Rodney Bourgeois, a black man arrested as part of “Operation Streetsweep,” claims that the decision to prosecute him was unconstitutionally based on race. In furtherance of this claim, Bourgeois sought discovery of government documents about Operation Streetsweep. The district court denied the discovery request, denied a motion to dismiss for selective prosecution and accepted Bourgeois’ conditional guilty plea. Bourgeois’ timely appeal challenges only the denial of discovery. We have jurisdiction and we affirm.
I
On June 14 and 15, 1990, federal agents and local law enforcement officers arrested more than 100 alleged gang members in South Central Los Angeles. These arrests were part of a publicized, nationwide effort, dubbed “Operation Streetsweep,” that resulted in at least 160 arrests in 11 states. The government prosecuted ten Los Angeles arrestees for federal firearms violations. All ten, including Bourgeois, are black men suspected of being affiliated with either the Crips or the Bloods, two Los Angeles-based gangs.
As Bourgeois’ brief states, “[ajlthough many other notorious gangs also use guns and violence — ranging from Latino (Nuestra Familia, Maravilla, 18th Street, Lomas), [to] Asian (Yu Li, Joe Boys, Wah Ching, Frogmen) [and] White (Hells Angels, Hole Stoners, Aryan Brotherhood) — only Black men were arrested and charged with federal violations as a result of ‘Operation Streetsweep.’ No other gangs were identified. No other race was represented____”
This exclusive representation was, Bourgeois claims, deliberate. His review of information provided by the government suggests that the ten men had been ostensibly identified through two methods of investigation. The first method focused on felons who purchased weapons from gun stores or who redeemed weapons from pawn shops. The second method focused on felons with a 1988 or 1989 state arrest indicating that they possessed a firearm. “Out of these two potentially enormous multi-racial pools of similarly situated persons, ‘Operation Streetsweep’ prosecuted only Black persons. The fact that only Blacks were prosecuted from such a tremendous class of similarly situated persons demonstrates the intentional selection of Blacks for prosecution,” according to Bourgeois.
The government asserts that it targeted the Crips and Bloods because the gangs’ members engage in violence and drug trafficking throughout the country. It did not target the Crips and Bloods because of the racial composition of their membership. Furthermore, the government stresses that it does prosecute people of all races for violating federal firearms laws. It characterizes Operation Streetsweep as an isolated program of gang-member arrests: “These arrests were coordinated to generate publicity and thus achieve maximum deterrence value in law enforcement’s effort to combat street crime and the proliferation of dangerous weapons among inner-city street gangs.” According to a government affidavit, the cases against five of the ten men were referred for prosecution to the United States Attorney’s Office months before prosecutors became aware of Operation Streetsweep.
Bourgeois’ prosecution stemmed from his 1989 purchase of a 12-gauge Mossberg shotgun. Federal agents conducting a records inspection at a Los Angeles gun *937 store had noted that Bourgeois purchased a firearm that the government considers a “weapon of choice” for crime. Accordingly, they checked his criminal history. Despite his prior felony conviction and two pending felony charges (all for drug activities), Bourgeois had signed a form indicating that he was not a felon and not facing felony charges. Bourgeois was arrested on June 14,1990, the first day of Operation Streetsweep. He was indicted for violation of 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1) (1988), which prohibits felons from possessing firearms.
Bourgeois moved to dismiss the indictment based on selective prosecution. He filed a discovery request seeking documents broadly related to Operation Street-sweep and the government’s efforts to combat violence by gang members. The district court denied both the motion to dismiss and the request for discovery. Bourgeois subsequently entered a conditional plea of guilty for violating 18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). The court sentenced him to ten months’ imprisonment followed by three years’ supervised release.
II
We have not previously resolved the question whether abuse of discretion or clearly erroneous is the appropriate standard of review for denial of discovery relating to a selective prosecution claim.
See United States v. Aguilar,
We now decide that the appropriate standard of review is abuse of discretion. “Discovery questions are ordinarily reviewed for abuse of discretion.”
United States v. Michaels,
The
Moody
opinion, however, did not review a discovery determination. It reviewed a determination on the merits of a selective prosecution claim.
Moody,
When faced with this discovery question, other circuits review for abuse of discretion.
See, e.g., United States v. Heidecke,
Ill
Bourgeois claims that it was because of his race that the government selected him, and not other armed felons, to
*938
be prosecuted in federal court. Although the government “retains broad discretion as to whom to prosecute,” its discretion “is not unfettered.”
United States v. Wayte,
As the Second Circuit aptly commented, “[njothing can corrode respect for a rule of law more than the knowledge that the government looks beyond the law itself to arbitrary considerations, such as race, religion, or control over the defendant’s exercise of his constitutional rights, as the basis for determining its applicability.”
Berrios,
To succeed on a selective prosecution claim, the defendant bears the burden of showing both “that others similarly situated have not been prosecuted and [also] that the prosecution is based on an impermissible motive.”
United States v. Wayte,
To obtain discovery on a selective prosecution claim the defendant must first identify specific facts that establish a “color-able” basis for both elements of the claim.
United States v. Balk,
*939
Bourgeois contends that the proper standard is significantly lower than a prima facie ease. He urges us to allow discovery if the defendant presents “some evidence” of selective prosecution sufficient to show that the assertion is “not frivolous.” The standard for discovery is lower, he argues, in recognition of the fact that “most of the relevant proof in selective prosecution cases will normally be in the Government’s hands.”
Wayte,
The
Wayte
majority solidified the elements of a meritorious selective prosecution claim, but did not set out a discovery threshold. In dissent, however, Justice Marshall suggested that “Wayte need not have made out a full prima facie case in order to be entitled to discovery____ the standard for discovery is merely nonfrivolousness.”
Wayte,
The Eighth and Second Circuits, by contrast, have required defendants to establish a prima facie case.
St. German of Alaska Eastern Orthodox Catholic Church v. United States,
We agree that the discovery threshold should not be so high as to require establishment of a prima facie case. We disagree, however, with Bourgeois’ contention that a defendant need only present some evidence showing that his claim is not frivolous. We hold that to obtain discovery on a selective prosecution claim, a defendant must present specific facts, not mere allegations, which establish a colorable basis for the existence of both discriminatory application of a law and discriminatory intent on the part of government actors. This is a high threshold. As has been true historically, it will be the rare defendant who presents a sufficiently strong case of selective prosecution to merit discovery of government documents.
We adopt a high threshold in recognition of two distinct policy considerations. First, courts are ill equipped to assess a prosecutor’s charging decisions. As the Wayte Court explained:
The decision to prosecute is particularly ill-suited to judicial review. Such factors as the strength of the case, the prosecution’s general deterrence value, the Government’s enforcement priorities, and the case’s relationship to the Government’s overall enforcement plan are not readily susceptible to the kind of analysis the courts are competent to undertake.
Wayte,
Second, court oversight of prosecutorial decisions could undermine effective law enforcement. As the Wayte Court reasoned:
Judicial supervision in this area ... entails systemic costs of particular concern. Examining the basis of a prosecution delays the criminal proceeding, threatens to chill law enforcement by subjecting the prosecutor’s motives and decisionmaking to outside inquiry, and may undermine *940 prosecutorial effectiveness by revealing the Government’s enforcement policy.
We believe that this high threshold will discourage fishing expeditions, protect legitimate prosecutorial discretion, safeguard government investigative records, and yet still allow meritorious claims to proceed. This threshold also draws on the effectively high hurdle all the circuits have adopted, regardless of the phraseology of their standards. Our research of circuit court opinions uncovered only a handful of instances in the past few decades in which a defendant obtained discovery or dismissal of charges based on a selective prosecution claim.
See, e.g., United States v. Adams,
IV
In making his initial showing of selective prosecution, Bourgeois focuses on the firearms prosecutions which stemmed from the arrests during the July 14 and 15 phase of Operation Streetsweep. Common sense, demographic evidence and statistical probability strongly suggest, he argues, that the government could as readily have identified and prosecuted non-blacks for firearms violations. Yet, for this operation, the government appears to have investigated gun stores in predominantly black neighborhoods and otherwise identified black, but not non-black felons who purchased guns.
The district court found the two-day focus too narrow. Instead, it considered a two-year time span, August 1, 1988 to July 31, 1990, and found that the government had charged more than 140 people in the Central District of California with being a felon in possession of a firearm or with making a false statement in connection with the purchase of a firearm. Bourgeois did not allege that all or most of these cases involved blacks.
The district court properly focused its inquiry on prosecutions over a reasonable period of time.
United States v. Aguilar
examines all federal prosecutions in Arizona for alien smuggling over a three-year period.
Aguilar
rejected this focus as too narrow. “Their suggested focus exclusively upon agricultural employers seeks to distract attention away from the fact that the government generally
does
prosecute organized smugglers, albeit organized alien smugglers following the dollar instead of the cross.”
As a policy matter, Bourgeois’ narrow time focus is untenable. If adopted, it would severely limit law enforcement efforts directed at specific groups of criminals. As both parties note, many gangs and criminal groups are racially homogeneous. Operations targeted at Wall Street bankers, alien smugglers, or any of the gangs listed by Bourgeois in his brief are likely to result in the prosecution of several people of the same race. This, in itself, does not suggest the prosecution decisions were based on race. This, in itself, does not supply a reason to compel discovery. The government need not provide discovery *941 on a selective prosecution claim simply because law enforcement officials focused for a short time on a racially homogeneous criminal group. Selective prosecution concerns could be raised, by long-term targeting of one gang to the exclusion of others whose members are equally culpable and apprehensible. But that is not this case.
V
Bourgeois fails to establish a color-able basis for the first element of his claim, that “others similarly situated have not been prosecuted.”
Wayte,
Bourgeois also fails to establish a color-able basis for the second element of his claim, that “[his] prosecution is based on an impermissible motive.”
Wayte,
Bourgeois analogizes his case to
United States v. Gordon,
Additionally, the government here supplies ample evidence of a permissible motivation to prosecute Bourgeois. He committed a felony and then illegally obtained a shotgun. Additionally, he does not deny the government’s allegation that he is a member of the Rolling 20’s sect of the Bloods gang. As a felon illegally in possession of a firearm, his situation differs from that of most defendants who raise meritorious selective prosecution claims. Typically the crime charged is one rarely prosecuted.
See, e.g., United States v. Adams,
Bourgeois does not present a colorable basis for his selective prosecution claim. Given the ephemeral evidence Bourgeois presented, we cannot say that the district court abused its discretion in denying the discovery motion.
VI
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
Erne
requires the defendant to allege sufficient facts to "take the question past the frivolous stage” in order to obtain an
evidentiary hearing.
Ness
initially discusses both the defendant's request for an evidentiary hearing and for discovery.
. In
Steele,
the most recent Ninth Circuit decision finding merit in a selective prosecution claim, the defendant challenged his conviction for failure to answer census questions. He demonstrated that the government had compiled background reports on people active in the census resistance movement and then prosecuted only those people.
Steele,
