Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge KAVANAUGH.
Jaron Brice was a pimp who prostituted under-age girls, among others. He was convicted of various federal sexual abuse crimes, and he was sentenced to 25 years in prison. At his sentencing hearing, the District Court referred to sealed material witness proceedings concerning two victims of Brice’s activities. After sentencing, Brice asked the District Court to unseal the records of those two material witness proceedings. The District Court denied the request. Brice appeals that denial, claiming that the First Amendment guarantees a right of access to material witness proceedings.
See Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia,
I
Jaron Brice was convicted of child sex trafficking, transporting a minor for prostitution, transporting an adult for prostitution, first-degree child sexual abuse, and pandering. As the District Court described it, Brice “preyed on very young girls at very difficult times in their lives and used them for his own purposes, used them, abused them, in really terrible, terrible ways.” Tr. of Sent. Hr’g at 32, Sept. 15, 2006. At trial, the Government presented evidence that Brice’s crimes involved at least three juveniles and four adults. The counts on which Brice was convicted involved two victims, one of whom was a minor.
During its investigation of Brice’s crimes, the Government arrested two of
Brice was sentenced to 25 years’ imprisonment. At Brice’s sentencing hearing, the District Court rejected Brice’s counsel’s request for a 10-year sentence, noting that Brice’s misconduct “didn’t happen just once,” but rather that “six or seven” young women were involved, which “wasn’t a small number.” Tr. of Sent. Hr’g at 19, June 19, 2009. Brice’s counsel objected that Brice was convicted for acts involving two victims, only one of whom was under age. Id. at 41. In response to that objection, the District Court stated: “For purposes of sentencing and the seriousness of the offense there were girls, I know there were girls. I spoke to some of the girls whom we held as material witnesses before trial.” Id.
Brice later moved to unseal the material witness proceedings regarding his victims. Brice asked for full unsealing of each case file, or, “[i]n the alternative, ... limited unsealing of the miscellaneous case so that the defense may review the court file and order the preparation of any transcripts necessary to Mr. Brice’s appeal.” Brice stated that he would agree to “whatever reasonable conditions the Court deems appropriate, including the entry of an appropriate protective order governing the use of the information contained in the miscellaneous case file.”
Applying the
Washington Post
First Amendment standard governing access to judicial proceedings, the District Court denied Brice’s motions.
See Washington Post v. Robinson,
II
Brice argues that sealing the records of the material witness proceedings violated the public’s First Amendment right of access to judicial proceedings.
The public possesses a qualified First Amendment right of access to judicial proceedings where (i) there is an “unbroken, uncontradicted history” of openness, and (ii) public access plays a significant positive role in the functioning of the proceeding.
Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia,
Applying the
Richmond Newspapers
test, the Supreme Court has found that the public has a right of access to criminal trials, voir dire proceedings, and preliminary hearings.
Richmond Newspapers,
Following the Supreme Court’s lead, this Court has applied the
Richmond Newspapers
test and found a First Amendment right of access to completed plea agreements, but no right of access to “unconsummated” plea agreements.
Washington Post v. Robinson,
Neither this Court nor any other court of appeals has considered whether the First Amendment right of access to judicial proceedings extends to material witness proceedings. We need not decide that question here. We assume arguendo that the First Amendment affords the public a right of access to material witness proceedings. Even so, that right does not entitle Brice to the records of the material witness proceedings in this case.
Where there is a First Amendment right of access to a judicial proceeding, the “presumption [of access] can be overridden only if (1) closure serves a compelling interest; (2) there is a substantial probability that, in the absence of closure, this compelling interest would be harmed; and (3) there are no alternatives to closure that would adequately protect the compelling interest.”
Washington Post,
Here, as to both victims, the District Court concluded that all three prongs of the
Washington Post
test were satisfied and justified sealing the material witness proceedings and records. The District Court found a compelling interest in closing the proceedings — namely, the interest in “not exposing intimate medical and other facts about these then-juveniles to all and sundry.”
United States v. Brice,
Nos. 05-405
&
05-406, slip ops. at 3 (D.D.C. Aug. 6, 2010) (orders denying motions to unseal);
see also Press-Enterprise I,
Brice contends that the District Court should have redacted sensitive information from the documents as an alternative to closure. But the District Court made an explicit finding that no alternative to closure would suffice to protect the sensitive and intensely personal information at issue here.
Brice,
Nos. 05-405 & 05-406, slip ops. at 4 (orders denying motions to unseal). To support that conclusion, the District Court explained that the proceedings contained “substantial amounts of material of an especially personal and private nature relating to the medical, educational, and mental health progress of both minors.”
Id.
at 2. The court added: “The material witness proceedings contain intensely private and painful information about both girls’ medical and mental health issues----”
Id.
at 4. Moreover, Brice knew the actual names of the victims referred to only by initials in the District
Brice also separately contends that the records could have been unsealed only for his counsel and not for the public at large. But the First Amendment right of access he asserts is a right of access for the public. Under the asserted First Amendment right of access, there is no precedent for disclosing material only to a defense counsel.
In sum, the District Court appropriately applied the Washington Post test in denying Brice access to the material witness proceedings. 2
Ill
Brice also advances statutory, Sixth Amendment, and common law arguments in his effort to open the records of the material witness proceedings. None is remotely persuasive.
Brice raises a statutory argument under 18 U.S.C. § 3509(d). 3 By its terms, however, § 3509(d) is not an affirmative disclosure statute but rather forbids disclosure of sensitive information. The statute therefore does not afford a right of access to these proceedings. Not surprisingly given the statutory text, Brice cites no precedent that actually supports his § 3509(d) argument. In light of the text and precedent, we reject Brice’s § 3509 contention.
Brice raises a Sixth Amendment issue, but he failed to raise that argument in the District Court. We therefore review that contention only for plain error. Fed.R.Crim.P. 52(b);
United States v. Olano,
* * *
We affirm the orders of the District Court.
So ordered.
Notes
. One was the minor victim of the crimes for which Brice was convicted.
. This Court has not indicated the proper standard for appellate review of a district court's application of the Washington Post standard. We need not decide that question here because even applying a de novo standard, we affirm the District Court's decision.
. 18 U.S.C. § 3509(d) provides, in relevant part:
(2) Filing under seal. — All papers to be filed in court that disclose the name of or any other information concerning a child shall be filed under seal without necessity of obtaining a court order. The person who makes the filing shall submit to the clerk of the court—
(A) the complete paper to be kept under seal; and
(B) the paper with the portions of it that disclose the name of or other information concerning a child redacted, to be placed in the public record.
(4) Disclosure of information. — This subsection does not prohibit disclosure of the name of or other information concerning a child to the defendant, the attorney for the defendant, a multidisciplinary child abuse team, a guardian ad litem, or an adult attendant, or to anyone to whom, in the opinion of the court, disclosure is necessary to the welfare and well-being of the child.
