We are asked by the government to mandate vacation of respondent’s order quashing a grand jury subpoena duces tec-um. The subpoena was issued in connection with presentation of a murder case to the grand jury. It sought employment time and attendance records respecting the suspect and other employees for a certain six-day period bridging the day of the killing. The susрect, one John E. Clark, has caused the records for the day of the murder to be in the possession of his attorney who successfully moved to quash the subpoena.
We view the issue presented for our consideration to be the following. Did the trial court have power to limit the investigation of a grand jury by quashing a subpoena duces tecum where the materials sought were not privileged and whеre the production of materials was not “unreasonable or oppressive” as contemplated by Super.Ct.Cr.R. 17 (c) ? Viewing the issue thus, it is unnecessary to treat at length, if at all, respondent’s effоrt to fit his action within the general holding of
Will v. United States,
In its opinion, the trial court correctly rejected arguments by the suspect that the employment time logs were protected work-product under the rule in
Hickman v. Taylor,
The court’s reasoning took the following path. Although a presumption of regularity attaches to a grand jury subpoena, once a рarty merely alleges irregularity, the onus shifts to the government to make a “minimum showing of the existence of a proper purpose.” The government failed to respond specifically 1 to the allegation of the suspect that the subpoena was an attempt by the government to “circumvent the rules of discovery” and thereby abuse the grand jury subpoena process. Such lack of response, inferred the court, served to render the government’s action suspect. Since the evidence sought was not “itself . . evidence of a crime” (the court cited as an examрle a blood-stained glove), and since the government “openly admitted” that the grand jury already had “oral evidence as to what the entry reflects”, the evidence was not of a sort “neеded” by the grand jury in deciding whether to indict, there being other adequate showing of probable cause. Consequently, the court *831 reasoned that the government was really using the grand jury subpoena as а device to obtain evidence which it could otherwise obtain only under the reciprocal provisions of the post-indictment discovery rules. This attempt, concluded the court, constituted an abuse of the grand jury subpoena power and under the circumstances rendered the subpoena “unreasonable and oppressive.”
We find these aspects of the court’s analysis to be flawed. First of all, although correctly acknowledging that a presumption of regularity attaches to a grand jury subpoena, the court appears to have impugned an unlawful motivе to the government largely from its asserted failure to respond to a mere allegation of impropriety. The presumption of regularity is not so easily erased. In
In re Grand Jury Proceedings (Schofield),
[W]e recognize that ... a presumption of regularity attaches to the grand jury’s proceedings, and hence to a grand jury subpoena. . . . Given that presumption, the party objecting to enfоrcement has the burden of making some showing of irregularity.
[Citations omitted.]
A mere allegation is not a sufficient “showing” to cancel the presumption of regularity. Consequently, the characterization of the govеrnment’s response (see note 1, supra) or lack thereof as revealing an improper purpose was unfounded.
Secondly, the court cited no authority, and we know of none, which holds that the “need” of the grand jury to consider evidence which directly relates to the whereabouts of a suspect at the time of a crime is somehow less compelling than the “need” to examine evidence which is “itself . . . evidence of a crime.” Where lies the distinction? The burden here remained on the suspect to establish that the documents had “no conceivable relevance to any legitimate object of investigation by the . . . grand jury.”
In re Horowitz,
Thirdly, the fact that oral evidence of the contents of the records was available to the grand jury is irrelevant. Even if by the court’s measure the grand jury had “enough” evidence, without considering the logs, to return an indictment, it was entitled to subpoena the logs. A grand jury does not have to “cease its investigation [once] it has adduced enough evidence to secure an indictment . It may well develop upon further investigation that others are involved or that those first suspected have . . . proof which absolve [s] them.”
United States v. Sweig,
*832
More important, however, is the court’s fundamental misconception of its power to control
2
the grand jury, and it is the resulting usurpation of power which concerns this court. The court in
United States v. United States District Court,
While the grand jury is summoned, empaneled and sworn by the court, it is essentially independent of court control. . The grand jury acts as an independent body. While the judge has the supervisory duty to see that its process is not abused or used for purposes of oppression or injustice (In re National Window Glass Workers, D.C.,287 F. 219 , 225), there shоuld be no curtailment of its inquisitorial power except in the clearest cases of abuse. . . . [Emphasis supplied.]
See also Branzburg v. Hayes,
The court did include a finding in its opinion to the effect that compliance with the subpoena would be “unreasonable and oppressive.” While Super.Ct.Cr.R. 17(c) empowers the court to quash a subpoena on this ground, that rule (the counterpart of Fed.R.Crim.P. 17(c) normally contemplates the quashing of a subpoena on Fourth Amendment grounds because it seeks materials excessive in number, covering an unreasonably long time interval, or unreasonably difficult to obtain.
See United States v. Gurule,
In light of what we have said, and there being no reason to believe that respondent will not vacate the order quashing the subpoena without the pressure of a writ of mandamus, we refrain from issuing such process. The clerk will, in lieu thereof, transmit a certified copy of this opinion to respondent.
So ordered.
Notes
. The. government, reported the court in its opinion, merely stated that the grand jury was empowered to subpoena all documents needed for a “full investigation of the ease.”
. The court exercises no prior control upon the use of the grand Jury subpoena. The court is, however, empowered to determine whether it will compel compliance once the subpoena is issued. Thus the enforcement power lies with the court, and the court may excuse compliancе by granting a motion to quash on the basis of various defenses, both constitutional and non-constitutional. In re Grand Jury Proceedings (Schofield), supra at 91-92. None of the defenses discussed in the above case authorizes the sort of judicial intrusion with the legitimate investigation of the grand jury which the trial court here exercised.
