Third-party movant North American Islamic Trust (“NAIT”) appeals from the district court’s order holding that NAIT’s Fifth Amendment rights were violated by its public naming in an attachment to the Government’s criminal pre-trial brief but denying NAIT’s requested equitable relief, including
inter alia
expungement of NAIT’s name and a public declaration by the court that NAIT’s rights were violated. The district court instead placed the at
I
A federal grand jury indicted the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development (“HLF”) and seven individuals (collectively, the “HLF Defendants”) on multiple charges stemming from the allegation that the defendants had engaged in a criminal conspiracy to provide support to Ha-mas, a designated foreign terrorist organization. In May of 2007, the Government filed a pre-trial brief for the purpose of setting forth “an overview of the case, the scope of the conspiracy, and the different kinds of evidence that the government will seek to admit at trial and the evidentiary bases for the admission of that evidence.” Under the heading “Breadth of Conspiracy,” the Government included the following passage:
[T]he focal point of this case is the designated terrorist group Hamas .... Although the indictment in this case charges the seven named individual defendants and the Holy Land Foundation for Relief and Development, it will be obvious that the defendants were not acting alone. As noted in the case summary, the defendants were operating in concert with a host of individuals and organizations dedicated to sustaining and furthering the Hamas movement. Several of the individuals who hold leading roles in the operation of Hamas are referenced by name in the indictment. A list of unindicted coconspirators is attached to this ... brief.
That attachment (“Attachment A”) bore the title “List of Unindicted Co-conspirators and/or Joint Venturers” and listed the names of 246 individuals and entities, organized under various headings. NAIT was included under the heading “The following are individuals/entities who are and/or were members of the U.S. Muslim Brotherhood.” The pre-trial brief described the Muslim Brotherhood as “an international Islamic fundamentalist movement” and stated that “Hamas’ founding charter makes clear that Hamas is, in fact, the Palestinian branch of the Muslim Brotherhood.” The Government explains that the inclusion of NAIT and other entities was intended to lay the groundwork for the possible admission of statements pursuant to Rule 801(d)(2)(E) of the Federal Rules of Evidence, which permits the admission of out-of-court statements by coconspirators and joint venturers of a party opponent. The Government concedes that it was an “unfortunate oversight” that Attachment A was not filed under seal.
The first trial against the HLF Defendants ended in a mistrial. Before a second trial commenced, NAIT filed a motion alleging that the inclusion of NAIT in Attachment A violated its Fifth Amendment rights. NAIT sought four forms of relief: a public declaration that its rights had been violated; the expungement of its name from any public document filed or issued by the Government identifying NAIT as an unindicted coconspirator; an injunction forbidding the Government from identifying NAIT as an unindicted cocon
II
NAIT argues that the district court erred by including its findings only in a sealed order, rather than issuing a publicly available order memorializing the holding that NAIT’s Fifth Amendment rights were violated. It argues that, by sealing the order, the district court deprived NAIT of an effective remedy for the violation of its rights. Because the order is sealed, NAIT complains, it cannot inform others that its public naming in the indictment was wrongful, and, therefore, the injuries it bore as a result of its public naming in the proceedings persist in the form of continued damage to its reputation. Moreover, NAIT argues, the decision to seal the order violates the common law right to public access to judicial records. Although the Government argues that the district court acted within its discretion in sealing the order, it has nevertheless stated that it is not ultimately opposed to the unsealing of the district court’s opinion and order in its entirety. 3
A district court has supervisory authority over its records, and we review the court’s decision to seal a judicial record for abuse of discretion.
See SEC v. Van Waeyenberghe,
The Government argues that, although NAIT does have standing to protect its own reputational interests, it does not have standing to assert the public’s right of access because it is not “a third party whose sole interest in litigation is access to the documents.”
United States v. Hickey,
Here, the district court did not explain why it chose to seal its opinion and order holding that NAIT’s rights were violated. Both NAIT and the Government suggest that the district court may have been trying to shield NAIT from further reputational harm related to its public naming in this case. Regardless of the intention behind the district court’s decision, however, its effect was to leave NAIT hamstrung in its ability to mitigate the damage done by its public identification as a possible coconspirator in the activities of the HLF Defendants. NAIT was publicly identified in Attachment A for over two years, and the public took note. The district court’s order and opinion included the important context that NAIT’s public naming had been held to be in violation of its Fifth Amendment rights. NAIT’s interests, therefore, would have been better served by leaving the order unsealed. The Government has no countervailing interest in sealing the order and in fact does not object to unsealing it.
Because the power to seal court records must be used sparingly in light of the public’s right to access, because
Ill
NAIT argues that the district court erred in declining to expunge its name from inclusion in Attachment A. It argues that expungement from the brief is the only means to guard conclusively against further wrongful reputational injury. The Government argues that the district court acted within its discretion in concluding that expungement was not warranted. We review a district court’s decision not to expunge a name from a judicial document for abuse of discretion.
See United States v. Int’l Harvester Co.,
We have considered claims by third parties who were identified as coconspirators in public court records before, and have left little doubt that expungement is sometimes an appropriate remedy.
See In re Smith,
Also important to the remedy inquiry— though we have never said so explicitly' — -is the particular context in which an accusation was made. Our jurisprudence has never recognized a general right not to be implicated as a possible coconspirator in another’s criminal case. Rather, we have always paid attention to both the source and the method of the accusation. In
Briggs,
this Court examined the claims of three individuals who had been publicly identified as unindicted coconspirators in a grand jury indictment. Our analysis focused not only on the harm done to the accused individuals, but also the powers and responsibilities of the grand jury itself. We noted that there was no authority for the proposition that a federal grand jury was “empowered to accuse a named
In
In re Smith,
we extended
Briggs
beyond the limited context of grand jury indictments to encompass at least some statements made by prosecutors.
In contrast, the Seventh Circuit reversed a district court’s order sealing the identities of unindicted coconspirators whose statements were admitted pursuant to Rule 801(d)(2)(E).
Ladd,
For coconspirator statements to be admitted pursuant to Rule 801(d)(2)(E), the Government must prove by a preponderance of the evidence that a conspiracy existed, that both the declarant and the defendant were members of the conspiracy, and that the statements were made in the course and in furtherance of the conspiracy. The district court, in admitting the statements, found that those requirements had been met. The status of coconspirator was, therefore, grounded in an evidentiary basis far more solid than the assertion of the United States Attorney.
Ladd,
Just as the context of a party’s naming as a possible coconspirator is relevant to whether the naming was wrongful and whether it should be sealed, context is relevant to whether the naming of a party should be expunged. The allegations against NAIT were not raised in an indictment or in a factual resume offered during a plea proceeding, but rather in a Government brief in a fully contested case. Al
IV
NAIT argues that the district court’s order and opinion contained an erroneous and irrelevant analysis of its ties to the HLF Defendants, and, therefore, simply unsealing the full opinion and order is not a sufficient remedy. The district court’s analysis, NAIT argues, essentially tars it with the same brush of guilt by association that the Government used in its pre-trial brief, and we, therefore, should vacate that portion of the order.
As we discuss more fully above, judicial records are subject to a general presumption that they will be available to the public. The benefits of this policy — to both the public and the courts — are legion. Sometimes, however, the result is the inclusion of statements and information that may be embarrassing, irrelevant, or prone to mischaraeterization. Nevertheless, our role, when considering an appeal from a district court, is to review that court’s decision, see 28 U.S.C. §§ 1291-1292 (establishing jurisdiction for appeals from final and interlocutory decisions), not to edit it.
We, however, note that some of the information included in the order, although relevant to a Rule 801(d)(2)(E) inquiry, had one occurred, is irrelevant to the question of whether NAIT’s Fifth Amendment rights were violated. Those rights were violated regardless of whether NAIT was in some manner, and at some point, associated with the HLF Defendants. Moreover, the district court’s statement that there was “ample evidence to establish the association ] of ... NAIT with HLF, the Islamic Association of Palestine (TAP’), and Hamas” went outside the bounds of both what was required to resolve the Fifth Amendment question and what would have been required to resolve a Rule 801(d)(2)(E) issue. Had a Rule 801(d)(2)(E) issue actually arisen, the court would have engaged in a bounded inquiry into NAIT’s involvement in a specific joint venture with a defendant, in the context of determining the admissibility of specific statements. Because no such Rule 801(d)(2)(E) issue arose during the trial, there was no judicial determination that evaluated NAIT’s connection to the case pursuant to a clear, circumscribed legal standard.
Cf. Ladd,
We note, as well, that the district court’s findings do not amount to a ruling that NAIT took part in a criminal conspiracy to support Hamas. In fact, the Government has gone so far as to argue that it never, in the course of this litigation, labeled NAIT a criminal coconspirator.
5
The Government argues that it only asserted that NAIT was at least a “joint venturer” with the defendants.
See United States v. Layton,
We do not go so far as to “vacate” the analysis of the opinion and order, because our review is of its holding, not every step of its reasoning or its choice of words. Rather, we simply note that the district court included discussion of issues that were not relevant to the disposition of the motion, which is obviously not a criminal adjudication. Any other conclusion on this record, beyond this narrow determination, would be legally premature.
V
NAIT seeks two additional forms of relief. First, it asks that we “publicly affirm” the district court’s conclusion that its rights were violated. Second, it asks that we order that the district court make a public declaration that NAIT’s rights were violated. As to the first request, we cannot affirm or reverse the district court’s holding that NAIT’s rights were violated, because the Government has not appealed it. The district court’s ruling on that issue is the final determination thereof. As to the second request, it would be unnecessary to require the district court to make a public declaration of its earlier Fifth Amendment conclusion, because that conclusion will itself be public when the district court’s opinion and order is unsealed.
VI
For the foregoing reasons, we REVERSE the district court’s order only insofar as it requires that the opinion and order be sealed. All other requests for relief are DENIED. The case is REMANDED to the district court to unseal its order in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
.NAIT’s motion was filed in conjunction with the Islamic Society of North America ("ISNA”), which is not a party to this appeal. Another entity, the Council on American Islamic Relations ("CAIR”) moved the district court for leave to file an amicus brief requesting that its name and all other unindicted coconspirators be stricken from Attachment A. CAIR's motion was addressed in the order addressing NAIT’s motion, but CAIR is not a party to this appeal.
. The two other individual defendants were not tried at that time.
. Neither party has challenged the district court’s decision to seal Attachment A.
. Although In re Smith is the law of this circuit, we note that its expansion of the narrow holding of Briggs has left the law in this area somewhat unsettled, with no clear boundaries regarding when prosecutors are permitted to refer publicly to unindicted alleged coconspirators by name and when they may not. Because the Government has not appealed the ruling that NAIT's Fifth Amendment rights were violated, we do not have the occasion to clarify that issue here.
. This argument stems from the tension between the characterization of Attachment A in the brief — which implied that it was a list of coconspirators — and the heading of Attachment A, which stated that it included joint venturers as well. Because the issue of whether NAIT's Fifth Amendment rights were violated was not contested, we need not reexamine that tension here.
