Court Opinion

ID: 2664123
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-04-04 03:18:13.036515+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:04:20.081335
License: Public Domain

FILED

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FoR THE DISTRICT oF CoLUMBIA JUN 2 3 2011
Clerk, U.S. District & Bankruptcy

) Courts forthe District of Co|umbia
UNITED STATES OF AMERlCA )
)
)

v. ) Criminal Action No. lO-223 (RBW)

)
)
WlLLlAM R. CLEl\/IENS, )
)
Defendant. )
)

MEMORANDUM OPINlON

William R. Clemens, the defendant in this criminal case, has been indicted on various
criminal charges related to testimony that he provided to the House Committee on Oversight and
Government Reform in February of 2008. g lndictment ("Indict.") at 12-19.1 On or about
February 10, 2011, the defendant served DLA Piper US LLP ("DLA Piper") with a subpoena
du@ te_c_\@ pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure l7(c), Memorandum in Support of
Non-Party DLA Piper’s l\/lotion to Quash Subpoena ("DLA Piper’s l\/Iem.") at l, seeking, i@
Mt, "all interview summaries, notes, and memoranda" pertaining to Jose Canseco, Brian
McNamee, and Kirk Radomski that are "related to the ‘Report to the Commissioner of Baseball
of an Independent lnvestigation into the Illegal Use of Steroids and Other Performance
Enhancing Substances by Players in Major League Baseball," L, Ex. 3 (Subpoena Duces Tecum
to DLA Piper US LLP) at 3. DLA Piper then moved to quash the subpoena, arguing that "the

handwritten or typed notes taken during interviews" conducted by DLA Piper of these three

l The defendant was originally indicted in this case on August 19, 2010. A superseding indictment, which like the
original indictment is also titled "lndictment," was filed with the Court on May 10, 2011. Unless otherwise n0ted,
the Court is referring to the superseding indictment in its use of the term "Indictment" or any short form thereof

individuals, as well as the "memoranda prepared after [the] interviews summarizing the
substance of the[se] interviews . . . . constitute classic attorney work product." DLA Piper’s
Mem. at 2. After careful consideration of DLA Piper’s motion to quash, the defendant’s
memorandum in opposition to DLA Piper’s motion, DLA Piper’s brief in reply to the
defendant’s opposition memorandum, DLA Piper’s work product, the defendant’s e_x ;gr§
submission regarding the DLA Piper documents, and the representations made to the Court
during the g }Lrt_e_ hearing with the DLA Piper attorneys who participated in the interviews, the
Court concludes for the following reasons that the motion to quash must be granted in part and
denied in part, based on the finding that the defendant is entitled to excerpts from DLA Piper’s
interview notes and memoranda.
I. Background

The defendant is a former Major League Baseball ("MLB") player who played for four
different teams over a span of twenty-four years. §§ Indict. at 2. "In or about March 2005," the
United States House of Representatives_specifically, the House Committee on Oversight and
Government Reform (the "Committee")-conducted an investigation into "the use of
[perforrnance-enhancing drugs] in professional baseball." I_d. at 7. "[T]he Commissioner of
MLB, partially in response to concerns raised by the Committee during its 2005 [investigation],
engaged former . . . United States Senator . . . George J. Mitche11 . . . to conduct a comprehensive
investigation of [performance-enhancing drug] use in MLB. ld_. at 8. Senator Mitchell, who at
the time of the engagement was a partner at DLA Piper, retained his law firm to represent him

during the investigation. § June 8, 2011 Hearing Transcript ("6/8/11 Hr’g Tr.") at 5:20-21

("Senator Mitchell . . . retained [DLA Piper] to represent him.");z id_. at 5:23-6:2 ("[T]he way the
contracts were set up is that baseball retained him to do an investigation, [and] he then retained
[DLA Piper] to act as his legal counsel . . . ."). "On or about December 13, 2007, Senator
Mitchell issued a 409-page report," commonly referred to as the "Mitchell Report," which
"contained multiple allegations of [performance-enhancing] drug use in MLB over the years
preceding its release." lndict. at 8. Among the allegations contained in the Mitchell Report were
claims that the defendant "used anabolic steroids on multiple occasions in 1998, 2000, and
2001," as well as human-growth hormone ("HGH") "on multiple occasions in 2000." I_d. ln
response to the allegations made in the Mitchell Report, the defendant appeared before the
Committee for a deposition "on or about February 5, 2008," and a hearing "on or about February
13, 2008," during which he denied using performance-enhancing drugs. l;d. at 10-1 l. According
to the govemment, the defendant made statements before the Committee that he "knew to be
false and rnisleading," and it is these statements that are the subject of the criminal charges
currently pending against him. See generally i;d. at 12-l9.

As noted above, the defendant served DLA Piper with a subpoena d£_s_ tecium, in which
it demanded production of, §§ L, various interview notes and memoranda pertaining to Jose
Canseco, Kirk Radomski, and Brian McNamee. §§ DLA Piper’s Mem., Ex. 3 (Subpoena Duces
Tecum to DLA Piper US LLP) at 3. DLA Piper moved to quash the subpoena on March 18,
201l. §e_e DLA Piper’s Mem. at 1. On April 21, 201l, the Court conducted a hearing on the
merits of DLA Piper’s motion to quash the subpoena, and after considering the arguments raised

by the parties at the hearing and in their written submissions, the Court concluded that the notes

2 The Court relied on a draft version of the June 8, 2011 hearing transcript in drafting this memorandum opinion.
After review of the draft transcript, the Court is confident that the transcription substantially reflects the
representations made by DLA Piper at the June 8, 201 1 hearing. The Court nonetheless will review the final version
of the transcript upon its release and amend this memorandum opinion, if necessary.

and memoranda at issue were prepared in anticipation of litigation, and thus they were entitled to
protection as attorney work product. April 21, 2011 Hearing Transcript ("4/21/11 Hr’ g Tr.") at
83:8-11. Furthermore, the Court concluded that due to the government’s involvement with the
interviews of Mr. Radomski and Mr. McNamee (but not l\/Ir. Canseco),3 the defendant may be
entitled to some portions of DLA Piper’s work product.l § i_c_l_. at 85:5-10 (noting that the work
product with regard to Mr. Canseco is in a different posture from the materials regarding Mr.
Radomski and Mr. McNamee); i;d. at 89:9-14 (ruling that "substantially verbatim" statements
made by either Mr. Radomski or Mr. McNamee "should . . . be made available to" the
defendant). The Court reserved its ruling on this issue, however, and instead directed DLA Piper
to produce for its i_n Q_r£ra inspection "all documents responsive to the subpoena dLce_s_ tecium
that involved an interview by DLA Piper of either [Mr.] McNamee or [Mr.] Radomski while in
the presence of government attorneys or investigators." April 27, 2011 Order at 1-2, md
States v. Clemens, Criminal Action No. 10-223 (RBW) (D.D.C.).S The Court later explained in
its April 27, 2011 Order that
[t]he first step in the Court’s review will be to determine whether the documents

at issue constitute "opinion work product" or "fact work product."é lf the Court
determines that the documents fall within the category of "opinion work product,"

3 The nature of the govemment’s involvement in these interviews is discussed later in this memorandum opinion.
w infra P- 6-3-

4 During the April 21, 2011 hearing, the Court stated that if DLA Piper’s work product contained "substantially
verbatim" statements by Mr. Radomski or Mr. McNamee, then the Court would find "that there was a waiver." id
at 87:18-20. The Court, however, did not intend to use the term "waiver" in the legal sense, such as where a party
loses protection over its work product by disclosing its materials in a manner that "is inconsistent with the
maintenance of secrecy from the disclosing party’s adversary." United States v. Thompson, 562 F.3d 387, 394
(D,C. Cir. 2009). Rather, the Court meant to convey its decision to provide the defendant with access to DLA
Piper’s work product if the statements contained in the work product could be reasonably attributed to the witnesses.

5 The oral rulings issued by the Court at the conclusion of the April 21, 2011 motions hearing were memorialized in
the Court’s April 27, 2011 Order.

° The Court provides a further explanation of the "fact" and "opinion" work product distinction below. S_e<; infra p.
1 1-27.

then the Court will not order DLA Piper to produce these documents to the

defendant. On the other hand, if the Court concludes that the documents, or

portions thereof, constitute "fact work product" because they contain substantially
verbatim statements of Mr. McNamee or Mr. Radomski, then the Court will

assess whether (1) the statements are inconsistent with the statements made by

these potential witnesses in interviews conducted by the government prior to their

interviews with DLA Piper, or (2) Mr. McNamee’s statements are consistent with

the defendant’s theory that Mr. McNamee has progressively embellished the facts

that form the basis of the offenses charged in the lndictment. lf the Court

concludes that the documents do fall within either of these two categories, then

the Court will order DLA Piper to produce those documents to the defendant

immediately.

Ld. at 2 n.2 (footnote added). 1n accordance with the Court’s Order, DLA Piper then provided
the Court with nine interview memoranda-five pertaining to Mr. Radomski, and the other four
regarding Mr. McNamee. Where they existed, any notes related to the aforementioned interview
memoranda were also provided to the Court by DLA Piper.

After conducting an i_n camera review of DLA Piper’s work product, "the Court
conclud[ed] that there [was] insufficient information in the record that [would] enable the Court
to reach an informed decision as to whether these materials," or portions thereof, constitute
"fact" or "opinion" work product. May 16, 2011 Order at 2-3, United States v. Clemens,
Criminal Action No. 10-223 (RBW) (D.D.C.). And, because the Court could not determine the
level of protection to which DLA Piper’s work product was entitled, the Court found that it
needed to "conduct a hearing to resolve the matter." Li_. at 3 (quoting Saunders v. United States,
316 F.2d 346, 350 (D.C. Cir. 1963)). Consequently, the Court ordered "all current DLA Piper
attorneys that were present during these interviews and who played some role in creating the
documents at issue" to appear for an _e_)g parte hearing on June 8, 2011, for the purpose of

allowing the Court to make the necessary inquiries to resolve DLA Piper’s motion to quash the

subpoena. l;i; at 2-3.

The Court held the hearing as scheduled, during which DLA Piper attorneys David
Clarke, Charles Scheeler, John Clarke, and Ellen Ginsberg were present.7 David Clarke first
explained that the purpose underlying DLA Piper’s investigation into the use of perforrnance-
enhancing drugs in Major League Baseball was "[t]o provide [baseball’s C]ommissioner with an
informed basis for taking any action that [he] needed to take with regard to [the] matter," 6/8/11
Hr’ g Tr. at 6:10-12, including, i_nt_cL a_lia, responding to "additional Congressional inquiries" and
"taking punitive actions against players or teams," i;d. at 6:13-15. To provide the Commissioner
with "a finn factual foundation . . . to respond to the various potential litigation" on the horizon,
§ at 8:17-19, DLA Piper conducted "interviews of individuals who had information pertinent to
the investigation," § at 8:14-15. After the completion of an interview, DLA Piper attorneys
memorialized the interview in a "memorandum[,] precisely so [that] there would be a record of .
. . [the] factual foundation" for any response or action taken by the Commissioner. Ld. at 8:21-
23.

Mr. Scheeler then explained to the Court the interview protocols employed by DLA Piper
with respect to Kirk Radomski and Brian McNamee. He advised the Court that in the spring of
2006, DLA Piper was contacted by Matt Parella, an Assistant United States Attomey in the
Northern District of California, regarding an unidentified individual (who later turned out to be
Mr. Radomski) who he wanted to make available to DLA Piper for its investigation, §§ at
11:10-13. Mr. Parella represented to DLA Piper that the unidentified individual was obligated to

talk with the law firm under the terms of a cooperation agreement. I_d. at 11:11-13. DLA Piper

7 David Clarke was present at the hearing as counsel of record for DLA Piper on the motion to quash, and, to the
Court’s knowledge, he was not involved in the creation of the notes and memoranda that are at issue here.
Additionally, Brett lngerman, who did have a role in creating these notes and memoranda, was excused from the
hearing due to his involvement in another matter.

represented to the Court that it had no knowledge of Mr. Radomski’s identity until April 2"7,
2007, when a press release announced that Mr. Radomski had reached a plea agreement with the
United States Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of California in his criminal case. §§§
§ at 26:24-27:6 (statement by Mr. Scheeler that a press release regarding Mr. Radomski was
issued on April 27, 2007, and it was "[a]t that point [that he] knew who it was"); Criminal
Pretrial Minutes at l, United States v. Radomski, Criminal Action No. 07-222 (SI) (N.D. Cal.),
ECF No. 12 (reflecting April 27, 2007, as the date the written plea agreement in Mr. Radomski’s
case was filed in open court). Similarly, the prosecutor arranged to have Mr. McNa1nee
interviewed by DLA Piper without disclosing his identity, and DLA Piper only learned of Mr.
McNamee’s identity less than 24 hours prior to their first scheduled interview on July 13, 2007,
§ 6/8/11 Hr’g Tr. at 91 15-16 (statement by David Clarke that the interview with Mr. McNamee
was "arranged before [he] was identified"); § at 12:16-17 (statement by Mr. Scheeler that DLA
Piper learned of Mr. McNamee’s identity "less than 24 hours" prior to their first interview).

Due to the lack of notice provided to DLA Piper, the law firm conducted its initial
interviews of Mr. Radomski and Mr. McNamee "with somewhat less preparation than there
might have been if [it] had known who the witnesses were."g § at 9:25-10:1. According to
DLA Piper, the lack of preparation was a break from its standard protocol, in which the law firm
would generally prepare "a lengthy . . . list of questions" for an interview. § at 12:23-24. For
"subsequent interviews," however, DLA Piper did revert to its standard practice of preparing

interview outlines, and with regard to the interviews of Mr. Radomski and Mr. McNamee, the

8 Although DLA Piper asserts that it did not have sufficient time to prepare for its initial interview with Mr.
Radomski due to the government’s secrecy regarding his identity prior to the interview, it acknowledged that it
leamed of Mr. Radomski’s identity approximately six weeks prior to the start of the interview. 6/8/11 Hr’g Tr. at
27:1-2.

law firm composed a list of "fol1ow[-]up questions" that were identified “based on the first
interviews" and "things that were being disclosed in the public domain." § at 10:7-12.
According to DLA Piper, the inquiries in these subsequent interviews were designed "to focus on
what [it] be1ieve[d] were the most important area[s]," § at 15:25-16:1, and to "confirm[]
information[ and] get[] clarifications . . . where [it was not] certain of exactly what [it] had gotten
information wise in the earlier interviews," § at 16:2-5.

During the interviews of Mr. Radomski and Mr. McNamee, Senator Mitchell "took the
lead" in presenting questions to the witnesses, with Mr. Scheeler asking questions as well. § at
13:16-17. In addition, there were several government officialsg present during each of these
interviews, and at times they "ask[ed] some questions . . . . to try to help . . . the witness refresh
their recollection if they had said something differently before or said they did[ not] remember
now [what] they [had] said . . . earlier."]° § at 18:21-19:4. ln the latter interviews for both Mr.
Radomski and Mr. McNamee, DLA Piper would "actually read [the witnesses a] draft of the
report . . . to make sure[ whether] there was a single word that [the witness] believed was
inaccurate." § at 16:8-10. DLA Piper’s interview protocols were "consistent with" the goal of
doing "everything . . . humanly possible [to] make sure everything in the report was accurate."
§ at 16:11-14. At no point during the process, however, did DLA Piper "show[ the witnesses]
the interview memorand[a]" from prior interviews, § at 18:8-9, nor did they "read[] portions of

the[se] memorand[a] to the witnesses," § at 31:18-19.

9 At times, the Court will use the term "government officials" to describe both federal prosecutors and law
enforcement agents.

'° Although DLA Piper recorded in its notes and memoranda which government officials were present during these
interviews, the law firm did not note which responses by the witnesses were in response to questions asked by the
government officials § § at 32:17-20 (statement by David Clarke that one could not "conclude from silence in
the memo[randum] that there were not other instances [0f govemment involvement] because the memo[randa] are
nowhere close to a verbatim [transcript]").

After the completion of each interview, a DLA Piper attorney would be designated to
create the first draft of an interview memorandum, § at 22:13-15. After the attorney completed
the first draft of the memorandum, the draft was then "circulated to other persons who
participated in the interviews," with the exception of Senator Mitchell. § at 22:18-19. Those
attorneys would review the memoranda, "refer to their notes, [and] sometimes would . . . take a
look at . . . what else was going on in the investigation . . , . to make sure [the memorandum] was
accurate." § at 22:22-23:2. The attorneys also wanted to ensure that only those matters that
they "deemed to be material" were reflected in the memorandum. § at 23:3-4. After all of the
attorneys reviewed the memorandum, they would then identify and address any "issues or . . .
concerns" regarding the memorandum. § at 23:6-7. DLA Piper explained, for instance, that if
one attorney heard the witness say one thing, but another attorney heard it differently, then the
attorneys would participate in a telephone conference to discuss the matter. § at 23:6-9. Once
the attorneys reached a consensus, they would then memorialize their agreement about the
witness’s statement in the final draft of the memorandum. § at 23:9-11. After the
memorandum was completed, one of the attorneys would enter the memorandum into a database
so that the other attorneys on the team could learn about an interview and assess whether what
was obtained from that interview "ha[d] an impact on what [those attorneys] were asking other
witnesses." § at 23:15-17.

In light of DLA Piper’s protocols, the law firm now contends that its notes and
memoranda constitute "opinion" work product. As support for this position, DLA Piper argues
that the interviews "were very much directed by DLA Piper and what DLA Piper thought was
important," § at 29:17-18, and that "[e]ven the initial interviews" were directed by DLA Piper

despite not learning of either Mr. Radomski’s or Mr. McNamee’s identities sufficiently prior to

their first interviews to prepare for them. § at 29:13-15. With regard to the notes, DLA Piper
argues that "none of the attorneys . . . charged with taking notes is anything close to having the
job skills of a court reporter," § at 28:11-13, and that "the notes they took were very
[summary]," in that they made no attempt to record the actual questions and the responses to
them, § at 28:13-15. As for the memoranda, DLA Piper argues that the preparation of these
documents required "a further c[u]lling process where some things that were in [the] notes were
not significant enough to be repeated in the memo[randum]." § at 28:18-20.

DLA Piper also argues that its efforts to ensure the accuracy of its memoranda have no
impact on the work-product analysis. lt asserts that in no instance was an interview
memorandum given to the witnesses for their review, nor did any of the attorneys ever read
portions of the memorandum to them. § § at 31:18-20 (statement by David Clarke that the
witnesses "never saw" the memoranda, and that the memoranda were "[n]ever . . . read to
them"). At most, according to DLA Piper, the attorneys would go "through the memorandum
summar[iz]ing the points and restating the facts as they understood them," and the witnesses
either confirmed or corrected what was related to them. § at 31:15-l8. Because DLA Piper
never read its memoranda to any of the witnesses, it contends that these documents do not
amount to "statement[s] adopted by the witness[es]." § at 30:24. In sum, DLA Piper argues
that all of its notes and memoranda are entitled to "opinion" work-product protection. § § at
29:22-24 (statement by David Clarke that "all" of the materials at issue "should be protected,"
although admitting that there are "some very specific snippets that . . . one might be able to

conclude . . . are in any way factual").

10

I. Legal Standard
"The work[-]product doctrine reflects the strong public policy against invading the
privacy of an attomey’s course of preparation." ln re Sealed Case, 856 F.2d 268, 273 (D.C. Cir.

1988) ("Sealed Case l"). As the Supreme Court explained in the seminal case on the attorney

work-product doctrine, Hickman v. Taylor, 329 U.S. 495 (1947):

Proper preparation of a client’s case demands that he assemble information, sift
what he considers to be the relevant from the irrelevant facts, prepare his legal
theories and plan his strategy without undue and needless interference. . . . This
work is reflected, of course, in interviews, statements, memoranda,
correspondence, briefs, mental impressions, personal beliefs, and countless other

tangible and intangible ways . . . . Were such materials open to opposing counsel
on mere demand, much of what is now put down in writing would remain
unwritten.

§ at 511. The work-product doctrine, therefore, serves to protect "written materials that
lawyers prepare in anticipation of litigation." United States v. Thompson, 562 F.3d 387, 393
(D.C. Cir. 2009) (internal quotation marks omitted).

While "the work-product doctrine most frequently is asserted as a bar to discovery in
civil litigation," the attorney work-product doctrine’s applicability is not limited to the civil
context. United States v. Nobles, 422 U.S. 225, 238 (1975). lndeed, the doctrine’s "role in
assuring the proper functioning of the criminal justice system is even more vital" because "[t]he
interests of society and the accused in obtaining a fair and accurate resolution of the question of
guilt or innocence demand that adequate safeguards assure the thorough preparation and
presentation of each side of the case." §; §§ § at 238 n.l2 ("A number of state and
federal decisions have recognized the role of the work-product doctrine in the criminal law, and
have applied its protections to the files of the prosecution and the accused alike."). Thus, the

attorney work-product "doctrine applies to criminal litigation as well as civil." § at 236.

11

The attorney work-product doctrine also can bar a party from obtaining protected
materials from a third party. F or instance, in United States v. Paxson, the defendant appealed his
conviction on the grounds that, ing ali_a, the district court erroneously quashed a subpoena
issued under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 17(c) and denied the defendant access to notes
of an interview of a third-party that were drafted by that third-party’s attorney. 861 F.2d 730,
735 (D.C. Cir. 1988). The District of Columbia Circuit acknowledged that "[n]either party . . .
cited any case applying the work-product privilege to facts paralleling those" before the Court in
l. § Nonethe1ess, the Circuit concluded "that the principles laid down in [Hickman] are
perfectly applicable" to a situation where a defendant seeks attorney work-product from a third-
party. § lt is of no moment, therefore, that the individual or entity seeking cover under the
attorney work-product doctrine is not a party to the underlying litigation.

Although the attorney work-product doctrine can protect an attomey’s materials in a
number of different circumstances, not "all written materials obtained or prepared by an
adversary’s counsel with an eye toward litigation are necessarily free from discovery in all
cases." Hickman, 324 U.S. at 511. Rather, attorney work-product is discoverable "if the party
seeking discovery can make a sufficient showing of necessity." 8 Charles Alan Wright and
Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2025 (3d ed. 1998). However, the showing
of need required to discover another party’s work product depends on whether the materials at
issue constitute "fact" work product or "opinion" work product. §§ ln re Sealed Case, 676 F.2d
793, 811 (D.C. Cir. 1982) (noting that there is “qualified protection for ‘fact’ work product and
more absolute protection for ‘opinion’ work product"). A party seeking discovery of "fact" work
product_e.g., "[w]here relevant and non-privileged facts remain hidden in an attorney’s file and

where production of those facts is essential to the preparation of one’s case," Hickman, 329 U.S.
12

at 511_must demonstrate “a substantial need for the materials and an undue hardship in
acquiring the information any other way," Dir., Office of Thrift Supervision v. Vinson & Elkins,
LL_P, 124 F.3d 1304, 1307 (D.C. Cir. 1997). On the other hand, with regard to "opinion" work
product_e.g., written materials prepared by counsel that reflect the attorney’s "‘mental
impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal theories,"’ United States v. Deloitte LLP, 610 F.3d
129, 135 (D.C. Cir. 2010) (quoting Dir., Office of Thrift Supervision, 610 F.3d at 1307)_such
materials are "virtually undiscoverable," Dir., Office of Thrift Supervision, 124 F.3d at 1307.
Discovery of "opinion" work product is therefore permissible only where a party has made "a far
stronger showing of necessity and unavailability by other means" than would otherwise be
sufficient for discovery of "fact" work product. Upiohn Co. v. United States, 449 U.S. 383, 402
(1981).

The challenge for the Court here is determining what constitutes "fact" versus "opinion"
work product. lt is well understood in the law that "the task of drawing a line between what is
fact and what is opinion can at times be frustrating and perplexing." Florida House of
Representatives v. U.S. Dep’t of Commerce, 961 F.2d 941, 947 (1 lth Cir. 1992). And, in the
work-product analysis, the "fact" and "opinion" labels are even less useful because even if it can
be agreed upon that a collection of materials or statements constitute "facts," the collection of
those facts itself might nonetheless reveal an attomey’s thought processes and mental
impressions of the case, thereby converting the information into "opinion" work product. §
Dir., Office of Thrift Supervision, 124 F.3d at 1308 ("At some point, . . . a lawyer’s factual
selection reflects his focus; in deciding what to include and what to omit, the lawyer reveals his
view of the case."). Additionally, the facts elicited from an investigation may be, in some

contexts, necessarily reflective of an attorney’s focus in a case. _S_eg ln re Sealed Case, 124 F.3d
13

230, 236 (1997) ("Sealed Case ll") (observing that "the fac_t§ elicited" from a "1itigation-related
investigation . . . . necessarily reflected a focus chosen by the lawyer" (emphases added)); _B;ett§
Gov. Bureau, Inc. v. McGraw, 106 F.3d 582, 608 (4th Cir. 1997), §§ Sealed Case ll, 124
F.3d at 236 (concluding that information gained from a witness and memorialized in a
typewritten summary "tend[ed] to indicate the focus of her investigation, and hence, her theories
and opinions regarding this litigation"). The "difficult matter[]" of deciding what "degree of
selection [is] necessary to transform facts into opinions" has yet to be resolved by the District of
Columbia Circuit. Dir., Office of Thrift Supervision, 124 F.3d at 1308.

The Court is not without guidance on this issue, however. The natural starting point for
determining the contours of "fact" and "opinion" work product is the Supreme Court’s Hickman
decision. Hickman involved the sinking of a tugboat that left five of nine crew members dead.
Hickman, 329 U.S. at 498. The attorney for the tugboat company "privately interviewed the
[four] survivors and took statements from them," which they "signed." § The attorney "also
interviewed other persons believed to have some information relating to the accident[,] and in
some cases he made memoranda of what they told him." § A representative for the decedents
then sought production of the signed statements and interview memoranda. § at 499.

With regard to the signed witness statements, the Supreme Court concluded that such
material "might, under certain circumstances, be admissible in evidence[,] give clues as to the
existence or location of relevant facts[, o]r they might be useful for purposes of impeachment or
corroboration." § at 511. For these signed statements, the Court concluded that "production
might be justified where the witnesses are no longer available or can be reached only with
difficulty." § However, "as to [the] oral statements made by [the] witnesses to [the attorney],

whether presently in the form of his mental impressions or memoranda," the Court did "not

14

believe that any showing of necessity [could] be made under the circumstances of [that] case to
justify production."’ § at 512. The Court reached this conclusion because
[u]nder ordinary conditions, forcing an attorney to repeat or write out all that
witnesses have told him and to deliver the account to his adversary gives rise to
grave dangers of inaccuracy and untrustworthiness. No legitimate purpose is
served by such production. The practice forces the attorney to testify as to what
he remembers or what he saw fit to write down regarding the witnesses’ remarks.
Such testimony could not qualify as evidence, and to use it for impeachment or
corroborative purposes would make the attorney much less an officer of the court

and much more an ordinary witness. The standards of the profession would
thereby suffer.

Hickman, 329 U.S. at 512-13. Justice Jackson, in concurring with the majority, elaborated on
this point:

1 can conceive of no practice more demoralizing to the Bar than to require a

lawyer to write out and deliver to his adversary an account of what witnesses have

told him. Even if his recollection were perfect, the statement would be his

language permeated with his inferences. Everyone who has tried it knows that it

is almost impossible so fairly to record the expressions and emphasis of a witness

that when he testifies in the environment of the court and under the influence of

the leading question there will not be departures in some respects.
§ at 516-17 (Jackson, J., concurring); see also Upjohn, 449 U.S. at 399 ("Forcing an attorney to
disclose notes and memoranda of witnesses’ oral statements is particularly disfavored because it
tends to reveal the attorney’s mental processes."); Notes of Advisory Committee on 1970
Amendrnent to Rules, 28 U.S.C.A., p. 442, guoted in Upjohn, 449 U.S. at 400 (noting that
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(3) "protect[s] against disclosure [of] the mental
impressions, conclusions, opinions, or legal theories . . . of an attorney or other representative of
a party. The Hickman opinion drew special attention to the need for protecting an attorney
against discovery of memoranda prepared from recollection of oral interviews." (emphasis

added)). The Hickman Court then concluded that "[i]f there should be a rare situation justifying

production of these matters, [the] petitioner’s case is not of that type." 329 U.S. at 513.

15

The Supreme Court further discussed the protection afforded to witness interview
memoranda in 1. That case involved an internal investigation conducted by corporate
counsel into "‘questionable payments"’ by the corporation’s subsidiary "to or for the benefit of
foreign government officials in order to secure government business." 449 U.S. at 386. As part
of its investigation, counsel dispatched a questionnaire to the corporation’s employees, and he,
along with outside counsel, also "interviewed the recipients of the questionnaire and some 33
other Upjohn officers or employees as part of the investigation." § at 387. Among the
individuals interviewed were seven former employees of the company. _S;c_e § at 394 n.3
("Seven of the . . . employees interviewed by counsel had terminated their employment with
Upjohn at the time of the interview."). The corporation then notified both the Securities and
Exchange Commission and the lntemal Revenue Service ("IRS") about the questionable
payments. § at 387.

The IRS "immediately began an investigation to determine the tax consequences of the
payments," seeking both the "written questionnaires," along with "memorandums or notes of the
interviews conducted in the United States and abroad with officers and employees of the"
corporation. § at 387-88. "The company declined to produce the documents . . . on the
grounds that they were protected from disclosure by the attorney-client privilege and constituted
the work product of attorneys prepared in anticipation of litigation." § at 388.

As to the questionnaire responses and interview memoranda pertaining to the former
employees, the Supreme Court declined to decide whether those communications were protected
either under the attorney-client privilege or the attorney work-product doctrine because this issue
had not been addressed by the trial court. § at 394 n.3. With regard to the current employees,

however, the Supreme Court held that "the responses to the questionnaires and any notes

16

reflecting responses to interview questions" were "covered by the attorney-client privilege," §
at 397, and that any additional matters reflected in the interview notes and memoranda were
entitled to protection under the "opinion" work product standard. S_e_e_ § at 401 (holding that the
work product at issue "cannot be disclosed simply on a showing of substantial need and . . .
undue hardship" that is sufficient for the discovery of "fact" work product). In rejecting the
argument that the notes and memoranda fell in the class of "relevant and nonprivileged facts"
whose "production . . . is essential to the preparation of one’s case," § at 399 (quoting Hickman,
449 U.S. at 511) (alteration in the original), the Supreme Court noted that this basis for
production recognized in Hickman did "not apply to ‘oral statements made by witnesses . . .
whether presently in the form of [the attorney’s] mental impressions or memoranda,’” § at 399
(quoting Hickman, 449 U.S. at 512). The Court concluded that requiring production of "notes
and memoranda of witnesses’ oral statements is particularly disfavored because it tends to reveal
the attorney’s mental processes." § Thus, the Supreme Court concluded in l that to the
extent the notes and memoranda "reveal communications, they are . . . protected by the attomey-
client privilege," and "[t]o the extent they do not reveal communications, they reveal the
attomey’s mental processes in evaluating the communications." § at 401. Put differently, by
remaining silent on the attorney work-product issue, Qpj_o§ did not foreclose the possibility that
the questionnaire and interview responses constituted "fact," rather than "opinion," work

product. ll

" The Supreme Court did note that if the trial court on remand determined that the questionnaire and interview
responses by the former employees were not covered by the attorney-client privilege, the Court’s discussion of
"opinion" work product nonetheless would be "relevant." I_d. at 394 n.3. The Supreme Court did not elaborate,
however, on the extent to which its discussion would be relevant with regard to these communications by the former
emp1oyees.

17

At least that was the District of Columbia Circuit’s reading of l as explained in

Sealed Case 1l. There, the Office of Independent Counsel sought production of "notes [from] a

conversation between a now-deceased White House official and his private attorney." j
l, 124 F.3d at 231. The notes were drafted during a "preliminary" interview that was
"initiated by the client." § at 236. The interview lasted two hours, and the attomey produced
three pages of notes in which "he underlined certain words, placing both checkmarks and
question marks next to certain sections." 1n re Sealed Case, 129 F.3d 637, 638 (D.C. Cir. 1997)
("Sealed Case lll") (Tatel, J., dissenting from denial of er_i _b_a_n_c hearing). The district court
found "that the notes were protected by the work-product privilege because they reflect[ed] the
mental impressions of the attorney." Sealed Case ll, 124 F.3d at 236 (internal quotation marks
omitted).

The Circuit reversed and remanded the case to the district court for further examination.
§ at 237. The Circuit acknowledged the Supreme Court’s pronouncement that "‘[f]orcing an
attorney to disclose notes and memoranda of witnesses’ oral statements is particularly disfavored
because it tends to reveal the attomey’s mental processes."’ § at 236 (quoting ll_pj§, 449
U.S. at 401) (alteration in original). But the Circuit noted that the Supreme Court had "not
decide[d]" in l_l_pjgh_n "whether [the] factual elements embodied in such notes should be accorded
the virtually absolute protection that the privilege gives to the attorney’s mental impressions,"
given that the l Court’s "reasoning seems to presuppose that such notes are analytically
divisible; . . . that the notes in question represented either communications protected by the
attorney-client privilege . . . or mental impressions protected by work-product privilege." §

The Circuit in Sealed Case ll did acknowledge its previous decision in Sealed Case l, in

which it held that where "the work product sought . . . is based on oral statements from

18

witnesses, a far stronger showing is required than the ‘substantial need’ and ‘without undue
hardship’ standard applicable to discovery of [‘fact’] work product." Sealed Case ll, 124 F.3d at
236 (emphasis added). But the Circuit found Sealed Case 1 (along with two other cases, Ytg
Govemment Bureau, Inc. and Cox v. Administrator, U.S. Steel, 17 F.3d 1386 (1 lth Cir. 1994))
distinguishable because those cases involved interviews that were conducted as "part of a
litigation-related investigation," and that under those circumstances, "the facts elicited
necessarily reflected a focus chosen by the lawyer." Sealed Case ll, 124 F.3d at 236 (emphasis
added). In Sealed Case ll, however, the attorney notes at issue were produced in connection with
a "preliminary" interview that "was . . . initiated by the client." § The Circuit suggested that in
these circumstances, while the attomey "was surely no mere potted palm, one would expect him
to have tried to encourage a fairly wide-ranging discourse from [his] client, so as to be sure that
any nascent focus on the lawyer’s part did not inhibit the client’s disclosures." § The Circuit
ultimately declined to rule on whether the notes constituted "fact" work product, § § at 236-
37 (noting that while the notes "contain[ed] factual material that could be classified as opinion
only on a virtually omnivorous view of the term," remand to the district court was proper for
"reexamin[ation] in light of [the Circuit’s] opinion"), but it did hold that “[w]here the context
suggests that the lawyer has not sharply focused or weeded the materials, the ordinary Rule
26(b)(3) standard (i.e., the "fact" work product standard) should apply." § Thus, Sealed Case
ll forecloses the proposition that all matters contained in attomey notes and memoranda are

absolutely entitled to heightened protection as "opinion" work product. § Dir. Office of Thrift

 

Supervision, 124 F.3d at 1308 ("We recently observed that under certain circumstances purely
factual material embedded in attorney notes may not deserve the super-protection afforded to a

lawyer’s mental impressions." (citing Sealed Case ll, 124 F.3d at 236-37)).

19

The Court also finds guidance on the "fact" versus "opinion" work product distinction in

cases construing 18 U.S.C. § 3500,12 the statute commonly referred to as the Jencks Act, and

" the Jentks Att, is u.s.c. § 3500 (2006), states the following

(a) 1n any criminal prosecution brought by the United States, no statement or report in the
possession of the United States which was made by a Govemment witness or prospective
Govemment witness (other than the defendant) shall be the subject of subpoena, discovery, or
inspection until said witness has testified on direct examination in the trial of the case.

(b) Af`ter a witness called by the United States has testified on direct examination, the court shall,
on motion of the defendant, order the United States to produce any statement (as hereinafter
defined) of the witness in the possession of the United States which relates to the subject matter as
to which the witness has testified. If the entire contents of any such statement relate to the subject
matter of the testimony of the witness, the court shall order it to be delivered directly to the
defendant for his examination and use.

(c) If the United States claims that any statement ordered to be produced under this section
contains matter which does not relate to the subject matter of the testimony of the witness, the
court shall order the United States to deliver such statement for the inspection of the court in
camera. Upon such delivery the court shall excise the portions of such statement which do not
relate to the subject matter of the testimony of the witness. With such material excised, the court
shall then direct delivery of such statement to the defendant for his use. lf, pursuant to such
procedure, any portion of such statement is withheld from the defendant and the defendant objects
to such withholding, and the trial is continued to an adjudication of the guilt of the defendant, the
entire text of such statement shall be preserved by the United States and, in the event the defendant
appeals, shall be made available to the appellate court for the purpose of determining the
correctness of the ruling of the trial judge. Whenever any statement is delivered to a defendant
pursuant to this section, the court in its discretion, upon application of said defendant, may recess
proceedings in the trial for such time as it may determine to be reasonably required for the
examination of such statement by said defendant and his preparation for its use in the trial.

(d) lf the United States elects not to comply with an order of the court under subsection (b) or (c)
hereof to deliver to the defendant any such statement, or such portion thereof as the court may
direct, the court shall strike from the record the testimony of the witness, and the trial shall
proceed unless the court in its discretion shall determine that the interests of justice require that a
mistrial be declared.

(e) The term "statement", as used in subsections (b), (c), and (d) of this section in relation to any
witness called by the United States, means--

(1) a written statement made by said witness and signed or otherwise adopted or
approved by him;

(2) a stenographic, mechanical, electrical, or other recording, or a transcription thereof,
which is a substantially verbatim recital of an oral statement made by said witness and

recorded contemporaneously with the making of such oral statement; or

(3) a statement, however taken or recorded, or a transcription thereof, if any, made by
said witness to a grand jury.

20

dealing with the issue of whether that statute requires production of "opinion" work product.l3
Under the Jencks Act, the government in a criminal prosecution must, under certain
circumstances, "produce any statement . . . of the witness in [its] possession . . . which relates to
the subject matter as to which the witness has testified." 18 U.S.C. § 3500(b). ln particular, the
types of "statements" producible under the Jencks Act include, i_ntg §, "a written statement
made by said witness and signed or otherwise adopted or approved by him," 18 U.S.C, §
3500(e)(1), as well as "a substantially verbatim recital of an oral statement made by said witness
and recorded contemporaneously with the making of such oral statement," 18 U.S.C. §
3500(@)(2). The intersection of the Jencks Act and the attomey work-product doctrine occurs
where a "statement" under the Jencks Act is found in a government attomey’s (or an agent of the
attorney’s) notes or memoranda.

The Supreme Court’s decision in Palmero v. United States, 360 U.S. 343 (1959),
provides a useful introduction to the Jencks Act. Although the work-product doctrine was not at
issue in Palermo, the Supreme Court did address the issue of whether memoranda memorializing
a witness interview conducted by an lnternal Revenue Service agent constituted a "statement" or
"substantial1y verbatim" statement under the Jencks Act. The Supreme Court analyzed the
Jencks Act and concluded that the Act "encompass[es] more than mere automatic reproductions
of oral statements." § at 352, At the same time, the Court concluded from the legislative
history of the Jencks Act that

[i]t is clear . . . Congress was concerned that only those statements which could
properly be called the witness’[sl own words should be made available to the

13 To be clear, the Court does not suggest that the Jencks Act is applicable in this case, given that the Act applies to
only those statements in the govemment’s possession, and it is DLA Piper in this instance that is in possession ofthe
attorney work product at issue in this case. Regardless, as the Court discusses below, the Supreme Court and
District of Columbia Circuit’s analysis of the attomey work-product doctrine in the context of the Jencks Act
concerns the nature of the statement itself, and not who is in possession of it. The analysis in the Jencks Act context,
therefore, is helpful to illuminate the distinction between "fact" and "opinion" work product.

21

defense for purposes of impeachment. lt was important that the statement could
fairly be deemed to reflect fully and without distortion what had been said to the
government agent. Distortion can be a product of selectivity as well as the
conscious or inadvertent infusion of the recorder’s opinions or impressions. lt is
clear . . . that the legislation was designed to eliminate the danger of distortion and
misrepresentation inherent in a report which merely selects portions, albeit
accurately, from a lengthy oral recital. Quoting out of context is one of the most
frequent and powerful modes of misquotation.

§ (emphasis added). For these reasons, the Supreme Court held that "summaries of an oral
statement which evidence substantial selection of material, or which were prepared after the
interview without the aid of complete notes, and hence rest on the memory of the agent," fall
outside the umbrella of "statements" or "substantially verbatim" statements that are required to
be produced by the govemment under the Jencks Act. § at 352-53. But where the witness’s
recorded remarks fall within the several definitions of what is considered a "statement" under the
Jencks Act, then the remarks can be fairly attributed to the witness and are, therefore,
discoverable under the Jencks Act. § at 352.

The Supreme Court then issued its decision in Goldberg v. United States, 425 U.S. 94

(1976), which addressed the issue of whether a "statement . . . adopted or approved by" a witness
under Section 3500(@)(1) could constitute "opinion" work product and, therefore, be exempt
from discovery under the Jencks Act. ln that case, a criminal defendant attempted to obtain from
the government handwritten notes pertaining to a key government witness. § at 101. At trial,
the witness was asked whether the government lawyers "sometimes questioned [him] about what
[he] had just said to make sure that they got it down correctly," to which the witness responded
that "[t]hey may have," although he was unsure whether such questions were "part of [a]
pattern." § at 100; see also § at 100-01 (citing trial transcript where witness was asked
whether the attorneys’ notes "[w]ere . . . read back to [him] to see whether or not they correctly

understood what [he was] saying," to which the witness responded “[p]robably from time to

22

time"); § at 101 (citing trial transcript where witness was asked whether he "either correct[ed]
them or sa[id] ‘Yes, that’s right,’ or ‘No, that’s not right,’ . . . [or] words to that effect," to which
the witness responded in the affirmative). The trial court denied the defendant access to these
notes on the grounds that the materials constituted attorney work product. §

The Supreme Court concluded that the trial court’s rulings were erroneous, § at 108, and
the matter was remanded to the trial court for further proceedings, § at 112. The Supreme
Court concluded that there is "nothing in the Jencks Act or its legislative history that excepts
from production otherwise producible statements on the ground that they constitute ‘work
product’ of [g]ovemment lawyers." § at 101-02. ln any event, the Supreme Court did not view
the disclosure of statements under the Jencks Act as "undermin[ing] the policies that gave rise to
the work-product doctrine," § at 105, because "[p]roper application of the Act will not compel
disclosure of a Government lawyer’s recordation of mental impressions, personal beliefs, trial
strategy, legal conclusions, or anything else that could not fairly be said to be the witness’[s] own
statement," § at 106 (intemal quotation marks omitted); see also § at 107 (observing that the
production of statements under the Jencks Act does not require the lawyer to be "called upon to
be a witness, since statements are produced only where they can fairly be said to be the
witness’[s] own" statements (internal quotation marks omitted)). Although the Supreme Court
acknowledged that "there is some risk that a witness’[s] words will be distorted in notes taken by
a Government lawyer," it noted that "there is no such danger where a witness has adopted or
approved the lawyer’s notes." § at 107 (intemal citation omitted). The Supreme Court then
concluded that further proceedings by the trial court were "necessary to determine whether the

prosecutors’ notes were actually read back to [the witness] and whether he adopted or approved

23

them,"ll § at 110, i.e., whether the remarks contained in the attorney’s memoranda or notes
were either read back or shown to the witness, s_e§ § at 111 n.19 (observing that an attorney’s
inquiries of a "general substance" to confirm "that he has correctly understood what the witness
has said . . . . do not constitute adoption or approval of the lawyer’s notes within [§] 3500(e)(1)"
of the Jencks Act).

Although Goldberg addressed only those "statements" that were either “adopted or
approved by the witness,” the District of Columbia Circuit reached a similar decision in a case
involving whether "substantially verbatim" notes drafted by a government attorney during a pre-
trial witness interview were exempt from production under the Jencks Act as "opinion" work
product. ln Saunders,l$ the Circuit concluded that where a "government attomey took down
what [a witness] said during the course of their interview[,] . . . . the trial judge was required to
determine whether" the statement was producible under the Jencks Act. 316 F.2d at 349. In
reaching its decision, the Circuit rejected the premise that such materials were protected from
disclosure under the work-product doctrine because "if the attomey has made only a
substantially verbatim record of his interview, then . . . his notes constitute a ‘statement’ and
include no protected material flowing from the attorney’s mental processes." § at 350. Thus,
the District of Columbia Circuit concluded that "if notes are substantially a verbatim recitation of
the witness’[s interview], there is no invasion of the attorney’s work product." § And, where

"the notes contain both verbatim remarks of the witness and personal observations of the

14 Similarly, if an interview memoranda constitutes "an accurate copy of a written statement made th[at same] day . .
. and adopted by [the witness] as his own," the memoranda is producible as a witness statement under the Jencks
Act. Campbell v. United States, 373 U.S. 487, 497 (1963).

‘5 lnterestingly, Saunders was authored by retired Supreme Court Justice Stanley F orman Reed, who was an active
Justice on the Supreme Court when the unanimous decision in Hickman was issued.

24

attomey, then [the Jencks Act] requires that the district judge inspect the statement and excise the
protected material if this is possible." §

To summarize the case law discussed above, Goldberg and Saunders stand for the
proposition that any attorney work-product materials containing either a "statement , . . approved
or adopted by" the witness or a "substantially verbatim recital of an oral statement made by [the]
witness and recorded contemporaneously with the making of such oral statement" do not
constitute "opinion" work product. This is because "statements" under the Jencks Act do not
"include . . . protected material flowing from the attorney’s mental processes." Saunders, 316
F.2d at 350. At best, these statements would be analogous to the signed witness statements in
Hickman and thus only entitled to protection as "fact" work product.

But the universe of "fact" work product is not limited to signed witness statements and
"statements" under the Jencks Act. For instance, the District of Columbia Circuit insinuated that
the attorney notes at issue in Sealed Case ll, or at least portions thereof, constituted "fact" work
product, even though there was no indication that the notes contained any "statement . . . adopted
or approved by" the witness, 18 U.S.C. § 3500(e)(1), or a "substantially verbatim recital of an
oral statement by [the] witness,"m 18 U.S.C. § 3500(e)(2). ln fact, as Judge Tatel pointed out in
his dissenting opinion from the Circuit’s denial of a rehearing g b§g, the attorney in that case
only produced three pages of notes from a two-hour interview, which hardly suggests that the
notes contained a verbatim transcription of the interview. Sealed Case lll, 129 F.3d at 638
(Tatel, J., dissenting from denial of g § hearing). Thus, even where the materials at issue do

not contain "statements" under the Jencks Act, the Court must still look to the "context" of the

'° Put differently, the Circuit’s discussion in Sealed Case ll of what constitutes "fact” work product did not depend
at all on whether the attorney’s notes contained any "statement" as the term is defined under the Jencks Act.

25

investigation and determine whether the attorney’s work product resulting from the investigation
appears to have been "sharply focused or weeded" by the attorney. Sealed Case ll, 124 F.3d at
236. And although the District of Columbia Circuit has provided scant instruction thus far on
how to apply the test, its analysis of the facts in Sealed Case 1 and Sealed Case ll provides the
following guidance: lf the work product contains facts elicited in the course of a "litigation-
related investigation" similar to the investigation discussed in Sealed Case l, then those facts
"necessarily reflect[] a focus chosen by the lawyer." Sealed Case ll, 124 F.3d at 236. However,
if the facts were drawn from a more general inquiry where the attorney would have attempted to
"encourage a fairly wide-ranging discourse from [his] client, so as to be sure that any nascent
focus on the lawyer’s part did not inhibit the client’s disclosures," §, then those facts are
entitled to less protection under the "fact" work-product standard.17

To be clear, however, simply because the record reflects a collection of facts that
"necessarily reflect[] a focus chosen by the lawyer," §, does not mean that those facts are
forever entitled to protection as "opinion" work product. As the cases above demonstrate, an
attorney can take certain actions that will, in essence, transform "opinion" work product into
"fact" work product. For instance, if an attorney authors a memorandum that includes a
completely paraphrased account of a witness’s interview, then the memorandum is entitled to
protection as "opinion" work product. But if the attorney provides the memorandum to the

witness, who then reviews the memorandum and signs it to indicate that he is adopting the

17 lt is not perfectly clear what the Circuit meant when it held that facts elicited in a "litigation-related investigation"
are necessarily reflective of an attomey’s focus, and that facts gamered from a more generalized inquiry are not
entitled to "opinion" work-product protection. After all, to be entitled to protection as either "fact" or "opinion"
work product, the materials must have been created with "an eye toward litigation." ln re Sealed Case, 29 F.3d 715,
718 (D.C. Cir. 1994). ln other words, even materials that constitute "fact" work product would appear to be created
as a result of a "litigation-related investigation." Nonetheless, the Court must respect the precedent of this Circuit
and attempt to apply to the best of its ability the standards articulated in the cases discussed above.

26

statements contained therein, then the attorney has now transformed that memorandum into a
signed witness statement, which is only entitled to protection as "fact" work product. 'l`hat much
is clear; of course, as the Court discusses below, this is not such a clear-cut case.

The upshot of the Court’s discussion up to this point is that the analysis of whether an
attomey’s work product constitutes "fact" or "opinion" work product is inherently and
necessarily fact-specific. ln other words, the Court must look at every facet of DLA Piper’,s
investigation to determine whether the law firm’s work product is entitled to the heightened
protection accorded to "opinion" work product. And, the ultimate objective for the Court is to
determine whether the work product at issue here contains either (1) "relevant and non-
privileged facts" that are "essential to the preparation of one’s case," Hickman, 329 U.S. at 511,
which would include "statements [that] could properly be called the witness’[s] own words,"
Pa1mero, 360 U.S. at 352, or (2) the attorney’s "‘mental impressions, conclusions, opinions, or
legal theories,"’ Deloitte, 610 F.3d at 135 (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(3)(B)), i.e., statements
that are attributable to the attorney, rather than the witnesses, § Goldberg, 425 U.S. at 107
(noting that one of the policies behind protection of attorney work product is to prevent the "use
of the attorney’s words for impeachment," thereby making "the attorney a witness rather than an
officer of the court"). With the aforementioned principles serving as the Court’s touchstone, the
Court turns to the factual aspects of DLA Piper’s investigation that the Court believes are

relevant to its ana1ysis.

27

III. Legal Analysis

Applying the principles stated above to the facts of this case, the Court concludes that, for
the most part,18 DLA Piper’s notes from its initial interviews of Mr. Radomski and Mr.
McNamee, as well as all of its interview memoranda, constitute "fact" work product and are,
therefore, entitled to a lower standard of protection under the principles set forth in Hickrnan and
_llpjo§lm.w The Court reaches its conclusion for three reasons: (l) with regard to the initial
interviews of both Mr. Radomski and Mr. l\/lcl\lamee, these interviews were of a general nature
and not "sharply focused or weeded" by DLA Piper; (2) government officials actively
participated in all of these interviews; and, most importantly, (3) DLA Piper made substantial
efforts to confirm the accuracy of the various statements contained in the memoranda with the
two interviewees. Taken together, these factors persuade the Court that the recorded remarks of
Mr. Radomski and Mr. McNamee contained in these notes and memoranda do not reflect the
mental impressions, thought processes, legal strategy, or personal assessments of DLA Piper; in
fact, they accurately depict the witnesses’ own words.

First, the Court finds that the notes from the initial interviews of Mr. Radomski and Mr.
McNamee fall squarely within the province of Sealed Case ll, As noted above, DLA Piper
acknowledged to the Court that it was inhibited in preparing for the initial interviews of Mr.

Radomski and Mr. McNamee because the law firm had not been made aware of the identity of

the witnesses until shortly before they were conducted. Given this limitation, the Court cannot

13 DLA Piper, on some occasions, included a section in its interview memoranda that it explicitly identified as
containing the attomey’s assessments ofthe witnesses, The Court’s ruling does not encompass these portions of the
memoranda.

19 Accordingly, the only notes that constitute "opinion" work product are those that accompanied the interview
memoranda of Mr. Radomski’s second interview. These notes were not affected by any of the three factors that the
Court discusses below, and they were drafted during an interview that the Court finds was sufficiently focused and
directed to qualify as "opinion" work product.

28

envision how DLA Piper could have developed a focused line of inquiry for either of these two
witnesses. Rather, the Court finds that DLA Piper’s objectives in these initial interviews of Mr.
Radomski and Mr. McNamee necessarily would have been to gather as much information as
possible concerning what they knew about the use of performance-enhancing drugs in Major
League Baseball. And to accomplish that objective, it seems only logical that DLA Piper would
have wanted to "encourage a fairly wide-ranging discourse from" these witnesses, Sealed Case
H, 124 F.3d at 236. Thus, the initial interviews of these witnesses are analogous to the
"preliminary” interview discussed in Sealed Case ll. Moreover, even assuming that the Court
agreed with DLA Piper that these notes were very "‘summary" in nature and did not constitute a
verbatim transcript of the hearing, 6/8/11 Hr’ g Tr. at 28:11-14, that factor alone is not sufficient
to undermine the "fact" work-product nature of this document, § Sealed Case ll, 124 F.3d at
236-37 (observing that at least portions of the notes "contain[ed] factual material that could be
classified as opinion only on a virtually omnivorous view of the term"); Sealed Case lll, 129
F.3d at 638 (Tatel, J., dissenting from denial of g _b__a§ hearing) (explaining that the attorney
only produced three pages of notes from a two-hour interview, suggesting that the attorney
"obviously wrote down what he thought was significant, omitting everything else"). For the
same reasons discussed in Sealed Case ll, the notes taken during the initial interviews of Mr.
Radomski’s and Mr. 1\/lcNamee’s initial interviews do not contain matters that were "sharply
focused or weeded" by DLA Piper.

Second, with regard to the initial interview notes and all of the memoranda, the Court
finds that DLA Piper failed to demonstrate to the Court that the government’s participation at the
interviews did not preclude it from exercising exclusive control over the focus and direction of

these interviews At least with regard to Mr. Radomski’s initial interview, DLA Piper stated that

29

a government agent provided the law finn with "a stack of papers" that consisted of (1)
"cancelled checks" from professional baseball players who had written the checks for
"substances that Mr. Radomski sold to them," (2) "packing slips," and (3) "other corroboration
of what Mr. Radomski was" stating during the interview. 6/8/11 Hr’g Tr. at 19:16-19. Given
that "most of the[se] papers found their way into the [Mitchell R]eport," § at 19:15, the Court
can reasonably assume that a substantial portion of the initial interview (and possibly portions of
the follow-up interviews) revolved around documentation that the government deemed to be
relevant to DLA Piper’s investigation. Thus, this factor certainly cuts against a finding that it
was DLA Piper alone that "sharply focused or weeded" the materials it sought to elicit in Mr.
Radomski’s initial interview.

Furthermore, as to all of the interviews, DLA Piper acknowledges that the government
officials who were present during these interviews would, at times, "ask some questions . . . . to
try to help . . . the witness refresh their recollection if they had said something differently before
or said they did[ not] remember now [what] they [had] said . . . earlier." § at 18:23-19:4. How
much of an impact the government’s participation in these interviews had on DLA Piper’s ability
to direct the interviews cannot be determined with any quantum of certainty, however, because
the law firm was unable to say for certain which portions of the interview memoranda reflected
statements by the witnesses made in response to questions asked by the government officials.
§e_e § at 32:17-19 (statement by David Clarke that one could not "conclude from silence in the
memo[randa] that there were not other instances [of government involvement] because the
memo[randa] are nowhere close to a verbatim [transcript]"). DLA Piper could only surmise that
the law firm’s attorneys asked about "90 percent of the questions" in these interviews, but it was

clear from the law firm’s representation to the Court that the estimate was a rough one at best.

30

S_ec_ § at 19:9-12 (statement by Mr. Scheeler that he can "only" provide "an estimate[,] but if
[he] had to say what was the portion of the questions asked by DLA Piper versus anyone in the
government[, it] would be . . . DLA Piper asking over 90 percent of the questions"). l\/loreover,
even assuming that DLA Piper asked the overwhelming majority of the questions during the
interviews, it is not clear that "90 percent" of the responses recorded in the notes and memoranda
resulted from questions asked solely by DLA Piper. As DLA Piper represented to the Court, the
notes do not reflect a verbatim transcript from the interviews, § at 28:10-15, and the
memoranda were further culled from the notes, § at 28:17-22. Thus, in filtering the
infonnation, it may have been the case that much, if not all, of the information omitted from the
law firm’s work product were responses to DLA Piper’s questions, thereby resulting in a higher
percentage of the government’s efforts being recorded in the work product. And, because DLA
Piper admits that "silence" in the notes and memoranda does not reflect whether the information
resulted from the government’s, rather than DLA Piper’s, questioning, § at 32:17-20, the Court
cannot determine how much of the work product stems from DLA Piper’s focus and direction.
lt is DLA Piper’s burden to demonstrate that its work product is entitled to heightened
protection, § ln re PEPCO Emp’t Lit., Civil Action No. 86-0603 (RCL), 1992 WL 310781, at
*4 (D.D.C. Oct. 2, 1992) (noting that the party seeking work-product protection has the burden
of "provid[ing] facts sufficient to support a judicial determination of the ‘fact’ or ‘opinion’
nature of the work product"’), and because the law firm is unable to represent with reasonable
certainty the extent of the government’s involvement in these interviews and which responses it
recorded were the product of government questioning, the Court must conclude that the
interview memoranda and initial interview notes constitute "fact," rather than "opinion," work

product. § ln re HealthSouth Corp. Sec. Litig,, 250 F.R.D. 8, 12 (D.D.C. 2008) (Bates, J.)

31

(relying, in part, on the fact that the law firm "neither crafted nor asked the questions" in
concluding that the firm’s interview summaries were "fact" work product).

Third, and most importantly, the Court finds that the statements contained in the
interview memoranda can be fairly attributed to the witnesses because of DLA Piper’s efforts to
ensure the accuracy of its memoranda. DLA Piper represented to the Court that one of the main
objectives for the follow-up interviews was to clarify and confinn the information gathered in its
previous interviews. _S_e_e 6/8/11 Hr’ g Tr. at 15:21-16:4 ("[W]e were trying to . . . make sure that
every single sentence in [the Mitchell Report] were accurately and fairly written to the best of
our ability. So those latter interviews were largely an exercise of DLA Piper . . . . confirming
information, [and] getting clarifications of information where we weren’t certain of exactly what
we had gotten . . . in the earlier interviews."); § at 24:3-8 (statement by l\/lr. Scheeler that DLA
Piper conducted "follow[-]up interviews . . . to make sure the information we had was accurate . .
. ."). These efforts resulted in at least one instance where DLA Piper revised an interview
memorandum after reviewing the substance of the document with Mr. Radomski and discovering
several erroneous statements.zo Furthermore, in drafting the interview memoranda, DLA Piper
emphasized that its attomeys would collaborate to ensure that the memoranda contained accurate
statements from the witnesses, _S_e_e § at 17:16-18 (statement by Mr. Scheeler that in drafting
the interview memoranda, the attorneys would review the memoranda for accuracy); § at 17:18-
19 (statement by l\/Ir. Scheeler that an interview memorandum would be finalized "[w]hen
everybody was confident it was accurate"); § at 22:20-23:4 ("Those persons who participated in
the interview but did not write the initial memoranda would look at the memoranda . . . . We

wanted to make sure [the interview memoranda were] accurate . . . ."); § at 24;15-21 (statement

20 The Court cannot provide any further description of this example without divulging protected work product
contained in the original and revised memoranda.

32

by Mr. Scheeler that DLA Piper would check the information in the memoranda "against other
data [that] we had," for the purpose of "determin[ing] whether the information was accurate or
not"). Of course, these efforts were reasonable because DLA Piper expected to rely heavily on
these memoranda in drafting the Mitchell Report; in fact, a comparison of the Report to the
interview memoranda reveals that many of the statements in the Report are taken verbatim or
substantially verbatim from the memoranda. DLA Piper, therefore, needed "to do everything . . .
humanly possible [to] make sure everything in the [R]eport was accurate," § at 16:12-14, which
included taking the necessary steps to ensure that the law finn "accurately captured [the
witnesses’] statements," § at 24:13-14; see also § at 23:14-15 ("[O]ne of the reasons we
needed to have accurate interview memo[randa was] because what we were learning from one
witness ha[d] an impact on what we were asking other witnesses."). Based on the efforts
employed by DLA Piper, the Court is confident that the statements contained in these
memoranda can be fairly attributed to the witnesses, and thus it harbors no concem that the
production of these statements would lead to DLA Piper attorneys having "to testify as to what
[they] remember[] or what [they] saw fit to write down regarding the witnesses’ remarks."21
Hickman, 329 U.S. at 513; see also § at 516-17 (Jackson, J., concurring) (expressing concern
over the production of "statement[s]" written in the attorney’s "language [and] permeated with

his references").

21 In the event that either l\/lr. Radomski or Mr. McNamee denies making the statements recorded in DLA Piper’s
interview memoranda or initial interview notes, it is possible that the defendant will need to call a DLA Piper
attorney to testify in order to complete the impeachment of the witness. But such testimony need not include the
attorney’s recollection of the witness’s statements, or the attomey’s reasons for recording the particular statement in
question To properly impeach the witness with a statement contained in these attomey work-product materials, the
defendant will be required to demonstrate only that (1) the DLA Piper attomey interviewed the witness, (2) the
witness provided information to the attomey, (3) the attorney attempted to accurately capture in the work product
information provided by the witness, (4) DLA Piper took steps to ensure the accuracy of the information contained
in the work product, and (5) the purportedly inconsistent statement is reflected in the work product. Thus, because a
successful impeachment can occur without requiring DLA Piper’s attomeys to opine as to what the witnesses
previously stated during these interviews, the Court is even more convinced that these materials constitute "fact,"
rather than "opinion," work product.

33

To be sure, the Court’s conclusion is not affected by the fact that DLA Piper never
reviewed its interview memoranda with Mr. Radomski and Mr. McNamee, or that it never read
any specific portions of the memoranda to the witnesses to confirm their accuracy. 6/8/11 Hr’ g
Tr. at 31 :18-20. While this factor would carry more weight in the context of the Jencks Act, §
Goldberg, 425 U.S. at 110 n.19 (noting that a witness has not “adopted or approved" a lawyer’s
writings if "the lawyer does not read back, or the witness does not read, what the lawyer has
written"), here the Court need not find that the memoranda contains "statements" as defined by
the Jencks Act in order to conclude that the memoranda constitutes "fact" work product. The
Court need only be satisfied that the remarks recorded in the interview memoranda can be fairly
attributed to the witnesses. C_f. Palermo, 360 U.S. at 352 (noting that Congress was concerned
that production under the Jencks Act be limited to "only those statements which could properly
be called the witness’[s] own words," and "that the statement could fairly be deemed to reflect
fully and without distortion what had been said to the government agent"). And for the reasons
discussed above, the Court is indeed satisfied that the memoranda accurately reflect the
witnesses’ statements to DLA Piper.

DLA Piper must therefore produce portions of the interview memoranda and the initial
interview notes to the defendant, provided that he has demonstrated a substantial need for the
materials, and that it would be an undue burden to require that he attempt to obtain the materials
from another source. And, based on defense counsel’s representations the Court concluded at
the April 21, 2011 hearing and in its April 27, 2011 Order that the defendant established a
substantial need for "(1) . . . statements [that] are inconsistent with the statements made by [Mr.
Radomski or Mr. McNamee] in interviews conducted by the government prior to their interviews

with DLA Piper," or (2) any statements by Mr. McNamee that "are consistent with the

34

defendant’s theory that Mr. McNamee has progressively embellished the facts that form the basis
of the offenses charged in the lndictment." April 27, 2011 Order at 2 n.l,  
Clemens, Criminal Action No. 10-223 (RBW) (D.D.C.). l\/loreover, the defendant could not
possibly learn what was actually discussed during DLA Piper’s interviews of Mr. Radomski and
Mr. McNamee without obtaining the law firm’s notes and interview memoranda;zz thus, the
defendant satisfied the "undue burden" prong as well.B As a result, the defendant has made a
sufficient showing to pierce the cloak of protection that otherwise might be accorded to DLA
Piper’s "fact" work product.

To determine which statements should be made available to the defendant, the Court
intended as part of its m §§ review to excise for production the discoverable statements from
DLA Piper’s work product. As the Court soon discovered in reviewing these materials, the
problem with this approach is that the Court lacks sufficient knowledge about the defendant’s
theory of the case to detennine whether the statements contained in these materials are either
inconsistent with other statements in the record, or an embellishment of other statements
Without this knowledge, the Court might inadvertently allow statements that would be beneficial
to the defendant to remain undisclosed, thereby prejudicing his ability to put forth his best
possible defense at trial. Furthermore, if the Court were to only provide the defendant with
specific instances of what seem to be inconsistent or embellished statements, without providing
other potentially germane portions of the initial interview notes and interview memoranda that

could possibly give context to those statements, the Court risks prejudicing the govemment

22 The govemment officials who attended the interviews did not take notes and no law enforcement reports were
prepared by the law enforcement agents who were in attendance. § 6/8/1 1 Hr’g Tr. at 20:6-8 (statement by Mr.
Scheeler that he could "not recall [the govemment officials] taking notes").

23 Although the "undue burden" analysis is rather straight forward, the Court acknowledges that it did not
communicate its findings regarding the "undue burden" prong either at the April 21, 2011 Hearing, or in the April
27, 2011 Order.

because it would not have the opportunity to review those contextual statements in order to
adequately rebut the purported inconsistency.zl S§ Palmero, 360 U.S. at 352 ("Quoting out of
context is one of the most frequent and powerful modes of misquotation."). The Court’s original
approach, therefore, could possibly "distort the record, mislead the factfinder, and undennine the
central truth-seeking function of the courts." Swidler & Berlin v. United States, 524 U.S. 399,
413 (1998) (O’Connor, J., dissenting).

At the same time, the Court is hesitant to give the defendant the entirety of DLA Piper’s
"fact" work product because much of the interview memoranda and initial interview notes, at
least at this stage in the litigation, do not seemingly have any relevance to the matters that will be
at issue in the upcoming trial. By allowing the defendant complete access to irrelevant materials
the Court would be giving short shrift to the protections otherwise accorded to DLA Piper’s
"fact" work product. Accordingly, after further consideration of the record and governing case
law, the Court finds that the more sensible approach is to provide the defendant with every
statement provided by Mr. Radomski or Mr. McNamee in DLA Piper’s work product that
directly pertains to the defendant, and to redact all other information contained in these materials
The Court concludes that this is the more prudent approach because, at this point in the litigation,
the only information contained in the work product that the Court can be certain will be at issue
at trial are those statements regarding the defendant that were provided by Mr. Radomski or Mr.
McNamee. While information concerning the other matters discussed in DLA Piper’s work

product might also be brought out at trial, the likelihood of such production is unclear, and even

24 The govemment, of course, would only be entitled to view DLA Piper’s work product if the defendant makes
evidentiary use of these materials at trial. S_ee Fed. R. Evid. 612 (requiring a party that "uses a writing to refresh [a
witness’s] memory for the purpose of testifying" to produce that writing to the "adverse party . . . at the hearing");
Fed. R. Evid. 614 ("ln examining a witness concerning a prior statement made by the witness, whether written or
not, the statement need not be shown nor its contents disclosed to the witness at that time, but on request the same
shall be shown or disclosed to opposing counsel.")

36

assuming that these subjects are raised, it seems quite possible that these subjects will be
"collateral" to the matters at issue and therefore are not subject to impeachment by DLA Piper’s
work product. § United States v. Pugh, 436 F.2d 222, 225 (D.C. Cir. 1970) ("[A] witness may
not be impeached by extrinsic evidence (contradiction by another witness or evidence) on a
collateral issue."). ln any event, if necessary based on what occurs during the trial, the Court
will revisit whether other portions of DLA Piper’s work product must be produced to the
def`endant. Accordingly, at this time, the Court will require that DLA Piper produce only those
portions of its interview memoranda and initial interview notes that directly pertain to the
defendant, The Court believes that this approach properly balances the interests of DLA Piper in
protecting its work product to the fullest extent possible, while also allowing the defendant
access to the information that he needs to present his defense.

To further ensure that DLA Piper’s work product is provided the protection it deserves
under the circumstances the Court will issue a protective order limiting the defendant’s use of
these materials Specifically, the Court will limit the defendant’s use to only those circumstances
that are necessary to present his defense at trial. Any use of these materials in any unrelated
litigation or in any other manner is strictly prohibited. The government, if it has been provided
with any of the work product, will be subject to the same restrictions Moreover, both parties
will be required to immediately retum to the Court at the conclusion of the trial any notes and
memoranda they have received during the course of this litigation.

IV. Conclusion

With the exception of one set of notes g s_ug;a_ p. 28 nl9, as well as those portions of

DLA Piper’s interview memoranda that are explicitly labeled as the assessments of the attorneys

g supra p. 28 n.18, the Court concludes that the remainder of DLA Piper’s notes and

37

memoranda constitute "fact" work product. As to the interview notes created during the initial
interviews of Mr. Radomski and Mr. l\/lcNamee, those materials were created in an almost
identical context to those created in Sealed Case ll, which the District of Columbia Circuit
strongly suggested constituted "fact" work product. With regard to the initial interview notes
and all of the interview memoranda, these documents are not entitled to protection as "opinion"
work product because DLA Piper has failed to meet its burden of demonstrating that the
government’s involvement did not otherwise impact its ability to "sharply focus or weed" the
inquiries made of the witnesses But more importantly, as to the interview memoranda,
heightened protection for these documents is not warranted because the statements contained
therein are an accurate reflection of the witnesses’ statements, not the attomeys’ mental
impressions of what the witnesses had stated or what the attorneys thought was important to
record, For these reasons all of the materials just described are "fact" work product, and
because the defendant has demonstrated a "substantial need" for those portions of the materials
that he would be unable to obtain without undue hardship, Dir., Office of Thrift Supervision, 124
F.3d at 1307 (intemal quotation marks omitted), the Court concludes that those portions must be
produced to the defendant.

As noted above, DLA Piper is required to produce to the defendant those portions of its
interview memoranda and initial interview notes that contain statements pertaining to the
defendant and that were made by Mr. Radomski or Mr. McNamee. The remainder of the work
product will be redacted, as the defendant has not established, at least at this point, a substantial
need for this infonnation. ln the event that these other portions of DLA Piper’s work product
become relevant at trial, then the Court will determine at that time whether further production is

necessary. ln addition, the Court will issue a protective order to ensure that DLA Piper’s work

38

product remains protected to the fullest extent possible. Finally, prior to requiring production of
these materials to the defendant, the Court will advise DLA Piper of what information it will
need to produce to the defendant, so as to afford it the opportunity to appeal the Court’s decision

to the District of Columbia Circuit.

so oRDERED this 21st day oritme, 2011.”  
l M//> /@1/ /\3$
R’EGGE»Y§. wALToN \/
United States District Judge

25 An order is being issued contemporaneously with this memorandum opinion (1) granting in part and denying in
part DLA Piper’s motion to quash the subpoena d§e_s_ tecum; and (2) directing DLA Piper to inform the Court in
writing no later than June 25, 2011, as to whether it will appeal the Court’s ruling to the District of Columbia
Circuit. Should DLA Piper decide not to appeal the Court’s ruling to the District of Columbia Circuit, then the
Court will issue a protective order forthwith barring the defendant from disclosing any portion of DLA Piper’s work
product unless such disclosure is necessary to his defense at trial.

39