EDMUND A. SARGUS, JR., Chief District Judge.
The United States Probation Office for the Southern District of Ohio received on March 18, 2019, a Subpoena to Produce Documents, Information, or Objects or to Permit Inspection of Premises in a Civil Action. For the following reasons, the Court
The Director of the Administrative Office of the United States Courts has promulgated regulations establishing procedures for the production or disclosure of documents and the testimony of federal judicial personnel, including United States probation officers, in legal proceedings. Those procedures, outlined in Volume 20, Chapter 8 of the Guide to Judiciary Policy (the "Guide"), have been adopted by this Court in its local criminal rules. See S.D. Ohio Crim. R. 32.3(b). Federal judicial personnel may not provide testimony or produce records in legal proceedings except as authorized in accordance with the regulations set forth in Volume 20, Chapter 8 of the Guide. Guide to Judiciary Policy, vol. 20, ch. 8, § 820(a); see also In re Morning Song Bird Food Litig., 119 F.Supp.3d 793, 799 (S.D. Ohio 2015) (restating the Guide's general prohibition on testimony and record production in legal proceedings).
A request for testimony or production of records from judicial personnel "shall set forth, or shall be accompanied by an affidavit setting forth, a written statement by the party seeking the testimony or production of records, or by counsel for the party." Guide to Judiciary Policy, vol. 20, ch. 8, § 830(a). The statement or affidavit must contain "an explanation of the nature of the testimony or records sought, the relevance of the testimony or records sought to the legal proceedings, and the reasons why the testimony or records sought, or the information contained therein, are not readily available from other sources or by other means." Id. "This explanation shall contain sufficient information for the determining officer [as identified below] to determine whether or not federal judicial personnel should be allowed to testify or the records should be produced." Id. If the request lacks a sufficient explanation, the determining officer may deny the request or ask that the requester provide additional information. Id.
Judicial personnel may not provide testimony or produce records in legal proceedings without the prior approval of a "determining officer." Guide to Judiciary Policy, vol. 20, ch. 8, § 840(a). The determining officer varies depending on the request. As to requests directed to an employee or former employee of a court office—such as the Clerk's office, the Probation office, or the Pretrial Services office—the determining officer is the unit head of the particular office— such as the Clerk of Court, the Chief Probation Officer, or the Chief Pretrial Services Officer. Id. § 840(b)(3). If a request is directed to a court office, the determining officer shall consult with the Chief District Judge regarding the proper response to the request. Id.; see also S.D. Ohio Crim. R. 32.3(c).
"In response to a request for testimony or the production of records by federal judicial personnel in legal proceedings . . . the determining officer may determine" whether and how the judicial personnel may respond. Guide to Judiciary Policy, vol. 20, ch. 8, § 850(a). The determining officer may deny a request if the request does not meet any requirement imposed by Volume 20, Chapter 8 of the Guide. Id. Moreover, when determining whether to authorize the production of judicial records or the testimony of judicial personnel in legal proceedings, "the determining officer will consider, based on [several enumerated factors], the effect in the particular case, as well as in future cases generally, which testifying or producing records will have on the ability of the federal judiciary or federal judicial personnel to perform their official duties." Id.
Here, after consulting with the Chief United States Probation Officer, the Court concludes that the Probation Department shall not comply with the subpoena. The subpoena was not issued in accordance with the requirements established in Volume 20, Chapter 8 of the Guide. The subpoena did not set forth, or contain an affidavit setting forth, "an explanation of the nature of the testimony or records sought, the relevance of the testimony or records sought to the legal proceedings, and the reasons why the testimony or records sought, or the information contained therein, are not readily available from other sources or by other means." Guide to Judiciary Policy, vol. 20, ch. 8, § 830(a).
For these reasons, the Court