This is аn appeal from an order of the district court denying the motion of plaintiffs, five Chicago policemen, to vacate two prior district court orders authorizing the disclosure to the Superintendent of Police of grand jury minutes pertinеnt to the policemen’s appearances before the grand jury and permitting court reporters to testify at a Chicago Police Department inquiry on matters occurring before the grand jury. On appeal, the policemеn contend that the orders sought to be vacated constitute a violation of rule 6(e) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, which provides for the secrecy of grand jury proceedings. Finding no abuse of discretion in the court’s granting of the two orders relative to the disclosure, we affirm the order of the court denying the policemen’s motion to vacate those orders.
The policemen appeared before a federal grand jury investigating allegatiоns of criminal conspiracy and corruption among members of the Chicago Police Department. Subsequently, the men were summoned to appear before the Police Department’s board of inquiry. The men were charged with viоlating certain departmental rules. 1 The Superintendent of Police and defendant, James B. Conlisk, Jr., thereafter petitioned the court for the orders authorizing disclosure of the grand jury minutes and permitting the court reporters to testify. The court granted the orders, and the Department formally notified the policemen that at their hearing it intended to call the court reporters as witnesses to testify and to produce transcripts of the policemen’s testimony before thе grand jury. The men then filed a motion to vacate the orders, which the court denied.
From earliest times, grand jury proceedings have been traditionally secret. In re April 1956 Term Grand Jury,
*895 Failing to give evidence before the Grand Jury, Coroner’s inquest, in court, or before any governmental body, including the
Police Board, when properly called to do so, or refusing to testify on the grounds that it might incriminate the member.
*896
Respecting the first exception, while the rule refers to attorneys for the government, this phrase has been construed to include only attorneys for the United States government and not municipal, county or state attorneys. In re Holovachka,
An elaboration of the Illinois statutory scheme is necessary to a resolution of this question. The Superintendent is empowered to enforce Departmental discipline through the placing of charges against members of the force. When the disciplinary remedy sought is dismissal or suspension for more than thirty days, the poliсeman is entitled to a hearing before a Departmental board of inquiry. The policeman may appear with counsel of his choice to present witnesses and evidence in his own behalf, and he may cross-examine witnesses giving evidence against him. Ill.Rev. Stat. ch. 24, sec. 10-1-18.1 (1969). The formal or technical rules of evidence do not apply, Id.; however, a record of the hearing is made. If the board orders the penalty sought, the policeman is entitled to judicial review of the decision by the Circuit Court of Cook County, with an appeal as of right to the Appellate Court of Illinois.
This statutory scheme resembles that found in In re Grand Jury Transcripts,
The second question is whether the judicial review envisioned by the statute is within the ambit of the term “judicial proceeding” found in rule 6(e). Judge Learned Hand articulated the classic definition of that term in Doe v. Rosenberry:
[T]he term “judicial proceeding” includes any “proceeding” determinable by a court, having for its оbject the compliance of 'any person, subject to judicial control, with standards imposed upon his conduct in the public interest, even though such compliance is enforced without the procedure applicable to the punishment of crime.255 F.2d at 120 .
The power of the Illinois courts on review of the board’s findings is vast. It extends to all questions of law and of fact presented in the record. The court may affirm or reverse the decision in whole or part, or it may remand the decision for further consideration or the taking of additional evidence. Ill.Rev. Stat. ch. 110, sec. 274-275 (1945). Where the power of the reviewing court is so immense, we find that the proceeding is in fact “determinable” by the court. The court cleаrly seeks the individual’s compliance with standards imposed on his conduct in the public interest, for, like Doe v. Rosenberry, supra, at 120, this proceeding is designed to preserve the good name and uprightness of public officers. Finally, the Circuit Court of Coоk County’s decision is subject to further judicial review, with an appeal as of right to the Appellate Court of Illinois. We conclude therefore that the requirement of a judicial proceeding is satisfied by this statutory scheme.
Even if the literal rеquirements of the rule are met, “the indispensible secrecy of grand jury proceedings must not be broken except where there is compelling necessity. There are instances when that need will outweigh the countervailing policy. But they must bе shown with great particularity (citations omitted)” United States v. Proctor & Gamble Co.,
Since disclosure effectuates the policy of the rule and since the literal requirements of the rule arе satisfied, we find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in ordering the disclosure of grand jury minutes.
See,
Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co. v. United States,
supra
(Brennan, J., dissenting), United States v. Berata,
Affirmed.
