CBS Inc. appeals from the denial of its application to copy for possible broadcast a videotaped deposition of a witness previously shown to a jury in open court during the ongoing trial in
United States v. Salerno,
No. 86 Cr. 245 (MJL) (S.D.N.Y. filed Sept. 19, 1986). At issue is a videotape of deposition testimony of Roy L. Williams, a former General President of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters now serving a federal prison sentence on unrelated
*959
charges. Because Williams was ill, he could not appear as a live witness at the trial, in which he was named as an unindicted co-conspirator. His testimony was taken in a prison hospital and consisted largely of admissions that he had allowed himself to be controlled by organized crime. Judge Lowe denied CBS’s application on the ground that the common law right to inspect and copy judicial records for possible broadcast does not apply to the videotaped deposition of a witness whose live testimony was precluded by severe illness. In the alternative, the district court held that even if the common law right did apply under such circumstances, the privacy interests of the videotaped deponent were sufficiently “extraordinary” to overcome the strong presumption in favor of the common law right,
I
As we noted in
In re NBC,
In the present case, the district court believed that application of the reasoning of Myers to a videotaped deposition taken under Fed.R.Crim.P. 15 would be exalting “form over substance” because the videotapes in the Abscam cases were “real evidence” whereas the videotape now in issue was analogous to live testimony. The district court concluded that the deposition room was “simply an extension of the southern district courtroom” and noted the possibility of witnesses obscuring the truth in anticipation of a broadcast to a television audience. The court then concluded that the rule against the filming of trials applies with equal force to videotaped depositions played at trial. We disagree.
Myers
held that the common law right to inspect and copy judicial records applies to
“any
item entered into evidence at a public session of a trial,” excluding only those items entered under seal, but not distinguishing evidence on the basis of whether it was real or testimonial.
Given the conceded permissibility of videotaping a deposition and the lack of a rule prohibiting the copying of such evidence for possible broadcast, the question is whether we should create an exception to *960 the common law right to inspect and copy judicial records for videotaped depositions. We conclude .we should not.
Such an exception certainly cannot be grounded upon some generalized right of privacy enjoyed by participants in judicial proceedings because no such right exists. Absent exceptional circumstances, one who testifies at a trial testifies before the public.
See Globe Newspaper Co. v. Superior Court,
The analogy between a videotaped deposition introduced in evidence and live testimony does not withstand scrutiny. Whatever disruptive effects the physical presence of cameras and recording equipment may be thought to have on trials, the copying and rebroadcast of a videotaped exhibit can have no such effect. The need for judicial oversight of cameramen or other technicians is minimal; there is no danger of the jury being exposed to inadmissible evidence or argument; and depositions are taken in private.
The district court speculated about the psychological effect upon witnesses and other participants of the knowledge that their testimony might be broadcast. In particular, Judge Lowe was concerned about witnesses becoming “actors” who will distort their testimony. We believe those apprehensions to be exaggerated. Newsworthy testimony is likely to be widely disseminated whether or not it is videotaped, and courtroom witnesses are thus subject to similar pressures. It seems highly unlikely that a witness forced to testify in a courtroom packed with representatives of the media will be less apprehensive and less prone to distortion and perjury than one who testifies in a room occupied only by lawyers, perhaps a judge and a single camera.
Because the videotape may in fact be more accurate evidence than a transcript, moreover, its availability to the media may enhance the accurate reporting of trials. Transcripts lack a tone of voice, frequently misreport words and often contain distorting ambiguities as to where sentences begin and end. Videotaped depositions thus convey the meaning of testimony more accurately and preserve demeanor evidence as well. Should posturing on the part of witnesses or, more likely, lawyers, occur, redaction of such material prior to the videotape exhibit’s admission into evidence is possible. Accordingly, there is no reason to carve out a general exception to the Myers rule for videotaped depositions.
II
In
Myers
we held that the presumption in favor of the public right to inspect and copy judicial records was so strong that only the “most extraordinary circumstances” or the “most compelling circumstances” would justify restricting that right “[w]hen physical evidence is in a form that permits inspection and copying without any significant risk of impairing the integrity of the evidence or interfering with the orderly conduct of trial.”
Myers,
Although the determination of whether circumstances exist that justify a restriction on access to evidence in a particular case is committed to the trial court’s discretion,
Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc.,
Reversed.
