18-3530-cv
United States v. Fridman
1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
3 ____________________
4
5 August Term, 2019
6
7 (Argued: December 17, 2019 Decided: September 9, 2020)
8
9 Docket No. 18-3530-cv
10
11
12 ____________________
13
14 United States of America,
15
16 Appellee,
17
18 v.
19
20 Natalio Fridman,
21
22 Defendant-Appellant.
23
24 ____________________
25
26 Before: POOLER, HALL, and LOHIER, Circuit Judges.
27
28 Appeal from the judgment of the United States District Court for the
29 Southern District of New York (Victor Marrero, J.) granting on remand the
30 Government’s petition to enforce two Internal Revenue Service summonses, one
1 sent to Fridman in his personal capacity and one sent to him in his capacity as a
2 trustee, based on the foregone conclusion and collective entity exceptions to the
3 Fifth Amendment’s self-incrimination clause. We agree with the district court
4 that the Government has shown with reasonable particularity the documents’
5 existence, Fridman’s control of the documents, and an independent means of
6 authenticating the documents such that the foregone conclusion doctrine applies.
7 We also agree with the district court that, as a matter of first impression in our
8 Circuit, a traditional trust is a collective entity subject to the collective entity
9 doctrine. Accordingly, we affirm the grant of the Government’s petition to
10 enforce the summonses.
11 Affirmed.
12 ____________________
13 RICHARD A. LEVINE (Nancy Chassman, on the brief),
14 Roberts & Holland LLP, New York, NY, for Defendant-
15 Appellant.
16
17 TALIA KRAEMER, Assistant United States Attorney
18 (Rebecca S. Tinio, Assistant United States Attorney, on
19 the brief), for Audrey Strauss, Acting United States
20 Attorney for the Southern District of New York, New
21 York, NY, for Appellee.
22
23
2
1 POOLER, Circuit Judge:
2 Natalio Fridman appeals from the judgment of the United States District
3 Court for the Southern District of New York (Victor Marrero, J.) granting on
4 remand the Government’s petition to enforce two Internal Revenue Service
5 (“IRS”) summonses, one sent to Fridman in his personal capacity and one sent to
6 him in his capacity as a trustee, based on the foregone conclusion and collective
7 entity exceptions to the Fifth Amendment’s self-incrimination clause. We agree
8 with the district court that the Government has shown with reasonable
9 particularity the documents’ existence, Fridman’s control of the documents, and
10 an independent means of authenticating the documents such that the foregone
11 conclusion doctrine applies. We also agree with the district court that, as a matter
12 of first impression in our Circuit, a traditional trust is a collective entity subject to
13 the collective entity doctrine. Accordingly, we affirm the grant of the
14 Government’s petition to enforce the summonses.
15 BACKGROUND
16 The IRS has long been investigating the use of offshore bank accounts to
17 improperly conceal federally taxable income. As part of these efforts, the IRS
18 sought to investigate Fridman for the 2008 tax year. While Fridman reported only
3
1 three foreign financial accounts maintained in a personal capacity for the 2008
2 tax year, the IRS became aware of at least five additional personal accounts: a
3 UBS account in Switzerland; a Credit Suisse account in Switzerland; a Bank
4 Leumi account in Switzerland; a Bank Leumi account in Israel; and a Bank Safra
5 account in Luxembourg (collectively, the “Personal Accounts”). The IRS learned
6 of these accounts in 2012 when Fridman’s representative provided the IRS with
7 these accounts’ statements or other bank records pertaining to the 2008 tax year.
8 From these documents, the IRS identified the account numbers and other
9 information related to the Personal Accounts.
10 Besides the Personal Accounts, the IRS became aware of seven companies
11 affiliated with or controlled by Fridman that maintained foreign bank accounts.
12 The IRS has identified seventeen such corporate foreign bank accounts
13 (collectively, the “Corporate Accounts”). 1 The IRS learned of these accounts
1Four accounts relate to a company called Consist Teleinformatica Argentine;
two accounts relate to a company called Consist Consultoria Systemast Repre;
one account relates to a company called Wanstat Systemar DE Computacao
CTDA; two accounts relate to a company called Consist France; one account
relates to a company called Consist Asia Pacific; six accounts relate to a company
called Mak Data System; and one account relates to a company called Consist
International Inc.
4
1 through Fridman’s filing of Foreign Bank and Financial Accounts (“FBARs”). A
2 person or entity is required to file an FBAR if they have “a financial interest in, or
3 signature or other authority over” a foreign financial account. 31 C.F.R. §
4 1010.350(a). In 1991, Fridman filed FBARs for the Consist Teleinformatica
5 Argentine, Consist Consultoria Systemast Repre, and Wanstat Systemar DE
6 Computacao CTDA accounts. In 1998, he filed FBARs for the Consist France and
7 the Consist Asia Pacific accounts. Fridman filed FBARs for one Mak Data System
8 account in 1998 and from 2000-2004, and for a second Mak Data System account
9 in 1998 and from 2000-2005. For four other Mak Data System accounts, he filed
10 FBARs in 2004 and 2005. For the Consist International Inc. account, Fridman filed
11 FBARs from 2000-2003.
12 Finally, the IRS learned that Fridman controls a number of trusts,
13 including at least one domestic trust that has a foreign financial account. This
14 trust is the David Marcelo Trust, named for Fridman’s son, of which Fridman is
15 both a trustee and beneficiary. Fridman’s sister is a second trustee, and
16 Fridman’s son is a second beneficiary. Though Fridman has not filed a tax return
17 for the David Marcelo Trust, the IRS learned that the David Marcelo Trust has an
18 HSBC account in Switzerland (the “HSBC Account”). The IRS came to know of
5
1 this account after Fridman’s representative provided some bank statements and
2 records related to the account in 2012 and 2013. One record shows a transfer of
3 $2.4 million from the HSBC Account into a domestic Citibank account belonging
4 to Fridman’s wife and son.
5 In 2013, the IRS issued the two summonses (“the Summonses”) that are
6 central to this case. One summons was sent to Fridman in his personal capacity,
7 and the other was sent to him in his capacity as Trustee of the David Marcelo
8 Trust. The documents sought (the “Requests”) were the same, and they largely
9 pertain to the Personal Accounts, Corporate Accounts, and HSBC Account
10 (collectively, the “Known Accounts”). The relevant Requests, as revised during
11 the proceeding below, are:
12 Request 1: For all of the foreign bank accounts listed on “Exhibit B”
13 [a list of 24 accounts] 2 over which you have signatory authority since
14 1999, please provide existing documents sufficient to show the
15 opening date and closing date of each.
16
17 Request 2: Please provide the 2006 and 2007 bank statements for all
18 your foreign bank accounts listed on “Exhibit B.”
19
20 Request 3: All bank statements and all the account opening
21 documents, including but not limited to, Know Your Customer
2Exhibit B contains the name of the account holder, the bank, the country, and
the account number provided in redacted form.
6
1 Account information including signature cards, opening deposit
2 slips, passport copies, certificates of beneficial ownership, letters of
3 reference, certificates of clean funds and/or other source of funds
4 documentation for accounts held under the name of Consist
5 Teleinformatica Argentine; Consist Consultoria Systemast Repre;
6 Wanstst Systemar DE Computacao CTDA; Consist France; Consist
7 Asia Pacific; Mak Data System; Consist International Inc. from
8 opening date to 1/31/2009.
9
10 Request 4: All bank statements and account opening documents,
11 including but not limited to, Know Your Customer Account
12 information including signature cards, opening deposit slips,
13 passport copies, certificates of beneficial ownership, letters of
14 reference, certificates of clean funds and/or other source of funds
15 documentation for the following accounts from opening date to
16 1/31/2009: UBS 29, Credit Suisse 3, Leumi Bank 49, Leumi Bank 02,
17 Safra 37, HSBC 15, Republic National Bank of New York (Suisse) S.A.
18
19 Request 7: Existing bank documents including but not limited to
20 cancelled checks, wire transfer instructions, wire transfer slips,
21 deposit slips that show the flow of the following funds, the account
22 numbers and account holders’ names for the Citibank accounts and
23 any other bank accounts, sufficient to show the flow of funds in five
24 transactions transferring funds between the HSBC account and an
25 unknown New York-based Citibank account on 7/26/2004, 8/30/2004,
26 9/28/2004, 1/31/2008, and 2/28/2010.
27
28 Request 11: Please refer to the Trust Agreement dated April 30th,
29 1990 – “the Grantor hereby transfers to the Trustees the property
30 described in the annexed Schedule A, which transfers the Trustees
7
1 hereby confirm.” See App’x at 81. Provide existing documents that
2 explain how the funds were transferred. For example:
3 a. Provide existing documents to show whether Fridman was
4 added to the existing account as trustee.
5 b. Provide existing documents relating to a redacted request
6 concerning the transfer of funds.
7 Provide existing documents sufficient to show the transfer of
8 property described in Schedule A of the Trust Agreement.
9
10 Request 12: All bank records for HSBC Private Bank (Suisse) SA
11 [redacted account number] from 1999 to 2002.
12
13 Request 13: All bank records for any account held under the name of
14 any trust for which Fridman is a Trustee or Beneficiary since the
15 inception of such trusts.
16
17 Request 14: In reference to first clause of Trust Agreement dated
18 04/30/1990, the Trust Agreement states “The Grantor wishes to record
19 that she intends by this Trust Agreement to create two separate trusts
20 . . .” See App’x at 81.
21 a. Please provide existing documents that show the name of the
22 trusts and all bank records for any account holding assets from
23 the inception of the trusts.
24
25 Request 15: Trust Agreement for any Trust for which Fridman is a
26 Trustee or Beneficiary.
27
28 Request 16: All books and records for the Trusts referenced in Clause
29 1 of the Trust Agreement dated 04/30/1990 and any other Trusts for
8
1 which Fridman is a Trustee or Beneficiary, including but not limited
2 to David Marcelo Trust.
3
4 Request 17: All records pertaining to property in which David
5 Marcelo Trust and/or any other trust have an interest.
6
7 Request 20: All correspondence between Fridman and any other
8 trustees, trustors, beneficiaries, and any other persons involved with
9 the trust(s) for which Fridman is a Trustee or Beneficiary related to
10 such a trust, its property and/or its administration.
11
12 Fridman asserted his Fifth Amendment privilege and refused to
13 produce the requested documents. On March 11, 2015, the Government
14 filed a petition to enforce the summonses. United States v. Fridman, 337 F.
15 Supp. 3d 259, 262 (S.D.N.Y. 2018). On November 25, 2015, the district court
16 granted the petition on the grounds that the documents were relevant and
17 certain exceptions to the Fifth Amendment act-of-production privilege
18 applied. Id. Fridman appealed, and a panel of this Circuit vacated and
19 remanded by summary order. United States v. Fridman, 665 F. App’x 94, 94
20 (2d Cir. 2016). While we affirmed the determination on relevance, we
21 remanded on the Fifth Amendment issue because the record was
22 insufficiently developed. Id. at 96-97. In a footnote, we directed the district
23 court to look to an intervening decision from our Circuit, United States v.
9
1 Greenfield, 831 F.3d 106 (2d Cir. 2016), with respect to its analysis of the
2 foregone conclusion doctrine. Fridman, 665 F. App’x at 96 n.1.
3 On remand, the district court again granted the petition. Fridman,
4 337 F. Supp. 3d at 264. The district court applied the foregone conclusion
5 doctrine to Requests 1, 2 (limited to the Known Accounts only), 4, and 7.
6 Id. at 268-71. Because the Government “has provided the name of the
7 account holder, the bank, the country, and the account number for each of
8 the Known Accounts,” the district court was satisfied that the Government
9 knew of the existence, location, and authenticity of the requested
10 documents, as required by Greenfield. Id. at 268-71. The district court also
11 held that so-called “traditional trusts” were collective entities for purposes
12 of the collective entity rule, and therefore that Requests 1-4, 7, 11-17, and
13 20 were excepted as to all trust-related documents. Id. at 270-72. The
14 district court applied the collective entity rule to Request 3 as well because
15 the entities listed are collective. Id. at 272-74. Rejecting Fridman’s argument
16 that the Summonses were not served on him in his capacity as
17 representative for any of those entities, the district court reasoned that
18 “[r]egardless of the capacity in which Fridman was served, the result is the
10
1 same: [he] is required to produce documents responsive to Document
2 Request No. 3 to the extent he possesses such documents in his individual
3 capacity or his capacity as the custodian of a collective entity, including the
4 corporations listed in the Document Request.” Id. at 273.
5 Fridman timely appealed.
6 DISCUSSION
7 “We review de novo the District Court’s determination of questions of law
8 as to the Fifth Amendment privilege. But [we] will overturn the District Court’s
9 determination as to whether the act of producing the documents would involve
10 testimonial self-incrimination only where such a finding has no support in the
11 record.” Greenfield, 831 F.3d at 114 (internal quotation marks and citations
12 omitted).
13 The Fifth Amendment provides that no person shall be compelled in a
14 criminal case to be a witness against himself. U.S. Const. amend. V. In Fisher v.
15 United States, 425 U.S. 391, 409-11 (1976), the Supreme Court defined the contours
16 of the Fifth Amendment as it applies to document requests. The Court held that
17 documents voluntarily prepared prior to the issuance of a summons were not
18 compelled testimony, so there was no Fifth Amendment protection for the
11
1 contents of these records. Id. at 410-11. At the same time, however, the Court
2 recognized a narrow privilege against the act of production. Because producing
3 documents “tacitly concedes the existence of the papers demanded and their
4 possession or control by the taxpayer . . . [as well as] the taxpayer’s belief that the
5 papers are those described in the subpoena,” the Court concluded that the act of
6 production could, in some cases, communicate incriminatory statements and
7 thus may fall under the Fifth Amendment’s protection against self-incrimination;
8 but the Court hinted that such a determination would be conditioned on the
9 “facts and circumstances of particular cases.” Id. at 410-11. Similarly, when a
10 defendant must “make extensive use of the contents of his own mind in
11 identifying the hundreds of documents responsive to the requests in the
12 subpoena,” he or she contributes to a “link in the chain” of their prosecution in
13 violation of the Fifth Amendment privilege. United States v. Hubbell, 530 U.S. 27,
14 42-43 (2000) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
15 The act-of-production privilege is not an absolute one. Fridman challenges
16 the district court’s ruling that two exceptions to the act-of-production privilege
17 permitted enforcement of the requests at issue in this case.
18
12
1 I. The Foregone Conclusion Doctrine
2 Under one exception, when “[t]he existence and location of the papers are
3 a foregone conclusion and the taxpayer adds little or nothing to the sum total of
4 the Government’s information by conceding that he in fact has the papers,”
5 production does not run afoul of the Fifth Amendment. Fisher, 425 U.S. at 411.
6 This principle has been aptly called the foregone conclusion doctrine.
7 As referenced above, our Circuit most recently addressed the foregone
8 conclusion doctrine in United States v. Greenfield, 831 F.3d 106, 110 (2d Cir. 2016).
9 There too, we dealt with a summons related to tax evasion. Id. at 110. In
10 Greenfield, we explained that for the foregone conclusion exception to apply, the
11 Government must establish “with reasonable particularity” its knowledge as to
12 “(1) existence of the documents, (2) the taxpayer’s possession or control of the
13 documents and (3) the authenticity of the documents.” Id. at 115; see also id. at
14 119. 3
3We acknowledged that “both our court and our sister circuits have struggled
with the extent of Government knowledge necessary for a foregone-conclusion
rationale to apply.” Greenfield, 831 F.3d at 116. Indeed, in Greenfield, we wrestled
with enunciating the requisite level of knowledge of each specific responsive
document covered by the Summons. On the other hand, the Government must
know, and not merely infer, that the sought documents exist, that they are under
13
1 To meet the existence requirement, the “Government is not required to
2 have actual knowledge of the existence and location of each and every
3 responsive document.” Id. at 116. When a summons seeks “customary account
4 documents related to financial accounts that [the Government] knew existed,”
5 the documents’ existence is a foregone conclusion. Id. at 118.
6 Although we did not explicitly define “control” in the context of the
7 foregone conclusion doctrine in Greenfield, we start from the premise that a
8 taxpayer’s “possession or control of the [requested] documents” is one of the
9 “communicative elements” protected by the Fifth Amendment. Id. at 115
10 (emphasis added); see also Fisher, 425 U.S. at 409-11. The Government may
11 therefore satisfy the control requirement by establishing its knowledge of the
12 physical possession of the requested documents by the subpoenaed individual,
13 see Fisher, 425 U.S. at 411-12, or the subpoenaed individual’s control over the
14 requested documents, see Greenfield, 831 F.3d at 119 (explaining that an
the control of defendant, and that they are authentic.” Id. (citation omitted). The
“sweet spot” for the Government’s level of knowledge is somewhere between
“perfect knowledge” and a “mere inference.” Determining whether the foregone
conclusion doctrine applies requires a fact-intensive, case-by-case analysis. Id. at
119-28.
14
1 individual’s ability or authority to receive the requested documents is an
2 essential part of being able to control the documents); id. at 199 n.10 (“[B]oth a
3 general power of attorney and the power to give instructions would suffice to
4 provide [the individual] with control over [the requested] documents.”); see also
5 Matter of Marc Rich & Co., A.G., 707 F.2d 663, 667 (2d Cir. 1983) (“The test for the
6 production of documents is control, not location); Control, Black’s Law Dictionary
7 (11th ed. 2019) (defining “control” as “[t]o exercise power or influence over”).
8 Thus, if the Government can prove it knows that an individual controls the
9 disposition of assets in an account, it follows that that individual controls the
10 requested documents associated with that account—given the Government has
11 satisfied the existence requirement.
12 With respect to the authenticity requirement, documents may be
13 “implicitly” authenticated if an individual complies with a summons demanding
14 production of documents, and the Government establishes that “th[ose]
15 documents are in fact what they purport to be” and “the taxpayer [was] not . . .
16 forced to use his discretion in selecting . . . the responsive documents.” Greenfield,
17 831 F.3d at 118 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Additionally, the
18 Government can “independently establish[]” authenticity in several ways: “a)
15
1 through the testimony of third parties familiar with that type of document, b) by
2 comparison to a prior version of the document, or c) by comparison to other
3 related documents.” Id. (citations omitted).
4 There is a critical temporal requirement as well. The Government must
5 prove its knowledge at the time the summons was issued. Id. at 119. “Relevant”
6 to this inquiry is whether “the Government can demonstrate that the documents
7 ever existed.” Id. at 119. “[I]n many circumstances, the Government’s ability to
8 establish existence and control as of an earlier date does permit an inference of
9 existence and control as of the date of the Summons.” Id. at 125 (emphasis
10 added). When considering whether such an inference of continued existence and
11 control is available, 4 we have borrowed and applied a balancing test from the
12 Eighth Circuit that examines: “(1) the nature of the documents, (2) the nature of
13 the business to which the documents pertained, (3) the absence of any indication
14 that the documents were transferred to someone else or were destroyed, and (4)
15 the relatively short time period . . . between the date as of which possession was
4We stress that this inference of continued existence and control is different than
the “inference” forbidden in Greenfield. The inference allowed in Greenfield is one
of continued existence and control, not of knowledge itself.
16
1 shown and the date of the ensuing IRS summons.” 5 Id. at 125-26 (internal
2 quotation marks and citation omitted).
3 Greenfield provides a bifurcated approach to the foregone conclusion
4 analysis when the “inference” of continued existence and control is at play. First,
5 we examine “whether the Government can establish the existence, control, and
6 authenticity of each category of sought documents” at some point prior to the
7 issuance of the summons. Id. at 119. For those documents for which the
8 Government’s evidence suffices, we then examine “whether it is a foregone
9 conclusion that these documents remained in [the individual’s] control through
10 the issuance of the Summons . . . . Only if that retention is a foregone conclusion
11 will the issuance of the Summons not violate [the] Fifth Amendment privilege.”
12 Id. at 123. 6
13 In this case, Fridman challenges the district court’s determination that the
14 foregone conclusion doctrine allows enforcement of Requests 1, 2, 4, and 7. He
5 We read “possession” here as synonymous with “control” in the context of the
foregone conclusion doctrine analysis.
6 We note that the Government does not need to prove authentication at an
earlier date so long as it can authenticate the documents as of the issuance of the
summons.
17
1 makes two primary arguments. First, he claims that the district court misapplied
2 our decision in Greenfield. Second, he asserts that enforcing these Requests would
3 require him to provide testimonial information because the Government has
4 failed to establish its knowledge of the relevant documents with reasonable
5 particularity. We are not persuaded by either argument.
6 1. Existence
7 There is no doubt that the Government knows that the Known Accounts
8 existed prior to the issuance of the Summonses. Exhibit B, which lists the Known
9 Accounts, specifies the account holder, account number, the bank, and the
10 location (by country) for each account. Based on filings from Fridman or his
11 representative, the Government also knows the following about the listed
12 accounts: (1) the Personal Accounts existed in 2008; (2) the HSBC Account existed
13 in the years 2003-2010; (3) the Consist Consultoria Systemast Repre Corporate
14 Accounts and Wanstat Systemar Corporate Account existed in 1991; (4) the
15 Consist France Corporate Accounts existed in 1998; (5) the Consist Asia Pacific
16 Corporate Account existed in 1998; and (6) two of the Mak Data System
17 Corporate Accounts existed in 1998 and in the years 2000-2004 while four others
18 existed in 2004 and 2005.
18
1 Requests 1, 2, 4, and 7 seek “customary account documents” from the
2 Known Accounts: (1) records sufficient to show the opening and closing dates of
3 the Known Accounts (listed in Exhibit B)7; (2) bank statements for the Known
4 Accounts for 2006 and 2007; (3) bank statements and account opening documents
5 for certain Personal Accounts and the HSBC Account, from the account opening
6 date through to January 31, 2009; and (4) bank records for transactions that the
7 Government knows occurred between the HSBC Account and an unknown
8 Citibank account. These requested documents—bank statements, account
9 opening documents, transaction records, and account closing documents—are all
10 quintessential customary account documents. Because of this, and because these
11 documents pertain to “financial accounts that [the Government] knew existed,”
12 their existence is a foregone conclusion. Greenfield, 831 F.3d at 118.
13 Fridman offers a number of unavailing counterarguments. First, Fridman
14 argues that the Government has not proven that it knows the specific requested
15 documents existed. But it was not required to do so. Greenfield makes clear that
7The Government no longer seeks records under the foregone conclusion
doctrine for the four Argentina-based Corporate Accounts. Moreover, although
not a foreign account, the Government also does not seek records under the
foregone conclusion doctrine for the U.S. Citibank account.
19
1 even if “the Government does not have specific knowledge of every document
2 that is responsive to the Summons, such specific knowledge exceeds what is
3 required under a ‘reasonable particularity’ standard.” Id. at 119. And when
4 dealing with customary account documents, proof of the account’s existence is
5 sufficient to show knowledge of the account documents with a reasonable
6 particularity. Id. Therefore, because the Government knows of the accounts’
7 existence, it has met its burden.
8 Fridman’s argument has the most traction with respect to Requests 1 and
9 2. As to the account closing documents sought in Request 1, it is true that the
10 Government does not know for certain that any of the Known Accounts, other
11 than the HSBC Account, have been closed. And unlike account opening
12 documents, which must necessarily exist for all the Known Accounts, account
13 closing documents will only exist for those accounts that have been closed.
14 Therefore, it is not as obvious whether knowledge of closing documents can be
15 predicated on knowledge of the accounts’ existence. Similarly, although Request
16 2 seeks bank documents for 2006 and 2007, the Government does not know for a
17 fact that the Personal or Corporate Accounts existed in those years; the IRS has
18 documents showing the Personal Accounts existed in 2008, and it knows the
20
1 FBAR filings for the relevant Corporate Accounts were made at various points
2 from 1991 to 2005.
3 But the Government does not need specific knowledge that the accounts
4 had been closed or that the accounts existed in 2006 and 2007. Such a
5 requirement does not square with our decision in Greenfield. In Greenfield, the
6 summons called for, inter alia, all documents in Greenfield’s possession for a
7 certain account. Id. at 112-13. There, we held that the Government had
8 sufficiently proven its knowledge of the existence of those documents because of
9 its knowledge of the account’s existence in 2001 and because the documents
10 sought were customary account documents. Id. at 119. It was no matter that the
11 category of documents sought—“all documents in [Greenfield’s] possession”
12 pertaining to the account—was sweeping and significantly broader than
13 Requests 1 and 2 here. See id. at 113. Thus, even though the Government in this
14 case does not have “specific knowledge of every document that is responsive to
15 the Summons,” such a heightened standard is not required under our
16 “reasonable particularity” standard, nor does it align with our analysis in
17 Greenfield. Id.
21
1 Fridman also contends that the Government does not have specific
2 knowledge of the facts contained in the documents soughtBut in arguing that the
3 Government must know of the facts contained in the documents, Fridman
4 conflates the documents’ contents with their existence. The distinction is a
5 consequential one: the contents of documents are not covered by the Fifth
6 Amendment privilege. Fisher, 425 U.S. at 409-10. Therefore, the Government need
7 not prove its knowledge of the documents’ contents. Further, In re Katz, 623 F.2d
8 122, 126 (2d Cir. 1980), is not to the contrary. In In re Katz, the Government
9 sought “all documents relating to any dealings or business with . . . any company
10 owned, operated or controlled” by an individual named Benjamin Jamil. Id. at
11 123. We denied enforcement of the subpoena as written because the Government
12 did not know the identity of the corporations, Jamil’s relationship with them, or
13 whether some documents may be protected by attorney-client privilege. Id. at
14 126-27. We remanded to the district court to either conduct in camera review or
15 limit enforcement of the subpoena to public documents related to known entities.
16 Id. But here, the Government knows the accounts whose records are sought and
17 their connection to Fridman.
22
1 Because the Government knew the accounts existed and requested only
2 customary account documents, we conclude that there is sufficient evidence in
3 the record to support the Government’s knowledge as to the documents’
4 existence for Requests 1, 2, 4, and 7.
5 2. Prior Control
6 The record establishes that Fridman’s representative provided account
7 statements or other bank records to the IRS in 2012 for the Personal and HSBC
8 Accounts. Moreover, Fridman held the Personal Accounts individually in his
9 name, and the HSBC Account was held in the name of the David Marcelo Trust,
10 for which Fridman serves as Trustee. This is sufficient to establish the
11 Government knew Fridman had control over the Personal and HSBC Accounts.
12 See id. at 119-20.
13 With respect to the relevant Corporate Accounts, Fridman made FBAR
14 filings at various points from 1991 to 2005. An individual must file an FBAR if he
15 has “a financial interest in, or signature or other authority over” a foreign
16 financial account. 31 C.F.R. § 1010.350(a). By filing FBARs for the Corporate
17 Accounts, Fridman indicated that he had control over those accounts’ records as
18 of the years of those corresponding filings. See id. § 1010.350(a), (e)-(f).
23
1 Although Fridman argues that certain requested documents would be in
2 the possession of offshore banks, not the account owner, this argument is
3 inapposite. We first note that the Government was not required to establish that
4 Fridman possessed the documents; rather, it was required to prove possession or
5 control of the documents. See Fisher, 425 U.S. at 410; see also Greenfield, 831 F.3d at
6 119-21 . Moreover, we have previously explained that “[t]he test for the
7 production of documents is control, not location.” Matter of March Rich & Co.,
8 A.G., 7070 F.2d at 667 (holding that a witness cannot resist the production of
9 documents on the ground that the documents are located abroad).
10 Because Fridman or his representative filed FBARs and copies of
11 documents pertaining to the Known Accounts, there is sufficient evidence in the
12 record to establish the Government’s knowledge of Fridman’s control over the
13 requested documents.
14 3. Inference of Continued Existence and Control
15 Having concluded that the Government has met its burden of showing
16 that the documents existed and were in Fridman’s control at one point, we now
17 turn to the question of existence and control at the time the Summonses were
18 issued in 2013. See Greenfield, 831 F.3d at 123. In doing so, we are permitted to
24
1 infer existence and control if the four factors from the Greenfield balancing test
2 weigh in favor of such an inference. Id. at 125-26.
3 After considering these factors, we conclude that the record permits an
4 inference of continued existence and control in the present case. The first three
5 factors support an inference of continued existence and control. First, as we
6 explained in Greenfield, “bank documents are more likely to be retained long term
7 as compared to documents like receipts or prosaic emails.” Id. Second, banks
8 “tend to maintain consumer records.” Id. Third, unlike in Greenfield, here there is
9 no “significant intervening event[] that might well have resulted in transfer or
10 destructions of the sought documents.” Id. Although Fridman suggests that the
11 absence of continued FBAR filings for the Corporate Accounts indicates that he
12 ceased having an interest in those accounts, we are not convinced. This absence
13 could be a product of Fridman’s failure to make requisite filings consistently. 8
14 His suggestion that he lost control of his Corporate Accounts during certain
15 years is just that—a suggestion. It does not amount to evidence of intervening
16 factors like those encountered in Greenfield. Id. at 126-27.
8The record supports that Fridman failed to consistently file FBARs for other
foreign accounts.
25
1 The final factor is less clear-cut. We have little difficulty agreeing with the
2 Government that the time period between the last date of possession for the
3 Personal and HSBC Accounts and the date of the Summonses was relatively
4 short. Fridman’s representative provided the IRS with documents relating to the
5 Personal Accounts in May 2012. The same representative last provided the IRS
6 with records relating to the HSBC Account in November 2012. Thus, only
7 nineteen and thirteen months, respectively, eslaped between this evidence of
8 control and the date of the Summonses (December 2013). Both lengths of time are
9 relatively short. See United States v. Rylander, 460 U.S. 752, 761 n.3 (1983)
10 (concluding that an “inference of continuing possession” over twenty-one
11 months was reasonable).
12 The same cannot be said for the Corporate Accounts. The last known date
13 of control for some of these accounts was more than a decade before the issuance
14 of the Summonses. The most recent last-known date of control was 2005,
15 approximately eight years prior to the Summonses’ date. This factor is not
16 dispositive, however, for we weigh all four factors in determining if an inference
17 of existence and control is acceptable. The Summonses seek “customary account
18 documents,” the requested documents are related to financial accounts, and
26
1 there is no evidence suggesting that the documents were transferred or
2 destroyed. 9 Here, while the time lapse for the Corporate Accounts is significant,
3 considering all the factors together, the inference is still applicable.
4 4. Authentication
5 We are also satisfied that the Government could independently
6 authenticate the documents it seeks without relying on Fridman’s act of
7 production. It could do so through the testimony of third parties familiar with
8 records, by comparisons to other bank records it already possesses, or by
9 comparisons to similar bank documents. Greenfield, 831 F.3d at 118. For the
10 Personal and HSBC Accounts, the Government possesses copies of statements
11 and other account documents that Fridman’s representative produced to it, and
12 the Government can use those as comparators for authentication purposes.
13 Although Greenfield did not reach the issue of whether such comparisons can
14 sufficiently authenticate documents, we so hold here.
9We note that Fridman is a sophisticated businessman who is likely to retain
corporate records. Additionally, multinational banks tend to hold onto records of
their accounts, even those accounts that have been closed. A former client of a
bank is still entitled to seek records of a closed account (i.e., he has control over
them). For these reasons, we put less weight on the fourth factor of the balancing
test in this situation.
27
1 As to the relevant Corporate Accounts, the Government argues that it can
2 use bilateral tax treaties to authenticate the documents. It points to a declaration
3 from an IRS employee noting that through certain treaties, the United States can
4 request authenticated records from Switzerland, Israel, Brazil, France, Spain, the
5 Philippines, and Germany—countries where the relevant Corporate Accounts
6 are located. Through those treaties, the Government may also obtain sworn
7 testimony or statements of authentication from bank officials to authenticate
8 bank records. 10 In our view, these tax treaties provide the Government with a
9 sufficient independent method of authentication.
10 Although in Greenfield we said that authentication through use of the
11 Hague Evidence Convention was insufficient, we emphasized that this was “in
12 light of the controversy surrounding the source of the documents” and the
13 Government’s failure to provide anything beyond “a conclusory statement” that
14 authentication was likely to occur. 831 F.3d at 120. Because whether treaties can
15 be used to authenticate documents depends on the facts and circumstances of a
10This second method of authentication is not available for accounts located in
Switzerland and France, per those countries’ respective treaties with the United
States.
28
1 particular case, and because the record before us presents neither the unusual
2 circumstances existing in Greenfield nor any other indication that the bilateral tax
3 treaties to be used here are too complicated or ineffective to permit
4 authentication, we conclude that the Government has sufficiently established
5 that it can authenticate the Corporate Account documents.
6 In sum, we are satisfied that the Government has met its burden of
7 proving knowledge of the existence of the documents, knowledge of Fridman’s
8 control over the documents, and an independent means of authenticating of the
9 documents as required by Greenfield. Therefore, the district court’s decision that
10 the foregone conclusion doctrine applies to Requests 1, 2, 4, and 7 for documents
11 relating to the relevant Known Accounts is affirmed.
12 II. The Collective Entity Doctrine
13 Because the Fifth Amendment privilege protects only natural persons,
14 collective entities such as corporations or partnerships may not invoke it to
15 evade document requests. See, e.g., Braswell v. United States, 487 U.S. 99, 102, 104-
16 08 (1988); Bellis v. United States, 417 U.S. 85, 88-89, 93-101 (1974). Nor may an
17 individual custodian holding a collective entity’s records in a representative
29
1 capacity refuse to produce documents. Braswell, 487 U.S. at 108-12; In re Grand
2 Jury Subpoena Issued June 18, 2009, 593 F.3d 155, 158 (2d Cir. 2010).
3 “The critical issue [for determining what is a collective entity] is whether
4 the organization had an institutional identity separate from that of its individual
5 members.” In re Two Grand Jury Subpoenae Duces Tecum Dated Aug. 21, 1985, 793
6 F.2d 69, 72 (2d Cir. 1986); see also Bellis, 417 U.S. at 94-95. Pursuant to this rule, we
7 have held that sole proprietorships are covered by the Fifth Amendment’s
8 privilege against compulsory self-incrimination, because “a sole proprietorship
9 has no legal existence apart from its owner.” United States v. Fox, 721 F.2d 32, 36
10 (2d Cir. 1983); see also Braswell, 487 U.S. at 104. We have been strict in limiting the
11 privilege to only sole proprietorships and even holding that one-person
12 corporations are collective entities. In re Grand Jury Subpoena Issued June 18, 2009,
13 593 F.3d at 158-59. Our conclusion was motivated in part by the desire to
14 “avoid[] creating a category of organizations effectively immune from regulation
15 by virtue of being beyond the reach of the Government’s subpoena power.” Id. at
16 159.
17 Fridman first challenges the district court’s holding that trusts are
18 collective entities and that Fridman is therefore required to produce all trust-
30
1 related documents contemplated by Requests 1-4, 7, 11-17, and 20. Fridman also
2 challenges the district court’s conclusion that he is required to produce
3 documents responsive to Request 3 that he possesses in his capacity as custodian
4 of certain collective entities.
5 A. The collective entity rule applies to trusts, including traditional
6 common law trusts, like the David Marcelo Trust.
7 Whether a trust is a collective entity for purposes of the Fifth Amendment
8 is an issue of first impression for our Circuit. Every other circuit to address the
9 issue has answered in the affirmative. See In re Grand Jury Subpoena, 973 F.2d 45,
10 48 (1st Cir. 1992); Watson v. Comm’r of Internal Revenue, 690 F.2d 429, 431 (5th Cir.
11 1982); United States v. Harrison, 653 F.2d 359, 361-62 (8th Cir. 1981); In re Grand
12 Jury Proceedings, 633 F.2d 754, 757 (9th Cir. 1980). Our sister circuits have focused
13 on facts like the circumscribed discretionary authority of trustees, formal status
14 of the trust, and that a defendant may not be the sole beneficiary, In re Grand Jury
15 Subpoena, 973 F.2d at 48-51; that trusts are artificial entities, Watson, 690 F.2d at
16 431; that a trust is formally organized and legally distinct from the trustees,
17 Harrison, 653 F.2d at 361-62; and that a trust has independent functions even
18 when it is grantor-controlled, In re Grand Jury Proceedings, 633 F.2d at 757.
31
1 We join these circuits and hold that a trust is a collective entity. We
2 conclude so for a number of reasons. Notably, a trust, including a traditional
3 common law trust like the David Marcelo trust, 11 has a separate legal existence
4 from the trustee, which is the critical hallmark of a collective entity. See Aug. 21,
5 1985, 793 F.2d at 72; see also Harrison, 653 F.2d at 361-62; In re Grand Jury
6 Proceedings, 633 F.2d at 757. Unlike a sole proprietorship, which cannot survive
7 without the owner or creator, when a trustee resigns or is removed, the trust may
8 still continue under New York law. Cf. 106 N.Y. Jur. 2d Trusts §§ 294, 298, 303.
9 This could not be so if the trust and trustee were one and the same.
10 In addition, a trust “represent[s] a formal institutional arrangement.” Cf.
11 Bellis, 417 U.S. at 95. A trust is “relatively well organized and structured,” much
12 like the other collective entities previously recognized by Supreme Court
13 precedent on the collective entity exception. See id. at 92-93; see also Braswell, 487
14 U.S. at 104-12 (detailing the collective entity rule’s “lengthy and distinguished
11Traditional common law trusts are those that “create[] fiduciary relationships
for purposes of estate planning” and “cannot sue or be sued in [their] own right,”
in accordance with the common law of trusts. Raymond Loubier Irrevocable Tr. v.
Loubier, 858 F.3d 719, 729 (2d Cir. 2017); see also Restatement (Second) of Trusts §§
177 cmt. a (1959) (summarizing a trustee’s duty to enforce and defend against
claims on behalf of the trust).
32
1 pedigree”). One example is that a trustee’s discretion is limited by the governing
2 document and the principle that a trustee must act in the beneficiaries’ best
3 interest. See 106 N.Y. Jur. 2d Trusts §§ 347, 360; see also In re Grand Jury Subpoena,
4 973 F.2d at 48-50. This clearly distinguishes a trust from an entity that “embodies
5 little more than [a] personal [venture].” See Bellis, 417 U.S. at 94-95. Another
6 example is that a trust’s records are “distinct from the personal books and
7 records of” the trustee. Id. at 93; 106 N.Y. Jur. 2d Trusts § 373.
8 Finally, our holding that trusts are collective entities recognizes that the
9 decision to create a trust “is freely made and generates benefits, such as limited
10 liability, and burdens, such as the need to respond to subpoenas” for records. See
11 In re Grand Jury Subpoena Issued June 18, 2009, 593 F.3d at 159. As the Eighth
12 Circuit has said, “those who form a separate business entity [and] hold that
13 entity out as distinct and apart from the individuals involved . . . are estopped
14 from denying the existence and viability of that entity for Fifth Amendment
15 purposes.” Harrison, 653 F.2d at 361-62. We agree that it would be inequitable to
16 allow individuals to create a separate entity like a trust for favorable treatment
17 while simultaneously denying that entity’s separate existence for subpoena
18 purposes.
33
1 Fridman’s arguments to the contrary are meritless. He first argues that
2 because a trustee can be held personally liable, a trust is more akin to a sole
3 proprietorship. Although a trustee is personally liable “in the first instance”
4 when acting on behalf of the trust, the trustee may be “entitled to be reimbursed
5 or indemnified . . . from [trust] assets.” 106 N.Y. Jur. 2d Trusts § 356. Fridman
6 next argues that because a trust cannot take legal action on its own behalf, and
7 because recent case law establishes that a trustee’s individual citizenship governs
8 jurisdiction in diversity suits, a trust and trustee are one and the same. See
9 Americold Realty Tr. v. ConAgra Foods, Inc., 136 S. Ct. 1012, 1016 (2016); Raymond
10 Loubier Irrevocable Tr. v. Loubier, 858 F.3d 719, 731 (2d Cir. 2017). But that “state
11 and federal law do not treat [trusts] as distinct entities for all purposes” does not
12 alter the conclusion that a trust is a collective entity because trusts “bear enough
13 of the indicia of legal entities to be treated as such for the purpose of our analysis
14 of the Fifth Amendment issue presented in this case” for the reasons discussed.
15 See Bellis, 417 U.S. at 97 n.7.
16 We hold that trusts, including a traditional common law trust like the
17 David Marcelo Trust, are collective entities for purposes of the Fifth Amendment.
18 As such, we affirm the district court’s grant of the petition to enforce the
34
1 Summonses with respect to any documents Fridman retains in his capacity as a
2 trustee in response to Requests 1-4, 7, 11-17, and 20. 12
3 B. Fridman must also produce responsive corporate documents he
4 retains in a representative capacity.
5 Fridman also challenges the district court’s ruling that if he possesses or
6 controls records of any of the entities listed in Request 3 in a representative
7 capacity, he must produce these records under the collective entity doctrine.
12The parties seem to dispute whether, with respect to Request 4, the district
court limited its enforcement order solely to records of the Known Accounts. If
the district court had in fact limited its order in such a manner, then Fridman
need not produce records relating to the Republic National Bank of New York
account belonging to the David Marcelo Trust. Our review indicates, however,
that the district court ordered Fridman to produce “all trust-related documents
contemplated by Document Request Nos. 1-4, 7, 10-17, and 20,” which by its
terms covers the Republic National Bank of New York documents. See Fridman,
337 F. Supp. 3d at 272. The district court limited enforcement of Request 4 to the
Known Accounts only with respect to its analysis under the foregone conclusion
doctrine.
Additionally, Fridman has abandoned any other challenge to the scope of
the district court’s order to produce all trust-related documents that he possesses
in a representative capacity by failing to raise any such argument on appeal and
conceding that—at least with respect to Requests 13, 15, 17, and 20—the order
encompasses documents held in connection with known and unknown trusts
other than the David Marcelo Trust.
35
1 Fridman argues that it is the Government’s burden to prove a custodial
2 relationship exists between him and the corporations.
3 While our Circuit has not articulated a specific framework for establishing
4 a custodial relationship, we adopt the D.C. Circuit’s burden-shifting framework.
5 See, e.g., In re Sealed Case, 877 F.2d 83, 87 (D.C. Cir. 1989). The Government need
6 only show a reasonable basis to believe a defendant has the ability to produce
7 records; once the Government has done so, the burden shifts to the defendant to
8 explain or justify refusal. See id.
9 In the case at hand, the Government has established Fridman’s control
10 over the records for the Corporate Accounts, as we discussed in our analysis of
11 the foregone conclusion doctrine. This control provides a reasonable basis for
12 believing that Fridman has the ability to produce these records, and the burden
13 has thus shifted to Fridman to prove otherwise. See id.
14 Fridman fails to meet his burden. He cites to two cases from our Circuit, In
15 re Grand Jury Subpoenas Duces Tecum Dated June 13, 1983 & June 22, 1983, 722 F.2d
16 981, 986-87 (2d Cir. 1983), and In re Three Grand Jury Subpoenas Duces Tecum Dated
17 January 29, 1999, 191 F.3d 173, 181 (2d Cir. 1999), for the proposition that former
18 employees possess records only in an individual, not representative, capacity.
36
1 But Fridman’s reliance is misplaced. It is clear that former employees could not
2 serve in a custodial capacity and therefore would hold records only in a personal
3 capacity. See In re Three Grand Jury Subpoenas Duces Tecum Dated January 29, 1999,
4 191 F.3d at 181. However, Fridman has not shown that he is no longer affiliated
5 with any of the corporate entities at issue here. Therefore, these cases are
6 inapposite.
7 We accordingly affirm the district court’s ruling that Fridman must
8 produce the corporate documents he holds in a representative capacity.
9 CONCLUSION
10 For the reasons given above, we affirm the district court’s grant of the
11 petition to enforce the Summonses.
37