Sol Shearn Rovinsky v. Dan v. McKaskle Acting Director, Texas Department of Corrections, Respondent

722 F.2d 197, 10 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1183, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 24598
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 12, 1984
Docket82-1577
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 722 F.2d 197 (Sol Shearn Rovinsky v. Dan v. McKaskle Acting Director, Texas Department of Corrections, Respondent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sol Shearn Rovinsky v. Dan v. McKaskle Acting Director, Texas Department of Corrections, Respondent, 722 F.2d 197, 10 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1183, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 24598 (5th Cir. 1984).

Opinions

ALVIN B. RUBIN, Circuit Judge:

Without advancing any reasons for doing so, a state court conducting a criminal trial held a hearing in chambers on the state’s motion to restrict the cross-examination of a prosecution witness despite the defendant’s objection to the procedure as violating [199]*199his right to a public trial, imminent in the process due him under the fourteenth amendment. Following the defendant’s conviction, a federal district court denied him a writ of habeas corpus. Reversing the district court, we hold that the right to a public trial specifically guaranteed by the sixth amendment and incorporated into the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment forbids state courts to conduct hearings in camera on matters arising in the course of a criminal trial, absent overriding need to foreclose public attendance, articulated in the court’s findings at the time of closure.

Sol Shearn Rovinsky was charged with theft by the State of Texas and was tried by jury in state court. Before trial, the state filed motions to restrict the cross-examination of two witnesses, Bloom and Lip-shy. The court did not act on these motions until after the trial had commenced. During the trial, Bloom testified as a prosecution witness. Over Rovinsky’s objection, the court then heard in chambers the state’s motion to restrict cross-examination of Bloom. Later, after Lipshy testified, the court heard the motion to limit his cross-examination in chambers. After the court granted this motion in part, Rovinsky waived his right to a public trial, requested that the jury be dismissed, and asked that all further proceedings take place in chambers. Rovinsky now contends that his conviction should be reversed because the motion to-limit Bloom’s cross-examination was not heard in open court.

The fourteenth amendment guarantees defendants in state prosecutions a public trial by incorporating the rights enumerated in the sixth amendment.1 By subjecting criminal trials to “contemporaneous review in the forum of public opinion,” this right prevents the abuse of judicial power, discourages perjury, encourages unidentified potential witnesses to come, forward, and instills in the public the perception that their courts are acting fairly.2 The sixth amendment right is personal to the accused; the right of the public and the press to attend criminal trials derives instead from the first amendment.3 Because the public’s first amendment right and the defendant’s sixth amendment right serve common interests, however, the legal principles appropriate for enforcing one are usually applicable to the other.4 We therefore seek guidance from the Supreme Court’s recent decisions recognizing and refining the first amendment right to attend criminal trials as well as from established jurisprudence regarding the sixth amendment right to a public trial.

Assuming arguendo that the public-trial right applies to a hearing on a motion in limine, the state argues first that Rovin-sky waived this right by failing to object to closure of the hearing on the second motion (to limit cross-examination of Lipshy) and by later requesting that the remainder of the trial be held in chambers. Failure to object to a private hearing, however, does not waive the right to be tried publicly when the futility of the objection is made [200]*200apparent by its previous rejection.5 We cannot construe failure to continue to object in the face of evident futility as the waiver of a previously asserted right.

We are also unpersuaded by the argument that Rovinsky’s request to conduct what remained of the trial in chambers relates back to hearings already conducted in chambers over his objection.6 For the waiver of a constitutional right is not lightly inferred: rights granted to ensure a fair trial and reliability in the fact-finding process can be waived only by voluntary, intentional, and knowing relinquishment.7 Ro-vinsky had no reason to believe that, by waiving his right to have what remained of his trial conducted in public, he would relinquish his right to have previous hearings in public and abandon the objection already made to their closure. Absent an express renunciation of his prior objection, there is no basis to infer that Rovinsky intended to waive the public-trial right as to hearings conducted before he requested closure.

The state argues that, even if they were not waived, Rovinsky’s rights under the sixth and fourteenth amendments were not violated, because the purpose of a motion in limine is to prevent embarrassing and prejudicial cross-examination. The right to a public trial is not absolute: limitations on public attendance may be imposed so long as they are no more exclusive than necessary to protect a state interest that outweighs the defendant’s interest in public scrutiny of the proceedings.8 Indeed, the protection of witnesses from embarrassment or intimidation so extreme that it would traumatize them or render them unable to testify is a state interest sufficiently weighty to justify partial or complete exclusion of the press and public.9 But the Supreme Court made clear in Globe Newspaper Co. v. Superior Court that no state interest, however compelling, can sustain the exclusion of press and public from part of a trial, absent findings of necessity articulated on the record.10 Before closing a trial, the judge must state his reasons for doing so on the record both to enable the public and the accused to know why the courtroom was closed and to enable appellate courts to review the adequacy of the reasons given.11

[201]*201The trial court in this case gave no reason for conducting private hearings on the motions and made no record finding of need to do so. Neither the defendant, nor the public, nor an appellate court can evaluate the propriety of conducting these proceedings behind closed doors. Because we cannot determine that closure was either necessary or narrowly tailored to protect a compelling state interest, we hold that it violated Rovinsky’s right to a public trial.

Sidebar conferences in which the defendant’s counsel participates without objection do not violate the right to a public trial.12 The Supreme Court has been careful to include in its opinions recognizing a public right to attend criminal trials caveats that cast doubt on the press’s ability to use' the right to intrude uninvited into conferences at the bench and in chambers.13 But the sixth amendment right cannot be denied simply because, as a matter of procedure, the prosecution’s motion was made ■ before the trial began. The right to a public trial does not turn on whether the inquiry of a hearing is factual or doctrinal, substantive or procedural, but on the relationship of the issue raised at the hearing to the merits of the charge, the outcome of the prosecution, and the integrity of the administration of justice.14 The right to a public trial is not limited to issues that arise after a jury is sworn or times when the jury is present. It extends at least to those pretrial hearings that are an integral part of the trial, such as jury selection and motions to suppress evidence.15

Here, indeed, the motions were not heard before a jury was impanelled but during the course of trial.

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Bluebook (online)
722 F.2d 197, 10 Media L. Rep. (BNA) 1183, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 24598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sol-shearn-rovinsky-v-dan-v-mckaskle-acting-director-texas-department-of-ca5-1984.