In Re Investigatory Grand Jury No. 2007-04

977 A.2d 621, 293 Conn. 464, 2009 Conn. LEXIS 371
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 2, 2009
DocketSC 2007-04
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 977 A.2d 621 (In Re Investigatory Grand Jury No. 2007-04) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Investigatory Grand Jury No. 2007-04, 977 A.2d 621, 293 Conn. 464, 2009 Conn. LEXIS 371 (Colo. 2009).

Opinion

Opinion

ROGERS, C. J.

Pursuant to General Statutes § 54-47g (d), 1 the intervening petitioner, the Hartford Courant *468 Company, filed this petition for review 2 of the order of the investigatory grand jury (grand jury) granting in part the motion of the respondent, the state of Connecticut, requesting that the grand jury’s final report of finding (final report), which incorporated by reference its interim report of finding (interim report), not be open to public inspection and copying. The petitioner claims that the grand jury improperly granted the state’s motion because both the final report and the interim report are presumptively open to the public pursuant to § 54-47g (b) and do not fall within any of the exceptions set forth in § 54-47g (c). We affirm the order of the grand jury with respect to the final report and reverse the order of the grand jury with respect to the interim report.

The record discloses the following undisputed facts. On October 24, 2007, an investigatory grand jury panel, consisting of three Superior Court judges, ordered an investigation to determine whether there was probable cause to believe that crimes had been committed by certain persons within the government of the city of Hartford (city). On November 6, 2007, the chief court administrator of the state of Connecticut appointed *469 Judge Dennis Eveleigh as an investigatory grand jury pursuant to General Statutes § 54-47d for the purpose of investigating “corruption and the misuse of public funds in the government of the [c]ity ... in its activities and dealings with persons or firms doing business with the city.” On January 13,2009, the grand jury issued under seal an interim report. On June 29, 2009, the grand jury issued its final report, which incorporated the interim report by reference. On the same day, the state filed a motion to seal the record of the investigation and the final report pursuant to § 54-47g (a) and (b) and requested a hearing pursuant to § 54-47g (c).

The hearing on the state’s motion to seal the record 3 and final report commenced on July 13, 2009. At the hearing, several persons who were referred to in the final report and who had been deemed to be interested parties under § 54-47g (c) requested through their counsel permission to view the final report before arguing on the issue of whether the report should be sealed. The grand jury ordered that each interested party could review the portion of the final report that related to that party and continued the hearing to July 20, 2009. On July 13, 2009, the petitioner filed a motion to intervene in the proceeding for the prapose of arguing that the final report should be disclosed to the public. At the July 20, 2009 hearing on the state’s motion to seal, the grand jury granted the petitioner’s motion to intervene and designated the petitioner as an interested party.

Thereafter, the grand jury granted in part the state’s motion to seal the final report. In its memorandum of decision, the grand jury observed that § 54-47g (b) expressly prohibits the disclosure of any part of the record that “contains allegations of the commission of *470 a crime by an individual if the investigatory grand jury failed to find probable cause that such individual committed such crime unless such individual requests the release of such part of the record. . . .” The grand jury concluded that, under this provision, it could not disclose the portion of the final report relating to persons for whom the jury had found no probable cause to believe that they had committed crimes. With respect to persons for whom the grand jury had found probable cause in the final report, the grand jury observed that none of them had yet been arrested and there was a possibility that they never would be. With respect to those persons, the grand jury found that “[i]f the information is made public, prospective jurors may be reading about aspects of the case that will never be disclosed in a trial.” It also observed that three persons had been arrested as the result of the grand jury’s findings of probable cause in the interim report and that the release of the final report could jeopardize the rights of those persons to a fair trial “due to pretrial publicity of unrelated matters.” In addition, the grand jury concluded that, because none of the persons named in the final report had yet been convicted, the presumption of innocence applied and, therefore, they were “innocent persons” under § 54-47g (c) (4). It further found that some of the allegations of criminal activity in the final report were “uncorroborated or inferred . . . .” The grand jury concluded, therefore, that the release of the final report could significantly damage the lives and reputations of innocent persons. Accordingly, the grand jury granted the state’s motion to seal part III of the final report, which contained the discussion section. It denied the motion with respect to parts I and II of the final report, which set forth the procedural background and the scope of the investigation. Finally, the grand jury noted that “the interim report and its findings were incorporated in the final report. The interim report has *471 previously been ordered sealed, and that order shall remain in effect.” This petition for review followed.

The petitioner claims that the grand jury improperly determined that part III of the final report should not be disclosed under § 54-47g (c) (1) because disclosure would result in pretrial publicity that would jeopardize the fair trial rights of the persons who were arrested as the result of the probable cause findings in the interim report. The petitioner also claims that the grand jury failed to consider whether there were reasonable alternatives to nondisclosure. The petitioner further contends that the grand jury improperly granted the motion to seal with respect to the portion of the final report related to persons for whom the grand jury did not find probable cause because the grand jury did not limit its order to the portions of the final report that were related to persons who were alleged to have committed a crime. 4 See General Statutes § 54-47g (b) (“no part of the record shall be disclosed which contains allegations of the commission of a crime by an individual if the investigatory grand jury failed to find probable cause that such individual committed such crime” [emphasis added]). In addition, the petitioner claims that, in determining that the release of the final report would damage the reputations of innocent persons, the grand jury improperly interpreted the phrase “innocent persons,” as used in § 54-47g (c) (4), to include persons for whom the grand jury had found probable cause to believe that they had committed crimes. Finally, the petitioner claims that the grand jury improperly sealed the interim report without making any specific findings of fact on the record regarding the reasons for sealing the report, as required by § 54-47g (c). The state and a *472

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Related

State v. Johnson
345 Conn. 174 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2022)
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Connecticut Appellate Court, 2018
Nyenhuis v. Metropolitan District Commission
22 A.3d 1181 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 2011)

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Bluebook (online)
977 A.2d 621, 293 Conn. 464, 2009 Conn. LEXIS 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-investigatory-grand-jury-no-2007-04-conn-2009.