Merry Reed v. Kevin Devlin

976 F.3d 302
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedSeptember 29, 2020
Docket20-1632
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 976 F.3d 302 (Merry Reed v. Kevin Devlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merry Reed v. Kevin Devlin, 976 F.3d 302 (3d Cir. 2020).

Opinion

PRECEDENTIAL

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT ______________

No. 20-1632 ______________

MERRY REED; PHILADELPHIA BAIL FUND

v.

FRANCIS BERNARD ARRAIGNMENT COURT MAGISTRATE JUDGES; SHEILA BEDFORD; KEVIN DEVLIN; JAMES O'BRIEN; CATERIA MCCABE; ROBERT STACK IN THEIR OFFICIAL CAPACITIES; PRESIDENT JUDGE PATRICK DUGAN IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY; SHERIFF OF PHILADELPHIA

Francis Bernard, Sheila Bedford, Kevin Devlin, James O'Brien, Cateria McCabe and Robert Stack,

Appellants ______________

On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (D.C. Civ. No. 2-19-cv-03110) District Judge: Honorable Harvey Bartle, III ______________

Argued June 30, 2020

BEFORE: KRAUSE, PHIPPS, and GREENBERG, Circuit Judges.

(Filed: September 29, 2020) ______________

Michael L. Berry Paul J. Safier Shawn Summers Ballard Spahr 1735 Market Street 51st Floor Philadelphia, PA 19103

Robert D. Friedman Nicolas Y. Riley (argued) Georgetown University Law Center Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection 600 New Jersey Avenue, N.W. Washington, DC 20001

Attorneys for Appellees

Aaron J. Marcus Defender Association of Philadelphia 1441 Sansom Street Philadelphia, PA 19102

2 Matthew Stiegler 7145 Germantown Avenue Suite 2 Philadelphia, PA 19119

Katie Townsend The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press 1156 15th Street. N.W. Suite 1020 Washington, DC 20005

Attorneys for Amici Curiae

Michael Daley (argued) Megan L. Davis Supreme Court of Pennsylvania Administrative Office of Pennsylvania Courts 1515 Market Street Suite 1414 Philadelphia, PA 19102

Attorneys for Appellants ______________

OPINION OF THE COURT ______________

GREENBERG, Circuit Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

3 This matter comes on before this Court on the appeal of defendant-appellants Arraignment Court Magistrate Judge Francis Bernard, et al. (“appellants” or the “Arraignment Magistrates”). Appellants appeal from the District Court’s February 25, 2020 Order granting summary judgment in favor of appellee Philadelphia Bail Fund (“appellee” or the “Bail Fund”) and holding that certain state and local rules precluding verbatim recording of bail proceedings violate the First Amendment. For the reasons that follow, we will reverse.

II. STATEMENT OF FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

An individual arrested1 in Philadelphia typically is brought before an Arraignment Court Magistrate (hereinafter, “bail magistrate”) at the City’s Criminal Justice Center for a preliminary arraignment (hereinafter, “bail hearing”).2 Bail

1 After an arrest, law enforcement processes the arrestee and creates a police arrest report. Thereafter, Pretrial Services interviews the arrestee and inquires into certain biographical information, including the arrestee’s residence, employment, health, and education level. The results of that interview are compiled into a report, which then is submitted to the bail magistrate prior to the bail hearing. 2 The arrestee ordinarily is confined at a Philadelphia police precinct. The bail magistrate, prosecutor, defender, and (if applicable) the public are located in a bail hearing courtroom in the basement of the Philadelphia Criminal Justice Center. The arrestee appears in court via an audio-visual link on a monitor, and all participants are able to hear and see each other via the

4 hearings may be held twenty-four hours per day, seven days per week, three-hundred and sixty-five days per year. On average, each bail hearing lasts approximately four minutes.

At the bail hearing, the bail magistrate hears oral argument from the prosecutor and defender, considers certain statutory factors and biographical information, and, if appropriate, sets bail. If an arrestee seeks review of the bail magistrate’s decision, an emergency municipal court judge is available to conduct an immediate de novo review by telephone.

The bail hearings are open to the public, but transcripts of the hearings are not made and audio recordings are not available to the public.3 Following the bail hearing, however,

audio-visual link.

3 The bail hearings are audio-recorded but for “internal review purposes” only. (JA 061.) It is undisputed that these unofficial audio recordings are not created in accordance with Pennsylvania’s First Judicial District Digital Recording Program, which governs the production of official court recordings. Moreover, the quality of these unofficial recordings and whether they adequately and accurately capture the contents of bail hearings is questionable. Indeed, all parties agreed to admit as part of the record that the unofficial audio recordings are of “inferior quality and often hard to hear”. (JA 012; see also JA 012 n.5.) Thus, the fact that the Philadelphia Municipal Court creates unofficial audio recordings of the bail hearings cannot be regarded as a basis on which to hold that verbatim documentation of bail hearings already exists. Nevertheless, we realize that the dissent makes much of the fact that, in order

5 the public may access and obtain copies of court documents related to the hearing, including the bail bond, the criminal complaint, the bail hearing subpoena, and a bail appeal report if the arrestee appealed. Those documents, however, do not include information such as the parties’ arguments and the bail magistrate’s reasoning for his or her decision.

The appellee Bail Fund is a nonprofit organization that seeks to enforce what it regards as justice within Philadelphia’s bail system. Among other things, the Bail Fund sends volunteers into Philadelphia bail hearings to observe and report on the proceedings and uses information volunteers compile to produce public reports and educate Philadelphia citizens and government officials.

The Bail Fund avers that “[i]ts volunteers take extensive notes on the proceedings but the rapid, back-to-back, jargon- filled nature of the hearings makes it impossible for them to document every point or word exchanged.” (Bail Fund (“BF”) Br. at 6.) Because of that limitation, it sought permission to create its own audio recordings of bail hearings. The President Judge of the Philadelphia Municipal Court denied that request, noting that state rules prohibit the public from recording bail hearings.

to comply with the District Court’s order, the Municipal Court has begun to make available certified transcripts of bail hearings based upon these recordings. See e.g., Dissent at 24 n.7. (Status Rpt., Exh. A, ECF No. 38.) This retrospective discussion elevates results over process and loses sight of the fact that the issue before us is whether the First Amendment mandated their creation at the outset, not whether they can be made.

6 Subsequently, the Bail Fund initiated this action, raising an as applied First Amendment challenge to the following three rules (hereinafter and collectively, the “challenged Rules”): Pennsylvania Rule of Criminal Procedure 112(C); Pennsylvania Rule of Judicial Administration 1910(B); and Philadelphia Municipal Court Arraignment Court Magistrate Rule 7.09.4 The District Court in a comprehensive opinion granted summary judgment in the Bail Fund’s favor, holding that the challenged Rules infringed on the Bail Fund’s First Amendment right of access to the bail hearings so long as the Philadelphia Municipal Court did not make official audio recordings or transcripts of the hearings available to the public. Consequently, it ordered that the Bail Fund must be allowed to audio-record bail hearings so long as the Philadelphia Municipal Court did not create publicly available transcripts or audio recordings of those proceedings.

III. DISCUSSION

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976 F.3d 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merry-reed-v-kevin-devlin-ca3-2020.