Cell phones and e-mail play just as big a role in criminal investigations as they do in everyday life. Two federal statutes 1 authorize law enforcement to compel telephone companies and Internet service providers to allow real-time monitoring of customer telephone and Internet usage (non-content), and to turn over customer phone records, cell site locations, stored emails, and other account information. Both statutes require a court order authorizing these forms of electronic surveillance in the course of a criminal investigation.
This opinion addresses a recurring issue of electronic surveillance law not previously decided in a published case: whether these electronic surveillance court orders may properly be kept secret, by sealing and non-disclosure provisions, for an indefinite period beyond the underlying criminal investigation.
On March 19, 2008, the Government submitted two applications for a pen register and trap/trace device on two cell phones allegedly used by an individual engaged in illegal drug trafficking. Following its usual practice in this district, the Government combined each application with a request for customer information regarding the target phones under SCA § 2703(d). Each application concluded with the Government’s standard request that the combined pen/trap/2703(d) orders (and underlying applications) be sealed and not disclosed by the service provider to the user or subscriber “until further
Upon further deliberation, the court is convinced that setting a fixed expiration date on sealing and non-disclosure of electronic surveillance orders 2 is not merely better practice, but required by law: in particular, the First Amendment prohibition against prior restraint of speech and the common law right of public access to judicial records. The considerations underlying this departure from previous practice are explained below.
Background
To appreciate the extent of the problem, it is necessary to understand how this segment of the criminal docket works. Magistrate judges in this district handle a significant volume of pretrial criminal proceedings, including initial appearances, appointment of counsel, arraignments, detention hearings, preliminary hearings, criminal complaints, grand jury returns, and arrest warrants. This criminal docket also includes ex parte investigative matters prior to indictment or complaint, including search warrants, seizure warrants, and electronic surveillance orders. To keep track of these ex parte orders, a supplemental docket system known as the “Green Book” was developed. The Green Book is an oversized, cloth-bound volume containing handwritten entries by the case manager for the duty magistrate judge. A separate Green Book is issued each year. Each entry is docketed ' under a separate “M” case number, and under that number are typically filed the Government’s application, affidavits, and other supporting material, as well as any orders of the court, including extensions and sealing orders. Sealed orders are maintained in sealed manila envelopes marked “Sealed by Order of Court.” With the advent of CM/ECF, 3 Green Book entries are transferred to the publicly-accessible electronic docket. Sealed cases are designated on CM/ECF only by case number and type of case, e.g., “H-08-218M Pen Register.”
Based on publicly available CM/ECF data, court staff conducted a survey of electronic surveillance orders issued by magistrate judges in the Southern District of Texas, Houston Division, for the period 1995-2007. The results, compiled in Table A (attached), reveal that 3877 out of 4234 electronic surveillance orders issued during this period, 91.6%, remain completely sealed. Almost all of these orders provide that they are sealed “until further order of the court.” Moreover, the vast majority of the 357 unsealed orders were not sealed initially; only 9 currently accessible orders had been previously sealed. This means that out of 3886 orders sealed “until further order of the court,” 99.7% remain under seal today, many years after issuance. These numbers confirm, beyond reasonable doubt, that when it comes to shielding electronic surveillance orders from the public, indefinitely sealed means permanently sealed.
Any evaluation of sealing and non-disclosure orders must begin with the governing statutory scheme.
The Pen/Trap Statute (18 U.S.C. §§ 3121-27). This statute, which authorizes electronic surveillance in the form of pen registers and trap/trace devices, specifically addresses both the sealing and non-disclosure of pen/trap orders. Section 3123(d)(1) of Title 18 directs that pen/trap orders be sealed “until otherwise ordered by the court.” No particular showing is required to justify sealing; nor is there any suggested sealing period, although it is fair to presume that sealing should last at least as long as the surveillance authorized by the order itself — 60 days. 4 How long a pen/trap order should be sealed, and whether sealing should continue beyond the life of the pen register itself, is left to the sound discretion of the court.
The statute also addresses non-disclosure, sometimes colloquially referred to as a “gag order.” 5 Section 3123(d)(2) - provides that the “the person owning or leasing the line or other facility to which the pen register or a trap and trace device is attached, or applied, or who is obligated by the order to provide assistance to the applicant” shall be directed not to disclose to any other person the existence of the pen/ trap or the investigation “unless or until otherwise ordered by the court.” Again, no particular showing by the government is required to justify non-disclosure, and no minimum time period is imposed or even suggested. In fact, the “unless” clause implies that the court may refuse to enjoin disclosure even in the first instance. In the end, the duration of any gag order remains subject to the court’s discretion.
Stored Communications Act (18 U.S.C. §§ 2701-12). The SCA is different. Nothing in that statute mentions sealing of orders granting access to telephone and email subscriber information. The SCA does allow for “preclusion of notice” to any other person of the existence of the order, but only if there is reason to believe that notification will result in—
(1) endangering the life or physical safety of an individual;
(2) flight from prosecution;
(3) destruction or tampering with evidence;
(4) intimidation of potential witnesses; or
(5) otherwise seriously jeopardizing an investigation or unduly delaying a trial.
18 U.S.C. § 2705(b)(l)-(5). 6
Precluding the service provider from giving notice of a § 2703(d) order is certainly a type of gag order, although the
Analysis
1. The First Amendment and Non-Disclosure Orders
The practice of issuing secret electronic surveillance orders without an expiration date raises troubling legal questions too often avoided. The task is complicated by the fact that the sealing and non-disclosure provisions are subject to different legal standards. Even though each provision contributes to the order’s concealment from the general public, gag orders implicate somewhat different interests than sealing orders. Judicial gag orders impinge upon freedom of speech and press under the First Amendment, and must pass muster under well-established constitutional case law. On the other hand, sealed judicial orders conflict with the common law tradition of public access to judicial proceedings, and are typically evaluated under more flexible common law rules. This section will focus upon gag orders and the First Amendment.
The constitutionality of an indefinite § 2703(d) non-disclosure order has not been specifically addressed in any published decision. However, the Fifth Circuit has acknowledged in an unpublished opinion that “substantial constitutional questions [are] raised by a nondisclosure order without any limitation as to time.”
United States v. Apollomedia Corp.,
No. 99-20849,
Regulation of speech.
The non-disclosure rule at issue here limits speech. The recipient of the order — that is, “the person owning or leasing the line or other facility to which the pen register or trap and trace device is attached, or applied, or who is obligated by the order to provide assistance to the applicant” — is forbidden from disclosing to anyone the existence of either the pen/trap device or the underlying investigation. Such a “naked prohibition against disclosure is fairly characterized as a regulation of pure speech.”
Bartnicki v. Popper,
Content-based.
A regulation that merely limits the time, place, or manner of speech is constitutionally permissible if it serves a significant governmental interest and leaves ample alternative channels for communication.
See Cox v. New Hampshire,
The gag orders in question are content-based because they effectively preclude speech on an entire topic — the electronic surveillance order and its underlying criminal investigation. Prohibiting a service provider from disclosing the existence of the pen/trap or the investigation means that the first-hand experiences of the recipients of these orders are completely excluded from the public debate.
See Doe v. Gonzales,
Prior restraint.
Besides restricting content, a non-disclosure order imposes a prior restraint on speech. The First Amendment provides greater protection from prior restraints than from subsequent punishments.
Alexander v. United States,
The Supreme Court has declared that “[any] system of prior restraints of expression comes to this Court bearing a heavy presumption against its constitutional validity,” and that the Government “carries a heavy burden of showing justification for the imposition of such a restraint.”
Capital Cities Media, Inc. v. Toole,
A prior restraint has traditionally been defined as a “predetermined judicial prohibition restraining specified expression.”
Bernard v. Gulf Oil Co.,
Countervailing interests.
In correspondence with this court, the Government has asserted two interests in support of this prior restraint: (1) the integrity of the investigation and (2) the reputational interests of innocent targets. The integrity interest is already reflected in SCA § 2705(b), which lists the various ways in which an ongoing investigation might be jeopardized by disclosure: endangering the life or physical safety of an individual, flight from prosecution, destruction or tampering with evidence, intimidation of potential witnesses, and undue trial delay. As the Supreme Court has recognized, however, the government’s legitimate interest in the integrity of its investigation does not automatically trump First Amendment rights. For example, in
Landmark Communications, Inc. v. Virginia,
Even more salient is
Butterworth v. Smith,
When an investigation ends, there is no longer a need to keep information from the targeted individual in order to prevent his escape — that individual will presumably have been exonerated, on the one hand, or arrested or otherwise informed of the charges against him, onthe other. There is also no longer a need to prevent the importuning of grand jurors since their deliberations will be over. Similarly, the concern that some witnesses will be deterred from presenting testimony due to fears of retribution is, we think, not advanced by this prohibition; any witness is free not to divulge his own testimony ....
Butterworth
also rejected as inadequate the government’s second compelling interest asserted here,
ie.,
that persons accused but exonerated by the grand jury should not be held up to public ridicule.
13
The Court conceded that such a ban might protect a target’s reputation in some cases, but noted that it might have the opposite effect when a target desires to “go public” and exonerate himself by publishing his own grand jury testimony. In any case, “our decisions establish that absent exceptional circumstances, reputational interests alone cannot justify the proscription of truthful speech.”
Butterworth,
The ban extends not merely to the life of the grand jury but into the indefinite future. The potential for abuse of the Florida prohibition, through its employment as a device to silence those who know of unlawful conduct or irregularities on the part of public officials, is apparent.
Butterworth’s concerns about indefinite bans of silence are no less applicable here. The basic context is the same: a witness in possession of information material to a criminal investigation is barred from making public statements about a matter of public interest for an indefinite period of time after the investigation is closed. It is true that not every criminal investigation generates the same degree of public interest as a probe of alleged impropriety by government officials, as in
Butterworth
or
Landmark Communications.
In fact the underlying investigation here does not in
It is appropriate here to address another interest not asserted in the government’s correspondence, but included in the government’s application to this court: “[T]he exact nature of the United States ‘pen register’ device and its configuration is classified as a law enforcement sensitive investigative technique, the disclosure of which would likely jeopardize other ongoing investigations, and/or future use of the technique.” In certain contexts, a qualified “law enforcement privilege” to protect government files related to an ongoing investigation has been recognized by a majority of circuits, including the Fifth Circuit.
See generally In re U.S. Dep’t of Homeland Sec.,
First of all, pen register configuration is not “classified information” in the strict national security sense. Classified information is governed by the Classified Information Procedures Act, and its definition of the term does not encompass pen/trap devices used for ordinary criminal law enforcement.
19
Second, neither the order nor the application would disclose the “exact nature or configuration” of the device. Even if they did, the reader would find nothing more informative than what could easily be found on the Internet, including the Supreme Court’s own website.
20
In
Finally, the argument that disclosure of this “sensitive” investigative technique would somehow jeopardize other investigations, now or in the future, simply proves too much. Muzzling telecoms to prevent disclosure of pen/trap orders might in the odd case deprive a fugitive of useful information, but it would also deprive the law-abiding public of significant data about the frequency of compelled Government access to individual e-mail and phone records. If that sort of trade-off were legally acceptable, then the Government would be free to cloak in secrecy any investigative technique, from the most mundane search warrant to the most sophisticated electronic surveillance, thereby avoiding the disinfecting rays of public scrutiny. That result might seem felicitous to zealous and well-meaning officers of the law, but it misconceives the indispensable role of daylight in our system of justice:
[Especially in the administration of criminal justice, the means used to achieve justice must have the support derived from public acceptance of both the process and its results.... People in an open society do not demand infallibility from their institutions, but it is difficult for them to accept what they are prohibited from observing.
Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia,
The potential for abuse of the witness gag order cited in Butterworth — that it would be employed “as a device to silence those who know of unlawful conduct or irregularities on the part of public officials” 21 — is likewise present here. And the potentially pernicious effects of concealing even lawful conduct should not be overlooked. Cumulatively considered, these secret orders, issued by the thousands year after year by court after court around the country, may conceal from the public the actual degree of government intrusion that current legislation authorizes. It may very well be that, given full disclosure of the frequency and extent of these orders, the people and their elected representatives would heartily approve without a second thought. But then again, they might not.
Conclusion.
An indefinite non-disclosure order is tantamount to a permanent injunction of prior restraint. To the extent such an order enjoins speech beyond the life of the underlying investigation, it must be narrowly tailored to serve a compelling governmental interest in order to pass muster under the First Amendment. The governmental interests considered here — the integrity of an ongoing criminal investigation, the reputational interests of targets, and the sensitivity of investigative techniques — are not sufficiently compelling to justify a permanent gag order. And because the statutes authorizing these non-disclosure orders must be construed whenever possible in a man
This does not preclude the possibility that in a particular case the government may be able to demonstrate that a particular order or portion thereof should not be disclosed when the investigation ends. For example, the Government may be able to establish that the life or physical safety of an individual will continue to be endangered after the investigation is closed. 23 Of course, the narrow-tailoring requirement entails that redaction of objectionable information should be considered as an alternative before tossing a blanket of silence over the entire order. In any event, electronic surveillance gag orders of unlimited duration must be the exception rather than the rule.
2. The Common Law Right of Public Access and Sealed Judicial Orders
The sealing of judicial records imposes a limit on public access rather than a direct restriction on speech. Even so, the Supreme Court has recognized a First Amendment right of public access to criminal trials, including certain pretrial proceedings.
See Richmond Newspapers, Inc.,
The public’s right of access to judicial records has long been acknowledged at common law, however.
See Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc.,
Historical background.
“What transpires in the court room is public property.”
Craig v. Harney,
. Authoritative sources on English common law agree that publicity was an inseparable concomitant of English justice. 25 As royal courts took over the administration of justice, the public nature of the proceedings became intrinsically associated with its public setting. Coke explained that the very words “In curia Domini Regis” in the Statute of Marlborough of 1267 meant that court proceedings would be public:
These words are of great importance, for all Causes ought to be heard, ordered, and determined before the Judges of the King’s Courts openly in the King’s Courts, whither all persons may resort; and in no chambers, or other private places: for the Judges are not Judges of chambers, but of Courts, and therefore in open Court, where the parties Councel and Attorneys attend, ought orders, rules, awards, and judgments to be made and given, and not in chambers or other private places ...
2 EdwaRD Coke, Institutes op the Laws of England 103 (Rawlins 1680) (emphasis added). 26
The English common law view of a court as a public forum was transplanted to colonial America. The first public trial provision to appear in America emphasized the public’s right to attend both civil and criminal trials:
That in all publick courts of justice for tryals of causes, civil or criminal, any person or persons, inhabitants of the said Province may freely come into, and attend the said courts, and hear and be present, at all or any such tryals as shall be there had or passed, that justice may not be done in a comer nor in any covert manner.
The Concessions and AgReements of the PROPRIETORS, Freeholders, and Inhabitants OF THE PROVINCE OF WEST NEW JERSEY IN America (1677), ch. xxiii, quoted in 1 Bernard Sohwartz, The Bill of Rights: A DoCumentary History 129 (Chelsea House Publishers 1971) (emphasis added).
Richmond Newspapers
describes several vital functions that publicity performs in our judicial system. First, it discourages misconduct among the trial participants and improves the quality of testimony.
27
Second, publicity acts as a check on the potential abuse of judicial power.
28
Finally, and perhaps most important, it has the “significant community therapeutic value” of promoting public confidence in the judicial system.
Id.
at 556,
Judicial records. Richmond Newspapers
was decided in the context of a First Amendment right to attend a criminal trial, but the valuable functions attributed to publicity apply not only to the actual proceedings but also to the records of those proceedings.
29
The first Supreme Court case to acknowledge the common law right of public access involved judicial records.
Nixon,
Nixon
involved a dispute over copies of presidential tape recordings that had been introduced at a criminal trial. The trial court had denied permission for television networks to copy the tapes for commercial distribution. While affirming the trial
Before delving into post-Miron cases on the common law right of access, it is critical to identify the type of “judicial record” at issue. The universe of judicial records may be envisioned as a three-drawer filing cabinet. In the bottom drawer are the bulk of unfiled documents and information generated by the discovery process. As a general rule, documents not yet admitted or filed with the court do not become available to the public simply because they have been produced in the judicially-managed discovery process.
See Seattle Times Co. v. Rhinehart,
The middle drawer consists of pleadings, documents, affidavits, exhibits, and other materials filed by a party or admitted into evidence by the court. Such documents are presumptively open for public inspection and copying, although various federal rules permit such documents to be filed in redacted form, under seal, or both.
31
Not all filed documents have equal public interest, however. Dispositive documents, that is documents that influence or underpin the judicial decision, are “open to public inspection unless they meet the definition of trade secrets or other categories of bona fide long-term confidentiality.”
Baxter,
What happens in the federal courts is presumptively open to public scrutiny. Judges deliberate in private but issue public decisions after public arguments based on public records. The political branches of government claim legitimacy by election, judges by reason. Any step that withdraws an element of the judicial process from public view makes the ensuing decision look more like fiat and requires rigorous justification. The Supreme Court issues pub-lie opinions in all cases, even those said to involve state secrets. See New York Times Co. v. United States,403 U.S. 713 ,91 S.Ct. 2140 ,29 L.Ed.2d 822 (1971). A district court issued public opinions in a case dealing with construction plans for hydrogen bombs. United States v. Progressive, Inc.,467 F.Supp. 990 , rehearing denied,486 F.Supp. 5 (W.D.Wis.), appeal dismissed,610 F.2d 819 (7th Cir.1979). We issued a public opinion in a case whose subject was attorney-client confidences that required the parties’ names and many details to be withheld. See A Sealed Case,890 F.2d 15 (7th Cir.1989). It is impossible to see any justification for issuing off-the-record opinions in a dispute about drawings of transmission testing equipment ... The Clerk of this court will place the district court’s opinions in the public record. We hope never to encounter another sealed opinion.
Hicklin Eng’g, L.C. v. Bartell,
Search wairant case law.
While no case directly on point has been found, perhaps the most analogous
35
cases are those dealing with sealed search warrants. Three circuits have ruled that there is at least a common law right of public access to a search warrant application once the warrant had been executed and filed with the clerk.
See In re Application of Newsday, Inc.,
In summary, no court has ruled that search warrant applications may be sealed indefinitely after the investigation comes to a close. On the contrary, sealing of search warrant affidavits is “an extraordinary action” to be taken only in exceptional cases. See Wright, King & Klein, FederAL PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE, CRIMINAL 3d § 673, at 332-33 (2004). 36
Fifth Circuit authority.
The Fifth Circuit has recognized the district court’s authority to seal the record of judicial proceedings, but cautions that such discretion “is to be exercised, charily.”
FSLIC v. Blain,
However, on at least two occasions the Fifth Circuit has considered the sealing of district court orders and reversed the lower court in each instance. In
Van Waey-enberghe,
the parties had agreed on a consent decree and final order of permanent injunction in a case involving violations of federal securities laws.
Although the public may have a right to the information that Schwartz was enjoined, that right cannot be equated with the public’s right of access to judicial records. The public’s right to information does not protect the same interests that the right of access is designed to protect. ‘Public access [to judicial records] serves to promote trustworthiness of the judicial process, to curb judicial abuses, and to provide the public with a more complete understanding of the judicial system, including a better perception of its fairness.’
Id.
at 849 (emphasis in original) (quoting
Littlejohn v. BIC Corp.,
Most recently, the Fifth Circuit invoked basic judicial standards of transparency and fairness to disapprove indefinite sealing orders in a dispute over attorneys fees.
In re High Sulfur Content Gasoline Prods. Liab. Litig.,
Finding that the trial court abused its discretion by rubber-stamping the committee’s recommendation in this manner, the court declared:
The court made matters worse when it sealed the exhibit listing the individual fees and the record entries pertaining to fees and placed a gag order on the plaintiffs’ attorneys. These actions not only kept the public in the dark about each plaintiffs’ attorney’s award but also prevented counsel from communicating with each other and their own clients on the subject. The lack of transparency about the individual fee awards supports a perception that many of these attorneys were more interested in accommodatingthemselves than the people they represent.
Id. at 229. A district court has discretion to seal a record, but that discretion must be mindful of “the public nature of our judicial proceedings” and “the public’s right to be informed.” Id. at 230. The court reasoned that fee disputes, like other civil litigation, ought to be litigated openly:
Attorneys’ fees, after all, are not state secrets that will jeopardize national security if they are released to the public.... From the perspective of class welfare, publicizing the process leading to attorneys’ fee allocation may discourage favoritism and unsavory dealings among attorneys even as it enables the court to better conduct oversight of the fees.
Id. The court then quoted with approval a Third Circuit decision overturning a trial court’s denial of public access to criminal pretrial hearings:
Public confidence cannot long be maintained where important judicial decisions are made behind closed doors and then announced in conclusive terms to the public, with the record supporting the court’s decision sealed from public view.
United States v. Cianfrani,
High Sulfur
thus echoes, in a civil context, the same justifications underlying the common law tradition of open court proceedings articulated in
Richmond Newspapers:
(1) to discourage misconduct among litigants; (2) to check potential abuse of judicial power; and (3) to promote public confidence in the judicial system.
Admittedly, High Sulfur did not involve the need to preserve the integrity of an ongoing criminal investigation. Because that legitimate interest will inevitably be present whenever an electronic surveillance order is issued, a temporary sealing order of some duration will almost always be necessary. 37 But as a general rule the need for sealing will last only so long as the underlying investigation is active.
Conclusion.
Based on the foregoing authority, the court concludes that there is a common law right of public access to electronic surveillance orders at the post-investigation stage. This right is not absolute, and may be curtailed when sealing is (a) essential to preserve higher values and (b) narrowly tailored to preserve that interest, after consideration of less restrictive alternatives.
Baltimore Sun Co.,
Summary
These considerations lead, by slightly different paths, to the same end. As a rule, sealing and non-disclosure of electronic surveillance orders must be neither permanent nor, what amounts to the same thing, indefinite. Such restrictions on speech and public access are presumptively justified while the investigation is ongoing, but that justification has an expiration date. Publicity will not threaten the integrity of a criminal investigation that is no longer active. Once that point is reached, the fundamental values of openness and transparency embodied in the First Amendment and at common law must be given sway. We are judges of courts, not of chambers, and justice may not be done in a corner.
The remaining task is to fix a standard period for sealing and non-disclosure orders. Obviously, it is not possible to predict in advance how long a criminal investigation will take. The standard duration for a pen/trap order is 60 days, 39 but extensions are not uncommon. Given that time frame, a 180 day period seems most reasonable as a default setting for sealing and non-disclosure — short enough to respect the fundamental values at stake, and long enough not to cause an undue burden.
Turning to the orders in this case, the sealing and non-disclosure provisions will expire on September 15, 2008, which is 180 days after they were entered. After that six month period, the orders will be unsealed and disclosable unless the Government moves to extend the ban for another 180 days based on (a) a certification that the investigation is still active, or (b) a showing of exceptional circumstances, e.g., danger to the life or physical safety of an individual. For purposes of certification, a currently inactive or dormant investigation will not qualify for extension based on the mere possibility of reactivation at a later date. Additional extensions will be considered, but a correspondingly greater specificity in the certification will be required for each such extension. The Government will be given 30 days advance notice before the gag orders are lifted and unsealed.
This protocol for sealing and non-disclosure of electronic surveillance orders will be followed by this magistrate judge until further notice. Although the 180-day sealing and non-disclosure period represents a departure from previous practice, the change should bring no undue hardship. If experience proves otherwise, the court will revisit the issue and entertain any reasonable modifications the Government or other interested parties might wish to propose.
ATTACHMENT
TABLEA
Sealing of Electronic Surveillance Orders 1995-2007
1995_405_319_1_318_78A_.
1996_378_301_0_301_7915_
1997_391_334_4_330_844_
1998_390_380_1_379_971_
1999_291_291_0_291_100_
2000_286_276_1_275_961)_
2001_341_324_1_323_947_
2002_277_228_0_228_82J5_
2003_252_247_0_247_981)_
2004_326_324_1 323_991_
2005_302_270_0_270_89A_
2006_251_248_0_248_9A8_
2007_344_344_0_344_100_
TOTALS 4234 3886 9 3877 91.6%
Source: Docket records for the United States District Court, Southern District of Texas, Houston Division, as of April 1, 2008. “Electronic surveillance orders” include orders for pen registers, trap & trace devices, tracking devices, cell site location, stored email, telephone logs, and customer account records from electronic service providers. Wiretap orders are not included.
Notes
. These statutes, known as the Pen/Trap Statute and the Stored Communications Act ("SCA”), were enacted in 1986 as separate parts of the Electronic Communications Privacy Act, Pub.L. No. 99-508, 100 Stat. 1848 (1986). They are codified at 18 U.S.C. §§ 3121-27 and 18 U.S.C. §§ 2701-12, respectively.
. As used in this opinion, the phrase "electronic surveillance orders” refers to pen register and trap/trace orders, § 2703(d) orders for stored e-mail, telephone records, and customer account information, cell site location orders, and tracking device warrants. Wiretap orders are not included.
. CM/ECF refers to the court’s "Case Man-agemenl/Electronic Case Filing” system, which allows remote electronic access to the court’s docket.
. 18 U.S.C. § 3123(c)(1). Extensions of up to 60 days can be granted upon re-application to the court. Id. at § 3123(c)(2).
.
See United States v. Brown,
. The SCA also allows up to 90 days delayed notice of § 2703(b) orders granting access to certain stored e-mail, upon a showing that notice may trigger the same “adverse results” listed in 18 U.S.C. § 2705(a). These provisions, currently the subject of
en banc
proceedings in the Sixth Circuit, were previously ruled unconstitutional by a panel of that court.
See Warshak v. United States,
. The Government’s practice in this district of combining pen/trap applications with requests for customer information under § 2703(d) has the advantage of efficiency, but at the cost of added legal uncertainty. Neither the Pen/Trap Statute nor the SCA expressly contemplates such a combination, so it is unclear which statute is controlling. With regard to sealing, this uncertainty is of little consequence. Although the Pen/Trap Statute requires sealing and the SCA does not, nothing in the SCA limits the court’s discretion to seal 2703(d) orders. The statutes are materially different regarding notice, however. The SCA authorizes a limited gag order only where there is reason to believe notification “will result in” a specified adverse consequence. The Pen/Trap Statute imposes no such threshold condition, and so would allow a gag order in circumstances where the SCA would not. In order to avoid such a legally dubious end-run around the SCA’s threshold for gag-orders, it will be assumed that the non-disclosure of combined pen/trap/2703(d) orders is governed by the more restrictive SCA.
. The Apollomedia court did not decide the issue, but remanded for reconsideration in light of changed circumstances on appeal. ApolloMedia, an Internet service provider, had received a § 2703(d) order compelling production of information concerning a customer suspected of sending threatening emails. ApolloMedia, seeking to publicize the government’s investigation on its website, appealed the indefinite gag order on First Amendment grounds. The investigation was discontinued while the appeal was pending, so the district court modified its order to allow ApolloMedia to disclose the existence of the investigation and the sealed order, but continued to restrain ApolloMedia from revealing specific identifying information regarding the victim and the alleged crime. At oral argument, the government conceded that disclosure of the redacted information would not compromise the investigation, but asserted that the gag order was justified by its policy of not disclosing the names of victims “at any time, even when the crime is never prosecuted.” Noting that the underlying statute authorized non-disclosure only upon a showing of certain specified harms, the court elected to remand the case for determination whether that portion of the non-disclosure order should remain in effect.
.
But see ApolloMedia Corp.,
. See Paul Schwartz, Reviving Telecommunications Surveillance Law, 75 U. Chi. L.Rev. 287, 287 (2008) (contending that rational inquiry about telecommunications surveillance has been "largely precluded by the haphazard and incomplete information the government collects about it”). The prevalence of nondisclosure orders may partly explain the relatively small number of reported decisions in this area of law.
.In the words of one authoritative commentator, "Prior restraints fall on speech with a brutality and a finality all their own.... A criminal statute chills, prior restraint freezes.” Alexander M. Bickel, The Morality of Consent 61 (Yale University Press, 1975).
.
.
See also Bartnicki v. Vopper,
. Citing
Landmark,
.See Fed. R.Crim. P. 6(e)(2), which expressly prohibits certain individuals other than witnesses from disclosing "a matter occurring before the grand jury,” and provides that "[n]o obligation of secrecy may be imposed on any person except in accordance with [this rule].”
. See, e.g., Matt Richtel, Live Tracking of Mobile Phones Prompts Court Fights on Privacy, N.Y. Times, Dec. 10, 2005, § A at 1; Jonathan Krim, FBI Dealt Setback on Cellular Surveillance, Wash. Post, Oct. 28, 2005; Ellen Nakashima, Cell Phone Tracking Lacks Limits, Houston Chronicle, Nov. 23, 2007, § A, at 1; Larry Copeland, Red Light Cameras Work: They're Changing Behavior, But Some Say Rights Violated, USA Today, Feb. 15, 2007.
.
See, e.g., Olmstead v. United States,
.
See United States v. United States Dist. Court,
. 18 U.S.C. app. 3 § 1(a) defines "classified information” as "information or material that has been determined by the United States Government pursuant to an Executive order, statute, or regulation, to require protection against unauthorized disclosure for reasons of national security and any restricted data, as defined in paragraph r. of section 11 of the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 (42 U.S.C. 2014(y)).”
.
See, e.g., Kyllo v. United States,
.
.
See Clark v. Martinez,
. See 18 U.S.C. § 2705(b)(1).
. Anglo-Saxon criminal trials "were by com-purgation or by ordeal and took place invariably before the assembled community, many of whom were required to attend.”
Gannett Co.,
. 1 William Searle Holdsworth, A History of English Law 7-24, 316 (Methuen & Co. 1927) (1903); Frederick Pollock, The Expansion of the Common Law 3132 (Stevens and Sons 1904); Matthew Hale, The History of the Common Law of England, 343, 345 (H. Butterworth 1820); 3 William Blackstone, Commentaries 372 (W. Maxwell 1855).
. The conception of a court as a public place to conduct public business can be traced to ancient Athens. One of the reforms attributed to Pericles was the establishment of popular courts called heliatae, so named because the sessions were held in the open air under the sun (helios). Will Durant, The Story of Civilization: The Life of Greece 259 (Simon and Schuster 1939).
. 6 John Henry Wigmore. Evidence in Trials at Common Law § 1834 (Aspen Publishers 2006).
. The Court invokes the famous dictum of Jeremy Bentham: "Without publicity, all other checks are insufficient: in comparison of publicity, all other checks are of small account.” 1 Jeremy Bentham, Rationale of Judicial Evidence Specially Applied to English practice 524 (Hunt and Clark 1827). Other philosophers past and present might also be cited. See, e.g., Immanuel Kant, Perpetual Peace 47 (Liberal Arts Press 1957) ("Every legal claim must be capable of publicity.... [Wjithout it there can be no justice (which can only be conceived as publicly known) and thus no right, since it can be conferred only in accordance with justice.”); John Rawls, A Theory of Justice 175-82 (Belknap Press of the Harvard University Press 1971) (publicity is necessary condition for a stable conception of justice).
.
See, e.g., United States v. Ochoa-Vasquez,
. 44U.S.C. § 2101 etseq.
. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 5.2 authorizes the court to order that a filing be made under seal, or that certain information be redacted for "good cause.” Under Rule 26(c), a party may move for an order requiring the sealing of depositions or other filings upon a showing of good cause. See In re Equal Employment Opportunity Comm’n, 709 F.2d 392, 402 n. 7 (5th Cir.1983) (ruling that testimonial and investigatory interests were inadequate to justify sealing informant’s affidavit in EEOC subpoena enforcement action).
.For example, the E-Government Act of 2002 was intended to promote governmental use of the Internet and emerging technologies "to provide citizen-centric [sic] Government information and services,” and thereby "make the Federal Government more transparent and accountable.” Pub.L. 107-347, 116 Stat. 2899 (Dec. 17, 2002), codified at 44 U.S.C.A. § 3601, note. Section 205(a) of the Act requires federal courts to maintain websites providing on-line access to "docket information for each case” as well as "the substance of all written opinions issued by the court, regardless of whether such opinions are to be published in the official court reporter, in a text searchable format.” The possibility of sealing such court documents is not mentioned, in pointed contrast to the section (§ 205(c)) on "electronic filings,” which does recognize that "documents filed under seal” will not be made available online. In other words, sealing of court opinions is too rare to be mentioned, while sealing of filed documents is common enough to be addressed.
. See e.g. Fed. R.Civ. P. 5.2, which restricts electronic access to case files in Social Security and immigration proceedings, except that the public is entitled to full remote electronic access to "(A) the docket maintained by the court; and (B) an opinion, order, judgment, or other disposition of the court, but not any other part of the case file or administrative record."
. Of course, Congress has occasionally passed legislation mandating secrecy of judicial rulings in certain sensitive areas. See Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, 50 U.S.C. § 1801 et seq.; False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. § 3730; 18 U.S.C. § 5038 (limiting disclosure of records of juvenile delinquency proceedings). By contrast, in the context of electronic surveillance Congress has chosen to rely upon judicial discretion, as noted previously.
. Grand jury no-bill decisions, which are normally kept from the public, are fundamentally different. Unlike electronic surveillance orders, a no-bill does not affirmatively authorize government coercion affecting property rights or other interests of a citizen. Moreover, as the Supreme Court in
Butterworth
noted, the limits of grand jury secrecy are specified by rule.
. The practice in this division was consistent with this rule until recent years. Review of the Houston Division criminal docket shows that for the years 1995-2001 between 13% and 25% of search warrants were issued under seal. Since 2002, the range has risen to between 52% and 72%. No explanation for this sea change is apparent on the face of the docket.
. Pre-indictmenl access to such orders might be justified under appropriate circumstances.
See, e.g., In re Search Warrants Issued on April 26, 2004,
. 22 C.F.R. § 9.4(d) (2007).
. 18 U.S.C. § 3123(c).
