In Re: Return of Seized Property of Lackawanna Cty , 212 A.3d 1 ( 2019 )


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  •                                  [J-101-2018]
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    MIDDLE DISTRICT
    SAYLOR, C.J., BAER, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.
    IN RE: RETURN OF SEIZED PROPERTY            :   No. 93 MM 2018
    OF LACKAWANNA COUNTY                        :
    :   Appeal from the Order of the
    :   Lackawanna County Court of
    PETITION OF: COMMONWEALTH OF                :   Common Pleas at No. 17 CV 5927
    PENNSYLVANIA                                :   dated May 11, 2018
    :
    :   ARGUED: December 5, 2018
    :
    OPINION
    JUSTICE DOUGHERTY                                           DECIDED: July 17, 2019
    This appeal concerns a motion for return of property filed by several Lackawanna
    County governmental entities (“County”) relative to materials seized by the Office of
    Attorney General (“OAG”). The OAG seized the County’s property pursuant to search
    warrants issued by the Supervising Judge of the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury.
    We consider whether the County’s motion for return was properly filed in the Lackawanna
    County Court of Common Pleas, and whether it must be adjudicated by the Supervising
    Judge. We also consider whether the Supervising Judge was empowered to issue the
    underlying search warrants.
    I. Background
    As the issues in this case relate to the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury,
    we begin by providing some brief context regarding its formation. On November 30, 2016,
    then-Pennsylvania Attorney General Bruce Beemer petitioned this Court, pursuant to the
    Investigating Grand Jury Act, 42 Pa.C.S. §§4541-4553, for an order directing the
    convening of a multicounty investigating grand jury having statewide jurisdiction to
    investigate organized crime or public corruption or both. See In re Application of Beemer,
    174 MM 2016 (Nov. 30, 2016). This Court, through an order signed by Chief Justice
    Saylor,1 granted the Attorney General’s application on December 9, 2016, as required by
    the Act. See 42 Pa.C.S. §4544(a) (where Attorney General’s application for multicounty
    grand jury satisfies relevant statutory criteria, the Court shall issue order granting
    application within ten days).
    Consistent with the dictates of 42 Pa.C.S §4544(b), the Court’s order included an
    array of content typical of such orders. For example, it designated the location of the 41st
    Statewide Investigating Grand Jury in Montgomery County, and specified the manner in
    which the jurors were to be selected. The order also appointed a Supervising Judge, the
    Honorable Anthony A. Sarcione, Judge of the Court of Common Pleas for the 15th Judicial
    District, Chester County, and instructed that “[a]ll applications and motions relating to the
    work of the [41st] Statewide Investigating Grand Jury — including motions for disclosure
    of grand jury transcripts and evidence — shall be presented to the Supervising Judge.”
    Order, 12/9/2016, at 1.2 Further, pursuant to Section 4544(b)(2), the order provided that
    “[w]ith respect to investigations, presentments, reports, and all other proper activities of
    the [41st] Statewide Investigating Grand Jury, Judge Sarcione, as Supervising Judge,
    shall have jurisdiction over all counties throughout the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.”
    
    Id. at 1-2.
    And finally, the order directed Judge Sarcione to maintain control of transcripts,
    1 See 42 Pa.C.S. §4542 (in the context of the Investigating Grand Jury Act, defining the
    “Supreme Court” as the Chief Justice or another designated Justice).
    2 Effective December 3, 2018, the Honorable Lillian H. Ransom, Judge of the Court of
    Common Pleas for the 1st Judicial District, Philadelphia County, assumed the role of
    Supervising Judge of the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury. Although we
    specifically refer to Judge Sarcione throughout this Opinion, these references are properly
    understood as generally describing the Supervising Judge of the 41st Statewide
    Investigating Grand Jury.
    [J-101-2018] - 2
    evidence, and matters occurring before the grand jury as provided by Pa.R.Crim.P. 229
    and 42 Pa.C.S. §4549. 
    Id. at 3.
    After the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury was empaneled and an
    investigation was ongoing, an OAG Special Agent and a Pennsylvania State Trooper
    applied to Judge Sarcione for four warrants to search and seize certain property
    belonging to the County. See Applications for Search Warrants, Reproduced Record
    (“R.R.”) at 67a, 72a, 77a, and 82a. On September 20, 2017 and September 21, 2017,
    Judge Sarcione approved the warrants. 
    Id. Thereafter, the
    OAG, in conjunction with the
    Pennsylvania State Police, executed the search warrants upon the Lackawanna County
    Prison, the Lackawanna County Community Corrections Center, the Lackawanna County
    Administration Building, and the Lackawanna County Center for Public Safety.3 The OAG
    seized various materials pursuant to the warrants, including computers, hard drives, email
    servers, and other files, documents, and records. See Receipts/Inventory of Seized
    Property, R.R. at 84a-117a.
    On November 9, 2017, the County filed a motion for return of property pursuant to
    Pa.R.Crim.P. 588.4 Notably, the County filed its motion in the Lackawanna County Court
    3 We recognize the media has previously reported on certain aspects of the grand jury’s
    investigation and Judge Sarcione has granted the OAG leave to disclose the existence
    and general focus of the investigation. See OAG’s Response to County’s Memorandum
    of Law in Support of Motion for Return, R.R. at 214a-215a. Nevertheless, because the
    nature of the grand jury’s investigation is not relevant to the legal issues presented in this
    case, we do not discuss it.
    4   Rule 588 provides, in relevant part:
    A person aggrieved by a search and seizure, whether or not executed
    pursuant to a warrant, may move for the return of the property on the ground
    that he or she is entitled to lawful possession thereof. Such motion shall be
    filed in the court of common pleas for the judicial district in which the
    property was seized.
    Pa.R.Crim.P. 588(A).
    [J-101-2018] - 3
    of Common Pleas, which comprises the 45th Judicial District. The matter was assigned
    to the Honorable John Braxton, Senior Judge of the Court of Common Pleas for the 1st
    Judicial District, Philadelphia County.5
    In its motion, the County advanced a threefold argument to support its claim of
    entitlement to lawful possession of the seized materials. First, the County argued the
    underlying search warrants were unconstitutionally general and overbroad. See Motion
    for Return of Property, R.R. at 50a-53a. Second, it asserted the seizing of judicial and
    other governmental officials’ property infringed upon various privacy interests and legal
    privileges. See 
    id. at 54a-59a.
    Third, it claimed the search warrants were invalid under
    Pa.R.Crim.P. 200. See 
    id. at 60a-62a.
    With respect to this final claim, the County explained a “search warrant may be
    issued by any issuing authority within the judicial district wherein is located either the
    person or place to be searched.” 
    Id. at 60a,
    quoting Pa.R.Crim.P. 200. The County noted
    the places to be searched were all located in Lackawanna County, i.e., in the 45th Judicial
    District, yet Judge Sarcione identified his title on the search warrants as a Court of
    Common Pleas Judge in the 15th Judicial District. According to the County, “[a]s a
    member of the 15th Judicial District — not the 45th — Judge Sarcione did not have
    5 As the OAG explains in its brief, Judge Braxton was appointed to hear the County’s
    motion after the entire Lackawanna County bench recused from the matter. See OAG’s
    Brief at 9 n.1. This court-wide recusal was necessitated by the fact the seized materials
    included copies of “emails for all agencies, departments, and institutions affiliated through
    the Lackawanna County email exchange server[,]” which included the Court of Common
    Pleas. Declaration of Michael Brown, R.R. at 119a-120a. See also Letter from OAG
    Counsel to the County, 11/3/2017, R.R. at 131a (explaining the “email exchange
    databases had to be seized in their entirety due to the commingling of all county
    employees” but asserting it did not intend to search “[t]he content of any judicial emails
    or communications (or any other county office or department not related to the search
    warrant)”).
    [J-101-2018] - 4
    authority to issue the search warrants under Pa.R.Crim.P. 200 for items to be seized in
    Lackawanna County.” 
    Id. at 61a.
    On November 13, 2017, the OAG filed a response to the County’s motion. Without
    confirming or denying the existence of a grand jury investigation due to secrecy concerns,
    the OAG nevertheless challenged the lower court’s jurisdiction to hear the motion for
    return. See Response to Motion for Return, R.R. at 126a-127a.6 In support, the OAG
    pointed to this Court’s order appointing Judge Sarcione as Supervising Judge and, in
    particular, the order’s instruction that “[a]ll applications and motions relating to the work
    of the [41st] Statewide Investigating Grand Jury . . . shall be presented to the Supervising
    Judge.” 
    Id. at 127a,
    quoting Order, 12/9/2016 at 1. In the OAG’s view, the order supplied
    Judge Sarcione with “exclusive jurisdiction” over the County’s motion for return because
    the motion challenged search warrants issued in connection with an investigation of the
    41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury. 
    Id. Two days
    later the parties appeared for a hearing before the lower court. The
    County contested the notion Judge Sarcione had jurisdiction over the motion, arguing
    there is “no authority for a civil matter or a return of property [motion] to be heard by a
    grand jury.” N.T. 11/15/2017 at 5; see also 
    id. (contending a
    motion for return of property
    “does not belong in a grand jury proceeding”). The County further challenged Judge
    Sarcione’s authority to issue the underlying search warrants, on the basis “there is nothing
    in the Grand Jury Act that authorizes search warrants.” 
    Id. at 8.
    In response, the OAG
    maintained the relevant source of authority as to both matters was this Court’s December
    9, 2016 order which, according to the OAG, granted Judge Sarcione “jurisdiction over all
    6In its response, the OAG asserted other arguments as well, including that the County’s
    motion was improperly filed on a miscellaneous civil docket, rather than on a criminal
    docket. See Response to Motion for Return, R.R. at 126a-127a. Before this Court, the
    OAG explains it has “opted not to directly pursue [this argument] on appeal.” OAG’s Brief
    at 20 n.7. Accordingly, we do not discuss it further.
    [J-101-2018] - 5
    counties throughout the Commonwealth” and authorized him “to handle any ancillary
    matters that may come up throughout the course of the grand jury conducting [its]
    business.” 
    Id. at 6.
    As the OAG believed the motion for return to be ancillary to the work
    of the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury, it requested the “entire matter be sealed
    and transferred to Judge Sarcione.” 
    Id. at 7.
    Following oral argument, the court held the
    matter under advisement.7
    On May 11, 2018, the lower court issued an opinion and order, ostensibly limited
    to the jurisdictional question. See Trial Ct. Op., 5/11/2018, at 1 (“This Opinion and Order
    will solely address proper jurisdiction of this matter and will not address the substantive
    Motion on the merits.”). In sum, the court determined the Lackawanna County Court of
    Common Pleas, rather than the Supervising Judge of the 41st Statewide Investigating
    Grand Jury, had jurisdiction to adjudicate the merits of the County’s motion for return of
    property. 
    Id. at 9.
    In reaching this conclusion, the court reasoned Rule 588 controlled, in
    that it “explicitly states that a motion for return of property ‘shall be filed in the [c]ourt of
    [c]ommon [p]leas for the judicial district in which the property was seized.” 
    Id. at 8,
    quoting
    Pa.R.Crim.P. 588(A). As additional support, the court cited In re Seized Property of
    Bartholomew, 26 Pa.D & C.4th 122 (C.P. Lehigh 1995), wherein a common pleas court
    judge adjudicated a motion for return of property even though the property had been
    seized pursuant to a search warrant issued by a statewide investigating grand jury. The
    lower court recognized “the issue of proper jurisdiction was not discussed” in the
    Bartholomew case, but nevertheless found that nonbinding authority “directly on point”
    7 At the conclusion of the hearing, the court granted the County’s request to file additional
    briefing. The County subsequently filed a memorandum of law in support of its motion on
    November 22, 2017. The OAG responded on December 7, 2017, and the County filed a
    reply on December 15, 2017. Because the substance of the parties’ supplemental
    briefing is reflective of the arguments they present in their briefs to this Court, which we
    detail below, we do not recount those arguments here.
    [J-101-2018] - 6
    and “persuasive.” Trial Ct. Op., 5/11/2018, at 4, 9.8 Finally, regarding the underlying
    search warrants issued by Judge Sarcione, the court remarked the Investigating Grand
    Jury Act “makes no mention of search warrants” and Pa.R.Crim.P. 200 “specifically
    indicates” search warrants must be issued by an issuing authority within the relevant
    judicial district. 
    Id. at 9.
    On May 21, 2018, the OAG filed an application to reconsider and to certify the
    court’s order for immediate appeal pursuant to 42 Pa.C.S. §702(b). Simultaneously, the
    OAG filed in this Court a petition for permission to appeal or, in the alternative, a petition
    for review. The County opposed both filings.
    On June 20, 2018, the lower court denied the OAG’s application insofar as it sought
    reconsideration, but granted the OAG’s request to certify the order for immediate appeal.
    Thereafter, this Court directed that the matter be determined upon full appellate briefing
    and oral argument.9
    The OAG presents the following two issues for this Court’s review:
    8In contrast, the court found the OAG’s reliance on In re Investigating Grand Jury of
    Philadelphia (Petition of Miller), 
    593 A.2d 402
    (Pa. 1991), unpersuasive. In that case, this
    Court considered a challenge to a search warrant issued for the purpose of obtaining
    evidence “for use before the grand jury[,]” but the challenge was unrelated to the judge’s
    authority to issue the warrant. 
    Id. at 404.
    9 In its brief, the County argues there is “no basis for the exercise of jurisdiction by this
    Court” and, instead, “appellate jurisdiction properly lies in the Commonwealth Court[.]”
    County’s Brief at 2. We disagree. As we indicated in our order granting briefing in this
    matter, the lower court’s ruling, which Judge Braxton certified for immediate appeal,
    affects an investigation conducted by the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury. That
    being so, our jurisdiction over this appeal is secure, and our decision to permit the appeal
    is a matter of discretion. See Pa.R.A.P. 3331(a)(3) (directing that an appellate challenge
    to an order “directly affecting an investigating grand jury or any investigation conducted
    by it” is to be filed in the Supreme Court); see also 42 Pa.C.S. §702(b) (specifying that,
    upon a lower tribunal’s certification of a nonfinal order, the appellate court may, “in its
    discretion, permit an appeal”); Pa.R.A.P. 3331(a)(5) (providing for appellate review of
    order affecting grand jury matters where certification per 42 Pa.C.S. §702(b) is entered).
    [J-101-2018] - 7
    1.     Did the lower court err in ruling it had the authority to address
    Lackawanna County’s motion for return of property concerning
    property seized pursuant to warrants issued by the supervising judge
    of the [41st] Statewide Investigating Grand Jury, when the
    Supervising Judge had exclusive authority to hear Lackawanna
    County’s Motion?
    2.     Whether, as a preliminary matter, the Supervising Judge of the [41st]
    Statewide Investigating Grand Jury had the authority to issue the
    search and seizure warrants executed in this matter, when the
    Supervising Judge has statewide authority with respect to the grand
    jury investigations he oversees, including the investigation
    associated with the warrants in this case?
    OAG’s Brief at 4. We address these legal questions on a plenary basis, and to the extent
    we must engage in statutory interpretation and analysis of our own procedural rules, we
    apply conventional interpretative principles. See In re Fortieth Statewide Investigating
    Grand Jury, 
    191 A.3d 750
    , 756 (Pa. 2018).
    II. Arguments of the Parties
    The OAG maintains Judge Sarcione, in his capacity as Supervising Judge, has
    exclusive authority to address the County’s motion for return because it relates to property
    seized through search warrants issued in connection with an investigation of the 41st
    Statewide Investigating Grand Jury. See OAG’s Brief at 14. As the OAG sees it, the
    lower court erroneously reached the opposite conclusion because it failed to “understand
    how supervising judges’ authority conforms with the various statutes, rules, and orders
    involved in the underlying legal actions here.” 
    Id. In this
    regard, the OAG begins by outlining what it believes to be the source of
    Judge Sarcione’s authority to adjudicate the motion for return of property. It primarily
    points to this Court’s December 9, 2016 order appointing Judge Sarcione as Supervising
    Judge — specifically, the order’s instruction that “‘[a]ll applications and motions relating
    to the work of the [41st] Statewide Investigating Grand Jury . . . shall be presented to the
    [J-101-2018] - 8
    Supervising Judge.’” OAG’s Brief at 21, quoting Order, 12/9/2016, at 1. The OAG
    explains the County’s motion for return, like the search warrants upon which the motion
    is premised, relate to the work of the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury. As such,
    the OAG concludes this Court’s own directive requires that the motion “‘shall be presented
    to the Supervising Judge.’” 
    Id. at 22,
    quoting Order, 12/9/2016, at 1.
    The OAG proceeds to address the lower court’s treatment of Pa.R.Crim.P. 588. It
    argues the lower court wrongly concluded Rule 588 prevents Judge Sarcione from
    addressing the motion for return since, in its view, the Rule does nothing more than dictate
    venue. See OAG’s Brief at 24-27. Thus, the OAG explains, while on its face the Rule
    requires that a motion for return shall be filed in the court of common pleas for the judicial
    district in which the property was seized — i.e., in Lackawanna County — “this does not
    prevent the Supervising Judge from hearing the motion or from it being ‘presented to the
    Supervising Judge.’” 
    Id. at 22,
    quoting Order, 12/9/2016, at 1. The OAG insists there is
    “no conflict” between Rule 588(A) and this Court’s directive that all motions relating to the
    work of the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury shall be presented to Judge
    Sarcione. 
    Id. From that
    premise the OAG prescribes two mechanisms that it believes would
    effectuate the intent of this Court’s order while simultaneously adhering to Rule 588(A).
    First, it argues Judge Sarcione is authorized to hear the County’s motion for return as
    filed in Lackawanna County. 
    Id. at 23.
    This is permissible, the OAG contends, because
    this Court’s order supposedly granted Judge Sarcione statewide jurisdiction with regard
    to any matters concerning the work of the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury and
    he therefore “has the same jurisdictional authority over Lackawanna County as any judge
    of the 45th Judicial District[.]” 
    Id. Alternatively, the
    OAG posits there is “no legal obstacle
    preventing the matter from being [ ] transferred to the docket associated with the
    [J-101-2018] - 9
    underlying grand jury investigation.” 
    Id. at 24.
    It notes that proceeding in this manner
    would be consistent with other Pennsylvania Rules of Procedure that dictate a default
    venue but also permit transfer to a different venue when the law and circumstances of a
    case warrant. See 
    id. at 24-27,
    citing Pa.R.Crim.P. 130 and Pa.R.Civ.P. 1006. In short,
    the OAG asserts Rule 588(A) “merely defaults to the reasonable position that a motion
    involving the return of property should be filed in the Common Pleas court where the
    property is located[,]” but it “does not prevent transfer of the matter to some other forum
    when such transfer is legally warranted.” 
    Id. at 26-27.
    Having concluded Judge Sarcione possesses exclusive jurisdiction to address the
    motion for return of property and that Rule 588(A) does not operate to prevent or constrict
    that authority, the OAG continues that the lower court’s contrary decision undermines the
    fundamental principles associated with the proper functioning of statewide investigating
    grand juries. See 
    id. at 27-30.
    Relying on this Court’s longstanding recognition that “[t]he
    secrecy of grand jury proceedings is indispensable to the effective functioning of a grand
    jury[,]” and this compelling need for secrecy “call[s] for a strong judicial hand in
    supervising the proceedings[,]” In re Dauphin County Fourth Investigating Grand Jury, 
    19 A.3d 491
    , 502-03 (Pa. 2011) (internal quotations and citations omitted), the OAG claims
    these principles will be frustrated if Judge Sarcione is prevented from adjudicating the
    motion for return. See OAG’s Brief at 31. This is so, the OAG argues, because it will be
    limited if not entirely barred from effectively responding to the substance of the County’s
    motion, as it implicates protected grand jury material. See OAG’s Brief at 31. Although
    the OAG concedes it may seek a disclosure order from Judge Sarcione to discuss some
    of the otherwise-secret matters with the lower court and the County, it stresses that “given
    the need to ensure an [e]ffective ongoing investigation, which may be targeting parties to
    the underlying motion or their affiliates, any disclosure may need to be limited.” 
    Id. The [J-101-2018]
    - 10
    OAG submits the lower court’s decision creates “a cumbersome process ripe for the
    unwarranted divulgence of secret information[,]” and it deems that burdensome process
    “wholly unnecessary . . . and antithetical to the fundamental principles governing grand
    jury practice.” 
    Id. at 31-32.
    Finally, the OAG proffers that there is a limit to a supervising judge’s authority to
    entertain a motion for return of property relating to a search warrant issued in connection
    with a grand jury investigation. See 
    id. at 32-33.
    Specifically, it suggests this rule applies
    only when there is an ongoing grand jury investigation or where grand jury secrecy
    concerns are present; absent these conditions, the OAG sees no reason why a motion
    for return of property could not be heard by a non-grand jury judge. See 
    id. Turning next
    to the issue of the search warrants, the OAG again identifies this
    Court’s order appointing Judge Sarcione as Supervising Judge as the authority permitting
    him to issue search warrants statewide. It argues the order, which tracks the language
    of 42 Pa.C.S. §4544(b)(2), states Judge Sarcione “(1) shall have jurisdiction over all
    counties throughout the Commonwealth, (2) including “‘[w]ith respect to investigations,
    presentments, reports, and all other proper activities of [the Grand Jury].’” OAG’s Brief
    at 35, quoting 42 Pa.C.S. §4544(b)(2) (emphasis supplied by the OAG). Thus, according
    to the OAG, Judge Sarcione had statewide jurisdiction with respect to any investigative
    activity of the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury. See 
    id. Working from
    that assumption, the OAG argues that “[be]cause Judge Sarcione
    had explicit statewide jurisdiction over all the Grand Jury’s investigations, he was an
    ‘issuing authority’ in Lackawanna County” as understood by Pa.R.Crim.P. 200. See 
    id. at 36,
    citing Pa.R.Crim.P. 200, cmt. (“[a]ny judicial officer who is authorized to issue a
    search warrant and who issues a warrant is considered an ‘issuing authority’ for purposes
    of this rule”). In support of its position an “issuing authority” under Rule 200 is not limited
    [J-101-2018] - 11
    to judicial officers whose commissions are linked to the judicial district where the property
    or person to be searched or seized is located, the OAG points to other examples where
    issuing authorities have been empowered to authorize search warrants in judicial districts
    where they do not normally sit. See 
    id. at 36-37
    (comment to Rule 200 acknowledges
    power of appellate court judges and justices to issue search warrants anywhere in
    Pennsylvania); 
    id. at 37-39
    (discussing collaborative agreements between judicial
    districts which permit visiting active judges and district justices to issue search warrants
    in judicial districts outside the one in which they sit). These examples, the OAG asserts,
    prove there is “nothing remarkable” about judges issuing search warrants outside their
    own judicial district, “so long as their authority [to do so] is otherwise legally authorized.”
    
    Id. at 37.
    As described, the OAG believes this Court’s order and 42 Pa.C.S. §4544(b)(2)
    provided Judge Sarcione with such legal authority, and it consequently faults the lower
    court to the extent it agreed with the County that Rule 200 prohibited Judge Sarcione from
    issuing the underlying search warrants.
    The OAG also challenges the County’s argument below that Judge Sarcione could
    not issue the search warrants on the basis that, under the Investigating Grand Jury Act,
    search warrants are not identified as an investigative resource of the grand jury and the
    issuance of search warrants is not mentioned as a power of the grand jury. See OAG’s
    Brief at 41, citing 42 Pa.C.S. §4542 (investigative resources of the grand jury) and 42
    Pa.C.S. §4548(a) (powers of investigating grand jury). As the OAG puts it, the County’s
    argument is “fundamentally flawed” because it misunderstands the nature and purpose
    of investigating grand juries. 
    Id. On this
    point, the OAG explains the powers of an
    investigating grand jury delineated in the Investigating Grand Jury Act “are in addition to
    the investigative resources and powers otherwise available to law enforcement in a
    criminal investigation.” 
    Id. (emphasis in
    original); see also 
    id. at 42
    (“the investigative
    [J-101-2018] - 12
    resources of the grand jury set forth the legal mechanisms which enable grand juries to
    gather potentially valuable evidence that may be otherwise inaccessible to law
    enforcement absent the power of a grand jury to acquire it”). The OAG asserts these
    additional resources advance the core purpose of the Investigating Grand Jury Act by
    enabling the Commonwealth to investigate and prosecute crimes which may otherwise
    go undetected; they do not, however, circumscribe the ordinary investigative tools and
    techniques that law enforcement may employ in the course of a criminal investigation.
    See 
    id. at 42
    . In sum, the OAG argues search warrants are just one of many ordinary
    investigative tools available to law enforcement in a criminal investigation, and nothing in
    the Investigating Grand Jury Act precludes their use to further a grand jury investigation.
    See 
    id. at 42
    -43.
    The County quite naturally disputes the OAG’s position on both issues. Regarding
    who may properly decide the motion for return of property, the County argues this issue
    is “squarely and completely resolved” by Rule 588(A), because it directs that motions for
    return shall be filed where the property was seized. County’s Brief at 15-16. The County
    submits there is nothing in this Court’s order appointing Judge Sarcione as Supervising
    Judge, or in the Investigating Grand Jury Act, that creates an exception to the procedure
    outlined in Rule 588(A). See 
    id. at 17.
    On a more foundational level, the County challenges the OAG’s interpretation of
    the powers granted to Judge Sarcione. While the County acknowledges this Court’s order
    conferred upon Judge Sarcione statewide jurisdiction, it argues this jurisdiction extends
    only to “investigations, presentments, reports, and all other proper activities of said
    investigating multicounty grand jury.” 
    Id. at 17,
    quoting 42 Pa.C.S. §4544(b)(2) (emphasis
    supplied by the County). In the County’s view, a motion for return of property “cannot in
    any way be deemed a ‘proper activity’ of an investigating grand jury.” 
    Id. In a
    similar way,
    [J-101-2018] - 13
    the County contests the OAG’s understanding of the separate directive in this Court’s
    order that all applications and motions relating to the work of the 41st Statewide
    Investigating Grand Jury shall be presented to Judge Sarcione. According to the County,
    its motion for return “does not reference or implicate grand jury testimony or any
    proceeding before the grand jury and therefore does not relate to ‘the work’ of the grand
    jury.” 
    Id. at 18.
    As for the OAG’s suggestion that transferring the motion for return of property from
    Lackawanna County to Judge Sarcione would comply with both this Court’s order and
    Rule 588(A), the County argues that employing such a procedure would be inappropriate
    for several reasons. For one thing, the County claims this procedure, which amounts to
    a request for change of venue, is waived because the OAG never requested a change of
    venue in the lower court. See 
    id. at 18-19.
    The County argues, even if the OAG had not
    waived this claim, the Pennsylvania Rules of Procedure cited by the OAG — including
    Pa.R.Crim.P. 130 and Pa.R.Civ.P. 1006 — “do not apply and are not satisfied here.” 
    Id. at 19.
       From the County’s perspective, the OAG failed to develop a factual record
    necessary to satisfy any standard for a change of venue, and thus there is no support in
    the record for such a change. See 
    id. at 19-20.
    Finally, to the extent the OAG invokes grand jury secrecy as support for its position
    that Judge Sarcione is empowered to address the motion for return of property, the
    County submits this is a red herring since the County’s motion “does not address or
    implicate any secret grand jury matters.” 
    Id. at 20.
    The County submits the execution of
    the warrants was a “very public event that attracted wide attention and publicity[,]” and it
    generally avers “there is nothing secret about the events that are the subject of the motion
    for return of property.” 
    Id. at 20-21.
    Moreover, the County continues, the motion for return
    advances facial and threshold legal challenges to the seizures “that do not implicate or
    [J-101-2018] - 14
    require consideration of any matters that occurred before the grand jury.” 
    Id. at 21.
    The
    County reasons that because the OAG has not substantiated its asserted need for
    secrecy, “it can only be concluded that secrecy is not a legitimate basis to reassign the
    motion for return of property.” 
    Id. at 22.
    Moving to the second issue concerning Judge Sarcione’s authority to issue the
    underlying search warrants, the County cites Pa.R.Crim.P. 200 as dispositive. The
    County interprets Rule 200 as endowing a judge with authority to issue search warrants
    only in the locality from which he or she was elected. See 
    id. at 23.
    In this case, since
    Judge Sarcione was elected in Chester County, the County argues it necessarily follows
    that he lacked authority to issue warrants in Lackawanna County. See 
    id. Furthermore, the
    County rejects the OAG’s attempt to analogize Judge Sarcione’s powers as
    Supervising Judge to those of appellate judges, who undoubtedly may “issue search
    warrants anywhere within the state.” Pa.R.Crim.P. 200, cmt. The County argues the
    statewide jurisdiction afforded to appellate judges is easily distinguishable, as they are
    elected to statewide office, whereas Judge Sarcione was not. See County’s Brief at 26
    n.10. As well, the County summarily discards the OAG’s reference to collaborative
    arrangements between counties which permit visiting judges to exercise the same power
    and authority as judges in the assigned district, because Lackawanna County is not party
    to any such agreement. See 
    id. at 26.
    The County finally dismisses the OAG’s argument the Investigating Grand Jury Act
    and this Court’s order appointing Judge Sarcione as Supervising Judge conferred upon
    him the power to issue search warrants coextensive with the jurisdiction of the 41st
    Statewide Investigating Grand Jury. As the County explains, the Investigating Grand Jury
    Act provides the investigating resources of the grand jury “shall include but not be limited
    to the power of [ ] subpoena, the power to obtain the initiation of civil and criminal
    [J-101-2018] - 15
    contempt proceedings, and every investigative power of any grand jury of the
    Commonwealth.” 
    Id. at 24,
    quoting 42 Pa.C.S. §4548(a) (emphasis supplied by the
    County). See also 42 Pa.C.S. §4542 (describing the investigative resources of the grand
    jury). The County asserts that, since grand juries have no statutory authority to issue
    search warrants, the Investigating Grand Jury Act “does not trump or supplant Rule 200.”
    
    Id. Similarly, the
    County argues that even though Section 4544(b)(2) and this Court’s
    order granted Judge Sarcione statewide jurisdiction over all “proper activities” of the grand
    jury, the issuance of search warrants is not a “proper activity” of a grand jury and,
    consequently, “this section does nothing to enlarge the scope of authority conferred by
    Rule 200.” 
    Id. at 24-25.
    For these reasons, the County deems irrelevant the OAG’s
    description of search warrants as ordinary investigative tools that may be used in addition
    to the express statutory powers conferred to investigating grand juries. See 
    id. at 25.
    Whether this is true “changes nothing[,]” the County concludes, because Judge Sarcione
    “had no power under Rule 200 or any other rule or statute to issue a warrant in any other
    county.” Id.10
    III. Analysis
    We find it helpful to address the issues presented in reverse order. We thus begin
    by considering whether Judge Sarcione, as Supervising Judge of the 41st Statewide
    10 The Pennsylvania Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (“PACDL”) has filed an
    amicus curiae brief in support of the County focusing “solely on the statutory construction
    of 42 Pa.C.S. §4548 and 42 Pa.C.S. §4542 and whether the Act grants to a supervising
    judge . . . the authority to issue a search warrant.” PACDL’s Brief at 8. As the County
    does, PACDL concludes “the statutory powers of an investigating grand jury do not
    include the power to issue search warrants.” 
    Id. The OAG
    responds to both the County’s
    and PACDL’s arguments in its Reply Brief, wherein it reiterates many of the points raised
    in its principal brief.
    [J-101-2018] - 16
    Investigating Grand Jury, had authority to issue the search and seizure warrants for the
    County’s property.11
    a. Authority to Issue Search Warrants
    Article V of the Pennsylvania Constitution establishes a unified judicial system
    vested with the judicial power of the Commonwealth. PA. CONST. art. V, §1. Although the
    Constitution does not enumerate every specific power inherent in courts and incidental to
    the grant of judicial authority under Article V, the Judicial Code serves to codify some of
    these non-particularized powers. Section 323 of the Judicial Code provides:
    Every court shall have power to issue, under its judicial seal, every lawful
    writ and process necessary or suitable for the exercise of its jurisdiction and
    for the enforcement of any order which it may make and all legal and
    equitable powers required for or incidental to the exercise of its jurisdiction,
    and, except as otherwise prescribed by general rules, every court shall have
    power to make such rules and orders of court as the interest of justice or
    the business of the court may require.
    42 Pa.C.S. §323. Section 912 of the Judicial Code similarly establishes that every court
    of common pleas “shall have power to issue, under its judicial seal, every lawful writ and
    process . . . as such courts have been heretofore authorized by law or usage to issue[,]”
    11 We recognize the issue of whether Judge Sarcione was empowered to authorize the
    underlying search warrants arguably goes to the merits of the County’s motion for return
    of property, and yet the lower court purported to “solely address proper jurisdiction.” Trial
    Ct. Op., 5/11/2018, at 1. However, it seems clear to us the lower court implicitly decided
    the search warrant issue as well. See 
    id. at 9
    (concluding Pa.R.Crim.P. 200 and the
    absence of any mention of search warrants in the Investigating Grand Jury Act “support
    [the] County’s position”). In any event, the parties have ably addressed the issue, and all
    recognize it is inseparably intertwined with the jurisdictional question presented. See,
    e.g., OAG’s Brief at 33 (the lower court’s apparent agreement with the County on the
    search warrant issue “contributed to the Court’s ultimate ruling” and “warrants addressing
    here”); County’s Brief at 22-23 (the OAG’s arguments regarding jurisdiction are “premised
    on the assumption that Judge Sarcione had authority to issue the warrants in the first
    place”); PACDL’s Brief at 7 (the “core issue before this Court” is whether the power to
    issue search warrants is a power of the investigating grand jury; “[a]ll other matters . . .
    are ancillary to that main issue”). For these reasons, we proceed to address both matters
    presented.
    [J-101-2018] - 17
    and every judge of a court of common pleas “shall have all the powers of a judge or
    magisterial district judge of the minor judiciary.” 42 Pa.C.S. §912. And Section 1515 of
    the Judicial Code expressly states magisterial district judges shall have jurisdiction “to
    issue warrants and perform duties of a similar nature[.]” 42 Pa.C.S. §1515(a)(4); see also
    42 Pa.C.S. §1123(a)(5) (same with regard to Philadelphia Municipal Court judges).
    Taken individually or together, these statutes make clear the issuance of a search warrant
    is a judicial power granted to common pleas court judges, among others.
    However, the judicial power to issue search warrants is not without limits. As the
    Superior Court observed more than thirty years ago, “the issuance of a search warrant is
    subject to the power of the Supreme Court to govern court procedures.” Commonwealth
    v. Dumont, 
    536 A.2d 342
    , 347-48 (Pa. Super. 1987).12 And, in fact, this Court, being
    reposed with the supreme judicial power of the Commonwealth, including the power to
    prescribe general rules governing practice, procedure, and the conduct of all courts, see
    PA. CONST. art. V, §§2, 10, has on multiple occasions exercised its rule-making power
    and adopted a number of rules pertaining to search warrants. See, e.g., Pa.R.Crim.P.
    200-212. Most germane to the present issue, and the subject of competing interpretations
    by the parties, is Rule 200. This Rule, as noted, provides that “[a] search warrant may be
    issued by any issuing authority within the judicial district wherein is located either the
    person or place to be searched.” Pa.R.Crim.P. 200.
    12 The Dumont Court explained its categorization of the issuance of a search warrant as
    procedural flowed from the definition of “legal process,” sometimes referred to as “lawful
    process,” which “‘means a summons, writ, warrant, mandate or other process issuing
    from a 
    court.” 536 A.2d at 347
    , quoting Black’s Law Dictionary at 1085 (5th Ed. 1979)
    (emphasis supplied by Superior Court). We note the Judicial Code provides a similar
    definition of “process.” See 42 Pa.C.S. §102 (defining “process” as a “document
    evidencing a command of a court or of a magisterial district judge”). This Court has also
    generally recognized “the decision to issue a search warrant is a judicial decision.” PG
    Pub. Co. v. Com., 
    614 A.2d 1106
    , 1108 (Pa. 1992).
    [J-101-2018] - 18
    Generally, Rule 200 permits common pleas court judges to issue search warrants
    only in the judicial district in which they sit and only so long as the person or place to be
    searched is located within that judicial district. This conclusion necessarily follows from
    the Rule’s express language, which tethers “issuing authority” — defined under
    Pa.R.Crim.P. 103 as “any public official having the power and authority of a magistrate,
    a Philadelphia arraignment court magistrate, or a magisterial district judge” — to the
    phrase “within the judicial district wherein is located either the person or place to be
    searched.” Pa.R.Crim.P. 200. In this way, the Rule restricts the territorial jurisdiction in
    which an issuing authority may issue a search warrant to the judicial district in which the
    issuing authority sits, the parameters of which are generally the county. See 42 Pa.C.S.
    §901(a) (establishing boundaries of judicial districts).13
    This is not to say, however, that the definition of an “issuing authority within the
    judicial district” is strictly limited to officials whose commissions are linked to the judicial
    district where the property or person to be searched is located. See County’s Brief at 23
    (arguing a judge can only issue search warrants in “the locality from which he or she was
    elected”). Rather, we agree with the OAG that the inquiry more broadly turns on “whether
    the issuing authority in question has the power to issue the warrant in the particular judicial
    13 We say “restricts” because there is some authority supporting the notion that, absent
    statutory or procedural rules to the contrary, a common pleas court judge’s inherent
    judicial power to issue a search warrant extends statewide. See WASSERBLY, MOORE, &
    SCHNEIDER, W EST’S PA. PRAC., CRIMINAL PRACTICE §19:9 (“In view of Commonwealth v.
    McPhail, 
    692 A.2d 139
    (Pa. 1997) (plurality opinion), which discussed the statewide
    jurisdiction of the court of common pleas under Article 5, §1, of the Pennsylvania
    Constitution in a ‘unified judicial system,’ the power of a court of common pleas to issue
    warrants may theoretically extend outside its judicial district.”); see also Commonwealth
    v. Ryan, 
    400 A.2d 1264
    (Pa. 1979) (recognizing a magisterial district judge has “at least”
    county-wide jurisdiction and therefore has power to issue a search warrant outside of the
    magisterial district but within the judicial district). But see 42 Pa.C.S. §931 (explaining
    the process of the courts of common pleas “shall extend beyond the territorial limits of the
    juridical district[,]” but only “to the extent prescribed by general rule”).
    [J-101-2018] - 19
    district.” OAG’s Brief at 36. See Pa.R.Crim.P. 200, cmt. (“Any judicial officer who is
    authorized to issue a search warrant and who issues a warrant is considered an ‘issuing
    authority’ for purposes of this rule.”). Indeed, as the OAG aptly notes by way of example,
    this Court has expressly authorized president judges in certain judicial districts to assign
    judges to sit in districts where they were not elected, and those judges so assigned are
    empowered with the same rights as any other jurist in that district. See 204 Pa. Code
    §§29.101-29.105 (approving inter-judicial-district assignments to promote continuous
    judicial coverage and granting assigned judges “the same power and authority as are
    vested in a judge or district justice of the assigned district”). In a similar way, judges
    temporarily assigned from one judicial district to another pursuant to this Court’s broad
    powers to make such assignments, see PA. CONST. art. V, §10(a) and Pa.R.J.A.
    701(C)(2), are authorized to “hear and determine any matter with like effect as if duly
    commissioned to sit in such other court.” 42 Pa.C.S. §4121(a). These examples serve
    to highlight that there are multiple ways in which an issuing authority may come to be
    “within the judicial district” for purposes of Rule 200.
    The relevant question that remains, then, is whether Judge Sarcione, in his role as
    Supervising Judge of the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury, was authorized to act
    in Lackawanna County. We conclude he was, and that his authority derived from this
    Court’s order appointing him as Supervising Judge. Notably, our order expressly granted
    Judge Sarcione jurisdiction over all counties in the Commonwealth “[w]ith respect to
    investigations, presentments, reports, and all other proper activities of the [41st]
    Statewide Investigating Grand Jury[.]” Order, 12/9/2016, at 1-2 (emphasis added). In our
    view, this grant of statewide jurisdiction relative to “investigations” was sufficiently broad
    to include within its scope the power to issue search warrants sought in connection with
    and to further an investigation of the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury.
    [J-101-2018] - 20
    The County’s arguments do not undermine this conclusion. The County focuses
    its efforts on explaining why the issuance of a search warrant is not a “proper activity” of
    the grand jury. See, e.g., County’s Brief at 24 (discussing 42 Pa.C.S. §§4542 and 4548(a)
    and concluding “[g]rand juries have no statutory authority to issue warrants”). Not only
    does this argument ignore the fact that this Court granted Judge Sarcione statewide
    jurisdiction with respect to “investigations” generally, but it also betrays a fundamental
    misunderstanding of the question involved. The issue is not, as the County contends,
    whether investigating grand juries have the power to issue search warrants; it is whether
    the judges who supervise grand juries possess that power. As we have explained, all
    common pleas court judges in this Commonwealth inherently possess the power to issue
    search warrants, subject only to this Court’s power to govern court procedures. Nothing
    in the Investigating Grand Jury Act alters this paradigm or restricts the inherent powers
    of supervising judges. See In re Investigating Grand Jury of Philadelphia County (Appeal
    of Drapczuk), 
    433 A.2d 5
    , 6-7 (Pa. 1981) (concluding 42 Pa.C.S. §4548(a) “in no respect
    provides, even implicitly, that the power[s] set forth [in the statute] are either exclusive to
    the grand jury or intended to displace valid, fundamental powers of the court”).
    Relatedly, we agree with the OAG that the Investigating Grand Jury Act is intended
    to expand, rather than narrow, the arsenal of investigative tools at the Commonwealth’s
    disposal when conducting an investigation. The Act implicitly recognizes this principle by
    requiring the attorney for the Commonwealth to allege, prior to submitting an investigation
    to the grand jury, “that one or more of the investigative resources of the grand jury are
    required in order to adequately investigate the matter.” 42 Pa.C.S. §4550(a). We have
    commented this imposition of a jurisdictional predicate that “the normal law enforcement
    resources of [the Commonwealth] must be inadequate” before an investigation may be
    submitted to a grand jury is “[c]entral to the Act’s purpose[.]” In re County Investigating
    [J-101-2018] - 21
    Grand Jury of April 14, 1981 (Appeal of Krakower), 
    459 A.2d 304
    , 307 (Pa. 1983). It
    seems obvious that central purpose is to supply the Commonwealth with additional
    investigative tools — i.e., the powers and investigative resources of the grand jury — so
    that it may ferret out criminal activity not otherwise able to be detected or effectively
    pursued through traditional law enforcement techniques alone.         See, e.g., 
    id. (“the investigating
    grand jury has been given resources to enable it to investigate and gather
    evidence otherwise unobtainable”); W.R. LAFAVE     ET AL.,   CRIMINAL PROCEDURE, §8.1(a)
    (“Utilizing its investigative authority, the grand jury uncovers evidence not previously
    available to the prosecution, and thereby provides the sword that enables the government
    to secure convictions that might otherwise not be obtained.”). There was thus nothing
    improper about the OAG’s practice of obtaining the search warrants from Judge Sarcione
    where its purpose was to further an ongoing investigation of the 41st Statewide
    Investigating Grand Jury.14
    In conclusion, we hold that where this Court appoints a common pleas court judge
    to supervise a multi-county or statewide investigating grand jury and empowers the judge
    14 Amicus PACDL suggests the Commonwealth should not be able to seek search
    warrants in the context of a grand jury investigation because “the subpoena duces tecum
    mechanism can be utilized to procure the same information.” PACDL’s Brief at 25. See
    42 Pa.C.S. §4542 (including “the power to require the production of documents, records
    and other evidence” as an investigative resource of the investigating grand jury). To be
    sure, the “basic advantage of the grand jury stems from its ability to use the subpoena
    authority of the court” which, among other benefits over a search warrant, can issue
    without a showing of probable cause. 
    LAFAVE, supra
    at §8.3(a). But notwithstanding the
    advantages a subpoena offers, in certain investigations a search warrant may still be
    preferable or even necessary. See 
    id. at §8.3(c)
    n.19 (listing the benefits of search
    warrants as compared to subpoenas, such as eliminating the possibility the party in
    possession may destroy, conceal, or alter documents). The unique advantages offered
    by each investigative tool underscore why the Commonwealth may properly employ either
    or both in relation to a grand jury investigation. See 
    id. at §8.8(g)
    (“Since searches and
    subpoenas offer different advantages, prosecutors may appropriately use both search
    warrants and subpoenas to obtain related material in the same investigation, sometimes
    from the same party.”).
    [J-101-2018] - 22
    to act in multiple judicial districts, that grant of authority includes the inherent power to
    issue search warrants in any of those districts, so long as the warrants relate to an
    investigation of the grand jury. Under those circumstances, the supervising judge is an
    “issuing authority” in those judicial districts as defined by Pa.R.Crim.P. 200. Here, Judge
    Sarcione possessed statewide jurisdiction with respect to all investigations of the 41st
    Statewide Investigating Grand Jury, and the search and seizure warrants for the County’s
    property related to one of those investigations.         Accordingly, Judge Sarcione was
    empowered to authorize the warrants.15
    b. Authority to Hear Motion for Return of Property
    We now consider who may properly address the County’s motion for return of
    property and we find the answer to this question is relatively simple: because the motion
    for return challenges the search warrants issued by Judge Sarcione, which in turn relate
    to the work of the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury, the motion must be presented
    to Judge Sarcione in the first instance.
    This conclusion directly follows from the language in this Court’s order appointing
    Judge Sarcione as Supervising Judge. Once more, that order instructs “[a]ll applications
    and motions relating to the work of the [41st] Statewide Investigating Grand Jury —
    including motions for disclosure of grand jury transcripts and evidence — shall be
    presented to the Supervising Judge.” Order, 12/9/2016, at 1.16 The breadth of this
    directive is sweeping, covering all applications and motions generally relating to “the
    15To be clear, we hold only that Judge Sarcione was authorized to issue the search and
    seizure warrants for the County’s property. We do not address any other challenges to
    the validity of the warrants raised in the County’s motion for return of property.
    16 Parenthetically, we note this particular directive is not required by the Investigating
    Grand Jury Act. See 42 Pa.C.S. §4544(b) (mandating the inclusion of certain content in
    order convening multicounty investigating grand jury, but also explaining that “[a]ll matters
    to be included in such order shall be determined by the justice issuing the order in any
    manner which he deems appropriate”).
    [J-101-2018] - 23
    work” of the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury. Although the County disputes that
    its motion fits within this category because it “does not reference or implicate grand jury
    testimony or any proceeding before the grand jury[,]” County’s Brief at 18, the directive’s
    scope is not as narrowly tailored as the County describes. Rather, under its plain terms,
    it applies broadly to any application or motion “relating to the work” of the grand jury. The
    County’s motion for return of property falls within this reach, as it challenges the validity
    of the search warrants issued in connection with an investigation of the 41st Statewide
    Investigating Grand Jury and, if successful, the County’s motion would deprive the grand
    jury of the very evidence it seeks to consider to further its investigation.
    Moreover, under the County’s view, parties could seek to obtain indirectly through
    the motion for return process that which they clearly would be prohibited from obtaining
    directly due to grand jury secrecy concerns. Indeed, despite the County’s assertion at
    the hearing before the lower court that it does not “seek the affidavit[s] of probable cause”
    supporting the search warrants, N.T. 11/15/2017 at 7, the County pointedly argued in its
    motion for return that “[t]he search warrants are not carefully tailored, supported by
    probable cause, nor circumscribed with particular exactitude.” Motion for Return of
    Property, R.R. at 59a (emphasis added); see 
    id. at R.R.
    53(a) (declaring the search
    warrants unconstitutional “for their lack of particularity and their overbreadth”). These
    claims are undoubtedly aimed at the sealed affidavits of probable cause supporting the
    issuance of the search warrants, and a court will necessarily have to examine the
    probable cause basis set forth in those affidavits to adequately address the County’s
    contentions.   See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Waltson, 
    724 A.2d 289
    , 230 (Pa. 1998)
    (rejecting overbreadth challenge and explaining that “where probable cause exists to
    support the search of the area so designated, a warrant will not fail for lack of
    particularity”) (citation omitted); Commonwealth v. Grossman, 
    555 A.2d 896
    , 900 (Pa.
    [J-101-2018] - 24
    1989) (“[I]n any assessment of the validity of the description contained in a warrant, a
    court must initially determine for what items probable cause existed. The sufficiency of
    the description must then be measured against those items for which there was probable
    cause.”). Consequently, the OAG’s concern the County’s motion for return will intrude
    upon protected grand jury matters is not merely theoretical; it is a certainty. And that is
    precisely why the Supervising Judge of the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury must
    be the one to entertain it. See generally In re Dauphin County Fourth Investigating Grand
    
    Jury, 19 A.3d at 504
    (explaining “the supervising judge has the singular role in maintaining
    the confidentiality of grand jury proceedings”).17
    Our final task is to determine the proper manner in which a motion for return of
    property relating to a search or seizure made in connection with a grand jury investigation
    is to be presented to the supervising judge of the grand jury. We find the most logical
    course in such circumstances is for the aggrieved party to file the motion in the court of
    common pleas for the judicial district in which the property was seized, as Pa.R.Crim.P.
    588(A) demands, and for the Commonwealth to then move to have the matter as filed on
    that docket presented to the supervising judge.
    17  Even if the County had not argued in its motion that it was challenging the search
    warrants on overbreadth or particularity grounds, we would reach the same result. Artful
    legal drafting cannot avoid the fact that, at bottom, any challenge to a search warrant
    issued in connection with an investigating grand jury affects the work of the grand jury
    and may require delving into secret grand jury matters. See generally In re Fortieth
    Statewide Investigating Grand 
    Jury, 191 A.3d at 762
    n.21 (“[T]o be effective, secrecy must
    extend to some range of matters beyond what happens before the grand jury in a grand
    jury room.”); SARA SUN BEALE & W ILLIAM C. BRYSON, GRAND JURY LAW & PRACTICE, §5.6
    (“If the disclosure of the documents in context reveals something about the grand jury’s
    investigation, the policy of grand jury secrecy has been breached regardless of whether
    the documents on their face related directly to the grand jury’s activities.”). In fact, since
    a motion for return necessarily requests relinquishment of the seized property, the rules
    governing secrecy will be directly implicated where the seized property has already been
    presented to the grand jury. See, e.g., Pa.R.Crim.P. 229 (requiring supervising judge to
    establish procedures for supervising custody “[w]hen physical evidence is presented
    before the investigating grand jury”).
    [J-101-2018] - 25
    As we have said, when this Court grants supervising judges multi-county or
    statewide jurisdiction, they maintain the same power and authority as are vested in judges
    of the district where the search occurred and the motion for return is filed, at least with
    respect to matters relating to the grand jury’s investigation. In this sense, a supervising
    judge has the same jurisdictional authority over the relevant county as any other judge in
    that district, and should exercise that jurisdiction to address the motion for return as
    originally filed on the appropriate common pleas court docket. If, upon being presented
    with the motion the supervising judge determines there are no outstanding concerns for
    grand jury secrecy — perhaps because the term of the grand jury has expired or an
    indictment has already issued — the judge may decline to hear the motion and it may
    instead be considered in the normal course under applicable rules and procedures.
    This approach best accommodates Rule 588, our intent that all matters relating to
    the work of a grand jury be presented to the supervising judge, and the secrecy concerns
    attendant to grand jury matters. It also serves to further judicial economy. As this case
    demonstrates, any alternative to the supervising judge addressing a motion for return in
    the first instance will likely result in unnecessary delay caused by the Commonwealth’s
    need to obtain permission from the supervising judge to disclose otherwise-secret grand
    jury material. This delay and uncertainty regarding what may be revealed in response to
    a motion for return is eliminated if the matter is first presented to the supervising judge,
    who is uniquely tasked with guarding the confidentiality of such matters. Accordingly, we
    conclude that when a motion for return concerns a search or seizure made in connection
    with a grand jury investigation, it is the supervising judge of that grand jury who must
    [J-101-2018] - 26
    initially consider it, doing so upon the docket on which it was originally filed in the relevant
    county.18
    IV. Conclusion
    In his role as Supervising Judge of the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand Jury,
    Judge Sarcione was empowered to issue search warrants in any judicial district, provided
    that the warrants related to an investigation of the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand
    Jury. Because there is no dispute the search and seizure warrants for the County’s
    property related to such an investigation, Judge Sarcione was authorized to issue them.
    Further, because the County’s motion for return of property challenges the validity of
    those search warrants, it relates to the work of the 41st Statewide Investigating Grand
    Jury and must be presented to the Supervising Judge, who shall adjudicate the motion or
    conclude it does not raise grand jury secrecy concerns. As the lower court reached the
    opposite conclusions, we vacate its order and remand for proceedings consistent with
    this Opinion.
    Chief Justice Saylor and Justices Baer, Wecht and Mundy join the opinion.
    Justice Donohue files a dissenting opinion in which Justice Todd joins.
    18 Based on our disposition, we decline to endorse the OAG’s alternative proposal to allow
    motions for return of property to be transferred to the docket associated with the
    underlying grand jury investigation. Our procedural rules do not contemplate the process
    envisioned by the OAG, and crafting a procedural mechanism of that scale is a function
    more appropriately reserved for our Criminal Procedural Rules Committee. Along those
    same lines, we believe it would be prudent for the Criminal Procedural Rules Committee
    to consider adopting a procedure requiring motions for return relative to property seized
    per warrants issued by a grand jury supervising judge to be filed on the docket for the
    grand jury investigation in the county in which the grand jury has been empaneled. In our
    view, such a procedure, if feasible, would most effectively facilitate this Court’s intent that
    matters relating to grand jury proceedings be directed to the supervising judge. For now,
    we see no impediment to a supervising judge simply entertaining a motion for return as
    filed on the docket in the relevant county. Indeed, as the OAG points out, the County
    does “not address or contest” this proposed course. See OAG’s Reply Brief at 13 n.4.
    [J-101-2018] - 27