Opinion
Petitioners 1 аre news media that disseminate news locally, regionally and nationally. On August 25, 2000, respondent superior court entered an order (the order) prohibiting Media or anyone from publishing any nontilized 2 images of the defendants in a pending criminal proceeding, regardless of the source from which Media obtained the images. Media’s petition for a writ of mandate seeks to reverse the order. Media argue the order is a prior restraint on free speech invalid under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and article I, section 2 of the California Constitution. Real Party in interest Michael Rose argues a court *869 may prohibit publication of a criminal defendant’s likеness without offending the federal or state Constitution if that prohibition is necessary to protect that defendant’s right to a fair and impartial trial.
I
Background
Several juveniles, including Rose, were charged as adults with numerous crimes arising out of an attack on migrant workers in San Diego County. The attack and resulting criminal charges have been the focus of substantial public interest and extensive coverage by the print and broadcast media. The names, ages and other identifying information of the juveniles have previously been published.
On July 19, 2000, in response to a request to permit coverage of the c'ourt proceedings, the court ordered that the media would be permitted in the courtroom and would be permitted to take photographs and videotapes, subject to the requirement that there be no cameras in the hallways and that the defendants’ faces be tilized in any photograph or videotape obtained in the courtroom. Media do not challenge the propriety of thе July 19, 2000 order. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 980.)
Media obtained photographs of several of the defendants from lawful sources, including school yearbooks and photographs taken outside the courthouse, and published these photographs without tilizing the defendants’ faces. On August 25, 2000, in response to these publications, Rose moved to expand the July 19, 2000 order. Rose argued that because the identity of the defendants was an issue in the case, it was necessary to prohibit Media from publishing photographs or videotapes of the defendants’ faces, regardless of the source of the photograph or videotape, to preserve the integrity of the evidеnce to be used at trial. The court agreed, and on August 25, 2000, enjoined Media from publishing any nontilized images of the defendants regardless of the source of those images. 3 The court denied Media’s request for modification of reconsideration of the order and Media filed this petition for a writ of mandate. We issued an order to shоw cause and held oral argument.
II
Discussion
An order enjoining publication of a photograph of a suspect in a pending court proceeding is classic prior restraint of speech. (Cf.
Smith v.
*870
Daily Mail Publishing Co.
(1979)
The California courts have likewise repeatedly struck down orders enjoining publication of lawfully obtained information concerning pending court proceedings. For example, in
San Bernardino County Dept. of Public Social
*871
Services v. Superior Court (1991)
Similarly, in
KGTV Channel 10 v. Superior Court
(1994)
Rose contends the order is valid because it is a narrowly drawn prophylactic measure necessary to protect his constitutional right to a fair trial.
5
He argues that because the identity of the perpetrators of thе various crimes will be a primary issue at trial, an order prohibiting dissemination of photographs
*872
depicting the defendants’ faces is essential to preserve the integrity of the witnesses’ in-court testimony concerning the identity of the perpetrators. However, there apparently is no relevant authority upholding a prior restrаint the rationale for which is the preservation of the integrity of a witness’s in-court identification.
6
Accordingly, we must test the validity of the order under the generic guidelines articulated in
Nebraska Press Assn. v. Stuart, supra,
Although
Nebraska Press
did not declare that a prior restraint on reporting criminal proceedings is always void, it established that to uphold a prior restraint on reporting a рublic criminal proceeding, the court must examine the nature and extent of pretrial news coverage, whether means less onerous than a prior restraint are available to mitigate the dangers to the countervailing interest posed by the pretrial news publicity, and the effectiveness of prior restraint in preventing the dangers created by the publicity.
(Nebraska Press Assn. v. Stuart, supra,
Our review of the order is dе novo and we independently examine the record to determine the constitutionality of the order under these standards.
7
(L.
A. Teachers Union
v.
L.
A.
City Bd. of Ed.
(1969)
Rose argues, and we agree, that his due process right to a fair trial is a substantial or overriding interest that competes with Media’s free speech rights, and that the order was narrowly tailored.
8
However, we аre unconvinced that the other two necessary prongs are satisfied here. First, although the due process concerns cited by the trial court are “in the abstract, an overriding interest, and ... the First Amendment [would], in an appropriate case, permit [a prior restraint] to protect that interest^ t]he trial court . . . made no finding supporting the proposition that prejudice to that interest was
substantially probable
absent [the prior restraint].”
(NBC Subsidiary (KNBC-TV), Inc.
v.
Superior Court, supra,
Second, and of еqual import, there are less restrictive means of achieving the competing interest. If any defendant believes a witness’s prospective in-court identification has been tainted by suggestive pretrial events, including viewing photographs in the newspapers, he can, by in limine motion or by a timely trial objection, move to excludе the testimony and require the trial court to take evidence out of the presence of the jury to determine whether the proposed in-court identification is admissible as the witness’s independent recollection or inadmissible as tainted by unduly suggestive pretrial events.
(People
v.
Enos
(1973)
Disposition
Let a writ of mandate issue directing the superior court tо vacate its August 25, 2000 order. This opinion is made final immediately as to this court. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 24(d).) Each party is to bear its own costs.
Huffman, Acting P. J., and Nares, J., concurred.
Notes
The petitioners (collectively, Media) are South Coast Newspapers, Inc., publisher of the North County Times; The Copley Press, Inc., publisher of the San Diego Union-Tribune; KNSD 7/39, a television news station owned and оperated by the National Broadcasting Company; and KGTV Channel 10, a television news station owned and operated by the McGraw-Hill Broadcasting Co.
Tilizing the face will obscure the facial features of the individual depicted in the photograph or video.
The order provided, “Previous [July 19] orders remain in full force [and] effeсt. In addition, any images received [through] other sources to be tilized.”
The Nebraska Press court declined to establish a bright-line rule holding such an order is always invalid. However, commentators have suggested that if the egregious facts presented to the Nebraska Press court did not satisfy the criteria articulated by that court for a valid prior restraint, then as a praсtical matter the Nebraska Press decision amounts to a complete bar against prior restraints on reporting criminal proceedings. (Portman, The Defense of Fair Trial From Sheppard to Nebraska Press Association: Benign Neglect to Affirmative Action and Beyond (1976) 29 Stan. L.Rev. 393, 409, fn. 72; Prettyman, Nebraska Press Association v. Stuart: Have We Seen the Last of Prior Restraints on the Reporting of Judicial Proceedings? (1976) 20 St. Louis U. L.J. 654.)
Rose does not claim that the state’s interest in protecting and rehabilitating juveniles, or the criminal defendant’s interest in having a jury untainted by pretrial publicity, constitutes a sufficient state interest to support the order here.
The cases cited by Rose to support his argument are inapposite. For example, Rose cites
Cheyenne K.
v.
Superior Court
(1989)
The trial court here held a hearing but did not make express findings that each of the four elements was present; under
NBC Subsidiary (KNBC-TV), Inc. v. Superior Court, supra,
Specifically, Rose argues that because the identity of the defendants is an issue in the case, published photographs showing the defendants’ faces might be viewed by the prosecution witnesses, and the in-court identifications by those witnesses could be tainted as a result. The order was narrоwly tailored to mitigate that danger. In analogous circumstances, the courts have acknowledged that procedures impacting a witness’s ability to identify a perpetrator, when unnecessarily suggestive and conducive to irreparable mistaken identification, can deprive an accused of the due process right to a fair trial. (See generally
People v. Caruso
(1968)
