ORDER GRANTING PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND DENYING DEFENDANTS’ MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
This case presents a facial challenge to a provision of the California Public Records Act, California Government Code § 6254, as that provision was amended, effective July 1, 1996, pursuant to Senate Bill 1059. The Court, having reviewed the moving and opposing papers and the oral arguments of counsel hereby GRANTS plaintiffs motion for summary judgment and DENIES defendants’ motions for summary judgment.
I. Background
Prior to July 1, 1996, the California Public Records Act provided that “state and local law enforcement agencies shall make public ... [t]he full name, current address, and occupation of every individual arrested by the agency[.]” Cal.Gov.Code § 6254. This made arrestee addresses available to anyone for any purpose. Cal.Gov.Code § 6254(f) was amended, effective July 1, 1996, to prohibit the release of arrestee addresses only to people who intend to use those addresses for commercial purposes. Cal.Gov.Code § 6254(f)(3) provides that state and local law enforcement agencies shall make public:
the current address of every individual arrested by the agency and the current address of the victim of a crime, where the requester declares under penalties of perjury that the request is made for a scholarly, journalistic, political, or governmental purpose, or that the request is made for investigation purposes by a licensed private investigator_ Address information obtained pursuant to this paragraph shall -not be used directly or indirectly to sell a product or service to any individual or group of individuals, and the requester shall execute a declaration to that effect under penalty of perjury.
*824 Plaintiff United Reporting Publishing Corp. (“United Reporting”) is a private publishing service that has been providing, under the former version of this statute, the names and addresses of recently arrested individuals to its clients. These clients include attorneys, insurance companies, drug and alcohol counselors, religious counselors, driving schools, and others. The defendants remaining in this action are various state and local law enforcement agencies.
Plaintiffs complaint seeks declaratory judgment and injunctive relief pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to hold the amendment to section 6264 unconstitutional under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution (first cause of action), and unconstitutional under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution (second, third, and fourth causes of action).
Plaintiff United Reporting and defendants County of San Diego Sheriffs Department, California Highway Patrol, and Los Angeles Police Department have filed cross-motions for summary judgment.
II. Issue
Is the amendment to Cal.Gov.Code § 6254 an unconstitutional limitation on plaintiff’s commercial speech?
II. Discussion
A. Scope of First Amendment Protection
Courts have historically recognized a common law right, but not an absolute right, of access to certain government records, including judicial records.
See Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc.,
Courts have uniformly answered this question in the negative: there is no constitutional right, and specifically no First Amendment right, of access to all governmental records.
Houchins v. KQED, Inc.,
There is no constitutional right to have access to particular government information, or to require openness from the bureaucracy. ... The public’s interest in knowing about its government is protected by the guarantee of a Free Press, but the protection is indirect. The Constitution itself is neither a Freedom of Information Act nor an Official Secrets Act.
The Constitution, in other words, establishes the contest, not its resolution. Congress may provide a resolution, at least in some instances, through carefully drawn legislation. For the rest, we must rely, as so often in our system we must, on the tug and pull of the political forces in American society.
Id.
at 14-15,
The Court concludes that the First Amendment does not provide plaintiff with a blanket constitutional right of access to ar-restee addresses; the state could constitutionally prevent everyone from having access to this information. This does not, however, foreclose plaintiffs claim. As previously outlined, the instant statute is an amendment to the California Public Records Act which makes all arrestee information public, but then limits access only to those who plan to use arrestee addresses in commercial speech. The amended statute states that “[a]ddress information obtained pursuant to this paragraph shall not be used directly or indirectly to sell a product or service to any individual or group of individuáis!.]” Cal.Gov.Code § 6254(f)(3). Functionally, this is a limitation on commercial speech. The government is the only source of this information and by statute is disseminating it to everyone except commercial users. The government cannot denominate this a limitation, on access in order to achieve a limitation on non-preferred speech. This limitation on access constitutes an indirect limitation on commercial speech.
Recently, two circuits held similar statutes limiting the right of access to government arrest information indirectly implicate First Amendment concerns because such statutes indirectly “punish” certain (commercial), but not all, uses of the information
2
.
Lanphere & Urbaniak v. Colorado,
Although criminal justice records themselves do not constitute speech, the Colorado Legislature has drawn a regulatory line based on the speech use of such records. [The challenged statute] disallows the release of records to those wishing to use them for commercial speech, while allowing the release of the same records to those having a noncommercial purpose. Because commercial speech is protected under the First Amendment (though it is accorded lesser protection than ‘core’ First Amendment speech), and because such speech includes direct mail solicitation, what we have in the end is a content-based restriction on protected speech.
The Court concludes that the amended Cal.Gov.Code § 6254(f) is a content-based indirect limitation on commercial speech which implicates the First Amendment.
B. Central Hudson Commercial Speech Test
Since First Amendment commercial speech interests are implicated by the amended Cal.Gov.Code § 6254, the statute must be subjected to the four part test set out in
Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corp. v. Public Service Comm’n of New York,
At the outset, we must determine whether the expression is protected by the First Amendment. For commercial speech to come within that provision’, it at least must concern lawful activity and not be misleading. [2] Next, we ask whether the asserted governmental interest is substantial. [3] If both inquiries yield positive answers, we must determine whether the regulation directly advances the governmental interest asserted, and [4] whether it is not more extensive than is necessary to serve that interest.
Id.
at 566,
1. Is Plaintiffs Commercial Speech Activity Lawful?
There is no contention that Plaintiffs proposed use of this information is misleading or is not'a lawful activity.
2. Are the Governmental Interests Substantial?
The defendants advance two substantial government interests which they claim support this statute. The legislative history quotes Senator Peace as follows:
From a law enforcement perspective, the processing of the requests puts a tremendous strain on already scarcely allocated time and resources. F[rom] a consumer perspective, this is an invasion of privacy. While these records are justifiably public in many ways, the unsolicited direct mail advertisements are unwarranted.
Legislative History (June 4, 1996 letter), p. 4. Both the
Speer
and
Lanphere
courts found that the governmental interest in protecting the privacy of arrestees was substantial.
Speer,
3. Whether the Restriction Directly and Materially Advances the Governmental Interests
To establish that the restriction on commercial speech advances the above-identified government interests in a direct and material way, the government body must demonstrate that the harms are real and that the restrictions will, in fact, alleviate those harms to a material degree.
Florida Bar,
— U.S. at-,
First, it is doubtful that this amended statute will save defendants any money at all. The costs of gathering and preparing arres-tee information will still be incurred under this statute because law enforcement agencies will still have to compile the identical arrestee data for journalists, government employees and other non-commercial users of the information. The additional costs of making copies for commercial users would be marginal, especially when they can be charged all of the costs of duplication. Moreover, under this statute the law enforcement agencies still have to compile and copy all arrestee information for commercial users except for addresses. The simple omission of addresses will not minimize law enforcement agency expenses. 5
Second, the amended statute also fails to advance the state’s interest in protecting the privacy and tranquility of its residents. In its most recent pronouncement on commercial speech, the Supreme Court upheld a statute prohibiting lawyers from sending direct mail solicitations to accident victims within 30 days of the accident.
Florida Bar,
— U.S. at -,
The Supreme Court’s holding in
Florida Bar
does not control the outcome in this case for two reasons. First, the ban at issue in
Florida Bar
only lasted for 30 days after the accident, whereas the ban on publication of arrestee addresses in section 6254(f)(3) is permanent. Permanent bans on attorney direct mail solicitation have been invalidated.
Zauderer v. Office of Disciplinary Counsel of Supreme Court of Ohio,
The two courts that dealt with statutes substantially similar to Cal.Gov.Code § 6254(f) split on whether the statutes mate *828 rially advanced the state’s interest in protecting the privacy of its citizens. In Lanphere, the Tenth Circuit held that
[t]he state’s interest in protecting privacy is directly advanced when the State no longer allows access to names and addresses of those charged with misdemeanor traffic violations and DUI. Further, refusing access to such information reasonably directly advances the State’s interest in lessening the danger of overreaching by solicitors where potential solicitation recipients may be particularly vulnerable.
This Court believes that the narrow and selective manner in which the Georgia statute attempts to further the asserted interest of protecting people’s privacy betrays the state’s true focus and its inability to serve the state’s asserted interest. The State does not restrict all (or probably even most) possible invasions of a person’s privacy. Anyone may access the records in question so long as they do not do so with an eye towards using the information for certain types of commercial solicitations. The media may peruse and report the records, academicians may employ them in their research, statisticians may gather their contents for inclusion in their computations, inventive entrepreneurs may use their contents for the commercial solicitation of individuals neither named nor related to persons named therein, curiosity seekers may browse through them in search of titillation, or personal enemies may even extract information from them for diabolical (yet otherwise lawful) purposes. Only entities intending to use the names and addresses of those mentioned therein to solicit those people or their relatives for commercial purposes are denied access. The restriction’s exceedingly narrow scope betrays it as a statute designed not to protect privacy but, instead, to prevent solicitation practices. And as Shapero teaches, a person’s privacy is not infringed by the solicitation, but by the solicitor’s discovery of the information that leads to the solicitation.
Accordingly, the Court finds that the Georgia statute does not directly advance the state’s asserted interest because it advances that interest hardly at all and because it attempts to protect those named in the records primarily by preventing solicitations rather than by preventing significant access.
The Court agrees with the reasoning of the
Speer
court. It is hard to see how direct mail solicitations invade the privacy of arres-tees. If they don’t like the solicitation, they can simply throw it away.
See Bolger v. Youngs Drug Products Corp.,
Since Cal.Gov.Code § 6254(f)(3) does not directly and materially advance the state’s asserted interests in minimizing costs and protecting the privacy of arrestees, it fails the third prong of the Central Hudson test.
4. Whether the Regulation is Narrowly Drawn
The final prong of the analysis is whether the statute is narrowly drawn. This test requires a ‘reasonable fit’ between the legislature’s ends and the means chosen to accomplish those ends.
Florida Bar,
— U.S. at-,
Whether there is a reasonable fit between the privacy rationale and prohibiting access to commercial users of the information collapses into the same analysis as whether the statute directly and materially advances the state interest. Since the prohibition on commercial use of the information does not materially advance the state’s interest in protecting the privacy of its citizens, there is not a reasonable fit between the legislature’s means and ends.
Since Cal.Gov.Code § 6254(f)(3) is more extensive than necessary to accomplish its asserted purpose, it also fails the fourth prong of the Central Hudson test.
The Court therefore- finds Cal.Gov.Code § 6254(f)(3) to be an unconstitutional limitation on commercial speech.
C. Plaintiff’s other causes of action
Since the Court finds Cal.Gov.Code § 6254(f)(3) unconstitutional as an impermissible limitation on commercial speech, the Court does not reach plaintiffs other causes of action.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the Court finds that • Cal.Gov.Code § 6254(f)(3). is an impermissible restriction on commercial speech which violates the First Amendment. For this reason, the Court hereby GRANTS plaintiffs motion for summary judgment and DENIES defendants’ motions for summary judgment.
Plaintiff shall lodge a proposed judgment of declaratory and injunctive relief within twenty days with counsel and the Court. Defendants shall have ten days to object to the form of the judgment, whereupon it shall stand submitted for Court revision and signature.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
.Two exceptions have been crafted to the general rule that there is no First Amendment right of access to government information. First, the Supreme Court has found a constitutional right of public access
to criminal trials
and court proceedings.
See, e.g., Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia,
Second, courts have found a First Amendment right of access to judicial records.
See United States v. Hickey,
Neither of these exceptions to the general
Houchins
rule assists plaintiff. Both of these exceptions are premised on the long tradition of open trials dating back to England and the colonial United States. The Third Circuit, in
Capital Cities Media, Inc. v. Chester,
. There appears to be no Ninth Circuit authority on this issue.
. The
Speer
decision of the District Court is after remand from the Eleventh Circuit which vacated a contrary first decision of the District Court. In vacating and remanding the District Court’s first decision, the Eleventh Circuit stated "[a] mere reading of this statute indicates that it probably impinges upon Speer’s commercial speech.”
Speer v. Miller,
. In
Lanphere,
the state statute in question required the government custodian to "deny any person access to records of official actions and criminal justice records unless such person signs a statement which affirms that such records shall not be used for the direct solicitation of business for pecuniary gain.”
. If this were the state’s real concern, they could appropriately charge commercial users for the copies and use the additional revenue to cover the marginal cost increase, if any. Plaintiff has expressed its willingness to pay any additional costs incurred because of its information requests.
. In
Lanphere,
the state statute in question required the government custodian to "deny any person access to records of official actions and criminal justice records unless such person signs a statement which affirms that such records shall not be used for the direct solicitation of business for pecuniary gain.”
. The Court notes that it was state and local law enforcement agencies and district attorneys' offices which proposed this amendment to § 6254.
