An application to stay the District Court's order (and the Court
of Appeals' mandate) requiring that applicant report for custody
pursuant to the District Court's earlier order finding him in
contempt for refusing to testify at a deposition hearing in
connection with denaturalization proceedings in another District
Court against a third person -- applicant having refused to testify
despite a grant of immunity and an order sealing his deposition --
is granted. Applicant contended that his testimony would tend to
prove that he cooperated with the Nazi Government, committed war
crimes, and engaged in treasonous activity against the Soviet Union
during World War II; that his testimony could be used by the Soviet
Union in a criminal proceeding against him if he were denaturalized
and deported there and his testimony came to the Soviet
Government's attention; and that, because the grant of immunity and
the sealing order did not adequately protect against the use of his
testimony in a foreign criminal prosecution, he had a Fifth
Amendment privilege against testifying. The question raised by this
application, concerning the adequacy of the sealing order is
sufficiently similar to the question identified in
Araneta
v. United States, ante, p. 1301 (BURGER, C.J., in
chambers), to make it appropriate for the full Court to consider
this application at the same time it decides whether or not to
grant certiorari in
Araneta.
JUSTICE STEVENS, Circuit Justice.
The United States District Court for the Northern District of
Illinois is holding applicant, Mecislovas Mikutaitis, in civil
contempt of court because he refuses to testify at a deposition in
Chicago despite a grant of immunity by the United States District
Court for the Middle District of Florida, where denaturalization
proceedings against one Jurgis Joudis are pending. The papers
before me indicate that the testimony the Government seeks from
Mikutaitis will tend to prove that he, as well as Joudis,
cooperated with the Nazi Government, committed war crimes, and
engaged in treasonous activity against the Soviet Union after it
invaded Lithuania during
Page 478 U. S. 1307
World War II. Mikutaitis asserts that the testimony the
Government seeks to compel may be used in the Soviet Union in a
criminal proceeding against him in the event that he is
denaturalized and deported there and his testimony comes to the
attention of the Soviet Government. Thus, he contends that, because
the grant of immunity does not adequately protect against the use
of his testimony against him in a criminal prosecution by a foreign
sovereign, he has a Fifth Amendment privilege against
testifying.
In support of his theory, Mikutaitis argued before the District
Court that there is a probability that he too will eventually be
denaturalized and deported, since his deposition testimony may be
used against him in such a civil proceeding. In this regard, a
lawyer for the Government's Office of Special Investigations
testified that the United States is actively engaged in seeking to
denaturalize and deport those who cooperated with the Nazi
Government and concealed their involvement to obtain entry into the
United States. Mikutaitis also presented an expert in Soviet law
who testified that the Soviet Union is likely to prosecute
Mikutaitis for treason if he is deported there. The District Court
recognized that Mikutaitis has a "realistic fear of prosecution,"
but nonetheless found Mikutaitis in contempt. The District Court
held that the court order sealing the deposition sufficiently
protected him from the risk that his testimony would ever be
disclosed to the Soviet Union.
See United States v.
Joudis, 800 F.2d 159, 161 (CA7 1986). The District Court
allowed Mikutaitis to remain free on bail pending appeal.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
affirmed the contempt order, concluding that
"the sealing order [was] adequate to protect Mikutaitis from
Soviet acquisition of his testimony, and thus override his Fifth
Amendment claim."
Id. at 162. In light of this conclusion, it was not
necessary for the court to decide whether the
Page 478 U. S. 1308
constitutional privilege against self-incrimination provides any
protection against compelled testimony when there is a substantial
risk that a foreign sovereign will prosecute the witness.
See
Zicarelli v. New Jersey Investigation Comm'n, 406 U.
S. 472,
406 U. S. 478
(1972) (declining to reach constitutional issue, since there was no
"real and substantial" danger that witness' testimony would be used
against him in a foreign prosecution).
On September 5, 1986, a panel of the Court of Appeals granted
the Government's motion for immediate issuance of the mandate, and
on September 10, the District Court ordered Mikutaitis to surrender
himself to the custody of the United States Marshal on the
following day. Mikutaitis complied with that order. He now asks me,
in my capacity as Circuit Justice, to stay the issuance of the
Court of Appeals' mandate and the District Court's order requiring
him to report for custody, thereby allowing him to remain free on
bond pending his filing a suggestion for rehearing to the Court of
Appeals or a petition for certiorari to this Court. [
Footnote 1] Pursuant to my request, the
United States has filed a memorandum in opposition to the
application.
In my opinion, the question raised by this application is
sufficiently similar to the question identified by THE CHIEF
JUSTICE in
Araneta v. United States,
ante p. 1301 (BURGER, C.J., in chambers), to make
it appropriate for the full Court to consider this application for
a stay at the same time it decides whether or not to grant certiori
in
Araneta. [
Footnote
2] In
Araneta, THE CHIEF JUSTICE granted a stay of the
contempt order pending a petition for certiorari, based in part on
his prediction that it is "more likely than not" that five
Justices
Page 478 U. S. 1309
will agree with the United States Court of Appeals for the
Fourth Circuit that the sealing of the grand jury testimony under
Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 6(e) in that case did not
provide adequate protection against future disclosure of testimony
to the Government of the Philippines.
Ante at
478 U. S.
1304. That conclusion was supported by the risk that the
testimony might be disclosed inadvertently, the fact that the order
did not forbid disclosure of evidence derived from the testimony,
and the possibility that the grand jury record might be opened at a
later date.
See United States v. (Under Seal), 794 F.2d
920 (CA4 1986). All of these factors are relevant in this case as
well. [
Footnote 3]
It does not appear that the Government will be significantly
prejudiced by an additional short delay in obtaining Mikutaitis'
deposition. [
Footnote 4] On the
other hand, it is possible that continued enforcement of
Page 478 U. S. 1310
the contempt order may have the practical consequence of
rendering the proceeding moot if Mikutaitis is pressured into
testifying because of the prospect of lengthy imprisonment pending
consideration of his petitions for review by the en banc Court of
Appeals or this Court. In light of these considerations, I have
decided to grant the application. Accordingly, the enforcement of
the contempt order entered by the District Court on March 11, 1986,
which had been stayed until September 5, 1986, is stayed until
further order of this Court. [
Footnote 5]
[
Footnote 1]
A suggestion for rehearing en banc was filed with the Court of
Appeals on September 16, 1986.
[
Footnote 2]
A petition for certiorari was filed in
Araneta on
August 4, 1986, and the Court should be able to act upon it during
its conference later this month.
See Araneta, ante at
478 U. S.
1305.
[
Footnote 3]
Recognizing that two courts have now ruled that the sealing
order eliminates Mikutaitis' substantial fear of disclosure, I
nonetheless believe that the legal question of whether sealing
orders adequately protect against disclosure for Fifth Amendment
purposes is one of the two key issues presented in
Araneta, and that the full Court should have the
opportunity to consider this stay application in light of its
action on the petition in
Araneta. As it stands, some of
the United States Courts of Appeals appear to have reached
differing conclusions on this issue.
See United States v.
(Under Seal), 794 F.2d at 925 (acknowledging that three
Circuits have deemed Rule 6(e) orders sufficiently protective, but
holding that the "contrary authority [is the] more
compelling").
[
Footnote 4]
The Government initially sought to depose Mikutaitis in 1983,
the order requiring him to testify was issued in October, 1985, and
he was found to be in contempt on March 11, 1986.
[
Footnote 5]
The entry of this order shall not in any way affect the
jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals to take whatever action it
deems appropriate in response to the pending suggestion for
rehearing. Nor does this order preclude the District Court from
entering whatever orders it deems appropriate to insure that
Mikutaitis will be available to testify in the event that the
judgment of the panel of the Court of Appeals is ultimately upheld.
Finally, issuance of this order is in no way intended to discourage
either Mikutaitis or the Government from seeking a broader sealing
order.
See United States v. Joudis, 800 F.2d 159, 163 (CA7
1986).