Theodore KAMASINSKI, on behalf of Himself and Others,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
JUDICIAL REVIEW COUNCIL, State of Connecticut; John D.
Labelle, Executive Director; William S. Bromson, Chairman;
Ethel S. Sorokin, Member; Eugene C. Baten, Member;
Sarfield G. Ford, Hon., Member; Howard J. Moraghan,
Hon., Member; James M. Higgins, Hon., Member; John
Dоnnelly, Dr., Member; Michael J. Daly, Member; Rebecca S.
Breed, Member; Richard C. Lee, Member; Daniel J. Mahaney,
Member, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 420, Docket 94-7276.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Submitted Sept. 22, 1994.
Decided Dec. 29, 1994.
Theodore Kamasinski, pro se.
Carolyn K. Querijero, Asst. Atty. Gen., Hartford, CT (Richard Blumenthal, Atty. Gen., Hartford, CT, of counsel), for defendants-appellees.
Before: VAN GRAAFEILAND, MINER, and McLAUGHLIN, Circuit Judges.
MINER, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff-appellant Theodore Kamasinski appeals from a judgment entered on January 26, 1994 in the United States District Court for the District of Connectiсut (Cabranes, then-Chief Judge),* dismissing his complaint. In his complaint, Kamasinski challenged the confidentiality provisions of Conn.Gen.Stat. Sec. 51-51l, which relate to proceedings before the Connecticut Judicial Review Council ("JRC"), on First Amendment grounds.
BACKGROUND
The State of Connecticut, like numerous other states, has established a Judicial Review Counсil ("JRC") for the purpose of investigating and disposing of complaints lodged against its judicial officers. The proceedings of Connecticut's JRC have two distinct phases. The first is a confidential preliminary investigation in which the JRC determines whether there is probable cause that judicial misconduct has occurred. Conn.Gen.Stat. Sec. 51-51l (a). Thе second phase of the JRC's proceedings begins when the JRC determines that there is probable cause to believe that judicial misconduct, as described in Conn.Gen.Stat. Sec. 51-51i, has occurred. Following such a finding, the JRC must conduct an open hearing, and all proceedings are to be conducted on the record. Id. Sec. 51-51l (c). No later than fifteen days following the close of that hearing, the JRC must publish its findings and a memorandum stating the reasons therefor. Id. The JRC may publicly censure a judge, suspend a judge for a period not exceeding one year, or refer a complaint with a recommendation for other disposition to the Connecticut Supreme Court or the Governor. Id. Sec. 51-51n. Decisions of the JRC may be appealed to the Connecticut Supreme Court by an aggrieved judge. Id. Sec. 51-51r.
Kamasinski began his challenge to the confidentiality provisions of the laws governing the JRC in February of 1991. At that time, Kamasinski challenged the then-existing Conn.Gen.Stat. Sec. 51-51l in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut, arguing that the confidentiality provisions of the statute violated the First Amendment. See Kamasinski v. Judicial Review Council,
In deciding whether these provisions violated the First Amendment, the district court first noted that the restrictions were content-based and therefore were required to be " 'necessary to serve a compelling state interest and ... narrowly drawn to achieve that end.' " Id. at 1090 (quoting Boos v. Barry,
The district court reached a different conclusion, however, with regard to the state's interest in keeping confidential the substance of an individual's complaint or testimony. Such information, the court noted, could just as well be disseminated to the mediа by the individual as put into a complaint before the JRC. Id. at 1094. Furthermore, the court noted, because the JRC has the power to subpoena witnesses, it could silence a potential witness simply by exercising that power. Id. The court therefore held that prohibiting the disclosure of an individual's own testimony was unconstitutional. Id.
In the wake of Kamasinski I, the State of Connecticut amended section 51- 51l to provide as follows:
Any investigation to determine whether or not there is probable cause that [misconduct] has occurred shall be confidential and any individual called by the council for the purpose of providing information shall not disclose his knowledge of such invеstigation to a third party prior to the decision of the council on whether probable cause exists, unless the respondent requests that such investigation and disclosure be open, provided information known or obtained independently of any such investigation shall not be confidential (amendments emphasized).
Despite the modification of the statute, Kamasinski informed the district court in December of 1992 that he wished to continue his lawsuit. He claimed that the statute, even as amended, violated the First Amendment. The defendants then moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground that plaintiff's claim was moot, because the plaintiff no longer had a complaint pending before the JRC. The district court granted this motion, but when the plaintiff filed a new complaint with the JRC, the district court agreed to reconsider its dismissal of the action. Finally reaching the merits, the court dismissed Kamasinski's action on the ground that section 51-51l, as amended, was "sufficiently narrowly tailored--in both duration and scope--to survive [Kamasinski's] constitutional challenge." Kamasinski v. Judicial Review Council,
DISCUSSION
1. First Amendment Test
As noted above, the district court concluded that the restrictions at issue are content-based, and therefore that the challenged regulations must be necessary to serve a compelling state interest and bе narrowly drawn to serve that end. We agree that the restrictions here are content-based, and that strict scrutiny is the correct standard. See Baugh v. Judicial Inquiry and Review Comm'n,
2. State Interests
Kamasinski first argues that under Landmark Communications, Inc. v. Virginia,
The Landmark Court listed four state interests served by confidentiality in the early period of the investigation: (1) encouraging the filing of complaints; (2) protecting judges from unwarranted complaints; (3) maintaining confidence in the judiciary by avoiding premature announcement of groundless complaints; and (4) facilitating the work of the commission by giving it flexibility to accomplish its mission through voluntary retirement or resignation of offending judges. Id. at 835-37,
As noted above, the district court in Kamasinski I supplemented the interests identified in Landmark with the state's interests in attracting qualified judges, increasing assistance with investigations, procuring complete and truthful testimony, insuring the independence of the state's judiciary, and increasing outsiders' ability to monitor the judiciary. Furthermore, it is instructive that Congress has concluded that confidentiality of inquiries into federal judicial misconduct is of great value. See 28 U.S.C. Sec. 372(c)(14) (all papers, documents and records of investigations into judicial misconduct are confidential). The state's interest in the quality of its judiciary, we conclude, is аn interest of the highest order.
3. Categories of Information
The cases analyzing the confidentiality of state investigations indicate that information that individuals may wish to disclose falls into three categories. First, there is the substance of an individual's complaint or testimony, i.e., an individual's own observations and speculations regarding judicial misconduct. Second, there is the complainant's disclosure of the fact that a complaint was filed, or the witness's disclosure of the fact that testimony was given. The third category is information that an individual learns by interacting with the JRC, such as information gained by hearing the testimony of other witnesses or comments made by members of the JRC. Each category involves differing First Amendment interests, and each will be discussed separately.
Whether the state may prohibit the disclosure of the substance of an individual's complaint or testimony merits little discussion. Penalizing an individual for publicly disclosing complaints about the conduct of a government official strikes at the heart of the First Amendment, see Mills v. Alabama,
A different question is presented by the second category of information--the fact that a complaint has been filed or that testimony has been given. The distinction between information that the individual obtains independently, and the fact that testimony has been given to the investigatory body was noted in Justice Scalia's concurrence in Butterworth v. Smith,
The Kamasinski I court held that Connecticut could constitutionally prohibit the disclosure of the fact of filing, placing it at odds with the district court that decided Doe v. State of Fla. Judicial Qualifications Comm'n,
First, the Doe сourt discounted the "bully pulpit" effect, stating that the danger that publication of the filing of a complaint will result in an overvaluation of its merits is "largely illusory." Id. at 1527-28. Distinct from a fear that the public will overvalue the complaint, however, is the fear that, armed with the ability to make the fact of a complaint public, complainants will еngage in a campaign of harassment. This may result in influences that lead to the loss of judicial independence as well as an overburdening of the JRC with frivolous complaints. The Doe court also discounted the value of confidentiality in facilitating the investigative process, and did not consider that a "common result of publication will be that witnesses otherwise willing to speak candidly will decline to do so, in the knowledge that the media and others will pursue them to inquire whether they have in fact testified." Kamasinski I,
Having concluded that the First Amendment permits Connecticut to prohibit a complainant's disclosure of the fact that he has filed a complaint, or a witness's disclosure of the fact that he has testified, we turn to the question whether Connecticut may, without violating the First Amendment, prohibit the disclosure of information gained through interaction with the JRC. We conclude that it may. If individuals were allowed to disclose comments made by JRC members, or other information gained through their interaction with the JRC, the Connecticut interests referred to above would not be served, as the proceedings of the JRC would effectively be made open.
The Third Circuit addressed this issue in First Amendment Coalition,
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
Judge Cabranes is now a member of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals
