§ 8.01-216.12.Civil investigative demands; protected material or information.
Chapter 3. Actions · Article 19.1. Virginia Fraud Against Taxpayers Act · Last amended 2002 · Last verified July 16, 2026
Full Text of § 8.01-216.12
Plain-English Summary
Section 8.01-216.12 places limits on what a civil investigative demand can reach. A demand cannot require production of documentary material, answers to interrogatories, or oral testimony that would be protected from disclosure under the standards that apply to subpoenas or subpoenas duces tecum issued to aid a grand jury investigation, or under the discovery standards in the Rules of the Supreme Court of Virginia, to the extent those standards fit the demand.
A separate rule addresses demands for a product of discovery — material originally produced in another proceeding. An express demand for such material overrides any inconsistent order, rule, or other provision of law, apart from this section itself, that would otherwise block its disclosure. Disclosing a product of discovery in response to an express demand does not waive any right or privilege the person making the disclosure could otherwise invoke to resist discovery of trial-preparation materials.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are there limits on what a civil investigative demand can compel?
Yes. It cannot reach material, answers, or testimony that would be protected under the standards applicable to grand jury subpoenas or under the discovery standards in the Rules of the Supreme Court of Virginia, as those standards apply to the demand.
Can a civil investigative demand override a protective order from another case?
An express demand for a product of discovery supersedes any inconsistent order, rule, or provision of law other than this section, so it can reach material a protective order in another proceeding would otherwise keep sealed.
Does producing material under an express demand waive the right to withhold it later as trial-preparation material?
No. Disclosure under an express demand for a product of discovery does not waive any privilege the disclosing person could otherwise invoke to resist discovery of trial-preparation materials.
What is an “express demand” for a product of discovery?
It refers to a civil investigative demand that specifically targets material a person originally obtained through discovery in another judicial or administrative proceeding, which is why §§ 8.01-216.10 and 8.01-216.11 require extra notice to the original source of that material.
Do grand jury subpoena protections apply automatically to every civil investigative demand?
They apply to the extent those standards are appropriate and consistent with the article’s purposes, not as a blanket rule imported wholesale from grand jury practice.
Amendment History
2002, c. 842.