This is a case in which Greg Rushford, the plaintiff, appeals from an adverse grant of summary judgment with regard to his defamation claim brought against The New Yorker Magazine, Inc. (The New Yorker). The Washington Post Company (The Washington Post) has intervened, seeking to unseal the pleadings and documents accompanying the successful Motion for Summary Judgment submitted by The New Yorker to the district court.
Because the allegedly defamatory statements are protected under a qualified privilege, we affirm the grant of summary judgment against Rushford. During pretrial discovery, a Protective Order covering six documents was issued. When The New Yorker moved for summary judgment, the entire record accompanying the summary judgment motion was placed under seal. Only three documents in that record were *251 covered by the Protective Order. 1 The New Yorker acknowledged in argument before this Court that it has no objection to unsealing the documents not covered by the Order. We therefore hereby unseal the summary judgment pleadings and accompanying exhibits except for the three documents specifically covered by the Order. With regard to those three documents, the case is remanded to the district court for the determination, which heretofore has never bеen judicially made, of whether the Protective Order should be enforced. 2
I.
On October 29,1986, Rushford brought a libel action against, inter alia, The New Yorker in the Circuit Court for Fairfax County, Virginia. The case was thence removed to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441.
The New Yorker had published a twо-part article by Renata Adler, entitled “Annals of Law — Two Trials,” in June, 1986. The article reported on two separate libel suits brought by General William C. West-moreland and Israeli General Ariel Sharon, respectively. The article referred to Rush-ford’s testimony as a witness for CBS in Westmoreland v. CBS, Inc., No. 82 Civ. 7918 (S.D.N.Y.) (PNL).
On December 23, 1986, Rushford served a document request on The New Yorker under Fed.R.Civ.P. 34. However, The New Yorker declined to produce several categories of documents without a protective order. Rushford thereafter moved to compel the production of the documents. The New Yorker opposed the motion and moved for a protective order pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(c) that would allow limited disclosure of the documents to Rushford and his counsel, but would forbid any other disclosure of the pertinent documents prior to trial. On March 9, 1987, Magistrate Grimsley ruled that a protective order should be issued. On March 20, 1987, Magistrate Brinkema entered a Protective Order:
The documents are to be shown only to the respective parties, their counsel and those assisting counsel, and are to be used solely for this litigation. No copies of these documents are to be made without leave of court. When this litigation is completed, the documents are to be returned to the party supplying them.
The Order covered the following documents:
1. Proposed “Note to Readers” drafted by William Shawn (never published);
2. Transcript of deposition of William Shawn, dated February 18, 1987;
3. Galleys and page proofs of the paragraph referring to Rushford in “Annals of Law — Two Trials”;
4. The New Yorkеr’s written instructions or guidelines to fact checkers;
5. The New Yorker’s internal telephone directories;
6. Rushford’s tax returns.
Rushford filed a “Partial Objection” to the Magistrate’s Protective Order, asserting, inter alia, that he had a First Amendment right to disseminate the pertinent documents. Following a hearing, Chief Judge Bryan sustained the Magistrate’s ruling in an order issued on March 17, 1987.
On April 7,1987, The New Yorker filed a Motion for Summary Judgment. It filed all its summary judgment papers under seal even though the Protective Order did not explicitly apply to pleadings. The New Yorker alleges that Judge Bryan had “instructed [The New Yorker] to place the motion and accompanying exhibits under seal.” Following oral argument, Judge *252 Bryan granted The New Yorker’s Motion for Summary Judgment on April 28, 1987.
On September 30, 1987 and after an appeal from the grant of summary judgment had been filed by Rushford, The Washington Post filed a motion for leave to intervene before this Court for the limited purpose of unsealing the summary judgment pleadings that formed the basis for Judge Bryan’s April 28, 1987 ruling. On Novembеr 25, 1987, we granted The Washington Post’s motion for leave to intervene as a party appellant for that limited purpose.
II.
We will first discuss the issue raised by The Washington Post of whether the pleadings and accompanying exhibits that were submitted to the district court should be unsealed for public inspection.
The New Yorker asserts that it filed the summary judgment pleadings under seal because it was instructed to do so by Chief Judge Bryan’s chambers. While we question whether Judge Bryan’s “instructions” regarding pleadings could be considered as a protective order pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 26(c), we need not reach that issue here. At the orаl argument, counsel for The New Yorker conceded that her client was willing to turn over to The Washington Post all pleadings and exhibits that were not under the March 20, 1987 Protective Order. Because of such a concession, we see no reason to keep those documents under seal.
With regard tо the three documents that were specifically covered under the March 20, 1987 Protective Order,
3
we question whether the Order remained in effect over these documents once they were submitted to the court below as attachments to a summary judgment motion. It appears from the recоrd that the Order was entered to facilitate pre-trial discovery. Once the documents are made part of a dispositive motion, such as a summary judgment motion, they “lose their status of being ‘raw fruits of discovery.’ ”
In re “Agent Orange” Product Liability Litigation,
We find The New Yorker’s reliance on
Seattle Times v. Rhinehart,
*253
We certainly recognize that there may be instances in which discovery materials should be kept under seal evеn after they are made part of a dispositive motion. The mere existence of a First Amendment right of access or of a common law right of access to a particular kind of document does not entitled the press and the public to access in every case.
See In re Washington Post Co.,
With regard to substantive requirements, we find it necessary to decide whether the interests of The Washington Post arise from the First Amendment or from the common law right of access. The common law does not afford as much substantive protection to the interests of the press and the public as does the First Amendment. Under common law, there is a presumption of access accorded to judicial records.
Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc.,
Under the First Amendment, on the other hand, the denial of access must be necessitated by a compelling government interest and narrowly tailored to serve that interest.
Press-Enterprise Co. v. Superior Court,
In making that determination, the district court must follow the procedural requirements as laid out in
In re Knight Publishing Co.,
In the instant case, the district court never had the opportunity to consider, in compliance with
In re Knight Publishing Co.,
III.
We now turn to the merits of the underlying libel claim that was brought by Rush-ford against The Nеw Yorker. Rushford argues that he was defamed by the following language in Adler’s article. He objects particularly to the three italicized sentences.
The first problem was presented more acutely by another witness, Greg Rush-ford, for eight months an investigator for the Pike Committee, and a devout believer in Adаms. On direct examination by Boies, Rushford seemed an effective witness on CBS’s and Adams’ behalf, telling what he had said, during the making of the broadcast, to Adams and to Crile. On cross-examination, however, by Dorsen (over heavy objections by Boies), he began alluding, with a kind of dark ebullience, to a ‘‘larger web” (which Judge Leval subsequently called “wider conspiracy”), which seemed to include among the conspirators virtually everyone. In the first bench conference, which Boies requested to state his objections to Dorsen’s mild inquiries into Rushford’s real beliefs, Judge Leval remarked that “Adams and Crile, or somebody at CBS” might have had reason to regard Rushford as “far out.” A bit later, in response to further objections, the judge put it more forthrightly, in ruling that Dor-sen’s questions were simply directed to what was told to Adams and Crile, and “not simply to exploring this witness’s views to show that he’s a kook.” That was the first, or “larger web,” problem: that Adams’ conspiracy-to-suppress theory had always extended, before “The Uncounted Enemy: A Vietnam Deception,” to officials higher than Westmoreland, including (in direct contradiction to the program’s central thesis) President Johnson and the Joint Chiefs. Westmoreland could hardly have conspired to deceive his military and civilian superiors in a deceit in which they were his co-conspirators.
Rushford basically complains that these three sentences suggest that, in the personal opinion of Judge Leval, Rushford was a “kook” or “far out.”
At common law, pursuant to a special privilege, republications of reports of judicial proceedings are not subject to liability unless the privilege is abused.
Alexandria Gazette Corp. v. West,
All three sentences being challenged by Rushford quote directly, at least in part, from the Westmoreland trial transcript. Rushford argues, however, that those quotes are taken out of context and are not protected under the privilege. We disagree. The privilege does not require that the published report be verbatim of the official report but it must only be substantially correct.
Alexandria
Gazette
*255
Corp.,
AFFIRMED IN PART, REMANDED IN PART.
Notes
. Transcript of deposition of William Shawn, dated February 18, 1987 (Appellee’s attachments to the Summary Judgment Motion, Vol. 1, Exhibits 3), Galleys and page proofs of the paragraph referring to Rushford in "Annals of Law —Two Trials” (Appellee’s Attachments to the Summary Judgment Motion, Vol. 1, Exhibit 6); Proposed "Note to Readers” drafted by William Shawn (Appellant’s Opposition to the Summary Judgment Motion, Exhibit 12).
. Because The Washington Post only seeks to unseal the documents that were submitted as attachments to the motion for summary judgment, the issue of whether the other three documents covered by the Protective Order should be unsealed is not before this Court.
. See supra note 1.
. While cautioning that the question of whether the public has a right of access to civil trials was not before the Court, Chief Justice Burger nevertheless noted “that historically both civil and criminal trials have been presumptively open.”
Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia,
