Target Letter vs. Grand Jury Subpoena: What Is the Difference?
They arrive in similar envelopes. They produce similar fear. They require entirely different responses.
A grand jury subpoena and a target letter are both instruments of federal investigation, but they signal different positions within that investigation and they carry different legal obligations. Conflating them is an error with consequences. The person who treats a subpoena as the equivalent of a target letter may waive rights that the distinction was designed to protect. The person who treats a target letter as merely a subpoena may take steps that accelerate rather than delay indictment.
The Subpoena: Compulsion Without Classification
A federal grand jury subpoena commands production. It may require documents, testimony, or both. It is directed at witnesses, subjects, and occasionally targets, which means that receiving one does not tell you, on its face, where you stand in the investigation.
A witness subpoena compels appearance and testimony. Noncompliance is punishable by contempt. The recipient who is genuinely a witness, with no personal exposure to the conduct under investigation, has limited grounds for resistance and narrow Fifth Amendment protections available only on a question-by-question basis.
A document subpoena compels production of records. The Fifth Amendment does not generally protect documents from compelled production, though it may protect the act of production in specific circumstances. Whether those circumstances apply to your situation is a question for counsel, not for your own assessment of the matter.
The subpoena tells you what the government wants. The target letter tells you what the government thinks. Those are not the same communication.
The Target Letter: Classification Without Compulsion
A target letter imposes no immediate legal obligation. You are not required to appear, to produce documents, or to contact the prosecutor who signed it. The letter notifies you of your status. It does not compel a response.
This absence of compulsion is the feature that distinguishes it most sharply from a subpoena, and it is the feature most often misunderstood. Recipients sometimes interpret the letter’s invitation to contact the prosecutor as a summons. It is not. Whether to engage, when to engage, and through whom to engage are strategic decisions that belong to you and your attorney.
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(212) 300-5196The government will proceed whether you respond or not. The question is whether your response, or the absence of one, shapes what it proceeds toward.
Subject Status: The Space Between
The Department of Justice recognizes three categories within a grand jury investigation: witness, subject, and target. A subject is a person whose conduct is within the scope of the grand jury’s investigation but against whom the evidence has not yet reached the threshold required for target classification.
Subject status is unstable. It can resolve in either direction: toward witness status if the investigation determines the person’s conduct was peripheral, or toward target status as evidence accumulates. The person who receives a document subpoena and believes themselves to be a witness may, by the time they appear before the grand jury, have become a subject. Whether that had already occurred before they entered the room is a question their attorney should have investigated and answered.
The Practical Divergence
If you have received a subpoena, the threshold question is whether you are compelled to comply, and if so, on what terms and with what protections in place. Your attorney’s role in that process is to negotiate scope, assert applicable privileges, and ensure that compliance does not inadvertently expand your exposure.
Todd Spodek
Lead Attorney & Founder
Featured on Netflix's "Inventing Anna," Todd Spodek brings decades of high-stakes criminal defense experience. His aggressive approach has secured dismissals and acquittals in cases others deemed unwinnable.
If you have received a target letter, the threshold question is different entirely. Compliance is not the frame. The frame is intervention: what, if anything, can be done to affect the trajectory of a grand jury investigation that has already identified you as its focus.
Both questions require counsel. They require different kinds of counsel, working from different strategic premises, toward different outcomes. Knowing which instrument you are holding is the beginning of that process, not the end of it.
Whether the court intended this outcome or merely failed to prevent it is a question worth considering.
Reach out before making any decisions about documents, testimony, or communication with investigators. The first conversation with counsel is where those decisions acquire a frame.