Case Information
*2 Before MARTIN, ROSENBAUM and LUCK, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
This case requires us to consider whether the use of a government filter team to review seized materials that are claimed to be privileged necessarily violates the privilege holder’s rights. Here, the government obtained and executed a search warrant at a suite of offices where the Optima Family Businesses were located. Among the materials seized were items from the office of an in-house attorney. The Optima Family Businesses and their owners, managers and controllers (collectively, the “Intervenors”) assert attorney-client and work-product privilege over at least some of these documents.
They filed a motion under Rule 41(g), Fed. R. Crim. P., to obtain injunctive relief prohibiting the United States’s filter team—which included attorneys and staff who were not involved in the criminal investigation of the Optima Family Companies and the individual owners, managers, and controllers—from reviewing any potentially privileged documents unless either the Intervenors agree or the court, after conducting its own privilege review, orders disclosure.
The district court held a hearing on the Intervenors’ motion and imposed a modified filter protocol but denied the Intervenors’ request to prohibit anyone from the government from reviewing potentially privileged documents unless the Intervenors agree or the court orders disclosure. The Intervenors now appeal that denial. After careful consideration and with the benefit of oral argument, we now affirm the district court’s order denying the Intervenors’ motion to enjoin the use of a filter team. We agree with the district court that the Intervenors have not showed a substantial likelihood of success on their argument that government filter teams per se violate privilege holders’ rights.
I. The Northern District of Ohio was conducting a criminal investigation into money laundering, conspiracy to money launder, and wire fraud. As it followed its leads, it decided it needed to search a suite of offices in Miami, Florida. So the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) applied for a search warrant in the Southern District of Florida.
A. The Search Warrant and Filter Team Protocol
On July 31, 2020, a magistrate judge in the Southern District of Florida issued that search warrant to be executed at the Miami offices of some of the entities that comprise the Optima Family Companies. The offices that were the subject of the warrant were located in a business suite.
The warrant identified the items to be seized, including records of and concerning Ukrainian nationals Ihor Kolomoisky and Gennadiy Bogolyubov and American citizens Mordechai Korf, Uriel Laber, and Chaim Schochet. Korf, Laber, and Schochet allegedly own, control, or manage the more than thirty entities that fall under the name “Optima” and have offices in the Miami suite that was the subject of the warrant.
Among the documents sought concerning the five individuals were “all documents for Ihor Kolomoisky, Gennadiy Bogolyubov, Mordechai Korf, Uriel Laber, and Chaim Schochet,” from “2008 to the present,” including “[r]ecords of receipt of income,” “[r]ecords of all accounts and transactions at financial institutions,” “[r]ecords of loans and financing transactions,” and “all communications between [these persons] and any employee or agent of [any of the entities, persons, or properties of the Optima Family Companies and Subsidiaries and other entities and properties identified in Attachment B.3 to the warrant [1] ]. ” The warrant also authorized seizure of “all emails sent to or from any of the above- referenced Optima-family companies, [and entities, persons, or properties] outlined in Attachment B.3.” Besides the seizure of paper records, the warrant authorized seizure, imaging, or copying of all computers or other electronic storage media that might contain the evidence described in the warrant.
If the government identified seized communications that were to or from an attorney during the seizure, the warrant outlined a protocol that would be followed concerning the handling of those materials. That protocol required the following:
Filter for Privileged Materials: If the government identifies seized communications to/from an attorney, the investigative team will discontinue review until a filter team of government attorneys and agents is established.
The filter team will have no previous or future involvement in the investigation of this matter. The filter team will review all seized communications and segregate communications to/from attorneys, which may or may not be subject to attorney-client privilege. At no time will the filter team advise the investigative team of the substance of any of the communications to/from attorneys. The filter team then will provide all communications that do not involve an attorney to the investigative team and the investigative team may resume its review. If the filter team decides that any of the communications to/from attorneys are not actually privileged (e.g., the communication includes a third party or the crime-fraud exception applies), the filter team must obtain a court order before providing these attorney communications to the investigative team.
(the “Original Filter-Team Protocol”).
Federal law enforcement agents executed the search warrant on August 4, 2020. As part of that process, agents seized various documents and equipment, including internal servers containing electronic documents and correspondence. In- house lawyers and paralegals worked (or had worked) in the business suite for the Optima Family Companies and other affiliated individuals, and for Korf, Laber, and Schochet. And the seized documents contained some items that were allegedly privileged.
B. Motion to Intervene and Motion for Injunctive Relief Following the seizure, Korf, Laber, Schochet and various Optima Family Companies and Subsidiaries (whom we have previously described as the Intervenors) filed a motion to intervene in the search-warrant proceedings in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida. The motion advised that the electronic data the government had seized when it executed the warrant contained privileged documents. Contemporaneously with the motion to intervene, the parties filed a document entitled Motion for Preliminary Injunction to Prohibit Law Enforcement Review of Seized Materials Until an Appropriate Procedure for Review of Privileged Items is Established (“Motion for Injunctive Relief”).
Asserting that the execution of the search warrant was the functional equivalent of a law-office search, the Motion for Injunctive Relief primarily challenged the use of the filter team to review privileged documents. The Intervenors objected to the protocol’s limited provision of judicial review for potentially privileged documents since review was available only if a communication was clearly sent “to/from attorneys.” In the Intervenors’ view, this exception for judicial review was inadequate because (1) the substance of the privileged information would initially be exposed to filter attorneys before judicial review, and (2) the scope of the documents subject to judicial review was underinclusive. The Intervenors contended that the protocol did not account for the existence of documents subject to the work-product doctrine, nor did it account for the existence of communications between non-lawyers reasonably necessary for the transmission of attorney-client communication.
The Intervenors also expressed particular concern over the government’s review of the privileged documents because in May of 2019, a bank filed suit in Delaware against Korf, Laber, Schochet, and various Optima Family Companies, alleging fraudulent activity. [2] See Joint Stock Co Comm. Bank PrivatBank v. Igor Valeryevich Kolomoisky , et al. , Del. Ch. C.A. No. 2019-0377-JRS (May 21, 2019). According to the Intervenors, the transactions and occurrences in the Delaware case overlapped with and were “substantively identical to the factual predicate for the grand jury investigation [in the Northern District of Ohio]” associated with the search warrant here. [3] Based on this overlap, the Intervenors claimed a “clear risk” existed that “the government will be able to view a roadmap to the privilege- holders[’] defenses.” To prevent these alleged harms, the Intervenors sought to perform their own privilege review of the documents and, more generally, they sought an injunction to prohibit law enforcement from reviewing the seized materials until a more protective protocol was put into place.
In mid-August 2020, the magistrate judge granted the motion to intervene and ordered the parties to meet and confer to see if they could narrow the issues addressed in the Motion for Injunctive Relief. In the meantime, with the agreement of the Intervenors, the government continued processing the seized materials, which meant it could arrange to have the materials copied and scanned, but it could not review their contents. Within forty-eight hours of processing any particular record, the court required, the government was to provide a copy of that record to counsel for the Intervenors.
In the government’s response to the Motion for Injunctive Relief, the government expressed deep concern over the Intervenors’ proposal that they be trusted with the task of reviewing for privilege on their own. According to the government, that type of approach would cause its investigation to cease in its tracks.
The government also pushed back on the Intervenors’ assertion that the search was the equivalent of a law-office search. It emphasized that within the multi-office complex, only a single office was used by a single in-house lawyer, and although three other lawyers had previously served as in-house counsel over the past decade, they no longer had offices there. Besides that, the government noted, it had seized only three boxes of materials from the in-house lawyer’s office, and those boxes had been segregated and marked. [4] Ultimately, the government asked that the district court deny the Motion for Injunctive Relief or, in the alternative, limit the scope of the Intervenors’ proposed review of the documents seized. It further requested that its own filter team be afforded an opportunity to review all the documents seized.
In late August 2020, the parties attempted to resolve the issues relating to the document review. During the course of these efforts, the government provided an inventory of the items seized. Ultimately, though, the parties were not able to agree on a modified approach.
C. Resolution of Motion for Injunctive Relief
Because the parties were unable to resolve the dispute, the magistrate judge heard arguments by the parties in mid-September. A few days later, the magistrate judge entered an order granting in part and denying in part the Motion for Injunctive Relief.
First, the magistrate judge rejected the Intervenors’ argument that the use of government filter teams to conduct privilege reviews is per se legally flawed. Nevertheless, the magistrate judge voiced reservations about the Original Filter- Team Protocol and concluded it did not provide sufficient protection. He found the case differed from the ordinary search of a business since the Intervenors anticipated asserting the attorney-client or work-product privileges over numerous communications relating to matters at issue in the Delaware RICO litigation and the two civil forfeiture actions brought in the Southern District of Florida. And he expressed concern that if the documents were inadvertently disclosed to the investigation and prosecution team, the government could become privy to privileged materials concerning the Delaware litigation. For these reasons, the magistrate judge concluded that the Intervenors had showed a likelihood of success on the merits with respect to the Original Filter-Team Protocol as applied to the seized items. To address the perceived problem, the magistrate judge decided that allowing the Intervenors to conduct the initial privilege review would protect both the Intervenors and the government from the inadvertent disclosure of privileged materials to the investigation and prosecution team.
Second, the magistrate judge determined that the Intervenors showed a danger of irreparable harm with respect to the Original Filter-Team Protocol, since it required the filter team to segregate only communications that were “to/from attorneys.” Because of the potentially underinclusive way of identifying privileged communications, the magistrate judge reasoned, the Original Filter-Team Protocol presented a danger that some items protected by the attorney-client or work-product privileges might be inadvertently disclosed to the investigative team.
Third, when the magistrate judge analyzed the balance of the harms, he found them to favor enjoining the Original Filter-Team Protocol.
Finally, although the magistrate judge concluded that the parties had identified important competing public interests, he ruled that the public interest would be best served by applying a modified filter-team protocol, which he then described. Under the new protocol, the Intervenors were to conduct an “initial privilege review of all seized items [and] provide a privilege log to the government’s filter team.” Then the government’s filter team, which the magistrate judge required to be composed of attorneys and staff from outside the investigating office (the United States Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Ohio’s Cleveland branch office), would have the opportunity to challenge any privilege designation on that log. Although the filter team would be “permitted to review any item on the privilege log in order to formulate a challenge[,]” the investigation and prosecution team would be prohibited from receiving any items on the privilege log “unless agreed to by the parties or the Court/special master ha[d] overruled the privilege.”
The more specific details of the modified filter-team protocol the magistrate judge imposed are set forth below:
a. The government shall process the items and provide them to the movants, on a rolling basis, so that the movants may perform the initial privilege review. Within forty-five (45) days of receipt of these items, the movants shall release all non-privileged items to the government’s investigative/prosecution team and provide a privilege log to the government’s filter team for all items for which they assert a privilege.
b. The government’s filter team shall be comprised of attorneys and staff from outside the United States Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Ohio’s Cleveland branch office. The filter team shall not share a first level supervisor with anyone on the investigative/prosecution team. Any supervisor involved in the filter team review shall be walled off from the underlying investigation.
c. The government’s filter team is permitted to review any items listed on the movants’ privilege log and may challenge any of the movants’ privilege designations.
d. The government’s filter team and the movants’ counsel shall confer and attempt to reach a resolution as to those items challenged by the government’s filter team.
e. If the parties are unable to reach a resolution, the parties shall file a joint notice with the Court. Either the Court or a special master shall rule on the parties’ privilege disputes.
f. The filter team will provide to the investigative team only those items for which the parties agree or for which the privilege has been overruled.
(the “Modified Filter-Team Protocol”).
D. Objection to the Order and Appeal to the District Court Judge With the district court, the Intervenors filed an appeal from and objections to the magistrate judge’s order and revised protocol. The Intervenors suggested the court should review materials first or use a special master to evaluate claims of privilege. They sought for the district court to vacate the portion of the Modified Filter-Team Protocol that authorized a filter team composed of government employees to review documents identified as privileged.
The district court set a hearing on the matter and after hearing from the parties, entered an order overruling the Intervenors’ objections and affirming the magistrate judge’s revised protocol. Among other conclusions, the district court reasoned that improper disclosure of privileged documents to the prosecution team was not a concern since “[n]ot only do [the Intervenors] have the opportunity to review the documents before the filter team, but any documents identified by the [Intervenors] in their privilege log may not be released to the prosecution team until the parties agree to do so, or the Court or special master has ruled on the privilege objections.” In this way, the district court found the Modified Filter-Team Protocol incorporated “several layers of safeguards that prevent[ed] anyone other than the filter team and [the Intervenors] from reviewing the potentially privileged documents.” The district court also expressed concern that requiring the district-court judge, magistrate judge, or special master to routinely review lawfully seized documents would be too burdensome. Overall, the district court determined that the Modified Filter-Team Protocol had been carefully crafted to afford protection of the attorney-client and work-product privileges.
This appeal ensued.
II.
A. We have jurisdiction over this appeal
We begin by considering our jurisdiction. We review
de novo
whether we
have jurisdiction to decide this interlocutory appeal, before we can address the merits
of the case.
Doe No. 1 v. United States
,
To determine whether the district court’s orders were immediately appealable
as a final judgment, the
DiBella
court said the orders must be “independent” from
the judgment.
Because the Intervenors moved the district court for the return of their
property under Rule 41(g), we must apply the
DiBella
test to determine whether we
have jurisdiction over their appeal.
[6]
See, e.g.
,
Harbor Healthcare Sys., L.P. v.
United States
, 5 F.4th 593, slip op. at 6–7 (5th Cir. 2021);
In re Search of Elec.
Commc’ns in the Acct. of chakafattah gmail.com at Internet Serv. Provider Google,
Inc.
,
The Intervenors clearly seek only the return of their property. They sought to
prohibit the government from reviewing seized materials until a protocol protective
of the attorney-client privilege was ordered. To protect the privileged materials, they
primarily asked for the court to order the return of the seized documents to prevent
law enforcement from reviewing the materials and suggested, in the alternative, that
an independent party could act as the filter. They do not seek to invalidate the
seizure—indeed, the government currently remains in possession of the materials
seized.
See
Oral Argument Recording at 2:36–44 (July 1, 2021) (“To be clear as we
sit here today hearing the case, the materials are safe. They are in the possession of
the government.”). Nor do they seek to suppress the seized materials or ask for any
other relief. This is sufficient to conclude the motion was solely for the return of
property.
See Richey
,
Neither was the Intervenors’ motion in any way tied to an ongoing criminal
prosecution.
See DiBella
, 369 U.S. at 131–32.
DiBella
suggested there was a
criminal prosecution “in esse,” or in existence, “[w]hen
at the time of the ruling
there
is outstanding a complaint, or a detention or release on bail following arrest, or an
arraignment, information, or indictment.”
Id.
(emphasis added). There is currently
no complaint, arrest, detention, or indictment in this case. Therefore, “according to
the literal language of
DiBella
,” there is no criminal prosecution in esse.
United
States v. Glassman
,
But the inquiry doesn’t stop there. In
In re Grand Jury Proceedings
(“
Berry
”),
730 F.2d 716 (11th Cir. 1984) (per curiam), where this Court previously applied
DiBella
to a motion characterized as seeking the return of property, we said that a
“pending criminal investigation, even in the absence of a formal charge,” may be
enough to show that the motion is tied to a criminal prosecution.
Id.
at 717.
Berry
explained that determining whether a motion meets the “no way tied to an ongoing
criminal prosecution” rule from
DiBella
may be relatively straightforward from the
procedural standpoint of the case. But
Berry
directed us to consider not only the
existence of a pending criminal investigation, but also to look to the purpose of the
motion for the return of property.
See id.
at 717–18. If it “is obvious from a reading
of the motion that appellants are attacking the validity of the search and seizure under
the fourth amendment,” then it is “clear that the motion is tied to the ongoing
criminal investigation and to issues that may be litigated in any subsequent criminal
proceedings arising out of the seizure.”
Id.
at 718;
see also Glassman
, 533 F.2d at
262–63 (“Only if this motion was a collateral attempt to retrieve property and not an
effort to suppress evidence in related criminal proceedings is it appealable.”).
The Intervenors are subjects of an ongoing criminal investigation. But under
Berry
, an ongoing criminal investigation isn’t—by itself—dispositive.
See Berry
,
The Intervenors sought equitable relief in the form of an injunction in a civil
case to prohibit the government from reviewing seized materials until a protocol
protective of the attorney-client privilege was ordered. They argued they could
prove the four elements required to obtain an injunction in a civil case. And they
sought return of the seized documents to protect privileged materials by preventing
law enforcement from reviewing the materials, asking in the alternative for an
independent party to act as the filter. Both the magistrate judge and the district court
treated the motion as a civil preliminary injunction to protect privileged documents.
So it is clear that the purpose of the Intervenors’ motion is not to attack the validity
of the search and seizure under the Fourth Amendment and is therefore not tied to
any criminal prosecution.
Cf. Berry
,
Appellate jurisdiction here also satisfies the concerns underlying the need for
appellate review of interlocutory orders as explained in
DiBella
.
See
369 U.S. at
124–29. The damage from any error in the district court would be “definitive and
complete,” if interlocutory review is not available, and would outweigh any
“disruption caused by the immediate appeal.”
Id.
“The whole point of privilege is
privacy.”
Harbor Healthcare
, 5 F.4th 593, slip op. at 10. So the Intervenors’
interests in preventing the government’s wrongful review of their privileged
materials lie in safeguarding their privacy.
See id.
Once the government improperly
reviews privileged materials, the damage to the Intervenors’ interests is “definitive
and complete.”
DiBella
,
Contrary to the government’s suggestion, suppression is not an adequate
remedy for any violations. We cannot know whether criminal charges will be
brought against the Intervenors. Yet suppression protects against only “the
procedural harm arising from the introduction [at a criminal trial] of unlawfully
seized evidence.”
Harbor Healthcare
,
In contrast, Rule 41(g) can. It offers the remedy of returning to the Intervenors
any improperly seized documents protected by privilege
before
the government has
reviewed them.
See
Fed. R. Crim. P. 41(g);
see also Harbor Healthcare
, 5 F.4th
593, slip op. at 12. Unlike suppression, that is a remedy that can redress any potential
injury by ensuring it does not occur in the first place. And if a district court
incorrectly denies Rule 41(g) relief when it is required, immediate review is
necessary to preserve that same remedy of return of the documents before the
government reviews them. Review later would be incapable of vindicating the
Intervenors’ privacy interests.
See Richey
,
Interlocutory review also comports with
DiBella
’s concern that the motion for
injunctive relief at issue here is severable and distinct from any other proceedings.
See DiBella
,
As for DiBella ’s concern for delaying criminal proceedings, that can be minimized by expediting review of motions of this type. The merits of a motion seeking only injunctive relief in the form of a preferred protocol for the government’s review of allegedly privileged materials and the return of those items that the protocol determines are protected are not complex. A review protocol for privileged documents either does or does not sufficiently protect the interests of the person or entity that owns the allegedly privileged documents. And we are hopeful that our analysis below on the merits, see infra at Section II.B., will make that straightforward issue even simpler. In short, the specific motion before us here meets the DiBella test. [7]
B. The district court did not abuse its discretion in issuing the Modified
Filter-Team Protocol and denying the Intervenors’ motion to the extent it sought to preclude any government review of documents before the Intervenors agreed or the court ordered disclosure The Intervenors assert that the district court abused its discretion in denying their motion for a preliminary injunction to prohibit any federal prosecutors or their agents—including the filter team—from reviewing documents the Intervenors identify as privileged unless the Intervenors agree or the court permits government review after first conducting its own privilege review. We disagree.
To obtain a preliminary injunction, the movant must clearly establish four
showings: (1) it has “a substantial likelihood of success on the merits;” (2) it will
suffer “irreparable injury” in the absence of the injunction sought; (3) any threatened
harm to the movant that might be inflicted because of the proposed injunction will
outweigh any damage to the opposing party; and (4) the injunction sought “would
not be adverse to the public interest.”
Siegel v. LePore
,
On appeal, we review the denial of a preliminary injunction for abuse of
discretion.
Wreal, LLC v. Amazon.com, Inc.
,
While we have described a showing of irreparable injury as “the sine qua non
of injunctive relief,”
Siegel
,
We begin by recognizing that the attorney-client and work-product privileges
play a vital “role in assuring the proper functioning of the criminal justice system”
and provide a means for a lawyer to prepare her client’s case.
See United States v.
Nobles
,
With that in mind, we turn to the Modified Filter-Team Protocol. Significantly, the Modified Filter-Team Protocol allows the Intervenors to conduct the initial privilege review. It also requires the Intervenors’ permission or court order for any purportedly privileged documents to be released to the investigation team. This means that the filter team cannot inadvertently provide the investigation team with any privileged materials. For three reasons, we conclude that this Protocol suffices under the law.
First
, though we have not previously issued any published opinions on point,
some of our sister circuits have approved of the use of a walled-off government filter
team to review documents for privilege. In
United States v. Jarman
,
Second , the Intervenors cite no cases for the broad remedy they seek: a holding that government agents “should never . . . review documents that are designated by their possessors as attorney-client or work product privileged” until after a court has ruled on the privilege assertion.” Nor has our research unearthed any.
Third
, to the extent that courts have disapproved of particular filter-team
protocols, the Modified Filter-Team Protocol suffers from none of the defects those
courts found disqualifying. The Intervenors rely primarily on
In re Grand Jury
Subpoenas 04-124-03 and 04-124-05
(“
Winget
”),
Winget
arose when the plaintiffs there learned that a third party had received
a grand-jury subpoena for documents, some of which allegedly were subject to the
plaintiffs’ claims of privilege.
But neither of these problems exists here. In fact, the records here are already in the government’s possession as the result of the execution of a search warrant, so under Winget , the use of a filter team to review them is “respectful of, rather than injurious to, the protection of privilege.” Id. at 522–23. And unlike in Winget , under the Modified Filter-Team Protocol, the Intervenors identify all allegedly privileged materials in the first instance. So there is no possibility here that privileged documents will mistakenly be provided to the investigative team.
Baltimore Law Firm
is also different from the Intervenors’ case in important
ways. There, the government seized documents in accordance with a search warrant.
Baltimore Law Firm
,
At the time the magistrate judge issued the search warrant, the magistrate judge also authorized a government filter-team protocol. Id. at 165. Like under the Winget protocol, the Baltimore Law Firm protocol allowed the government filter team to determine initially whether items were potentially privileged or not. Id. at 166. And when the filter team found materials not to be privileged, it could forward them directly to the investigative team. Id. As for items the filter team deemed privileged or potentially privileged, the filter team could provide those materials to the investigative team only if the parties agreed or the court concluded after review that the items could be turned over. Id. at 166.
The Fourth Circuit held that the filter-team protocol that the magistrate judge
approved was legally flawed.
[9]
Id.
at 176. As relevant here, it objected first to the
[9]
The district court modified the protocol to require the filter team to forward any materials
it deemed nonprivileged to the plaintiff or the court for approval before providing them to the
investigative team.
Baltimore Law Firm
,
As with Winget , none of the concerns the Fourth Circuit identified in Baltimore Law Firm apply here. Though the magistrate judge originally approved the Original Filter-Team Protocol ex parte , before the investigative team could review any documents, the court held an adversarial hearing and, after considering the Intervenors’ concerns, put the Modified Filter-Team Protocol into place. Also unlike in Baltimore Law Firm , this case involves no claims that the majority of 183–84. And the concurring opinion noted that the majority opinion did not suggest the modified protocol “impermissibly usurp[ed] a judicial function.” Id. at 184 (Rushing, J., concurring). seized materials were both privileged and irrelevant to the subject of the investigation. And finally, the Modified Filter-Team Protocol did not assign judicial functions to the executive branch. Rather, and as we have noted, under the Modified Filter-Team Protocol, the Intervenors have the first opportunity to identify potentially privileged materials. And before any of those items may be provided to the investigative team, either the Intervenors or the court must approve. Put simply, the Modified Filter-Team Protocol complies with the recommendations both the Sixth and Fourth Circuits have made concerning the use of filter teams. [10] So once again, we return to the observation that the Modified Filter-Team Protocol appears to us to comply with even the most exacting requirements other courts that have considered such protocols have deemed appropriate. In short, the Intervenors have not clearly established a substantial likelihood of success on the merits.
III.
For the reasons we have explained, we affirm the district court’s order. AFFIRMED.
[1] The Optima Family Companies and Subsidiaries identified in Attachment B.3 to the warrant included Optima International, LLC, also known and operated as Optima International of Miami; Optima Ventures, LLC; Optima Management Group LLC; Optima Acquisitions, LLC; Optima Specialty Steel; Kentucky Electric Steel; Corey Steel Company; Niagara LaSalle Corporation; Michigan Seamless Tube, LLC; Optima Group; Georgian American Alloys, Inc.; CC Metals and Alloys, LLC; Felman Production, LLC; Felman Trading, Inc.; Felman Trading Americas, Inc.; Georgian American Alloys Sarl; Georgian Manganese, LLC; Georgian American Alloys Management, LLC; Vartisikhe 2005, LLC; Optima Fixed Income, LLC; Optima Hospitality, LLC; Optima 777 LLC; Optima 925 LLC; Optima 925 II LLC; Optima Harvard Facility LLC; Optima 1300 LLC; Optima 1375 LLC; Optima 1375 II LLC; Optima 55 Public Square LLC; Optima 7171 LLC; Optima 500 LLC; Optima Stemmons LLC; Optima CBD Investments LLC; CBD 500 LLC. Attachment B.3 also identified a number of United States properties, third-party companies, foreign companies, and additional ownership entities.
Notes
[2] The PrivatBank lawsuit alleges Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization (“RICO”) violations that arise out of “a series of brazen fraudulent schemes orchestrated by Ukranian oligarchs and . . . Kolomoisky and . . . Bogolyubov . . . and their agents . . . to acquire hundreds of millions of dollars-worth of U.S. assets through the laundering and misappropriation of corporate loan proceeds issued by PrivatBank.” The Intervenors note that Korf, Laber, Schochet, and the Optima Family Companies have been defending against the lawsuit since it was filed on May 21, 2019.
[3] The Intervenors also claimed that the Delaware case overlapped with civil forfeiture claims filed in the Southern District of Florida. Those claims sought forfeiture of the properties listed in Attachment B.3 of the search warrant, which were owned by many of the Intervenors.
[4] In its opposition to the Motion for Injunctive Relief, the government discussed how agents “carefully watched for potentially privileged materials” on the day the search warrant was executed. And when they came across information that might be privileged, they stopped searching and separately designated “filter agents” ( i.e. , non-investigative agents) to review and segregate the materials. Additionally, only filter agents searched the in-house lawyer’s office, from where the three boxes of materials were seized. As we have noted, those materials were segregated, and the filter team informed the FBI’s document processors that they were to be treated as potentially privileged. Of the three offices occupied by unrelated lawyers, only one had relevant material, which was collected in a single box.
[5] Both the cases before the Court in
DiBella
involved defendants who had been arrested
but not yet indicted when they filed their suppression motions.
[6] The parties dispute whether the Intervenors actually invoked Rule 41, but we believe this
is the proper way to come before the court to seek an injunction regarding the government’s use
of a filter team to review seized documents.
Cf. Richey v. Smith
,
[7] The government relies on other cases to further its jurisdiction argument, but each is
distinguishable. First, it points to
Sealed Case
,
[8] The crime-fraud exception applies if (1) the client was involved in or was planning
criminal conduct when he sought advice of counsel, or that he committed a crime after he received
the benefit of legal counsel; and (2) “the attorney’s assistance was obtained in furtherance of the
criminal . . . activity or was closely related to it.”
In re Grand Jury Investigation
,
[10] We do not prejudge other filter protocols that are not before us. Rather, we evaluate only the Modified Filter-Team Protocol and simply conclude that, under the circumstances here, that Protocol suffices, even under frameworks of analysis that other Circuits have used to invalidate other protocols.
