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Before Smith, Southwick, and Wilson, Circuit Judges. Cory T. Wilson, Circuit Judge: Before the court in this sealed case is a petition for writ of mandamus filed on behalf of a state agency (the Agency). In the petition, the Agency asks this court to direct the district court to vacate its repeated rulings annulling the Agency’s attorney-client privilege pertaining to matters implicated in a grand jury investigation into alleged wrongdoing by senior Agency personnel. Specifically, the Agency seeks to override the district court’s May 2024 order allowing grand jury testimony to proceed as outlined in the court’s prior orders. Because the Agency fails to show a clear and indisputable right to relief, the Agency’s petition fails. The Agency’s emergency motion to stay grand jury proceedings currently set for early July—which rises and falls with its mandamus petition—necessarily fails for the same reason. Accordingly, we deny both the mandamus petition and the motion for a stay, and we dissolve the administrative stay this court entered No. 24-50415 pending our consideration of the Agency’s requested relief. We deny as moot the Agency’s separate motion to enforce the administrative stay. I. The Agency’s petition arises in the context of an investigation initiated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the United States Department of Justice (collectively, DOJ) into alleged criminal wrongdoing by senior Agency personnel. The investigation, which has now evolved over several years, prompted the grand jury proceedings underlying today’s case. Earlier in its investigation, DOJ requested the district court to determine that certain Agency communications were categorically unprotected by the attorney-client privilege. DOJ supported its application with ex parte evidence that the court reviewed in camera. In a two-page order entered in October 2020, the district court granted DOJ’s application, ruling that the Agency could not invoke the attorney-client privilege to avoid producing evidence and witness testimony regarding four general categories of information (the October 2020 Order). The district court’s ruling concluded with two tersely-stated alternative grounds for support, viz.: [A]ny information relating to the four topics identified above are not protected from [DOJ]‘s grand jury investigation by the attorney-client privilege. And even if the privilege applied, the crime-fraud exception to the attorney-client privilege obviates any applicable privilege as to any information relating to the four topics identified above. The first three categories delineated in the October 2020 Order pertain to senior Agency personnel’s interactions with another person targeted in the investigation, related entities, and federal and local law enforcement officials. The Agency does not challenge the district court’s ruling as to these categories, so only the fourth category is presently at issue: Any actions or communications contemplated or undertaken by the [Agency], the [Agency head], or senior executive staff of the [Agency] to interfere in or obstruct the current Federal investigation into the matters listed in [the first three categories]. Two months after the court entered the October 2020 Order, DOJ served the Agency with a subpoena seeking materials within the order’s ambit, and the Agency produced responsive documents. In June 2021, the Agency sought to modify or rescind the October 2020 Order, challenging the order’s breadth, attempting to assert additional “privileges” unaddressed by the order, and identifying “serious federalism concerns” implicated by the order. InAugust2021, the district court granted the Agency’s motion in part and denied it in part (the August 2021 Order).[1] Doing so, the district court explained its earlier rationales for entering the October 2020 Order. Following In re a Witness Before the Special Grand Jury 2000-2, 288 F.3d 289 (7th Cir. 2002) (Ryan), the court reiterated its view that the attorney-client privilege does not extend “to government attorneys in the context of criminal investigations,” 288 F.3d at 295, such that the four categories of information sought by DOJ did not implicate the privilege at all.[2] And even if the privilege generally applied to government attorneys in this setting, the court found that DOJ had satisfied its prima facie burden to show that the crime-fraud exception nullified any assertion of privilege by the Agency. In April 2024, DOJ served grand jury subpoenas on two senior Agency employees.[3] These subpoenas make clear that the witnesses will be asked to testify about matters implicating the categories of information articulated in the October 2020 Order. The Agency moved to quash the subpoenas on April 23, 2024, again requesting that the district court reconsider the scope of its October 2020 Order. The district court denied the Agency’s motion to quash on May 9, 2024 (the May 2024 Order). The court refined its October 2020 Order to make clear that the witnesses may assert the attorney-client privilege as to matters “outside the [October 2020] Order” if they “show the information in question is privileged because the [Agency] is their client, not simply their employer, and that there is no suspicion of government misconduct.” But the district court also reiterated its reliance on Ryan to support a blanket disallowance of the attorney-client privilege related to misconduct of state officials within the scope of the grand jury investigation. The Agency countered with this petition for writ of mandamus, asking this court to direct the district court to vacate its May 2024 Order—and by extension, its prior privilege orders—vitiating the Agency’s attorney-client privilege and applying the crime-fraud exception to the grand jury testimony sought by DOJ.[4] The Agency also filed an emergency motion to stay the grand jury proceedings so this court “may fully consider the pending petition for a writ of mandamus.” We issued an administrative stay on May 28, 2024, pending our resolution of the Agency’s requests for relief. II. This court has discretion to issue a writ of mandamus[5] when the petitioner “has no other adequate means to attain the relief he desires,” the court is “satisfied that the writ is appropriate under the circumstances,” and the petitioner demonstrates a “clear and indisputable right to the writ.” In re JPMorgan Chase & Co., 916 F.3d 494, 499 (5th Cir. 2019) (cleaned up and citations omitted). In addition to its traditional provenance as a “supervisory” writ, this Court may issue the writ in an “advisory” capacity “as a one-time-might have otherwise evaded expeditious review.” In re EEOC, 709 F.2d 392, 394 (5th Cir. 1983) (citations omitted).[6] Whether supervisory or “advisory,” the requirement that a petitioner demonstrate a “clear and indisputable right to the writ” remains. In re JPMorgan Chase &Co., 916F.3d at 500. “Satisfying this condition require[s] more than showing that the district court misinterpreted the law, misapplied it to the facts, or otherwise engaged in an abuse of discretion.” Id. (citation omitted). The petitioner but that it clearly and indisputably erred.’” Id. (citation omitted and emphasis in original). Indeed, this court may “deny the writ as a matter of prudence even when the district court erred[.]” In re Paxton, 60 F.4th 252, 260 (5th Cir. 2023) (citation omitted). Such “prudential denials involve a district court’s mistaken resolution of a novel or thorny question of law.” Id. (collecting cases); see also Landmark Land Co. v. Off. of Thrift Supervision, 948 F.2d 910, 911 (5th Cir. 1991) (denying the writ after the erroneous interpretation of a “question of first impression”). “These types of mistakes, made under difficult circumstances, may not rise to the level of a clear and indisputable error, as required for mandamus relief.” Paxton, 60 F.4th at 260 (citing In re JPMorgan Chase, 916 F.3d at 504). III. To support its mandamus petition, the Agency contends that the district court erred (A) by determining that the Agency cannot interpose the attorney-client privilege to avoid complying with DOJ’s subpoenas; and (B) by ruling that even if the attorney-client privilege is viable, the crime-fraud exception vitiates the privilege as to the fourth category of evidence in the October 2020 Order. right to the writ. Neither basis supports a clear and indisputable A. In its October 2020 Order, and carried forward in its August 2021 Order and its May 2024 Order, the district court held “that attorney-client privilege will not apply to information related to state misconduct or targeted at wrongdoing by state officials[.]” The district court’s ruling was grounded upon Ryan, 288 F.3d 289. There, the Seventh Circuit rejected attorney-client privilege claims asserted by the chief legal counsel of the Illinois Secretary of State’s office in response to a federal investigation of then-Governor George Ryan. That court reasoned: It would be both unseemly and a misuse of public assets to permit a public official to use a taxpayer-provided attorney to conceal from the taxpayers themselves otherwise admissible evidence of financial wrongdoing, official misconduct, or abuse of power . . . . [W]hen another government lawyer requires information as part of a criminal investigation, the public lawyer is obligated not to protect his governmental client[,] but to ensure its compliance with the law. . . . Therefore, when another government lawyer requires information as part of a criminal investigation, the public lawyer is obligated not to protect his governmental client but to ensure its compliance with the law. 288 F.3d at 293 (citation omitted). Going further, the Ryan court stated that “the policy reasons behind the attorney-client privilege do not justify its extension to government attorneys in the context of criminal investigations,” and the court therefore declined to recognize the privilege when it “impair[s] legitimate federal interests and provide[s] only speculative benefits’ to a state official.” Id. at 295 (citation omitted). The Agency argues that in adopting Ryan, the district court joined the “wrong side” of “a significant circuit split.” The Agency implores us instead to adopt the Second Circuit’s approach in In re Grand Jury Investigation, 399 F.3d 527, 533–36 (2d Cir. 2005). There, the Second Circuit addressed the assertion of attorney-client privilege by the Connecticut Governor’s former chief legal counsel during grand jury proceedings. Notably, the Governor’s counsel invoked the privilege based on conversations “with [the Governor] and other members of his staff on the subject of the receipt of gifts and the meaning of related state ethics laws.” In re Grand Jury Investigation, 399 F.3d at 529. The court held that the attorney-client privilege applied to state government agencies’ communications that “were in confidence and conducted for the purpose of providing legal advice[.]” Id. at 529–30. Specifically, it reasoned that the attorney-client privilege was necessary in that scenario to encourage government officials “to seek out and receive fully informed legal advice.” Id. at 529–30, 533–34. To the extent that the district court relied on Ryan to espouse a categorical, and prospective, vitiation of the Agency’s attorney-client privilege simply “as part of a criminal investigation,” Ryan, 288 F.3d at 293, it was error to do so. A federal investigation into potential wrongdoing by state government officials, in itself, does not annul the privilege’s protection of otherwise-covered attorney-client communications. Cf. In re Grand Jury Subpoena, 909 F.3d 26, 31–32 (1st Cir. 2018) (“[W]hen the federal grand jury is investigating potential crimes that state officials . . . may have committed,” an overly-broad application of the privilege may operate to “facilitate[e] rather than deter[] crime.”). Contra Ryan‘s holding that the privilege does not “exten[d] to government attorneys in the context of criminal investigations,” 288 F.3d at 293, “it [is] best to proceed cautiously when asked to narrow the privilege’s protections in a particular category of cases.” In re Grand Jury Investigation, 399 F.3d at 531. Much as it does in non-governmental settings, the attorney-client privilege protects agencies’ communications that “were in confidence and conducted for the purpose of providing legal advice[.]” Id. at 529–30. If anything, “the traditional rationale for attorney-client privilege applies with special force in the government context.” Id. at 534. Government officials who are expected to uphold and execute thelaw—and who may face criminal prosecution for failing to do so—must be able freely to seek and receive informed legal advice. Id. The attorney-client privilege thereby operates to effectuate, not hinder, the public interest. Accordingly, we “reject the categorical rule that a state government has no attorney-client privilege that can be invoked in response to a grand jury subpoena.” In re Grand Jury Subpoena, 909 F.3d at 32. Nonetheless, it does not follow that the Agency’s mandamus petition is well-taken. Though effectively advocating its position, the Agency concedes that “[t]his circuit has not weighed in on this issue” and “at least two of [our] sister circuits have [arrived] at opposite conclusions.” Those points are fatal because we often deny the writ where “a district court [makes a] mistaken resolution of a novel or thorny question of law.” In re Paxton, 60 F.4th at 260. Indeed, we previously denied the writ where “the district court, with the best of intentions, misapplied the law” on a legal question involving a circuit split. In re Dean, 527 F.3d 391, 394 (5th Cir. 2008) (per curiam). The same result obtains here: We cannot say that the district court’s mistaken reliance on Ryan, “made under difficult circumstances,” rises “to the level of a clear and indisputable error as required for mandamus relief.” In re Paxton, 60 F.4th at 260 (citation omitted). B. This conclusion is buttressed by the district court’s sound alternate holding that the crime-fraud exception to the attorney-client privilege operates to nullify the Agency’s assertion of the privilege as to “actions or communications contemplated or undertaken . . . to interfere in or obstruct the current [f]ederal investigation[.]” After all, “ it is the purpose of the crime-fraud exception to the attorney- of secrecy’ between lawyer and client does not extend to communications crime.” United States v. Zolin, 491 U.S. 554, 563 (1989) (cleaned up). Our holding that the attorney-client privilege retains its forcein the governmental setting in no way “derogates from traditional doctrines, such at the crime-fraud exception . . . to limit egregious abuses of the protections that the privilege affords.” In re Grand Jury Investigation, 399 F.3d at 535. To invoke the crime-fraud exception here, DOJ was required to “establish[] a prima facie case that the attorney-client relationship was intended to further criminal or fraudulent activity.” In re Grand Jury Subpoenas, 419 F.3d 329, 335 (5th Cir. 2005). In its October 2020 Order, and reiterated several times since, the district court agreed with DOJ that there is “reason to believe that evidence of federal crimes alleged in [DOJ's] motion is in the possession, custody, or control of current and former employees” of the Agency. Mindful that not the first question has been asked of either subpoenaed witness, we cannot say that the district court erred in its determination on this point, much less that it “clearly and indisputably erred.” In re JPMorgan Chase & Co., 916 F.3d at 500 (citation and internal quotations omitted; emphasis in original). To the contrary, based on the record before us, including DOJ’s ex parte evidence, it is plain that the crime-fraud exception to the privilege is implicated, at least with regard to the general categories of information delineated in the district court’s October 2020 Order. The Agency thus fails to show any entitlement to a writ of mandamus.[7] * * * Notwithstanding our disagreement with the district court’s reliance on Ryan regarding the scope of the Agency’s attorney-client privilege, the court’s May 2024 Order sets forth a prudent, and familiar, framework to proceed with the subpoenaed witnesses’ testimony. That order makes clear that the witnesses “ha[ve] the right to raise any legitimate, good faith objection[s] based on privilege,” if they “show the information in question is privileged because the[Agency]is their client, not simply their employer . . . . If the DOJ then wants to pursue that line of questioning,” DOJ may file a motion to compel, allowing the district court to “review each objection on a question-by-question basis.” We simply clarify that government attorneys may assert the privilege as to state agency communications that “were in confidence and conducted for the purpose of providing legal advice[.]” In re Grand Jury Investigation, 399 F.3d at 529–30. If an assertion of privilege is made, the same framework likewise may resolve disputes regarding the crime-fraud exception to the privilege. All this we leave to the sound discretion of the district court. IV. Because the Agency has failed to show a clear and indisputable right to a writ of mandamus, its petition is DENIED. The Agency’s emergency motion to stay the grand jury proceedings is DENIED for the same reasons explained above. We likewise DISSOLVE the administrative stay this court entered May 28, 2024. The Agency’s motion to enforce the administrative stay is DENIED AS MOOT. Finally, the Agency’s motion to maintain the filings in this case under seal is GRANTED, except that the Clerk is DIRECTED to publish this opinion, see 5thCir. R.47.5, five days after its issuance.

 
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