Jerald Wilson and Sharon Murff appeal their convictions of various federal offenses, most notably mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1341, arising from Wilson’s scheme to defraud the Illinois Department of Employment Security (IDES) by filing false unemployment compensation claims. (The jury also convicted Wilson and Murff of credit card fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1029(a)(2), convictions not at issue in this appeal.) Much of the government’s evidence consisted of records obtained from the IDES. Wilson and Murff contend the district court should have excluded those records because they were privileged. We disagree, and affirm Wilson and Murff’s convictions.
Wilson is a former IDES employee who used his familiarity with unemployment compensation law and procedure to fraudulently obtain unemployment benefits. Between 1981 and 1986, Wilson used several means to defraud the IDES. Wilson urged friends and acquaintances, including Murff, to file false unemployment compensation claims. Wilson advised these people about how to file claims, occasionally urged them to use false Social Security numbers to prevent detection, and allowed the claimants to falsely list his businesses as their former employers. Wilson also urged several of his businesses’ permanent part-time employees (again including Murff) to file false unemployment compensation claims to supplement their incomes, even though they were not eligible to receive unemployment compensation. Finally, on several occasions Wilson filed false unemployment claims for people without their knowledge, using information he learned about them when he encouraged them to file their own previous false claims.
Sometime in 1981, Naomi McCarthy, an IDES investigator, received an anonymous letter about Wilson’s transgressions. McCarthy began to investigate Wilson and concluded that he was making false claims or statements. However, she was unable to pursue the investigation further on her own, and decided to turn the case over to federal authorities. McCarthy, with her supervisor’s consent, furnished IDES records to the United States Department of Labor to use in a joint investigation of Wilson with the United States Postal Service. That investigation ultimately led to Wilson’s and Murff’s indictments and convictions.
Section 1900 of the Illinois Unemployment Compensation Act, Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 48, para. 640, regulates the disclosure of information obtained by the IDES in administering the Act. Specifically, § 1900 A. provides that “[ejxcept as provided in this section, information obtained from any individual or employing unit ... shall: be confidential, not be used in any court in any pending action or proceeding, [and] shall not be admissible in evidence in any action or proceeding other than one arising out of this Act.” Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 48, para. 640 A. Wilson and Murff contend that § 1900 creates an evidentiary privilege that should have prevented the government from introducing at trial any IDES records or the testimony of any IDES employee concerning those records.
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For purposes of this case, we accept Wilson’s and Murff’s argument that § 1900 would have prohibited any use of the IDES records in an Illinois court. Section 1900’s language supports that position as do Illinois cases interpreting § 1900. See
Lowrance v. Marion Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co.,
[e]xcept as otherwise required by the Constitution of the United States or provided by Act of Congress or in rules prescribed by the Supreme Court pursuant to statutory authority, the privilege of a witness, person, government, State, or political subdivision thereof shall be governed by the principles of the common law as they may be interpreted by the courts of the United States in the light of reason and experience.
We must thus decide for ourselves, “in the light of reason and experience,” whether any privilege prohibited the government from introducing the IDES records.
To determine whether to recognize the privilege Wilson and Murff assert, we must balance the purpose the privilege is meant to serve against the federal interests served by allowing the government to use the evidence. See
United States v. Cartledge,
Laws prohibiting disclosure of unemployment compensation information are meant to further the administration of unemployment compensation laws by encouraging full and accurate reporting from claimants and their employers. See
Ellis,
Against this weak state interest in confidentiality stand important federal interests. The federal government has a strong interest in enforcing federal criminal statutes, which implies a strong policy favoring admissibility of relevant evidence in criminal cases. See
United States v. Gillock,
These two interests are especially strong in this case. Wilson and Murff were charged with scheming to defraud Illinois’ unemployment compensation system. Besides overseeing state unemployment compensation programs, the federal government helps to pay for these programs. See 42 U.S.C. § 1101(c)(1)(A). Prosecuting those who defraud state unemployment compensation programs is an important *51 means for protecting the government’s investment by ensuring that those programs are run with a minimum of waste and fraud. The IDES records Wilson and Murff seek to suppress are direct evidence, and probably the best evidence, of their scheme to defraud the IDES. To hold that the government may not use the IDES records in this case would make it more difficult for the government to safeguard the program it is charged with administering.
Wilson and Murff rely principally on
In re Hampers,
Hampers is distinguishable from this case in two important respects. First, the evidence sought in Hampers was probative only of motive, see id. at 22, while the IDES records were direct evidence of the fraud against the IDES. Second, the Hampers court found that Massachusetts taxpayers turn over information “in a confidence [the information] will not be disclosed,” id. at 23; § 1900, on the other hand, specifically allows disclosure to the Department of Labor. In short, the Hampers court found that based on the facts before it, the balance of state and federal interests tipped in favor of recognizing a limited privilege. Had those facts been different — had the evidence sought been vital to prosecuting the crime or had the Massachusetts ban on disclosure not been as absolute — the Hampers court may not have recognized the privilege. See id. at 23.
In our case, unlike in Hampers, the balance of competing interests clearly tips against recognizing a privilege that would preclude the government from using the IDES records at trial. Therefore, we affirm Wilson’s and Murff’s convictions.
Affirmed.
