MEMORANDUM & ORDER
Presently before the Court are a series of severance motions made by defendants Norman Chañes, Richard Martino, Thomas Campos, Daniel Martino, Thomas Pug-liese, Lawrence Nadell, Yitzhak Levy, and Kenneth Schaeffer 1 , and a motion by the government to disqualify Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP (“Weil Gotshal”) as defense counsel for defendant Norman ' Chañes. For the following reasons (1) the severance motion made by defendants Nadell, Schaeffer, and Levy pursuant to Rule 14 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure is granted; (2) all other severance motions are denied; (3) and the government’s motion to disqualify Weil Gotshal is granted.
THE INDICTMENT
The central charges in this case are alleged violations of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, 18 U.S.C. § 1961 et seq., (“RICO”). The indictment alleges that seven of the eleven defendants are either members or associates of the “Gambino Family of La Cosa Nostra,” the alleged RICO enterprise. These seven defendants 2 (the “RICO Defendants”) áre charged with racketeering and racketeering conspiracy (Counts One and Two) and with money laundering and money laundering conspiracy (Counts 15-20). In addition, defendants Richard Marti-no, Daniel Martino, and Norman Chañes are alleged to have participated in mail and wire fraud in connection with two separate schemes: the first, outlined in Counts 3-10, involved the inclusion of charges on consumers’ telephone bills for services which they had not requested (“the telephone cramming scheme”); the second, set forth in Counts 11-14, pertained to a scheme in which visitors to adult entertainment websites run by certain defendants were allegedly misled into believing that they were receiving a free tour, while in reality charges were levied to their credit cards, which they had provided for age verification purposes (“the internet scheme”). Zef Mustafa, Andrew Campos, and Thomas Pugliese, the remaining RICO defendants, are also charged with the telephone cramming scheme.
I. The Racketeering Charges:
According to the indictment, the purpose of the Gambino Crime Family, the enterprise, was to “generate money for its members and associates through crime, including mail fraud, wire fraud, credit card fraud, money laundering and other crimes.” (Ind. at ¶ 5.) The Family allegedly operates through groups of individuals referred to as “crews.” Each crew is composed of “made” members of the Gambino Family referred to as “soldiers,” and is headed by a “captain,” or “capo.” Captains received a share of the criminal proceeds obtained by their crews, in exchange for which they supervise the criminal activities and provide support and protection.' Crewmembers are expected to pay “tribute” to their captains by providing them with a certain percentage of their illegal proceeds. (Ind. at ¶¶ 2-3, 5.) In this case, the indictment alleges that illegal proceeds which were obtained via the telephone cramming and internet schemes were laundered for the purpose of fulfilling the obligations of paying tribute to’ superiors in the family. (Ind. at ¶¶ 58-60.)
II. The Telephone Cramming Scheme:
This “cramming scheme” involved the use of USP & C, a corporation allegedly controlled by defendants Richard Martino, Daniel Martino, and Norman Chañes, to include unwarranted charges on consumers’ telephone bills for services which they had not requested. (Ind. at ¶ 21.) The government alleges that defendants created advertisements promising free samples of adult entertainment phone services (the “marketing materials”). When a customer called the numbers in the advertisements, he allegedly began receiving recurring monthly charges on his telephone bill for a voice mail service which he had not requested. (Ind. at ¶¶ 22-23.) The indictment alleges that defendants prepared a set of advertisements and аudio programs (the “approval materials”) which differed from those used for marketing in that they appeared to properly seek the customers’ authorization to charge a recurring fee for the voice mail service, which the material described fully. (Ind-¶ 25-26.) These “approval materials” were provided to the telephone companies that allowed the charges to be added to customers’ bills, as well as to complaining customers and regulatory agencies, thereby preventing discovery of the fraud. (Ind. at ¶¶ 24-26.)
III.The Internet Scheme:
The internet scheme charged in the indictment involved the creation of a joint venture between two companies, Crescent Publishing and Lexitrans. Crescent Publishing created adult entertainment materials, which were then placed on websites by Lexitrans, a web hosting company controlled by Richard Martino; together they operated the adult entertainment websites. (Ind. at ¶¶ 42-44.) As previously noted, the alleged fraud involved visitors to the website being offered free tours after entering their credit card numbers for the alleged purpose of age verification. The websites were allegedly designed in such a manner as to trigger charges on the visitors’ credit cards without their knowledge. (Ind. at ¶¶ 47-51.)
TV. Money Laundering Charges:
The final counts in the indictment allege that the RICO Defendants conspired to commit and actually did commit money
THE SEVERANCE MOTIONS
Defendant Schaeffer seeks a severance on the grounds of improper joinder under Rule 8(b) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure; all other motions are based on Rule 14 of the Rules.
I. Defendant Schaefer’s Motion to Sever due to Improper Joinder Under Rule 8(b)
Rule 8(b) permits joinder of two or more defendants in the same indictment where “they are alleged to have participated in the same act or transaction or in the same series of acts or transactions constituting an offense or offenses.”
3
Fed. R.Crim.P. 8(b). The standard for joinder under Rule 8(b), as articulated in
United States v. Attanasio,
requires that the acts in which the defendants participated be “unified by some substantial identity of facts or participants” or “arise out of a common plan or scheme.”
Although it is true that the internet and telephone cramming frauds involve different activities and, as. such, are distinct, courts have on several occasions held that joinder under Rule 8(b) is proper where a defendant, although not charged in the RICO count itself, is charged in substantive offenses which also serve as predicate acts in the RICO count.
United States v. Cervone,
The principal Second Circuit case on this issue is
United States v. Cervone,
in which eighteen defendants were charged in a 102-eount indictment with charges including RICO violations, RICO conspiracy, labor bribery, extortion, and other associated crimes.
These cases are directly applicable here. The connection between the telephone cramming scheme with which Schaefer is charged and the other charges in the indictment is significantly more palpable than in Cervone. In this case, Schaefer is charged — together with five of the RICO-defendants — with having participated in a fraudulent scheme, the proceeds of which were allegedly laundered and channeled to senior members of the criminal enterprise. He was also an employee of Mical Properties, Inc., a company owned by defendant Martino, and a co-worker of two other defendants in the case who were charged in both the telephone and the internet fraud, both of which were predicate acts of the RICO charges. Moreover, Schaef-fer — like Gotti — although not charged with the RICO counts themselves, is charged with fraud in connection with the telephone cramming scheme, which is one of the RICO predicate acts. Therefore, applying the court’s logic in Gotti and Cer-vone, the defendants in this case are permissibly joined. Defendant Schaeffer’s motion to sever under Rule 8(b) is therefore denied.
II. Defendants’ Motion to Sever under Rule 11
Rule 14(a) states that, “[i]f the joinder of offenses or defendants in an indictment, an information, or a consolidation for trial appears to prejudice a defendant or the government, the court may order separate trials of counts, sever the defendants’ trials, or provide any other relief that justice requires.” Fed. R.Crim.P. 14(a). The severance decision is committed to the sound discretion of the trial court.
Opper v. United States,
[W]hen defendants properly have been joined under Rule 8(b), a district court should grant a severance under Rule 14 only if there is a serious risk that a joint trial would compromise a specific trial right of one of the defendants, or prevent the jury from making a reliable judgment about guilt or innocence. Such a risk might occur when evidence that the jury should not consider against a defendant and that would not be admissible if a defendant were tried alone is admitted against a codefendant.... When many defendants are tried together in a complex case and they have markedly different degrees of culpability, this risk of prejudice is heightened.
In
United States v. Casamento,
the court addressed the problem of long and complex trials and provided some “benchmarks” for district courts to use in exercising their discretion to sever trials. The court held that in cases in which the time estimated for the prosecution to make its case exceeds four months, the judge should “oblige the prosecutor to present a reasoned basis to support a conclusion that a joint trial of all the defendants is more consistent with the fair administration of justice than some manageable division of the case to separate trials for groups of defendants.”
With these factors in mind, the Court now turns to the individual severance motions.
A. Rule II Motion of Levy, Schaeffer, and Nadell
Defendants Levy, Schaeffer, and Nadell moved for severance under Rule 14.
4
Defendants allege that because they
In effect, the government in this case is seeking to introduce extensive evidence about the existence of the Gambino Crime Family and the manner in which it functions, as well as actual video surveillance tapes and recorded conversations of specific instances in which several RICO defendants interacted at the infamous Ravenite Social Club or with the notorious John Gotti. Moreover, the government has recently suggested that it will also seek to introduce certain violent acts relating to certain RICO defendants with alleged ties to the Gambino Family.
In
United States v. Bellomo,
Absent severance, these defendants would face a lengthy trial that would include evidence of a RICO enterprise in which none of them is charged with participating. This evidence might prejudice these defendants significantly because the trial would include a great deal of evidence about an organized crime enterprise and its operations which would not be presented at a separate trial and which is not alleged to have been part of their criminal activity. Thus, there is clear potential for spillover prejudice in this case. Nor, as the government’s proposal clearly concedes, is there any reason to subject these defendants to a lengthy RICO trial, much of which will have nothing to do with them.
Id.
at 650. Similarly, in
United States v. Maisonet,
which involved violations of the federal narcotics laws, motions were made by two defendants who were not charged with RICO counts to sever their trial from their.RICO co-defendants. The court considered various factors and found that “[gjiven the nature and extent of evidence that the Government will likely introduce against [the] codefendants, the potential for prejudice ... arising from a joint trial ... is substantial.”
Maisonet,
The government has argued that severance would not cure this prejudice to the defendants because the same evidence will be admissible in a separate trial against Nadell, Levy, and Schaeffer. (.Govt. Letter. Aug. 16, 2004 at 1-2.) Specifically, the government claims that it would press to include evidence of defendant Richard Martino’s organized crime membership because “it is probative of an individual’s mental state that he associates himself with a business that he knows to require— and benefit from — the protection of organized crime.” (Id. at 2.) The government anticipates presenting evidence that the Mieal employees — including Levy, Nadell, and Schaeffer — had discussed the news coverage alleging that Martino was a soldier in the Gambino Crime Family. Although the Court is not yet prepared to rule on the question of what evidence will be admissible in such a trial, it is clear that any such evidence of Martino’s alleged organized crime affiliations would not concern whether in fact Martino was a member of the Crime Family, but only whether the defendants believed him to be. The evidence as to organized crime, if admissible at all, would be extremely limited in scope and purpose and would not generate the level of prejudice that would result from a joint trial, in which extensive testimony, pictures, and video footage will depict Mafia meetings at the Ravenite Social Club with personalities such as John Gotti. Moreover, any prejudice which might result if some limited evidence of organized crime were admissible would be more easily controlled where both the charges alleged and the number of defendants are smaller. The jury’s ability to keep track of the evidence as it corresponds to the various defendants would be significantly enhanced in a trial with three defendants and eleven counts, as opposed to eleven defendants and twenty counts.
In addition to the danger of spill-over prejudice, the guidelines set forth in
Ca-samento
are particularly applicable to this motion. As noted above, this ease involves twenty counts and eleven dеfendants. The government has estimated that the presentation of its case will take approximately four months and to say that the charges— involving the structure of the Gambino Crime family, RICO counts, two different yet equally elaborate schemes to defraud consumers, and the channeling of funds through numerous companies in a complicated money laundering scheme — are complex, would be an understatement'. A judge is not required to accept the’ government’s estimate of the time required to present its case without question, but is free to make an independent assessment thereof.
Casamento,
In light of the serious prejudice likely to result from a joint trial, the duration and complexity of the trial, and the large number of defendants and counsel which are involved, this Court grants the motions to sever made by defendants Levy, Nadell, and Schaeffer.
B. Motions by Chañes and Daniel Mar-tino to sever under Rule II
Motions have also been madе by defendants Chañes and Daniel Martino, seeking dismissal of the RICO counts against them and severance under Rule 14 from mem
C. Chañes’ Motion to Sever the Internet and Audiotext Fraud Counts
Defendant Chañes — joined by Richard Martino, Pugliese, Daniel Marti-no, Campos, Nadell, Levy, and Schaeffer— seeks a severance of the internet and au-diotext fraud counts on the grounds, that a joint trial would be inherently and unfairly prejudicial. Chañes also argues that the racketeering charges assоciated with the internet scheme should be. severed from the racketeering charges associated with the audiotext scheme.
Given the presumption in favor of joint trials and the fact that these two fraudulent schemes are both predicate acts for the overarching RICO charges, this Court declines to exercise its discretion in favor of severance. Chañes cites only one case in support of his argument, and even that case is factually very different. In
United States v. Villanueava Madrid,
DISQUALIFICATION OF COUNSEL FOR NORMAN CHAÑES
The government has moved to disqualify defendant Chañes’ counsel, John Wing, and his firm, Weil, Gotshal & Manges LLP, principally because a partner in Mr. Wing’s law firm will likely be a government witness in this case, and because Mr. Wing has previously represented another potential government witness.
I. Background
In 1985, Norman Chañes and Monroe Caine were indicted for mail fraud in the Southern District of New York. Mr. Wing, a partner at Weil Gotshal, represented Caine in that case. Both Chañes and Caine pled guilty. The government has stated that it anticipates that Caine will testify that, as regards the 1985 charges, he entered into a scheme with Chañes to market products through false and misleading advertisements. The government alleges that Caine will further testify that
From April 1985 — July 1989, subsequent to Chañes’ conviction in the Southern District case, Weil Gotshal also provided legal services to companies in which Norman Chañes had an ownership interest. (Jaffe Aff. at 1.) Helene Jaffe and other members of the firm reviewed and approved advertisements for the companies. In 1989, Chañes was introduced to Joel R. Dichter, an attorney at Klein, Zelman, Rothermel & Dichter, LLP (“Klein Zelman”), by Steve Becker, a partner of Chanes’s in at least one company. Dichter, who had been providing legal services to Mr. Becker and to the companies in which he had an ownership interest, then began providing legal services to Chañes and his companies, shortly after Chañes terminated his relationship with Weil Gotshal. It was also during this same time period that Mr. Dichter met Chañes’ codefendant Richard Martino, who worked or came to work with Chañes and Becker on various audiotext projects. 5
Between 1990 — 1995, Klein Zelman provided legal services to companies in which Chañes and/or Martino either had an ownership interest or with which their companies were conducting business. (Weil Gotshal Mem. Aug. 11, 2004 at 8.) The legal advice provided concerned the audio-text industry, including regulatory compliance with FCC and FTC rules. Beginning in 1995, Klein Zelman began providing legal advice on Internet use and Internetre-lated advertising. Id.
The government alleges that both Mr. Wing’s representation of Caine, and Ms. Jaffe’s prior representation of Chañes constitute grounds for disqualification of Mr. Wing as counsel for Norman Chañes, because the government intends to call both Ms. Jaffe and Mr. Caine as witnesses to rebut any reliance on counsel defense advanced by Chañes.
II. ■ Discussion
The Supreme Court, in Wheat v. United States, recognized the difficulties facing a district court judge when ruling on a disqualification issue:
Unfortunately for all concerned, a district court must pass on the issue whether or not to allow a waiver of a conflict of. interest by a criminal defendant not with the wisdom of hindsight after the trial has taken place, but in the murkier pre-trial context when relationships between parties are seen through a glass, darkly. The likelihood and dimensions of nascent conflicts of interest are notoriously hard to predict, even for those thoroughly familiar with criminal trials.
III. Disqualification based on the Advocate-Witness Rule
As a preliminary matter, it should be noted that the entire question of disqualification based on the advocate-witness rule would be moot, should Chañes not raise a reliance on counsel defense — in such a case, the, government would have no other legitimate grounds upon which to question Ms. Jaffe. Here, Chañes’ counsel has indicated that Chañes will likely raise such a defense, which will encompass the claim that Chañes had no intent to mislead consumers in his advertisements .since they had been reviewed by counsel for compliance with, among other regulations, the Federal Trade Commission’s clear and conspicuous disclosure standard.
A. Waiver of the Attorney-Client Privilege
Prior to addressing the larger question of whether disqualification is necessary in the present case, this Court must first answer the threshold question of whethér the attorney-client privilege adhering to Chañes’ communications with Ms. Jaffe during the time period between April 1985 and July 1989, when Weil Gotshal represented his companies, would likely- be waived in the event that Chañes asserts a reliance of counsel defense. Obviously, if no circumstances could be envisioned in which the privilege would be waived, the disqualification issue would not arise.- As this question focuses • on legal advice regarding the Federal Trade Commission’s disclosure requirements, and the application of those requirements to different advertising media, it is necessary to have an understаnding of the provisions in question. It is therefore helpful, as a preliminary matter, to examine these provisions, insofar as they relate to the advice received by Chañes.
The Federal Trade Commission Act of 1914, 15 U.S.C. §§ 41-58 (2004) prohibits unfair or deceptive advertising in any medium; including internet advertising. Section 5(a) of the Act prohibits “unfair or deceptive acts or practices in or affecting commerce” and provides the Commission with the requisite powers to prevent such acts or practices. 15 U.S.C. §§ 45(a)(1) & (2). Section 12 of the Act focuses on false
This issue before the Court at this juncture is whether Chañes’ assertion of a reliance on counsel defense, stating that he relied on Mr. Dichter’s assertions that his advertisements complied with the FTC disclosure standards outlined above, would waive Chañes’ privilege not only as to com
The fundamental purpose of the attorney-client privilege is to “encourage full and frank communication between attorneys and - their .clients.”
United States v. Bilzerian,
Although this principle of waiver is well-settled, the more difficult question is the scope of such a waiver. Chañes argues that the waiver here should be limited to the legal standard — here the FTC disclosure standard — as applied to the facts and circumstances under which the legal advice was rendered. Therefore, the argument goes, Chañes’ privilege should only be waived as to Dichter’s communications regarding the application of the FTC standards to the audiotext and internet advertisements at issue in this case, rather than as regards advice that Chañes received on the “clear and conspicuous disclosure” standard more broadly. Noting that Ms. Jaffe’s advice related to mail order advertisements, and not the internet and audio-text advertisements at issue in this case, Chañes argues that the subject matter of the waiver does not extend to his communications with Jaffe. (Weil Gotshal Mem. Aug. 11, 2004 at 34.)
The government, on the other hand, maintains that any advice received by Chañes regarding the FTC’s disclosure standard is relevant to determining his good faith reliance on Mr. Dichter’s advice, and that Chañes has waived the privilege with respect to all communications that his assertion has logically placed “in issue.” (Govt, letter July 29, 2004 at 9, citing
The argument that the jury should be able to ' assess the totality of Chañes’ knowledge, including any advice he received on the matter from prior counsel, finds support in the case law of this Circuit. In Bilzerian, the defendant, who was charged with having violated federal security laws, sought to testify that he had lacked the intent to violate the laws without waiving communications with his attorney on the subject. The district court denied the defendant’s motion, holding that if the defendant testified that his actions were in good faith, such testimony would open the door to cross-examination with respect to the basis for this belief, including communications with his attorney. The Second Circuit upheld the district court’s determination and engaged in a lengthy discussion of the attorney client privilege and its waiver. In particular, in discussing why waiver was applicable, the court stated that:
This waiver principle is applicable here for Bilzerian’s testimony that he thought his actions were legal would have put his knowledge of the law and the basis for his understanding of what the law required in issue. His conversations with counsel regarding the legality of his schemes would have been directly relevant in determining the extent of his knowledge and, as a result, his intent.
Moreover, in
Convolve, Inc. v. Compaq Computer Corp.,
Chañes, however, argues that these cases do not support an extension of the waiver to communications with Ms. Jaffe because the waivers in these cases never extended to a larger legal principle but were limited to the communications regarding the particular subject matter at issue in that ease, such as the specific transaction or ■ the specific patent. His assessment of the factual circumstances is correct. On the other hand, no case appears to have addressed a factual scenario similar to his case and concluded that the waiver would not be extended to earlier on discussions on the same legal issue. Because the facts of this case present a novel issue which has not been directly addressed in the available case law, the Court must look to the principles underlying the attorney client privilege, the reasons for which it is waived where a reliance on counsel defense is asserted, and the considerations and approaches taken by courts in addressing these issues. The issue becomes largely one of relevance. As indicated above, courts have repeatedly indicated that the waiver will not protect communications that shed light on whether reliance on counsel would have been reasonable and in good faith.
Given the applicability of the same FTC disclosure standard to all advertisement mediums, the extent to which a party is aware of the rules of disclosure, and of the factors which are taken into consideration in the application of those rules to a particular medium, is relevant to a determination of whether that same party relied in good faith on the advice of counsel when applying the same principles to a different medium.
7
In other words, if Chañes received information from Ms. Jaffe regarding the application of the FTC standards
For these reasons, this Court finds that if Chañes were to assert a reliance on counsel defense, doing so would waive his attorney client privilege not only as to his conversations with Mr. Dichter, but as to his conversations with Ms. Jaffee relating to the application of the FTC disclosure standards.
B. Disqualification under the Witness-Advocate Rule
Because the attorney-client privilege has been deemed waived as to Chañes’ communications with Ms. Jaffe on the issue of the applicability of the FTA “clear and conspicuous disclosure” standard, this Court is now 'faced with the question of whether Weil Gotshal should be precluded from defending Chañes as a result.
In determinating when disqualification of counsel is required under the advocate-witness rule, the Second Circuit is guided, althоugh not bound, by the New York Code of Professional Responsibility, which states, in Disciplinary Rule 5 — 102(d), that:
If, after undertaking employment in contemplated or pending litigation, a lawyer learns or it is obvious that the lawyer or a lawyer in his or her firm may be called as a witness on a significant issue other than on behalf of the client, the lawyer may continue the representation until it is apparent that the testimony is or may be prejudicial to the client at which point the lawyer and the firm must withdraw ■acting as an advocate before the tribunal.
N.Y. Comp.Codes. R. & Regs. tit. 22 § 1200.21(d) (2004);
Renner v. Townsend Fin. Servs. Corp.,
In order to succeed on a motion seeking disqualification, the moving party must demonstrate the necessity of the testimony as well as a substantial likelihood of prejudice to the defendant.
Parkins v. St John,
Prejudice, on the other hand, requires that the testimony be “sufficiently adverse to the factual assertions or account of events offered on behalf of the client, such that the bar or the client might have an interest in the lawyer’s independence in discrediting that testimony.”
Parke-Hayden, Inc. v. Loews Theatre Mgmt. Corp.,
The -standards governing whether or not to disqualify counsel are clear; the difficulty lies not in identifying them, but rather in their application, which requires a fact-intensive inquiry.
Renner,
It appears to a near certainty that Norman Chañes will defend against these charges on the grounds that he was told that the advertisements the government claims are false and misleading in fact complied with the law. This advice was provided by Joel Dichter. The government .wishes to challenge this reliance on counsel defense by calling as a witness Helen Jaffe. It argues that Ms. Jaffe’s anticipated testimony will undermine that defense. Although it does not know what her precise testimony will be, it has pieced together certain information. First, she began to represent him after his 1985 plea and conviction for mail fraud; she represented him in connection with his business pertaining to advertisements for various products; she is a leading trade-practices lawyer and a specialist in FTC marketing regulation; and although her affidavit filed with the Court denied giving advice in certain areas, it did not deny that she provided advice as to the Federal Trade Commissions “clear and conspicuous disclosure” standard. It is thus more than reasonable to conclude that she would of necessity had to.have advised him about, if not the requirements of the FTC standard per se, then, at the very least, the application of those principles to the advertisements she discussed with him. The government’s argument is that Dichter’s advice was plainly wrong,
8
and that Ms.
It is not possible to assess at this point the ultimate persuasiveness of the government’s theory that Chañes left Jaffe and hired Dichter specifically to engage in fraud. Chañes has presented information which would undercut the strength of some of the government’s inferences but not eliminate them. It does not appear to this Court, however, to be a frivolous dr unsupported theory. In any event, whether the government establishes this theory or not, it is quite likely that Ms. Jaffe will ■have relevant testimony to give that will go directly to the issue of Chañes’ knowledge and state of mind as it pertains to his reliance on counsel- defense.
A review of'the factors that contribute to a finding of necessity — the significance and weight of the evidence, as well as the availability of other evidence — weighs in the government’s favor. This testimony meets the necessity criteria since Ms. Jaffe is the only other identified lawyer who provided Chañes with advice in this area and the one who directly preceded Dichter. Chañes misses the point when he says that Dichter is available to offer.testimony regarding the extent of Chañes’ knowledge of the FTC standard, and thus Ms. Jaffe is not needed. The crux of the government’s argument is, that it needs to demonstrate what “other” lawyers informed him about, not the one Chañes will proffer that he relied on. This is particularly true where the government seeks to prove by inference that he purposely left the competent Jaffe to engage the less competent but more agreeable Dichter.
With regard to the prejudice element, it is clеar that if Ms. Jaffe testifies as expected by the government or in any way provides information that would undermine Chañes’ assertion of good faith reliance on Mr. Dichter, such testimony would be highly prejudicial and Chañes would certainly have an interest in having that testimony discredited by an unconflicted lawyer. An effective cross-examination of Ms.
Moreover, although it is true that the government can not prove just what Ms. Jaffe will testify to, the government must only demonstrate a substantial likelihood of prejudice.
Renner,
As a final matter, this Court is firmly persuaded that the concern raised by a disqualification motion under the advocate-witness rule, namely that the party seeking disqualification is “manufacturing a conflict in order to prevent a defendant from having a particularly able defense counsel at its side,”
Wheat,
II. Disqualification because of Mr. Wing’s prior representation of government witness
The government’s motion to disqualify Weil Gotshal based on Mr. Wing’s prior representation of Mr. Caine, Chañes’ former co-defendant whom thе government plans on calling as a witness at trial, also raises important concerns regarding Chañes’ right to unconflicted counsel. The conflict arises because, as stated over 50 years ago by Judge Weinfeld:
A lawyer’s duty of absolute loyalty to his client’s .interests does not end with his retainer. He is enjoined for all time, except as he may be released by law, from disclosing matters revealed to him by reason of the confidential relationship. Related to this principle is the rule that where any substantial relationship can be shown between the subject matter of a former representation and that of a subsequent adverse representation, the latter will be prohibited.
T.C. Theatre Corp. v. Warner Bros. Pictures,
III. The Independent Counsel Alternative
When the conflict with Ms. Jaffe was first brought to this Court’s attention, the Court inquired whether retaining separate counsel to cross-examine Ms. Jaffee would provide an adequate alternative to disqualification. In its letters to the Court, Chañes has now argued in favor of this notion and has proposed that having Chañes retain independent counsel for the cross-examination of both Ms. Jaffe and Mr. Caine would provide a viable alternative to disqualification. However, after having given the matter more serious consideration, the Court is not convinced that the use of an independent counsel would suffice to eliminate the conflicts in their entirety. The specter of Ms. Jaffe as a potential witness and the impact of her testimony will extend beyond her mere cross-examination; it will permeate the entire trial, including the opening statement, summation, and advice to Chañes as to whether or not he should testify. On reflection, this Court concludes that, despite its fervent hope that this alternative would resolve this extremely diffiсult and troubling problem, retaining separate counsel to cross-examine Ms. Jaffe will not suffice. The conflict cannot be so' neatly compartmentalized. Moreover, as pointed out by the government, the cases cited by Chañes, in which retention of independent counsel to handle a portion of the ease resolved the conflict, did not involve advocate-witness conflicts. The fact that this case not only presents an unwaivable conflict of interest under the advocate witness rule, but also presents a potential conflict due to Mr. Wing’s prior representation of a second likely government witness highlights the need to err on the side of caution and to disqualify Weil Gotshal from serving as trial counsel to defendant Chañes.
In a recent decision of the Second Circuit,
United States v. Jones,
[I]n situations where a potential conflict exists, one that may ripen into an actual conflict as the trial progresses, district courts must have wide latitude to permit or deny a defendant’s waiver of such conflict. We reсognize that a trial court confronted with waiver issues is faced with an unenviable choice — no matter which way it rules — of being reversed on appeal. Hence, the trial judge is caught in a daunting dilemma between what appears to be two choices, both of which are potentially negative from its standpoint.
Jones,
CONCLUSION
Therefore, for the reasons set forth above, the severance motions of defendants Schaeffer, Nadell, and Levy pursuant to Rule 14 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure are granted. All other severance motions are denied. The government’s motion to disqualify Weil, Gotshal & Manges as counsel for defendant Chañes is granted.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. USP & C initially joined in both a motion for severance on the grounds of improper joinder made by defendant Schaeffer, as well as in a motion for severance under Rule 14 made by defendants Schaeffer, Nadell, and Levy. However, in a letter to the Court dated September 14, 2004, USP & C asked to withdraw its motions for severance.
. Salvatore LoCascio, Richard Martino, Zef Mustafa, Norman Chañes, Daniel Martino, Andrew Campos, and Thomas Pugliese.
. While this motion concerns the impropriety of the joinder оf the offenses and technically would fall under Rule 8(a), the Second Circuit has held that where the challenge to joinder of offenses is made by a defendant in a multiple-defendant case, the motion is made under Rule 8(b) as opposed to 8(a).
United States v. Turoff,
. Defendants LoCascio, Richard Martino, Mustafa, Pugliese, Chañes, and Campos joined this motion with respect to the time management arguments presented by Levy, Nadell, and Schaeffer in favor of severance.
. The government alleges that Chañes met Martino prior to ending his relationship with Weil Gotshal and hiring Mr. Dichter. Chanes's papers are unclear about the timing. (Weil Gotshal Mem. Aug. 11, 2004 at 7; Govt. ■ Motion July 29, 2004 at 5.)
. The Court agreed to review cértain notes in camera to determine if they bore on the issue.
. This is also suggested by the notion that in assessing reasonableness of reliance on counsel’s determination that a patent is invalid, ”[r]easonableness is not analyzed without taking into account the circumstances of the client — the more sophisticated the client, the more stringent the duty of inquiry on the party of the client.” Chañes’ experience in having dealt with the FTC standards for years and with different attorneys would appear to ‘ be relevant to determining his good faith reliance on advice he received regarding adequate'disclosure. .
. In support of its claim that these advertise-merits were obviously deceptive, the govern
. The Court also envisions another way in which Ms. Jaffe's testimony might be necessary and which would create a different but equally problematic concern. Were Chañes to testify and were the government to cross-examine him on its theory that he abandoned Jaffe to go with Dichter, the possibility exists that Jaffe would have favorable testimony which might dispel that theory. John Wing, her partner, could be said to have an interest in her not being called either to avoid disqualification of the firm and consequent lack of fees or to avoid having one of the members of the firm cross-examined by the government in a way that might harm the firm's reputation.
