The New York Times Company and Dow Jones & Company (collectively, “the newspapers”), appeal from an order entered by the district court denying in part their motion to make public certain papers and materials related to the criminal prosecution of Michael D. Andreas and Terrance S. Wilson. Andre-as and Wilson, bоth of whom were officers of the Archer Daniels Midland Company (ADM), were indicted along with others in December 1996 on charges of price fixing in the lysine market, a protein additive for poultry and swine feed, in violation of Section 1 of the Sherman Act. Their trial in this widely-publicized case currently is ongoing.
During thе course of pretrial discovery, the district court entered two protective orders permitting limited disclosure of otherwise privileged or confidential materials for the purpose of the parties’ trial preparation. The protective orders cover grand jury materials, inсluding grand jury testimony, docu- *767 mente produced in grand jury investigations pursuant to subpoena, and other documents considered by the grand jury. In addition, the orders provide that surveillance tapes purportedly made pursuant to Title III of the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act of 1968, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2510-2520, are confidential, and the orders preclude disclosure of materials relating to ADM’s confidential business information and trade secrets, as well as materials relating to the Government’s investigation of the citric acid market. Pursuant to these protective orders, the parties to the criminal case filed numerous dоcuments under seal. In addition, the defendants filed pretrial motions under seal, many of which were accompanied by supporting exhibits. The Government’s responsive memoranda in opposition to these pretrial motions were also filed under seal.
In September 1997, The New York Times Compаny filed a motion, subsequently joined by Dow Jones & Company, to intervene in the criminal case in order “to secure public disclosure of documents filed under seal and to modify protective orders.” 1 The newspapers’ motion listed, by docket number, the documents that had been filed under seal, assеrted that the wholesale filing under seal of pretrial motions conflicts impermissibly with the presumption of public access to criminal proceedings, and contended that the district court “must evaluate the specific sealed materials to determine that the ‘sealing’ is not over-inclusive.” The motion also requested that the district court modify the protective order to allow the parties “to file any portions of pleadings under seal only upon a particularized showing to the Court that the need for secrecy overcomes the constitutional and common-law privilеge of public access.”
The supporting memorandum of law filed by the newspapers made two arguments relating to the disclosure of sealed materials. The first argument — captioned “The Requested Materials Should be Disclosed in Balancing the Constitutional and Common Law Rights to Access” — discussed the pub-he’s right to attend criminal trials, a right that is rooted in both the First Amendment and the common law,
see, e.g., Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia,
The second argument contained in the newspapers’ memorandum was captioned “The Seventh Circuit Has Held That Wholesale Sealing of Briefs is Improper.” • This argument asserted that this Court disfavors the wholesale filing of briefs and motions under seal, in light of the general presumption that judiсial proceedings are open to the public. Because only information that is justifiably confidential should be filed under seal, the memorandum argued, the parties were exceeding the permissible scope of the protective orders by filing entire documents under seal.
In response to the newspapers’ motion, Andreas and Wilson filed a motion in opposition in which they argued that most of the information contained in the documents that had been filed under seal was confidential and that under such circumstances the wholesale filing of documents under seal may be appropriate. The Government did not oppose the newspapers’ motion in the district court. According to the Government’s brief to this Court, it construed the motion to be requesting that pretrial documents be made available to the public to the extent they do not contain privileged or confidential material, a proposition to which it is not opposed as a general matter.
The district court, on January 5, 1998, granted the newspapers’ motion to intervene. On the merits of the motion, the court denied
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the newspapers’ request to modify the protective order. The court recognized that the constitutional and common-law right to access asserted by the newspapers is not absolute, and that “the presumption of access does not apply to materials properly submitted to the court under seal.” In that context, the court discussed the materials that were subject to the protective orders and concluded that they shielded from disclosure materials that should appropriately remain confidential. The court, for example, took note of Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 6(e) and concluded that “the well-establishеd rule that materials containing grand jury information are protected from disclosure trumps the public’s right to access those materials.” The confidentiality of Title III surveillance tapes also outweighs the public’s rights of access, the court concluded, because “Congress has alreаdy balanced the public’s right to satiate its curiosity with defendants’ rights to the benefits of pre-trial privacy and determined that the scales tip in favor of protection from disclosure.” (Citing
United States v. Dorfman,
The court did grant the newspapers partial relief, however, with respect to the wholesale filing of documents under seal. Relying primarily upon our decision in
Methodist Hospitals, Inc. v. Sullivan,
The newspapers now appeal. We have jurisdiction over this appeal under the collateral order doctrine.
See Cohen v. Beneficial Indus. Loan Corp.,
We are not unsympathetic to the merits of the newspapers’ argument, which has enjoyed some acceptance in the courts of appeals.
See, e.g., United States v. Amodeo,
We believe that the argument raised by the newspapers on appeal differs in kind from the argument that they raisеd in the district court — which was merely that all judicial documents are presumptively accessible, unless there are reasons that they should be confidential. The newspapers argue that they did not waive their present argument, and they point to two passages in their memorandum in the district court. The first, contained in the section of their memorandum arguing that all judicial documents are presumptively accessible, states: “But whatever the outer reaches to which the presumption of access applies, the presumption surely applies to core criminal justice prоcedures such as motions seeking dismissal of indictments and supporting legal memoranda.” This passage is not supported with a citation to any authority. The second passage, contained in the part of the memorandum arguing that the wholesale filing of briefs is improper, states: “While pure discovery materials are not subject to the presumption of access, information used at trial or otherwise that serves as a basis for judicial decisions enters the public record.
Id.
[citing
In re Grand Jury Proceedings: Victor Krynicki,
These statements do not support the newspapers’ contention that they raised their argument below. The first statement came in the context of arguing that
all
judicial records are presumptively accessible, an argument that is quite different from the newspapers’ current argument, which is that even confidential records become presumptively accessible when they have been referred to by the district court. The second statement, and the accompanying citation to
Krynicki,
may seem more supportive of the newspa-' pers’ position on the surface, but analysis of the statement in context reveals that it does nothing to support the newspapers’ claim. The statеment was part of a description of
Krynicki,
as the senténce following it makes evident: “Judge Easterbrook ruled that the briefs were to be publicly filed and that any information which could properly be held confidential in light of the presumption of public access had to be included in a separаte addendum.” More importantly, the passage was contained within a substantive argument that differs materially from the contention that the newspapers now assert on appeal. We have held time and again that perfunctory and undeveloped arguments (even constitutional ones) are waived,
see, e.g., United States v. Berkowitz,
Our adherence to the waiver doctrine in this case is particularly important due to the nature of the newspapers’ argument. Their argument recognizes that the alleged presumption of access can be rebutted, such that even documents referred to by the district court in issuing a pretrial order may, upon a proper showing of necessity of confidentiality, remain sealed. Our precedent recognizes the sensitivity of the inquiry into disclosure, and we have emphasized that the determination is appropriately made by the district court in the first instance, which is most familiar with the intricacies of the case and the need for privacy.
See Corbitt,
The newspapers have waived their only argument raised on appeal. Thus, we affirm the decision of thе district court.
Notes
. The United States and the defendants contend that the argument raised by the newspapers on appeal, which we discuss infra, was never raised in the district court, and that the newspapers have therefore waived the argument. For this reason, we discuss the district court proceedings in some detail.
. The district court has issued a number of rulings relating to the parties’ pretrial motions.
