Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge GINSBURG.
Joe Mohwish and Donald B. Sargeant seek a writ of mandamus requiring the United States Attorneys for the District of Columbia and the Southern District of Georgia to present certain information to a grand jury. We hold that they do not have constitutional standing to pursue such relief, and we therefore affirm the judgment of the district court dismissing their suit for lack of jurisdiction.
I. Background
The Organized Crime Control Act of 1970 includes several provisions designed to encourage citizens to report crimes and to guard against the possibility of government corruption. One section provides that:
It shall be the duty of each [special] grand jury ... to inquire into offenses against the criminal laws of the United States alleged to have been committed within that district. Such alleged offenses may be brought to the attention of the grand jury by the court or by any attorney appearing on behalf of the United States for the presentation of evidence. Any such attorney receiving information concerning such an alleged offense from any other person shall, if requested by such other person, inform the grand jury of such alleged offense, the identity of such other person, and such attorney’s action or recommendation.
18 U.S.C. § 3332(a).
Convicted felons Joe Mohwish, whose appeals have been heard and largely rejected by the Supreme Court,
see Mohwish v. United States,
When after several inquiries Mohwish had received no reply, he and Sargeant (hereinafter collectively Mohwish) brought three mandamus actions in the district court seeking, among other things, to compel the U.S. Attorneys to present the evidence to a grand jury. Mohwish also sought (1) to have a grand jury empanelled in the event that one was not already sitting; (2) to present his information to the grand jury personally or through his lawyer,
but see Sinvpson v. Reno,
The district court dismissed the three actions, sua sponte, on the ground that “a private party lacks a judicially cognizable interest in the prosecution or nonprosecution of another.... Accordingly, plaintiffs do not have standing.” Mohwish appealed, and this court consolidated the three actions and appointed the amicus curiae to present arguments on Mohwish’s behalf.
II. Analysis
Mohwish’s request that his evidence be presented to the grand jury is, unlike his other requests, at least plausible. Section 3332 says on its face that the U.S. Attorney “shah” present to the grand jury information provided by “any person,” and one district court has held that any person has standing to enforce this duty.
See In re Grand Jury Application,
In order to have standing to sue in federal court, Article III of the Constitution of the United States requires that a complainant have suffered an injury in fact, which the Supreme Court has defined as the invasion of a concrete, imminent, and legally cognizable interest.
See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
The Government argues, and we agree, that the interests Mohwish proffers — in the prosecution of government officials and in seeing that the laws are enforced — are not legally cognizable within the framework of Article III.
See Linda R.S. v. Richard D.,
Indeed, there is nowhere in our legal system a recognized interest merely in “being heard” as an end in itself. To the extent that the “right to be heard” has a familiar ring at all, it is as. an echo of procedural due process. The right to due process is an instrumental entitlement aimed at ensuring that a person is not wrongfully deprived of his liberty or of an interest in property. As the Supreme Court said in
Fuentes v. Shevin,
The constitutional right to be heard is a basic aspect of the duty of government to follow a fam process of decisionmaking when it acts to deprive a person of his possessions. The purpose of this requirement is not only to ensure abstract fair play to the individual. Its purpose, more particularly, is to protect his use and possession of property from arbitrary encroachment — to minimize substantively unfair or mistaken deprivations of property.
Id.
at 80-81,
The
amicus
suggests that because § 3332 itself gives Mohwish a right to be heard he need not assert a reason for wanting to be heard, let alone a concrete interest in being heard, any more than a person suing under the Freedom of Information Act need allege a reason for pursuing the information to which he has a statutory right.
See, e.g., Akins v. FEC,
We emphasize that Mohwish lacks standing because he has failed to identify any cognizable injury, not because § 3332 is inherently unenforceable at the instance of a private litigant; for example, a person who would be entitled to a bounty if a prosecution were initiated might well have standing.
Cf. Lujan,
III. Conclusion
In sum, Mohwish alleges no interest sufficient to give him standing to enforce 18 U.S.C. § 3332. The judgment of the district court, dismissing his petition for lack of jurisdiction, is therefore
Affirmed.
