State of Maryland Withdraws Subpoena for Lawyer’s Computer and Personnel Records (3/2/2007)
ACLU Calls it Victory for Civil Rights FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org ANNAPOLIS, MD - In a
move hailed as a victory by the American Civil Liberties Union of Maryland,
Attorney General Douglas Gansler is withdrawing a subpoena demanding production
of a civil rights lawyer’s computer hard drive and personnel records. This is the latest development in a
long-running voting rights dispute between the Maryland Green Party and the
State Board of Elections. "This a victory for
every Marylander who cares about our court system’s respect for the rights of
those who stand up to challenge civil rights violations,” said ACLU of Maryland
Legal Director Deborah A. Jeon. “We view this turnabout by the state as a clear
acknowledgement by the Attorney General of the impropriety of the
subpoena.” In January, the ACLU
of Maryland asked the state appeals court to quash the subpoena, which had been
served upon the lawyer’s employer, Montgomery College. Shortly thereafter, the
court of appeals took the matter up for review. The controversy
arose in a voting rights case in which the Maryland Green Party successfully
challenged the constitutionality of state election laws and practices that
denied a Green Party candidate a place on the ballot during the 2000
Congressional elections. The merits of the dispute have been settled since 2003,
when Maryland’s highest court ruled in favor of the Green Party. The courts also have squarely decided
that the state is required to pay the Green Party’s legal fees under civil
rights laws. But the litigation has
dragged on for years as Maryland has sought to delay or avoid payment of those
fees - engaging in what Supreme Court Justice William Brennan once called “one
of the least socially productive types of litigation
imaginable.” The subpoena was
served in spring 2006 upon the employer of one of the Green Party’s lawyers,
even though the employer is not a party to the case. It demanded production of
the lawyer’s job application and his wage, attendance, and leave records. More importantly, the subpoena sought
all email and other electronic information stored on the lawyer's
password-protected work computer, including privileged communications between
the lawyer and the Green Party and confidential documents prepared as part of
the litigation. In its appeal, the
ACLU argued that enforcement of the subpoena would have undermined both the
attorney-client privilege and the work product doctrine - two of the oldest and
most fundamental protections clients and their lawyers have under the law. The ACLU also argued that the subpoena
would discourage private parties and lawyers from taking up civil rights causes,
for fear that their success in doing so would expose them to unreasonable
government intrusions upon their privacy. Numerous civil
rights and legal groups joined the ACLU as “friends-of-the-court” supporting the
effort to quash the subpoena because of its potential to undermine enforcement
of civil rights law. Led by the Public Justice Center, those groups
include: CASA of Maryland, Inc.,
Civil Justice, Inc., the Greater Baltimore Christian Legal Society, the Labor
Council for Latin American Advancement, the Maryland Disability Law Center, the
Maryland Employment Lawyers Association, the National Council of La Raza, the
NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund, Inc., the Natural Resources Defense
Council, Inc. and Public Citizen. Counsel in the case
include Frank Dunbaugh and Mark Miller, original counsel for the Green Party;
Creighton R. Magid and Beth Forsythe of Dorsey & Whitney; C. Christopher Brown
of Brown, Goldstein & Levy; and Jeon and David Rocah of the ACLU of
Maryland. Suzanne Sangree at the Public Justice Center organized participants
filing the friend-of-the-court brief.
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