On November 15, 1994, United States government agents executed a search warrant on the premises of EyeCare Physicians of America (“EyeCare”), located at 3101 and 3115 N. Harlem in the city of Chicago, and seized a number of documents to facilitate an ongoing criminal investigation into the activities of various doctors, clinics, ambulatory surgical centers, and other entities engaged in providing health care services. Contemporaneously, the government moved to have the application and affidavit in support of the warrant sealed on the ground that premature disclosure of the application for the search warrant and affidavit filed in support could jeopardize the ongoing investigation. A United States magistrate judge determined that the search warrant material could be sealed for a two-year period (until November 15, 1996), and agreed with the government that “premature disclosure [of the search warrant material] could jeopardize an ongoing investigation.” Immediately thereafter, the government offered to provide EyeCare with copies of any and all of their seized documents. The government has complied and turned over to EyeCare the documents requested.
One month after the search and seizure (December 19,1994), EyeCare filed a motion to have the warrant application and affidavit unsealed to “assess whether to challenge the government’s extraordinarily broad search.... EyeCare can make an informed and meaningful decision regarding its rights under Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 41 only if it can review the affidavit.” The government, on February 10, 1995, in response to the December 19, 1994 motion, filed another affidavit under seal, arguing
disclosure of the affidavit could result in breaehing the secrecy of grand jury testimony and subpoenas, that the privacy of implicated persons who have not been charged, other witnesses . and patients would be impaired by disclosure; that the identity of unnamed subjects would become clear to petitioner which disclosure could jeopardize the investigation in light of particular instances revealed in the government’s affidavit made in opposition to the pending motion in which persons on behalf of [EyeCare] have taken actions to discourage cooperation; that disclosure of numerous potential witnesses could result in their unwillingness to cooperate with the government; and that the scope of the investigation would be revealed so as to give petitioners premature guidance concerning potential charges.
The magistrate judge, after considering the feasibility of disclosing a redacted version of the affidavit, stated that “redaction would entail such a.large portion of the affidavit that it is not a practical alternative.” EyeCare appealed the magistrate judge’s denial of its motion to release the sealed documents to the district court, and the trial judge directed the government to file a draft redacted version of the affidavits for inspection by the court in camera. ■ After in camera review of the proposed redactions as well as the affidavit of a government agent explaining its reasoning for the redactions (also under seal), and following oral argument, the district court affirmed the magistrate judge’s order. The district court incorporated the magistrate judge’s rationale with the additional finding that “partial disclosure or redaction might mislead the reader to mistakenly conclude that certain persons and entities are either subjects of the investigation or are cooperating with the government.”
EyeCare appeals the district court’s denial of its motion, arguing that the government has failed to establish that it has a compelling interest in keeping the three affidavits sealed. We affirm.
I. EyeCare’s Constitutional Arguments
EyeCare asserts that it has a “due process” right to review the affidavit under the Fourth Amendment. This argument is a synthesis of two independent rights, requiring analysis of' each argument. The Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment protects EyeCare from being deprived of life, liberty or property without due process of law. Any argument based upon this section of the Fifth Amendment falls on deaf ears, for no person affiliated with EyeCare has even been indicted, much less deprived of life or liberty. Nor can EyeCare claim that it has been deprived of property, for the government has furnished copies of all its requested documents.
EyeCare points us to In the Matter of the Search of Wag-Aero, Inc.,
EyeCare also asserts that the Fourth Amendment recognizes a right of access to sealed affidavits. EyeCare’s argument does not rest upon the terms of the Fourth Amendment, for the text of that Amendment does not address, even implicitly, the problem of lack of access to sealed search warrant affidavits.
II. Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 41(g)
EyeCare argues that Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 41(g) is a codification of Fourth Amendment procedures and thus provides a fundamental right of access to search warrant affidavits. As discussed above, no provision within the Fourth Amendment grants a fundamental right of access to sealed search warrant affidavits before an indictment. We are convinced that a proper reading of Rule 41(g) does not include a constitutional right of access to sealed warrant affidavits, but rather provides an administrative framework for the exercise of the common law right of access.
The common law recognizes a “general right to inspect and copy public records and documents, including judicial records and documents.” Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc.,
The “decision as to access [to judicial records and documents, including the duration of time they may be sealed] is one best left to the sound discretion of the trial
As previously mentioned, the magistrate judge and the district court were required to, and did, consider the potential adverse consequences of granting immediate access to the warrant affidavits. Such consequences include the likelihood that the secrecy of grand jury proceedings would be violated. See Fed.R.Crim.P. 6(e). Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 6(e) codifies the centuries-old requirement that grand jury proceedings be kept secret. Matter of Grand Jury Proceedings,
“In a ease where a particularized need is established ‘the secrecy of the proceedings is lifted discretely and limitedly.’ ” Id. “In determining whether the party requesting disclosure has met his burden, the district court has ‘substantial discretion.’ ” Id. (citation omitted). “District courts that contemplate ordering disclosure must consider the possible effects upon the functioning of future grand juries.” Proceedings, 942 F.2d
Additional consequences in disclosing the sealed affidavits include: the identity of unnamed subjects not yet charged would be revealed; there may be mistaken notions concerning who might and might not be cooperating with the government or who may be subjects; there may be misunderstandings about the parameters of the government’s investigation; the privacy of the innocent and the implicated would be threatened; and the cooperation of present and potential witnesses could be compromised or influenced. We add that disclosing even a redacted version of the search warrant affidavit would enable the subjects of the investigation the opportunity to alter, remove or withhold records. We agree with the magistrate judge and the district court that disclosure of the affidavits might very likely impair the ongoing criminal investigation. We, therefore, hold that the magistrate judge and the district court did not abuse their discretion in denying EyeCare’s motion to unseal the search warrant affidavits. EyeCare can challenge the contents of the affidavits at any time.
The district court’s denial of EyeCare’s motion to unseal is, therefore, AFFIRMED.
Notes
. At this juncture, no person affiliated with Eye-Care has been indicted and the government's criminal investigation continues.
. The Fourth Amendment provides:
The right of the people to be secure in their person, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated; and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath erf affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
(Emphasis added).
. The court essentially held with little explanation that the Fourth Amendment .applies to sealed search warrant affidavits. While the factual distinctions between Search Warrants and the instant case are irrelevant to the question of whether the Fourth Amendment grants a right of access to sealed search warrant affidavits, such differences are worth noting. In Search Warrants, the investigation had been underway for almost three years (only two years have elapsed in the present case); the search took place in the business area in the movant's home (the government searched a business in this case); and the court's opinion is not clear as to whether or not the seal of the affidavit was lifted during the preindictment stage of the criminal investigation (which is where we are now).
.Rule 41(d) directs the officer seizing property under a search warrant to make the return "promptly." Compliance with this subsection of the Rule is not in question. Rule 41(g) directs the magistrate judge to file all papers in connection with the seizure of property with the clerk of the district court.
. The district court’s denial of EyeCare’s motion to unseal could also be affirmed because the affidavits reveal the identity of informants. "The informer's privilege,” which has its roots in the English Common Law, is a misnomer as it "is in reality the Government's privilege to withhold from disclosure the identity of persons who furnish information of violations of law to officers charged with enforcement of that law.” Roviaro v. United States.
