In Re: v. Costello

USCA1 Opinion









February 7, 1992




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No. 92-1028




IN RE: LAWRENCE J. COSTELLO, JR.,

Petitioner.


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APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

[Hon. Robert E. Keeton, U.S. District Judge]
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Before

Torruella, Circuit Judge,
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Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,
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and Cyr, Circuit Judge.
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Lois M. Lewis on brief for appellant.
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Wayne A. Budd, United States Attorney and Elizabeth Keeley,
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Assistant United States Attorney, on brief for appellee.



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Per Curiam. The appellant, Lawrence J. Costello, Jr.,
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appeared before a grand jury on September 12, 1991, pursuant to a

subpoena. The grand jury was investigating a possible violation

of 18 U.S.C. 2114, relating to an armed robbery of a postal

employee and truck occurring on April 19, 1991. Costello

appeared without counsel. He was sworn and advised of his Fifth

Amendment privilege against self-incrimination and his Sixth

Amendment right to counsel. He was then asked to provide

fingerprint and palmprint exemplars and to be photographed. He

refused to do so. That same day, the grand jury voted to order

Costello to furnish the requested material and Costello was

informed of the grand jury order. He again refused to comply.

The government then moved in the district court for an order

to compel Costello to comply with the grand jury directive to

furnish fingerprint and palmprint exemplars and to be

photographed. The district court granted the motion to compel on

October 8, 1991.

On October 24, 1991, Costello was again subpoenaed before

the grand jury. He again appeared without counsel. He was

served with a copy of the court order of October 8th. He again

refused to comply and claimed a Fifth Amendment privilege against

self-incrimination.

On November 7, 1991, the government moved, in the district

court, for an order of contempt. 28 U.S.C. 1826. At

Costello's request, the government also moved for appointment of

counsel on Costello's behalf. Counsel was appointed for Costello

on December 2, 1991 and a hearing was held on January 6, 1992.















At that hearing, counsel expressly disavowed any reliance on

the Fifth Amendment.1 Rather, counsel made two other

contentions. First, counsel argued that Costello had just cause

for non-compliance because, counsel contended, the government

already had the sought-after items within its possession or could

easily obtain them from other law enforcement agencies. Counsel

based this contention on the following. Costello was arrested on

May 8, 1991, in Medfield, Massachusetts by a local police

officer, who allegedly witnessed Costello robbing an armored

car.2 Costello was transported to the Medfield police station

where, according to Costello, he was fingerprinted, palmprinted,

and extensively photographed. Also according to Costello, two

F.B.I. agents were present at the scene of arrest and at the

Medfield station and, in Costello's presence, these agents

requested copies of the prints and the photographs. Costello

claims that two postal inspectors were at the Medfield station as

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1Counsel obviously was cognizant of the settled caselaw.
"It has long been held that the compelled display of identifiable
physical characteristics infringes no interest protected by the
privilege against compulsory self-incrimination." United States
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v. Dionisio, 410 U.S. 1, 5-6 (1973) (noting with approval prior
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cases which held that the Fifth Amendment privilege offered no
protection against compulsion to submit to fingerprinting and
photographing). Nor would compelled submission to
fingerprinting, palmprinting, and photographing infringe any
Fourth Amendment right. See id. at 11, 14; see also United
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States v. Mara, 410 U.S. 19, 21 (1973).
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2A second individual was arrested along with Costello and a
manhunt was undertaken to locate a third suspect. This second
individual also was subsequently subpoenaed before the grand
jury, refused to comply with the court's order to furnish
fingerprint and palmprint exemplars and to be photographed, and
was held in contempt. He has not appealed that contempt finding.
We, therefore, do not discuss him further.

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well. After his arraignment the next day, Costello was

transported to the Norfolk County House of Correction, where,

according to Costello, he was again fingerprinted and

palmprinted.3

Second, counsel argued that the court should direct the

government to file affidavits detailing (1) the relevance of each

item sought to the grand jury's investigation, (2) the

jurisdiction of the grand jury to request the item and (3) that

the government requests the item for the purposes of the grand

jury and no other reasons. Counsel suggested that such a

requirement was appropriate to ensure against grand jury abuse

and so that Costello, "already subject to extensive state

prosecution, is not exposed unnecessarily to other crimes."

Government counsel responded that (1) it was not required to

provide information as to the basis for the request for the items

sought and (2) in any event, it would not be seeking a contempt

order if, in fact, it had access to the items sought. Counsel

conceded that fingerprints of Costello existed, but stated that

John Dunn, the postal inspector in charge of the April postal

truck robbery, had inquired as to palmprints and a right-side

profile photograph of Costello and was told that those materials

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3According to counsel, in connection with the May 8th
arrest, Costello has been charged in fifteen indictments for
attempted murder, armed robbery while masked, attempted armed
robbery, unlawful possession of a stolen motor vehicle and
possession of stolen motor vehicle license plates. Prior to his
being transferred to federal custody as a result of the finding
of contempt, Costello had been held in state custody since his
May 8th arrest, unable to post the required bail amount of one
million dollars.

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did not exist.

John Dunn thereafter was sworn in and testified that the

taking of palmprints is not standard procedure in routine cases.

He opined that identification was not an issue with respect to

the May armored car robbery and testified that the taking of a

profile photograph is not standard procedure with many local

police departments. He had spoken to State Trooper Nagle, the

officer in charge of the May armored car robbery investigation,

who informed Dunn that he had no palmprints or right-side profile

photographs of Costello. Dunn stated that he had seen a front

facial photograph of Costello that Nagle had in his file.

Dunn further testified that, after Costello filed his

affidavit in which he stated that extensive photographs were

taken, he phoned Trooper Nagle. He told Nagle of the affidavit

and asked him to check his file again. With Dunn still on the

line, Nagle pulled his file and said that he had photographs of

tattoos on Costello's body, but not any profile shot of his face.

Dunn testified:

I told him that there had been an affidavit
filed saying that this happened -- I mean,
from a practical standpoint, if they're
there, I'm wasting my time. I said, "Look in
your file again." He looked in his file
again and he said, "He may be talking about
the tattoo pictures I took of his body."
That was his response to me, "I have pictures
of different tattoos on the body and maybe
they4 thought at the time I was taking a
side shot of their [sic] face." That was his
response to me.

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4The plural refers to Costello and the second individual
arrested, who also had tattoos.

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Dunn also testified that he had obtained a photographed

record of Costello's fingerprints from California, where,

according to Dunn, Costello had previously served prison time,

but there were no palmprints or right-side profile photographs.

Dunn stated that he had learned, from the U.S. Attorney's office,

that the FBI did not have any palmprints or profile photographs.

He testified that, in his opinion, he had exhausted the avenues

from which to obtain those sought-after items.

Thereafter, the court heard argument from counsel. Counsel

pointed out that the government had conceded that it had

fingerprints, yet was asking for an additional set, and argued

that it was reasonable to assume that palmprints and side profile

photographs were taken. She reiterated the request that the

court require the government to disclose the nexus between the

items sought and the grand jury investigation.

The district court concluded, based on Costello's affidavit

and Dunn's testimony, that Costello had failed to show, as his

counsel urged, that the grand jury was seeking something to which

it already had access and, in light of that finding, the question

whether the government ought to be required to file affidavits

relating why it is seeking these items, despite being able to

obtain them from other sources, was moot.

The district court found Costello in contempt of his October

8th order. 28 U.S.C. 1826. Two days later, counsel moved for

reconsideration, stating that she had been informed by Costello

that he was willing to be fingerprinted and palmprinted, but that


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he was still unwilling tobe photographed. That motionwas denied.

Counsel filed a notice of appeal and sought a stay pending

appeal. The court denied a stay of the contempt order pending

appeal. It also denied a motion by Costello for an order

directing the government to inform him of the termination date of

the grand jury. Costello appealed the order of contempt and we

denied a stay pending appeal. We now resolve the appeal.

In view of counsel's representation in the motion for

reconsideration filed in the district court that Costello is now

willing to provide the fingerprint and palmprint exemplars, we

focus on the only remaining item which Costello apparently

currently contests, i.e., allowing himself to be photographed.5

We reiterate that this grand jury directive to be photographed

impinges on no constitutional privilege of Costello. See note 1,
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supra.
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Costello's arguments on appeal are meritless. First of all,

they seem misplaced. Counsel argues that the government is

seeking material which it already has in its possession or to

which it has access. Based on the evidence before the district

court, however, we cannot say that the district court was clearly

erroneous in finding that the government, in fact, had neither

possession of, nor access to, a right-side profile photograph of





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5In any event, the result would not change because we view
the compelled display of these identifiable physical
characteristics in the same light. See note 1, supra.
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Costello.6 In re Grand Jury Subpoenas (Anderson), 906 F.2d
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1485, 1488 (10th Cir. 1990) (a district court's findings of fact

in a contempt matter are reviewed under the clearly erroneous

standard). So, Costello's starting premise is factually and

fatally wrong. Consequently, insofar as he suggests he is being

harassed for duplicative material, his next contention, that the

government ought to be required to make a preliminary showing, by

affidavit, of the general purpose for the subpoena, is misplaced.

Costello may be making a broader contention, however. He

cites caselaw from the Third Circuit which, pursuant to the

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6. In affirming this finding of the district court, we do not
suggest that government was required to show that it neither had
possession of, nor access to, the items sought. Though Costello
denies that he is suggesting that the government should show a
"need" for the material sought, we think his claim of good cause
for refusing to comply because the government already has
possession of, or access to, what it seeks is, in essence, a
claim that the grand jury does not "need" him to submit to any
additional photographing. Whatever the viability of requiring
the government to show "need and relevance" prior to enforcement
of a grand jury subpoena, see In re Grand Jury Proceedings
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(Hill), 786 F.2d 3, 5 n.1 (1st Cir. 1986), a question we do not
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resolve, such a requirement in this case which involves a
physical characteristic "constantly exposed to the public,"
United States v. Dionisio, 410 U.S. at 14, strikes us as
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particularly unwarranted, when considering the resulting costs.

Requiring the government to show both that
the information it hopes to obtain from [the
summoned witness] is significant and that
that information is unavailable from other
sources would obviously impair the efficiency
of grand juries. Such a requirement would
bring investigations to intermittent
standstills as the government set out to
prove the necessity of each piece of
information it sought to obtain.

In re Grand Jury Proceedings (John Doe), 862 F.2d 430, 431-32 (2d
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Cir. 1988).

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federal courts' supervisory powers, requires the government, in
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every case, to make a preliminary showing by affidavit that each
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item is (1) at least relevant to an investigation being conducted

by the grand jury and properly within its jurisdiction and (2)

not sought primarily for another purpose. In re Grand Jury
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Proceedings (Schofield I), 486 F.2d 85, 93 (3d Cir. 1973); In re
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Grand Jury Proceedings (Schofield II), 507 F.2d 963, 966 (3d
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Cir.), cert. denied, 421 U.S. 1015 (1975). But, we have
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previously considered, and rejected, adopting such a supervisory

role. In In re Pantojas, 628 F.2d 701, 704-05 (1st Cir. 1980),
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we declined to impose the Schofield procedure, finding "little to
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convince us that prosecutors are regularly overreaching or that

the district courts have been insensitive to irregularities that

may occur." There is nothing in the record before us suggesting

that, in the interim since Pantojas, grand jury abuses have
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either regularly occurred or escaped district court attention.

And, we certainly see no such evidence with respect to the

particular case before us.

We acknowledge that the Supreme Court recently suggested

that "a court may be justified in a case where unreasonableness

is alleged in requiring the Government to reveal the general

subject of the grand jury's investigation before requiring the

challenging party to carry its burden of persuasion." United
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States v. R. Enterprises, Inc., 111 S. Ct. 722, 728 (1991). The
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Court went on to say that "[w]e need not resolve this question in

the present case, however, as there is no doubt that respondents


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knew the subject of the grand jury investigation pursuant to

which the business records subpoenas were issued." Id. So too,
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in the case before us, we need not address this concern as,

without a doubt, Costello knew that the grand jury was

investigating the April 1991 postal truck robbery, as evidenced

by his response to the government's petition for contempt, filed

three days before the contempt hearing.7

Lastly, Costello contests the district court's denial of his

request for an order directing the government to disclose the

termination date of the grand jury. The government urges us not


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7. And, in fact, Costello may have received some indulgence. A
subpoena recipient, who claims that compliance is unreasonable,
may not necessarily be entitled to know even the general subject
of the grand jury's investigation.

In cases where the recipient of the subpoena
does not know the nature of the
investigation, we are confident that district
courts will be able to craft appropriate
procedures that balance the interests of the
subpoena recipient against the strong
governmental interests in maintaining
secrecy, preserving investigatory
flexibility, and avoiding procedural delays.
For example, to ensure that subpoenas are not
routinely challenged as a form of discovery,
a district court may require that the
Government reveal the subject of the
investigation to the trial court in camera,
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so that the court may determine whether the
motion to quash has a reasonable prospect for
success before it discloses the subject
matter to the challenging party.

Id. at 728-29. The government disclosed the subject matter of
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the grand jury investigation to the district court in camera when
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it initially sought the order to compel in October 1991. Even
considering this recent pronouncement by the Supreme Court,
therefore, there is simply no basis for Costello's challenge to
the issuance of this grand jury subpoena.

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to address it, claiming that it was not timely raised and, in any

event, would not excuse Costello's contempt of the order

compelling him to provide the exemplars and to be photographed.

We agree that the refusal to provide Costello with the grand

jury's termination date is not just cause for his failing to

comply with the prior court order. Nonetheless, this issue was

raised in the district court, even if during the hearing on the

stay request after the finding of contempt issued, and the

district court ruled on this motion. We believe, therefore, it

was timely raised.

We are unable to review its merits, however, for the lack of

a sufficient record. Although the record contains a copy of

Costello's motion seeking disclosure of the termination date of

the grand jury, with a margin order by the district court,

"1/8/92 Denied after hearing this date," Costello has not

provided us with a transcript of that January 8th hearing, nor

has he told us of the basis for the court's ruling. In re Grand
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Jury Investigation (DiLoreto), 903 F.2d 180, 185 (3d Cir. 1990),
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upon which Costello relied, assumed, without deciding, that the

standard of review of a district court order denying disclosure

of the termination date of a grand jury is abuse of discretion.

Costello does not argue for a less deferential standard of review

and we also shall assume, without deciding, that the district

court's ruling on this matter may not be disturbed without a

showing of an abuse of discretion. But without any indication of

the basis for the ruling, we cannot find any abuse of discretion


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or undertake any otherwise meaningful appellate review.

Costello, as appellant, is responsible for providing this court

with a sufficient record upon which to review the ruling he is

challenging. See, e.g., United States v. Lebron-Gonzalez, 816
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F.2d 823, 827 (1st Cir.) (the burden of seeing that a record is

adequate to present issues on appeal rests on appellants), cert.
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denied, 484 U.S. 843 (1987). He has not done so. We therefore
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decline to disturb the district court's denial of his motion for

disclosure.

Affirmed.
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