JOHN R. PADOVA, Judge.
Second SupersedingIndictment No. 10-663 charges Defendant Jacquel Crewswith one count of conspiracy to distribute 5 kilograms or more of cocaine and 50 grams or more of cocaine base ("crack"), in violation of 21 U.S.C. § 846 (Count Five), and thirteen counts of laundering of monetary instruments in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1956(a)(1)(A)(i) and 1956(a)(1)(B)(i) (Counts Eight — Twenty). He is scheduled to be tried on these charges beginning on February 27, 2012. Presently before the Court is Crews's Motion "For Issuance of Subpoenas Duces Tecum Pursuant to Fed. R. Crim. P. 17(c)." We held a hearing on the Motion on January 4, 2012. For the reasons stated below, we deny the Motion.
The Second Superseding Indictment alleges that Crews participated in a multi-million dollar cocaine and crack cocaine distribution association based in the Frankford section of Philadelphia(the "Frankford DTA"), which engaged in the trafficking of hundreds of kilograms of cocaine and crack cocaine in Philadelphia from 1995 through 2007. As part of this conspiracy, Crews allegedly provided moneyfor the purchase of multi-kilogram quantities of cocaine; purchased multi-kilogram quantities of cocaine; received deliveries of cocaine; manufactured crack cocaine for sale; packaged cocaine and crack cocaine; and supplied cocaine and crack cocaine to other individuals for sale. The Frankford DTA is alleged to have generated millions of dollars in gross receipts and profits from its drug trafficking activities, and the Second Superseding Indictment also charges Crews with laundering those proceeds through the purchase and mortgaging of real estate in Philadelphia.
Crews's Motion concerns two individuals who have been identified as witnesses who will testify against Crews at his trial. The first is Craig Lofton, who is alleged in the Second Superceding Indictment to be another member of the Frankford DTA who participated in the purchase and packaging for resale of kilogram quantities of cocaine. The second individual is James Miller, who is alleged in the Second Superceding Indictment to have purchased cocaine from Crews between 2003 and 2006 and to have sold cocaine to Crews in 2006.
Lofton and Miller were both arrested in October 2006, and have both entered guilty pleas to drug trafficking crimes. Since his 2006 arrest, Lofton has been held in the Federal Detention Center-Philadelphia ("FDC"), the Salem County Correctional Facility, the Berks County Prison, and the Lehigh County Prison. James Miller has been held since his arrest in the FDC, the Salem County Correctional Facility; the Northern Neck Regional Jail, and the Northeast Ohio Correctional Center.
Crews contends that Lofton and Miller have colluded incoercingand coordinating testimony of several other individuals who Crews expects to testify against him at trial. Crews has, accordingly, moved for an order allowing the issuance of subpoenas duces tecum addressed to all of the institutions in which Lofton and Miller have been incarcerated since their arrests. Each subpoena seeks the pre-trial production of Lofton's and Miller's recorded phone calls and visitor logs. Together, the subpoenas seek the production of the recordings of every phone call made by Lofton and Miller for over five years, in addition to a listing of every single individual who has visited Lofton and Miller for the same time period.
A subpoena duces tecum issued pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 17(c) "may order the witness to produce any books, papers, documents, data, or other objects the subpoena designates. The court may direct the witness to produce the designated items in court before trial or before they are to be offered in evidence." Fed. R. Crim. P. 17(c)(1). If the court orders that the requested documents be produced prior to trial, the court may also permit the parties to inspect the documents prior to trial.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has also cautioned that "[t]he fact that requested material may be evidentiary and subject to subpoena at trial under
Crews contends that he is entitled to the requested subpoenas because he has information indicating that Lofton and Miller "have been reaching out to individuals who are cooperating in this case, . . . have been coordinating testimony, [and] have been telling people essentially what to say and how to say it." (1/4/12 Hrg. Tr. at 2-3.) He maintains that the material he seeks, phone calls recorded by prisons and prison visitor logs, are not otherwise procurable in advance of trial. (
Crews testified during the January 4, 2012 Hearing to lay an evidentiary foundation for his Motion. He stated that his belief that Lofton and Miller are coercing and/or coordinating testimony against him is based on three sources of information: (1) conversations he had with Lofton; (2) conversations he had with two of his co-defendants in this case; and (3) conversations he had with an individual who has placed three-way calls for Lofton since Lofton was incarcerated. Crews reported that, in 2006, Lofton contacted him by way of a three-way call placed by a girl named Tamara. (
In 2006, Crews spoke to Mark Miller (one of his co-defendants in this case), who was then incarcerated in Fort Dix, New Jersey. (
On one occasion during 2011, Crews spoke to another co-defendant in this case, Monique Pearson, who informed Crews that Lofton had coerced several people, namely Theodore McFaddden, Jr., Kevin Isely, Timothy Carter, and Mark Miller. (
In 2007, Crews had a conversation with Lofton's cousin Ryan, who informed Crews that he had placed three-way calls for Lofton with Isely and McFadden, and several other people, and had overheard Lofton asking Kevin Isely to set people up for him and to coerce stories. (
Crews did not identify any specific phone calls or visitor logs he seeks to subpoena for pre-trial production pursuant to Rule 17(c). Rather, he is engaged in a fishing expedition, merely hoping to find material that he may be able to use to impeach the Government's witnesses against him. Indeed, "[r]ather than specifically targeting evidentiary and relevant material, the proposed subpoena[s] appear[] to be an attempt by Defendant[] to unearth a mass of personal communications by potential government witnesses in an attempt to find anything that might impeach their credibility."
Crews seeks an order allowing him to review the recordings of more than five years of telephone calls made by two imprisoned government witnesses and more than five years of logs showing each person who has visited these witnesses in prison. He seeks what appears to be a massive amount of material in the hope that his review of this material may uncover the proverbial needle in a haystack, a visit or phone call that he can use to impeach the testimony of these two witnesses and perhaps some other government witnesses. As we have discussed above, impeachment material is not typically the proper subject of pre-trial subpoenas pursuant to Rule 17(c).