not discuss .it here. We note that an adversary's prior possession of grand jury transcripts has been the explanation for disclosure in a number of cases.
See In re Grand Jury Proceedings GJ-76-4 & GJ-75-3,
. The litigants in the qui tam matter have access to depositions-taken in
Cook,
. Petitioners initially contested both the jurisdiction of this court and the respondents' standing to challenge the disclosure order. Neither of these issues requires extended discussion. We have held that a disclosure order is appealable as a final decision under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
See In re Grand Jury 95-1,
. We are not persuaded by Stone’s citations to
Evans,
In
Sarbaugh,
a decision of the Seventh Circuit that preceded
Douglas,
the court granted the State’s motion for a broad release of the testimony of former employees of the corporate defendant. That case turned, in large part, on the fact that the employer already had copies of the transcripts.
See Sarbaugh,
. These individuals are identified in a sealed addendum to this order.
. In briefing the stay issue, the parties submitted documents that were not in the district court record, such as excerpts from depositions taken after entry of the district court'-s order, items produced in discovery, and attorney affidavits relating to whether plaintiffs have or have not utilized nonprotected information to refresh witnesses’ memories. The additional materials are not properly before this court and have not been considered here.
See Boone v. Carlsbad Bancorporation, Inc.,
. The. John Does and other intervenors have complained of lack of notice and an opportunity to be heard in the district court. Fed.R.Crim.P. 6(e)(3)(D) requires notice to "(i) the attorney for the government, [and] (ii) the parties to the judicial proceeding if disclosure is sought in connection with such a proceeding.” The court also has discretion to direct notice to any other person. Under the rule, the district court has considerable latitude to decide whether witnesses or other interested persons should be notified of the potential for disclosure.
. We note that the district court was within its discretion in determining particularized need for the grand jury testimony of persons identified in submissions to that court. As to these individuals, named in the sealed addendum to this opinion, the district court, after further review, may designate appropriate portions of their grand jury testimony without further consideration of particularized need.
