In re 38 Studios Grand Jury.
No. 2017-301-Appeal. (PM 17-701)
Supreme Court of Rhode Island
February 19, 2020
February 19, 2020
In re 38 Studios Grand Jury.
Supreme Court
No. 2017-301-Appeal. (PM 17-701)
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Tel. 222-3258 of any typographical or other formal errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published.
Supreme Court
No. 2017-301-Appeal. (PM 17-701)
In re 38 Studios Grand Jury.
Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.
OPINION
Justice Flaherty, for the Court. In this controversy, two constitutional officers of this state, the Governor and the Attorney General, present us with conflicting views about whether certain grand jury materials should become available to the public or whether, in the alternative, those materials should be protected from public view in accordance with existing court rules and centuries of cautious precedent. The Governor and the Attorney General have both vigorously and articulately argued their positions as each sees her or his constitutional responsibilities. In essence, the question presented to this Court is: Is the Superior Court vested with the “inherent supervisory authority” to order the public disclosure of grand jury materials—materials that are generally kept secret—from a grand jury that adjourned less than five years ago, that could potentially be reopened, and that dealt with events for which the potentially relevant statute of limitations has not yet run? In her official capacity, Governor Gina M. Raimondo asks this Court to answer that question in the affirmative on appeal from
I
Facts and Travel
There can be no question that the Governor‘s appeal involves a matter of intense public concern with which many, if not most, Rhode Islanders are familiar. In 2010, the Economic Development Corporation (EDC), a quasi-public corporation created by the Rhode Island General Assembly, issued $75 million in bonds to guarantee loans for 38 Studios, a video game company headed by former Boston Red Sox World Series hero Curt Schilling. As is painfully well-known, just two years later 38 Studios failed and did not honor its obligation to repay the bonds, leaving the taxpayers of Rhode Island to foot an $88 million bill.1
In 2012, a statewide grand jury convened to investigate the possibility of potential criminality in connection with the 38 Studios deal. That grand jury sat for eighteen months and, as has been confirmed by the Attorney General, completed its work in 2015. During the course of the investigation, which began before the convening of the grand jury, approximately 146 individuals, including members of the 2010 General Assembly, were interviewed or called to testify before the grand jury. However, at the conclusion of the grand jury investigation, in a joint statement, the Attorney General and the Rhode Island State Police announced that there were not any “provable criminal violations of the Rhode Island General [L]aws in connection with the funding of 38 Studios, the disbursement of funds to 38 Studios, and by 38 Studios to vendors.”
Independent of the grand jury investigation, the state initiated civil litigation against persons and entities that had been involved in the 38 Studios deal. The settlements recovered in excess of $61 million for taxpayers, and hundreds of thousands of documents produced during the course of litigation were made public. Following the close of the civil litigation, the Governor filed a miscellaneous petition in the Superior Court in February 2017, seeking “the release of all 38 Studios Grand Jury Records[.]”
To support her petition, the Governor argued: (1) that the Superior Court, in exceptional circumstances, has the discretion to release grand jury materials; (2) that exceptional circumstances exist; and (3) that the need for grand jury secrecy is outweighed by those exceptional circumstances. The Attorney General opposed the Governor‘s petition. The Presiding Justice of the Superior Court heard the petition in April 2017, and thereafter rendered a thorough twenty-four-page written decision in which she determined that, because the Governor was not seeking disclosure pursuant to
Before this Court, the Governor asserts that it was error for the Presiding Justice to read
II
Discussion
This case raises a weighty question of first impression in this jurisdiction. That is, whether the Superior Court has inherent authority to disclose grand jury materials beyond the parameters of the permitted disclosures that are set forth in
In Rhode Island, there exist both county and statewide grand juries. See
In some cases, the prosecutor will have all of the information that he or she requires for an indictment readily available. Those types of cases would most commonly involve criminal offenses that require indictment by a grand jury, those that, as mentioned above, carry a maximum sentence of life imprisonment. That type of grand jury, which does not conduct an investigation but rather acts on a request to issue an indictment, is known as an “indicting grand jury.” 1 Sara Sun Beale, Grand Jury Law and Practice § 1:7 at 31 (2d ed. 2018). In other cases, however, the state may be uncertain as to whether proof of criminal conduct exists; in that situation, it will use the grand jury to compel witness testimony and receive evidence to determine whether provable criminal conduct has taken place. See id. at 32-33 (discussing the utility of the investigative grand jury and noting that it “is particularly well-suited to investigating business crime, political corruption, organized crime, and other criminal activity where there is no identifiable victim to report the offense and help investigative agencies“). When the government employs a grand jury in this way, it is commonly referred to as an “investigatory grand jury.” Id. at 31. Of course, after the completion of the investigation, if the government believes that there is sufficient evidence of provable criminal conduct, it will ask the grand jury to vote on whether to indict. If an indictment is returned, the case is charged and proceeds to trial or other disposition.
A grand jury that hears evidence, and that may be asked by the government to vote on indictments, is made up of between thirteen and twenty-three individuals who are selected at random from the general public.
In order to better understand the “dual function” of the grand jury, and to better evaluate the Governor‘s request to release the 38 Studios grand jury material, we will provide an overview of the history of the institution.
A
A Brief History of the Grand Jury and the Modern Secrecy Rule
English Roots
The history of the grand jury begins in England nearly a millennium ago during
By 1215, however, the incipient building blocks of due process were laid when King John signed the Magna Carta. Kadish, 24 Fla. St. U.L. Rev. at 7. Although the Magna Carta did not specifically refer to the grand jury, “[i]t did * * * introduce the concept of due process against which any procedural practice [of the day] must be measured.” Id. Then, by the fourteenth century, during the reign of Edward III, the process of criminal prosecution in England morphed once again. Id. at 8. The role of the twelve men who, under the reign of King Henry II, would have made accusations that were essentially confirmed by trial by ordeal, was altered. Id. The accusatorial role was, instead, assumed by twenty-four knights who were selected by the county sheriff. Id. The twelve men previously responsible for accusations now functioned to return a verdict in cases of capital crime. Id. This body of twelve was called the petit jury. Id. Accusation in a grand jury followed by trial by petit jury is reflective of the course of criminal prosecution today. Nevertheless, that does not mean that, in those early days, criminal justice included the protections that we
It was “[n]ot until the 17th century * * * [that] the English grand jury earn[ed] its reputation as a body that not only accused the guilty, but also shielded the innocent from unfounded charges.” Beale, supra, § 1:2 at 9. As early as 1642, Lord Coke, the famous English jurist, interpreted the Magna Carta as requiring “indictment or presentment of good and lawful men.”6 Id. Later, in 1681, two separate London grand juries, despite facing significant pressure from the Catholic-leaning King Charles II, declined to indict two of the King‘s Protestant enemies for treason. See id., § 1:2 at 9-10; Diamond, supra, § 1.01 at 4; Schiappa, 43 Cath. U.L. Rev. at 327. Undaunted, the Crown empaneled a grand jury from a different county, resulting in the indictment of one of the King‘s Protestant targets, who was ultimately tried and executed. See id., § 1:2 at 10; Diamond, supra, § 1.01 at 5-6. The other target fled into exile. See id.; Diamond, supra, § 1.01 at 5-6. Even in the face of these outcomes, “the London grand juries’ refusal to indict in these cases was hailed as a demonstration that the grand jury was one of the chief safeguards of the liberty of Englishmen.” Id.
America
The grand jury was used for instituting criminal charges in all the English colonies in America. Beale, supra, § 1:3 at 11. In Rhode Island, for example, a grand jury was first empaneled nearly four hundred years ago, in 1640.7 Id., § 1:3 at 12. Although it might be true that the grand jury the colonists inherited from the mother country was “a governmental body by which the sovereign could enforce his will[,]” Diamond, supra, § 1.02 at 6, nonetheless, during the Revolutionary period some grand juries in the colonies “frustrated the efforts of royal officials to enforce unpopular laws.” Beale, supra, § 1:3 at 14. In Massachusetts, for example, a grand jury refused to indict the Boston Gazette for libel against the governor. Id. In New York, multiple grand juries similarly refused to indict publisher John Peter Zenger, of the New York Weekly Journal, for libel against the governor of that colony. Id.; Schiappa, 43 Cath. U.L. Rev. at 329.
After this country had achieved independence, the tradition of using the grand jury for the bringing of criminal charges continued. Beale, supra, § 1:4 at 15-16. The former colonists’ experiences with grand juries during the Revolution, as well as the English legal sources that the colonists had available to them, influenced the founders of the new state governments. Id., § 1:4 at 16. Those sources, from Lord Coke to William Blackstone, “uniformly focused on the grand jury‘s role in protecting suspects against malicious and unfounded accusations.” Id. It is true that the grand jury was not provided for in the United States Constitution when it was adopted, but by 1791, the Fifth Amendment had been ratified. See id., § 1:4 at 19; Kadish, 24 Fla. St. U.L. Rev. at 11-12. That Amendment provides in part that:
Secrecy
Of course, lying at the heart of this dispute is not the general history of the grand jury, but the specific history and tradition of grand jury secrecy. It should be recognized that, as the grand jury evolved, the tradition of grand jury secrecy was born. See Kadish, 24 Fla. St. U.L. Rev. at 12-13. The oath that members of the grand jury were required to take did not include a vow of secrecy until the fourteenth century. Id. at 13. However, by the seventeenth century, the oath that was administered to grand jurors was similar to the oath in use in the 1940s, when the
That notion—that confidentiality benefited those who were brought before the grand jury—soon took root in the United States. For example, in an early and influential charge to a grand jury in the District of California in 1872, Circuit Justice Stephen Johnson Field, who would later serve on the United States Supreme Court, said:
“You are * * * to keep your own deliberations secret; you are not at liberty even to state that you have had a matter under consideration. Great injustice and injury might be done to the good name and standing of a citizen if it were known that there had ever been before you for deliberation the question of his guilt or innocence of a public offense.” In re Charge to Grand Jury, 30 F. Cas. at 995.
In Rhode Island, albeit in a federal rather than a state court, the reasons for grand jury secrecy were expounded upon in a 1917 case decided by United States District Court Judge Arthur Lewis Brown, who served on that court for over thirty years, United States v. Providence TribuneCo., 241 F. 524 (1917). In that case, a newspaper published by the Providence Tribune Company had published an article divulging certain information that allegedly had come before a grand jury, purportedly related to cocaine trafficking by prominent physicians in the state. Providence Tribune Co., 241 F. at 524-25. In denying the publisher‘s motion to dismiss the contempt case brought against it by the United States, Judge Brown explained the importance of grand jury secrecy:
“Secrecy is essential to the proceedings of a grand jury for many reasons. Publicity may defeat justice by warning offenders to escape, to destroy evidence, or to tamper with witnesses. Even when indictments have been found and presented to the court, secrecy is extended until those indicted have been arrested.
“* * * Even when [disclosure] does not lead to the flight of an offender, it may result in the disappearance of witnesses and of documentary proof, and thus in a failure of the grand jury to secure evidence sufficient for an indictment. “Secrecy is also required in order that the reputations of innocent persons may not suffer from the fact that their conduct is under investigation, or has been investigated, by a grand jury.
“Secrecy is further required for the protection of witnesses who may go before the grand jury, and to encourage them to make full disclosure of their knowledge of subjects and persons under investigation, without fear of evil consequences to themselves.
“Premature disclosures may thus injuriously affect and embarrass the attorneys for the United States in the duty of presenting matters to the grand jury, the grand jury itself in the duty of investigation, and court and grand jury alike in giving protection to witnesses and to other persons, by preventing scandals and rumors respecting matters which may or may not be under investigation. Furthermore, such premature reports may go further and prejudice the mind of the public, thus affecting a trial which may follow the action of the grand jury.” Id. at 526 (internal citations omitted).
Modern Disclosure Practice in Rhode Island
Today, in this state, the grand jury is, for the most part, governed by
B
Standing
i
In advance of our addressing the Governor‘s arguments, we must consider whether the Governor has the requisite standing to seek the relief she requests. See Carlson v. United States, 837 F.3d 753, 757 (7th Cir. 2016). Although the Governor‘s standing to petition the Superior Court to release the 38 Studios grand jury material was not challenged in the Superior Court, standing is a prerequisite to a court‘s entertaining a claim or petition, and the issue may be raised by this Court sua sponte. Robinson v. Mayo, 849 A.2d 351, 353 n.2 (R.I. 2004) (acknowledging this Court‘s “authority to reach the issue of standing * * * sua sponte“).
Standing is a component of justiciability that ensures that a complaining party has “such a personal stake in the outcome of the controversy as to assure that concrete adverseness[,] which sharpens the presentation of issues upon which the court so largely depends for illumination of difficult * * * questions[,]” exists. Watson v. Fox, 44 A.3d 130, 135 (R.I. 2012) (quoting Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 204 (1962)). To have standing, the party that believes itself to be aggrieved “must allege ‘that the challenged action has caused him injury in fact, economic or otherwise.‘” Id. (quoting Rhode Island Ophthalmological Society v. Cannon, 113 R.I. 16, 22, 317 A.2d 124, 128 (1974)). That injury-in-fact must be “concrete and particularized[.]” Id. at 135-36 (quoting McKenna v. Williams, 874 A.2d 217, 225 (R.I. 2005)). The party bringing
Arguments were not submitted to this Court on the issue of standing because, as acknowledged above, the issue was not raised in the Superior Court. Nevertheless, this Court ordered the parties to be prepared to address at oral argument whether the Governor does indeed have standing and whether, if this Court were to find that she does not, the lack of standing should be overlooked. At oral argument, the Governor argued that she has suffered a unique injury because, each year, when putting together the annual budget proposal for the state, she must allocate funds to pay off the remainder of the 38 Studios debt. She also argued that, as Governor and chairperson of the Rhode Island Commerce Corporation, her injury is unique.8 At the same time, however, the Governor argues that the alleged injury is one shared by the general public; that is, the public‘s inability to secure full transparency with respect to the series of events culminating in 38 Studios’ bankruptcy and the ensuing litigation. She also maintains that any member of the public has standing to petition the court to release court records.
On the other hand, the Attorney General argues that the Governor does not have standing and that the disclosure the Governor seeks—disclosure to the general public—is reflective of the Governor‘s lack of particularized harm. If the harm alleged by the Governor were particularized, the Attorney General argues, the Governor would be requesting that the materials sought be disclosed directly to the Governor alone to remedy the harm. Thus, the Attorney General contends, because disclosure is sought for the public at large, the harm cannot be characterized as “particularized.”
To support her claim that she has standing, the Governor draws this Court‘s attention to a 2016 case from the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, Carlson, cited supra. In that case, a three-judge panel of that court considered whether Carlson, “a journalist and historian with a special expertise in naval history” who petitioned the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois to unseal certain grand jury materials related to a 1942 Chicago Tribune article following the Battle of Midway that suggested that the United States had broken a Japanese code, while he was writing a book about that very article seventy years later, had standing. Carlson, 837 F.3d at 755, 756, 757. The court determined that Carlson did have standing, reasoning that grand jury materials are court records and, because the public has a general right to view such records, as a member of the public his injury-in-fact was “the denial of access to government documents that he ha[d] a right to seek.” Id. at 758, 759.
Although we understand why the Governor believes that Carlson supports her position, we believe that the matter before us is readily distinguishable from Carlson, in particular with respect to the issue of standing. First, when a member of the general public brings a claim, that individual still needs to demonstrate a harm different
In contrast, the Governor argued in the Superior Court that “Rhode Islanders should have full disclosure about [the] disastrous [38 Studios] deal. * * * [The Superior] Court should permit the release of all the grand jury material from the 38 Studios investigation so that our State can finally move past this unfortunate episode in our history.” This is a clear allegation of a harm that is shared by the public at large, not one that is particular to the Governor in any way.
Second, in this case the Governor, unlike the petitioner in Carlson, is not seeking disclosure of the 38 Studios grand jury material as a member of the general public, but rather in her official capacity as the Governor of the State of Rhode Island. In that respect, and as has been recognized, the Governor argues that her injury is unique because she must allocate monies to pay off the remaining 38 Studios debt. Again, she also argues that her injury is unique given her position as Governor and chairperson of the successor organization to the EDC, which authorized the issuance of the 38 Studios bonds. Clearly, Carlson does not speak to such arguments. And, moreover, it is our opinion that, despite her responsibilities as Governor, which we certainly do not minimize, these arguments do not establish an injury-in-fact. Further, as the Attorney General points out, if the Governor‘s harm was particularized, that harm could be remedied by disclosure directly to the Governor‘s office. Instead, the Governor seeks public disclosure of all the grand jury material. Moreover, it is unclear to us how gaining access to the grand jury material would actually assist the Governor in the performance of her official duties.
ii
It is our opinion that the Governor does not meet the traditional requirements for standing that would enable her to petition for release of the materials she seeks. Nonetheless, it has long been part of our jurisprudence that “on rare occasions this Court has overlooked the standing requirement to determine the merits of a case of substantial public interest.” Watson, 44 A.3d at 138 (brackets omitted) (quoting Burns v. Sundlun, 617 A.2d 114, 116 (R.I. 1992)); see Sennott v. Hawksley, 103 R.I. 730, 732, 241 A.2d 286, 287 (1968) (explaining that “because there was a substantial public interest in the adoption or rejection of a new constitution,” and due to other considerations, the Court would determine whether the constitutional convention exceeded its authority “without first resolving the standing question“).
We cannot fail to recognize that the issue which has been framed is one that, as the Governor has so capably demonstrated, is of immense public interest. In her words, “[e]ven six years after the company closed its doors, the 38 Studios transaction and its consequences still makes front-page news.” Moreover, we emphasize that this case does contain an element of the
For these reasons, we shall overlook the absence of the traditional elements of standing and reach the merits of the controversy before us.
C
Does the Superior Court Have the Inherent Authority to Release Grand Jury Materials Outside of Rule 6(e)?
The Governor first argues that it was error for the Superior Court to read
In contrast, the Attorney General maintains that the disclosures permitted by
Whether the Superior Court has inherent authority to release grand jury materials outside of the permitted disclosures set forth in
We begin our analysis with the text of that rule. In its current form,
“A grand juror, an interpreter, a stenographer, an operator of a recording device, a typist who transcribes recorded testimony, an attorney for the State, or any person to whom disclosure is made under subdivision (e)(3)(A)(ii) shall not disclose matters occurring before the grand jury, except as otherwise provided for in these rules. A knowing violation of Rule 6 may be punished as a contempt of court.”
Super. R. Crim. P. 6(e)(2) .
The very next provision of
“(i) When so directed by a court preliminarily to or in connection with a judicial proceeding; (ii) When permitted by a court at the request of the defendant * * *; (iii) When the disclosure is made by an attorney for the State to another grand jury; or (iv) When permitted by a court at the request of an attorney for the State * * * to an appropriate official of the federal government for the purpose of enforcing such [federal criminal] law.”
With respect to the Governor‘s assertion that
The Governor is correct that we have in the past endorsed the principle “that the grand jury is an arm of the Superior Court[,]” and also that “[i]t is not under the control of the Attorney General.” In re Young, 755 A.2d 842, 843 (R.I. 2000) (mem.). The Governor also argues that historically included in the inherent authority of courts over the grand jury is the discretion to disclose grand jury materials that would normally be secret; she points out that Rhode Island courts have recognized that “[t]he granting of access to Grand Jury materials is a matter within the discretion of the Superior Court.” In re Station Fire Grand Jury, 2006 R.I. Super. LEXIS 193, at *4 (R.I. Super. Ct. Dec. 21, 2006). Indeed, this Court has determined that whether to disclose grand jury materials is, in appropriate instances, a matter within the discretion of the Superior Court. See State v. Ouimette, 110 R.I. 747, 764, 298 A.2d 124, 135 (1972).
In Ouimette, a case tried in the Superior Court two years before the adoption of the
Similarly, In re Station Fire Grand Jury, the case which the Governor quotes for the proposition that Rhode Island courts have the discretion to disclose grand jury material, specifically addressed whether disclosure was appropriate in connection with ongoing litigation, pursuant to
As the Attorney General points out, this Court, in a case that was decided after the adoption of the
The Governor, recognizing that the question before us is one of first impression for this Court, directs us to federal caselaw. She argues that “the great weight of federal cases” supports her contention that “the Superior Court has the inherent authority to disclose grand jury material outside the confines of
Indeed, it is true that a number of federal appellate courts have concluded that the federal district courts have the inherent authority to disclose grand jury materials, even if those disclosures fall outside of the exceptions set out in
However, the point of view that
After reviewing the competing and conflicting authority, and after carefully considering the thoughtful arguments of the opposing constitutional officers, we are confronted with the ultimate question: Does our Superior Court have the authority to disclose grand jury materials if that disclosure is not authorized by
In reaching this conclusion, we harken back to our long-standing principles expressed in In re Opinion to the Governor, 62 R.I. 200, 4 A.2d 487 (1939), in which we said that: “One of [the grand jury‘s] main purposes was to protect the rights of the individual citizen against possible oppression by the crown or its agencies in the prosecution of crimes[,]” In re Opinion to the Governor, 62 R.I. at 203, 4 A.2d at 488; and in In re Buxton, 111 R.I. 480, 304 A.2d 350 (1973), in which we endorsed the principle that “the grand jury was a shield which would protect an accused from governmental oppression[.]” In re Buxton, 111 R.I. at 482, 304 A.2d at 352. We are of the opinion that, as the history reflects, grand jury secrecy plays an integral part not only in the effective prosecution of crimes, but also in the protection of those upon whom the grand jury casts its considerable inquisitorial powers, which in turn is a protection potentially afforded to every member of the public. We decline to hold that the Superior Court has the authority to act as the Governor advocates. We affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.
D
Did the Governor Present Special or Exceptional Circumstances?
In light of our conclusion that the Superior Court is not garbed with the inherent authority to disclose grand jury materials outside of
In the vast majority of the cases offered by the Governor to support her argument, in which a court has publicly released grand jury material under special or exceptional circumstances, the subject of the grand jury was of unquestionably intense national historical interest; a significant amount of time—decades—had passed since the grand jury proceedings had closed; the disclosures were sought by historians; and the courts released but a limited amount of information. See Carlson, 837 F.3d at 756-57 (affirming disclosure of transcripts of witness testimony from grand jury that investigated newspaper‘s
In our opinion, the Governor‘s case is not analogous in any way to any of those cases.17 First, the Governor seeks disclosure,
We conclude that, had we determined that it was necessary to address whether the Governor presented special or exceptional circumstances, the timing of the Governor‘s petition alone would have been all but fatal to her request. As has been explained by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals in In re Petition of Craig, “[t]he timing of [a] request remains one of the most crucial elements” for at least three reasons. In re Petition of Craig, 131 F.3d at 107. “First, if historical interest in a specific case has persisted over a number of years, that serves as an important indication that the public‘s interest in release of the information is substantial.” Id. “Second, the passage of time erodes many of the justifications for continued secrecy.” Id. And “[t]hird, the passage of time eventually, and inevitably, brings about the death of the principal parties involved in the investigations, as well as that of their immediate families. And the continued existence and vulnerability of such parties is, of itself, a factor that a court should consider.” Id.18
Again, had we reached the question of whether the Presiding Justice abused her discretion in denying the Governor‘s petition, we would have unhesitatingly held that she did not.
III
Conclusion
For many people in this state, particularly those who are currently holding public office, the 38 Studios situation and the company‘s bankruptcy, occurring as it did just as the entire country was clawing its way out of the Great Recession, still stings. We certainly understand those feelings. However, after careful consideration of the issues ably briefed and argued by the parties, the judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed. The papers in this case shall be returned to the Superior Court.
STATE OF RHODE ISLAND AND PROVIDENCE PLANTATIONS
SUPREME COURT – CLERK‘S OFFICE
OPINION COVER SHEET
| Title of Case | In re 38 Studios Grand Jury. |
| Case Number | No. 2017-301-Appeal. (PM 17-701) |
| Date Opinion Filed | February 19, 2020 |
| Justices | Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ. |
| Written By | Associate Justice Francis X. Flaherty |
| Source of Appeal | Providence County Superior Court |
| Judicial Officer From Lower Court | Presiding Justice Alice B. Gibney |
| Attorney(s) on Appeal |
For the Governor: Claire J. Richards, Esq. Adam J. Sholes, Esq. For the Attorney General: Michael W. Field, Esq. Susan Urso, Esq. Rebecca Tedford Partington, Esq. Kate C. Brody, Esq. |
SU-CMS-02A (revised June 2016)
Notes
While we do not discuss each consideration in the body of this text, we are convinced that virtually none of these factors would weigh in favor of granting the Governor‘s petition.“(i) the identity of the party seeking disclosure; (ii) whether the defendant to the grand jury proceeding or the government opposes the disclosure; (iii) why disclosure is being sought in the particular case; (iv) what specific information is being sought for disclosure; (v) how long ago the grand jury proceedings took place; (vi) the current status of the principals of the grand jury proceedings and that of their families; (vii) the extent to which the desired material—either permissibly or impermissibly—has been previously made public; (viii) whether witnesses to the grand jury proceedings who might be affected by disclosure are still alive; and (ix) the additional need for maintaining secrecy in the particular case in question.” In re Petition of Craig, 131 F.3d at 106.
