The Unabom Trial Media Coalition ("Media"), a group of newspapers and broadcasting companies, petitions for a writ of mandamus challenging the district court's closure of various aspects of the pretrial proceedings in the case of Theodore John Kaczynski, the infamous "Una-bomber." We dismiss the petition as moot.
I
Kaczynski's trial promised to be one of the most publicized and controversial of recent years. Media accordingly wished to have full access to all pretrial matters and proceedings, but the district court withheld certain information until after Kaczynski's guilty plea on January 22, 1998. Media now raises a laundry list of challenges to the court's pretrial orders and rulings, the highlights of which are as follows: The district court ordered that release of the jurors' and their spouses' names, addresses, and places of employment, be withheld until after discharge, and prohibited any photographs, pictures or sketches of the jurors while within the environs of the courthouse. The court also provisionally sealed portions of the government's Fed.R.Evid. 404(b) motion until it was determined whether the highly inflammatory material described therein was admissible. Finally, the court used its inherent powers to order Kaczynski to prepare an amended notice inforniing~ the government of the specifics of his mental status defense. However, the court treated the notice as part of discovery and, therefore, not subject to Fed.R.Crim.P. 12.2(b)'s filing requirements.
Shortly after Kaczynski pled guilty, the district court released the information Media had requested.
II
Though our Article III jurisdiction extends only to actual cases and controversies, the Supreme Court has "recognized .. . that jurisdiction is not necessarily 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 Ass'n v. Stuart,
Post-trial release of previously sealed transcripts does not necessarily render a case moot. See Brooklier,
Here, Media challenges the district court on very different grounds. Media does not dispute that the court afforded it ample opportunity to be heard; nor does it claim that the court failed to make specific factual findings. Instead, Media argues that the court’s findings were insufficient to support the' closure orders. We are thus presented, not with the procedurally deficient closure orders unsupported by specific factual findings of Brooklier and Phoenix Newspapers, but with procedurally sound orders .which were supported by numerous factual findings.
Media has not made either showing. Contrary to Media’s contention that the district court ordered closure based merely on a vague concern that the extensive publicity surrounding Kaczynski would taint the proceedings, the record reveals that the court acted in response to the particular, and highly idiosyncratic, circumstances of this case.
Kaezynski’s impending trial attracted extraordinary attention from the news media, the general public and crackpots nationwide, and managed to stir up “deep passions” unusual even for high-publicity trials. Cf. United States v. Branch,
Considering the totality of the district court’s findings and the peculiar context within which they were made, we are struck by the acutely case-specific nature of the court’s orders. To establish a reasonable expectation that Media will suffer these same injuries in the future, it would have to show that the circumstances of this case are likely to recur. While there will,
Even if the circumstances of this case ■were capable of repetition, the harm suffered by Media is unlikely to evade review. The relevant pretrial proceedings lasted several months, giving Media ample opportunity to seek, and obtain, an expedited appellate ruling before Kaczynski pled guilty in late January 1998. Media’s counsel conceded at oral argument that petitioners could have, but did not, immediately move for expedited review before, this court. Instead, Media, waited several weeks after the district court entered the offending orders to file its petition, in part because they projected the trial to stretch over a four- to six-month period. Their delay ended up consuming valuable time. Petitioners’ attorney acknowledged this at oral argument and indicated that her client will immediately seek expedited review the next time there is a high-profile case like Kaczynski’s. Thus, we cannot say that the orders challenged here were “in [their] duration too short to be fully litigated pri- or to [their] cessation or expiration.” Weinstein,
As we have determined that Media’s petition does not present issues that fall within the exception to mootness for questions that are capable of repetition but will evade review, the petition for a writ of mandamus is DISMISSED.
Notes
. Media does complain that the district court “predetermined” its decision to impanel a partially anonymous jury because it sent notice to potential jurors prior to entering its closure order that their names would not be disclosed to the public before or during trial. Additionally, Media ■demanded access to transcripts of in camera conferences in which the jury anonymity issue was discussed, which Media points to as further evidence that the court prejudged the issue. However, not only was the notice to jurors not binding on the court, it was sent to jurors after the court had already entered its September 5, 1997, order announcing that it was “inclined” to withhold the jurors' information and inviting Media and the public to file objections and participate in a hearing scheduled for later that month. Furthermore, there is no error to ■correct with respect to the transcripts of in camera conferences as the district court released all such transcripts upon Media's request. As Media does not claim that the district court failed to conduct hearings on their objections or make findings in support of closure as required by Brooklier-and Phoenix Newspapers, they have alleged no relevant procedural errors.
. Procedural irregularities, as alleged in Phoenix Newspapers and Brooldier, are inherently less case-specific than the particular factual findings that support closure orders in a particular case. It is therefore far more likely a claim of procedural error will be found to be capable of repetition. We do not read Phoenix Newspapers and Brooklier as holding that closure orders in criminal cases never become moot, no matter how case-specific or idiosyncratic the alleged error happens to be. Any such interpretation would put us into conflict with the Supreme Court’s holding that the capable of repetition yet evading review exception to the mootness doctrine must be read narrowly. See Lyons,
. For example, a prosecutor submitted an affidavit stating that a group of people had approached a potential witness’s house and threatened physical harm to the witness and his family. The Federal Defender stated that his office had received a publicly distributed document listing 18 so-called "Unabom witnesses,” which suggested a game of contacting and scaring the witnesses. Others received disturbing letters and were harassed by the public and media. The court also . noted the intense media attention generated by the case, with various trial participants reporting extensive and unwanted contacts from the press.
