OPINION
In this сase, Wayne County appeals the district court’s denial of its petition for the release of materials used in a grand jury indictment. We conclude that Fed. R.Crim.P. 6(e)(3)(E)(i), pertaining to the disclosure of grand jury documents, cannot be used to mandate such release. As a result, we AFFIRM the district court’s decision, although on different grounds than those stated by the district court.
I.
Jon Rutherford was the president and CEO of Metro Emergency Services, Inc. and DPR Management, which provided mental health care to rеsidents of Wayne County, MI. Judith Bugaiski was the Controller of Metro Emergency Services. On April 21, 2006, a federal grand jury in Michigan indicted Rutherford and Bugai-ski on twenty-two counts of criminal conspiracy, income tax evasion, and fraud. In September of that same year, Wayne County filed a civil suit against Metro
Wayne County filed an Emergency Petition for Releаse of Documents pursuant to Fed.R.Crim.P. 6(e)(3)(E)(i) in district court on November 11, 2006. Wayne County requested each of the fifty-three documents the government had identified in a May 5, 2006 discovery notice, including income tax returns, federal tax returns, articles of incorporation, and bank account records. The government, Rutherford, and Bugaiski objеcted to the Petition.
The district court held a hearing on the matter on December 5, 2006, and issued an opinion and order on January 8, 2007 denying Wayne County’s petition. The district court concluded that because the documents were requested under Fed. R.Crim.P. 6(e)(3)(E)(i), they were presumed to be “matters occurring before the grand jury” under Fed.R.CrimP. 6(e)(2)(B) and therefore could not be disclosed. Because Wayne County failed to rebut that presumption or show a compelling necessity for the material, thе court did not compel release of the documents.
The district court also analyzed the facts based on
Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Ernst & Whinney,
concluding that disclosure was not required because Wayne County did not prove that it was unable to obtain the requested documents through civil discovery or other investigative means.
II.
A district court’s denial of a motion for disclosure of grand jury materials is reviewed for abuse of discretion.
See In re Grand Jury Subpoenas,
Upon review of the original documents in
Ernst & Whinney
and the case cited for the legal standard therein,
In re Grand Jury Proceedings,
III.
The government first argues that “it is not clear” that the district court’s
IV.
It has long been recognized that grand juries require a generous zone of secrecy in order to perform their investigative functions.
In re Grand Jury Subpoenas,
Wayne County concedes that it is not entitled to the documents obtained by grand jury via coercion. As for the rest of the documеnts, we assume that Wayne County is correct that they do not qualify as grand jury documents. We do not agree, however, that this conclusion compels their disclosure. Rulе 6(e)(2)(B) is a prohibitory rule that prevents the government from disclosing grand jury matters except in limited circumstances. It does not authorize third parties to obtain grand jury materials from the government against the government’s objections without a proper device for compelling the documents, such as a subpoena ducеs te-cum. In other words, the fact that the documents are not matters occurring before the grand jury means that they may be disclosed notwithstanding Rule 6(e)(2)(B), not that they must be disclosed.
Wayne County contends that
In re Grand Jury Proceedings
supports the proposition that non-grand jury mattеrs must be disclosed to a third party who requests them under Rule 6(e)(2)(B). This is not true. In
Grand Jury,
the Treasury Department asked for an order giving it permission to obtain grand jury documents, and a third party objected to that disclosure.
Our decision in
Ernst & Whinney
accords with this conclusion. In
Ernst & Whinney,
as in this case, a third party sought disclosure of documents pertaining to a grand jury investigation.
V.
Although the district court may have erred in deciding that the documents at issue were matters occurring before the grand jury, we find that the decision not to force disclosure of the documents was correct. We do not rely on the court’s mistaken statement of a standard that this Court unwittingly modified, but find thаt because Wayne County failed to make use of a proper method for compelling documents, they should not be disclosed. We thus AFFIRM the decision of the district court.
