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Vol. 71, No. 9,
September 1998
Fighting back:
Remedies for the wrongfully prosecuted?
By David W. Simon
You represent Marsha Jones and her company, Home Healthcare
Inc. After working in various home health-care agencies for several years,
Jones and a friend started their own home health-care business servicing
primarily poor, inner-city neighborhoods. In 1996 the government commenced
an investigation into the Medicare billing practices of Home Healthcare.
Apparently, the company had violated several Medicare regulations, including
one that prohibited licensed, government-certified nurses from being reimbursed
for services provided unless government-licensed home health-care agencies
would not service a particular area or patient group. You viewed the government's
theory as absurd - your client started her business because the existing
home health-care agencies would not service inner-city neighborhoods. Assuming
that the investigation (and the government's threats of criminal prosecution)
were based simply on a misunderstanding of your client's business and of
the industry, you responded to the government audit by providing a detailed
explanation of her operation and billing practices.
The prosecutor was undeterred and, under pressure from Washington to
"crack down" on Medicare fraud, prosecuted Home Healthcare, Marsha,
and her partner. Fortunately, the jury - after deliberating for fewer
than 30 minutes - returned a "not guilty" verdict. Although
Marsha avoided prison, the business was destroyed because it could not perform
any government-reimbursed services during the investigation and prosecution.
Moreover, the well-publicized indictment and trial severely damaged Marsha's
reputation in the industry, and she has been unable to find work in her
field.
A rather Pyrrhic victory for your client: While you kept her out of jail,
Marsha's business was ruined as a result of the government investigation
and prosecution. When she turned to you, her lawyer, seeking relief, there
wasn't much you could offer. Vindicated criminal targets or defendants generally
are without a remedy in our system. The immunity doctrines and the very
high bar for any civil remedy historically have made recovery for even the
most abusive prosecution virtually impossible. Until recently, the answer
to the question posed by Secretary of Transportation Ray Donovan following
vindication after a baseless prosecution - "Where do I go to get
my reputation back?" - basically was: "Consider yourself fortunate
that you're not in prison."
A recent development in federal law, however, may permit some victims
of investigatory or prosecutorial abuse to recover, if not their reputations,
at least the costs they incurred in fighting the government's investigation
and prosecution. This development may provide a remedy for most individuals
and small- and medium-sized corporations prosecuted under federal law. Large
corporations and targets of state court prosecutions still remain without
a remedy.
Fee Shifting in Criminal Cases
As an exception to the "American Rule," the Hyde Amendment
to 18 U.S.C. section
3006A permits a defendant that prevails in criminal prosecution to recover
its attorney fees and costs if it can show that the prosecution was "vexatious,
frivolous, or in bad faith." Specifically, the Hyde Amendment provides:
"[T]he court, in any criminal case, ... may award to a prevailing
party other than the United States, a reasonable attorney's fee and other
litigation expenses, where the court finds that the position of the United
States was vexatious, frivolous, or in bad faith, unless the court finds
that special circumstances make such an award unjust." 1
Rep. Henry Hyde, the sponsor of this amendment, defended his bill against
attacks that it would unreasonably burden federal prosecutors, saying:
"I would hope this would take some time and resources from the Justice
Department. They might think twice about bringing cases for which there
is no substantial justification. If someone is a prosecutor and they are
going to wrench somebody out of their job and their home and put them on
trial as a criminal, there ought to be enough in the case that it is substantially
justified.
"To say one does not want them to waste their resources on cases
that are not substantially justified, what about the citizen who has been
put through the hoops? What is the remedy, if not this, for someone who
has been unjustly, maliciously, improperly, abusively tried by the Government,
by faceless bureaucrats who hire a law firm or get a U.S. Attorney looking
for a notch on his gun?"2
Because the Hyde Amendment is of such recent vintage, it has yet to be
interpreted by the courts.3 The
Hyde Amendment specifically incorporates the procedural provisions of the
Equal Access to
Justice Act (EAJA),4 which
permits prevailing civil litigants to recover attorney fees and costs from
the United States where the position of the government was not "substantially
justified." The case law interpreting the fee-shifting provisions of
the EAJA will help guide litigants and courts interpreting the Hyde Amendment's
criminal fee-shifting provision.
To recover costs and attorney fees under the Hyde Amendment, a criminal
defendant must file a petition for fees and costs - including an itemized
list of expenses and an allegation that the government's position was "vexatious,
frivolous or in bad faith" - within 30 days of the judgment upon
which the applicant seeks recovery.5
To successfully recover its costs and fees, the applicant must clear several
hurdles:
Client eligibility for fee shifting. First, the defendant must
win the case - only "prevailing parties" may recover; however,
it is unclear how broadly courts will interpret "prevailing party."
Certainly, criminal defendants who are acquitted by a jury or who successfully
move the court for a judgment of acquittal will be eligible. But what about
less clear-cut victories? What if the prosecutor sees the error in her ways
and voluntarily dismisses the case midway through trial? What about a lengthy
and intrusive grand jury investigation that ultimately is dropped? What
if the defendant is charged in a multicount indictment, acquitted on the
majority of the serious charges, but convicted on a minor tag-along charge?
It appears clear that an indicted criminal defendant who convinces the
prosecutor that the government cannot win and thus should drop the case
has "prevailed" in a criminal case and is eligible to recover
its fees and costs. The unconsummated grand jury investigation hypothetical
is less clear. While the statute's language appears to preclude recovery
for the grand jury target (the provision applies only in a "criminal
case"), the U.S. Supreme Court has concluded that, for purposes of
the Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination, a grand jury proceeding
is a criminal case.6 Moreover,
the purpose of the Hyde Amendment suggests a broad interpretation; an abusive
grand jury investigation can cause nearly as much pain to a target as a
criminal prosecution. Thus, although the scope of the statute is unclear
in this respect, a grand jury target certainly may argue that the Hyde Amendment
applies even if no indictment follows.
As to the mixed-verdict hypothetical, in light of the provision's purpose
- to deter government overreaching - there is no reason that such
a defendant should not be eligible to recover under the Hyde Amendment.
A court may well conclude that an indictment that includes several baseless
but serious charges along with a well-founded but minor charge is abusive.
Moreover, the test for whether a civil litigant has prevailed under the
EAJA strongly suggests a broad reading of the term in the criminal context
as well. Under the EAJA a party has prevailed if it has succeeded on any
significant issue in litigation that achieved some of the benefit sought
in bringing suit.7
Congress has limited eligibility for fee shifting to individuals and
small- to medium-sized businesses by expressly incorporating the EAJA eligibility
provisions into the Hyde Amendment.8Only
individuals with a net worth of less than $2 million or corporations or
other organizations with a net worth of less than $7 million and 500 or
fewer employees are eligible to recover fees and costs.9
The fee applicant bears the burden of proving its eligibility for a fee
award, although it may satisfy its initial burden by simply filing an affidavit
asserting that it meets the statute's eligibility requirements.10
Vexatious, frivolous or bad faith prosecution.
The vindicated criminal defendant must show that the government's position
was "vexatious, frivolous, or in bad faith." The original bill
proposed by Rep. Hyde incorporated the standard of the EAJA, which requires
the government to show its position was "substantially justified."11 Fierce opposition from the Department
of Justice prompted Congress to substitute the "frivolous, vexatious
or in bad faith" standard to make recovery more difficult. This standard
imposes a substantially higher burden on a criminal defendant seeking to
recover attorney fees and costs; it requires a fee applicant to show either
that the government's factual or legal theory was so baseless as to be "frivolous"
- interpreted in the context of Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil
Procedure to mean a claim or defense having no reasonable basis in law or
fact12 - or that the prosecution
or investigation was improperly motivated.
This subset of criminal prosecutions undoubtedly will be relatively small;
however, it will not be a null set. The House-Senate Conference Committee
made it clear that "a grand jury finding of probable cause to support
an indictment does not preclude a judge from finding that the government's
position was vexatious, frivolous or in bad faith."13
Special circumstances that make an award unjust. Even where an
award of attorney fees otherwise would be appropriate, a district court
nevertheless may decline to make an award if it finds special circumstances
that would make the award of fees and costs unjust. As under the similar
EAJA provision, the government should bear the burden of proving the existence
of such special circumstances.14Although
the term defies bright-line rules, courts interpreting this provision of
the EAJA generally consider factors such as whether the government urged
a departure from existing law (especially if the interpretation is later
adopted), and the conduct of the private litigant applying for fees.15
The structure and language of the Hyde Amendment, however, suggest that
courts evaluating applications for fees thereunder should be more reluctant
to find "special circumstances" than in EAJA applications. The
EAJA (which imposes the burden on the government to demonstrate that its
position was substantially justified) includes the special circumstances
provision as a "safety valve" to ensure that the government is
not deterred from advancing novel but good-faith arguments for extending
existing law.16 Because the
Hyde Amendment provision requires the fee applicant to demonstrate that
the government's position was vexatious, frivolous, or in bad faith, it
is likely the "special circumstances" escape hatch will be invoked
rarely and only where truly special circumstances apply.
Monetary limits on recovery. A district court will have substantial
discretion to fashion an appropriate fee award under the Hyde Amendment.17The EAJA provisions expressly incorporated
into the Hyde Amendment provide limits and guideposts for the district courts.
Under the statute, attorney fees are capped at $125 per hour, unless cost
of living increases or special circumstances justify a higher award.18(Congress recently increased the allowable
hourly rate to $125 from $75 to reflect cost of living increases; thus,
it is unlikely that a court will deviate from the fixed rate based on cost
of living increases in the near future.) However, special circumstances
may justify an increased hourly rate. Relevant special circumstances may
include the qualifications and skills of the attorneys, the market rate
for attorney fees, whether the attorney practices in a specialized substantive
area of the law such as environmental, governmental contracts, or patent
law, and the social value of the decision in the case.19
Any fees incurred in making the fee application also are recoverable under
this provision.20 Besides attorney
fees, a prevailing defendant also may recover its costs, including expenses
of expert witnesses and the cost of reports, studies, or analyses necessary
to prepare the party's case.21
Thus, in our hypothetical scenario, the Hyde Amendment may allow you
to recover fees and costs on behalf of Marsha Jones and Home Healthcare.
The defendants clearly prevailed in a criminal case, having been acquitted
at trial. They also meet the other eligibility requirements: Home Healthcare
only has two employees and a net worth of less than $100,000; Jones is an
individual with a very modest net worth. Moreover, no special circumstances
are present that would make fee shifting unjust.
As likely will be the case in most Hyde Amendment applications, the main
issue likely will be whether the defendant can show that the government's
position was vexatious, frivolous, or in bad faith. Perhaps the prosecution
was frivolous because it had no basis in fact; the defense may be able to
persuade the judge that the government did not sufficiently investigate
the home health-care industry. Or maybe the defense can establish the prosecution
was in bad faith because it was motivated by political pressure to "crack
down" on Medicare fraud. In our scenario, it would be worthwhile to
make the application.
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