The government has asked us to dismiss this appeal on the ground that the order sought to be appealed is not an аppealable order. The order grew out of a criminal information filed against the defendant-appellant, J.J.K., for violation of federal drug laws. Because he was not yet 18 years old at the time of the alleged offenses, the government was required to file the information under the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 5031-5042, and it did so. The Act authorizes the district court to order that the juvenile be proceeded against as if he were an adult, however,
id.,
§ 5032, and that is the order that J.J.K. seeks to appeal in advance of trial on the ground that the Act, like the dоuble-jeopardy clause, confers rights that a trial would destroy. If this is correct, then the order, though certainly not a final judgment in the usual sense, is appealable as a collateral order. The merits are independent оf the issues in the criminal proceeding itself (issues having nothing to do with the defendant’s age or his entitlements under the Act), pаrts of the order will become moot if review is deferred until judgment is entered in the criminal proceeding, and the order is definitive rather than tentative in nature. The concurrence of these circumstances makes the order “finаl” in a meaningful sense.
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
The Act entitles a juvenile proceeded against under it (as distinct from a juvenile ordered prosecuted as an adult) to be detained in a juvenile detention center prior to as well as after conviction and to have his name and the record of the proceedings against him kept secret. §§ 5035, 5038. These rights would bе irrevocably impaired if they could not be asserted in advance of trial and judgment. We therefore hold, in cоncert with all the other courts that have addressed
We are not merely jumping on a bandwagon. The parties are entitled to our independent judgment. But we think the decisions that we have cited are correct. We say this mindful that the collateral order doctrine is an exception to the general federal policy that only "really" final judgments, that is, judgmеnts which actually wind up the litigation in the district court, are appealable, and an exception that is to bе interpreted particularly narrowly in criminal cases because of the strong interest in the expeditious conduct of such cases. Flanagan v. United States,
Midland may be the case closest to ours (though not close) in which the Cоurt refused to apply the doctrine. The order sought to be appealed had turned down a motion to dismiss the dеfendant's indictment. The ground of the motion was that the government had violated Fed.R.Crim.P. 6(e), which limits the disclosure of what goes on before a grand jury. The reason for not applying the doctrine was that Rule 6(e) does not create а right not to be tried, id. at 801, and if that is the line, as other decisions by the Supreme Court also teach, e.g., United States v. MaсDonald,
Nevertheless the appeal must be dismissed. J.J.K. signed a form expressly requesting that he be housed "in the general adult population" of the Metropolitan Correctional Centеr, the federal jail in Chicago. lie claims that he made the request under duress, because the only alternative dеtention facility that the government offered him was a jail remote from his family in Chicago rather than a foster home or some facility proximate to his family, as he claims to be
The appeal is dismissed as moot.
