I Sixth Amendment Right to Counsel
Part One of this appeal presents the troublesome question whether the post-indictment service of a grand jury subpoena on a target’s counsel constitutes a per se violation of the Sixth Amendment. Although we do not condone such conduct, we are constrained by Supreme Court and Ninth Circuit precedent to hold that the per se rule of prejudice is inapplicable on these facts.
A.
The government’s apparently increasing use of grand jury subpoenas on a target’s counsel, both pre- and post-indictment, has been the subject of much comment in the last few years. 1 The practice has been almost universally criticized by courts, commentators and the defense bar because it is viewed as a tool of prosecutorial abuse and as an unethical tactical device US Attorneys employ to go on a “fishing expedition” with legal counsel without first pursuing alternative avenues to get the information. Many feel, and with some justification, that whatever benefit the government derives from this practice comes at the direct expense of the attorney-client relationship. Among the perceived costs, for example, are the potential loss of a client’s choice of counsel should the latter be compelled to testify at the trial and the potential chilling effect upon the client’s trust in his counsel’s loyalty.
The Department of Justice took note of the situation in 1985, shortly after DOJ statistics revealed the increasing use of this type of subpoena. In July of that year, under the tutorage of Stephen S. Trott (now a member of this court), it issued a new section of the United States Attorney’s Manual entitled “Policy With Regard to the Issuance of Grand Jury or Trial Subpoena to Attorneys for Information Relating to the Representation of Clients.” 2 United States Attorneys’ Manual § 9-2.161(a) (July 18, 1985). In substance, the guidelines seek to ensure that subpoenas on counsel issue only in appropriate contexts and subject to certain safeguards. They require the prosecutor to obtain the approval of the Assistant Attorney General in charge of the Criminal Division for issuance of all subpoenas served on counsel at any time; the subpoena must seek only information “reasonably needed for the successful completion of the investigation or prosecution”; and, the prosecutor must establish that he has sought alterna *1348 tive sources first and that the need for the information outweighs the risk that the attorney will be disqualified. Taking the matter one step further, the American Bar Association House of Delegates passed a resolution in February, 1986 urging the requirement of a non-adversarial judicial approval prior to issuance of subpoenas of legal counsel. And in February of this year, the ABA House of Delegates, responding to the continuing need for protection, changed their recommendation to urge instead prior adversarial judicial proceedings.
The courts’ reactions have been mixed. To balance the resulting tension between the policies underlying the grand jury process and the protected attorney-client relationship, at least one federal court has, under its supervisory powers, adopted regulations requiring prior judicial approval before issuance of a subpoena both pre- and post-indictment on a target’s counsel.
See United States v. Klubock,
However, this circuit has not. In
In re Grand Jury Proceeding (Schofield),
It is sufficient for our purposes here to label the government’s conduct in this case as clearly wrongful. 3 Five days before trial commenced, the government subpoenaed Perry’s trial counsel to appear before a federal grand jury. The subpoena directed counsel to produce all documentation relating to Perry’s fee arrangement. Notwithstanding the apparent unprivileged nature of the information sought, 4 the timing and circumstances surrounding the issuance of the subpoena strongly suggest an improper motive. 5 But because no mo *1349 tion to quash was made, our inquiry is limited to determining whether such government conduct violated Perry’s Sixth Amendment right to effective assistance of counsel.
B.
The starting point for the analysis is
Strickland v. Washington,
The second exception applies in only a narrow class of cases which trigger the “per se” rule of prejudice. In these cases, prejudice is presumed without any showing at all. Cases in which the per se rule applies are those in which there has been an actual or constructive denial of assistance,
Strickland,
Perry has not brought a section 2255 motion to attack his conviction. He argues the Cuyler rule is not applicable to his Sixth Amendment claim because the conflict of interest created by issuance of the subpoena was “put upon” his counsel by the government’s actions. He reasons that the government’s conduct is sufficiently “egregious” to bring it within the operation of the per se rule of prejudice. We disagree.
Not all government interference triggers the per se rule. The common thread in cases where the government’s conduct was found to be “egregious” is conduct which jeopardizes the integrity of the legal process. Surreptitious eavesdropping by a government agent is illustrative.
United States v. Irwin,
It does not follow that the post-indictment service of a grand jury subpoena on a target’s counsel for production of fee information jeopardizes the integrity of the legal process. To hold otherwise would create an absolute rule prohibiting a grand jury from seeking all types of information about a target’s actions from his counsel. We decline to adopt such a rule. As the First Circuit said in
In Re Grand Jury Matters,
We are indeed mindful that subjecting counsel to grand jury process potentially implicates serious Sixth Amendment concerns.
Accord In Re Grand Jury Matters,
We disagree that the risk of disqualification is so great that allowing service of a grand jury subpoena on a target’s counsel will inevitably enable the government to control the target’s choice of counsel.
See Klein,
As the facts of this case illustrate, there will be many situations where an attorney’s compliance with the subpoena will not require disqualification. Here, counsel brought the matter to the attention of the district court when he sought a continuance so he could testify before the grand jury. At no time did he or the court suggest that he should withdraw.
6
Because only those interferences which actually have an impact on the reliability of the verdict may impugn a conviction,
Cronic,
We also disagree that allowing service of the subpoena is certain to chill the attorney-client relationship or so greatly disrupt and distract the attorney that his assistance will be ineffective. These same reasons we also found in
Osterhoudt
were insufficient to justify a preliminary showing of need or relevance in the pre-indictment context.
Accord Doe,
In sum, while we are clear that the government’s conduct was wrongful, we are equally clear that it was not the sort of egregious conduct required to trigger the per se rule. Any harm done by issuance of a grand jury subpoena on a target’s counsel can be remedied by appropriate procedures for motions to quash or continuances. In the unlikely event neither a motion for continuance or to quash the subpoena is sought or both are denied, the defendant can still attack his conviction either by making a Cuyler showing in a section 2255 hearing or by demonstrating actual prejudice. The per se rule, however, is inapplicable on the facts in this case: the potential for prejudice is just that — potential.
II Sixth Amendment Right to a Fair Trial
A careful analysis of the remaining assignments relating to the alleged denial of fair trial manifests the conclusion that none has merit. The first assignment relates to the admission of a bankruptcy court’s determination that certain transfers of property to Perry’s relatives were fraudulent conveyances. As the Tenth Circuit noted in
Johnson v. Colt Industries Operating Corp.,
The challenged testimony was not, as Perry urges, offered as substantive proof
*1352
of a fraudulent scheme.
9
A review of the record shows that the testimony was offered only to show that Perry was the true owner of certain properties nominally owned by his relatives.
See Greycas, Inc. v. Proud,
Moreover, if there was any confusion that the bankruptcy court’s determination showed a pattern of fraud, it was largely attributable to the defense’s cross-examination of the bankruptcy trustee. All that had been brought out on direct examination was the fact that the transfers of certain properties had been set aside as fraudulent conveyances. On cross-examination, defense counsel asked whether there had been any “adjudication of fraudulent misrepresentations in the inducement to obtain the funds to buy the property_” The government immediately objected on the ground that the trustee was testifying only with respect to fraudulent conveyances, not about the fraudulent scheme charged in the mail and wire fraud counts. The court sustained the objection.
Perry complains that in the absence of a limiting instruction, the jury could not have understood the technical distinction. While it is true that there may have been some confusion, it cannot be said the prejudice, if any, was undue: this determination, of course, is subject to proper balancing which the trial court could have made had defense counsel made a timely objection. Counsel offers no explanation, however, for neither having objected to the admission of the challenged testimony nor for failing to request a limiting instruction. Counsel’s failure to act puts the reviewing court, not in the position of asking how it would have balanced, but whether the admission of the evidence was so prejudicial that plain error occurred.
We have declined to find error in a similar situation when applying the abuse of discretion standard.
See Commodity Futures Trading Comm’n v. Co Petro Marketing Group, Inc.,
Accordingly, we conclude that neither the admission of the evidence nor the failure to give a limiting instruction
sua sponte
amounts to plain error. The evidence was clearly relevant to (and perhaps necessary to establish an element of) the tax evasion issue; the government in effect gave the evidence a limiting use in its objection to the defendant’s cross-examination of the bankruptcy trustee. While it would have been proper for the court to have given a cautionary instruction nonetheless, it was not reversible error not to have done so.
See United States v. Sangrey,
The second assignment is that the prosecutor impermissibly inquired into the details of Perry’s prior misdemeanor convictions for embezzlement and obtaining money under false pretenses. However, here Perry “opened the door” to detailed cross-examination when he attempted to “explain away” those convictions by offering his own version of the underlying facts.
See, e.g., United States v. Amahia,
825
*1353
F.2d 177, 180 (8th Cir.1987);
United States v. Barnes,
And the final assignment is that the prosecutor impermissibly commented on Perry’s post-arrest silence when he asked on cross-examination questions which, in substance, asked whether the version of events to which Perry was testifying to at trial was the same version of events of which he told the authorities earlier.
See Doyle v. Ohio,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. See Genego, Risky Business: The Hazards of Being a Criminal Defense Lawyer, 1 Crim.Just. 2 (Spring 1986); Pierce and Colamarino, Defense Counsel as a Witness for the Prosecution: Curbing the Practice of Issuing Grand Jury Subpoenas to Counsel for Targets of Investigations, 36 Hastings LJ. 821 (1985); Zwerling, Federal Grand Juries v. Attorney Independence and the Attorney-Client Privilege, 27 Hastings L.J. 1263 (1976); Note, Grand Jury Subpoenas of a Target’s Attorney: The Need for a Preliminary Showing, 20 Ga.L.Rev. 747 (1986).
. Perry’s trial predated promulgation of the DOJ Guidelines. We make reference to them and to the ABA Recommendation in our discussion, however, because they confirm our view that the government’s conduct in this case was indeed improper. For a reprint of the full text of the guidelines,
see In Re Grand Jury Subpoena To Attorney (Under Seal),
. Because Perry’s trial took place before promulgation of the DOJ Guidelines or the ABA’s recommendations, we are not confronted with a situation where the US Attorney clearly violated any established rules. And even had the guidelines been in force, we note that the guidelines themselves provide that they "are not intended to, do not, and may not be relied upon to create any rights, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law by any party in any matter, civil or criminal, nor do they place any limitations on otherwise lawful investigative or litigative prerogatives of the Department of Justice.”
See Klein,
. Fee information is ordinarily not privileged.
In Re Osterhoudt,
. The subpoena issued shortly after the court refused to grant the government a
Nebbia
hearing to have both Perry and his counsel testify regarding the source of funds being used to pay for the counsel's representation.
See United States v. Nebbia,
. We are, however, unable to find that Perry has waived his right to complain of conflict-free representation on this record. Although the court was made aware of the subpoena, the court never informed Perry of the risk brought about by the potential conflict and thus never secured from Perry a knowing and voluntary waiver "on the record after adequate warning”.
Mannhalt v. Reed,
. Rejecting these same arguments as insufficient to justify application of the attorney-client privilege, we said in
Tomay,
“[w]e do not believe that clients, knowing that their attorney may be compelled to testify about the amount, date, and form of fees paid, would be inhibited from disclosing fully information needed for effective legal representation. Nor do we accept a generalization that clients feel less free to disclose once it becomes apparent that their attorney’s testimony may cause adverse results.”
.
Johnson
was a products liability suit in which the plaintiff, owner and purchaser of a gun, sued Colt Industries, the manufacturer, for negligent design. The plaintiffs theory was that the gun’s design caused the gun to discharge when dropped, even when the gun was not cocked. To rebut the defendant’s claim that it was unaware of other similar accidents, the plaintiff introduced into evidence the fact of another lawsuit, also based on the "drop-kick” defect, in which the plaintiff had prevailed. The court found its admission, over objection, erroneous.
. An essential element of both the wire and mail fraud charges for which Perry was indicted was that Perry had committed an "act or acts of having devised or intended to devise a scheme or artifice to defraud or to attempt to defraud investors out of money or property by means of false or fraudulent pretenses or representations."
. There is some support, however, for Perry’s argument that counsel’s emphasis on Perry’s prior conviction during his closing arguments improperly suggested evidence of Perry’s bad character. In his summation, counsel for the prosecution said,
The man’s whole life had been geared at defrauding people. We see that as early as 1979 on this conviction for obtaining money under false pretenses. We see this conviction right here for embezzlement. Is that the life of a man who doesn’t intend to defraud?
But granting counsel was overzealous, this isolated statement does not constitute plain error. Unlike in those cases cited by Perry in which reversible error stemmed in part from a counsel’s character attacks,
see, e.g., United. States
v.
Roenigk,
