UNITED STATES of America, Appellee,
v.
Bruce CUTLER, Defendant-Appellee,
Jerry Capeci, Tom Robbins, Kevin McLaughlin, Selwyn Raab,
Arnold Lubasch, Peter Bowles, Kevin McCoy, Anthony
DeStefano, CBS Inc., James Nolan, Karen
Phillips and Television
Station WNYW, Appellants.
Nos. 2071-2082, Docket 93-6160, 93-6166, 93-6168, 93-6170,
93-6172, 93-6174, 93-6176, 93-6178, 93-6180,
93-6182, 93-6184, 93-6186.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued July 16, 1993.
Decided Sept. 23, 1993.
John J. Gallagher, Sp. Prosecutor, New York City (Kelly D. Talcott, Corbin Silverman & Sanseverino, New York City, of counsel), for appellee.
Frederick P. Hafetz, New York City (Susan R. Necheles, Goldman & Hafetz, Robert F. Katzberg, Kaplan & Katzberg, New York City, of counsel), for defendant-appellee.
R. Bruce Rich, New York City (Eve B. Burton, Weil, Gotshal & Manges, New York City, of counsel), for appellants Capeci and Robbins.
Anthony M. Bongiorno, New York City (Douglas P. Jacobs, New York City, of counsel), for appellant CBS Inc.
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher, New York City (Robert D. Sack, Edward T. Ferguson, III, Karen A. Odom, New York City, Christopher J. Nolan, Melville, Carolyn Schurr, New York City, of counsel), for appellants Bowles, DeStefano, and McCoy.
George Freeman, Adam Liptak, New York City, for appellants Lubasch and Raab.
Jan F. Constantine, New York City, for appellants McLaughlin, Nolan, and Phillips.
Muriel Henle Reis, New York City, for appellant WNYW (Fox Television Stations, Inc.).
Jonathan C. Scott, New York City, submitted a brief amicus curiae for the New York Ass'n of Criminal Defense Lawyers.
Before: MAHONEY, McLAUGHLIN, and JACOBS, Circuit Judges.
MAHONEY, Circuit Judge:
Appellants Jerry Capeci, Tom Robbins, Kevin McLaughlin, Selwyn Raab, Arnold Lubasch, Peter Bowles, Kevin McCoy, Anthony DeStefano, James Nolan, and Karen Phillips (the "Reporters"), and CBS Inc. ("CBS") and WNYW (Fox Television Stations, Inc.) ("WNYW") (collectively the "TV Stations"), appeal from an order entered June 22, 1993 in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, Thomas C. Platt, Chief Judge. The challenged order of the district court (1) denied appellants' motions to quash subpoenas served by defendant-appellee Bruce Cutler in connection with an ongoing criminal contempt proceeding against him; and (2) held appellants in contempt for (a) the refusal of the Reporters to testify and produce unpublished notes concerning (i) interviews of Cutler related to certain published articles about Cutler and one of his clients, John Gotti (the "Articles"), and (ii) statements by government officials (the "Government Officials") connected with the case United States v. Gotti, 90 CR 1051(ILG) (E.D.N.Y.1992) (the "Gotti Case") concerning Gotti or the Gotti Case; and (b) the refusal of the TV Stations to testify and produce video outtakes (i.e., tape footage that was not broadcast) regarding interviews of Cutler that they broadcast (the "Outtakes").
We conclude that the district court properly denied the motions insofar as they sought to quash the subpoenas' demand to produce the Reporters' testimony and unpublished notes regarding statements made by Cutler to the Reporters in connection with the Articles, and the Outtakes. We also conclude, however, that the court erred in denying the motions insofar as they sought to quash the subpoenas' demand to produce the Reporters' testimony and notes concerning statements by the Government Officials concerning Gotti and the Gotti Case. We accordingly affirm in part and reverse in part the order of the district court.
Background
The criminal contempt proceeding that gives rise to this appeal originated with the Gotti Case, in which Cutler served as Gotti's trial counsel until Cutler was disqualified in August 1991. SeeUnited States v. Gotti,
Rule 7 provides in part:
(a) It is the duty of the lawyer ... not to release or authorize the release of information or opinion which a reasonable person would expect to be disseminated by means of public communication, in connection with pending ... criminal litigation with which a lawyer ... is associated, if there is a reasonable likelihood that such dissemination will interfere with a fair trial or otherwise prejudice the due administration of justice.
Further, the rule specifies that lawyers shall not release extrajudicial statements that a reasonable person would expect to be publicly disseminated concerning, inter alia, "the character or reputation of the accused," "[t]he identity, testimony or credibility of prospective witnesses," or "[a]ny opinion as to the accused's guilt or innocence or as to the merits of the case or the evidence in the case." Id. However, the rule explicitly does not "preclude any lawyer from replying to charges of misconduct that are publicly made against said lawyer." Id.
During the course of his representation of Gotti in the Gotti Case, and following his disqualification, Cutler was quoted in numerous newspaper articles making statements about Gotti and the Gotti Case, and appeared on several television programs during which he commented extensively on those subjects. SeeCutler II,
In preparation for a nonjury trial of this matter before Chief Judge Platt, the special prosecutor and defense counsel for Cutler served subpoenas upon the Reporters and the TV Stations. The special prosecutor's subpoenas to the Reporters called for the testimony of each of the Reporters "regarding the statements actually reported and attributed to Bruce Cutler" in the article(s) written by each reporter. His subpoenas to WNYW requested "[c]opies of televised news reports referring or relating to John Gotti that were actually broadcast on Fox's New York City local news program" on dates between December 12, 1990 and August 13, 1991. His subpoena to CBS requested a "copy of the television program '60 Minutes' that was actually broadcast on Channel 2 (New York)" on April 7 and August 11, 1991.
Defense counsel's subpoenas to the Reporters required the production of "[a]ny and all notes of any interviews of any person concerning the [article(s) written by that reporter]" and "[a]ll notes of any statements made by government officials, including but not limited to prosecutors, FBI agents, and any other employees of the United States Attorneys [sic] Office or the Justice Department concerning [the Gotti Case] and John Gotti." Defense counsel's subpoenas to WNYW requested a number of videotapes broadcast by WNYW from local and national news concerning the Gotti Case and related events, and "[a]ll videos, whether broadcast or not, of the Gotti trial or Bruce Cutler" for news programs on four specified dates. Defense counsel's subpoenas to CBS requested "[a]ll videos of segments that were broadcast concerning the John Gotti trial for the period of August 1, 1991 through and including August 12, 1991 from the local and national news," and "[a]ll videos filmed in the production of the '60 Minutes' story called 'Brucification,' broadcast on April 7, 1991 and rebroadcast on August 11, 1991, concerning Bruce Cutler and John Gotti whether or not those segments were actually broadcast."2
The Reporters and the TV Stations moved to quash or, in the alternative, to modify the subpoenas on the ground that the scope of the subpoenas, particularly those of defense counsel, contravened the reporter's qualified privilege recognized by federal law.3 In the course of the oral argument before Chief Judge Platt on June 21, 1992 of the motions to quash, Cutler agreed to limit his subpoenas as follows: (1) the Reporters would not be required to produce unpublished notes of interviews of persons other than Cutler and the Government Officials; and (2) the TV Stations would be required to produce outtakes only respecting their interviews of Cutler.
At the conclusion of the oral argument, Chief Judge Platt denied the motions to quash and ordered the Reporters and the TV Stations to comply with the subpoenas, as modified. At an appearance before Chief Judge Platt the following day, the Reporters advised the court that they were willing to testify concerning "the substance and published aspects" of the Articles, but were unwilling to reveal confidential sources or to produce notes or other unpublished materials unless directed to do so by the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. The TV Stations advised the court that they would not disclose the Outtakes to Cutler's defense counsel, but were willing to offer the Outtakes for the court's in camera review on the condition that if the district court found the Outtakes to be relevant, the TV Stations would have an opportunity to appeal the district court's ruling before the Outtakes were disclosed to Cutler.
Chief Judge Platt rejected the offer of the TV Stations, and ordered the Reporters and TV Stations to "be held in contempt and ordered to pay a fine of $1.00 per day until such time as they comply with the Court's instructions or are excused from doing so," but stayed imposition of the punishment pending an expedited appeal. The Reporters and TV Stations filed timely notices of appeal from this order, and we granted an expedited appeal.
Discussion
A. The Governing Standard.
The guiding precedent in this circuit for resolution of the issues presented by this appeal is United States v. Burke,
We articulated the standard underlying our ruling as follows:
When a litigant seeks to subpoena documents that have been prepared by a reporter in connection with a news story, this Circuit's standard of review, at least in civil cases, is well settled:
The law in this Circuit is clear that to protect the important interests of reporters and the public in preserving the confidentiality of journalists' sources, disclosure may be ordered only upon a clear and specific showing that the information is: highly material and relevant, necessary or critical to the maintenance of the claim, and not obtainable from other available sources. Baker v. F & F Investment,
In re Petroleum Products Antitrust Litigation,
We see no legally-principled reason for drawing a distinction between civil and criminal cases when considering whether the reporter's interest in confidentiality should yield to the moving party's need for probative evidence.
Burke,
The leading Supreme Court decision on this issue is Branzburg v. Hayes,
Cutler contends that we should no longer follow Burke in view of recent Supreme Court statements construing Branzburg, referring to University of Pennsylvania v. EEOC,
The case we decide today in many respects is similar to Branzburg v. Hayes,
Branzburg presented three appeals in which reporters declined to provide testimony to, or appear before, grand juries on First Amendment grounds. The Court ruled against the reporters in all three cases. See
[N]ews gathering is not without its First Amendment protections, and grand jury investigations if instituted or conducted other than in good faith, would pose wholly different issues for resolution under the First Amendment. Official harassment of the press undertaken not for purposes of law enforcement but to disrupt a reporter's relationship with his news sources would have no justification. Grand juries are subject to judicial control and subpoenas to motions to quash. We do not expect courts will forget that grand juries must operate within the limits of the First Amendment as well as the Fifth.
Id. at 707-08,
Justice Powell concurred in the majority opinion, but also wrote a separate concurring opinion in which he emphasized that reporters would have judicial protection against grand jury investigations that were "not being conducted in good faith," sought "information bearing only a remote and tenuous relationship to the subject of the investigation," or called for the disclosure of "confidential source relationships without a legitimate need of law enforcement." Id. at 710,
The dissenters' proposed test to which Justice Powell took exception is the following:
[W]hen a reporter is asked to appear before a grand jury and reveal confidences, I would hold that the government must (1) show that there is probable cause to believe that the newsman has information that is clearly relevant to a specific probable violation of law; (2) demonstrate that the information sought cannot be obtained by alternative means less destructive of First Amendment rights; and (3) demonstrate a compelling and overriding interest in the information.
Id. at 743,
Baker was this court's first assessment of the reporter's privilege in the aftermath of Branzburg. In Baker, we distinguished Branzburg as having only "tangential relevance" because Baker was a civil case.
Cutler essentially argues, based upon the foregoing, that we adopted a rule for criminal cases in Burke that is practically indistinguishable from the view advanced by the three dissenting judges in Branzburg, and is at odds with the majority Branzburg view that there should be no special threshold test for the compulsion of a reporter's testimony before a grand jury or in a criminal case. Further, Cutler points out that the Court's recent unanimous construction of Branzburg in University of Pennsylvania to preclude any "special showing that [a] reporter's testimony [is] necessary,"
As we have noted, however, the holding in Burke was that the materials sought by the defense, "virtually every document and tape ... that in any way related to the [magazine] article" coauthored by the prosecution witness whom the defense sought to impeach,
B. Resolution of the Issues on Appeal.
We consider first Cutler's demand for (1) the testimony, and production of the unpublished notes, of the Reporters regarding statements made by Cutler to the Reporters in connection with the Articles, and (2) the production of the Outtakes. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that Cutler is entitled to this testimony and the production of these materials.
Whatever the doctrinal considerations, we must certainly follow Branzburg when fact patterns parallel to Branzburg are presented for our decision. One of the reporters whose testimony was compelled in Branzburg had "refused to answer questions that directly related to criminal conduct that he had observed and written about."
The special prosecutor's subpoenas are no longer contested, so it is obvious that the Articles and "actually broadcast" videotapes whose production is required by the prosecutor's subpoenas can be admitted in evidence at Cutler's contempt trial. Cutler is clearly entitled to examine the Reporters regarding the context, background, and content of those statements, and to scrutinize their relevant unpublished notes that relate to these matters, as well as the Outtakes in the possession of the TV Stations, to defend against the charge that his statements were criminally contemptuous. SeeUnited States v. Criden,
The Reporters and TV Stations contend that they should not be required to produce the materials sought by Cutler, or testify on this subject, as to statements made by Cutler prior to any definitive order by Judge Glasser compelling Cutler's compliance with Rule 7. They note in this regard that Chief Judge Platt has deferred any decision whether Judge Glasser's December 1990 and January 1991 warnings were adequately definite and specific to provide a basis for contempt sanctions. See supra note 1 and accompanying text; Cutler II,
The special prosecutor's brief on appeal makes clear, however, that whatever Chief Judge Platt's ultimate ruling regarding Judge Glasser's December 1990 and January 1991 warnings, the special prosecutor will seek to introduce public statements by Cutler concerning Gotti and the Gotti Case throughout the entire period from December 1990 to August 1991 pursuant to Fed.R.Evid. 404(b) in order to establish (1) a pattern of conduct intended to influence potential jurors, and (2) intent to disobey whatever order(s) are ultimately determined to provide a basis for contempt sanctions. Further, the special prosecutor's subpoenas are addressed to Cutler's public statements regarding Gotti and the Gotti Case throughout this period, and are no longer contested. Cutler is entitled to equivalent production of the Reporters' unpublished notes and Outtakes, and cross-examination of the Reporters, in order to respond to the special prosecutor on these issues.
The TV Stations also contend that the district court erred in denying the motion to quash the subpoenas rather than first reviewing the Outtakes in camera. In Burke, we encouraged in camera review as a precautionary measure before a definitive ruling to exclude access to assertedly privileged materials, especially when the materials are not voluminous. See
The remaining issue is posed by Cutler's demand for access to the Reporters' unpublished notes regarding statements by the Government Officials concerning Gotti and the Gotti Case, and for related cross-examination of the Reporters. Cutler asserts in his brief on appeal that the Reporters' testimony and unpublished notes are relevant to the defenses that he will assert
because they will establish, first, that the vast majority of the publicity generated about the Gotti case came from non-Cutler sources and, in the face of this massive publicity, nothing that Mr. Cutler said had a reasonable likelihood of interfering with a fair trial or the due administration of justice. Second, they will demonstrate that many of Mr. Cutler's statements did not violate Local Rule 7 because they were made in response to public allegations that Mr. Cutler had engaged in misconduct or concerned matters other than the pending Gotti case. Finally, they will counter the government's claim that the evidence establishes that Mr. Cutler believed that his statements violated Judge Glasser's order to comply with Local Rule 7 and he intended to violate this order--an element of criminal contempt.
We are unpersuaded. The comparative impact of Cutler's public statements and other publicity regarding the Gotti Case manifestly depends upon what was published on that subject, not upon what is in the Reporters' unpublished notes. Similarly, the unpublished notes will cast no light on what Cutler was entitled to say "in response to public allegations that Mr. Cutler had engaged in misconduct [emphasis added],"6 and will provide no assistance to Cutler in establishing that his statements "concerned matters other than the pending Gotti case." Finally, the content of the unpublished notes, by definition unknown to Cutler at the time that he made the statements upon which the contempt charges are premised, can hardly have affected his intent in making those statements.
Cutler points out that a portion of the special prosecutor's cross-examination of an expert witness produced by Cutler was premised upon the proposition that only Cutler, and no government attorneys, violated Judge Glasser's warnings to obey Rule 7, thus highlighting the intentional nature of Cutler's violation. Cutler argues that only access to the Reporters' unpublished notes will enable him to refute this argument by demonstrating that government attorneys commented anonymously to the press concerning Gotti and the Gotti Case.
Chief Judge Platt made no finding that such disclosure would assist Cutler at trial; he simply ruled that on the record before him, he was not assured that such evidence would be irrelevant. Its irrelevance, however, seems clear. We are confident that Chief Judge Platt will take into account, to the extent of any relevance it may bear to the issues before him, the attribution in the press to anonymous government sources of comments concerning Gotti and the Gotti Case contemporaneously with some of the Cutler statements that are alleged to be contemptuous. That is all that Cutler could have known when he made those statements, and accordingly all that has any relevance to his intent in making them. Further, the fact that the purported government sources required anonymity does not bespeak a belief on their part that they were complying with Rule 7; it is accordingly hard to follow Cutler's argument that he believed he could respond in kind on the record without committing such a violation.
In sum, whether judged by the Branzburg standard or Burke 's special threshold standard, Cutler's argument for production of the Reporters' testimony and unpublished notes regarding statements by Government Officials concerning Gotti and the Gotti Case does not prevail.
Conclusion
The order of the district court is affirmed insofar as it required production of (1) the Reporters' testimony and unpublished notes regarding statements made by Cutler to the Reporters in connection with the Articles and (2) the Outtakes; but reversed insofar as it required production of the Reporters' testimony and unpublished notes concerning statements by the Government Officials regarding Gotti and the Gotti Case. The parties shall bear their own costs. The mandate shall issue forthwith.
Notes
In Cutler II, Chief Judge Platt described those warnings as a December "[a]dmonition," a January "[i]nstruction," and a July "[o]rder." Seeid
Although the format of Cutler's subpoenas to the Reporters seeking unpublished notes and to the TV Stations seeking the Outtakes is identical, the proceedings below and in this court make clear that Cutler presently seeks the unpublished notes and related testimony from the Reporters, but only the Outtakes from the TV Stations
No issue concerning the special prosecutor's subpoenas is presented on this appeal
Justice Douglas dissented separately, calling for an absolute reporter's privilege because "absent his involvement in a crime, the First Amendment protects [a reporter] against an appearance before a grand jury and if he is involved in a crime, the Fifth Amendments stands as a barrier." Id.
This opinion has been circulated to the active members of this court prior to filing
To the extent that any statements by Cutler may have been prompted by inquiries to Cutler that were framed in terms of asserted misconduct on his part, those inquiries must be disclosed in accordance with our ruling requiring testimony and the production of unpublished notes regarding statements made by Cutler to the Reporters in connection with the Articles, and the production of the Outtakes
