Those are the allegations in
this motion to dismiss filed by Howard Srebnick and Rossana Arteaga-Gomez in U.S. v. Schapiro before Judge Cooke.
Those who practice in this District know that in large fraud cases, the government stores its documents at a facility in Miramar. If you want to see or copy the documents, you need to go there. The Schapiro defense alleges that it flagged documents for copying from the warehouse. The copy service scanned those documents and gave the defense a CD, which included the documents, titles the defense assigned to those documents, and post-it notes on the documents. Unbeknownst to the defense, the copy service would also give that CD with this material to government agents. And the copy service has been doing this for 10 years. From the motion:
Mr. Montero [the copy service guy] then stated that he had been providing to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the past 10 years duplicate copies of the discovery documents selected by defense counsel in other cases. On that day, Mr. Montero forwarded to Ms. Arteaga-Gomez his April 21, 2016 email to Cori Weiss [the government paralegal] (discussed above). In the forwarded email, Mr. Montero writes:
Here is the email I sent the FBI and this practice has been one that has been going on since 2006 that both Xpediacopy my old company and Imaging Universe have provided the U.S.D.O.J. in the majority of the cases where the government was not paying for the discovery services or were paying for half of the services.
To the prosecutor's credit, he informed the defense of this when he found out about in this case. But query why it took 10 years for any prosecutor or agent to speak up.
Judge Cooke remarked at the initial status conference on the motion that if true, the conduct was "repulsive." In fact, she issued
an order asking the parties to address the following issue: "What remedies, if any, are available to the court were the court to find that the described conduct in Defendant Shapiro’s motion is a systemic, consistent and/or pervasive practice of or on behalf of the United States Attorney’s Office?"
The Government filed a 49-page response
here in which it claims, no harm no foul and that this isn't really work-product. It also makes the surprising claim that the defense has waived any claim because it either knew or should have known about this procedure. Wow.
An evidentiary hearing has been scheduled for next week. This is worth following.
Kudos to Dan Christensen from Broward Bulldog as the first to report on the story
here, which will soon be national news. From the intro:
In a stunning twist in a long-running Medicare fraud case, both the
Miami U.S. Attorney’s office and the FBI stand accused of spying on a
defendant’s lawyer by illegally and secretly obtaining copies of
confidential defense documents.
Court papers filed last week by attorneys for Dr. Salo Schapiro
contend the secret practice was not the action of “just one rogue agent
or prosecutor.” Rather, it was apparently an “office-wide policy” of
both the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the FBI that’s gone on for “at least
10 years.”
The unwritten policy involves “surreptitiously copying defense
counsel’s work product through the government-contracted copy service
that the government requires defense counsel to use to obtain the
discovery documents’’ needed to properly prepare for trial, according to
court papers that seek either the dismissal of Schapiro’s indictment or
the disqualification of the entire prosecution team.