In
United States v. Ohle, 2011 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12581 (SD NY 2011),
here, aff'd 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 21275 (2d Cir. 2011), the defendants moved for a new trial, complaining that the prosecutors violated their
Brady obligations. Prior to trial, the prosecutors turned over to the defendants a massive quantity of documents that the Government had obtained from Jenkins & Gilchrist (J&G). The format for the turn over of documents was a Concordance database, in which the documents were viewable and searchable. The prosecutors thought that all J&G documents were in the database. After trial, at the
Fatico sentencing hearing, the prosecutors admitted that the turn over did not include approximately 110 boxes. The principal question presented was whether the 110 boxes contained
Brady material that should have been disclosed contained
Brady material that should have been disclosed, but a related question was whether a mass document disclosure without specifically identifying the
Brady material was appropriate. The court, Jed Rakoff, rejected the claim, finding no
Brady violation.
I address only the larger issue of the ground rules for the prosecutors' obligations when making mass document disclosures, often referred to as an open file policy. In large white collar cases, including large tax crimes cases (such as
Ohle and the KPMG related criminal cases), the turnover of massive quantities of documents is common. The Court had an interesting discussion of the ground rules that apply. I quote (footnote omitted):