I.
On May 23, 1985, a federal grand jury in the Middle District of Florida returned a forty-five count, 166-page indictment against thirty defendants. The indictment charged that the Board of County Commissioners of Hillsborough County, Florida was an “enterprise” within the meaning of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961-1968 (1982), and that the defendants, who included three county commissioners and various construction contractors, real estate developers, suppliers, and lawyers, conspired to conduct and did conduct the affairs of the board through a pattern of bribery. In essence, the indictment alleged that a significant portion of local government in Hillsborough County had been corrupted.
Although the indictment named several participants in the acts of bribery who were not indicted, it also made references to participants who were neither indicted nor named. Most of the defendants filed motions for a bill of particulars that would identify those unnamed and unindicted participants, and some of the defendants also filed motions for pretrial notice of the Government’s intention to use “similar act” evidence under Fed.R.Evid. 404(b). Those motions were granted by a magistrate.
In compliance with the magistrate’s order, the Government filed a bill of particulars and a notice of possible similar acts evidence, but at the same time made
in camera ex parte
motions to seal the two documents. The motions to seal were granted by the district court, which, relying primarily on
United States v. Briggs,
The bill of particulars and the notice of similar acts evidence filed by the Government never appeared on the court’s docket. The motions to seal and the district court’s orders sealing those documents also did not appear on the court’s docket. And no hearings were held to consider the motions to seal. In short, nothing in the public record indicated that any action had been taken relating to the magistrate’s order compelling a bill of particulars and notice of similar acts evidence.
Only through the keen observation of a reporter for The Tampa Tribune did the paper’s publisher, The Tribune Company (Tribune), suspect that certain documents marked “in camera” delivered to the office of the clerk by the United States Attorney were the bill of particulars and notice of *1440 similar acts and that the court had sealed them. The Tribune then filed a petition for access requesting copies of (1) any motions or memoranda filed seeking production of a bill of particulars in camera; (2) notices of hearing regarding the sealing of the bill of particulars; (3) transcripts of any hearing held to determine whether the bill was to be sealed; and (4) any orders issued by the court limiting public access to the bill of particulars or to other documents. The Tribune also requested a hearing on its petition.
The district court, finding a hearing to be unnecessary, granted the Tribune’s petition for access and released two
in camera
orders in which the court had directed the sealing of the bill of particulars and the notice of similar acts evidence. The court noted that when it issued the orders it had considered the balancing test required by
Newman v. Graddick,
Subsequently, the Tribune filed a second petition for access in which it sought the release of both the bill of particulars and the notice of similar acts evidence; it also renewed its request for the Government’s motions to seal those documents and for a hearing. The Tribune argued that the public’s constitutional and common law rights to judicial documents outweighed the Government’s interest in protecting the due process rights of unindicted participants. The district court denied the petition. Relying on the balancing test of
United States v. Briggs,
The Tribune has appealed the district court’s order.
II.
Rule 404(b) of the Federal Rules of Evidence provides that evidence of other crimes, wrongs, or acts may be admissible to prove, among other things, motive, opportunity, and intent. Although it is obviously advantageous for defense counsel to determine before trial whether the prosecutor intends to offer similar acts evidence, the rule does not require the government to give notice of its intent to introduce such evidence. 2 J. Weinstein & M. Berger,
Weinstein’s Evidence
¶ 404[19] (1985). The absence of a mandatory notice requirement does not, however, preclude the prosecution from voluntarily giving notice of similar acts evidence.
Id.
Nor is the trial judge prevented from requiring disclosure of similar acts evidence in compliance with a pretrial Omnibus Hearing procedure consented to by the parties.
See United States v. Jackson,
In this case, when the Government filed the notice of possible similar acts evidence along with a motion to seal the document, it, in effect, had voluntarily agreed to provide the information on the condition that the defendants not reveal the notice’s contents to the public or to the press. Simply because the Government filed the notice in compliance with a court order does not make the notice information something other than voluntary discovery. 2 The question then becomes whether the Tribune is *1441 entitled to view a discovered document describing possible similar acts evidence.
The Supreme Court has stated that the “First Amendment does not guarantee the press a constitutional right of special access to information not available to the public generally.”
Branzburg v. Hayes,
Discovery is neither a public process nor typically a matter of public record. Historically, discovery materials were not available to the public or press.
See Seattle Times Co. v. Rhinehart,
If it were otherwise and discovery information and discovery orders were readily available to the public and the press, the consequences to the smooth functioning of the discovery process would be severe. Not only would voluntary discovery be chilled, but whatever discovery and court encouragement that would take place would be oral, which is undesirable to the extent that it creates misunderstanding and surprise for the litigants and the trial judge. Litigants should not be discouraged from putting their discovery agreements in writing, and district judges should not be discouraged from facilitating voluntary discovery.
Here, the district court, in denying the Tribune’s petition for access to the government’s notice of similar acts evidence, merely refused to allow the Tribune access to a document not a matter of public record.
See United States v. Gurney,
III.
The purpose of a true bill of particulars is threefold: “to inform the defendant of the charge against him with sufficient precision to allow him to prepare his defense, to minimize surprise at trial, and to enable him to plead double jeopardy in the event of a later prosecution for the same offense.”
United States v. Cole,
*1442
To allow the bill of particulars to serve as a wholesale discovery device would actually frustrate the federal discovery rule. Rule 16(b)(2) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure states that the rule “does not authorize the discovery or inspection of ... statements made ... by government ... witnesses, or by prospective government ... witnesses.” A defendant who desires a list of government witnesses — or “unindicted co-conspirators” —could thus bypass the Rule 16(b) restriction on discovery by asking for and receiving a “bill of particulars” pursuant to Fed. R.Crim.P. 7(f), which simply provides that “[t]he court may direct the filing of a bill of particulars.” Because a defendant has no right to obtain a list of witnesses by simply calling his request a “bill of particulars,”
see United States v. Pena,
Thus, for the reasons presented in our discussion of the notice of similar acts evidence, a bill of particulars that merely facilitates voluntary discovery is not a court document the public and press are entitled to view. 5 A request for a list of “unindicted co-conspirators,” so called, is a discovery request that is not a matter of public record and cannot be made a matter of public record by simply attaching to it the label “bill of particulars.” The public and press are also not entitled to demand a hearing on whether a “discovery bill” should be sealed. Finally, it should be noted that the district court’s refusal to allow the Tribune to inspect the sealed notice of similar acts evidence and the sealed bill of particulars in no way restricted the Tribune from independently obtaining the information contained in the documents by employing its own investigative techniques.
The district court’s order sealing the notice of similar acts evidence and the bill of particulars is, accordingly,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. The defendants’ motion for notice of similar acts evidence cannot be regarded properly as a Fed.R.Crim.P. 12 motion requesting discovery under Fed.R.Crim.P. 16, because similar acts evidence does not fall within the categories of information — such as documents and tangible objects — that the government must furnish upon the defendant’s request.
. "[I]t is unreasonable to require a district judge to hold hearings and to issue special orders with respect to every request he is presented with by the press during the course of a long trial.”
United States v. Gurney,
. We are aware that the Third Circuit, when interpreting Rule 7(f) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure, recently found that bills of particulars "were regarded by the drafters of the rules as supplements to the indictment rather than as pretrial discovery."
United States v. Smith,
. Simply because a bill of particulars may be "a proper procedure for discovering the names of unindicted coconspirators who the government plans to use as witnesses,”
United States v. Barrentine,
