MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER DENYING TARGETS’ MOTION TO DISQUALIFY THE LOCAL UNITED STATES ATTORNEY’S OFFICE
Introduction
Pеtitioners Michael I. Greer and Patrick R. Frega are targets of a federal grand jury investigation concerning alleged corruption among former state court judges. 1 Although the grand jury has not indicted them yet, Greer and Frega have moved to disqualify the local United States Attorney’s Office from ■ investigating this matter further or prosecuting them. The motion is based on an ethical conflict of interest stemming from the fact that one Assistant U.S. Attorney— not assigned to this matter — previously represented Frega during a state investigation of the same allegations.
The Court, having read and considered the moving papers, opposition, reply, declarations and exhibits submitted by counsel, and the declarations of Assistant U.S. Attorneys Phillip Halpern and Charles La Bella, and having concluded that this matter is proper for resolution without the need for oral argument, HEREBY DENIES the motion to disqualify the local U.S. Attorney’s Office from further investigation or prosecution of Greer and Frega.
Jurisdiction
This case arrives before the Court in a highly unusual posture, since no indictment has been filed and therefore no criminal case has been opened. However, the Court has looked to the concept of “anomalous jurisdiction” to determine whether it has jurisdiction to resolve this motion.
A district court has equitable jurisdiction to consider a motion to suppress evidence evеn in the absence of a filed indictment.
Meier v. Keller,
Facts
Moving parties Greer and Frega are targets of a federal grand jury investigаtion concerning alleged bribery, tax evasion, conspiracy, and racketeering activities of former California Superior Court judges in San Diego. Although the targets have not been indicted, the United States expected to obtain indictments as early as February 15, 1996. Greer and Frega have moved to disqualify the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of California from investigating or prosecuting them, on ethical conflict of interest grounds. 3
The alleged conflict stems from Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Dowd’s representation of Frega during a state investigation of the same allegations of bribery in 1992. It is undisputed that Dowd and Frega shared privileged attorney-client conversations during this rеpresentation, and all parties agree that Dowd is disqualified from participating in the federal investigation of the targets.
The local United States Attorney’s Office was not immediately aware of Dowd’s prior representation of Frega. It appears to have come to the Office’s attention when Special Agent John Gillies approached Dowd to see if he would be interested in joining the bribery investigation. (Redacted Declaration of Charles La Bella ¶ 10). At that time, Dowd explained that he could not do so due to an ethical conflict of interest.
Although the United States Attorney’s Office does not so state explicitly, the primary reason that Dowd’s conflict did not surface until he was approached by Gillies is that U.S. Attorney Alan Bersin instructed Assistant U.S. Attorneys Phillip Halpern and Charles La Bella to keep the bribery investigation confidential within the Office. (Declaration of Charles La Bella ¶¶ 3, 9). 4 Throughout the investigation, La Bella and Halpern kept the files on this case segregated from all other files; in a separate building with access restricted to prosecutors working on the investigation. (Declaration of Phillip Halpern ¶ 13). 5
By May 1995, however, the existence of the investigation had become public knowledge, and Halpern and La Bella implemented a screen specifically for Dowd.. On May 12, 1995, Halpеrn directed that all files and case materials pertaining to the corruption investigation be visibly marked as such, and that all personnel be made aware of the significance of these markings. On May 23, 1995, Halpern sent electronic mail to the other attorneys informing them of Dowd’s recusal. *1377 (Redacted Declaration of Phillip Halpern ¶¶ 15-18).
On January 12, 1996, Frega and Greer sought a temporary restraining order to enjoin the U.S. Attorney’s Office from proceeding with the investigation, based on Dowd’s recusal. They also filed a motion to disqualify the Office on the same ground. The Honorable Rudi M. Brewster 6 denied the TRO application and was prepared to hold an evi-dentiary hearing on the disqualification motion. However, on January 19, 1996, the entire federal bench in San Diego recused itself, and the Ninth Circuit assigned the case to this Court.
Discussion
The issue before the Court is whether Dowd’s disqualification requires recusal of the entire U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of California from investigating or prosecuting Greer and Frega. The answer lies in the applicable rules of professional conduct.
Attorneys admitted to practice in the Southern District of California must adhere to the California Rules of Professional Conduct as well as the American Bar Association Model Rules of Professional Conduct. Local Rule 83.5(e)(2).
7
Rule 83.5(e)(2) applies to Assistant United States Attorneys.
See United States v. Lopez,
A. Ninth Circuit Authority
The leading disqualification case in the Ninth Circuit is
Trone v. Smith,
*1378 However, Troné is clearly not applicable to government attorneys. Its holding is based on the ABA Model Code of Professional Conduct, 10 which has since been replaced by the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct. Model Rule 1.11(c)(1) states:
Except as law may otherwise expressly permit, a lawyer serving as a public officer or employee shall not ... participate in a matter in which the lawyer participated personally and substantially while in private practice or nongovernmental employment, unless under applicablе law no one is, or by lawful delegation may be, authorized to act in the lawyer’s stead in any matter.
Comment [9] to Model Rule 1.11 states: “Paragraph (c) does not disqualify other lawyers in the agency with which the lawyer in question has become associated.”
That
Troné
does not apply to government attorneys is consistent with Ninth Circuit authority.
11
In
United States v. Weiner,
In
United States v. Mapelli,
Mapelli is analogous with the situation in this case. 13 Along with Weiner and Model Rule 1.11(c), it demonstrates that Ninth Circuit authority does not support disqualifying the U.S. Attorney’s Office. 14
B. California Authority
There are, of course, no California cases focusing on the disqualification of federal prosecutors. However, California courts have visited the issue of recusing state prose
*1379
cutors a number of times.
15
For recusal to be ordered, “the conflict must be of such gravity as to render it unlikely that defendant will receive a fair trial unless recusal is ordered.”
People v. Conner,
Greer and Frega argue that California eases regarding recusal of state prosecutors do not apply to federal prosecutors because district attorneys are officials elected by the voters of the districts that they serve. This argument is not wholly devoid оf merit, since the fact that district attorneys are elected officials has been a factor leading California courts to conclude that disqualification should require a considerable showing of risk of an unfair trial:
Caution is necessary because “when the entire prosecutorial office of the district attorney is recused and the Attorney General is required to undertake the prosecution or employ a special prosecutor, the district attorney is prevented from carrying out the statutory duties of his elected office and, perhaps even more significantly, the residents of the county are deprived of the services of their elеcted representative in the prosecution of crime in the county. The Attorney General is, of course, an elected state official, but unlike the district attorney, is not accountable at the ballot box exclusively to the electorate of the county.”
People v. Lopez,
Nevertheless, this difference is not as significant as Greer and Frega would make it. It is true that the local U.S. Attorney is appointed by the President, rather than elected by the voters of the district. 28 U.S.C. § 541(a). However, Lopez noted that the state Attorney General is also elected by voters. The significant difference between the District Attorney and the state Attorney General is that the former serves the county from which hе is elected, whereas the latter serves the entire state. In the same way, the local U.S. Attorney serves the district for which he is appointed, whereas the United States Attorney General serves the entire country. Thus, 'the reason that disqualification of district attorney’s offices is disfavored applies with full force to U.S. Attorney’s offices. Replacing the local U.S. Attorney’s Office with the Department of Justice frustrates the U.S. Attorney from carrying out his statutory duties, and deprives the residents of the Southern District of California from the services of their local federal prosecutor.
Under the California rule, the Court must determine whether Dowd’s prior representation of Frega renders it unlikely that Frega and the other targets will receive fair trials. An examination of other California cases applying this rule is therefore warranted.
In
People v. Conner, supra,
the California Supreme Court upheld the disqualification of the felony division of the Santa Clara District Attorney’s Office because one of the prosecutors had been shot at by the defendant.
The facts of this matter are significantly different from those in
Conner.
First, the Court may take judicial notice pursuant to Fed.R.Evid. 201 of the fact that the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of California has in excess of seventy-five attorneys.
17
Second, the conflict in
Conner
existed because Braughton spoke to about half of the attorneys about being shot at. Given the small size of the office, the California Supreme Court concluded that even attorneys who had not talked to Braughton would know of the incident and would harbor potential prejudice. The court focused on the “dramatic and gripping nature” of the “harrowing experience” and concluded that it would be difficult to gauge the overall effect.
In this case, however, the alleged conflict is not emotional bias, but disclosure of confidential information. Thus, the particular fact that Dowd has been recused is not, in and of itself, a reason to disqualify the other attorneys from the investigation, as it would be if the conflict were emotional bias. Furthermore, there is no evidence that Dowd has actually disclosed such information, and indeed, California and federal case law does not presume that government attorneys share confidential information.
United States v. Weiner, 578
F.2d 757, 767 (9th Cir.),
cert. denied,
In
People v. Lopez, supra,
the court considered a motion to disqualify the Imperial County District Attorney’s Office, on the grounds that one of the ten attorneys in the office had previously represented the defendant during the preliminary hearing.
Lopez is particularly instructive as to this case. As noted before, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District has more than seventy-five attorneys, and is thus much larger and more diffuse than the Imperial County District Attorney’s Office. As in Lopez, the federal prosecutors in this case have submitted declarations that they have not spoken with Dowd about the investigation. 18 (Redacted Declaration of Charles La Bella ¶ 20; Redacted Declaration of Phillip Hal-pern ¶ 19).
Greer and Frega further argue that
Love v. Superior Court,
However, Love made no mention of Calif.Penal Code § 1424 and appears to have been based instead on the now-discredited rule of Greer that the appearance of impropriety was sufficient to disqualify prosecutors. Therefore, it is doubtful that Love' remains controlling authority, and the Court declines to apply it in the face of contrary authority, such as Calif.Penal Code § 1424 and Conner.
Greer and Frega also cite
People v. Lepe, 164
Cal.App.3d
685, 211
Cal.Rptr. 432 (1985), in which the court disqualified the entire district attorney’s office because the District Attorney had previously represented the defendant. The deputy prosecutors were disqualified also, because they were “hired by Storey [the D.A.], evaluated by Storey, promoted by Storey, and fired by Storey.” Id. at 689,
In summary, under applicable state law, the local United States Attorney’s Office need not be disqualified. This conclusion is buttressed by an independent examination of the facts of this matter to determine whether there is a grave risk of an unfair trial. Greer and Frega would not receive a fair trial if Dowd imparted any attorney-client knowledge he possessed about Frega — thus, the issue to be determined is the gravity of that risk.
The declarations submitted by the Assistant U.S. Attorneys indicate that only U.S. Attorney Bersin and the individual prosecutors working on the investigation knew of its existence, and that they specifically avoided discussing the matter with other prosecutors. (Redacted Declaration of Charles La Bella ¶ 9). Thus, there appears to be no realistic opportunity for them to have obtained any confidential information from Dowd by way of discussing this investigation, even before they became aware of Dowd’s conflict and took active steps to screen him from the investigation.
Greer and Frega argue that because Halpern, La Bella, Bersin, and Agent Gillies worked with Dowd on other matters,
19
they may have inadvertently discussed matters relating to Dowd’s representation of Frega. This particular fear is of course the reason the Ninth Circuit adopted the imputed disqualification rule in
Trone v. Smith,
Accordingly, California authority does not support disqualifying the local U.S. Attorney’s Office.
C. Outside Circuit Authority
Greer and Frega also cite
United States v. Goot,
Greer and Frega argue that the local U.S. Attorney’s Office took no such steps. However, Greer and Frega cite the wrong section of the U.S. Attorney’s Manual. Greer and Frega refer to the requirеments for recusal of the U.S. Attorney. (U.S. Attorney’s Manual § 1-3.170). The appropriate section of the Manual is that dealing with recusals of Assistant U.S. Attorneys. (U.S. Attorney’s Manual § 1-3.220). Thus, the requirements that Greer and Frega maintain were not followed are not intended to be imposed when an Assistant U.S. Attorney is recused. Moreover, neither compliance nor failure to comply with the Manual is dispositive.
Goot,
Second, although the Office did not screen Dowd from the outset of his rejoining the U.S. Attorney’s Office, the procedures that Halpern and La Bella implemented effectively screened everyone in the Office, with the exception of the Assistant U.S. Attorneys actually working on the investigatiоn. Under these circumstances, where every prosecutor assigned to the case was instructed to keep the work confidential, Dowd — along with the rest of the Office — would have been screened.
Thus, Goot provides no authority for disqualifying the U.S. Attorney’s Office in this case.
D. Evidentiary Hearing
The Court must also determine if Greer and Frega are entitled to an evidentia-ry hearing in this matter. To be entitled to an evidentiary hearing on this matter, Greer and Frega must “present factual allegations by affidavit that, if true, would warrant relief.”
United States v. Rewald,
An evidentiary hearing would be necessary only if Greer and Frega sought to show that disclosure of confidential information actually occurred. Since Greer and Frega are not proceeding under this theory, an eviden-tiary hearing is not necessary. Moreover, Greer and Frega provide no evidence to believe that disclosure occurred, and the declarations of Halpern and La Bella state that they received no information from Dowd. (Redacted Declaration of Charles La Bella ¶ 21; Redacted Declaration of Phillip Hal-pern ¶ 19). Significantly, these declarations are uncontradicted, a factor that weighs against an evidentiary hearing.
Montoya,
Accordingly, the Court conсludes that an evidentiary hearing is not warranted in this matter. In the absence of any showing by Greer and Frega that confidential information was disclosed, such a hearing would only serve as a fishing expedition for Greer and Frega.
E. Encroachment on States’ Rights
Lastly, Greer and Frega argue that this investigation is an improper encroachment upon States’ rights. They point out that the state of California has already conducted its own investigation and concluded that criminal charges are not warranted.
See, e.g., Adams v. Commission on Judicial Performance,
Lopez
and
Younger are
inapplicable to this matter. In
Lopez,
the Supreme Court struck down the Gun-Free School Zones Act of 1990, 18 U.S.C. § 922(q), which made it a federal crime to possess a firearm within 1000 feet of a school zone, as beyond Congress’ power to regulate interstate commerce. — U.S. at -,
Similarly, in
Younger,
the Supreme Court held that federal courts would
not
enjoin state prosecutions, even if the grounds for requesting the injunction were based on federal defenses.
Greer and Frega disagree with the federal government’s investigation of this matter. If the State of California shares this disagreement, it is free to exercise its political influence on Congress to reduce the federal government’s power.
See Garcia v. San An
*1384
tonio Metropolitan Transit Authority,
Conclusion
The Court has canvassed a variety of state and federal law on professional responsibility to determine if the local U.S. Attorney’s Office should be disqualified. The Court’s conclusion is that the Office should not be disqualified. The sole reason that Dowd’s conflict did not surface earlier аnd that he was not screened immediately was that Halpern and La Bella kept the entire investigation segregated from the rest of the Office. In that circumstance, the risk of confidential information spilling accidentally from Dowd is remote, since neither Halpern nor La Bella would have initiated conversation leading to such disclosure. To do so, they would have had to divulge the existence of the investigation which they themselves were keeping secret.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Clerk of the Court shall serve, by telefax or United States mail, copies of this Order on counsel for the parties in this matter.
Notes
. Greer was the former chief of the Superior Court in San Diego, and Frega was a private attorney practicing in San Diego.
. Hunsucker specifically included United States Attorneys within the reach of "anomalous jurisdiction.” Id. at 32 n. 3.
. The other targets, James A. Malkus, G. Dennis Adams, and James A. Williams, have not joined in this motion.
. Paragraph 3 of La Bella’s declaration has not been released previously. It states in relevant part: "Due to the investigation's sensitive nature, the United States Attorney and I determined that no one else in this Office was to have any knowledge that the case had been opened as a criminal investigation. The U.S. Attorney wanted to guard closely this information, inter alia, to avoid the inadvertent disclosure of such a preliminary investigation to anyone outside of the U.S. Attorney's Office.”
.Paragraph 13 of Halpem’s declaration has not been released previously. It states in relevant part: ”[W]e continued to segregate all relevant documents in a locked room located in the Federal Building. Access to this room was restricted to the AUSAs who were working on the investigation.”
. United States District Court Judge for the Southern District of California.
. Local Rule 82.5(e), titled “Standards of Professional Conduct,” states as follows:
Every member of the bar of this court and any attorney permitted to practice in this court shall be familiar with and comply with the standards of professional conduct required of members of the State Bar of Cаlifornia,' and decisions of any court applicable thereto, which are hereby adopted as standards of professional conduct of this court. This specification shall not be interpreted to be exhaustive of the standards of professional conduct. In that connection, the Code of Professional Responsibility of the American Bar Association should be noted. No attorney permitted to practice before this court shall engage in any conduct which degrades or impugns the integrity of the court or in any manner interferes with the administration of justice therein.
. Greer and Frega seek to disqualify the U.S. Attorney’s. Office from both investigating and prosеcuting them for alleged judicial corruption. Because of the traditional reluctance of federal courts to interfere with investigations prior to indictment,
see In re Hugle,
.Troné defined substantially related prior representation as where “the factual contexts of the two representations are similar or related.” Id. at 998. In addition, ”[i]f there is a reasonable probability that confidences were disclosed which could be used against the client in later, adverse representation, a substantial relation is presumed.” Id. In this case, Dowd’s prior representation covered the exact same factual allegations, and is therefore undisputedly substantially related.
. Troné does not explicitly state its reliance on the Model Code. However, this conclusion is unmistakable when one considers thаt the opinion discusses the need to uphold Canons 1, 4, 5, 6, 7, and 9, with descriptions of those canons that match exactly those given in the Model Code. Id. at 999.
. An underlying assumption of Troné 's imputed disqualification rule is that the client is not significantly prejudiced when the entire law firm is disqualified by the disqualification of a single attorney, because the client is free to hire another law firm. This assumption necessarily requires that there be enough law firms so that the client can find another comparable firm. In the case of government agencies, however, this assumption fails. The only choices for federal prosecution are the local Assistant U.S. Attorneys, Department of Justice attorneys, or special prosecutors.
. In Kastigar, the Supreme Court held that information obtained from a person testifying under a grant of immunity could not be used against that person in subsequent prosecution, and that the person could force the prosecution to prove that it obtained all its evidence against him through independent sources. Id. at 461-62.
. Mapelli is particularly fatal to Greer's and Frega’s motion, since the Ninth Circuit did not even disqualify federal prosecutors who had worked on the same matter with the tainted attorneys.
.
See also United States v. Caggiano,
. Since California law recognizes that different disqualification rules apply to prosecutors than to private attorneys, cases discussing the disqualification of law firms are not relevant to this discussion.
. Calif.Penal Code § 1424 states in relevant part: "The motion [to disqualify] shall not be granted unless it is shown by evidence that a conflict of interest exists as would render it unlikely that the defendant would receive a fair trial.”
. This information is readily available on West-lаw, in West's Legal Directory, and is thus "capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot be reasonably questioned." Fed.R.Evid. 201(b)(2).
. It appears that La Bella initially approached Dowd about joining the investigation and learned at that time that Dowd could not do so due to an ethical conflict. (Redacted Declaration of Charles La Bella ¶ 10; Redacted Declaration of Phillip Halpern ¶ 6).
. Greer and Frega point out that the names of Dowd, Halpern, and La Bella appear jointly on an information in United States v. Sahadi, dated August 13, 1994. (Declaration of Dennis Rior-dan, Exh. H).
. Goot is an out-of-circuit case and ordinarily would only be persuasive authority. However, Rule 83.5(e) states that the Southern District of California "is committed to the highest standards of professionalism,” and that the requirement of adherence to the California Rules of Professional Conduct "shall not be interpreted to be exhaustive of the standards of professional conduct.” Arguably, Rule 83.5(e) imposes on attorneys in the Southern District any applicable standard of professional conduct. If so, Goot would assume controlling authority status.
.
Lopez
does contain dicta to the effect that "areas such as criminal law enforcement or education” have traditionally been reserved for the states to regulate.
Id.
at -,
. To the extent that Greer and Frega mean to challenge the constitutionality of the federal crimes that they expect to he indicted for violating, their challenge is not yet ripe, as no such indictments have been handed down by the grand jury.
. Younger defined "Our Federalism” as:
What the concept does represent is a system in which there is sensitivity to the legitimate interests of both State 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.
Id.
at 44,
.In this regard, this situation is less similar to that in
Younger
than it is to the federal prosecution, following state acquittal, of the Los Angeles police officers who beat Rodney King.
See generally United States v. Koon,
