CORE TERMS: wiretap, privacy,
sealed, conversation, suppression hearing, disclosure, First Amendment,
wiretapping, law enforcement, criminal trial, lawfully, moot, public
disclosure, fair trial, news media, unsealed, media, Fifth Amendment,
unlawfully obtained, lawfully obtained, right of access, intercepted,
injunction, draftsmen, disclose, fruits, seal, unseal, criminal prosecution,
motion to suppress
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COUNSEL: Michael J. Rovell, Jenner & Block, Chgo., Illinois; Harvey
M. Silets, Silets & Martin, Ltd., Chgo., Illinois; Theodore Sinars, Harris,
Burman, Sinars & Jiganti, Chgo., Illinois; Edward L. Foote, Winston &
Strawn, Chgo., Illinois, for Appellant.
Gary S. Shapiro, Spec., Atty., U.S. Dept. of Justice, Chgo., Illinois, (for
Appellee).
A. Daniel Feldman, Isham, Lincoln & Beale, Chgo., Illinois, (for Intervenor-Appellee).
Lawrence Gunnels, Reuben & Proctor, Chicago, Illinois, (for Intervenor-Appellee).
JUDGES: Cummings, Chief Judge, and Posner and Coffey, Circuit
Judges.
OPINIONBY: POSNER
OPINION: [*1231]
POSNER, Circuit Judge.
The appellants in No. 82-2489 are five persons charged with various federal
crimes arising out of an alleged scheme to defraud a union's pension fund.
Their trial is to begin in a few days. As part of the investigation that led
to their indictment the government engaged in wide-ranging wiretapping for
more than a year. Hundreds of persons' telephone conversations were
intercepted, yielding more than
[**2] 2000 reels of taped conversations. The
defendants moved under
18 U.S.C. § 2518(10)(a), a part of Title III of the Federal Omnibus
Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, as amended,
18 U.S.C. §§ 2510-2520, to suppress at trial the fruits of the
wiretapping of their conversations, on the ground that the wiretapping was
unlawful under Title III. At the evidentiary hearing on the motion, the
government submitted some 200 exhibits containing wiretap materials. The
district judge ordered the exhibits to be sealed. At the conclusion of the
hearing he ruled that most of the wiretap evidence that the government
contended was relevant to the criminal prosecution had been obtained
lawfully.
This ruling precipitated a motion by newspaper publishers and broadcasters
to unseal the sealed exhibits, so that they could be inspected and copied.
The news media are interested in the exhibits because the defendants include
senior officers of labor unions and alleged captains of "organized crime,"
the crimes charged include bribery of a United States Senator, and as a
result of the nature of the alleged crimes and the identity of the
defendants the
[**3] criminal prosecution has already been
publicized widely.
The district judge (in two orders that we shall treat as one for the sake of
simplicity) directed that most of the sealed exhibits be unsealed; some of
these, however, are not to be unsealed until the jury has been empaneled.
The defendants-appellants argue that the release of any of the sealed
exhibits, unless and until they are put into evidence at the trial (most of
them will not be), would violate both Title III and the constitutional
guarantee of a fair trial.
We must decide first whether we have jurisdiction of this appeal from what
is technically an interlocutory order. We have some difficulty with the
argument that the order is in effect the denial of an injunction to protect
the defendants' right of privacy under Title III. Orders denying injunctions
are, of course, appealable regardless of finality,
28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1), but Title III does not provide for injunctive
relief (a deliberate omission, see S. Rep. No. 1097, 90th Cong., 2d Sess.
107 (1968)); and while it does of course provide for motions to suppress, in
other contexts such motions have not been considered "injunctions" for
[**4] purposes
of section 1292(a)(1), as we noted just the other day in holding that these
appellants could not appeal the district judge's order denying their motion
to suppress the wiretap evidence as unlawfully obtained.
United States v. Dorfman, 690 F.2d 1217 at 1223 (7th Cir. 1982).
The appellants also rely however on the collateral order doctrine of
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp., 337 U.S. 541, 545-47, 93
L. Ed. 1528, 69 S. Ct. 1221 (1949), which permits the immediate appeal
of an order that is at once so far separate from the main case that the
appeal will not interrupt and delay the progress of the trial, and likely to
become moot if judicial review is postponed until the final judgment in the
main case is appealed. To refuse to allow immediate appeal in such a case
would have no basis in the final-judgment rule
(28 U.S.C. § 1291), which seeks to expedite the trial while preserving a
meaningful right of judicial review of the legal rulings made at the trial.
The motion to unseal the exhibits, and this appeal insofar as it is based on
Title III from the grant of that motion, compose a proceeding that is
distinct
[**5] from--in the
[*1232]
practical sense of not interfering with--the criminal trial scheduled to
begin shortly. There is of course a relationship between the trial and the
motion; that is why we have expedited the consideration of this appeal. But
the moving parties--representatives of the news media--are not parties to
the criminal proceeding, and we have not been asked to stay the trial while
we consider this appeal. The trial will go forward, on schedule, however the
appeal is decided. This distinguishes the present case from
United States v. Dorfman, supra, which held that an order denying
a Title III motion to suppress wiretap evidence as unlawfully obtained is
not appealable as a collateral order. Because such a motion is directed to
the use of specific evidence at trial, a direct appeal from the order
disposing of it could delay the trial; this appeal cannot. Cf.
id.,
slip op. at 12.
Whichever way the district judge ruled on this motion his ruling would
probably be moot as a practical matter by the time the trial was finished.
If the district judge denied the motion, and the motion could not have been
appealed, the exhibits that the movants wanted
[**6] to use in their news stories might well lose
all newsworthiness by the time the trial was over. If the district judge
granted the motion, as he did, and his action could not be appealed, the
privacy that the defendants claim to be entitled to under Title III would be
gone forever as soon as the media began disseminating their news stories;
and it is doubtful, to put it mildly, that if the appellants ultimately
convinced this court or the Supreme Court that the motion had been
improperly granted, they could get any monetary redress. They could not
against the district judge, of course; nor, in all probability, against the
news media, since "good faith reliance on a court order . . . . shall
constitute a complete defense to any civil . . . . action" under Title III,
18 U.S.C. § 2520, and by hypothesis the media would be acting in
reliance, presumably good-faith reliance, on a court order.
The question of appealability might be answered differently if this appeal
were based solely on the appellants' argument that public disclosure of the
wiretap evidence will prevent their getting a fair trial. Not only could
such an appeal delay the trial, but the appellants,
[**7] though
not the media, could look forward to having an effective remedy if it turned
out that the motion had been granted improperly--an order for a new trial.
But Title III protects a different interest, privacy, which can be lost
without a criminal conviction.
So we have jurisdiction, and can turn to the merits. Title III makes it a
crime to disclose wiretap evidence (transcripts, logs, summaries, etc.) only
if the evidence was obtained in violation of Title III and the disclosure is
willful.
18 U.S.C. § 2511(1)(c). But by permitting disclosure of lawfully
obtained wiretap evidence only under the specific circumstances listed in
18 U.S.C. § 2517, Title III implies that what is not permitted is
forbidden (see also S. Rep. No. 1097,
supra, at 91), though not
necessarily under pain of criminal punishment. The implication is reinforced
by the emphasis the draftsmen put on the importance of protecting privacy to
the extent compatible with the law enforcement objectives of Title III. See
Congressional Findings following
18 U.S.C. § 2510; S. Rep. No. 1097,
supra, at 66-67;
Gelbard v. United States, 408 U.S. 41, 47-51, 33 L. Ed. 2d 179, 92 S.
Ct. 2357 (1972). [**8]
Now the only pertinent exception in section 2517 to this implied prohibition
is in subsection (3), which (as amended in 1970) provides: "Any person who
has received, by any means authorized by this chapter [Title III], any
information concerning a wire or oral communication, or evidence derived
therefrom intercepted in accordance with the provisions of [Title III] may
disclose the contents of that communication or such derivative evidence
while giving testimony under oath or affirmation in any proceeding held
under the authority of the United States or of any State or political
subdivision thereof." The function of this provision is obvious. Since one
of the main
[*1233] purposes of Title III is to allow the
fruits of at least some wiretaps to be used in criminal investigations and
prosecutions (another, as mentioned, is to protect privacy), section 2517(3)
is necessary so that the fruits of lawful wiretapping can be used as
evidence in criminal proceedings. The draftsmen must have known that most
criminal proceedings are conducted in public, so probably they expected (if
they thought about the matter) that most testimony authorized by section
2517(3) would end up in the
[**9] public domain. But we find no evidence that
they wanted to create a right of public access. The privilege to disclose
created by section 2517(3) continues in force "while giving testimony."
There is no separate privilege to publicize testimony that was given
in
camera. And the right of the news media to get access to testimony is
derivative from the public's right, if any.
Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc., 435 U.S. 589, 609, 55 L. Ed. 2d
570, 98 S. Ct. 1306 (1978).
The district judge in this case sealed the exhibits submitted by the
government in the supprssion hearing in order to protect the defendants'
right of privacy under Title III and their constitutional right to a fair
trial. We need not decide whether he was
required to seal the
exhibits, either by Title III or by the due process clause of the Fifth
Amendment (which guarantees criminal defendants the right to a fair trial
and implicitly therefore at least some protection against prejudicial
pretrial publicity), though we note that the strict prohibition in Title III
against disclosure of unlawfully obtained wiretap evidence would be
undermined by public disclosure of wiretap evidence at a
[**10]
suppression hearing before the judge ruled on the lawfulness of the
wiretaps. See
United States v. Cianfrani, 573 F.2d 835, 857 (3d Cir. 1978). The
defendants in this case have argued that the judge did not go far enough to
protect their rights in the suppression hearing--that he should have
conducted the entire hearing
in camera. No one is arguing that he
should not have done what he did--seal the exhibits. Having done so, he was
not authorized by any provision that we are able to find in Title III to
release them to the public. The only lawful way they can be made public over
the defendants' objection is by being admitted into evidence in the criminal
trial or in some other public proceeding within the scope of section
2517(3). The usual disposition of evidence submitted to a court in a
preliminary hearing but no longer required by the court is to return it to
the party who submitted it--in this case the government. The government
could not, after getting back the sealed wiretap evidence, hold a press
conference and there release the evidence to the public, without violating
Title III; no more are judges authorized to release it.
Now it might seem that
[**11] if the district judge has the implicit
authority under Title III to seal exhibits offered at the suppression
hearing, he must have implicit authority to unseal them. But the issue is
not his authority to correct a mistake. That is not what he did here. He
unsealed the exhibits because he concluded that the harm of unsealing to the
defendants' privacy would be outweighed by the newsworthiness of the
exhibits. We cannot find in Title III any grant of authority to judges to
make that particular judgment.
But perhaps we should be looking for it in another place--the First
Amendment. Until recently there was doubt whether the First Amendment
secured to the media, along with their right to publish information obtained
by their own efforts, a right to make the government give them access to
nonpublic information. See
Gannett Co. v. DePasquale, 443 U.S. 368, 391-92, 61 L. Ed. 2d 608, 99
S. Ct. 2898 (1979). But this doubt was dispelled just a few months ago
by the Supreme Court in
Globe Newspaper Co. v. Superior Ct. for Cty. of Norfolk, 457 U.S.
596, 102 S. Ct. 2613, 73 L. Ed. 2d 248 (1982). The "right of access" is
now part of the First Amendment,
[**12] and the Court held that it had been
infringed by a
[*1234] state statute barring the public from any
rape trial where the rapist's victim is a minor. But the Court stated that
the right of access is not absolute,
73 L. Ed. 2d at 257, and the situation before it was different from this
case. The curtailment of the right is less here. No one suggests that Title
III prevents the public from attending a trial, as did the statute struck
down in the
Globe Newspaper case. Title III did not even exclude the
public from the suppression hearing--a lesser affair, in terms of the
public's legitimate interest in the operation of the criminal justice
system, than the trial itself. Title III will not prevent the public from
reading the transcripts of any of the wiretap evidence that is presented in
the criminal trial. All it will prevent is public access to wiretap evidence
that the district court lawfully sealed in order to protect the privacy of
the defendants and that the government (which has taken no position on the
merits of this appeal) has no further interest in.
The right to privacy of telephone conversation has long been thought to have
a constitutional basis.
[**13] That was the position taken in Justice
Brandeis's famous dissent in
Olmstead v. United States, 277 U.S. 438, 478-79, 72 L. Ed. 944, 48 S.
Ct. 564 (1928), and vindicated by the Supreme Court in
Katz v. United States, 389 U.S. 347, 19 L. Ed. 2d 576, 88 S. Ct. 507
(1967), which overruled
Olmstead, and to which the draftsmen of
Title III tried to conform the statute. S. Rep. No. 1097,
supra, at
66. True, the right of conversational privacy, founded on the Fourth
Amendment, is no more absolute than the "right of access," founded on the
First Amendment. It yields among other things to imperative needs of law
enforcement. The district court held in this case that most of the wiretap
evidence that the government had obtained was obtained lawfully. Such
evidence is admissible in the criminal trial against the appellants provided
that it meets the other requirements for admissibility imposed by the
Federal Rules of Evidence. To the extent that it is admissible and actually
admitted, it will lawfully diminish the appellants' privacy. But this appeal
concerns wiretap materials that may never be presented at the trial. No law
enforcement interest requires
[**14] that this evidence be made public. There is
public curiosity about it, but curiosity is just the opposing force to
privacy; one of them has to yield; both have constitutional dignity.
Congress in Title III struck a balance between these interests that seems
reasonable to us. It put no limits on the public disclosure of lawfully
obtained wiretap evidence through public testimony in legal proceedings; but
neither did it authorize wiretap evidence not made public in this manner to
be made public another way without the consent of the people whose phone
conversations were intercepted. Of course the courts will not be allowed to
distort the balance by indiscriminately sealing evidence or closing legal
proceedings to the public.
United States v. Cianfrani, supra, 573 F.2d at 854-57. But there
is no suggestion that the district judge in this case should not have sealed
the wiretap exhibits submitted in the suppression hearing.
By doing so as we have said he made them private documents unless and until
admitted into evidence at a trial or other public proceeding described in
section 2517(3). We do not think the First Amendment requires a different
result. Wiretapping
[**15] is not yet a constitutionally protected
method of news gathering. And we are not persuaded that since the law
enforcement officers who recorded the wiretaps, and the district judge, who
read the transcripts, know the content of the wiretaps, the appellants'
privacy interest has been hopelessly compromised and public exposure can do
no further harm. This overlooks the difference between disclosure to a
professionally interested stranger and to the world at large. The tort of
invasion of privacy is committed only by publicizing--widely
disseminating--private information. Prosser, Handbook of the Law of Torts
809-10 (4th ed. 1971). Similarly, Title III does not allow
[*1235]
public disclosure of all lawfully obtained wiretap evidence just because a
few officers are privy to its contents; if it were construed to do so, much
of the statute would be superfluous, for example
18 U.S.C. §§ 2517(1)-(3).
Our analysis makes it unnecessary to decide whether the word "proceeding" in
section 2517(3) was meant to include a suppression hearing (as we have
tacitly assumed), whether release of the sealed exhibits would violate the
appellants' rights under the Fifth
[**16] Amendment, or even whether the Fifth
Amendment issue can be brought up to us by means of an interlocutory appeal.
But we do have to consider separately so much of the district court's order
as unsealed the applications made under
18 U.S.C. § 2518(1) for the wiretap warrants. The release of such
applications is governed by a different, and as one would expect more
liberal, section of Title III--section 2518(8)(b), which authorizes
disclosure for "good cause." But in considering what is good cause the
district court must protect the appellants' privacy if endangered by
disclosure, as it is here because there were a series of applications and
some of the later ones refer to conversations wiretapped pursuant to
warrants granted in response to the earlier applications. Without suggesting
that this part of the court's order is wrong (we have not read the
applications), we shall remand this part of the case so that the district
court can decide in the first instance whether release of the applications
in their entirety would be consistent with Title III as construed in this
opinion.
We have another appeal before us (No. 82-2520)--by some of the people who
were
[**17] at the other end of wiretapped conversations
with the defendants but who are not defendants themselves--from the same
orders that the defendants have appealed from. These appellants complain
that some of the exhibits that the defendants want to keep sealed pertain to
conversations with them. Without considering these appellants' standing, we
shall dismiss their appeal as moot, since by reversing the district court's
orders unsealing all of the exhibits, including those in which these
appellants are interested, we shall be giving them the same relief they
would have gotten if their motion had been granted.
In No. 82-2489, the orders appealed from are vacated and the case is
remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. The appeal in
No. 82-2520 is dismissed as moot, as is the motion of intervenor-appellee
Field Enterprises, filed yesterday, to dissolve our stay of the district
court's orders pending the decision of these appeals.
SO ORDERED.