MEMORANDUM OPINION
This matter is before the Court on the non-party Christopher Marston’s MOTION TO QUASH SUBPOENAS TO ROBERT B. BELL, WILLIAM ROBERT JANIS, AND CHRISTOPHER MAR-STON AND/OR FOR A PROTECTIVE ORDER, Docket No. 61. For the reasons set forth below, the Motion will be denied in part.
BACKGROUND
Dawn Curry Page, Gloria Personhubal-lah, and James Farkas (“Plaintiffs”) filed this action against Virginia State Board of Elections, Don Palmer, Kimberly Bowers, Charlie Judd, and Kenneth Cuccinelli II, (“Defendants”)
Kenneth Cuccinelli II (then the Attorney General of Virginia) and the Virginia State Board of Elections have been dismissed from this case by consent of the parties. Virginia’s Republican Congressional delegation filed an unopposed motion to intervene as defendants. After the Court denied motions for summary judg
The pending motion was originally filed by non-parties Robert B. Bell, William Robert Janis, and Christopher Marston, in response to a series of subpoenas issued by the Plaintiffs. Bell and Janis were members of the Virginia House of Delegates at the time of the redistricting. They were subpoenaed to give depositions, but Plaintiffs have since withdrawn the subpoenas, and Janis and Bell are no longer parties to this motion. From Marston, the Plaintiffs sought documents pertaining to the redistricting process. Marston has refused to produce those documents, claiming that the attorney-client privilege and the legislative privilege protect them from disclosure. The Court has completed an in camera review of the documents Marston claims to be protected by the attorney-client privilege and has upheld some claims of privilege while rejecting others. See Docket No. 90. Accordingly, this opinion will address only Marston’s assertion of a legislative privilege.
In his declaration, Marston avers that, during the relevant time period, he “was Executive Director of and Counsel to the Virginia House Republican Caucus,” but that he “was paid as an independent contractor by the House Republican Campaign Committee.” The parties agree that the membership of the Caucus and the Campaign Committee is the same. However, at oral argument, counsel for Mar-ston acknowledged that, notwithstanding the overlap in membership, the organizations are distinctly different. The Caucus functions within the confines of the House of Delegates, whereas the Campaign Committee serves a political function, helping Republican delegates to be elected or reelected.
Marston also avers that, while he served as “legal counsel to the Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates and the Virginia House Republican Caucus,” he “also worked in a legislative capacity for the Republican members of the Virginia House of Delegates.” His job in the latter capacity was coordinating communications and legislative strategy. Marston asserts that there were four staff members, but that, in his consulting capacity, he “effectively was lead staff for the redistricting efforts of the Virginia House of Delegates.”
In his role of consultant, Marston “participated in crafting redistricting legislation; coordinating and gathering analysis of data and information from which redistricting legislation was introduced; assisted members of the House of Delegates in holding hearings on redistricting; assisted in preparing statements to members about redistricting; advised members and their staff regarding strategy for passage of redistricting legislation; and regularly engaged in frank discussions with members concerning the creation, evolution, and passage of redistricting legislation.” Mar-ston recites that, when performing those responsibilities, he “was a consultant due to the manner in which [he] was compensated.”
DISCUSSION
Testimonial and evidentiary privileges exist against the backdrop of the general principle that all reasonable and reliable measures should be employed to ascertain the truth of a disputed matter. Privileges are therefore strictly construed and accepted only where the public good associated with the exclusion of relevant evidence overrides the general principle in favor of admission. Trammel v. United States,
“Legislative privilege clearly falls within the category of accepted evidentiary privileges.” E.E.O.C. v. Wash. Suburban Sanitary Comm’n,
1. Eligibility for the Legislative Privilege
The parties do not contest the existence of a legislative privilege. However, they sharply dispute whether Marston or the documents that were subpoenaed are protected by the privilege.
Marston relies on McCray v. Md. Dep’t of Transp., Md. Transit Admin.,
McCray is perhaps even less helpful to Marston’s position. In McCray, the Fourth Circuit commented favorably on the concept of extending legislative privilege to government agency officials who gave counsel to executive officials tasked with carrying out legislative budget cuts.
In their opposition, the Plaintiffs argue that “non-legislators must be ‘properly acting in a legislative capacity" before they can seek to assert legislative privilege.” Opp. at 8 (quoting Kensington Volunteer Fire Dep’t, Inc. v. Montgomery Cnty., Md.,
In the other cited case, Comm. for a Fair & Balanced Map v. Ill. State Bd. of Elecs., Case No. 11C5065,
In sum, none of the decisions cited by the parties addresses a circumstance such as that presented here by Marston’s affidavit which sets out the details about his relationship with the Virginia General Assembly. Docket No. 84, Exh. A. There, Marston says that he was employed full-time as the “Executive Director of and Counsel to the Virginia House Republican Caucus” during the period relevant to this litigation. Id. at ¶ 3. He describes himself as “workpng] in a legislative capacity for the Republican members of the Virginia House of Delegates, coordinating communications and legislative strategy.” Id. at ¶ 5. However, Marston acknowledges that he “was paid as an independent contractor by the House Republican Campaign Committee.” Nonetheless, he seeks the benefit of the legislative privilege because, in his words, “I effectively was lead staff for the redistricting efforts of the Virginia House of Delegates.” Id. at ¶¶ 9-12. Marston’s position is that these facts make his status equivalent to a legislative aide in Virginia’s General Assembly.
However, as the Plaintiffs have pointed out, the Virginia Code specifically identifies the personnel that can be employed by individual legislators and standing legislative committees in the General Assembly, and the Code also specifies the procedures for appropriating the funds to compensate those staff members. See Va.Code Ann. § 30-19.4. The Code does not authorize individual General Assembly members to employ consultants, contractors, or counsel or consultants for the party caucuses, an omission that the Court must regard as significant under the legislative interpretative rule of expressio unius. Cf. Commonwealth v. Brown,
Even more telling is Va.Code Ann. § 30-19.20, which reads:
The House of Delegates and the Senate and the clerks thereof are authorized to employ such personnel as may be deemed necessary for the efficient operation of the General Assembly as prescribed by the rules or resolutions of the respective houses. The House of Delegates and the Senate shall by resolution or resolutions set the compensation of the personnel employed by each house, and the personnel shall be paid from the contingent fund of each house, respectively.
This statutory provision invites the House of Delegates and Senate to identify any personnel “deemed necessary for the efficient operation of the General Assembly,” and then allows compensation of those personnel through legislative action and the contingent fund of the legislative house that employs the particular staff member. As a matter of simple logic, then, a deci
Precedent demands that, under certain circumstances, formal staff members should be treated as the functional equivalent of legislators for the purpose of legislative immunity and legislative privilege. That is because “[t]he day-to-day work of such aides is so critical to the Members’ performance that they must be treated as the latter’s alter egos.” Gravel v. United States,
Marston asks the Court to automatically treat the functional equivalent of an Assembly — wide staff member as the functional equivalent of an individual legislator, and that is a bridge too far. When state statute specifically provides a structure for the retention of aides and assistants by individual legislators and standing committees, and even provides a mechanism for the retention of at — large legislative assistants where “necessary to the efficient operation of the General Assembly,” a legislative consultant and independent contractor paid by a political group, the House Republican Campaign Committee, has no grounds to claim that he is so critical to the performance of the legislature that he should be treated as a legislative alter ego and extended the benefit of legislative privilege.
Moreover, a requirement that a legislative assistant or aide be directly employed and paid by an individual legislator, a legislative committee, or the legislature as a whole provides a sensible and defensible bulwark against excessive use of the legislative privilege. It prevents legislators from enveloping lobbyists and outside experts in a cloak of invisibility, while permitting state legislatures the freedom to make their own decisions about what staff members are sufficiently important to be formally retained by the state government and thus be eligible for the privilege. And, indeed, that is a salutary result of applying the Virginia statutes to determine Marston’s status.
For the foregoing reasons, the Court finds that Marston is not eligible to receive the benefit of legislative privilege.
2. Balancing of the Legislative Interests
Even if it is assumed that Marston is entitled to legislative privilege, it would
The teaching of Marylanders for Fair Representation, Inc. v. Schaefer,
Legislative redistricting is a sui generis process. While it is an exercise of legislative power, it is not a routine exercise of that power. The enactment of statutes ordinarily involves the implication of public policy by a duly constituted legislative body. Redistricting involves the establishment of the electoral structure by which the legislative body becomes duly constituted. Inevitably, it directly involves the self-interest of the legislators themselves.
Id. at 304 (Murnaghan & Motz, JJ., concurring). That significant difference prompted the court to require a flexible approach to resolving discovery objections based on legislative privilege.
In assessing the applicability of the legislative privilege, it is necessary to remember that the privilege is an outgrowth of the doctrine of legislative immunity because the privilege was thought necessary to effectuate the immunity. E.E.O.C. v. Wash. Suburban Sanitary Comm’n,
Other courts have used a more fact-intensive set of factors to balance the interests in deciding whether the legislative privilege applies to a given redistricting case. The analysis is somewhat less flexible than the one heralded by Marylanders for Fair Representation, but the essential factors as applied in this case provide add
For example, in determining whether a qualified privilege should be applied when discovery of legislative documents was at issue, the court, in Rodriguez v. Pataki
A. The Relevance of the Evidence and the Role of the Government in the Litigation
The state government’s role in the events giving rise to the present litigation is central to the Plaintiffs’ claims. The Plaintiffs seek strict scrutiny review of facially neutral redistricting legislation, a standard only triggered “if it can be proved that the law was motivated by a racial purpose or object or if it is unexplainable on grounds other than race.” Hunt v. Cromartie,
Obviously, any documents containing the opinions and subjective beliefs of legislators or their key advisors would be relevant to the broader inquiry into legislative intent and the possibility of racially motivated decisions that were not adequately tailored to a compelling government interest. But even purely factual material can shed light on what factors and considerations were foremost in the legislature’s mind while the legislation was pending. Given the centrality of the legislature’s motivations and Marston’s inability to offer more than a conelusory assertion that “the vast majority” of the documents in dispute “are not, in fact, highly relevant to Plaintiffs’ claims,”
B. Availability of Other Evidence
Marston argues that, “in order to establish their case, Plaintiffs ‘need not offer direct evidence of discriminatory intent.’ ” Reply at 6 (quoting Comm. for a Fair and Balanced Map v. Ill. State Bd. of Elecs., No. 11C5065,
Admittedly, the Plaintiffs can obtain and introduce some direct evidence even without the benefit of Marston’s documents. For example, they have already signaled their intent to include direct evidence about the views of Delegate Janis, the chief architect of the enacted 2012 redistricting plan. See Plaintiffs’ Trial Brief, Docket No. 86, at 8-5. And, they may rely on the previously identified circumstantial evidence. However, the availability of statements made by Janis and that circumstantial evidence does not mean that the Plaintiffs must confine their proof to those statements or to the circumstantial evidence. The real proof is what was in the contemporaneous record in the redistricting process. Taken as a whole, the Court finds that this factor does not militate against disclosure of the documents in Marston’s possession.
C. Seriousness of the Claims
The right to vote and the rights conferred by the Equal Protection Clause are of cardinal importance. And, there is no dispute over the seriousness of the Plaintiffs’ claims.
As in Fair and Balanced Map, “Plaintiffs raise profound questions about the redistricting process and the viability of the [map produced by that process.]” Fair and Balanced Map,
D. Potential for a Chilling Effect
Finally, it is necessary to consider the potential for “future timidity” within the halls of the legislature that may “inhibit frank and full deliberations” in legislative activity. See Favors,
3. Scope of the Document Production Request
Although Marston has not presented any specific objections to the scope of the document production request appended to the subpoena, it is nonetheless appropriate to examine the scope of the production request closely in order to monitor the discovery process and manage the litigation. Having done so, the Court finds that paragraph 1 is overly broad. The request is thus modified to call for “all maps and draft maps in your possession that were considered in the 2012 Virginia redistricting process, and all communications in your possession about those maps.” The request in paragraph 2 is also too broad and is hereby modified to call for “all communications between members of the General Assembly, the staff of the General Assembly, and you [the recipient of the subpoena] that mention the 2012 Virginia redistricting process.” The request in paragraph 7 is so broad as to be untenable, and is stricken in its entirety. The requests in paragraphs 3, 4, 5, and 6 are reasonable, are reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery of relevant evidence, and are clearly focused upon the claims and defenses of the parties as presented in their various papers filed with the Court.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, the non-party Christopher Marston’s MOTION TO QUASH SUBPOENAS TO ROBERT B. BELL, WILLIAM ROBERT JANIS, AND CHRISTOPHER MAR-STON AND/OR FOR A PROTECTIVE ORDER, Docket No. 61, is DENIED IN PART with respect to the assertion of a legislative privilege. Marston shall turn over all documents that are responsive to the demands of subpoena (as modified by the Court) except for those previously identified by the Court as being covered by the attorney-client privilege.
It is so ORDERED.
Notes
. Palmer, Bowers, and Judd were sued in their official capacities as members of the Virginia State Board of Elections. Cuccinelli was sued in his official capacity as the Attorney General of Virginia.
. Indeed, McMillan appears to involve a consultant who was directly retained and compensated by a legislative committee. This would make him much more like a legislative aide than a consultant who receives payment from a partisan political group.
. This decision speaks to both the scope of the privilege and the issue of waiver; the non-legislators were not within the scope of the privilege, and therefore the legislators had effectively waived the privilege by disclosing the documents to third parties outside the scope of the privilege.
. It is not necessary to reach the question whether Marston would have been covered by the legislative privilege if he had been formally retained by the General Assembly or one of its committees (as opposed to retention by an individual legislator capable of asserting the privilege). For the purposes of this case, it is enough to say that the informal nature of Marston's retention prevents him from receiving the privilege.
. The court actually permitted depositions to be taken. It is not necessary to reach that issue in this case because no deposition of Marston is sought. The only thing required is document disclosure.
. See Reply at 6, Docket No. 84.
