N RE: M.H., Cite as 108 AFTR 2d 2011-XXXX, 08/19/2011
In re: Grand Jury Investigation M.H.
Case Information:
Code Sec(s):
Court Name: UNITED
STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT,
Docket No.: No.
11-55712; D.C. No. 10-GJ-0200,
Date Decided:
08/19/2011Argued and Submitted June 24, 2011—Pasadena, California.
Disposition:
HEADNOTE
.
Reference(s):
OPINION
Pamela J. Naughton and Rebecca S. Roberts, Sheppard Mullin
Richter & Hampton LLP, San Diego, California, for appellant M.H.
Frank P. Cihlar, Gregory Victor Davis, Alexander P. Robbins,
Tax Division, Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., for appellee United
States of America.
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT,
Appeal from the United States District Court for the
Southern District of California Irma E. Gonzalez, Chief District Judge,
Presiding
Before: William C. Canby, Jr., Ronald M. Gould, and Richard
C. Tallman, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Tallman
OPINION
Judge: TALLMAN, Circuit Judge:
FOR PUBLICATION
Appellant M.H. is the target of a grand jury investigation
seeking to determine whether he used secret Swiss bank accounts to evade paying
federal taxes. The district court granted a motion to compel M.H.'s compliance
with a grand jury subpoena duces tecum demanding that he produce certain
records related to his foreign bank accounts. The court declined to condition
its order compelling production upon a grant of limited immunity and, pursuant
to the recalcitrant witness statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1826, held M.H. in contempt
for refusing to comply. M.H. appealed.
The foreign bank account information the Government seeks is
information M.H. is required to keep and maintain for inspection under the Bank
Secrecy Act of 1970 (BSA), 31 U.S.C. § 5311, and its related regulations. M.H.
argues that if he provides the sought-after information, he risks incriminating
himself in violation of his Fifth Amendment privilege. He asserts that the
information he is being asked to produce might conflict with other information
M.H. has previously reported to the Internal Revenue Service (IRS). Production
might reveal, for instance, that he has accounts he has not reported or that
the information he has previously reported is inaccurate. On the other hand, if
M.H. denies having the records, he risks incriminating himself because failing
to keep the information when required to do so is a felony.
The district court concluded that under the Required Records
Doctrine, the Fifth Amendment did not apply. That doctrine recognizes that when
certain conditions are met, records required to be maintained by law fall
outside the scope of the privilege. We agree that, under the Required Records
Doctrine, the Fifth Amendment does not apply. We therefore affirm the district
court's order of contempt for failing to produce the information the grand jury
sought.
I
In 2009, as part of a deferred-prosecution agreement with
the United States Department of Justice, the Swiss bank UBS AG (UBS) provided
the federal government with bank account records identifying approximately 250
U.S. taxpayers UBS might have aided in committing tax evasion. The UBS records
showed that in 2002, M.H. transferred securities from his UBS account to a
different Swiss bank, UEB Geneva. IRS agents began investigating him.
In June 2010, a San Diego federal grand jury issued a
subpoena duces tecum to M.H. for records he was required to keep pursuant to
Treasury Department regulations governing offshore banking. The subpoena
demanded production of:
[a]ny and all records required to be maintained pursuant to
31 C.F.R. § 103.32 [subsequently relocated to 31 C.F.R. § 1010.420] relating to
foreign financial accounts that you had/have a financial interest in, or
signature authority over, including records reflecting the name in which each
such account is maintained, the number or other designation of such account,
the name and address of the foreign bank or other person with whom such account
is maintained, the type of such account, and the maximum value of each such account
during each specified year.
(Emphasis added). 1 M.H. declined to provide the requested
information and also declined to deny having it, reasoning that either response
posed a risk of self-incrimination under the Fifth Amendment to the United
States Constitution. The district court ordered him to comply anyway. When he
again refused to produce the requested documents, the court conducted a
show-cause hearing for failing to comply with its order and found him in
contempt. However, because the district court considered M.H.'s arguments
“substantial and worthy of appellate review,” the court stayed the contempt
order pending appeal, contingent on M.H.'s posting of a $250,000 cash bond.
M.H. is not currently incarcerated and may travel without restriction.
The information identified in the subpoena mirrors the
banking information that 31 C.F.R. § 1010.420 2 requires taxpayers using
offshore bank accounts to keep and maintain for government inspection. The
information the subpoena seeks is also identical to information that anyone
subject to § 1010.420 already reports to the IRS annually through Form TD F
90-22.1, known as a “Report of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts,” or “FBAR.”
Therefore, the information at issue in this contempt proceeding is information
that M.H. —if he has a foreign bank account and meets other qualifications
specified in the BSA—must keep, report to the Treasury Department, and maintain
for IRS inspection.
II
We review de novo mixed questions of law and fact contained
within the analysis of a civil contempt proceeding.Shoen v. Shoen , 48 F.3d
412, 414 (9th Cir. 1995). We review for clear error any factual findings
underlying the contumacious behavior. United States v. Bright, 596 F.3d 683, 694 [105 AFTR 2d 2010-1124]
(9th Cir. 2010). Where incarceration has been stayed pending appeal and no
party is harmed by the delay, we may exceed the thirty-day time limit for
deciding appeals that § 1826 would
otherwise impose. In re Grand Jury Witness, 695 F.2d 359, 361 n.4 (9th Cir.
1982).
III
A
[1] As a preliminary matter, M.H. argues that—for a number
of reasons—§ 1010.420 does not apply to him, so he is not required to comply
with the grand jury's subpoena and we need not reach the Fifth Amendment
question. But at this point in its investigation, the Government need not prove
the regulation or the BSA apply. It need only show a “reasonable possibility”
that the subpoena will serve the grand jury's legitimate investigative purpose.
United States v. R. Enters., Inc., 498 U.S. 292, 300–01 (1991).
The Government is not required to justify the issuance of a
grand jury subpoena by presenting evidence sufficient to establish probable
cause because the very purpose of its inquiry is to establish whether probable
cause exists to accuse the taxpayer of violating our tax laws. See id. at 297
(“The grand jury occupies a unique role in our criminal justice system. It is
an investigatory body charged with the responsibility of determining whether or
not a crime has been committed. Unlike this Court, whose jurisdiction is
predicated on a specific case or controversy, the grand jury “can investigate
merely on suspicion that the law is being violated, or even just because it
wants assurance that it is not.”” (citation omitted)).
[2] There are, of course, limits to the grand jury's
authority. See, e.g, id. at 299 (stating that a grand jury may not “engage in
arbitrary fishing expeditions” or base its investigation on “malice or an
intent to harass”). But there is no evidence of excess here. We have examined
the evidence in the sealed record along with the evidence the district court
reviewed in camera. That evidence confirms that the grand jury's inquiry is a
legitimate exercise of its investigatory authority. If it is later established
that, for whatever legal reason, the regulation at issue does not apply to
M.H., then the Government will be unable to successfully prosecute him and
there is no risk of a Fifth Amendment violation. Until then, however, M.H.'s
obligation to comply with the grand jury subpoena is not contingent upon
whether the Government has proven the BSA and its regulations apply to him as a
U.S. taxpayer who has previously filed FBARs with the Department of the
Treasury.
B
[3] M.H. argues that the Required Records Doctrine— which,
if it applies, renders the Fifth Amendment privilege inapplicable—does not
apply to this case and that the district court erred in finding otherwise. The
Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution states that “[n]o person ...
shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness against himself.” The
Supreme Court has held that where documents are voluntarily created and kept,
compelling their disclosure does not implicate the privilege against
self-incrimination. See United States v. Doe,
465 U.S. 605, 611–12 [57 AFTR 2d 86-1270] (1984) (citingFisher v. United
States , 425 U.S. 391, 409–10 [37 AFTR
2d 76-1244] (1976)). Where documents are required to be kept and then produced,
they are arguably compelled. However, the Supreme Court has recognized that in
such circumstances, the privilege does not extend to records required to be
kept as a result of an individual's voluntary participation in a regulated
activity.See Shapiro v. United States , 335 U.S. 1, 17 (1948) (noting that the
nature of documents and the capacity in which they are held may indicate that
“the custodian has voluntarily assumed a duty which overrides his claim of
privilege” (quoting Wilson v. United States, 221 U.S. 361, 380 (1911))). Our
task is to determine whether the records sought in this case fall into the
former or latter category. If they fall into the latter, the Required Records
Doctrine applies and the privilege is unavailable to M.H., who has voluntarily
participated in a regulated activity.
[4] In Shapiro—credited for establishing the principles of
what has come to be known as the Required Records Doctrine —the Supreme Court
required a wholesaler of fruit and produce to turn over certain records he was
obliged to keep and maintain for examination pursuant to the Emergency Price
Control Act, which applied in part to records “customarily kept.” See Marchetti
v. United States, 390 U.S. 39, 55 [21
AFTR 2d 539] (1968). The Court reasoned that the Required Records “principle
applies not only to public documents in public offices, but also to records
required by law to be kept in order that there may be suitable information of
transactions which are the appropriate subjects of governmental regulation, and
the enforcement of restrictions validly established.” Shapiro, 335 U.S. at 17.
Twenty years after Shapiro, the Court considered two cases
that examined whether being required to pay an excise tax on one's gambling
wagers violated the Fifth Amendment. Those two cases were Marchetti and Grosso
v. United States, 390 U.S. 62 [21 AFTR
2d 554] (1968). In its analysis in those cases, the Court identified three
principles fromShapiro that distinguished it fromGrosso and Marchetti where,
the Court concluded, the Required Records Doctrine did not apply.See Marchetti
, 390 U.S. at 56–57 (“We think that neither Shapiro nor the cases upon which it
relied are applicable here.... Each of the three principal elements of the
[Required Records Doctrine], as it is described in Shapiro, is absent from this
situation.”); Grosso, 390 U.S. at 67–68 (“The premises of the [Required Records
Doctrine], as it is described in Shapiro, are evidently three: first, the
purposes of the United States' inquiry must beessentially regulatory ; second,
information is to be obtained by requiring the preservation of records of a kind
which the regulated party has customarily kept; and third, the records
themselves must have assumed “public aspects” which render them at least
analogous to public documents.... [B]oth the first and third factors are
plainly absent from this case.” (emphasis added)).
Since Grosso and Marchetti, the Supreme Court has applied
Shapiro and the principles underlying the Required Records Doctrine broadly to
“items that are the legitimate object of the government's noncriminal
regulatory powers,” Baltimore City Dept. of Soc. Servs. v. Bouknight, 493 U.S.
549, 557 (1990), regardless of whether they are required to be kept and
regardless of whether they are records. See, e.g., California v. Byers, 402
U.S. 424, 427–31 (1971) (applying Required Records Doctrine principles and
concluding that a state statute requiring drivers involved in vehicle accidents
to stop at the scene of the accident and leave their names and addresses for
police did not infringe the Fifth Amendment); Bouknight, 493 U.S. at 558
(applying the Required Records Doctrine to determine that a parent lacked a
Fifth Amendment privilege in producing her child in response to a court's
order).
[5] We have recognized that the three principles announced
in Grosso define the Required Records Doctrine, but have also adopted the
Supreme Court's flexibility in applying those principles. See In reGrand Jury
Proceedings (Doe M.D.), 801 F.2d 1164, 1168 (9th Cir. 1986) (“Under [the
Required Records Doctrine], the Fifth Amendment privilege does not apply if: (1)
the purpose of the government's inquiry is regulatory, not criminal; (2) the
information requested is contained in documents of a kind the regulated party
customarily keeps; and (3) the records have public aspects.”);see also U.S. SEC
v. Fehn , 97 F.3d 1276, 1291–92 (9th Cir. 1996) (observing that we have applied
the Required Records Doctrine “principles in a variety of contexts, and have
accorded them varying emphasis”).
Even though M.H. is being asked to turn over reports he is
required to keep pursuant to the BSA and its regulations, the Government,
citing Byers, Bouknight, andFehn , suggests that all three requirements need
not be met. While it is true that when the Required Records Doctrine is applied
to items other than records a rigid application of all three factors may not be
necessary, see, e.g., Bouknight, 493 U.S. at 558–60 (applying the “principles”
of the Required Records Doctrine and concluding that a mother compelled to
produce her child through a court order could not invoke a Fifth Amendment
privilege against self-incrimination to resist the order); United States v. Des
Jardins, 747 F.2d 499, 507–09 (9th Cir. 1984) (concluding that the Fifth
Amendment privilege does not apply to a requirement under the BSA that
travelers transferring more than $5,000 out of the country file a written
report, but considering only whether the regulation at issue was essentially
regulatory or criminal in nature), rev'd on other grounds, 772 F.2d 578 (9th
Cir. 1985), we need not resolve that issue here. Even if we assume, for
purposes of decision, that all three prongs of the test set forth in Grosso
apply, we conclude that all three requirements are met in this case.
1. “Essentially regulatory”
We begin by recognizing that when compelled disclosure has
incriminating potential, “the judicial scrutiny is invariably a close one.”
Byers, 402 U.S. at 427. In evaluating the danger of incrimination, we consider
whether the requirement in question is essentially regulatory or criminal in
nature. Doe M.D., 801 F.2d at 1168. In doing so, “[i]t is irrelevant that
records kept for regulatory purposes may be useful to a criminal grand jury
investigation.” Id. Instead, we consider whether the statutory or regulatory
requirement involves an area “permeated with criminal statutes,” whether it is
“aimed at a highly selective group inherently suspect of criminal activities,”
Des Jardins, 747 F.2d at 508 (internal citations and quotation marks omitted),
and whether complying with the requirement would “generally ... prove a significant
“link in a chain” of evidence tending to establish guilt.” Id. at 509 (internal
quotation marks omitted). M.H. argues that, for several reasons, the BSA's
record-keeping provision is criminal in nature, not regulatory. Our precedent
indicates otherwise.
[6] M.H. first argues that § 1010.420 is criminal in nature
because the BSA's “primary purpose is to detect criminal conduct, specifically
money laundering, terrorism and tax evasion.” To support this position, M.H.
points to language in the BSA describing the purpose of the statute as
requiring “certain reports or records, where they have a high degree of
usefulness in criminal, tax, or regulatory investigations or proceedings, or in
the conduct of intelligence or counterintelligence activities, including
analysis, to protect against international terrorism.” See 31 U.S.C. § 5311.
M.H. also cites language from the IRS Web site describing the BSA as the first
law to fight money laundering in the United States, along with legislative
history indicating congressional interest in combating criminal activity.
[7] The Supreme Court has already considered and rejected
these arguments as they relate to the BSA generally. InCalifornia Bankers Ass'n
v. Shultz , 416 U.S. 21, 76–77 [33 AFTR
2d 74-1041] (1974), the Court observed that the goal of assisting in the
enforcement of criminal laws “was undoubtedly prominent in the minds of the
legislators,” as they considered the BSA. However, it noted that “Congress
seems to have been equally concerned with civil liability which might go
undetected by reason of transactions of the type required to be recorded or
reported.” Id. at 76. The Court concluded that “the fact that a legislative
enactment manifests a concern for the enforcement of the criminal law does not
cast any generalized pall of constitutional suspicion over it.” Id. at 77.
Therefore, that Congress aimed to use the BSA as a tool to combat certain
criminal activity is insufficient to render the BSA essentially criminal as
opposed to essentially regulatory.
Turning to the specific regulation in question, our analysis
in Des Jardins is informative. There, we considered whether a particular BSA
record-reporting provision, which required travelers to report transporting
more than $5,000 in monetary instruments across the United States border, was
essentially criminal in nature and determined it was not. In that case, a U.S.
Customs Agent working at the Los Angeles International Airport—as part of a
project to detect narcotics-related criminal activity—noticed that Des
Jardins's travel route paralleled those drug couriers frequently took. Des
Jardins, 747 F.2d at 501. The agent inspected Des Jardins's luggage and found
$5,000. Upon searching Des Jardins's person, the agent discovered several
thousand more dollars. Id. at 502. Des Jardins was ultimately convicted for
violating the reporting requirement.
We considered whether the reporting requirement violated Des
Jardins's Fifth Amendment privilege, and we analyzed whether the fact that the
regulation was not “exclusively regulatory” made it essentially criminal. Id.
at 508–09 (emphasis added). We determined it did not.Id. at 509. We reasoned in
part that “[s]ince the transportation of monetary instruments in such amounts
is not itself illegal and since there is no reason to suppose that the
transportation of monetary instruments in such amounts is generally connected
with criminal activity, the vast majority of people subject to the requirement
are not suspect of illegality.” Id.
[8] The same can be said here. There is nothing inherently
illegal about having or being a beneficiary of an offshore foreign banking
account. According to the Government, § 1010.420 applies to “hundreds of
thousands of foreign bank accounts—over half a million in 2009.” Nothing about
having a foreign bank account on its own suggests a person is engaged in
illegal activity. That fact distinguishes this case from Marchetti and Grosso,
where the activity being regulated—gambling—was almost universally illegal, so
that paying a tax on gambling wagers necessarily implicated a person in
criminal activity. Admitting to having a foreign bank account carries no such
risk. That the information contained in the required record may ultimately lead
to criminal charges does not convert an essentially regulatory regulation into
a criminal one. See Des Jardins, 747 F.2d at 508; see also Marchetti, 390 U.S.
at 57.
Considering whether the sought-after information would
likely serve as a significant chain in a link of evidence establishing guilt,
we found relevant in Des Jardins the nature of the specific information
travelers were required to report (the legal capacity in which the person
filing the report was acting; the origin, destination, and route being
traveled; and the amount and kind of monetary instruments transported). We
concluded that because such evidence lacked an inherently criminal quality, it
would not likely serve as a significant link in a chain of evidence. Des
Jardins, 747 F.2d at 508–09.
[9] M.H. was required to maintain, and through the subpoena
is being asked to produce, the following information:
((1)) The name in which each account is maintained;
((2)) The number or other designation of such account;
((3)) The name and address of the foreign bank or other
person with whom such account is maintained;
((4)) The type of such account;
((5)) The maximum value of each such account during the
reporting period.
[10] This information is not inherently criminal. As in Des
Jardins, it is the act of not reporting (or in this case the act of not maintaining
for inspection) the information that suggests criminality, not the information
itself. Because the information being requested of M.H. is not inherently
criminal, being required to provide that information would generally not
establish a significant link in a chain of evidence tending to prove guilt. See
Des Jardins, 747 F.2d at 509 (“Since the requirement concerns such relatively
innocuous matters ... any information obtained would be at best tangentially
related to criminal activity.”); see also Wilson, 221 U.S. at 380 (“But the
physical custody of incriminating documents does not of itself protect the
custodian against their compulsory production. The question still remains with
respect to the nature of the documents and the capacity in which they are
held.”).
[11] M.H. suggests that Des Jardins should not apply because
in that case we considered a reporting requirement instead of a record-keeping
requirement. ButDes Jardins 's analysis of whether the regulation in question
was essentially regulatory did not hinge on the “reporting” aspect of the
regulation. Des Jardins relied on cases interpreting the Required Records
Doctrine and is clearly applicable to the “essentially regulatory” aspect of
that doctrine, which does not turn on whether a reporting requirement exists,
but—as we have already explained—on whether the information sought is
inherently criminal in nature. While Des Jardins does not answer the precise
question at issue in this case, we apply the rules recognized there to inform
our Fifth Amendment inquiry. Those rules suggest that because § 1010.420 does
not target inherently illegal activity or a highly selective group of people
inherently suspect of criminal activity, it is essentially regulatory, not
criminal.
We have held that whether a requirement to maintain records
involves a reporting requirement is not determinative for purposes of deciding
whether it is essentially regulatory.See United States v. Rosenburg , 515 F.2d
190, 199–200 (9th Cir. 1975) (holding that the Required Records Doctrine
applied even though the statute in question only required records to be kept
for two years and did “not expressly provide that records shall be open to
inspection by state officials”). Thus, the lack of an “automatic” reporting
requirement does not mean § 1010.420 is not essentially regulatory. This
conclusion makes sense because, as we have already explained, the heart of the
“essentially regulatory” inquiry is whether the regulation in question targets
inherently illegal activity. As we observed inRosenburg , where the purpose of
the record-keeping requirement “is to aid in the enforcement of” the statutory
scheme, the Required Records Doctrine may apply, regardless of whether the
regulation itself includes a reporting requirement, automatic or otherwise. Id.
at 200.
Moreover, § 1010.420 has a reporting requirement. The
regulation mandates that the required records “shall be kept at all times
available for inspection as authorized by law.” The Supreme Court has indicated
that no meaningful difference exists “between an obligation to maintain records
for inspection, and such an obligation supplemented by a requirement that those
records be filed periodically with officers of the United States.”Marchetti ,
390 U.S. at 56 n.14.
Because § 1010.420 is essentially regulatory in nature, we
conclude that the first prong of the Required Records Doctrine is satisfied.
2. Customarily Kept
[12] We have not assigned a specific definition to the term
“customarily kept,” but records appear to be customarily kept if they would
typically be kept in connection with the regulated activity. As the case law
dealing with this requirement suggests, the Fifth Amendment does not apply when
the Government compels individuals to create records that they would customarily
keep.
In Shapiro, the records a fruit wholesaler “customarily
kept” in compliance with the Emergency Price Control Act of 1942 were not
privileged. By contrast, inMarchetti , records regarding a person's gambling
expenses were deemed not customarily kept and were privileged. Some courts have
recognized records as “customarily kept” where they are required to be retained
as part of the general regulatory scheme, as they were inShapiro . See, e.g.,
In reDoe , 711 F.2d 1187, 1191 (2d Cir. 1983) (“That the W-2s are records of a
kind customarily kept by taxpayers is not open to dispute.”). Most, however,
seem to simply make a cursory statement that the records are, or are not,
customarily kept. See, e.g., Doe M.D., 801 F.2d at 1168 (concluding without
analysis that “it is evident that Doe customarily maintained the documents in
his possession”).
[13] The information that § 1010.420 requires to be kept is
basic account information that bank customers would customarily keep, in part
because they must report it to the IRS every year as part of the IRS's
regulation of offshore banking, and in part because they need the information
to access their foreign bank accounts. That M.H.'s bank keeps the records on
his behalf does not mean he lacks access to them or that they are records
offshore banking customers would not customarily keep. A bank account's
beneficiary necessarily has access to such essential information as the bank's
name, the maximum amount held in the account each year, and the account number.
Both common sense and the records reviewed in camera support this assessment.
We conclude that the records sought are customarily kept.
3. “Public aspects”
[14] The Supreme Court has recognized that if the
government's purpose in imposing the regulatory scheme is essentially
regulatory, then it necessarily has some “public aspects.” Shapiro, 335 U.S. at
33 (noting that “the privilege which exists as to private papers cannot be
maintained in relation to records required by law to be kept in order that
there may be suitable information of transactions which are the appropriate
subjects of governmental regulation, and the enforcement of restrictions
validly established” (citation and internal quotation marks omitted));id. at 34
(observing that because the Price Control Act required the records in question
to be kept, they had “public aspects”).
[15] The mere fact that the government has “formalized its
demands in the attire of a statute” does not automatically ascribe “public
aspects” to otherwise private documents. See Marchetti, 390 U.S. at 57.
However, that the information sought is traditionally private and personal as
opposed to business-related does not automatically implicate the Fifth
Amendment. Where personal information is compelled in furtherance of a valid
regulatory scheme, as is the case here, that information assumes a public
aspect. See Byers, 402 U.S. at 431–32 (holding that a California statutory
requirement that drivers involved in automobile accidents provide their names
and addresses to police did not infringe on the Fifth Amendment privilege
because “[d]isclosure of name and address is an essentially neutral act.
Whatever the collateral consequences of disclosing name and address, the
statutory purpose is to implement the state police power to regulate use of
motor vehicles”). Similarly, disclosure of basic account information is an
“essentially neutral” act necessary for effective regulation of offshore
banking.
M.H. argues that the records in question, even if they are
essentially regulatory, lack public aspects because “nothing in the record
keeping provision of the BSA requires [M.H.] to produce bank records to the
Government.” However, we have held that a regulation need not have an express
reporting requirement in order to have public aspects.See Rosenberg , 515 F.2d
at 199–200 (finding no Fifth Amendment violation even though the statute
required records to be kept but not produced (citing Shapiro, 335 U.S. 1, and
Grosso, 390 U.S. at 68)).
Furthermore, as we have already noted, § 1010.420does
require M.H. to produce to the Government the information being sought upon
request, as long as that request is authorized by law. The regulation states
that records “shall be retained for a period of 5 years and shall be kept at
all times available for inspection as authorized by law.” § 1010.420.
Additionally, the information required to be kept under § 1010.420 is the same
information disclosed in FBAR forms. For purposes of the Required Records
Doctrine, it does not matter whether the production of that information is
requested through a subpoena (as in this case and Shapiro), a court order (as
in Bouknight), or the regulation itself (as in Byers). See Marchetti, 390 U.S.
at 56 n.14 (rejecting the argument that “the crucial issue respecting the
applicability of Shapiro is the method by which information reaches the
Government”). Even if § 1010.420 lacked any reporting requirement whatsoever,
it would still have public aspects because, as was the case inRosenberg , the
documents in question are required to be kept to aid in the enforcement of a
valid regulatory scheme.
M.H. next suggests that because the BSA provides that a
person need only disclose records “as required by law” and the House report
accompanying the legislation specified that the records “will not be made
automatically available for law enforcement purposes,” the records are not
public because they are not “easily accessed” by the Government. But court
orders and subpoenas are legal processes that prevent law enforcement from
automatically retrieving information, and whether a document is easily
accessible has nothing to do with whether a document has public aspects.See
Marchetti , 390 U.S. at 56 n.14; see also Rosenberg, 515 F.2d at 199–200. The
language “as required by law” does not prevent the sought-after records from
assuming public aspects for purposes of the Required Records Doctrine.
M.H.'s argument that, because the law recognizes special
privacy interests in bank records and tax documents, those documents cannot
have “public aspects” is also flawed. The fact that documents have privacy
protections elsewhere does not transform those documents into private documents
for the purpose of grand jury proceedings. See Doe M.D., 801 F.2d at 1168
(finding that confidential patient records have “public aspects” for purposes
of the Required Records Doctrine and that “expectations of privacy do not
negate a finding that there is a public aspect to the files under the ...
regulatory schemes”); see also Fisher, 425 U.S. at 401 (“We adhere to the view
that the Fifth Amendment protects against “compelled self-incrimination, not
the disclosure of private information.”” (citation and internal markings
omitted)).
M.H. emphasizes decisions from other circuits that have
found certain personal income tax documents beyond the scope of the Required
Records Doctrine. Those cases are not binding in this Circuit, but even if they
were, they fail to support M.H.'s position. For example, M.H. relies heavily on
Smith v. Richert, 35 F.3d 300, 303 (7th Cir. 1994). There, the court held that
where the “production of personal tax records of the character of W-2's and
1099's would have testimonial force and incriminate the taxpayer ... the
required-records doctrine is inapplicable and that production is excused by the
self-incrimination clause.” Smith, 35 F.3d at 304.
But the rationale behind that ruling was that “[t]he
decision to become a taxpayer cannot be thought voluntary ... [because]
[a]lmost anyone who works is a taxpayer, along with many who do not.”Id. at
303. The court reasoned that the obligatory nature of paying taxes was
distinguishable from “the case of the individual who enters upon a regulated
activity knowing that the maintenance of extensive records available for
inspection by the regulatory agency is one of the conditions of engaging in the
activity.” Id. In the latter scenario—which is precisely the situation here
because no one is required to participate in the activity of offshore
banking—the required records doctrine would apply.
Furthermore, in Smith the subpoena did not indicate that the
records being sought related to a regulated activity, whereas in this case the
subpoena so indicates.See id. (determining that the Required Records Doctrine
did not apply in part because “[n]othing in the subpoena identifies the records
sought as records required by the state's agricultural statutes to be kept”).
Here, the subpoena explicitly requires the production of banking records
required to be kept and maintained for inspection pursuant to regulations
implemented through the BSA.
[16] Finally, M.H. argues that allowing the regulatory
nature of a requirement to render it as having “public aspects” allows the
exception to swallow the rule that “[t]he Government's anxiety to obtain
information known to a private individual does not without more render that
information public.” Marchetti, 390 U.S. at 57. But, as stated above, a statute
or regulation “directed at a selective group inherently suspect of criminal
activities” fails to render the privilege against self-incrimination
inapplicable. Id. Determining whether a regulation is essentially regulatory or
criminal requires analysis that goes beyond the label Congress or an agency
provides, thus safeguarding against the exception swallowing the rule.
Furthermore, in this instance, M.H. has not made a compelling argument that the
information he is being asked to provide lacks “public aspects” despite its
essentially regulatory nature. We therefore conclude that the records in
question have public aspects.
IV
[17] Because the records sought through the subpoena fall
under the Required Records Doctrine, the Fifth Amendment privilege against
self-incrimination is inapplicable, and M.H. may not invoke it to resist
compliance with the subpoena's command. See Doe M.D., 801 F.2d at 1167
(“Records that are required to be maintained by law are outside the scope of
the privilege [against self-incrimination].”). Because M.H.'s Fifth Amendment
privilege is not implicated, we need not address his request for immunity.Bouknight
, 493 U.S. at 562 (declining to “define the precise limitations that may exist
upon the State's ability to use the testimonial aspects of Bouknight's act of
production in subsequent criminal proceedings”).
The district court's order is Affirmed.
1
The regulation cited
in the subpoena, 31 C.F.R. § 103.32, has since been relocated to 31 C.F.R. §
1010.420. For ease of reference, this opinion will refer to the current
citation.
2
The regulation
reads, in relevant part:
Records of accounts required by [31 C.F.R. § 103.24
(relocated to 31 C.F.R. § 1010.350)] to be reported to the Commissioner of
Internal Revenue shall be retained by each person having a financial interest
in or signature or other authority over any such account. Such records shall
contain the name in which each such account is maintained, the number or other
designation of such account, the name and address of the foreign bank or other
person with whom such account is maintained, the type of such account, and the
maximum value of each such account during the reporting period. Such records
shall be retained for a period of 5 years and shall be kept at all times
available for inspection as authorized by law.
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