PER CURIAM.
The only question in this case that merits discussion is whether the defendants who were convicted of a crime against the United States were given a public trial as required by the Sixth Amendment to the Constitution. '
The crime of which defendants were charged had connection with a train robbery, and the trial, which was held at Muskogee, Okl., excited more than ordinary interest. At previous sessions the courtroom was crowded with spectators, so much so that in one instance the court directed the bailiffs to clear the aisles, so that witnesses would not be impeded when called. Considerable ill feeling had developed between the defendants, their relatives and friends, and some of the witnesses for the prosecution, and the court had placed the latter in the custody and care of an officer. Precautions had also been taken that defendants should come unarmed into the courtroom. On the evening of the night session an encounter occurred in a restaurant, in which a relative of one of the defendants hit a witness for the prosecution across the face with a newspaper. This was reported to the court; also that one or more of the witnesses in the courtroom were intoxicated. It does not appear that the courtroom was crowded beyond its seating capacity when the order to clear it was made, or that any person was making a disturbance or threatening to do so, or that there was any well-founded apprehension that a disturbance would occur.
We appreciate the better position of the trial court to appraise the significance of surrounding conditions, but we cannot avoid the conviction that it acted upon the representations of those who did not adequately realize the great importance of keeping a'place where the justice of the nation is judicially administered a public place for the admission of peaceful citizens. An intoxicated man could have been excluded or removed; the aisles and passageways could have been kept clear; when the seats were filled, other spectators could have been denied at the door; if the noise in the lobbies interfered with the proceedings, the lobbies could have been cleared; and individuals whose conduct outside the courtroom made their presence within a menace might have been excluded. But it is quite a different thing to exclude the public generally, regardless of their conduct or character.
The Sixth Amendment provides that “in all criminal prosecutions the accused shall enjoy the right to a * * * public trial.” The provision is one of the important safeguards that were soon deemed necessary to round out the Constitution, and it was due to the historical warnings of the evil practice of the Star Chamber in England. The corrective influence of public attendance at trials for crime was considered important to the liberty of the people, and it is only by steadily-supporting the safeguard that it is kept from being undermined and finally destroyed. As the expression necessarily implies, a public trial is a trial at which the public is free to attend. It is not essential to the right of attendance that a person be a relative of the accused, an attorney, a witness, or a reporter for the press, nor can those classes be taken as the exclusive representatives of the public. Men may have
The qualifications of the broad scope of the constitutional provision and of like provisions in the Constitutions of the states are few, and are based upon considerations of public morals and peace and good order in the courtrooms. They are definitely illustrated in cases in which the exclusion of some or all of tire spectators has been upheld.
In Grimmett v. State, 22 Tex. App. 36,
People v. Kerrigan,
In Benedict v. People,
State v. Nyhus,
Reagan v. United States,
In State v. Callahan,
In Myers v. State,
In Lide v. State,
“It was not only the power, but tbe cluty, of the court to prevent demonstrations of approval or disapproval by spectators in the trials of causes, and if need be to this end to exclude the offending parties from the courthouse.”
In People v. Swafford,
State v. Brooks,
In State v. McCool,
The above are most of the cases in which limited admissions have been upheld. We turn now to those in which they have been disapproved.
In State v. Osborne,
“You will-please exclude everybody from the courtroom except the defendant, the attorneys engaged in the trial of tills case, the jury, and officers of this court, and the witnesses while on the witness stand ; and you will observe this order-so to exclude the public from the courtroom during the taking of testimony" upon this trial.”
The carrying out of this order was vigorously condemned by the Supreme Court o £ the state. It will be observed that there was no selective exclusion with reasonable regard for the nature of particular phases of the trial or the testimony.
Tilton v. State,
In State v. Hensley,
“The trial should he ‘public,-’ in the ordinary common-sense acceptation of the term. The doors of the courtroom are expected to be kept -open, the public are entitled to be admitted, and the trial is to be public in all respects, as we have before suggested, with due regard to the size of the courtroom, -the conveniences of the court, the right to exclude objectionable characters, and youth of tender years, and to do other things which may facilitate the proper conduct of the trial.”
People v. Murray,
In People v. Yeager,
“I have told the officer not to let anybody in here who is not either a friend of the complaining witness or of the defendant. He will ascertain that fact as they apply for admission. All such people will be admitted, and the public will be kept out.”
The Supreme Court of the state held the trial not a public one. It said:
“Who is to decide who are the friends of the accused? The law makes no such test, but allows all citizens freely to attend upon any trial, whether civil or criminal.”
We think these latter cases are well founded in principle and reason, and that in the case at bar the defendants did not have the public trial contemplated by the Sixth Amendment.
The sentences are reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.
