In this appeal involving important First Amendment issues, we survey the law regarding the closure of criminal proceedings, and hold unconstitutional the Middle District of Florida’s sealed docket in criminal cases.
BACKGROUND
On January 29, 1992, a grand jury indicted a Tampa, Florida criminal defense lawyer, Charles Corees, and an assistant state attorney, John Valenti, on charges of conspiracy, extortion, and bribery. The charges related to a previous state indictment for Corces’s alleged bribery of Valenti in order to gain favorable treatment for criminal defendants in pending state prosecutions. Following the federal indictment, the state dismissed its indictment against Corees and Valenti.
Several months before trial, closed proceedings took place in the district court, including: (1) a February 14, 1992 partially ex parte, closed bench conference between the prosecutor and the district court, which resulted in a postponement of the trial date to May, 1992; (2) the government’s March 18, 1992 ex parte, in camera motion; (3) the government’s April 22, 1992, ex parte, in camera motion requesting a second continuance of the trial; (4) an August 13, 1992 closed conference between the prosecutor, defense counsel, and Corees before a United States Magistrate Judge; (5) the government's October 16, 1992 in camera motiоn; (6) an October 19, 1992 closed bench conference in open court, between *711 the prosecutor, Corees, and defense counsel; (7) an October 19, 1992 ex parte, closed bench conferences with the government; (8) an October 19, 1992 closed bench conference with the prosecutor, Corees, and defense counsel where the government disclosed the contents of the earlier ex parte disсussions; (9) an October 21, 1992 closed bench conference with the prosecutor, Corees and his counsel; (10) an October 21,1992 closed bench conference where Corees filed under seal certain exhibits, which he had received in camera from the government; (11) an October 22, 1992 in camera proceeding where the district court heard testimony of an Assistant United States Attorney; (12) an October 22, 1992 ex parte, closed bench conference with the prosecutor; and (13) an October 15, 1992 in camera motion that the government filed seeking protection of discovery materials.
On October 20, 1992, a St. Petersburg Times {Times) news reporter delivered a letter to the district court requesting transcripts of the October 19, 1992 proceedings be made available to the public, and requesting that all further proceedings be held in open court. On October 21, 1992, the district court returned the reporter’s letter with a note from the clerk of the court directing the reporter to file a formal motion on these requests. On October 23, 1992, the Times filed an Emergency Motion to Intervene and Unseal Court Records and Request for Expedited Hearing (“emergency motion”). On October 26, 1992, the Times filed its Amended Emergency Motion, claiming that the district court had stymied its efforts to obtain accurate and timely information about the public corruption рrosecution in violation of the Constitution and the common law.
On October 29, 1992, the district court granted the portion of Times’s emergency motion seeking to intervene for the limited purpose of seeking to unseal the disputed court records. The district court also filed in camera certified questions to this court. On November 3, 1992, this court notified the district court that it would transfer the filing to the miscellaneous docket without furthеr action because the law provides no basis for a response to the filing.
On November 6, 1992, the district court denied that portion of the Times’s emergency motion seeking to unseal court records. The district court also directed the clerk of the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida (“Middle District”) to annotate any further closed proceedings in this case on the Middle District’s public doсket, rather than the usual annotations made only on the sealed docket.
ISSUES AND CONTENTIONS
The Times contends that the district court erred in conducting closed proceedings without first providing the public and press notice and opportunity to be heard, and articulating specific findings that justified closure of portions of the underlying criminal proceeding. The Times also contends that the district court erred in denying its emergency motion to unseal transcripts of previously held closed proceedings and several in camera documents. Additionally, the Times petitions this court to issue a writ of mandamus, ordering the Middle District not to continue using both a public and a sealed docket in criminal proceedings. The government agrees that this case is not moot merely because the underlying trial has concluded in a mistrial. The government contends, however, that this cоurt has no jurisdiction to review the use of a dual-docketing system in the Middle District because the district court has already fashioned a remedy in this case. In addition, the government contends that the district court did not abuse its traditional discretion to conduct closed bench conferences and properly denied the Times’ s emergency motion to unseal the disputed transcripts and in camera documents. We address these contentions separately.
APPELLATE JURISDICTION
We first note the Times’s standing to intervene for purposes of challenging its denial оf access to the underlying litigation, even though it is otherwise not a party.
See In re Petition of Tribune Co. v. United States,
The Times argues that this is a model case of the kind of constitutional wrong that is capable of repetition yet evading review. The government concedes that this case is not moot merely because the underlying prosecution has come to a conclusion, but argues that the “capable of repetition, yet evading review” exception to the mootness doctrine is inapplicable because the case is not yet moot. Rather, the government argues that the controversy in this case remains alive since the requested records remain sealed.
The Times requests relief broader in scope than merely unsealing the transcripts of closed proceedings in this case. The Times also challenges the procedures for closure followed in the district court, and requests this court to strike the Middle District’s dual-docketing system. Thus, the district court’s November 6, 1992 order does moot that portion of this case relating to the district court’s procedures for closure and its maintenance of a dual-docketing system. The district court directed the clerk to annotate any future closed proceedings on the public docket “in this particular case.” The district court’s order makes it clear that the instructions for complete public docketing apply only to this case.
Because this case presents a controversy capable of repetition yet evading review, we hold that mootness does not bar our review of the Times’s claims against the dual-docketing system.
See Newman,
DISCUSSION
Prerequisites for Closure of Judicial Proceedings
The public and the press have a qualified constitutional right to attend criminal trials.
Globe Newspaper Co. v. Superior Court,
*713
Thus, in determining whether to close a historically open process where public access plays a significant role, a court may restrict the right of the public and the press to criminal proceedings only after (1) notice and an opportunity to be heard on a proposed closure; and (2) articulated specific “findings that сlosure is essential to preserve higher values and is narrowly tailored to serve that interest.”
Press-Enterprise I,
(i) Closed Bench Conferences
The Times argues that the district court completely ignored the Press-Enterprise I and Newman procedural requirements before conducting closed bench conferences. The government responds that the district court properly exercised its traditional authority to conduct closed bench conferences, especially where closure protects sensitive information concerning an ongoing criminal investigation. The government also argues that the district court’s subsequent hearing and order on the Times’s emergency motion was adequate to satisfy the principles articulated in Press-Enterprise I and Newman.
Contrary to the
Times’
s argument, we do not interpret
Press-Enterprise I
to require a trial court to articulate findings that a closed bench conference is necessary and narrowly tailored to preserve higher values
before
a closed bench conference occurs. Instead,
Press-Enterprise
notes that a court may conduct an
in camera
conference on the record where the “constitutional value sought to be protected by holding open proceedings may be satisfied later by making a transcript of the closed proceedings available within a reasonable time.”
Press-Enterprise I,
(ii) Sealed Transcripts and In Camera Motions
Even where a court properly denies the public and the press access to portions of a criminal trial, the transcripts of properly closed proceedings must be released when the danger of prejudice has passed.
See Gannett,
In its November 6, 1992 order, the district court identified the substantial probability of irreparable damage to a continuing law enforcement investigation as the compelling interest requiring a denial of the Times’s motion for access to the in camera motions and the transcripts of the closed proceedings. The district court also ruled that “the alternаtive to closure will not adequately protect that interest and that there is a substantial probability that closure will be effective in protecting against the harm feared by the moving party.” The Times argues that the district court’s ruling is inadequate under the standards in Press-Enterprise I because protection of an ongoing law enforcement investigation is not a recognized compelling interest. 2 The Times also argues that the district court erred in failing to identify the alternatives to closure that it considered and rejected. 3
Based on our review of the sealed motions and transcripts, we hold that the district court properly denied the Times’s emergency motion to unseal as a necessary means to achieving the government’s compelling interest in the protection of a continuing law enforcement investigation.
See In re Petition of the Tribune,
In addition, we hold that the district court did not err in failing to specify which alternatives it considered before con-
*715
eluding that closure was necessary to prоtect the government’s compelling interest. We note that the
Times
failed to suggest a logical and workable alternative for the district court’s consideration, and also failed to suggest a workable alternative for this court’s consideration in its brief or at oral argument.
See Gannett,
(iii) Sealed Docket
The
Times
argues that the Middle District’s maintenancе of the dual-docketing system denied it any meaningful opportunity to be heard on its exclusion from closed pretrial proceedings. The government responds that this court should avoid binding the district court to any formal procedure that is unduly burdensome. Although this court in
Newman
decided not to bind the district courts to the formality of any set procedure for closure, the
Newman
court did hold that “the issue [of closure] must be squarеly confronted and those with various interest must be given the opportunity to be heard.”
Newman,
In this case, the sealed docket completely hid from public view the occurrence of closed pretrial bench conferences and the filing of in camera pretrial motions. These events remained hidden until a Times reporter happened to be present to observe a closed bench conference. The Middle District’s dual-docketing system can effectively preclude the public and the press from seeking to exercise their constitutional right of access to the transcripts of closed bench conferences. Thus, we hold that the Middle District’s maintenance of a dual-docketing system is an unconstitutional infringement on the public and press’s qualified right of access to criminal proceedings.
CONCLUSION
We find no error in the district court’s exercise of its traditional authority to conduct closed bench conferences, where the court later allowed the press an opportunity to be heard on the release of the transcripts to the closed proceedings within a reasonable time.
See Press-Enterprise I,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Our holding also provides a workable method and a common sense solution to the closure problem. After all, a trial judge сannot rule intelligently until some information has been disclosed.
. We find the Times’s argument that the district court erred in relying on 18 U.S.C. § 3153(c)(1) to find a compelling and legitimate interest in sustaining a seal on the closed proceeding before the magistrate judge, to be completely without merit and warrants no discussion. See 18 U.S.C. § 3153(c)(1) & (2) (1985).
. In addition, the Times argues that the district court's order is not narrowly tailored based on the absence of a ruling on how long the transсripts and in camera motions must remain sealed. This issue is not properly before this court because, as the Times concedes, the district court’s November 6, 1992 order is silent on the time length of the seal. It would be premature for this court to consider a claim that the district court erred in permanently sealing the disputed motions and transcripts in the absence of such a ruling from the district court. Based on the November 6, 1992 оrder, the Times is not precluded from making a subsequent motion to unseal or a motion to amend due to changed circumstances in the ongoing law enforcement investigation.
. Having addressed the Times's claims for relief in this expedited appeal under the collateral *716 order doctrine, we deny the Times's petition for a writ of mandamus. See United States v. Fernandez-Toledo, 737 F.2d 912, 919 (11th Cir.1984) (holding that a writ of mandamus is appropriate only for extraordinary situations where no other adequate means of obtaining relief is available).
