Two oil companies that had entered nolo contendere pleas in criminal-antitrust cases appeal an order in related civil litigation which permits the civil plaintiffs substantial discovery of evidence collected by the government in the criminal case.
Petrol Stops and associated plaintiff companies are suing Douglas Oil, Phillips Petroleum, and other defendant oil companies in the District of Arizona for damages for alleged antitrust violations. After the damage action was filed, the United States brought the criminal antitrust charges against the same defendants in the Central District of California. The indictment charged antitrust conduct similar to that alleged in the damage action. After the court in the criminal case accepted the nolo contendere pleas from all the defendants, the criminal cases were concluded. Thereupon Petrol Stops filed a petition in the district court in Los Angeles, seeking disclosure of testimony and materials which Douglas, Phillips, and their employees had provided the grand jury during its investigations in that district.
The United States, the only respondent to Petrol Stops’ petition, stated that it had no objection to the disclosure. Douglas and Phillips, styling themselves real parties in interest, appeared and opposed the petition. The district court granted Petrol Stops’ request, subject to a protective order which limited disclosure to Petrol Stops’ attorneys, prohibited further copying, limited the use of the evidence to impeachment, refreshing recollection, and testing credibility, and required return of the materials when they were no longer needed. Douglas and Phillips raise a number of issues in challenging the order.
I
The first issue is standing to appeal. Douglas and Phillips were not named as parties below, and the United States, the only named party respondent, declines to participate in this appeal. The district court’s order does not require Douglas or Phillips to do anything, and they did not seek to intervene in that court.
The Third Circuit has held on such facts that parties situated somewhat similarly have no standing to oppose production of grand jury documents.
United States v. American Oil Company,
We hold, however, that Douglas and Phillips have standing. The proceeding directly affects their interests. After the United States declined to oppose the petition, Douglas and Phillips were the only parties who could provide the adversity necessary for the full presentation of all issues.
While grand jury secrecy primarily protects the public interest in assuring full disclosure to the grand jury, it also protects some important private interests. One is the avoidance of public disclosure of normally confidential information. Another is the protection of those who provide information.
Douglas and Phillips might be injured in fact by disclosure. They are arguably within the zone of interests which grand jury secrecy protects.
Association of Data Processing Service Organizations, Inc. v. Camp,
*1129
Petrol Stops candidly seeks discovery of evidence to use against Douglas and Phillips in a civil case. If Petrol Stops sought the identical evidence by a civil discovery motion, Douglas and Phillips, without question, would have standing to resist the motion.
The district court in Arizona might hesitate to grant discovery in the civil case, either because it has no direct connection with the grand jury, or because of deference to the district court which convened the grand jury. By petitioning the court in the district in which the grand jury sat, Petrol Stops avoided any jurisdictional dispute. It does not follow, however, that Douglas and Phillips should have no opportunity to participate. It may have been better for Douglas and Phillips to intervene as respondents in the district court, but the question is before us and we are satisfied that standing exists. 2
II
Because grand jury secrecy serves a number of public purposes, a civil litigant may not violate it at his pleasure. It is not sufficient that the litigant might find it useful to do so. The Supreme Court requires a showing of particularized need before allowing disclosure. In
United States v. Procter & Gamble Co.,
The cases teach that disclosure would be proper when the ends of justice required. Defendants in such cases undoubtedly keep copies of all documents they furnish the grand jury, and they have frequent and informal contact with their employees who testify. The court reasonably could conclude that a plaintiffs need for grand jury records to ferret out the facts in a private antitrust action might be far more compelling than a defendant’s curiosity about what its employees may have disclosed.
We previously applied the Supreme Court’s standards in
U.S. Industries, Inc., v. United States District Court,
District courts generally adopt a similar analysis in this situation. The consideration they find to be relevant is that of protecting witnesses from retaliation. Corporate witnesses are vulnerable to their corporate employers, but the need for protection is limited after the corporation already has its employees’ testimony. Limiting the use of the materials can give adequate assurances of safety to future witnesses. Thus, most courts grant access with only a minimal showing of particularized need; they commonly see use of the material for impeachment as sufficient.
S.E.C. v. National Student Marketing,
While the Fifth Circuit, in
Texas
v.
United States Steel Corp., supra,
recently held that a grant of access with little if any showing of particularized need was an abuse of discretion, it recognizes that disclosure is proper if the material is needed for purposes such as impeaching a witness or refreshing recollection.
Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Company
v.
City of Fort Pierce,
U.S. Industries, Inc. v. United States District Court, supra, thus continues to provide the guidelines that courts generally follow. The question now is whether the district court exercised its discretion within those guidelines.
The criminal case has been concluded, and, in contrast to the cases which the Supreme Court decided, the United States has no objection to disclosure. Douglas and Phillips already have all the materials requested by their adversary, and there is no indication that granting Petrol Stops’ petition would expose witnesses to new sources of retaliation. The public-interest side of the balance therefore is lightly weighted. 4
Petrol Stops showed a particularized need beyond the mere relevance of the materials. *1131 It showed that some of the answers Douglas and Phillips made to its interrogatories might contradict the charges in the indictment. Since Douglas and Phillips entered nolo contendere pleas, there is a strong inference that the grand jury materials support the government’s charges. 5 The materials might thus be relevant for impeachment, one of the classic reasons for making them available.
On appeal Petrol Stops makes a stronger showing, pointing out inconsistencies between the government’s bill of particulars and statements made in recent depositions. However, even at the district court, Petrol Stops did not seek the materials merely for a general fishing expedition. It made a sufficient showing of particularized need, in light of the weakness of the reasons offered for opposing disclosure.
The district court recognized that some particularized need was necessary but that it did not have to be great. While it authorized disclosure, it imposed a stringent protective order limiting the persons to whom the materials could be disclosed and the uses Petrol Stops could make of them. This carefully limited disclosure was not an abuse of discretion. Denial of disclosure might well have been an abuse.
Affirmed.
Notes
. There are obvious differences between Data Processing and this case; among them are that Douglas and Phillips are seeking standing as respondents, not as petitioners, and that this proceeding is not an administrative review. However, Data Processing is, at least in part, constitutionally based, and we find its analysis helpful here.
. Our conclusion and some of our reasoning follows that of the Seventh Circuit in the very similar case of
Illinois v. Sarbaugh,
. The reasons were first stated in
United States v. Amazon Ind. Chem. Corp.,
. We think that the Central District of California court was the proper district court to consider the issue. It was best situated to evaluate the need for continuing secrecy and may have been the only court with jurisdiction under Fed.R.Crim.P. 6(e).
See Illinois v. Sarbaugh,
. In its petition Petrol Stops inaccurately stated that they pleaded guilty; we do not think that the different inferences to be drawn from the two pleas are great enough to matter here.
