Montana Code Annotated 2003

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     32-8-509. Judicial subpoena. (1) A director, executive officer, controlling person, or employee of a foreign capital depository may disclose or authorize another to disclose a financial record and an officer, employee, or agent of a supervisory, state, or local agency may obtain a financial record under 32-8-503(1)(d) pursuant to a judicial subpoena only if one of the following has occurred:
     (a) the subpoena is issued as otherwise authorized by law and served in compliance with Rule 4D of the Montana Rules of Civil Procedure and the requirements of subsection (1)(b), (1)(c), or (1)(d) have been met. In the event that actual service on the customer is not prohibited but has not been made prior to the time the financial record is required to be produced in response to the subpoena, the court shall, prior to turning over a record to the agency and upon good cause shown, make a finding that due diligence has been exercised by the agency in its attempt to effect service upon the customer.
     (b) 10 days have passed after service of the subpoena on the customer and the depository without the customer or the depository having moved to quash the subpoena;
     (c) the subpoena has been served upon the customer and the depository and a judge in a judicial proceeding to which the customer or the depository is a party rules that the subpoena should not be quashed. This subsection (1)(c) is not intended to preclude appellate remedies that may be available under existing law.
     (d) the subpoena has been served upon the depository and a court orders that service of the subpoena upon the customer be delayed in accordance with this section. Service may be delayed for up to 30 days from the date of issuance of the judicial subpoena after the court makes a finding upon a written showing that service upon the customer would impede the investigation. The withholding of notification may be extended for additional 30-day periods if a court makes a finding upon a written showing, at the time of each extension, that service upon the customer would impede the investigation. Whenever practicable, an application for an extension of time must be made to the judge who issued the judicial subpoena. In deciding whether to grant an extension of the notification time, the judge shall endeavor to provide the customer with prompt notification, consistent with the purpose of this part.
     (2) If testimony is to be taken concerning a financial record or if a financial record is to be produced before a court, the 10-day period provided for in subsection (1)(b) may be shortened by the court upon a showing of good cause. The court shall direct that all reasonable measures be taken to notify the customer within the shortened time period. The motion to quash the subpoena must be made, whenever practicable, in the judicial proceeding pending before the court.
     (3) (a) A grand jury, upon resolution adopted by a majority of its members, may obtain financial records pursuant to a judicial subpoena based upon a written showing to a judge that there exists a reasonable inference that a crime within the jurisdiction of the grand jury has been committed and that the financial record sought is reasonably necessary to the jury's investigation of that crime. The judicial subpoena must be is personally signed and issued by a judge in accordance with 46-4-301 and must otherwise comply with the requirements of this section.
     (b) For the purpose of this subsection (3), an "inference" is a deduction that may be reasonably drawn by the grand jury from facts relevant to the investigation.
     (4) A showing required to be made pursuant to this section, as well as the court record of any finding made pursuant to the showing, must be sealed until one person named in the indictment to which the showing related has been arrested or until the end of the term of the grand jury if no indictment to which the showing relates has been returned. However, a court may unseal the showing and the court record relating to the showing on a written showing of good cause.

     History: En. Sec. 37, Ch. 382, L. 1997.

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