Opinion by
On January 16, 1970, the appellant, Alan D. Pierce, was convicted by a jury in Delaware County of murder in the first degree and the punishment was fixed at death. 1 A motion for a new trial was denied and sen *192 tence was imposed as the jury directed. This appeal followed.
The prosecution stemmed from the attempted robbery of John Courtney and Joseph O’Brien, Esq., while they were walking along a public street in Mеdia, about 8:30 p.m. on April 7, 1969.
Several assignments of error are asserted, but only one need concern us.
Prior to the trial Pierce filed a motion for a change of venue alleging he could not receive a fair trial by an impartial jury in Delaware County, because of the nature and quantity of the publicity which attached to the crime and his arrеst. After a hearing the motion was denied. We have reviewed the evidence presented to the lower court in support of the application for a change of venue and now rule a change of venue should have been granted, and on this basis we reverse.
Because of the nature of the crimes and the fact that one of thе victims was a seminarian and the other a practicing lawyer in Delaware County, the incident received wide coverage in the newspapers, and on radio and television. While much of the publicity was routine, factual, and wholly lacking in inflammatory content, a great deal of publicity about Pierce was emotionally charged and inflammаtory, and clearly pointed to his guilt. A brief review of some of the inflammatory news coverage will show the quality of the publicity. In one story the police were quoted as stating Pierce had been arrested, and he verbally confessed to the double shooting. The story read: “[Police] He’s the triggerman. . . . He admitted it and now he’s crying and weeping.” The story went on to state; “Police said Pierce’s record dates to 1963 and included arrests for car theft, assault and battery and carrying a con *193 eealed deadly weapon. ... He reportedly served time in the state juvenile center in Dallas, Pa.” Another story was entitled, “Two Youths Re-enact Media Street Attack.” This story reported a staged re-enаctment of the crime and read: “Speaking softly, Pierce who Police say has confessed to being the ‘triggerman’ described how the three youths encountered the victims and then indicated where the victims fell after their attack.” Accompanying this story was a large picture of Pierce flanked by a policeman with a caption which read: “Alan Pierce indicates for C.I.D. Detective Edward Smith where one of the victims fell.” Another article was titled, “Third Youth Held in Media, Chester Man, 20, Admits Being Gunman, Chief Says.”
Striking the balance between the right to a fair trial and the equally important right of free press has long been a complex and troublesome problem. See generally Symposium—A Free Press and a Fair Trial, 11 Vill. L. Rev. 677 (1966). The news media must be given wide latitude in reporting material about criminal trials, since the foundation of our society rests on freedom of thought and discussion. In
Sheppard v. Maxwell,
It has been recognized by the United States Supreme Court that under normal circumstances a claim of a due process violation requires a showing of identifiable prejudice to the accused. Nevertheless, there are certain procedures employed by the states which involve such a probability of prejudiсe that they are deemed inherently lacking in due process. See
Sheppard v. Maxwell,
supra;
Estes v. Texas,
Wе find the instant case analagous to the United States Supreme Court case of
Rideau v. Louisiana,
supra. In
Rideau,
the police staged a filmed interview
*196
with the accused in which he admitted committing a bank robbery, kidnapping, and murder, and the “interview” was shown over the local television stations. In condemning such a practice, Mr. Justice Stewart, speaking for the majority of the Court, stated: “In the view we take of this case, thе question of who originally initiated the idea of the televised interview is, in any event, a basically irrelevant detail. For we hold that it was a denial of due process of law to refuse the request for a change of venue, after the people of Calcasieu Parish had been exposed repeatedly and in depth to the spectаcle of Rideau personally confessing in detail to the crimes with which he was later to be charged. For anyone who has ever watched television the conclusion cannot be avoided that this spectacle, to tens of thousands of people who saw and heard it, in a very real sense
was
Rideau’s trial—at which he pleaded guilty to murdеr. Any subsequent court proceedings in a community so pervasively exposed to such a spectacle could be but a hollow formality.”
It is not only the fact that the publicity was “inherently prejudicial” that troubles us about this case —it is also the source of the publicity. The information in this case was not reported as a result of independent research by the representatives of the news media—it came directly from the police. It was the authorities who released the fact that Pierce was the confessed “triggerman” with a past record, and the police who staged the “re-enactment” of the crime. Moreover, the District Attorney’s Office is not free from some blame for the aroused tone of the community because his office released statements such as: “I am waiting for the misguided social worker to begin a fast and vigil at the hospital beds of these most recent victims of savage lawlessness. When the robbers are captured, I promise them a swift and very special treatment.” Thе District Attorney’s Office also refused to produce witnesses at an arraignment because of alleged telephone threats to the victims of “ultimate death”.
Statements such as those of the police and the prosecutor in this case create an even more substantial risk of a denial of a fair trial, because of the position in the community these individuals hold, and also suggest an official disregard of safeguards inherent in a fair trial. Officers of the Commonwealth and the police have a special duty and responsibility to all of the citizens of the Commonwealth. They must never lose sight of the fact that an accused has a right to a fair trial by an impartial jury, that only a jury can “strip a man of his liberty”, and a man is presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law, and that all men are guaranteed basic rights under the Constitution.
In
Berger v. United States,
*200 In accordance with these views, we rule that in this Commonwealth policemen and members of the staffs of the office of District Attorneys shall not release to the news media: (a) the existence or contents of any statement or confession given by the accused, or his refusal to give a statement or to take tests; (b) prior criminal records of the accused, including arrests and convictions; (c) any inflammatory statements as to the mеrits of the case, or the character of the accused; (d) the possibility of a plea of guilty; (e) nor shall the authorities deliberately pose the accused for photographs at or near the scene of the crime, or in photographs which connect him with the scene of the crime. See generally ABA Project on Minimum Standards for Criminal Justice, Standards Relating to Fair Trial and Free Press. §§1.1 and 2.1 (Approved Draft 1968).
We hold that anything short of compliance with these standards can operate to deprive an accused of due process of law, as this type of material did in the instant case. Moreover, we strongly suggest that trial courts employ the precautions set forth in
Sheppard v. Maxwell,
supra, and
Commonwealth v. Hoss,
Judgment reversed and a new trial is ordered.
Notes
At the same trial, Pierce was also convicted of robbery, violation of the Uniform Firearms Act, two counts of carrying a con *192 cealed deadly weapon, assault and battery, assault and battery with intent to kill and conspiracy. All of the charges arose frоm the same occurrence.
Iu
Sheppard,
supra, Mr. Justice Clark stated: “But the Court has also pointed out that ‘[ljegal trials are not like elections, to be won through the use of the meeting-hall, the radio, and the newspaper.’ Bridges v. State of California, supra,
In Marshall v. United States,
In
Irvin v. Dowd,
In
Stroble v. California,
“Thus, on the California court’s own reading of the record, circumstances tending to establish guilt and adduced outside the courtroom before the trial had even begun were avidly exploited by press and other media, actively promoted by the prosecutor. The Stаte court sanctioned this as not only permissible but as an inevitable ingredient of American criminal justice. That sanction contradicts all our professions as to the establishment of guilt on the basis of what takes place in the courtroom, subject to judicial restrictions in producing proof and in the general conduct of the proceedings. Jurors are of course human beings and even with the best of intentions in the world they are in the well-known phrase of Holmes and Hughes, J.T., ‘extremely likely to be impregnated by the environing atmosphere.’ Frank v. Mangum,
“. . . To allow such use of the press by the prosecution as the California court here left undisciplined, implies either that the ascertainment of guilt cannot be left to the established processes
*200
of law or impatience with those calmer aspеcts of the judicial process which may not satisfy the natural, primitive popular revulsion against horrible crimes but do vindicate the sober second thoughts of a community. If guilt here is clear, the dignity of the law would be best enhanced by establishing that guilt wholly through the processes of law unaided by the infusion of extraneous passion. The moral health of the community is strengthened by according even the most miserable and pathetic criminal those rights which the Constitution has designed for all.” Id. at 200-02,
