Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge RANDOLPH.
On October 28, 1990, twenty-seven members of the Ku Klux Klan paraded from the Washington Monument down Constitution Avenue to Capitol Hill. A violent counter-demonstration had been threatened, causing the full mobilization of the Metropolitan Police Department and the commitment of more than 3,500 police officers. Disputes about the permit for the march generated two district court rulings, the second issuing twelve hours before the march, in the wake of this court’s decision, on an emergency appeal, vacating and remanding the initial order.
District Judge Oberdorfer, on remand, issued an order in the form of a preliminary injunction requiring the District of Columbia to grant the Klan’s request for a march permit. The District brings this appeal to challenge that order. The United States (a party to the proceedings because the Klan had requested, in the alternative, a permit to march along streets under federal control) urges us to dismiss the appeal as moot. The Klan asks us to affirm. Because the Klan may march again, in which event the circumstances attending its permit request in this case would likely recur, we hold that the case continues to present a live controversy. On the merits, we affirm the district court’s judgment granting the injunction.
I
The Klan attempted an earlier march, on September 2, 1990, along the route later taken pursuant to the district court’s order. The September march met considerable resistance. Counter-demonstrators near the Monument spilled into an intersection and the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) chose not to clear it. Instead, the MPD sent the Klan by bus directly from a parking lot at the Pentagon to the Capitol, where Klan members made speeches. (The MPD claims the Klan agreed to the change voluntarily; the Klan says it was threatened with revocation of its permit if it did not agree.) Believing that it had been denied its right to march, through a combination of mob and government action, the Klan resolved to try again.
On September 17, 1990, the Klan applied for new parade permits. In order to march from the Washington Monument at 14th Street, N.W., to the Capitol along Constitution Avenue, a group must obtain permits from three authorities: the United States Park Police (which has authority over the Monument, the Mall, and the streets running through it); the MPD (which has authority over Constitution Avenue from 14th
*368
Street to 3d Street); and the Capitol Police (which has authority over Constitution Avenue from 3d Street to the Capitol, and over the Capitol grounds).
Christian Knights of the Ku Klux Klan Invisible Empire, Inc. v. District of Columbia,
The Klan initially requested permits for October 14. The District objected on the basis of competing events. The Klan then sought October 28, a Sunday, from 12:30 p.m. to 4:30 p.m. The Park and Capitol Police representatives granted permits for that date. The MPD, on October 19, granted a permit to march only from 7th Street to 3d Street.
On October 23, the Klan brought an action for an injunction requiring the District to allow it to march from 14th to 3d Streets, the route the Klan requested. In the alternative, the Klan sought an order requiring the Park Police to grant a permit for a march down Madison Drive, an essentially parallel route through the Mall under Park Police jurisdiction.
The first appeal to this court immediately followed. On October 27, by a split decision rendered without the benefit of oral argument, ah emergency panel, including the writer, vacated the injunction and remanded the case.
Christian Knights of the Ku Klux Klan Invisible Empire, Inc. v. District of Columbia,
On remand, Judge Oberdorfer sat late into the evening of October 27, holding a three and one-half hour evidentiary hearing primarily focused on the ability of the various police forces to control any possible violence, and on the District’s past practices in adjusting march routes.
*369 The court therefore concluded that the Klan was likely to prevail on two theories: that the restriction was impermissible even as a time, place and manner restriction; and that the District’s decision “deprive[d] plaintiffs of equal protection of the laws” because it was “not based on any discernible standard.” Id. The court further concluded that the Klan was likely to succeed because its asserted message — that it had the right to march the full route — could only be conveyed if it got to march the full route. Id. At 1:00 a.m. on October 28, the court re-issued its injunction, requiring the District to allow the march to proceed from 14th Street. Id. at 217. The District did not seek an emergency appeal and the march went off as planned later that Saturday afternoon. According to press accounts, approximately 3,500 police officers, 1,000 counter-demonstrators, and 27 Klan members showed up. Bricks were thrown, nightsticks were swung. When it was over, six counter-demonstrators and eight police officers suffered injuries. Though the Chief of Police initially reported that one officer’s neck had been broken, that injury — the most serious reported in the press — turned out to be a muscle strain. Approximately two months after the march, the District filed this appeal.
II
The obvious initial question is whether the appeal is now moot. The march is over. Nothing a court could do today would change what occurred. The Klan received the full measure of relief it sought through its complaint. The complaint itself concerned only the Klan’s permit requests for an October 28, 1990, parade. No regulations were challenged on their face. The United States makes several of these points in urging a dismissal for mootness.
University of Texas v. Camenisch,
Still, the Klan and the District want to bring the merits of the case to an appellate conclusion. They cite the rule regarding issues “capable of repetition, yet evading review.”
Southern Pacific Terminal Co. v. ICC,
As to the “evading review” requirement, the issue here surely qualifies. By this the Supreme Court has meant evading Supreme Court review.
Nebraska Press Ass’n v. Stuart,
The issue also is “capable of repetition.” While this aspect of the rule had been thought to have “independent significance apart from the possible repetition of injury to the particular plaintiff,” Note,
The Mootness Doctrine in the Supreme Court,
88 Harv.L.Rev. 373, 386 (1974), especially in light of
Roe v. Wade,
We believe there is a “reasonable likelihood,”
Honig v. Doe,
We recognize that without any prospect of an
immediate
repeat performance, the case seems out of kilter with the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
Lujan v. Defenders of
Wildlife,-U.S. -,
The issue here is therefore “capable of repetition, yet evading review” and the appeal will not be dismissed as moot. 2
Ill
All concerned agree on several essential points. The first is that the street in question — Constitution Avenue — is a “public forum” within the accepted legal meaning of the terms.
See, e.g., United States v. Grace,
None of this leads, however, to the conclusion that the Klan had a constitutional right to be free of all restraints. In the District of Columbia and elsewhere, those seeking to use the streets must obtain a permit. The proposition that the government may, consistent with the First Amendment, so regulate a marcher’s use of the streets had at one time rested on a perceived difference between pure speech and speech plus conduct.
Cox v. Louisiana,
When it comes to use of a public forum such as a street, then, speakers do not have a constitutional right to convey their message whenever, wherever and however they please. It may be that the streets have been traditionally used for communicating ideas,
Hague v. CIO,
There is no doubt that the District’s proposed limitation on the Klan’s activities amounted quite literally to a “place” restriction.
See Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc.,
475- U.S. 41, 46,
It is therefore critical to determine whether the District’s place restriction, limiting the Klan to four blocks rather than eleven, amounted to a content-based regulation. “The principal inquiry in determining content neutrality,” the Supreme Court said in
Ward v. Rock Against Racism,
491
*373
U.S. at 791,
But in cases other than
Ward,
the Court has focused the inquiry into content neutrality rather differently. It has asked if the time, place or manner restriction was
“justified
without reference to the content of the regulated speech,”
Boos v. Barry,
In
Boos v. Barry,
the challenged statute forbade any display within 500 feet of an embassy that called into contempt a foreign government.
All doubts ábout the issue have, in any event, now been settled. In
Forsyth County v. Nationalist Movement,
— U.S. -, -,
We hold that the District’s proposed restriction of the location of the Klan’s march, resting as it did on the threat of listeners’ violent reaction to the message being delivered, was content based.
IV
Having identified the basis of the restriction, and the consequent standard of review, we are still left with the question whether the First Amendment forbids authorities, under any circumstances, to place any preconditions on a public demonstration because of the prospect of a violent response. The United States adopts essentially one of the positions of the district judge (suggested by Judge Edwards as an essential fact to be determined,
see
We cannot agree that a threat of violence “is an impermissible ground even for a time, place and manner limitation.” 751 F:Supp. at 223. When the choice is between an abbreviated march or a bloodbath, government must have some leeway to make adjustments necessary for the protection of participants, innocent onlookers, and others in the vicinity. The area of this march is frequented by thousands of tourists.
Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Violence,
Judge Oberdorfer found that the threat of violence was real, and substantial,
On this record, the court’s conclusion must be sustained. Major Holmberg, Commander of the Special Forces Branch of the Park Police, testified that though all agencies expected the greatest confrontation to occur at the “assembly point” of the march, “the currently planned force levels at the assembly point are believed to be sufficient to overcome unlawful attempts to stop the march by violence and to assure reasonable ... safety for persons and property.” Transcript of Fact Finding Hearing on Remand at 6-7 (Oct. 27, 1990). The Major further testified that “currently planned force levels also appear to be sufficient to assure a reasonable level of safety for persons and property along the march route itself.” Id. at 7; see also id. at 48. The substance of that testimony was confirmed by the Assistant Commander of the Special Forces Branch of the Park Police, Captain Irwin. Id. at 26, 77.
By contrast, the only testimony offered by the District about the ability of the police to control threatened violence came from MPD Inspector Collins. The Inspector testified that there was a potential for violence.
Id.
at 57. He also stated, in a closed conference, that he felt police would not be able to control the violence if the march went the full route. Transcript of Hearing (Proceedings Held at the Bench and in the Jury Room) at 12 (Oct. 27, 1990) (“Closed Proceedings”). Most of his testimony, however, came in response to hypo-theticals posed to him about the September 2d march, and was rather equivocal. He concluded that “it’s hypothetical and I just can’t respond to that,” and that he did not have an opinion on the matter.
Id.
at 72-75, 76. Inspector Collins was in charge of Intelligence; he was not responsible for determining whether the march should proceed, nor for planning or implementing security measures at the event.
Id.
at 52-53; Closed Proceedings at 14-15. The MPD officials responsible for making those decisions and implementing security measures were Deputy Chief Carroll of the Special Operations Division, and Captain Harrison, Commander of the Special Events Branch.
7
*376
Neither ever testified that the violence would be beyond reasonable control. In fact, neither witness offered any testimony about the likelihood of violence, or about the ability of the police to control any threatened violence. The district judge, who observed all the testimony, found Collins “not as convincing” as Major Holm-berg of the Park Police.
The potential for violence was the only reason urged upon Judge Oberdorfer, or significantly reflected by the record, as justification for limiting the march. In light of our conclusion upholding the finding that any violence would be controllable, no interest sufficiently compelling to justify limitation of the Klan’s rights is supported on this record. 8 Accordingly, the order issuing a preliminary injunction to permit the march, treated by this court as a permanent injunction, is
Affirmed.
Notes
. Mr. Griffin is the Klan’s "Imperial Wizard.” Id. at 1, ¶ 1; see abo Errata Order of Dec. 12, 1990 (Civ. No. 90-2615-LFO).
.
Camenisch
said that the issue presented by a pre-compliance appeal from a preliminary injunction is whether the injunction is proper.
There would be no point to that here. There is no distinct post-compliance issue. Even if we remanded for a determination about whether the Klan had a legal right to march (as opposed to a reasonable likelihood that it did), an adverse determination could not change what occurred. We therefore will treat Judge Oberdorfer's October 28th order as the equivalent of a permanent injunction. Our statutory jurisdiction over this appeal thus results from 28 U.S.C. § 1291, not 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). Cf. Fed.R.Civ.P. 65(a)(2).
. The District states that the Klan’s "basic message” is “hatred of blacks and other groups." Brief for Appellants at 23. The Klan rejects that characterization, Brief for Appellants [Klan] at 19 n. 3, and states that it “advocates views on various political and social issues,” such as church-state separation, drug use, abortion policy, and "race-mixing.”
Id.
at 2-3. Neither the District nor the United States contends that the Klan was not seeking to engage in expression,
cf. Brandenburg v. Ohio,
. The validity of even a content-neutral time, place or manner restriction will also depend on the extent to which the speaker has been given an effective alternative outlet for expression
(United States v. Grace,
. MPD Deputy Chief Carroll, the highest-ranking MPD officer to testify, did so as follows:
Q: Is the reason that these demonstrators are unable to have a march ... because they espouse unpopular views which requires that deployment for security?
A: That’s correct.
Transcript of Fact Finding Hearing on Remand at 90 (Oct. 27, 1990).
. This is not to deny that a threat of violence presents different consequences than a risk of offense, nor to imply that mob violence is not an interest that government may legitimately take into account. See infra p. 374. The discussion thus far is concerned only with the degree of scrutiny implicated by the government’s interest, not the weightiness of that interest when properly invoked.
. Captain Harrison was scheduled to be in command of MPD forces on the day of the march. Id. at 84. •
. Because we affirm on this ground, we express no opinion on the district court's findings or conclusions about the District’s treatment of the Klan’s application as compared to its treatment of previous applications.
