REVISED OPINION
Pеtitioner-appellant Craig Martin, a state prisoner, sought habeas relief based on a claim that the state court’s exclusion of his mother from the courtroom during part of the testimony of a key prosecution witness deprived him of his Sixth Amendment right to a public trial. The United Statеs District Court for the District of Massachusetts denied the writ. Martin appeals.
As a preliminary matter, we must explore, for the first time in this circuit, the interrelationship between habeas petitions and the newly enacted Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1996 (PLRA). Once that expedition is finished, we address the merits of Martin’s claim. In the end, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On May 7, 1991, a Barnstable County (Massachusetts) grand jury indicted Martin on charges of breaking and entering.
See
Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 266, § 18 (1990). Later that year, a petit jury found the petitioner guilty as charged, and the court imposed a substantial prison sentence. Martin’s subsequent attempts to gain surcease in the state court system proved unavailing.
See Commonwealth v. Martin,
On March 12, 1996, the petitioner applied for a writ of habeas corpus in the federal *873 district court, see 28 U.S.C. § 2254 (1994), naming as respondents various state officials (who, for ease in reference, wе call “the Commonwealth”). He premised the application on a claim that the trial court’s exclusion of his mother from the courtroom during part of the testimony of a key prosecution witness deprived him of his Sixth Amendment right to a public trial. The district court, without much in the way of indеpendent elaboration, turned a deaf ear and thereafter denied a certificate of probable cause. We nonetheless granted a certificate of appealability. See 28 U.S.C.A. § 2253(c)(1) (West Supp.1997).
II. THE COURSE OF TRIAL
To understand the petitioner’s claim, we must rehearse his trial in the Barnstable Superior Court. We offer only a synopsis, confident that the reader who thirsts for additional detail can find it elsewhere.
See Martin,
The Commonwealth alleged that Martin and Niles Hinckley, his half-brother, broke into the office of the Yarmouth town dump and stole a safe. After removing the safe from the building, they told a Mend, Thomas Violette, that they needed help to transport “something big.” Violette obliged. As the three men left the dump in Hinckley’s car, with the safe aboard, they came across Linda Rose, whose automobile had failed her. She joined them. The group proceeded to Rose’s home. Once there, the men dragged the safe into the house and tried to open it. Unsettled by this endeavor, Rose departed with her children. Violette also grew anxious about his involvement; he left the premises a few minutes after Martin and Hinckley began wоrking on the safe, pondered his predicament, and then made a beeline for the police. The culprits were apprehended and charged in short order.
Martin and Hinckley were tried together. The Commonwealth called Rose as a witness in its case in chief. She stated repeatedly that she did not see (or, at least, could not recall) much of what had transpired on the evening in question. The prosecutor told the judge at sidebar that Rose was nervous and scared and suggested that her professed lapses of memory were disingenuous. The trial adjourned in the midst of Rose’s cross-examination.
On the next trial day, the prosecutor voiced concern about possible witness intimidation and the judge conducted a voir dire outside the presence of the jury. During that proceeding, Rose admitted that portions оf her previous testimony had been less than truthful. She also stated that she had been Mghtened by James Martin (the petitioner’s brother, who, she said, had pointed at her from the back of the courtroom), by the petitioner’s girlMend, and by an unidentified woman (who, she said, had given her dirty looks, “scaring [her] from testifying”). Rose went on to recount that the petitioner’s girl-Mend had signalled her to “come over and talk” outside the courtroom; that the petitioner himself had accosted her shortly after his arrest and instructed her to testify (falsely) that Hinckley had acted alone in exрropriating the safe; and that, on another occasion, the Martin brothers ordered her to deny the petitioner’s role in the burglary.
Based on Rose’s statements, the court determined that it was “in the interest of justice that the Commonwealth be permitted to reopen and rеdirect on Miss Rose.” In so ruling, the judge noted that James Martin already had pleaded guilty to intimidating witnesses (including Rose) and that the petitioner had been found guilty of intimidating Rose. The judge then ordered the courtroom closed during the remainder of Rose’s testimony and refused to make an exception for the petitioner’s mother. 1 During her reopened testimony, Rose described the petitioner’s attempts to intimidate her, but her recollection of the evening in question did not differ materially from her original testimony.
III. THE PRISON LITIGATION REFORM ACT
We begin with the PLRA, Pub.L. No. 104-134, tit. VIII, 110 Stat. 1321, 1366 (1996), which, among other things, amended
*874
28 U.S.C. § 1915 tо require convicts to pay the full amount of the filing fees in civil actions.
See
PLRA, § 804,
Though habeas proceedings are technically civil actions,
see Ex parte Tom Tong,
We are not alone in finding these indicia persuasive. All the circuits that have addressed this question to date have agreed that the PLRA does not apply to habeas petitions.
See Smith v. Angelone,
IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
On April 24, 1996—over a month after Martin filed his petition—the President signed the AEDPA into law, therеby altering the legal framework which governs federal judicial review of habeas corpus applications.
See
Pub.L. No. 104-132, tit. I, 110 Stat. 1216 (1996). The Supreme Court has now decided that the AEDPA does not apply to habeas petitions which were pending at the time the new law took effect.
See Lindh v. Murphy,
— U.S. -,---,
Y. THE MERITS
Refined to bare essenсe, the petitioner’s constitutional claim is that his Sixth Amendment right to a public trial was offended by the exclusion of his mother from the courtroom during Rose’s reopened testimony.
A.
This claim rests primarily on the petitioner’s interpretation of
Waller v. Georgia,
[T]he party seeking to close the hearing must advance an overriding interest that is likely to be prejudiced, the closure must be no broader than necessary to protect that interest, the trial court must consider reasonable alternatives to closing the proceeding, and it must make findings adequate to support the closure.
Id.
at 48,
We do not agree. Nothing in Waller or in any other ease cited by the petitioner suggests that a trial judge, presented with evidence of repeated attempts аt witness intimidation and a live witness who harbors a plausible fear of testifying before spectators known and unknown to her, must undertake an assessment of the exact level of affrightment created by each specific spectator, one by one, before closing a courtroom to the public. 4 Rose already had been frightened and intimidated by the petitioner, the petitioner’s brother, the petitioner’s girlfriend, and an unidentified woman. The trial court’s closure order was neither broader nor longer than was reasonably necessary to end this widespread reign of harassment and secure the witness’s accurate testimony.
Our judgment that the trial court’s closure order does not run afoul of
Waller
is buttressed by the Second Circuit’s decision in
Woods v. Kuhlmann,
B.
The petitioner has one last string to his bow. He insists that we should consider
*876
the exclusion of his mother from the courtroom under a “heightened” standard which presumably would be applicable whenever a court excluded a family member from a criminal defendant’s trial. The short, entirely dispositive answer to this plaint is that the Supreme Court opinion on which the petitioner relies,
In re Oliver,
In sum, we not only reject the petitioner’s assertion of a heightened standard for the exclusion of family members from the courtroom, but we also note the exquisite irony of Martin raising the argument where, as here, his relatives played prominent roles in menacing a witness. On these peculiar facts, it seems especially reasonable for the trial court to have concluded that the witness’s founded fears would only be quelled if the courtroom were cleared of spectators associated with those persons who already had threatened her.
VII. CONCLUSION
We need go no further. Since the PLRA does not apply in the habeas context, Martin’s application was properly before the district court notwithstanding his failure to pay a filing fee. Accordingly, we rеach the merits. Once there, however, we discern no constitutional error in the state trial court’s decision to close the courtroom during the testimony of Linda Rose.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Although the closure order exempted the press, there is no evidence in the record that any reрorters were in attendance during Rose’s reopened testimony.
See Martin,
. The petitioner did file a motion to proceed in forma pauperis, and although the district court did not grant that motion, he appears eligible for such a dispensation.
. Prior to the Court's resolution of the question by a five-to-four margin in
Lindh,
the circuits had divided on the issue of retroactivity.
Compare Hunter v. United States,
. On direct review, the Massachusetts Appeals Court summarized the matter as follows:
While we think the judge should have expressly rather than implicitly determined whether the witness wоuld have had difficulty testifying with the defendant's mother present, it was not constitutional error requiring a new trial not to do so in the particular circumstances of recent intimidation by other family members and persons sympathetic to the defendant.
Martin,
.
Oliver
dealt with an entirely secret trial in which the defendant was denied both counsel and proper notice.
See Oliver,
