Document ID: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca5-14-51314/USCOURTS-ca5-14-51314-0/pdf.json

Parties Involved:
Daniel C. Morales
Appellant
Private Counsel
Appellee
United States of America
Appellee

Document Text:

IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT

No. 14-51314

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 

 Plaintiff - Appellee

PRIVATE COUNSEL

 Appellee

v.

DANIEL C. MORALES, 

 Defendant - Appellant

-------------------------

CONSOLIDATED CASE 14-51323

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 

 Plaintiff - Appellee

v.

DANIEL C. MORALES, 

 Defendant - Appellant

Appeals from the United States District Court

for the Western District of Texas

Before STEWART, Chief Judge, and CLEMENT and ELROD, Circuit Judges.

United States Court of Appeals

Fifth Circuit

FILED

November 30, 2015

Lyle W. Cayce

Clerk

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2

EDITH BROWN CLEMENT, Circuit Judge.

In 2003, Daniel Morales, the former Attorney General of Texas, was 

convicted of mail fraud and of making and filing a false income tax return. 

During his criminal prosecution, the district court entered a protective order 

covering discovery materials produced by certain victims and third parties. 

More than a decade later, Morales moved to modify that protective order to 

permit the limited disclosure of certain documents. The district court denied 

that motion, and Morales now appeals.1 Because Morales has not shown any 

changed circumstances justifying his requested modification, we affirm.

I.

Morales served as Attorney General of Texas from 1991 to 1999. During 

his tenure, he oversaw Texas’s litigation against big tobacco companies. That 

litigation resulted in a gargantuan settlement and, indirectly, Morales’s 

conviction and incarceration.

Morales hired a group of Texas law firms (“Private Counsel”) to conduct 

the litigation against big tobacco. After several years of litigation, Private 

Counsel secured a $17.3 billion settlement and applied for the attorney’s fees 

provided for in their agreement with Texas. On the day the case settled, Marc 

Murr—Morales’s personal friend and campaign advisor—also applied for 

attorney’s fees, even though he was not party to Private Counsel’s agreement. 

In support of his application, Murr proffered retainer agreements between him 

and Texas that pre-dated the settlement agreement and that would entitle him 

to a gigantic attorney’s fees award. 

Murr never received that award, however, because authorities soon 

discovered that Morales had faked the purported agreements between Texas 

 

1 Morales also appeals the district court’s denial of his motion for an extension of time 

to appeal. Because we hold that his appeal was timely even absent the extension, we dismiss 

that appeal as moot.

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and Murr as part of a scheme to profit from the settlement award. In fact, Murr 

had provided no appreciable legal services to Texas regarding the tobacco 

litigation. Soon after the scheme was discovered, Morales was indicted.

During Morales’s criminal proceedings, Private Counsel moved for a 

protective order under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 16(d)(1). Listed as 

victims of Morales’s scheme in the indictment and cooperating as witnesses, 

Private Counsel asked the district court to prevent Morales from disclosing 

information they produced in the course of the prosecution. Private Counsel 

sought the protective order after learning that Morales intended to sue Private 

Counsel to recover some or all of the fee award that Private Counsel recovered 

as part of the settlement agreement. The government—citing the Victim and 

Witness Protection Act—supported Private Counsel’s motion, and confirmed 

that Morales was soliciting plaintiffs’ lawyers’ assistance in suing Private 

Counsel. In direct response to the concerns voiced by Private Counsel, the 

district court granted Private Counsel’s motion and entered a protective order 

requiring the parties to keep “all discovery” confidential and to “not disclose 

same except as necessary to prepare their cases for trial.”

A few months later, Morales pleaded guilty to mail fraud and to making 

and filing a false income tax return. The district court sentenced him to 48 

months of imprisonment and three years of supervised release. Shortly before 

Morales was sentenced, he moved to modify the protective order so that he 

could enter several hundred pages of evidence (including the two documents at 

issue in this appeal) obtained during his prosecution into the record. The 

district court denied the motion. Morales neither pursued a direct appeal nor 

appealed the district court’s denial of his motion to modify.

Fast-forward eleven years to 2014. Morales, who had completed his 

prison term and term of supervised release, again filed a motion to modify the 

protective order. This time, Morales limited his motion: He asked the district 

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court to lift the protective order only as to two specific documents, both of which 

Private Counsel produced to the government during his prosecution. Morales 

himself has had these documents since at least 2003, when he received them 

from the government during his criminal proceedings. The documents were 

never entered into evidence, however. Morales seeks to use the documents as 

the basis for a qui tam suit on Texas’s behalf against Private Counsel because, 

in his view, they provide a basis for the recovery of some or all of Private 

Counsel’s tobacco-settlement fee award. Private Counsel and the government 

both opposed Morales’s motion. 

The district court held a hearing on the motion to modify and, on 

November 20, 2014, denied it. Morales filed a motion for extension of time to 

appeal, along with a notice of appeal, on December 9, 2014. The district court 

denied his motion for an extension, and Morales appealed that denial as well. 

We consolidated his appeals.

Private Counsel and the government contend that this is a criminal 

appeal governed by Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(b) and, as a result, 

that Morales did not timely file his appeal within fourteen days. Morales 

counters that this is a civil appeal governed by Rule 4(a) and that, even if it is 

not, the district court abused its discretion in denying his motion for an 

extension of time to file. 

Aside from his arguments about whether he timely filed his appeal, 

Morales argues on appeal only that the district court abused its discretion in 

denying his motion to modify the protective order.

II.

We review the district court’s denial of a motion to modify a criminal 

protective order for abuse of discretion. See United States v. Gurney, 558 F.2d 

1202, 1211 n.15 (5th Cir. 1977) (noting district court’s discretion in deciding 

confidentiality of documents in criminal case); cf. United States v. Miramontez, 

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995 F.2d 56, 59 (5th Cir. 1993) (reviewing denial of motion for disclosure of 

grand jury materials for abuse of discretion). 

III.

Private Counsel and the government both contend that Morales did not 

timely file his notice of appeal. Whether Morales timely noticed his appeal 

depends on whether this appeal is criminal or civil in nature.

Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(a)(1)(B) provides litigants sixty 

days to notice an appeal in a civil case involving the United States. Rule 

4(b)(1)(A), on the other hand, provides defendants only fourteen days to notice 

an appeal in a criminal case. The district court entered the order denying 

Morales’s motion on November 20, 2014. Morales filed his notice of appeal on 

December 9, 2014 (nineteen days later). If Morales’s appeal is civil, rather than 

criminal, his notice of appeal was timely under Rule 4(a)(1)(B).2

We have never considered whether Rule 4(a) or 4(b) governs an appeal 

from an order denying a post-conviction motion to modify a criminal protective 

order. Although Morales filed his motion to modify the protective order “in the 

same court and under the same docket number as his earlier criminal 

proceeding, this does not require that his [motion] be treated as a criminal 

action.” Miramontez, 995 F.2d at 58; see United States v. Roher, 706 F.2d 725, 

727 (5th Cir. 1983). Rule 4(a) applies to civil proceedings, even those arising 

from earlier criminal cases; the inquiry is whether the proceedings themselves 

are civil. Indeed, even some appeals arising out of motions under the Federal 

Rules of Criminal Procedure are civil for Rule 4 purposes. Hunt v. U.S. Dep’t 

of Justice, 2 F.3d 96, 97 (5th Cir. 1993) (per curiam) (Rule 4(a) applies to Rule 

 

2 The timeliness of a notice of appeal in a criminal case is not jurisdictional and can 

be waived, United States v. Martinez, 496 F.3d 387, 388-89 (5th Cir. 2007), but the 

government did not waive timeliness. 

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41(e) motions for return of property); Roher, 706 F.2d at 727 (Rule 4(a) applies 

to Rule 46(f) motions to remit or set aside forfeiture of appearance bond).

But we have never set out a clear test for determining whether 

proceedings other than direct appeals arising out of final judgments in criminal 

cases are civil or criminal in nature. Instead, we have often reasoned by 

analogy. See United States v. Truesdale, 211 F.3d 898, 903 (5th Cir. 2000). 

Where motions have civil analogues, that weighs in favor of the proceedings 

being civil. See id. at 904 (Rule 4(a) applies to appeals from orders on Hyde 

Amendment motions, regarding reimbursement of attorney’s fees to 

defendants in certain criminal cases, because those motions are analogous to 

motions under Equal Access to Justice Act); United States v. Cooper, 876 F.2d 

1192, 1194 (5th Cir. 1989) (per curiam) (Rule 4(a) applies to appeals from 

orders on petitions for writs of error coram nobis because those petitions are 

equivalent to § 2255 motions, which are governed by Rule 4(a)), abrogated on 

other grounds by Smith v. Barry, 502 U.S. 244 (1992); see also Roher, 706 F.2d 

at 727 (Rule 4(a) applies to appeals from orders denying motions to set aside 

or remit forfeiture of appearance bond because those motions involve “a plainly 

civil subject”); Miramontez, 995 F.2d at 58 (Rule 4(a) applies to appeal from 

order on motion for disclosure of grand jury transcripts where district court 

construed petition, in part, as FOIA request, a construction that “emphasize[d] 

the civil aspect” of the proceedings).

A motion that “deals directly with the movant’s liberty interest,” on the 

other hand, is likely to be criminal; such motions implicate the reasons for Rule 

4(b)’s shorter time period. Truesdale, 211 F.3d at 903; see, e.g., United States 

v. Young, 966 F.2d 164, 165 (5th Cir. 1992) (Rule 4(b) applies to Rule 35 

motions to correct sentence); cf. Roher, 706 F.2d at 727 (Rule 4(a) applies to 

Rule 46(f) motions to set aside bond forfeiture because the “reasons for short 

time periods for criminal appeal do not apply”); Truesdale, 211 F.3d at 904 

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(Rule 4(a) applies to Hyde Amendment motions in part because they do not 

implicate movant’s liberty interest). Perhaps the most apt distillation of a rule 

is found in Hunt, where we suggested that motions that are “not a part of the 

trial and punishment process that is criminal law” should be treated as civil. 

2 F.3d at 97; see also United States v. Holland, 214 F.3d 523, 526 (4th Cir. 

2000) (“A proceeding is basically civil if it redresses private injuries; a criminal 

proceeding, by contrast, establishes guilt and punishes offenders.”).

Morales’s motion to modify the protective order has a civil analogue. 

Protective orders are commonly entered in civil cases, and indeed the district 

court here analyzed Morales’s motion, in part, under the civil standard for 

modifying a protective order. Motions to modify protective orders in criminal 

cases appear to be infrequent; courts have thus drawn from the standard for 

modification of civil protective orders in deciding them. See, e.g., United States 

v. Swartz, 945 F. Supp. 2d 216, 219 (D. Mass. 2013). That we may have to look 

to civil law to resolve Morales’s motion weighs in favor of holding that the 

motion is civil. Morales, moreover, seeks to modify the protective order because 

he wants to file a qui tam action, a civil matter. Cf. Roher, 706 F.2d at 727. As 

in Miramontez (where the movant sought grand jury transcripts to support a 

habeas petition under § 2241), that Morales’s ultimate goal is a civil action

weighs in favor of his motion being civil. 995 F.2d at 58; see United States v. 

Hamberg, No. 07-1527, 294 F. App’x 251, at *1 (8th Cir. Sept. 30, 2008) (relying 

on Miramontez and holding that appeal from post-judgment order denying 

motion to set aside protective order was civil). 

What is more, Morales’s motion does not deal with his liberty interest. 

Indeed, not only has Morales’s criminal conviction “long been final,” 

Miramontez, 995 F.2d at 58, he completed his sentence long ago as well. It is 

thus difficult to characterize his motion as “part of the trial and punishment 

process that is criminal law,” Hunt, 2 F.3d at 97; he seeks merely the 

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“disclosure of secret information, not unlike a [FOIA] request,” In re Special 

Grand Jury 89-2, 450 F.3d 1159, 1168 (10th Cir. 2006). See also Holland, 214 

F.3d at 526. And neither Private Counsel nor the government identifies 

anything implicating the policy reasons why criminal appeals are subject to 

shorter deadlines.3 See United States v. Craig, 907 F.2d 653, 656 (7th Cir. 1990)

(discussing policy reasons).

For all these reasons, we hold that Morales’s appeal is civil, is governed 

by Rule 4(a), and is thus timely.4

IV.

Morales argues that the district court abused its discretion in denying 

his motion to modify the protective order. He seeks to share two documents 

with the State of Texas, in hopes that he can convince it to join his (as-yetunfiled) qui tam suit against Private Counsel.

Below, the parties disputed the proper standard for assessing Morales’s 

motion, but the district court decided that—under any standard—Morales’s 

motion should be denied. Private Counsel and the government argue that we 

should assess Morales’s motion under the standard for gaining access to grand 

jury materials. See, e.g., Miramontez, 995 F.2d at 59-60. Morales, however, 

disputes that Private Counsel provided the documents at issue under a grand 

jury subpoena—the government, moreover, refuses to represent that they 

were—and the district court explicitly declined to resolve that factual question. 

We will not make such a finding in the first instance on appeal. See Lytle v. 

Bexar Cty., 560 F.3d 404, 417 (5th Cir. 2009) (“[I]t is the job of the factfinder, 

 

3 The government cites the Seventh Circuit’s explanation that the shorter deadline 

exists “to ensure that criminal prosecutions do not plod on indefinitely.” Craig, 907 F.2d at 

656). But Morales’s prosecution has concluded.

4 Because we decide that Morales’s appeal is civil, and thus timely under Rule 

4(a)(1)(B), we do not address his related argument that the district court abused its discretion 

in denying his motion for an extension of time to file his notice of appeal.

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not this court, to ultimately resolve the factual disputes and make the 

inferences that fill the gaps in the facts.”). In addition, on its face, Morales’s 

motion sought only to modify a protective order, not to unseal grand jury 

materials.5 Although the documents may be protected as grand jury materials, 

it is undisputed that they are covered by the protective order. We thus address 

whether the district court abused its discretion in finding that Morales failed 

to meet the standard for modifying the protective order. 

Declining to decide whether the civil or criminal standard for modifying 

a protective order applied, the district court analyzed Morales’s motion under 

both standards. But the protective order was entered under Federal Rule of 

Criminal Procedure 16(d)(1), signaling that the criminal standard applies, 

particularly in the absence of any contrary indication.6 We thus analyze 

Morales’s modification motion under the criminal standard—although, given 

the criminal standard’s relative lack of content, the civil standard informs our 

analysis.

Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 16(d)(1) provides that “[a]t any time 

the court may, for good cause, deny, restrict, or defer discovery or inspection, 

or grant other appropriate relief.” We have not identified what constitutes 

“good cause” to modify a Rule 16(d)(1) protective order, but we find it prudent 

to borrow from the civil context. See Swartz, 945 F. Supp. 2d at 219 (“[I]t is 

appropriate to analyze the ‘good cause’ requirement under the criminal rules 

in light of precedent analyzing protective orders entered in civil cases.”). In 

that context, courts consider four factors when determining whether to modify 

 

5 The secrecy of grand jury materials is animated by concerns different from those 

justifying the confidentiality of documents covered by a protective order. Compare 

Miramontez, 995 F.2d at 59 (discussing grand jury secrecy) with Swartz, 945 F. Supp. 2d at 

219-220 (discussing criminal protective orders).

6 Whether this case is criminal or civil for the purposes of Federal Rule of Appellate 

Procedure 4 does not change the nature of the protective order itself.

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a protective order: “[(]1) the nature of the protective order[;] (2) the 

foreseeability, at the time of issuance of the order, of the modification 

requested[;] (3) the parties’ reliance on the order; and most significantly (4) 

whether good cause exists for the modification.” Peoples v. Aldine Indep. Sch. 

Dist., No. CIV. A. 06-2818, 2008 WL 2571900, at *2 (S.D. Tex. June 19, 2008). 

Good cause is the most important of these factors in the criminal context, given 

that phrase’s inclusion in Rule 16(d)(1).

Regarding the first factor, the protective order here covered “all 

discovery,” indicating that it should be more easily modified than more 

narrowly tailored protective orders. Peoples, 2008 WL 2571900 at *2. Yet the 

two documents that Morales seeks to unshield are precisely the type of 

documents at which the protective order was aimed—it is not as if Morales 

seeks simply to narrow an overly broad protective order to disclose documents 

not properly covered. In seeking the protective order, Private Counsel sought 

to prevent Morales from using documents that they disclosed to sue them, and 

that is exactly the reason Morales seeks to disclose the documents here. At 

best, then, this factor is neutral.

Although the second factor, foreseeability, is a more apt consideration 

when the parties have negotiated a protective order, see id., it nevertheless has 

some minimal relevance here. Morales knew shortly after the order was 

entered that he wanted it to be modified and he effectively moved to modify 

it—for the same reason he now seeks to modify it. But he did not appeal the 

district court’s refusal to unseal documents at that time. This factor thus 

weighs slightly against modification.

Reliance here weighs against modification. Private Counsel relied on the 

protective order when providing the government with these two documents, 

whether or not Private Counsel provided them under a subpoena. Had the 

protective order not been entered, Private Counsel might have resisted a 

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subpoena or might not have provided the documents voluntarily, whatever the 

case may have been. As cooperating witnesses, Private Counsel are entitled to 

not have their settled expectations—that, because of the protective order, the 

evidence Private Counsel provided against Morales would not be used against 

them—overturned. Id.; cf. Swartz, 945 F. Supp. 2d at 221 (discussing interest, 

supporting redaction, in shielding victims from potential retaliation).

Lastly, Morales has not shown good cause to modify the protective order. 

Good cause in this context includes “changed circumstances or new situations” 

and “the need to make information available for use in subsequent 

proceedings”; it also factors in “the other party’s need for protection.” Peoples, 

2008 WL 2571900 at *3 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).

Morales has not shown changed circumstances.7 The district court’s 

rationale for entering the protective order in 2003 remains unchanged today. 

The protective order was entered precisely to prevent Morales from doing what 

he now seeks to do: use documents that Private Counsel produced during 

discovery to sue Private Counsel. Indeed, Morales moved in 2003 to unseal 

these documents in order to further that same objective; the district court 

denied that motion. Morales did not appeal that denial. Nor did Morales 

recently discover these two documents. To the contrary: The government 

provided Morales with the documents during discovery back in 2003. In short, 

nothing about Private Counsel’s “need for protection” from disclosure has 

changed.

Morales does seek the documents for use in subsequent proceedings. But 

that does not weigh in favor of modification here, because preventing the 

 

7 Morales does not seriously argue that changed circumstances justify modification. 

Effectively, he argues that his desire to file the qui tam suit constitutes changed 

circumstances, although the record demonstrates that he has been interested in suing 

Private Counsel on a similar theory since at least 2003. 

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documents’ use in subsequent civil proceedings is the very reason why the 

documents are under a protective order. That Morales has perhaps formulated 

a more comprehensive theory of his proposed lawsuit than he did in 2003 does 

not warrant abandoning the original justification for the protective order. And 

in the context of criminal protective orders, the “subsequent proceedings” 

inquiry usually regards a defendant’s intent to use information to defend 

himself against criminal prosecution, not his intent to file a lawsuit against his 

victims and witnesses that provided evidence against him.8

Because Morales has not demonstrated good cause to modify the 

protective order, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying his 

motion. 

V.

The district court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to modify the 

protective order. We thus AFFIRM. Because we hold that Morales’s appeal was 

timely, we DISMISS AS MOOT his appeal of the district court’s denial of his 

motion for an extension of time to appeal.

 

8 As part of its “good cause” analysis, the district court considered the merits of 

Morales’s putative qui tam suit. But we need not—and do not—assess the merits of that 

hypothetical suit to determine whether the district court abused its discretion in denying 

modification. It is enough to note that nothing relevant to the protective order has changed 

since 2003, when the district court entered the order, and when Morales moved to modify it 

for the first time. No facts relevant to the potential suit have changed, and Morales identifies 

nothing about the putative suit that differs from the suit he would have filed in 2003, save 

perhaps a more fleshed-out theory of the case and a purported desire to further Texas’s 

interests rather than purely his own. As the district court found, he had, and had identified 

the potential importance of, the relevant documents back in 2003. Thus, because Morales 

cannot identify any changed circumstances or reasons to undermine the district court’s 

protections for Morales’s victims and witnesses, he cannot show good cause—whether or not 

his hypothetical suit is potentially meritorious. 

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