The Sacramento Bee v. United States District Court For The Eastern District Of California

656 F.2d 477
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 6, 1981
Docket81-7255
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 656 F.2d 477 (The Sacramento Bee v. United States District Court For The Eastern District Of California) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Sacramento Bee v. United States District Court For The Eastern District Of California, 656 F.2d 477 (9th Cir. 1981).

Opinion

656 F.2d 477

7 Media L. Rep. 1929, 7 Media L. Rep. 2376

The SACRAMENTO BEE, published by McClatchy Newspapers, Petitioner,
v.
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR the EASTERN DISTRICT OF
CALIFORNIA, NORTHERN DIVISION, Respondent,
United States of America, William Dale Smith, Cheryl
Bickford, James Cameron, Julius Fisherman, Norman
Heifner, Andrew Pope, and Norman Truax,
Real Parties In Interest.

No. 81-7255.

United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.

Argued and Submitted July 15, 1981.
Decided Sept. 14, 1981.
As Corrected on Denial of Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc
Nov. 6, 1981.

Douglas T. Foster, Sacramento, Cal., for petitioner.

E. Richard Walker, Sacramento, Cal., for respondent.

Petition for Writ of Mandamus to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California.

Before WRIGHT, TRASK and ANDERSON, Circuit Judges.

EUGENE A. WRIGHT, Circuit Judge:

The Sacramento Bee petitions for a writ of mandamus directing the district court to issue no further orders excluding the press from any stage of a criminal trial. We conclude that the court's decision to close two brief hearings during the course of a two-month trial, after it had carefully considered alternatives and made findings in support of its closure decision, does not warrant issuance of the writ.

FACTS

The jury trial of seven of 22 persons indicted for trafficking in heroin began in Sacramento early in March 1981. Before trial, the defendants and the approaching trial were well publicized by the Bee.

In selecting a jury, the judge determined that the jurors had no prejudicial information. After selection, he instructed the jury to avoid any media accounts of the trial.

At the start of the trial, the Bee published a story about the prior criminal activities of one defendant. Counsel for that accused, joined by other defense counsel, moved to sequester the jury. Having learned that one juror had seen but not read the story, the judge granted the motion.

It appeared, after a conference with the federal marshal, that sequestration would require two weeks to arrange, would require housing of the jurors away from their homes, constant attendance by marshals, and transportation by chartered bus with covered windows.

Defense counsel then decided the sequestration was not in the best interests of their clients. The earlier order was vacated, and the court directed that government personnel, defense counsel, court personnel and the defendants refrain from communicating with the press about the trial.

The court admonished the jurors again to ignore media reports about the trial and directed them to have family members remove from newspapers any accounts of the trial.

After another Bee article about the trial on March 31, the court polled the jury. The juror who had seen the earlier story had read the later one and learned of inadmissible evidence about alleged organized crime connections of one defendant. Because of the prejudicial nature of that information, the court removed that juror.

On April 3, the court excused the jury, the public and the press from the courtroom for an evidentiary side bar conference. The defendants and their families remained. Neither the press nor public objected and the court made no findings supporting closure.

On April 7, in open court without the jury, the court excluded the press, but allowed the public to remain while the government made an offer of proof.

When a Bee reporter asked for reasons to justify closure, the judge said that he feared that the jury might learn indirectly of inadmissible evidence. He noted that one juror already had been disqualified for that reason.

He explained that he had tried to balance the rights of the news media and the defendants by refusing to sequester the jury, and by refusing to exclude the press from each motion out of the presence of the jury. He proposed that motions to exclude the press would be considered as each problem arose, and said that he would grant such motions only "where there is a substantial possibility that evidence will not be put before the jury, (because) I don't want them to get it indirectly through the media." The reporter left the courtroom without objecting.

Counsel for the Bee appeared on April 8 and objected to exclusion of the press. The judge told him

I am just telling you that I sat and thought through every alternative that I could find that I have been able to think of and they all don't meet the problem. Now I am anxious for you to supply me with an alternative that would work.

When counsel for the Bee suggested sequestration, the judge explained that was not feasible because it would mean

in effect, putting the jury in prison, in effect putting them in a posture in which there will be deep resentment against the Court, and perhaps the government, and perhaps the defendants in this matter, having results which will be unpredictable but clearly serious.

He explained the mechanical complications of sequestration. He noted also that the jury was annoyed at the length of the trial, then in its eighth week, and said that sequestration could impose otherwise avoidable hardships because the jury had received no advance warning. One juror, a pregnant woman, might have asked to be excused had she known sequestration was possible.

When the court asked the parties again about sequestration, all said that they preferred exclusion of the media.

On April 10, a Bee attorney restated the newspaper's opposition to closure. The court again considered and rejected admonishing the jury because one juror had been excused after he learned of inadmissible evidence, despite warnings to avoid news accounts of the trial.

It rejected the suggestion to clip the jurors' newspapers because the electronic media were broadcasting the newspaper's stories, the excused juror had learned of the prejudicial information despite taking that precaution, and it would be impractical to have marshals go to jurors' homes to remove stories of the trial from all newspapers.

The Bee again suggested sequestration, but offered no new arguments or better suggestions.

The judge rejected considering evidentiary matters in side bar discussions because it would be "terribly inhibiting to whisper with the jury here when there are important things to be said which I want to think about and hear clearly."

When defense attorney suggested holding evidentiary hearings in chambers or in the jury room, Bee counsel challenged the right of the court to hold bench conferences on evidentiary questions.

Finally, the court said that closure caused only a temporary denial of information because reporters' transcripts would be available immediately at the end of the trial.

DISCUSSION

* Jurisdiction

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656 F.2d 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-sacramento-bee-v-united-states-district-court-for-the-eastern-district-ca9-1981.