J. SKELLY WRIGHT, Circuit Judge:
This proceeding involves the access of litigants to the federal courts. Over forty defendants in criminal prosecutions in a state court of Mississippi seek to remove the causes into the United States District Court under 28 U.S.C. § 1446. The clerk of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi, acting under "local court rules, refuses to accept for filing the single removal petition covering all 40-odd state prosecutions, and the defendants seek a mandamus against the judge of the District Court to require that such filing be permitted. The application for mandamus states that the District Court practice “limits and prohibits any effective use of the criminal removal provisions covering civil rights cases in that district.”
It appears from the papers before us that the petitioners were charged with violations of H.B. 546, 1964 Sess.Miss. Leg., a statute which denounces picketing and demonstrations in the environs of public buildings. The statute, set out in the margin,1 was enacted by the Mississippi Legislature on April 8,1964. The 40-odd petitioners were arrested in Hat-tiesburg, Mississippi, on April 10. According to the sworn removal petition:
“Petitioners are members of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, affiliated with the Conference of Federated Organizations, both Civil Rights groups, and were at the time of their arrests, engaged in a voter registration drive in Forrest County, Mississippi, assisting Negroes to register so as to enable them to vote as protected under the1 Federal Constitution and the Civil Rights [statute].”
On April 13, the verified removal petition was refused filing by the District Court, through its clerk, for the following reasons.
[283]*283<1) The petition was in behalf of more than one individual.
•(2) It was not accompanied by a filing fee of $15.00 per individual.
<(3) It was not accompanied by a removal bond of $500.00 per individual.
'(4) It was not signed by a member of the bar of the Southern District of Mississippi.
Petitioners’ “Alternative Petition Tor a Writ of Mandamus,” seeking to require the judge of the District Court to have the petition filed, was filed in this court on April 13 under Rule 13a.2 We have authority under Rule 13a to order that the District Judge be made a respondent in these mandamus proceedings and to fix a time for him to file an answer. Out of deference to judicial decorum, however, we did not do so, but ordered that the application for mandamus be held in abeyance to permit the petitioners to take such further action in the District Court as they deemed advisable, or to file supplemental papers with us. At the same time, we also issued a per curiam 3 setting forth the considerations [284]*284which moved us in making our decision not to invoke immediately the process of Rule 13a. Thus we intended that the petitioners and the District Court have the advantage of our views on the matter so that they could act accordingly. Subsequently, the petitioners have filed supplemental pleadings and affidavits in this court, copies of which have been sent to the District Judge and the prosecution below; the District Judge has favored us with memoranda of points and authorities, copies of which have been sent to petitioners’ counsel.
In order to render unnecessary formal mandatory procedure under Rule 13a, it appears that a fuller expression of our understanding of the governing law may now be appropriate. We shall consider seriatim each of the reasons advanced by the District Court for refusal to accept the removal petition for filing.
I.
With reference to the number of persons who may join in a single petition, the removal statute provides:
“A defendant or defendants desiring to remove any * * * criminal prosecution from a State court shall file * * * a verified petition * * * ” 28 U.S.C. § 1446(a).
The primary question presented in these proceedings is whether the 40-odd petitioners who were arrested at the same time and place and charged with violating the same state statute are required to bring separate, individual removal proceedings under the federal removal statute because the Mississippi officials have charged each petitioner individually and separately. Since this question involves the interpretation of a federal statute, neither state law nor local rules promulgated by the District Court can provide the answer.
On its face the removal statute authorizes the removal of any “criminal prosecution from a State court,” irrespective of the number of “defendants desiring to remove.” The statute speaks in terms of a single prosecution with one or more defendants. Thus the language of the statute, strictly interpreted, would seem to require a separate petition for removal for every state criminal prosecution.
In civil rights cases, however, Congress has directed the federal courts to use that combination of federal law, common law, and state law as will be best “adapted to the object” of theeivil rights laws. Rev.Stat. § 722 (1875), applying to Title XIII, Rev.Stat.; 42 U.S.C. § 1988; see 28 U.S.C. § 1443, formerly Rev.Stat. § 641 (1875); 42 U.S. C.A. § 1988 Note. Therefore a federal court is required to use common law powers to facilitate, and not to hinder, “ [proceedings ixx vindication of civil I'ights.” 42 U.S.C. § 1988. To facilitate, and not to hinder, “proceedings in vindication of civil rights,” under the circumstances of this case, we think it would be quite appropriate for a District Court to accept the joint removal petition herein presented.
[285]*285On the present record, however, if the District Court declines to do so and insists upon separate petitions, and further assuming that such a requirement does not so delay matters as to operate to deprive the petitioners of effective access to the federal courts, we would not find the requirement to be such a gross abuse of discretion as to move us to mandamus. We commend this decision to the informed discretion of the District Court.
II.
Filing fees are not to be collected in connection with criminal removal petitions. Such fees are regulated by statute, and a comparison of the present statute with its predecessor shows that there is now no authority for the clerk to charge fees in such proceedings.
The former statute provided for fees in criminal proceedings:
“Upon the institution of any suit or proceeding, whether by original process, removal, indictment, information, or otherwise, there shall be paid by the party or parties so instituting such suit or proceeding * * the sum of $5.” Former 28 U.S.C. § 549 (1940 ed.).
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J. SKELLY WRIGHT, Circuit Judge:
This proceeding involves the access of litigants to the federal courts. Over forty defendants in criminal prosecutions in a state court of Mississippi seek to remove the causes into the United States District Court under 28 U.S.C. § 1446. The clerk of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi, acting under "local court rules, refuses to accept for filing the single removal petition covering all 40-odd state prosecutions, and the defendants seek a mandamus against the judge of the District Court to require that such filing be permitted. The application for mandamus states that the District Court practice “limits and prohibits any effective use of the criminal removal provisions covering civil rights cases in that district.”
It appears from the papers before us that the petitioners were charged with violations of H.B. 546, 1964 Sess.Miss. Leg., a statute which denounces picketing and demonstrations in the environs of public buildings. The statute, set out in the margin,1 was enacted by the Mississippi Legislature on April 8,1964. The 40-odd petitioners were arrested in Hat-tiesburg, Mississippi, on April 10. According to the sworn removal petition:
“Petitioners are members of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee, affiliated with the Conference of Federated Organizations, both Civil Rights groups, and were at the time of their arrests, engaged in a voter registration drive in Forrest County, Mississippi, assisting Negroes to register so as to enable them to vote as protected under the1 Federal Constitution and the Civil Rights [statute].”
On April 13, the verified removal petition was refused filing by the District Court, through its clerk, for the following reasons.
[283]*283<1) The petition was in behalf of more than one individual.
•(2) It was not accompanied by a filing fee of $15.00 per individual.
<(3) It was not accompanied by a removal bond of $500.00 per individual.
'(4) It was not signed by a member of the bar of the Southern District of Mississippi.
Petitioners’ “Alternative Petition Tor a Writ of Mandamus,” seeking to require the judge of the District Court to have the petition filed, was filed in this court on April 13 under Rule 13a.2 We have authority under Rule 13a to order that the District Judge be made a respondent in these mandamus proceedings and to fix a time for him to file an answer. Out of deference to judicial decorum, however, we did not do so, but ordered that the application for mandamus be held in abeyance to permit the petitioners to take such further action in the District Court as they deemed advisable, or to file supplemental papers with us. At the same time, we also issued a per curiam 3 setting forth the considerations [284]*284which moved us in making our decision not to invoke immediately the process of Rule 13a. Thus we intended that the petitioners and the District Court have the advantage of our views on the matter so that they could act accordingly. Subsequently, the petitioners have filed supplemental pleadings and affidavits in this court, copies of which have been sent to the District Judge and the prosecution below; the District Judge has favored us with memoranda of points and authorities, copies of which have been sent to petitioners’ counsel.
In order to render unnecessary formal mandatory procedure under Rule 13a, it appears that a fuller expression of our understanding of the governing law may now be appropriate. We shall consider seriatim each of the reasons advanced by the District Court for refusal to accept the removal petition for filing.
I.
With reference to the number of persons who may join in a single petition, the removal statute provides:
“A defendant or defendants desiring to remove any * * * criminal prosecution from a State court shall file * * * a verified petition * * * ” 28 U.S.C. § 1446(a).
The primary question presented in these proceedings is whether the 40-odd petitioners who were arrested at the same time and place and charged with violating the same state statute are required to bring separate, individual removal proceedings under the federal removal statute because the Mississippi officials have charged each petitioner individually and separately. Since this question involves the interpretation of a federal statute, neither state law nor local rules promulgated by the District Court can provide the answer.
On its face the removal statute authorizes the removal of any “criminal prosecution from a State court,” irrespective of the number of “defendants desiring to remove.” The statute speaks in terms of a single prosecution with one or more defendants. Thus the language of the statute, strictly interpreted, would seem to require a separate petition for removal for every state criminal prosecution.
In civil rights cases, however, Congress has directed the federal courts to use that combination of federal law, common law, and state law as will be best “adapted to the object” of theeivil rights laws. Rev.Stat. § 722 (1875), applying to Title XIII, Rev.Stat.; 42 U.S.C. § 1988; see 28 U.S.C. § 1443, formerly Rev.Stat. § 641 (1875); 42 U.S. C.A. § 1988 Note. Therefore a federal court is required to use common law powers to facilitate, and not to hinder, “ [proceedings ixx vindication of civil I'ights.” 42 U.S.C. § 1988. To facilitate, and not to hinder, “proceedings in vindication of civil rights,” under the circumstances of this case, we think it would be quite appropriate for a District Court to accept the joint removal petition herein presented.
[285]*285On the present record, however, if the District Court declines to do so and insists upon separate petitions, and further assuming that such a requirement does not so delay matters as to operate to deprive the petitioners of effective access to the federal courts, we would not find the requirement to be such a gross abuse of discretion as to move us to mandamus. We commend this decision to the informed discretion of the District Court.
II.
Filing fees are not to be collected in connection with criminal removal petitions. Such fees are regulated by statute, and a comparison of the present statute with its predecessor shows that there is now no authority for the clerk to charge fees in such proceedings.
The former statute provided for fees in criminal proceedings:
“Upon the institution of any suit or proceeding, whether by original process, removal, indictment, information, or otherwise, there shall be paid by the party or parties so instituting such suit or proceeding * * the sum of $5.” Former 28 U.S.C. § 549 (1940 ed.).
The present statute does not authorize fees in criminal proceedings:
“The clerk of each district court shall require the parties instituting any civil action, suit or proceeding in such court, whether by original process, removal or otherwise, to pay a filing fee of $15 * * 28 U.S.C. § 1914 (1948 ed.).
III.
The Act of Congress providing for removal bonds does not authorize them in criminal cases:
“Each petition for removal of a civil action or proceeding * * * shall be accompanied by a bond * * * ” 28 U.S.C. § 1446(d).
If there were any doubt as to whether this limitation was intentional, the Reviser’s Notes are clear: “[T]he requirement for cost bond is limited to civil actions in conformity with the more enlightened trend of modern procedure to remove all unnecessary impediments to the administration of criminal justice.” 28 U.S.C.A. § 1446 Note. Therefore such bonds may not be required.
IV.
The District Court has a broad discretion concerning admission to practice before it. See 28 U.S.C. § 1654. But, of course, such rules may not be allowed to operate in such a way as to abridge the right of any class of litigants to use the federal courts or to deny the Sixth Amendment right of criminal defendants to counsel of their choice. Generally, courts may, if they deem it necessary, require that local counsel be associated in some way with litigation in the local courts. Cf. Piorkowski v. Arabian American Oil Company, S.D.N.Y., 131 F.Supp. 553 (1955). However, as the District Judge below has commendably noted, if no local counsel are available, a court rule requiring local counsel should be waived. Moreover, where local counsel are associated in the case to comply with court rules, non-local counsel chosen by the parties may nevertheless take the lead in the direction and argument of the case. See United States v. Bergamo, 3 Cir., 154 F.2d 31 (1946).
Federal as well as state courts must be guided in this matter of local rules by the recent decisions of the Supreme Court concerning regulation of attorneys. The Court has said that “A State could not, by invoking the power to-regulate the professional conduct of attorneys, infringe in any way the right of individuals and the public to be fairly represented in lawsuits authorized by Congress to effectuate a basic public interest.” Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen v. Virginia ex rel. Virginia State Bar, 84 S.Ct. 1113, 1117. This principle-applies with special force where it is a federal court, and not a state, whose regulations may interfere with lawsuits authorized by Congress. And where, as here, the basic public interest involved is-the protection of fundamental -constitu[286]*286tional rights of the petitioners, courts must give special heed to the teachings of the Supreme Court to permit neither indirect nor direct “means to bar them from resorting to the courts to vindicate their legal rights. The right to petition the courts cannot be so handicapped.” Id., 84 S.Ct. at p. 1117. And since this is a criminal case, the constitutional right of the accused to the assistance of ■counsel of his own choice reinforces this principle.
In the removal petition at hand, .and in the class of cases likely to raise similar problems, “litigation is not a technique of resolving private differences; it is a means for achieving the lawful objectives of equality of treatment by all government, federal, state and local, for the members of the Negro ■community in this country.” N.A.A.C.P. v. Button, 371 U.S. 415, 429, 83 S.Ct. 328, 336, 9 L.Ed.2d 405 (1963). In this context where the litigation is not brought for private gain, any regulation of the practice of law must show sufficient “substantial regulatory interest,” id., 371 U.S. .at 444, 83 S.Ct. 328, 9 L.Ed.2d 405, to justify the potential and actual inhibitory ■effects of the regulation on the constitutionally protected right to litigate. Ibid,
For these reasons, as we indicated in our earlier memorandum and as ■the District Judge below agrees, waiver ■of local rules, or admission to the bar pro hac vice, should be allowed when, as herein alleged, the non-local counsel “was ■unable to find counsel admitted [locally] ■who would sign the pleadings with him.” The Supreme Court has recently taken .judicial notice of a similar circumstance .in a not unrelated proceeding:
“* * -» Lawsuits attacking rae-cial discrimination, at least in Virginia, are neither very profitable nor very popular. They are not an object of general competition among Virginia lawyers; the problem is rather one of an apparent dearth ■of lawyers who are willing to undertake such litigation. * * *” .N.A.A.C.P. v. Button, supra, 371 U. S. at 443, 83 S.Ct. at 343, 9 L.Ed.2d 405.
Such a situation is unworthy of the proud tradition of the Southern bar. We are pleased to note that, after the filing of the above mentioned affidavit, the judges of the District Court were able to secure the names of members of the local bar available to associate themselves with the original counsel for the petitioners herein. It is commendable that the District Court helped secure for petitioners the assistance of counsel familiar with the local practice. Otherwise original counsel would have had to proceed alone. And it is commendable that gentlemen of the local bar have agreed to perform their duties as lawyers in rendering such service.
It thus appears that there is no reason why petitioners may not now file a removal petition or petitions for the criminal prosecutions here involved, without payment of fees or bond, and with the signatures of local counsel available. No formal order need issue, therefore, designating the District Judge as respondent on the petition for mandamus, as the District Judge’s memorandum indicates that he will act upon an expression of our views. See Maryland v. So-per (No. 2), 270 U.S. 36, 44, 46 S.Ct. 192, 70 L.Ed. 459 (1926). For the reasons herein stated, we reserve decision on the question of invoking Rule 13a(b) of our rules, and retain jurisdiction until the matter is finally settled.