On Aрril 2, 2001, defendant-appellant Artin H. Coloian was indicted on charges of bribery and conspiracy to commit bribery. The case went to trial and on June 27, 2002, Coloian was acquitted of both counts. Three years later, Coloian filed a motion to expunge his criminal record on equitable grounds under the оriginal district court case number. The government responded that the district court lacked jurisdiction to consider the motion and that the requested relief was inappropriate in any event. The district court concluded that it did have jurisdiction to expunge records, but that expungement was not warranted in Coloian’s case. After careful consideration, we vacate the district court’s order and remand for dismissal for want of jurisdiction.
I. Factual Background
On April 2, 2001, a federal grand jury returned a superseding indictment charging Coloian, an attorney and former Chief of Staff for the mayor of Providence, among others, with variоus public corruption offenses. Coloian’s case proceeded to trial on two counts: bribery and conspiracy to commit bribery. Those charges were based on allegations that Coloian had been involved in a scheme whereby Vincent A. Cianci, Jr., then mayor of Providence, was рaid $5,000 for obtaining a job for one Christopher Ise. On June 27, 2002, following a four-day trial, a jury acquitted Coloi-an of both counts. 1
On December 8, 2005, more than three years later, Coloian filed a Motion to Expunge under the original district court case number in the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island. 2 In that motion, Coloian asked the court to “expunge his record with all due dispatch.” Coloian asserted that expungement was warranted on equitable grounds because the “stigma” of having been charged “is extreme and unusual” and his arrest and trial resulted in impediments to “his ability *49 to practice law and business.” Colоian also filed a related motion to seal the records. 3
The government filed a consolidated response in which it challenged the court’s jurisdiction to expunge Coloian’s record on equitable grounds and argued that, even if jurisdiction existed, the requested ex-pungement was inappropriate given Coloi-an’s circumstances. In reply, Coloian reasserted his complaints of stigma and made vague allegations of “zealous prosecution” during the course of the grand jury proceedings in his case.
At a February 10, 2006 hearing, Coloian conceded that nothing in the criminal record had “disqualified] him for anything that he might apply for in the future,” but emphasized that the record appeared on his credit report, and that he was questioned about it by banks, potential clients and friends. Coloian suggested that he was different from other acquitted defendants in that he was a “practicing attornеy” and “a member of the business community,” and as such, a criminal record was particularly damaging because character and reputation are of particular importance in his chosen career.
In an oral disposition, the district court first concluded that “courts do have inherent authority and inherent control over their records and can, in appropriate circumstances, expunge records, but that power should be very sparingly exercised.” The court noted that expungement would be appropriate upon a showing that the proceedings had been unlawful or invalid, or the record of the proceeding caused “extreme hardship” in a particular case. However, the court found that Coloian had not presented “anything even approaching satisfaction of either of those criteria.”
On appeal, Coloian contends that the district court acquired and retained subject matter jurisdiction over this case once the indictment was filed against him pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3231. He further asserts that the district court has ancillary jurisdiction to adjudicate and determine matters incidental to the exercise of its primary jurisdiction. Coloian contends that because his motion to expunge his criminal record relates to the charges in the indictment and “remainfs] a public record and record of the District Court,” the district court has ancillary jurisdiction over the expungement of the criminal records. 4 We disagree.
II. Discussion
We review the threshold jurisdictional issue
de novo. See Baella-Silva v. Hulsey,
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This case presents an issue of first impression in thе First Circuit. The only case in this Circuit to have addressed this issue, albeit indirectly, is
Reyes v. Supervisor of the DEA,
A district court has original jurisdiction over “all offenses against the laws of the United States.” 18 U.S.C. § 3231. We have held that “[o]nce subject-matter jurisdiction has properly attached, courts may exceed their authority or otherwise err without loss of jurisdiction.”
Prou v. United States,
In
Kokkonen v. Guardian Life Insurance Co. of America,
the Supreme Court shed some light on the contours of a distriсt court’s ancillary jurisdiction.
The Court first noted that the claim originally before the district court — the claim it dismissed — had nothing to do with the claim for breach of the settlement agreement; “it would neither be necessary nor even particularly efficient that they be adjudicated together.”
Id.
at 380,
In view of the Supreme Court’s instruction on the purposes of ancillary jurisdiction, we must determine whether Coloian’s request for the expungement of his criminаl record, based solely on equitable grounds, 6 serves either of these purposes.
The Third, Eighth and Ninth Circuits have read
Kokkonen
to preclude ancillary jurisdiction over orders to expunge criminal records based solely on equitable grounds. These circuits have rejected the notion that a federal court’s jurisdiction under either § 3231 or its “inherent power” provides ancillary jurisdiction over equitable orders to expunge because such orders do not fit within
Kokkonen’s
purposes for ancillary jurisdiction.
See, e.g., Dunegan,
The Second, Seventh, Tenth and D.C. Circuits, however, have concluded that dis
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trict courts do have ancillary jurisdiction to expunge records based on equitable considerations.
7
See, e.g., United States v. Flowers,
We agree with the Third, Eighth and Ninth Circuits that
Kokkonen
answers the question raised in this case. As the
Kokkonen
court held, ancillary jurisdiction exists only (1) to permit disposition of interrelated claims by a single court and (2) to enable a court to “manage its proceedings, vindiсate its authority, and effectuate its decrees.”
III. Conclusion
Because we find that the distriсt court lacked jurisdiction to consider Coloian’s motion, we vacate the district court’s order and remand for dismissal for want of jurisdiction.
Vacated and Remanded with instructions to dismiss.
Notes
. During the trial, the district court denied Coloian’s motion for judgment of acquittal.
. The word "expunge” generally refers to the physical destruction of information.
Dubnoff v. Goldstein,
. Coloian does not appeal the district court’s ruling on his motion to seal.
. Congrеss has specifically provided for ex-pungement or related remedies in narrowly defined circumstances.
See, e.g.,
5 U.S.C. §§ 552a(d), (g)(1)(C) (allowing claims to amend public records that are inaccurate); 10 U.S.C. § 1565(e) (mandating expungement of DNA records when military conviction is overturned); 18 U.S.C. § 3607(c) (allowing for expungement of criminal records in certain drug possession cases); 21 U.S.C. § 844a(j) (allowing for expungement of civil penalty records in certain drug possession cases); 42 U.S.C. § 14132(d) (allowing for expungement of DNA records held by the FBI in certain cases where conviction is overturned). Also, federal courts have upheld the expungement of criminal records as a remedy for arrests or prosecutions that violate federal statutes or the constitution.
See, e.g., United States v. McLeod,
. Examples of a district court’s proper exercise of ancillary jurisdiction “to enable a court to function successfully” include the power to compel payment of sanctions for misconduct,
Chambers v. NASCO, Inc.,
. When we refer to "еquitable grounds,” we mean grounds that rely only on notions of fairness and are entirely divorced from legal considerations. Other circuit courts have also emphasized this distinction.
See, e.g., United States
v.
Meyer,
. Although the Seventh and Tenth Circuits have not specifically tied the district court’s power to expunge criminal records to a particular jurisdictional basis, we interpret the silence to mean that the power is grounded on a district court’s ancillary jurisdiction.
Cf. Kokkonen,
