*271 ORDER
Time Inc., Dow Jones & Company, Inc., The New York Times Company, The Los Angeles Times, and The Associated Press have petitioned for a writ of mandamus instructing the district court to unseal certain documents filed in United States v. Julie Hiatt Steele, Cr. No. 99-9-A, pending in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. The documents at issue were filed as exhibits in support of several of Steele’s pretrial motions. The documents were filed under seal because they were subject to a blanket protective order that controlled discovery.
A First Amendment right of access applies to -a criminal trial, including documents submitted in the course of a trial. This right of access also applies to plea and sentencing hearings and to documents filed in connection with such hearings.
See In re Washington Post Co.,
As we understand it, only the Government (the Office of Independent Counsel) urges sealing in the proceedings here. In such proceedings to which a First Amendment right of access attaches, a court must assess whether sealing documents is “‘necessitated by a compelling government interest, and ... narrowly tailored to serve that interest.’ ”
Washington Post,
Here, the district court issued a protective order governing the treatment of discovery materials provided by the Government to the defense in the Steele case. It allowed the Government to designate materials provided as “confidential” at its discretion. If any materials marked “confidential” were appended to any court filing, the material had to be filed under seal. The court encouraged the parties to negotiate whether any material marked “confidential” could be made public and instructed the parties to bring any disputes on this issue to its attention. After Steele filed motions with sealed documents attached, the petitioners moved for access to the documents. The district court denied the motion without conducting an in camera review and without following all of the In re Charlotte Observer procedures.
Once Steele began filing pretrial motions with sealed documents attached, the district court could not order that those
*272
documents remain under seal without reviewing them and complying with the procedures specified in
In re Charlotte Observer. Cf. Rushford v. The New Yorker Magazine,
We recognize that the Steele trial is now under way, and this prompts us to make two points. First, the need for review of sealed documents is moot to the extent they have been disclosed during trial. Second, we do not intend for this order to disrupt the trial. We are confident that the district court will attend to our directions as expeditiously as it can, giving all necessary attention to the conduct of the trial.
Because we are confident that the district court will provide the relief outlined in this order, we believe it unnecessary to issue a writ.
ENTERED at the direction of Judge Michael with the concurrences of Judge Ervin and Judge King.
