Under
Brady v. Maryland,
In this ease, defendant Maurice Herring
1
filed a pre-trial motion for a ruling that the AUSA must personally review the personnel files of testifying federal agents. Relying on
Jennings,
the district court initially denied Herring’s request, but later reconsidered its ruling sua sponte in light of
Kyles v. Whitley,
- U.S. -,
The question we must decide is whether
Jennings
was effectively overruled by
Kyles. We
hold that it was not principally because
Kyles
did not address the question presented by
Jennings
and this case — whether the district court has the authority to issue a pretrial order requiring a prosecutor to review personnel files of testifying officers personally. Rather,
Kyles
was a post-conviction case involving the application of the well-established
Brody
rule that the prosecution’s failure to disclose
Brady
material justifies a new trial, regardless of whether that failure “is in good faith or bad faith.”
Kyles,
— U.S. at -,
In interpreting
Kyles
as “effectively” overruling
Jennings,
the district court relied primarily on the language in
Kyles
that “the individual prosecutor has a duty to learn of any favorable evidence known to the others acting on the government’s behalf in the case, including the police.”
Kyles,
— U.S. at -,
We hold that
Jennings
survives
Kyles
as the law of our circuit. Accordingly, we VACATE the district court’s order dismissing the indictment without prejudice and its order granting the defendant’s request that the AUSA be required to review the personnel files of testifying agents personally, and REMAND for further proceedings. In so doing,
Notes
. Herring was indicted along with 17 other defendants for conspiracy to sell cocaine.
. We would, of course, be at liberty to revisit
Jennings
if we believed it had been undermined by
Kyles. See Palmer v. Sanderson,
.
Jennings,
like
Henthom,
was an appeal from a district court’s ruling on a pre-trial discovery motion. In
Henthom,
the defendant sought a pre-trial order requiring the prosecution "to produce the personnel files of all law enforcement witnesses whom it intends to call at the trial -"
Henthom,
In
Jennings,
the district court issued an order requiring the AUSA prosecuting the case personally to review the personnel files of testifying officers.
Jennings,
.Moreover, as we read that language, it is unnecessary to the Court's decision in Kyles.
