Affirmed by published opinion. Judge MURNAGHAN wrote the opinion, in which Judge LUTTIG and Judge HALLANAN joined.
OPINION
In reviewing the propriety of loans made by the Appellant-Bank to a customer of the Bank, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”) concluded that a series of loans made to that customer, his wife, and an acquaintance of the customer were in fact nominee loans made for the benefit of the customer. As such, the FDIC contended that the loans made-to the customer’s wife and the acquaintance should be combined with the loans made to the customer so as to create a civil violation of the Virginia lending limit statute, Va.Code Ann. § 6.1-61 (Michie 1996). In response, the Bank sought to quash grand jury subpoenas served on its attorneys, who .represented the Bank with respect to the loans, and a non-attorney employee. After conducting an m‘ camera hearing on July 24, 1996, the district court concluded that the government had made a sufficient showing of a prima facie case of crime or fraud to vitiate both the attorney-client and work-product privileges. Additionally, the district court concluded that neither the attorney-client nor the work-product privileges applied to documents created by the non-attorney employee. The Bank now challenges both rulings on appeal.
I.
The evidence presented to the district court in the in camera hearing tends to prove that the Bank participated in loan procedures whereby a customer borrowed $350,-000 from the Bank on November 21, 1990, the result of which was to place the customer $91,950 over the Virginia lending limit permitted to one customer considering the existing loans made to that customer. In an apparent effort to conceal the lending limit violation, nearly a week after the $350,000 loan was made to the customer, the Bank lent the customer’s wife $350,000, and had her sign a note, back-dated to the day of the loan to her husband. The wife’s note effectively cancelled out her husband’s November 21, 1990 note. These series of machinations by the Bank served, to further the concealment of the Bank’s exceeding of the lending limit to the customer.
Ultimately, the Bank wrote off as losses about $1,867,000 in loans to both the customer and his wife. Thereafter, lawyers representing the Bank, with no criminal or fraudulent intentions, performed on behalf of the Bank certain acts which served to misrepresent or to conceal what the Bank had, in fact, done. One lawyer suing to collect the loans involved asserted that the wife’s loan was
In response to the grand jury’s subpoenas, the Bank asserted the attorney-client privilege and the work-product privilege, on the part of the lawyers involved in performing, unknowingly, acts in furtherance of the Bank’s alleged crime or fraud. Furthermore, the Bank also resorted to the work product privilege with respect to testimony from the non-attorney employee about his investigation on the Bank’s behalf. The investigation concerned FDIC inquiries of several Bank activities such as the back-dated note and the excess loan to the customer, which here concern us. The district court concluded that the government had established a prima facie case of crime-fraud sufficient to override both the attorney-client and work-product privileges.
II.
Although the initial grand jury has now retired, another grand jury has been empaneled to hear the matter. In view of the replacement of the retired grand jury by a new grand jury, the instant matter is not moot. In re Grand Jury Proceedings,
A. Attorney-Client and Work-Product Privileges
No doubt exists that, under normal circumstances, an attorney’s advice provided to a client, and the communications between attorney and client are protected by the attorney-client privilege. Upjohn v. United States,
The attorney-client and work-product privileges are lost, however, when a client gives information to the attorneys for the purpose of committing or furthering a crime
While the Fourth Circuit has not explicitly addressed the interplay between the attorney's lack of knowledge of the client's criminal or fraudulent activities, and the successful assertion of the attorney-client privilege by the client,
Inasmuch as today's attorney-client privilege exists for the benefit of the client, not the attorney, it is the client's knowledge and intentions that are of paramount concern to the application of the crime-fraud exception; the attorney need know nothing abe.it the client's ongoing or planned illicit activity for the exception to apply. It is therefore, irrelevant, for purposes of determining. whether the communications were made "in furtherance of' Corporation's criminal activity, that Roe and Doe [attorneys] may have been in the dark about the details of that activity.
Id. at 381-82 (internal footnote omitted). Moreover, in In re Sealed Case,
[un some circumstances the attorney may be innocently involved in the client's crime or fraud. But a guilty client may not use the innocence or igrorance of his attorney to claim the court's protection against a grand jury subpoena. Unless the blameless attorney is before the court with an independent claim of privilege, the client's use of an attorney's efforts in furtherance of crime or fraud negates the privilege.
Id. at 812. See also In re Grand Jury Proceedings,
B. Bank's Attoriieys
The Bank claims that the attorney-client and work-privileges protect its attorneys from testifying before the grand jury or producing a~iy documents with respect to the Bank. Furthermore, even if the loans with respect to the customer were improper or ifiegal, a point the Bank does not concede, the Bank maintains that the privileges should stifi remain intact because the attorneys knew nothin~ about the Bank's alleged criminal or fraudulent activity.
We review the district court's determination that the government made a prima facie showing of the Bank's crime or fraud for abuse of discretion. In re Grand Jnry Proceedings,
The court is satisfied that the district court's finding of a prima facie case of
C. Bank’s Non-Attorney Employee
The non-attorney employee’s assertion of a work-product privilege for documents prepared during the course of the employee’s investigation on behalf of the Bank, fares no better. Here, the Bank hired a consultant,
Undisputedly, the non-attorney employee did not work for any lawyer. Instead, he worked for the Bank before any lawyer was involved in representing the Bank and reported the results of his investigation to-the Bank itself. Furthermore, any communication of the investigation’s results to the attorneys concerned facts designed to secure concealment of the Bank’s crime or fraud. Indeed, the non-attorney employee advised the Bank to retain attorneys after the non-attorney employee concluded his investigation. While the result of the non-attorney’s investigation may have been, and probably was, used by lawyers for the Bank in preparing a defense to the FDIC’s claim, the use of the non-attorney’s investigation does not negate the fact that he was not hired by any attorney nor worked for any attorney. Hence, the district court properly concluded that neither the attorney-client or work-product privileges applied to the non-attorney.
III.
A client’s criminal or fraudulent activities are not to be encouraged. The protective shield, of the attorney-client and work-product privileges is appropriately pierced when a client attempts to use these privileges to further criminal or fraudulent activities. As the Supreme Court aptly stated in Clark v. United States,
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The question being considered only at a prima facie stage concerning what evidence may be obtained and offered, our assumption here and elsewhere that lawyers were acting innocently need not preclude a contrary finding at a subsequent stage of the proceeding if further evidence is introduced so indicating.
. In X Corp. v. Doe,
. As the record bears out, the loan was actually made November 27, 1990.
. The Bank later hired the consultant as an employee. ,
