Hunt аppeals from the district court’s denial of his motions for a temporary restraining order and preliminary injunction. Hunt unsuccessfully sought to prevent National Broadcasting Company (NBC) from broadcasting a “docudrama” entitled “Billionaire Boys Club,” which was produced by I.T.C. Productions, Inc. (ITC). The district court had jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1441. We have jurisdiction over Hunt’s timely appeal pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). We affirm.
I
On October 28, 1987, Hunt filed a comрlaint in Los Angeles County Superior Court requesting a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction against NBC’s scheduled broadcast of “Billionaire Boys Club” on November 8 and 9, 1987. At that time, Hunt already had been convicted in Los Angeles for the murder of Ronald Levin, and was awaiting trial in San Mateo County for his alleged role in the murder of Hedayat Eslaminia. Following NBC and ITC’s removal of the case, the district court denied Hunt’s motions, and “Billionaire Boys Club” was aired on November 8 and 9, 1987.
Hunt contended that the broadcast of this docudrama would infringe his sixth amendment right to a fair trial. The docu *291 drama portrays Hunt planning and committing the Eslaminia murder for which he will be tried, and establishes Hunt’s motive. Hunt’s real name is used, although Eslami-nia’s is not. The docudrama depicts Hunt’s involvement with an enterprise and social group called the “Billionaire Boys Club,” and portrаys Hunt’s personality, activities, and business affairs in ways that further connect him to this murder. Hunt argued that airing this film would severely prejudice his right to a fair trial before unbiased jurors for his alleged role in the Eslaminia murder. In addition, Hunt’s conviction in Los Angeles County for the Levin murder was, and still is, on appeal. Should that conviction be reversed, Hunt argued, the broadcast would have a similar effect on any retrial. The docudrama pоrtrays Hunt’s social and business dealings with Levin (whose real name is used), establishes Hunt’s criminal motive, and depicts Hunt planning and committing Levin’s murder. Hunt is shown bragging to friends about the deed, which he calls a “perfect crime.” The docudrama features a trial in which Hunt is prosecuted for Levin’s murder. After hearing witness after witness testify against Hunt, the jury finds him guilty of first degree murder.
Hunt sought to enjoin this and any future broadcast of “Billionaire Boys Club,” as well as distribution of the docudrama, until his pending criminal cases are final.
II
Because the district court denied Hunt’s motions, NBC aired “Billionaire Boys Club” as scheduled. We first address the threshold question whether this appeal should be dismissed as moot.
Article III, section 2 of the Constitution extends the judicial power of the federal courts to actual cases or controversies. “The Court has recognized, however, that jurisdiction is not nеcessarily defeated simply because the order attacked has expired, if the underlying dispute between the parties is one ‘capable of repetition, yet evading review.’ ”
Nebraska Press Association v. Stuart,
Nebraska Press
involved an order restraining the media from broadcasting certain informаtion regarding a murder case.
Here, as in Nebraska Press, once Hunt faces trial for the San Mateo murder case, or should his Los Angeles murder conviction be overturned and a new trial occur, a resurgence of public interest in Hunt and the “Billionaire Boys Club” may prompt NBC to air the docudrama again. NBC has acknowledged that it might do so, and would object to any restriction on its discretion to rebroadcast it. Yet in this type of case, an injunction is generally sought, as it was here, shortly before a scheduled broadcast date. The broadcast in question will thus already have occurred or been prevented before effective appellate review can take place.
In
Oregon,
the district court issued an injunction to allocate salmon fishing rights along the Columbia River during the 1982 season.
A similar pattern presents itself here. If NBC decides to broadcast the docudrama before all criminal proceedings against Hunt are finalized, there will be insufficient time before the broadcast for plenary, considered appellate review. Yet the same dispute between Hunt and NBC may recur, and Hunt will claim the same harm.
NBC and ITC have failed to meet the heavy burden required by the Supreme Court to demоnstrate that this action is moot.
County of Los Angeles v. Davis,
Ill
Hunt moved for both a temporary restraining order and a preliminary injunction. Both motions were dеnied. We cannot tell whether he appeals from denial of both motions, or only the preliminary injunction. Since the denial of a temporary restraining order is not generally appeal-able unless it effectively decides the merits of the case,
Graham v. Teledyne-Continental Motors,
“Review of an order granting or denying a preliminary injunction is much more limited than review оf an order granting or denying a permanent injunction.”
Zepeda v. United States Immigration & Naturalization Service,
The district court may abuse its discretion several ways. First, the court abuses its discretion if it did not apply the correct legal standard governing the issuance of preliminary injunctions, or if it misapprehended the underlying substantive law.
Zepeda,
In reviewing the district judge’s application of a preliminary test to the substantive legal area and the facts before him, we will not reverse the district court’s order simply because we would have reached a different result. To determine whether there has been an abuse of discretion, we “must consider whether the decision was based on a consideration of the relevant factors and whether there has been a clear error of judgment.... The [reviewing] court is not empowered to substitute its judgment for that of the [district court].”
Id.
at 725,
quoting Sports Form,
The parties have chosen not to proceed in the district court to determine whether a permanent injunction will be granted. We stress how review of a preliminary injunction order differs from review of a perma
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nent injunction judgment because it is apparent that parties in some cases appeal orders granting оr denying preliminary injunctions to obtain a preview of how the appellate court will rule on the merits. Here, as in
Zepeda,
“we are requested to express an opinion on very important legal questions concerning individual constitutional rights,” but the nonintrusive nature of our review of the preliminary injunction order means that our disposition provides little guidance on the underlying merits.
IV
A party seeking a preliminary injunction must demonstrate either a combination of probable success on the merits and the possibility of irreparable injury, or that serious questions are raised and the balance of hardships tips in its favor.
United States v. Odessa Union Warehouse Co-op,
We turn now to the application of our rules governing review of a preliminary injunction and determine whether there was an abuse of discretion. Hunt does not contend that the district court applied an incorrect standard for determining whether a preliminary injunction should issue, nor does he argue that the district court’s decision rested on a clearly erroneous finding of a material fact. Rather, his argument appears to be that the district court misapprehended and misapplied the law.
A.
To determine whether an abuse of discretion occurred, we examine whether the district court “misapprehended the law with respect to the underlying issues in litigation.”
Zepeda,
In
Nebraska Press,
the Court, while stating that freedom of the press is not an absolute right,
must examine the evidence before the trial judgе when the order was entered to determine (a) the nature and extent of pretrial news coverage; (b) whether other measures would be likely to mitigate the effects of unrestrained pretrial publicity; and (c) how effectively a restraining order would operate to prevent the threatened danger. The precise terms of the restraining order are also important. We must then consider whethеr the record supports the entry of a prior restraint on publication, one of the most extraordinary remedies known to our jurisprudence.
Id.
at 562,
In
CBS,
we reversed a district court’s temporary restraining order (TRO) prohibiting the television network from “disseminating and/or broadcasting any portion of any and all government surveillance tapes generated in the investigation and prosecution” of John DeLorean.
We held that the record did not demonstrate publicity so likely to prejudice the entire community that twelve unbiased jurors could not be found. Id. at 1180. Elaborating on the Nebraska Press test, we explained that to assess the prejudicial effect of pretrial publicity, courts “must look not simply to [рublicity’s] effect on individual viewers but to its capacity to inflame and prejudice the entire community.” Id. While acknowledging the magnitude of publicity surrounding DeLorean, we observed that even in cases as heavily publicized as Watergate and Abscam, “many, if not most, potential jurors are untainted by press coverage.” Id. at 1179-80. We also explained that two relevant factors in evaluating the likely impact of pretrial publicity upon a community are whether the subject matter of the case is lurid or highly inflammatory, and whether the community itself is small and rural, or large, populous, metropolitan and heterogeneous. Id. at 1181-82. Finally, we rejected the district judge’s dismissal of voir dire as an effective alternative; we stressed the availability of voir dire, emphatic and clear instructions, and other alternatives to prior restraint. Id. at 1182.
Goldblum
involved a last minute effort to enjoin NBC from broadcasting a television docudrama called the “Billion Dollar Bubble” depicting securities and insurance fraud.
We granted mandamus relief and reversed the contempt order. We reviewed the order as if it were itself a prior restraint, since its sole purpose was to aid the court in determining whether to enjoin the broadcast. Id. at 906-07. Such a prior restraint was “presumptively unconstitutional.” Id. at 906. We found no basis in fact or law for Goldblum’s theories that without prior restraint the docudrama would prejudice his consideration for parole or a wholly speculative future criminal prosecution. Id. at 906-07.
In the case beforе us, Hunt initially questioned whether NBC’s docudrama should receive the same degree of first amendment protection from prior restraint as news coverage receives under
Nebraska Press.
Hunt characterized the docudrama as “not a news story, but ... a drama produced for profit based upon, but not limited to, documentary facts.” NBC and ITC characterize it as a “fact based drama.” The Supreme Court has held that motion pictures enjoy first amendment protection even though they are designed to
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entertain, and are produced and exhibited for private profit.
Joseph Burstyn, Inc. v. Wilson,
We assumed in
Goldblum,
without discussion, that the docudrama constituted speech protected by
Nebraska Press
from prior restraint.
At oral argument, however, Hunt conceded that Goldblum required application of the prior restraint standard of Nebraska Press to the NBC docudrama here. For purposes of this appeal, therefore, we assume without deciding that the standard articulated in Nebraska Press applies to this docudrama.
Nebraska Press, CBS,
and
Goldblum
clearly supply the relevant body of law for Hunt’s action. Under the circumstances of this case, we cannot say that “the district court misapрrehended the law in its preliminary assessment of the merits.”
Caribbean Marine,
B.
Hunt next contends that the district court applied the preliminary injunction standard “in a manner that results in an abuse of discretion.”
Zepeda,
Hunt has not made this difficult showing. As to the Eslaminia charge, the jury pool in San Mateo County, as of October 27, 1987, exceeded 530,000, a number far exceeding the total population — 80,000—in the relevant venues in
Nebraska Press. Id.
at 563 n. 7,
Hunt has not demonstrated that this broadcast would inflame and prejudice the entire San Mateo County community.
See CBS,
Similarly, should Hunt secure a retrial in the Levin case, it would occur in Los Ange-les. There has been no showing that twelve unbiased jurors could not be found there.
See id.; see also People v. Manson,
The Court in
Nebraska Press
stressed the existence of alternatives to prior restraint. Hunt has not met the burden of demonstrating why measures available to the trial court such as voir dire, jury instructions, delay, change of venue or jury sequestration would not suffice to protect
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his rights.
Nor has Hunt demonstrated that the proposed prior restraint would effectively protect his rights.
Nebraska Press,
We conclude, therefore, that the denial of the preliminary injunction “was based on a consideration of the relevant factors” and there has been demonstrated no “clear error оf judgment.”
Zepeda,
V
NBC urges us to adopt the position expressed in Judge Goodwin’s concurrence in
CBS.
Judge Goodwin suggested that there is no conflict between the sixth amendment right to a fair trial and the first amendment right to publish information, because both constitutional guarantees are limitations upon government, not upon citizens.
CBS,
We need not determine the precedential value of the proposition stated in Judge Goodwin’s concurrence in
CBS.
All three judges on the panel concurred fully in the opinion written by Judge Norris, which decided the case as described above.
AFFIRMED.
