ORDER ON TRIAL MANAGEMENT
It would seem that early in the career of every trial lawyer, he or she has lost a case by leaving something out, and thereupon resolved never again to omit even the most inconsequential item of possible evidence from any future trial. Thereafter, in an excess of caution the attorney tends to overtry his case by presenting vast quantities of cumulative or marginally relevant evidence. In civil cases, economics place some natural limits on such zeal. The fact that the attorney’s fee may not be commensurate with the time required to present the case thrice over imposes some restraint. In a criminal case, however, the prosecution, at least in the federal system, seems not to be subject to such fiscal constraints, and the attorney’s enthusiasm for tautology is virtually unchecked.
United States v. Reaves,
I. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
In a fifty-nine page, forty-four count indictment returned on September 14, 1995, eleven defendants 1 are each charged with one or more federal offenses, ranging from conspiracy to commit mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371 (Count I), to mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341 (Counts 2 through 42), to conspiring to launder money in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1956(h) (Count 43), to criminal forfeiture under 18 U.S.C. § 982 (Count 44). The indictment alleges a complex scheme to defraud individuals whereby defendants falsely represented to individuals that, as a result of a class-action lawsuit in the United States District Court in Colorado, the entire banking system in the United States, as well as the IRS and the Federal Reserve, were declared to be fraudulent and unconstitutional. 2 Defendants allegedly represented that as a result of thе Colorado lawsuit, any individual who had ever paid taxes or used Federal Reserve notes was eligible to receive “damages” if that individual filed a claim on defendants’ form and paid defendants a fee of $300.00. The indictment further alleges that, as a result of this scheme, defendants obtained some 6,832 claims from individuals in 49 states and two Canadian provinces.
In a status report filed on May 13, 1996, shortly before a scheduling conference on preparation of this ease for trial to begin on June 27,1996, the United States represented that the likely number of documents the prosecution must review exceeds 100,000. Furthermore, the government represented that over one hundred specific exhibits have thus far been identified, but the ease agent identifying those exhibits estimates that she has “been through” only approximately ten percent of the potential exhibits. The government also represented that, to date, it has identified over three dozen potential witnesses. Thus, it is apparent that without some exercise of control by the court, this trial has the potential for mushrooming into a confusing, lengthy, and hence potentially unjust proceeding that makes inefficient use of the parties’, the court’s, and the jury’s time and the public’s resources. Although the court has severed out for trial on June 27, 1996, only three of the ten defendants, with the remaining defendants to be tried later this year, the court nonetheless views with concern the volume of evidence likely to be presented at the upcoming trial.
II. LEGAL ANALYSIS
A. Legal Authority For Reasonable Limitations
Numerous courts have grappled with the authority of the district judge to impose reasonable limitations on the manner in which cases, both civil and criminal, are presented to the jury, including the amount of time afforded the parties to present their cases, the amount of testimony and other evidence that can be presented during trial, and other restrictions on the conduct of counsel and the parties. The court is particularly indebted to Judge Bertelsman of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky for his insightful discussion of these questions nearly a decade ago.
See United States v. Reaves,
It has become apparent that courts must recognize that it is they, rather than the attorneys, who have a more objective appreciation of the time a case requires when balancing its needs against the exigencies of the court’s docket.
Id. He also sided with Judge Leval of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, who had discovered five primary benefits of a court’s imposition of limits on trials:
It requires counsel to exercise a discipline of economy choosing between what is important and what is less so. It reduces the incidence of the judge interfering in strategic decisions. It gives a cleaner, crisper, better-tried case. It gives a much lower cost to the clients. Finally, it will save months of our lives.
Reaves,
The Supreme Court stated at least the general principles under which the court must act to control trials in
Geders v. United States,
Our cases have consistently recognized the important role the trial judge plays in the federal system of criminal justiсe. “[T]he judge is not a mere moderator, but is the governor of the trial for the purpose of assuring its proper conduct and of determining questions of law.” A criminal trial does not unfold like a play with actors following a script; there is no scenario and can be none. The trial judge must meet situations as they arise and to do this must have broad power to cope with the complexities and contingencies inherent in the adversary process. To this end, [the trial judge] may determine generally the order in which parties will adduce proof; [the judge’s] determinations will be reviewed only for abuse of discretion. Within limits, the judge may control the scope of rebuttal testimony; may refuse to allow cumulative, repetitive, or irrelevant testimony; and may control the scope of examination of witnesses. If truth and fairness are not to be sacrificed, the judge must exert substantial control over the proceedings.
The judge[] [has] power to control the progress and, within the limits of the adversary system, the shape of the trial____
Geders,
There seems to be no disagreement among the federal courts that district judges have broad discretion in managing their dockets, including trial procedure and the conduct or pace of trials.
See, e.g., Sims v. ANR Freight Sys., Inc.,
Although there is no disagreement that the court has the discretion to manage trials, there also seems to be no disagreement that this discretion has its limits and must not be abused.
Sims,
The decisions considering the issue the court has raised here have most often found the trial court’s power to limit evidence and the time for presentation of a case in the court’s “inherent power,” often citing as embodiments of that power Federal Rules of Evidence 403 and 611.
See, e.g., Reaves,
[T]he courts of this country labor under heavy caseloads, and in order to accommodate these caseloads some concessions to expediency are necessary. However, if the goal of expediency is given higher priority than the pursuit of justice, then the bench and the bar both will have failed in their duty to uphold the Constitution and the undеrlying principles upon which our profession is founded. Speed is necessary, and the limited capability of the judicial system certainly should be considered in determining whether to impose limits on the introduction of evidence and the length of trial. However, such considerations *846 must be addressed with a cautious respect for the requirements necessary to achieve a fair trial.
Sims,
In Duquesne Light Co., the court identified the principal rules governing federal cases in which trial management authority is embodied:
The [rules of evidence and procedure] repeatedly embody the principle that trials should be both fair and efficient. Thus, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure “shall be construed and administered to secure the just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every action.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 1. Similarly, the Federal Rules of Evidence “shall be construed to secure ... elimination of unjustifiable expense and delay.” Fed.R.Evid. 102. More particularly, Fed. R.Evid. 403 allows judges to exclude even relevant evidence because of “considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.”
******
____ After all, “ ‘it has never been supposed that a party has an absolute right to force upon an unwilling tribunal an unending and superfluous mass of testimony limited only by [its] own judgment and whim.’ ” MCI Communications [Corp. v. American Tel. & Tel. Co.,708 F.2d 1081 ,] 1171 [ (7th Cir.),] (quoting 6 Wigmore, Evidence § 1907 (Chadboume Rev.1976)), [cert. denied,464 U.S. 891 ,104 S.Ct. 234 ,78 L.Ed.2d 226 (1983) ].
Duquesne Light Co.,
Fed.R.Evid. 403 and 611(a) give the district court wide discretion in the management of its docket and the presentation of evidence. A party is not entitled, as a matter of right, to put on every witness he [or she] may have. In the management of its docket, the court has an inherent right to place reasonable limitations on the time allotted to any given trial.
Deus,
In a quest for the proper limitations on the court’s authority to manage the presentation of evidence, this court turns again to the observаtions of the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals in Sims:
A trial is a proceeding designed to be a search for the truth. See Nix v. White-side,475 U.S. 157 , 158,106 S.Ct. 988 , 989-90,89 L.Ed.2d 123 (1986)____ Essential to the endeavor is an opportunity for the parties through their lawyers to present information in a manner that is comprehensible to a judge or jury. In this respect, the role played by lawyers in a trial is paramount. When the manner of the presentation of information to a jury is judicially restricted to the extent that the information becomes incomprehensible then the essence of the trial itself has been destroyed.
Sims,
Further cautions come from a decision of the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals in which the district court attempted to limit the government to prosecution of its “ten best” counts of a seventy-count indictment as well as limiting the government to use of the testimony of only ten of the thirty-five alleged victims of the telemarketing fraud scheme under prosecution.
United States v.
*847
Zabawa,
Certainly a district court has reasonable discretion in appropriate eases to manage its docket by granting particular defendants separate trials or disallowing cumulative testimony on a particular charge. But the order appealed from here neither separates defendants for trial nor limits testimony relevant to a single charged crime. It limits the prosecution to the testimony of ten victims of a telemarketing scheme, to prove only ten of seventy charged crimes against thirteen individual defendants (fourteen, including the defendant corporation).
Because the district court’s ruling forces the government to abandon, at least temporarily, the prosecution of separate crimes it has charged against defendants who are scheduled to be tried, we believe the ruling goes beyond those subject to the court’s discretionary control and impinges upon the separation of powers. Prosecutorial discretion is a function of the executive branch, not the judiciary.
‡ ‡ ‡
... We conclude that the district court erred in ordering the government to elect counts, and we reverse that portion of the November 4 order.
Zabawa,
We ... note that the necessity or value of the two agents’ testimony was questionable. We have reviewed defense counsel’s proffer of what testimony they would have elicited from [the two agents], and we are satisfied the issues involving the agents were adequately brought out by other testimony. Therefore, we hold ... that the exclusion of the two witnesses may be upheld under the trial court’s power to control the trial and limit testimony that would be cumulative and marginally relevant.
Wallace,
However, when excluding witnesses, it is apparent that the court may not do so on the basis of “mere numbers.”
Secretary of Labor v. DeSisto,
Similarly, the court concludes that courts may restrict by pre-trial order the presentation of evidence to certain questions, at least where the restriction does not prevent a party from pursuing his or her theory of the case.
United States v. Hassan El,
Considering specifically the district court’s authority to impose time limitations on parties, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals provided guidance this court finds generally applicable to the question of how limitations are to be determined:
[B]ecause by their very nature such procedures can result in courts dispensing with the general practice to evaluate each piece of offered evidence individually, district courts should not exercise this discretion as a matter of course. As one court has put it, witnesses should not be excluded “on the basis of mere numbers.” MCI Communications,708 F.2d at 1171 . Rather, a district court should impose time limits only when necessary, after making an informed analysis bаsed on a review of the parties’ proposed witness lists and proffered testimony, as well as their estimates of trial time. And, the court must ensure that it allocates trial time evenhandedly. But still the courts need not allow parties excessive time so as to turn a trial into a circus____
... [W]hile courts certainly have flexibility in reassessing imposed time limits, they ordinarily should allow a party to fill its allotment with whatever evidence that party deems appropriate, subject, of course, to rules of admissibility independent of the overall time limitation for the case being tried. As a corollary, an allocation of trial time relied upon by the parties should not be taken away easily and without warning.
Duquesne Light Co.,
Extrapolating from these precedents, the court finds the following general principles should guide the court in fashioning appropriate limitations for the sake of comprehensibility, economy, and fairness: (1) the court must impose no restriction that causes the information presented to become incomprehensible; and (2) no restriction or limitation should be imposed arbitrarily. In aid of these principles, the court will be guided by these general rules: (1) limitations must only be imposed when necessary to the just and *849 efficient presentation of evidence, or, to put it another way, “if it isn’t broken, don’t fix it,” which means leave areas that do not appear to be a problem well enough alone; (2) limitations should be made on the basis of an informed analysis, including review of proposed witness lists and proffered testimony, exhibits, or estimates of trial time; (3) no limitatiоn may be imposed without balancing probative value against issues of delay, confusion, or waste of time pursuant to Fed. R.Evid. 403 and 611; (4) the parties should be allowed to decide how best to use whatever allotment is given them; (5) any pre-trial limitations must be flexibly administered during trial to prevent any sacrifice of justice to efficiency; (6) changes in allotments, either admitting additional evidence or testimony or precluding more evidence or testimony than anticipated, must only be made with notice and upon a determination of need.
In addition to general rules to guide the court, these precedents also establish that the trial judge has the authority to manage the trial of a case, civil or criminal, by limiting the amount of time allotted to the parties for the presentation of their eases.
See, e.g., General Signal,
B. Potential Limitations That May Be Imposed Here
In light of these rules and precedents, the court concludes that it may be proper for the court to impose the following restrictions upon the parties in the prosecution and defense of this trial: (1) time limitatiоns on each party for the presentation of its case-in-chief; (2) limitations on the numbers of witnesses; (3) limitations on exhibits. However, the court cannot make a proper determination of the specific limitations, if any, to be imposed, in light of probative value versus cumulative effect, waste of time, or delay, without receiving information from the parties concerning the time they believe presentation of their cases should require as well as the extent of the evidence, testimonial or documentary, by which they intend to prove their case or defend charges against them. Yet, the court has no intention of standing usual criminal procedure on its head by requiring pre-trial disclosure of any information not normally disclosed to opponents pretrial.
The court’s solution is relatively simple. The court will require the parties to make disclosures, ex parte and under seal, of the information the court requires to manage the trial of this case in .a just and efficient manner. The court will review all submissions in camera, make its determinations of the proper needs for trial, and may then file a trial management order identifying potential redundancies in witnesses or exhibits solely by number. In order to aid the court in making assessments that arе not based on “mere numbers,” the parties will be required to provide both an indication of counsel’s estimate of priority of the witness or exhibit, as well as a summary of each witness’s testimony and the content and purpose of an exhibit. The more carefully counsel fulfills this obligation, the more accurately the court will be able to determine, first, whether any limitations should be imposed and, second, which limitations, if any, will advance the goals of a just and efficient trial.
The court will not at this time strike any witness, exhibit, or other evidence, but may instead find it appropriate to impose what it finds to be reasonable limitations on the time for trial and numbers of witnesses and exhibits, possibly broken down by categories. The ultimate strategic decisions of what witnesses to call or other evidence to present, within the allotments that may be made by the court, will be left to the parties. Furthermore, the parties will be allowed to petition for relief from any case management order ultimately entered, either by written pre-trial motion, filed under seal if necessary, or by ex parte motion to the court during trial.
The case management order promulgated by the court shall, in the first instance, apply only to those parties for whom trial is set to begin June 27, 1996. Those parties for whom trial has been set later in the year will be subject to a subsequent requirement to file a trial management report and shall be subject to a subsequent trial management order.
IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED THAT
1. Not later than June 6, 1996, parties for whom trial has been set to begin June 27, 1996, including the attorneys for the government and the parties appearing pro se, 5 shall submit to the court a Trial Management Report, ex parte and under seal, consisting of the following:
a. The party’s estimate of the minimum and maximum amount of time in which the party can reasonably present its case-in-chief and rebuttal, if the party *851 is entitled to any, exclusive of time for cross-examination of any witness.
b. A witness list, identifying each witness the party reasonably expects to call in its case-in-chief and rebuttal, if the party is entitled to any rebuttal.
i. Each witness shall be identified by name and number.
ü. Each witness shall further be assigned a letter indicating the party’s good faith estimation of the witness’s priority, indicated by the letters A, B, or C, with A as most necessary, and C as least necessary.
iii. Identification of each witness shall also include a summary of the witness’s expected testimony that is sufficiently specific to enable the court to determine the relevance and possible cumulativeness of the witness’s testimony. The identification shall also indicate to what counts and defendants the witness’s testimony is relevant.
c. An exhibit list, identifying each exhibit the party reasonably expects to use in its case-in-chief and rebuttal, if the party is entitled to any rebuttal.
i. Each exhibit shall be identified by number and brief descriptive title.
ii. Each exhibit shall further be assigned a letter indicating the party’s good faith estimation of the exhibit’s priority, indicated by the letters A, B, or C, with A as most necessary, and C as least necessary.
iii. Identification of each exhibit shall also include a summary of the exhibit’s content and purpose that is sufficiently specific to enable the court to determine the relevance and possible eumulativeness of the exhibit. The identification shall also indicate to what counts and defendants the exhibit is relevant.
2. Following in camera review of the submissions of the parties, the court may promulgate a Trial Management Order, specifying such limitations on the time for trial, and the numbers of witnesses, exhibits, and other evidence the parties may present at trial as the court may determine are appropriate.
Because defendants Larry A. Webb and Joan A. Webb have been uncommunicative and did not appear at the scheduled hearing, the court further orders that the United States Marshal Service shall personally serve a copy of this order on defendants Larry A. Webb and Joan A. Webb as soon as possible.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
ORDER ON MOTION TO RECONSIDER ORDER ON TRIAL MANAGEMENT
Can the court properly order all partiеs in a criminal prosecution to file trial management reports ex parte and under seal identifying their witnesses and exhibits for the purpose of the court’s evaluation of the need to promulgate reasonable limitations on the amount of time for presentation of evidence and limitations on the evidence itself? The court has entered an order requiring such reports in this case, and the government has moved to reconsider on the ground that a decision of the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals precludes such ex parte reports to the court. The court now enters the following ruling on the government’s motion to reconsider.
I. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
On May 16, 1996, this court entered an Order On Trial Management directing the parties to provide prior to trial a Trial Management Report, ex parte and under seal. The Trial Management Report of each party is to provide the court with the following information: (1) each party’s estimate of the minimum and maximum amount of time in which the party can reasonably present its case-in-chief and rebuttal, if the party is entitled to any, exclusive of time for cross-examination of any witness; (2) a witness list, identifying each witness the party reasonably expects to call in its case-in-chief and rebuttal, if the party is entitled to any rebuttal, identifying each witness by name and number, stating a good faith estimation of the witness’s priority, and a summary of the witness’s expected testimony that is suf *852 ficiently specific to enable the court to determine the relevance and possible eumulativeness of the witness’s testimony, and identifying to what counts and defendants the witness’s testimony is relevant; and (3) an exhibit list, identifying each exhibit the party reasonably expects to use in its casein-chief and rebuttal, if the party is entitled to any rebuttal, identifying each exhibit by number and brief descriptive title, stating a good faith estimation of the exhibit’s priority, and a summary of the exhibit’s content and purpose that is sufficiently specific to enable the court to determine the relevance and possible cumulativeness of the exhibit, and further identifying to what counts and defendants the exhibit is relevant.
The court found that this case involves multiple defendants and multiple counts, many of which charge violation of the same statute and all of which stem from the same alleged conspiracy or scheme, as well as many witnesses, and voluminous items of documentary and other evidence. The court was therefore concerned that at least some share of the evidence and testimony that could potentially be presented to the jury is likely to be cumulative, and that the trial of the case runs a substantial risk of being both confusing to a jury and excessively long. 1
The court therefore made an extensive examination of its inherent power to manage the trial of a criminal case by imposing reasonable limits on the amount of evidence parties would be allowed to present and reasonable time limits to be imposed on parties in the presentation of their cases. The avowed purpose of such limits was to avoid cumulative evidence and waste of time, as authorized by Fed.R.Evid. 403. Extrapolating from the precedents it had examined, the court found the following general principles should guide the court in fashioning appropriate limitations for the sake of comprehensibility, economy, and fairness: (1) the court must impose no restriction that causes the information presented to become incomprehensible; and (2) no restriction or limitation should be imposed arbitrarily. In aid of these principles, the court declared that it would be guided by these general rules: (1) limitations must only be imposed when necessary to the just and efficient presentation of evidence, or, to put it аnother way, “if it isn’t broken, don’t fix it,” which means leave areas that do not appear to be a problem well enough alone; (2) limitations should be made on the basis of an informed analysis, including review of proposed witness lists and proffered testimony, exhibits, or estimates of trial time; (3) no limitation may be imposed without balancing probative value against issues of delay, confusion, or waste of time pursuant to Fed.R.Evid. 403 and 611; (4) the parties should be allowed to decide how best to use whatever allotment is given them; (5) any pre-trial limitations must be flexibly administered during trial to prevent any sacrifice of justice to efficiency; and (6) changes in allotments, either admitting additional evidence or testimony or precluding more evidence or testimony than anticipated, must *853 only be made with notice and upon a determination of need. To these ends, the court directed the parties to file the Trial Management Reports described above, ex parte and under seal.
On May 28, 1996, the government moved to reconsider the court’s order for
ex parte
Trial Management Reports and filed an accompanying brief. The' government asserts that the court’s requirements of
ex parte
reports on witness and exhibits is contrary to the rule of law set out in
United States v. Earley,
Although the court was aware of the Earley decision, it did not review that case prior to issuing its Order On Trial Management. The court appreciates the government’s efforts to bring that case to the attention of the court. Having now reviewed the case, the court is persuaded that it does not require withdrawal of the Order On Trial Management, which admittedly probed a largely uncharted frontier. The Earley decision does, however, provide useful warnings about where the court dare not tread while attempting to chart this frontier. In ruling on the governmеnt’s motion to reconsider, the court will review the Earley decision and consider its applicability here. 2 In the course of these considerations, because the Earley decision focuses on the extent to which the court may accept ex parte submissions from the government in a criminal case, the court will also examine the extent to which the court may, or may be required, to make an ex parte evaluation of evidence prior to its presentation at trial, to determine whether the ex parte Trial Management Reports it has ordered are proper.
II. LEGAL ANALYSIS
A. The Earley Decision
In
United States v. Earley,
The court observed that ex parte communications between a trial court and government counsel raise questions of due process and breach of legal and judicial ethics, and therefore should be discouraged as undermining confidence in the impartiality of the court. Id. at 416. The court remarked,
[I]t is not controlling that the trial brief was intended to help the district judge carry out his trial responsibilities and to give advance warning of possible issues as to admissibility of evidence. The benign purpose does not insure against other tendencies for which ex parte communications are disfavored.
Earley,
The Earley court also found of limited scope the argument that advance warning of evidentiary issues was less significant where the jury would be the ultimate finder of fact, because the court, even in a jury trial, “makes potentially important decisions on admissibility of evidence and the general conduct of the trial [and] also rules on motions for judgment of acquittal and for new trial,” as well as bearing “sentencing responsibilities” that could be colored by advance knowledge of possible evidence. Id. at 417. Finally, the court rejected the argument that the taint of the ex parte communications was removed after the fact by according the defendant an opportunity to make similar ex parte submissions:
We must also dismiss as irrelevant the government’s argument that communication of the trial brief was not “ex parte” because Earley had notice of its submittal (and allegedly even a general knowledge of its contents); this fact does not obviate concerns with the time and manner in which evidence is put before the court. Similarly, the fact that Earley was offered the opportunity to submit his own trial brief does not justify a procedure which is of doubtful constitutionality because of a defendant’s rights to be present during trial and to confront witnesses against him.
Earley,
[B]ecause of the potential for prejudice and violation of due process, submission of an ex parte trial brief is improper and ... the district court should not have accepted such a communication from the prosecution.
Id. The court then suggested that the procedures for a pre-trial conference pursuant to Fed.R.Crim.P. 17.1 were the more appropriate means for identifying evidentiary issues, as were conferences outside the presence of the jury during the course of trial to identify and consider difficult questions on the admissibility of evidence. Id. The court ultimately concluded, however, that the defendant was not entitled to relief under 28 U.S.C. § 2255, because he could show no prejudice from the submission of the ex parte trial brief. Id. at 418-19.
B. Applicability Of The Earley Decision
The court concludes that the
Earley
decision is legally and factually inapplicable to the court’s order for
ex parte
Trial Management Reports. First, the
Earley
decision considered an entirely different issue in entirely different factual circumstances. Instead of considering the court’s power to
order
the parties to make simultaneous
ex parte
trial management reports, including identification of witnesses and exhibits, the
Earley
court considered the issue of whether it was improper for the district court to
accept
and
ex parte
“trial brief’ submitted by the government attorney on counsel’s initiative.
Earley,
The comments of the
Earley
court concerning “benign purpose” failing to overcome the tendencies for which
ex parte
communications are disfavored,
Earley,
In the present circumstances, there need also be little “concern ... that the trial judge may form an opinion as to the truth of the evidence before it may be answered and challenged.” Id. The avowed purpose of the Trial Management Repоrts is to allow the court to evaluate any potential evidence under the balancing test required by Fed. R.Evid. 403, which requires the court to balance relevance of evidence against cumulativeness. Fed.R.Evid. 403 (court may exclude even relevant evidence because of “considerations of undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence”). That balancing test does not require the court to take any position on the “truth” of the evidence, but only the “relevance” of evidence, which is antecedent to the question of truth. See Fed.R.Evid. 401 (“ ‘Relevant evidence’ means evidence having any tendency to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determina,tion of the action more probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence.”). The court will also have before it any “answering” evidence the opposing party identifies in its own Trial Management Report, thus removing the one-sided version of “truthful” evidence troubling to the appellate court in Earley.
Perhaps as important as any other factor to the decision in Earley was the appearance of partiality the receipt of the government’s ex parte brief suggested. Thus, the court identified as one of the tendencies for which ex parte communications are disfavored a concern “with the ‘insidious’ nature of a court-prosecutor relationship which would allow such ex parte disclosures.” Id. Here, there can be no “insidious” relationship between the court and counsel for one party, because the court has directed each party to make the required disclosures. Thus, the ex parte submissions have not grown out of a presumption by any party that it, and it alone, is entitled to the court’s ear. Instead, the requirement of ex parte submissions is stringently even-handed and the requirement that the submissions be made ex parte is to avoid standing usual criminal procedure on its head by requiring pre-trial disclosure of any information not normally disclosed to opponents pre-trial.
As to the fourth concern of the Earley court, although there may be some “danger that the district court will be in possession of a body of information that does not become a part of the record and is not known to the defendant and subject to cross-examination,” id., the procedure the court has ordered here also means that there is an off-setting possibility that the court will be in possession of a body of information that does not become a part of the record and is not known to the government and subject to cross-examination. There is consequently little real danger of the court being biased by an ex parte preview of witnesses and exhibits to the prejudice of one party or the other, which the Earley court considered a realistic concern when only one party had presumed to make an ex parte submission.
In noting the limited scope of an argument that ex parte communications by only one party made to a presiding judge were of less significance when a jury would be the trier of fact, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals *856 suggested in Earley that, even in a jury trial, the court “makes potentially important decisions on admissibility of evidence and the general conduct of the trial, ... rules on motions for judgment of acquittal and for new trial,” and bears “sentencing responsibilities” that could be colored by advance knowledge of possible evidence. Id. at 417. This court reiterates its conclusion that the potential for any bias in such decisions is dramatically lessened when ex parte identification of witnesses and evidence is required, in an even-handed fashion, from all parties. This court notes further that there are various circumstances in which the court is allowed, or even required, to make much more extensive ex parte examinations of proffered evidence than are contemplated here to determine the need for such evidence, and there appears to be little concern that the court will be biased in making other admissibility determinations, ruling on motions for acquittal or new trial, or bearing its sentencing responsibilities. 3
*857
The last impediment that might be posed by the
Earley
decision is the appellate court’s assertion that neither notice of the
ex parte
submission by an opponent nor the opportunity to submit a party’s own
ex parte
“trial brief’ concerning witnesses would justify the court’s acceptance of the initial submission made
ex parte
by the government.
Earley,
As a final point, the alternative suggested by the court in
Earley,
and by the government here, recourse to a pre-trial conference pursuant to
Fed.R.Crim.P.
17.1, is not available under the express terms of that rule.
Fed.R.Crim.P.
17.1 (“This rulе shall not be invoked in the case of a defendant who is not represented by counsel”). At least, that alternative is not available as to the first set of defendants to be tried here, all of whom are proceeding
pro se.
The court deems it inappropriate to use any inherent trial management power to overcome the express terms of a rule of criminal procedure; however, the court concludes that such power may be exercised to a legitimate end when no rule or decision specifically prohibits the course the court has charted.
United States v. Isa,
In its prior ruling, the court documented the extensive authority for a court to exercise trial management power by limiting the time for presentation of evidence and the amount of evidence pursuant to
Fed.R.Evid.
403 to avoid “undue delay, waste of time, or needless presentation of cumulative evidence.”
Fed.R.Evid.
403. If the court cannot obtain,
ex parte,
the information it needs to make reasonable trial management decisions, it faces the unacceptable alternative of making arbitrary trial management dеcisions or decisions based on “mere numbers,”
Secretary of Labor v. DeSisto,
However, the
Earley
decision does caution the court to ensure that the
ex parte
disclosures it requires be properly circumscribed to avoid any appearance of partiality or prejudgment of evidence. Upon review of its requirements for the filing of
ex parte
Trial Management Orders, the court finds one aspect that might conceivably raise a concern about improperly influencing the court about matters other than its interest in avoiding cumulative evidence and waste of time pursuant to
Fed.R.Evid.
403. That requirement was that the parties indicate, as to witnesses and exhibits, a “good faith estimation of the [evidence’s] priority” by designating the witness or exhibit with the letter A, B, or C, with A as most necessary, and C as least necessary. Although the requirement is analogous to a Rule 17(b) showing of necessity, it could improperly give a party an opportunity to have the “first word” on what evidence the party considers is most important or to suggest to the court what its opinion on evidence should be in the absence of immediate cross-examination.
See Earley,
III. CONCLUSION
The court finds that the decision of the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals in
United States v. Earley,
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. One defendant has since decided to plead guilty to some or all of the charges against him.
. The indictment alleges that the lawsuit that is the cornerstone of the scheme was the decision in
Baskerville v. Federal Land Bank,
No. 93-C-1781 (D.Colo. June 25, 1993),
affirmed,
. Equally apt is the judge’s observation that, "Nothing lulls an attorney to the passage of time like the sound of his or her own voice. New attorneys can tell you what time it is without describing how the clock was made.”
Reaves,
. Although the court doubts at this time that it will impose a pre-trial limitation on cross-examination, myriad decisions, just of this circuit, establish the court’s authority to limit cross-examination in the course of trial.
See, e.g., United States v. Darden,
. Nothing in this order shall be construed to require stand-by counsel for pro se defendants to do anything to prepare a Trial Management Report unless authorized to do so by the pro se party to which the stand-by counsel is assigned.
. In a fifty-nine page, forty-four count indictment returned on September 14, 1995, eleven defendants are each charged with one or more federal offenses, ranging from conspiracy to commit mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371 (Count I), to mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341 (Counts 2 through 42), to conspiring to launder money.in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1956(h) (Count 43), to criminal forfeiture under 18 U.S.C. § 982 (Count 44). The indictment alleges a complex scheme to defraud individuals whereby defendants falsely represented to individuals that, as a result of a class-action lawsuit in the United States District Court in Colorado, the entire banking system in the United States, as well as the IRS and the Federal Reserve, were declared to be fraudulent and unconstitutional. Defendants allegedly represented that as a result of the Colorado lawsuit, any individual who had ever paid taxes or used Federal Reserve notes was eligible to receive "damages” if that individual filed a claim on defendants’ form and paid defendants a fee of $300.00. The indictment further alleges that, as a result of this scheme, defendants obtained some 6,832 claims from individuals in 49 states and two Canadian provinces.
In a status report filed on May 13, 1996, shortly before a scheduling conference on preparation of this case for trial to begin on June 27, 1996, the United States represented that the likely number of documents the prosecution must review exceeds 100,000. Furthermore, the government represented that over one hundred specific exhibits have thus far been identified, but the case agent identifying those exhibits estimated that she had thus far "been through” only approximately ten percent of the potential exhibits. The government also represented that, to date, it had identified over three dozen potential witnesses.
. The court has not waited for the defendants to respond to the government’s motion for reconsideration for two reasons. First, the pro se defendants who are scheduled for trial on June 27, 1996, have not responded to a number of court orders or filed resistances to motions in the past. Second, the time to trial is short; therefore, the court concluded that a prompt resolution of questions about the requirement to file trial management orders was necessary to provide the parties with all opportunities to complete the necessary preparations.
. Two situations immediately present themselves. The first is the situation in which a defendant unable to pay witness fees seeks a subpoena from the court to secure the attendance of a witness “necessary to an adequate defense.”
See, e.g., Fed.R.Crim.P.
17(b) (before issuing a subpoena for a witness called by a defendant unable to pay the fees for such witness, the court must consider the
ex parte
application of a defendant and only “upon a satisfactory showing that the defendant is financially unable to pay the fees of the witness аnd
that the presence of the witness is necessary to an adequate defense
" order the subpoena to issue);
United States v. Hang,
The second situation is when the defendant’s need for expert testimony or the defеndant's mental state is at issue in a criminal proceeding.
See, e.g., United States v. Nichols,
However, these two situations do not exhaust the list of circumstances in which the court may or must make an
ex parte
preview of evidence to be submitted in a criminal trial.
See, e.g., United States v. Rodriguez-Andrade,
