Opinion
2:24-cr-00093-LK
07-05-2024
STIPULATED PROTECTIVE ORDER
Lauren King United States District Judge
This matter comes before the Court on the parties' Stipulated Motion for Entry of Protective Order. Dkt. No. 41. The Court, having considered the motion and the balance of the record, grants the motion and enters the following PROTECTIVE ORDER:
1. Protected Material. For purposes of this Order, “Protected Materials” shall include sensitive materials that disclose personal identifying information (“PII”) obtained during the investigation, including but not limited to personal information about witnesses, victims, and third parties, and other sensitive information obtained during the investigation (collectively, the “Protected Material”). Any produced Grand Jury transcripts will be considered Protected Material without further designation by the Government. Other information believed by the Government to be Protected Material will be so designated by the Government. Said material may include, but is not limited to, Giglio impeachment materials.
2. Production of Protected Material to the Defense. The United States will make available copies of the Protected Materials, including those filed under seal, to defense counsel to comply with the Government's discovery obligations. Possession of copies of the Protected Materials is limited to attorneys of record and investigators, paralegals, law clerks, experts, and assistants for the attorneys of record (hereinafter collectively referred to as “members of the defense team”). Further, the attorneys of record are required, prior to disseminating any copies of the Protected Materials to members of the defense team, to provide a copy of this Protective Order to members of the defense team and obtain their agreement to be bound by the terms and conditions of this Protective Order.
3. Review of Protected Material by a Defendant. The attorneys of record and members of a Defendant's defense team may share and review the Protected Material with a Defendant. When a Defendant resides at the Federal Detention Center (“FDC”), they will be permitted to review the Protected Material, consistent with the regulations established by the BOP for such material, with or without his counsel in a controlled environment at the FDC, but will be prohibited from printing out, copying, or disseminating the material. If a Defendant is on pretrial release, he will be permitted to review the Protected Material at the office of his counsel, or via a video conference call, but will be prohibited from printing out, copying, or disseminating the material.
4. Limits on Dissemination of Protected Materials. The attorneys of record and members of the defense team acknowledge that providing copies of the Protected Material to a Defendant and other persons is prohibited and agree not to duplicate or provide copies of the Protected Material to Defendant and other persons. This order does not limit employees of the United States Attorney's Office for the Western District of Washington from disclosing the Protected Material to members of the United States Attorney's Office, federal law enforcement agencies, witnesses, and the Court. Nor does this order limit employees of the United States Attorney's Office for the Western District of Washington from disclosing the Protected Material to defense counsel as necessary to comply with the Government's discovery obligations.
5. Future Production of Additional Protected Materials. Additional types of discovery items may be deemed by the parties to constitute Protected Material upon agreement, or (if no agreement can be reached) by further order of the Court.
6. No Waiver. Nothing in this order should be construed as imposing any substantive discovery obligations on the Government that are different from those imposed by case law and Rule 16 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. The failure to designate any materials as provided in paragraph 2 shall not constitute a waiver of a party's assertion that the materials are covered by this Protective Order.
7. Use of Protected Material in Court. Any Protected Material that is filed with the Court in connection with pre-trial motions, trial, or other matter before this Court, shall be filed under seal and shall remain sealed until otherwise ordered by this Court. This does not entitle either party to seal their filings as a matter of course. The parties are required to comply in all respects with the relevant local and federal rules of criminal procedure pertaining to the sealing of court documents.
8. Non-Termination. The provisions of this Order shall not terminate at the conclusion of this prosecution. Furthermore, at the close of this case, defense counsel shall return the Protected Material, including all copies of the Protected Material, to the office of the United States Attorney, or otherwise certify that the material has been destroyed.
9. Violation of Order. Any person who willfully violates this Protective Order may be held in contempt of court and may be subject to monetary or other sanctions as deemed appropriate by this Court.
10. Modification of Order. Nothing in this Protective Order shall prevent any party from seeking modification of this Order or from objecting to discovery that it believes to be otherwise improper. The parties agree that in the event that compliance with this Order makes it difficult for defense counsel to adhere to their Sixth Amendment obligations, or otherwise imposes an unworkable burden on counsel, defense counsel shall bring any concerns about the terms of the Order to the attention of the Government. The parties shall then meet and confer with the intention of finding a mutually acceptable solution. In the event that the parties cannot reach such a solution, defense counsel shall have the right to bring any concerns about the scope or terms of the Order to the attention of the Court by way of a motion.
11. Agreement to Provide Copies of Protected Material to Defendant. Upon agreement of counsel for the Government, members of a defense team may provide copies of specific Protected Material, or redacted versions of such material, to a Defendant. When seeking the Government's agreement to give such a copy to a Defendant, members of the defense team will identify with reasonable particularity, including (where available) the specific bates numbered pages and or recording descriptions, the specific material defense counsel proposes to give to a Defendant. Unless expressly stated otherwise by the Government, copies of Protected Material to be provided to a Defendant will continue to be Protected Material subject to all of the protections of the Court's Order, with the sole exception that a copy can be given only to a Defendant (and not shared with anyone else outside the defense team). If counsel for the Government and counsel for a Defendant cannot reach agreement on whether particular portions of the Protected Material or redacted versions of Protected Material should be given to a Defendant under these conditions, defense counsel may raise the issue with the Court by way of a motion.
12. No Ruling on Discoverability or Admissibility. This Protective Order does not constitute a ruling on the question of whether any particular material is properly discoverable or admissible and does not constitute any ruling on any potential objection to the discoverability of any material.
13. No Ruling on Timing of Production. This Protective Order does not require the Government to provide particular discovery at a time or in a fashion inconsistent with applicable law.