Appellants-defendants were charged in an information with a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1382 by the reentry to a military reservation after having been ordered not to do so. The charge was a petty offense under 18 U.S.C. § 1. As permitted by 18 U.S.C. § 3401(b), the defendants elected to be tried in the United States District Court and demanded and received a jury trial. They were found guilty and appeal from the sentences imposed.
Fort Sill is a military reservation in Oklahoma. In June, 1967, defendant Weissman attended a court-martial held there and participated in a demonstration which included “chanting, making noises, and the singing of certain phrases to the disruption of the court.” The commandant received reports of these demonstrations and of the activities of both Weiss- *273 man and Martin. He orderd that they should not reenter Fort Sill. On July 29, 1967, written notice of that order was served on the defendants personally. On July 31 the military authorities, on the basis of statements of the defendants to the press and on the basis of surveillance of defendants suspected that the defendants might reenter the base to attend a court-martial. Cars in which the defendants were riding were stopped at a traffic control point within the reservation because the cars did not have the required permit stickers. The defendants were later identified and arrested.
Defendants say that they were free lance journalists and that the bar order violated the First Amendment guarantee of freedom of the press and the Sixth Amendment right to a public trial. The claim that they were representatives of the press is based on affidavits submitted in support of a motion to dismiss. 1 At the time of their arrest they did not assert a right to enter the reservation because of any representation of the press. We doubt that their belated self-serving declarations entitle them to be heard on the point. In any event the argument is without merit. If it be assumed that a defendant in a court-martial has the right to a public trial, there is grave doubt whether members of the press have standing to invoke that right. 2 Even if they have, they may be ordered to conform to standards of conduct and may be excluded if necessary to maintain orderly proceedings. 3 Weissman participated in an unseemly demonstration at a previous court-martial and Martin solicited people to take part in such demonstrations. The military authorities had the responsibility to forestall such conduct by excluding those responsible therefor. In our opinion no violation of either the First Amendment or Sixth Amendment occurred by barring the defendants from entering the reservation.
The bar order is attacked on the ground that the government showed no valid reason for its promulgation. The argument is that Cafeteria & Restaurant Workers Union v. McElroy,
We do not understand the argument of the defendants as attacking the authority of the commandant to make the order. In the Cafeteria Workers decision the Court recognized that a Post Commander in the exercise of his discretion could exclude from the Post private persons “in the interest of good order and military discipline.” 5 The question then is whether the order was rational.
General Brown, the commanding officer, ordered his staff to investigate the defendants’ activities at Fort Sill. The staff intelligence officer pre *274 pared a report which went up the chain of command to the General. On the basis of the report the General made the bar order. He testified that he did so because he considered the conduct of the defendants “prejudicial to good order and discipline, and the accomplishment of my mission.” In the facts presented the basis for the order appears more clearly than did the basis for the order in the Cafeteria Workers case. We believe that the order was reasonable. Even if we did not so believe, the order was within the discretionary power of the commandant and not reviewable by the courts. 6
While General Brown was on the witness stand, defense counsel made a demand under 18 U.S.C. § 3500 for the production of written reports relevant to his testimony. The court refused to order such production. The argument is that under both § 3500 and the decision in Jeneks v. United States,
Defendants argue that their arrests were illegal. Pursuant to orders the military policemen were stopping all cars at traffic control points to determine whether they bore the required permit stickers. After the defendants were identified as passengers, they were taken into custody. The cars were not searched and no statements were taken. Reliance on Henry v. United States,
A witness for the government testified that the point where the cars were stopped was “exclusively owned by the United States and within the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States.” Under Army Regulations a member of the army may make an arrest for “a misdemeanor amounting to a breach of the peace * * * committed in his presence.” 8 The military police knew of the bar order. When they saw the defendants on the reservation in violation of that order, a misdemeanor was committed in their presence and they had full power to arrest. The fact that the stopping of the ears and the identification of the defendants were not simultaneous *275 does not change the result. The offense occurred when the defendants entered the reservation. In our opinion the arrests were lawful and the testimony of the military police in regard thereto was properly submitted to the jury.
The trial court imposed sentences of six months imprisonment and a $500 fine, the maximum permitted by 18 U.S. C. § 1382. Defendants say that the sentences are unnecessarily severe. When a sentence is within the limit fixed by law, the appellate court will not interfere with the trial court’s exercise of discretion in fixing that sentence. 9
Affirmed.
Notes
. The defendants did not testify at the trial. At a bond-reduction hearing Weiss-man testified that she was a clerk and stenographer and had not worked for four months. Martin said that he was a lay-out designer and did clerical work for a New York firm but had not been employed for two months.
. See In re United Press Associations v. Valente,
. See Sheppard v. Maxwell,
. Id. at
. Id. at
. Harper v. Jones, 10 Cir.,
. In United States v. Morgan,
. Army Regs. 633-1, para. 8, Sept. 13, 1962. This regulation is authorized by 32 C.F.R. § 503.1 and 10 U.S.C. § 3012 (e) and (g).
. Welch v. United States, 10 Cir.,
