435 A.2d 369 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1981
The petitioner publishes a daily newspaper with a large circulation throughout most of the state and it has appealed pursuant to General Statutes
The closure order was made after a hearing in which the attorney for the petitioner was allowed to participate. Testimony was presented concerning the extent of publicity given to the crimes charged against the defendants, the circulation figures and distribution areas of newspapers published in Waterbury, New Haven and Hartford, including the petitioner's newspaper and the broadcast coverage of three television stations and one radio station. All of these news media had given substantial publicity to the cases, and their representatives testified also to *707 their intentions of having reporters cover all court proceedings. It is undisputed that the case has received widespread publicity throughout Connecticut, although the extent of publicity has been far less in the Stamford and New London areas than in communities closer to Waterbury. The nature of the charges, involving multiple killings and the claimed applicability of the death penalty, would account for the exceptional amount of publicity generated and also would indicate the likelihood of similar publicity during future court proceedings.
The same evidence concerning publicity was utilized in connection with a motion of the defendants for a change of venue, in which the defendants suggested that the cases be transferred to New London or Stamford where the extent of publicity has not been so great. The court denied this motion, concluding that a fair trial could still be had in Waterbury despite the great publicity about the charges in that area. Practice Book 835.
It appears that in considering the motions for closure the trial court was attempting to follow our recent decision in State v. Burak,
In this appeal the petitioner does not dispute that the case has received and will continue to receive an exceptionally high level of publicity as a multiple murder case in which the prosecution seeks the death penalty. It claims that extensive publicity does not necessarily mean the defendants will be prejudiced. We agree that it is the prejudicial nature of the publicity and not merely its extent which would support a closure order. See Murphy v. Florida,
In denying the motion for a change of venue, the trial court made several findings in support of its conclusion that a fair trial could be held in Waterbury which the petitioner claims are inconsistent with its findings in granting closure. We can see no such *709 inconsistency. In deciding that the publicity had not been so intense as to preclude a fair trial in Waterbury the court was considering primarily the extent of the publicity which had been generated in the past. In deciding the closure motion the primary concern is the prejudicial nature of future publicity which might be given to matters which may eventually be excluded at a trial. It is entirely reasonable for the court to have concluded that a fair trial was possible in Waterbury but that it would become impossible if the matters sought to be suppressed were widely publicized before trial.
The petitioner also disagrees with the trial court's evaluation of the effectiveness of the various alternatives to closure which were considered by the trial court. The proposal for a change of venue undoubtedly had some merit, but the lesser degree of past publicity about the case in the two areas of the state suggested was a condition which might well change once it was known that the trials would be held in those communities. Extensive voir dire examination, which the court noted to be our practice, is not an absolute guaranty that persons consciously or unconsciously prejudiced by the news media will not be selected as jurors. A defendant in a criminal case ought not to have jury selection confined to people who do not read newspapers or are not otherwise exposed to current events. The alternative mentioned by the court in State v. Burak, supra, of simply referring to the evidence in question without revealing its content was considered but found to be impractical for evidentiary hearings such as these where witnesses could probably not avoid disclosing the matters at issue in the course of their testimony. Another assertion of the petitioner, that the matters which are the subject of the suppression hearings have already been publicized, is not supported by our examination of the record. The judgment of the trial court on *710 these matters carries the weight ordinarily given to the determination of essentially factual issues. We conclude that there was sufficient support for the order of closure entered by the trial court.
There is no error.
In this opinion DALY and BIELUCH, Js., concurred.