                             UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
                             FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

UNITED STATES ex rel. LANDIS,

                        Plaintiffs,

                        v.                         Case No. 1:10-cv-00976 (CRC)

TAILWIND SPORTS CORP., et al.,

                        Defendants.

                                      OPINION AND ORDER

          Before the Court is Defendant Lance Armstrong’s Motion to Compel Production of

Documents in response to his First Set of Requests for Production of Documents to Plaintiff

United States [ECF No. 190]. On September 30, 2014, the Court issued an Opinion and Order

directing the Government to submit a supplemental filing regarding its assertions of privilege

over withheld witness interview memoranda prepared by law enforcement agents. 1 The Court

also provided the parties with general guidance regarding the boundaries of privilege in this case

based on its review of the parties’ briefing and the applicable case law. The Government has

now submitted all of the relevant memoranda for in camera review, along with its justifications

for withholding the documents, and Armstrong has provided a response. Upon consideration of

the memoranda, the motion, the oppositions and reply, and the supplemental briefs and

responses, the Court will grant the motion to compel in part and deny it in part.

I.        Background

          This qui tam action was brought by relator Floyd Landis in June 2010. The Government

intervened in the action in April 2013. The Government is represented by lawyers in the Civil


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     The Opinion and Order also addressed ten other categories of documents sought by Armstrong.
Divisions of the U.S. Department of Justice (“DOJ”) and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the

District of Columbia. The case is now in discovery.

       Defendant Armstrong seeks production of witness interview memoranda prepared by

government agents over which the Government asserts work-product privilege. Armstrong’s

First Supplemental Br. at 3. Most of the memoranda were created during a prior criminal

investigation in the Central District of California into the alleged use of performance enhancing

drugs in professional cycling. That investigation lasted from 2009 until early 2012, when the

Government announced it would not be seeking an indictment against Armstrong. Id. at 4–5.

Specifically, Armstrong seeks 45 memoranda prepared by law enforcement agents summarizing

witness interviews conducted in the criminal investigation. Supplemental Br. In Supp. of United

States’ Claims of Privilege Over Interview Memoranda Ex. G. Many of these interviews were

conducted by the agents themselves. Armstrong also seeks seven memoranda summarizing

interviews conducted jointly by the civil and criminal teams after the relator filed this suit,

including five over which the Government also claims attorney-client privilege. Id. Ex. F.

Finally, Armstrong seeks 24 memoranda prepared by an agent of the United States Postal

Service (“USPS”) Office of Inspector General (“OIG”) that summarize interviews conducted

exclusively by the civil attorneys and investigators in this case. Id. Ex. E. The agent himself

conducted three of the 24 interviews over the phone without government attorneys present; the

rest were led by the civil lawyers.

II.    Legal Standard

       A witness interview memorandum prepared in anticipation of litigation can constitute

attorney work product. See Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(b)(3); Upjohn Co. v. United

States, 449 U.S. 383, 401 (1981). As the Court explained in its prior opinion, courts generally



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draw a distinction between pure “opinion” work product, which reflects an attorney’s mental

processes and is virtually never discoverable, and “fact” work product, which reflects only

relevant, non-privileged facts and is discoverable upon a showing of substantial need and

unavailability by other means. Op. and Order Sept. 30, 2014 at 8 (citing In re Sealed Case, 124

F.3d 230, 236 (D.C. Cir. 1997)). While distinguishing opinion from fact work product is

“inherently and necessarily fact specific,” United States v. Clemens, 793 F. Supp. 2d 236, 252

(D.D.C. 2011), the D.C. Circuit has instructed that notes and memoranda reflecting the

“opinions, judgments and thought processes of counsel” fall into the former category, whereas

those whose content has not been “sharply focused or weeded” by counsel fall into the latter, In

re Sealed Case, 124 F.3d at 236. Accordingly, courts in this district have held substantially

verbatim witness statements contained in interview memoranda that have not been “sharply

focused or weeded” by an attorney to be fact rather than opinion work product. See Clemens,

793 F. Supp. 2d at 252 (finding lawyers’ notes of an FBI witness interview to be fact work

product where the lawyers did not shape the interview and the memoranda “accurately depict[ed]

the witnesses’ own words”); In re HealthSouth Corp Sec. Litig., 250 F.R.D. 8, 12–13 (D.D.C.

2008) (attorney memoranda that were “nearly verbatim transcripts” of an FBI interview held to

be fact work product). Memoranda prepared by an agent of the attorney that meet the above

criteria may also be entitled to attorney work-product protection. United States v. Nobles, 422

U.S. 225, 238–39 (1975).

       The Court previously ruled that Armstrong has demonstrated a substantial need for any

law enforcement memoranda created during the now-closed criminal investigation that contain

relevant fact work product only. Op. and Order Sept. 30, 2014 at 9–10 (citing Miller v.

Holzmann, Case No. 95-01231, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 16117, *4–5 (D.D.C. Mar. 8, 2007)



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(finding that qui tam defendant had substantial need for summaries of FBI witness interviews

that were created during a since-closed criminal investigation and shared with civil Government

lawyers)). The Court explained that because the civil lawyers litigating this qui tam action have

received a substantial advantage from having access to the fruits of the prior criminal

investigation, fairness dictates that both sides have equal access to relevant witness statements

developed by law enforcement in the prior criminal investigation. Id.

III.   Analysis

       The Court will address each category of withheld memoranda in turn.

       A. Memoranda Summarizing Investigatory Interviews During the Civil Investigation
          (Exhibits E and F)

       The Government asserts that the memoranda contained in Exhibits E and F of its

supplemental brief—mainly summaries of interviews conducted by the civil lawyers in this case

and drafted by an investigator on the civil litigation team—consist of opinion work product and

thus are not discoverable. Armstrong responds at the outset that the Government has waived any

claim of opinion work product by stating at the hearing that it was “not taking the position that

[the memoranda are] opinion work product.” Hr’g Tr. 18: 6–11, Sept. 15, 2014. But, the

memoranda before the Court at the time of the hearing consisted largely of law enforcement

memoranda created during the criminal investigation as opposed to those created by the civil

litigation team. The hearing also preceded the Court’s guidance regarding the application of the

work-product privilege to this matter and its in camera review of the specific memoranda at

issue. As a result, the Court will not treat Government counsel’s comment at the hearing as a

waiver and instead will address the merits of the Government’s arguments.

       The memoranda contained in Exhibit E were authored by Special Agent M.J. Pugliese of

the USPS OIG, who was assigned to support DOJ’s civil investigation in July 2010, several

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months prior to any of the interviews. Supplemental Br. In Supp. of United States’ Claims of

Privilege Over Interview Memoranda Ex. B, Decl. of Michael Pugliese (“Pugliese Decl.”) Oct.

21, 2014 ¶ 3. Pugliese affirms that the civil attorneys “selected witnesses to be interviewed,

selected the topics to be addressed with each witness, selected the documents to be shown to

witnesses, led the interviews, and asked the questions.” Id. ¶ 6. He further states that he

participated in attorney strategy discussions and received interview outlines from attorneys prior

to interviews, and discussed the relevance of each interview with attorneys afterwards but before

drafting the memoranda. Id. ¶¶ 7–10. In some cases, after Pugliese circulated a draft

memorandum to the civil attorneys, “an attorney would call me to discuss [it] in order to ensure

that it reflected all information from the interview that was relevant to the legal theories of the

case under consideration.” Id. ¶ 10.

       Special Agent Amy Fong of the USPS OIG drafted the memoranda in Exhibit F under

similar circumstances. Supplemental Br. In Supp. of United States’ Claims of Privilege Over

Interview Memoranda Ex. A, Decl. of Robert Chandler (“Chandler Decl.”) Oct. 21, 2014 ¶ 13.

The civil team shared its investigative work and discussed its “thinking about the defendants’

potential liability under the [False Claims Act] and the direction of [its] investigation” with the

criminal team—including Fong—prior to these interviews, “asked questions as necessary to

develop their legal theories” during the interviews, and reviewed the memoranda before they

were finalized after the interviews. Id. ¶¶ 13–15. Despite Armstrong’s arguments to the

contrary, these affidavits make clear that the civil attorneys “shape[d] the topics that were

covered” and “frame[d] the questions that were asked” in the interviews reflected in both

Exhibits E and F as part of their efforts to determine whether to intervene in this litigation. In re

HealthSouth, 250 F.R.D. at 12. The Court therefore finds that these materials “contain[] facts



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elicited in the course of a ‘litigation-related investigation’” that “‘necessarily reflect[ ] a focus

chosen by the lawyer,’” and thus constitute opinion work product entitled to privilege. Clemens,

793 F. Supp. 2d 236 at 252 (quoting In re Sealed Case, 124 F.3d 230 at 236). 2

        B. Memoranda Summarizing Witness Interviews During the Prior Criminal Investigation
           (Exhibit G)

        The memoranda in Exhibit G of the Government’s supplemental brief—law enforcement

interview summaries from the criminal investigation—are a different kettle of fish. Unlike the

memoranda in Exhibits E and F, the Government has not established that an attorney “‘sharply

focused or weeded’” the content of the summaries. In re HealthSouth, 250 F.R.D. at 11 (quoting

In re Sealed Case, 124 F.3d at 236). Nearly half of the interviews took place without a

government lawyer present and the Court’s in camera review reveals that all of the memoranda

appear to be substantially verbatim agent summaries of open-ended discussions of issues relevant

to the criminal investigation. While a prosecutor involved in the investigation attests that he and

other members of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California set the general

direction of the investigation and the interviews, Supplemental Br. In Supp. of United States’

Claims of Privilege Over Interview Memoranda Ex. H, Decl. of Mark Williams (“Williams

Decl.”) Oct. 21, 2014 ¶ 5, it does not appear that these attorneys focused the content of the

memoranda themselves or participated in drafting them, as the civil lawyers did with respect to

the summaries drafted in furtherance of their investigation. Indeed, the Government itself

acknowledges that the memoranda in Exhibit G “are fact work product” that must be disclosed

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   The Government has also asserted attorney-client privilege over five memoranda in Exhibit F
that summarize interviews of USPS employees. Supplemental Br. In Supp. of United States’
Claims of Privilege Over Interview Memoranda Ex. D. Armstrong previously indicated that he
does not seek production of three of the five memoranda due to the Government’s invocation of
attorney-client privilege. Armstrong’s First Supplemental Br. at 8, n.6. Because the remaining
two are substantially similar to the three uncontested memoranda, the Court finds that they are
likewise privileged.
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upon a showing of substantial need by Armstrong. Supplement to the United States’ Surreply at

2. And as the Court has previously determined, Armstrong has made the necessary showing.

Op. and Order Sept. 30, 2014 at 9 (“The Court agrees that Armstrong has demonstrated a

substantial need for any law enforcement memoranda containing only relevant ‘fact’ work

product[.]”). Accordingly, the Court finds that the Government must produce to Armstrong the

memoranda contained in Exhibit G. The Government may redact any portions of the

memoranda that reflect opinion work product, such as attorney notes or highlighting.

        IV.    Conclusion

        For the foregoing reasons, it is hereby ORDERED that Defendant Armstrong’s Motion

to Compel [ECF. No. 190] is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. The motion is denied as

it relates to the memoranda set forth in Exhibits D, E, and F and granted as it relates to the

memoranda set forth in Exhibit G. It is further

        ORDERED that the Government shall produce to Armstrong the memoranda set forth in

Exhibit G after redacting and logging any portions that include opinion work product, such as

attorney notes or highlighting.

        SO ORDERED.




                                                              CHRISTOPHER R. COOPER
                                                              United States District Judge

Date:   January 12, 2014




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