The Paradox: You Can Leave, But Your Words Cant
Heres the kicker about proffer agreements that nobody explains clearly: withdrawing from the agreement doesnt undo the proffer session. It terminates the relationship going forward. The government still possess everything you gave them during your "queen for a day." This catches people completely off guard. They think about proffer agreements like canceling a gym membership. Stop paying, relationship ends, everyones back where they started. Thats not how it works with federal prosecutors. The fundamental misunderstanding comes from treating proffers like ordinary contracts. In a normal contract, termination means both parties walk away. If you cancel your cell phone plan, the company dosent get to keep billing you. If you end a lease early, you might owe penalties but the relationship is over. Proffer agreements operate differently. The "contract" governs what happens to information you provide - not whether that information exists. When you speak during a proffer session, you create something permanant: a record. That record exists independently of any agreement. The agreement just constrains (slightly) how that record can be used. When you sit down for that proffer session, several things happen immediately: First, FBI agents are in the room taking detailed notes. These notes become permanent records. The agents are trained to capture not just what you say, but how you say it. Your hesitations. Your word choices. The moments you look away. All of it goes into there notes. And those notes dont disappear just because you decide to stop cooperating. Second, prosecutors are listening and forming investigative strategies based on what you say. Theyre not just taking information - they're building a roadmap. Every name you mention becomes a potential witness. Every document you reference becomes a subpoena target. Every transaction you describe becomes a forensic accounting project. Third, anything you reveal can be used to develop new evidence - even if your actual statements cant be used directly. This is called derivative use, and its the trap most defendants dont see coming. The Department of Justice Criminal Resource Manual explains how this works: your words cant be quoted directly, but everything they lead to is fair game. So when you "withdraw" from the proffer, what actually happens? The government stops any obligation they had to consider you for cooperation benefits. You stop getting credit toward a potential 5K1.1 motion. The relationship is over. What dosent happen? Your statements dont disappear. The notes dont get shredded. The investigative leads you provided dont get un-followed. Everything you said remains in the governments possession and can be used derivatively to build a case against you.What "Use Immunity" Actually Means (Hint: Not What You Think)
Heres were most people get this wrong. They hear "use immunity" in there proffer agreement and think its protection. Its not protection - its a specific limitation that sounds better then it actually is. Use immunity means your exact statements from the proffer session cannot be used as direct evidence in the governments case-in-chief at trial. Thats it. Thats the entire protection. What use immunity does NOT protect against: Derivative use. The Supreme Court established in Kastigar v. United States (1972) that the government can pursue any investigative leads your statements suggest. If you mention a bank account during your proffer, they can subpoena that bank account. If you reference a conversation, they can interview that person. The evidence they find through following your leads is fully admissible - even though your statements technically arnt. Impeachment. If you testify at trial inconsistently with your proffer, the government can use your proffer statements to impeach your credibility. This basicly means: if you say something different at trial then you said in the proffer, they can bring in what you originally said. Rebuttal. Modern proffer agreements often contain language allowing the government to use your statements if you present any evidence or argument inconsistent with what you proffered. Not just your testimony - your entire defense strategy. False statements prosecution. If you lied during the proffer, your protected by nothing. Under 18 U.S.C. § 1001, false statements to federal agents are independently prosecutable. Ask Martha Stewart how that works out. She didn't go to prison for insider trading. She went to prison for lying about insider trading during her interview with federal agents. The underlying conduct wasn't even charged - but the false statements were. Heres the uncomfortable math: the proffer session itself creates criminal exposure that didnt exist before you walked in. Your trying to help yourself by cooperating, but every word you say could become the basis for a completely separate prosecution. So what does "use immunity" actually give you? A limited protection against your exact words appearing in the governments opening statement. Thats probably not the fortress you imagined. Its more like a sheet of paper between you and a hurricane.The Rule 410 Trap: Why Signing Reduced Your Rights
OK so heres something that blows peoples minds when they learn it. Federal Rule of Evidence 410 already provides protection for statements made during plea negotiations. You dont need a proffer agreement to get some protection - the rule gives it automatically. But heres the irony. When you sign a proffer agreement, you typically WAIVE parts of Rule 410. The proffer letter substitutes its own terms for the rules default protections. And the proffer letters terms are almost always worse. Under standard FRE 410, statements made during plea discussions are generally inadmissible. But proffer agreements routinely carve out exceptions:- Impeachment exception (broader then FRE 410 default)
- Rebuttal exception (much broader then FRE 410)
- False statement exception (similar but specifically triggered)
How Your Lawyers Questions Can Sink Your Defense
15,000+
Federal Cases Filed Annually
90%
Plea Before Trial
- Arguing the government failed to prove elements
- Suggesting witnesses are mistaken or lying
- Pointing out discrepancies in police testimony
- Arguing lack of corroborating evidence
The Martha Stewart Pattern: Convicted of Cooperating Wrong
Heres the uncomfortable truth that everyone in federal criminal defense knows but defendants rarely understand until its to late: the cooperation itself creates criminal exposure independant of the original crime. Martha Stewart wasn't convicted of insider trading. She was convicted of lying to investigators. Michael Flynn wasnt convicted of whatever underlying conduct was being investigated. He pled guilty to making false statements to FBI agents. This pattern repeats constantly in federal cases. The proffer or cooperation creates an entirely new avenue for prosecution: 18 U.S.C. § 1001 false statements. What counts as a false statement during a proffer?- Outright lies (obviously)
- Material omissions (leaving out important facts)
- Minimizing your involvement
- "Forgetting" things you actually remember
- Inconsistencies with other evidence they discover later
Timeline: What Happens After You Walk Away
People ask "can I withdraw from a proffer agreement" like its a yes/no question. The answer is yes - but the more important question is what happens next. Immediately after withdrawal: Your attorney notifies the government that cooperation has ended. This can be formal (written letter) or informal (phone call). Either way, the cooperation relationship terminates. Days to weeks after: The government evaluates what they learned from your proffer. They dont forget anything. Agents review there notes. Prosecutors assess whether you provided useful leads. Any derivative investigation continues. If they developed new evidence: Every lead your proffer suggested is still being followed. New witnesses contacted. New documents subpoenaed. New forensic analysis conducted. All of this evidence is fully admissible against you, even though it originated from your proffer statements. If your case goes to trial: Heres were it gets complicated. Your proffer statements cant be used in the governments case-in-chief. But:- If you testify inconsistently: impeachment
- If your defense contradicts the proffer: rebuttal
- If you made false statements: separate prosecution
Defense Team Spotlight
Todd Spodek
Lead Attorney & Founder
Featured on Netflix’s “Inventing Anna,” Todd brings decades of experience defending clients in complex criminal cases.
When Withdrawal Makes Sense (And When It Doesn't)
Withdrawing from a proffer agreement isn't inherently good or bad. Its a strategic decision that depends completely on your specific circumstances. Withdrawal may make sense when: The cooperation relationship has broken down. If the government isn't offering what was informally discussed, continuing to provide information without reciprocal benefit is just giving them more ammunition. You realize you made false statements. If you lied or omitted material information, continuing to cooperate may only compound your exposure. Consult with counsel immediately about your options. The deal being offered is worse then going to trial. Sometimes the plea offer after proffer is so bad that trial becomes the better gamble - especially if your defense dosent contradict your proffer. Your information wasn't valuable enough. Some proffers dont lead to deals because the government already had what you told them, or it wasn't helpfull. No reason to keep cooperating if theres nothing to gain. In these cases, your proffer didn't hurt you much - they knew everything already - but it also didn't help you. Withdrawing is just acknowledging reality. The relationship has become adversarial. Sometimes the dynamic between your attorney and the prosecutors breaks down. Trust evaporates. When that happens, continued cooperation becomes counterproductive. Your providing information to people who may actively be looking for ways to use it against you rather then help you. Withdrawal probably dosent make sense when: You've provided substantial valuable information. If your cooperation is genuinely helping the government and a good deal is taking shape, withdrawal throws that away. Your exposed to false statement charges. Withdrawing dosent fix this - it just eliminates any cooperation credit you might receive. Trial would require a defense contradicting your proffer. If your only viable defense theory conflicts with what you proffered, trial becomes extremely difficult. Continued cooperation toward a plea may be the better path.Protecting Yourself Before, During, and After
If your reading this before you've proffered, you have options. If your reading this after, you still have options - just different ones. Before the proffer: Consider whether proffering is actually necessary. Not every federal case requires cooperation. Strong defenses exist. Some cases are best fought at trial. Others are best resolved through negotiation without ever sitting down for a formal proffer session. The decision to proffer should never be made lightly - once you walk into that room, you cant take back what you say. Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure governs plea negotiations, and informal discussions may provide some protection without the formal proffer letters limitations. Understanding these rules before you agree to anything is essential. Negotiate the proffer letter terms. Not all proffer agreements are identical. Some have broader protections then others. Your attorney should push back on overly expansive waiver provisions. Know exactly what you'll say. A proffer session is not the time for improvisation. Every answer should be prepared, vetted, and strategized in advance. During the proffer: Tell the complete truth or say nothing. Partial truth is worse then silence. Omissions become false statements if there material. Dont speculate or guess. "I dont know" and "I dont remember" are acceptable answers - if there true. Assume everything will be used somehow. Even with "use immunity," derivative use means your words will echo through the investigation. After withdrawing: Preserve all communications. If you later need to prove what was agreed to or what you said, documentation matters. Prepare for derivative evidence. Whatever leads you provided are being followed. Build your defense with that reality in mind. Consider the sentencing implications. If convicted, your proffer statements may reappear at sentencing. Plan accordingly. Spodek Law Group handles proffer agreements and cooperation decisions in federal cases nationaly. Call us at 212-300-5196 if your facing this decision or have already proffered and need to evaluate your options. The paradox of proffer withdrawal is real - you can walk away from the agreement, but you cant walk away from your words.Frequently Asked Questions
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