This appeal requires that we decide whether, and under what circumstances, a district court may release the presentence investigation report of a criminal defendant to members of the news media. The district court authorized disclosure of the defendant’s presentence report under the “common law right of access” to judicial records.
See Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc.,
I.
Facts and Proceedings Below
The defendant, Michael Corbitt, served as Chief of Police of the Village of Willow Springs, Illinois for approximately ten years, ending in 1982. On May 20, 1987, Corbitt was indicted in the Northern District of Illinois on three counts of extortion and racketeering, in violation of 18 U.S.C. sections 1951 and 1962(c) and (d). The indictment alleged that, during his tenure as Chief of Police, Corbitt accepted bribes in exchange for permitting various criminal enterprises to operate with impunity, and that he extorted payments from businesses in Willow Springs and elsewhere. Corbitt pled guilty to all three counts; he was sentenced on January 11, 1988 to four years on each count, the sentences to run concurrently.
At Corbitt’s sentencing, Judge Prentice Marshall stated that he had decided to impose a sentence lower than that recommended in the presentence report due to an unprecedented, and apparently spontaneous, torrent of letters written on Corbitt’s behalf. In statements directed at the defendant, the judge remarked that “[o]ne of the things that struck me about [the letters] is not just that ordinary folk have come forward in your behalf, but ... elected ... and appointed public officials in the community in which you have resided, have come forth for you.”
Corbitt’s sentencing provoked an outcry in Willow Springs; Village residents expressed a strong interest in learning which public officials had written letters, many apparently on official letterhead, seeking leniency for Corbitt. Three days after Cor-bitt’s sentencing, the Board of Trustees of Willow Springs unanimously approved a resolution stating that no Village official had been authorized to use his or her office to secure a lighter sentence for Corbitt; the board also sent a letter to Judge Marshall, asking him to allow public access to the letters written by Village officials.
The Southtown Economist, a newspaper covering the Village of Willow Springs, reported extensively on Corbitt’s conviction and sentencing. On January 19, 1988, Pulitzer Community Newspapers, Inc. (“Pulitzer”), publisher of the Southtown Economist, moved to intervene in Corbitt’s case to secure release of the presentence report and testimonial letters on which Judge Marshall had relied in sentencing. Pulitzer argued that, since Corbitt’s conviction involved misconduct in office, the entire criminal proceeding was “affected with a public interest.” Pulitzer also asserted that the public had an especially strong interest in learning what factors, possibly including the pleas of Village officials, had persuaded the district court to impose what was perceived to be an inordinately lenient *227 sentence. Corbitt objected to disclosure of any sentencing materials which had not previously been disclosed during the sentencing hearing; however, he declined to file a brief opposing Pulitzer’s motion in the district court, and has not participated in this appeal. The United States filed a brief stating that, while it did not object to disclosure of the unsolicited letters written on Corbitt’s behalf, it opposed the disclosure of any part of Corbitt’s presentence report.
On August 24, 1988, the district court issued a memorandum opinion granting Pulitzer substantial access to the presentence report and letters. Judge Marshall began his opinion by noting that prior decisions of this court, which held that a criminal defendant must show a “compelling need” for disclosure of the presentence report of a government witness, were not controlling because, in those cases, “no third party had sought release of [the] presentence report.” The court then noted that, through a series of amendments to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 32, there had been a “gradual relaxation” of the traditional secrecy of the presentence report, culminating in the current version of Rule 32, which mandates defense access to the report in every case. Relying on
United States v. Schlette,
Judge Marshall declined to rely on the first amendment right of access to criminal proceedings as a basis for disclosure, but instead turned to the “common law right of access” to judicial records recognized in
Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc.,
The court found that Pulitzer’s “assertion of a public interest in keeping watch over, official misconduct triggers application of the common law right of access to judicial records.” Judge Marshall also held that the government had failed to rebut the presumption of openness, since it relied on “conjectural statement[s]” regarding the general policies served by confidentiality, rather than on specific facts which coun-selled against disclosure of Corbitt’s pre-sentence report in particular. The court observed that the government’s concern over the potential harm to witnesses mentioned in the report could be addressed by redacting portions of the report identifying witnesses whose names had not been disclosed in open court. The court also determined, sua sponte, that certain portions of the report should be redacted to protect the privacy of the defendant and others. However, except for the redactions, Pulitzer was given access to the entire presentence report. The government appeals; Judge Marshall has stayed the disclosure authorized by his opinion pending resolution of the appeal. 1
*228 II.
Source of the District Court’s Authority to Disclose Corbitt’s Presentence Report
Pulitzer argues that disclosure of Cor-bitt’s presentence report is warranted under either of two separate, but related, legal theories: (1) the common law right to inspect and copy judicial records, or (2) the first amendment right of access to criminal proceedings.
A.
The Common Law Right of Access to Judicial Records
In
Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc.,
While this court has recognized that the common law right of access creates a “strong presumption” in favor of public access to materials submitted as evidence in open court, id. at 1294, this presumption should not apply to materials properly submitted to the court under seal. 2 Where judicial records are confidential, the party seeking disclosure may not rely on presumptions, but must instead make a specific showing of need for access to the document. Of course, the public’s right to inspect judicial documents may not be evaded by the wholesale sealing of court papers. Instead, the district court must be sensitive to the rights of the public in determining whether any particular document, or class of documents, is appropriately filed under seal. The question then becomes whether presentence reports are properly filed under seal; we discuss below the interests which support the confidentiality of presentence reports.
B.
The First Amendment Right of Access to Criminal Proceedings
The first amendment right of access to judicial proceedings provides no broader right to disclosure of the presentence report. The Supreme Court has conducted a two-pronged inquiry in order to determine whether any particular stage of a criminal proceeding should be open to the public: first, the Court has considered “whether the place and process have historically been open to the press and general public,”
Press-Enterprise Co. v. Superior Court,
As a preliminary matter, we note that this court has held that the first amendment right of access extends to documents submitted in connection with a judicial proceeding.
See, e.g., United States v. Peters,
It is clear that presentence reports have traditionally been confidential — indeed, it is only in the past 25 years that the
defendant
has had access to the presentence report, either as a discretionary matter or as of right.
See Williams v. New York,
Further, as we discuss below in some detail, public disclosure of the contents of the presentence report would not promote the effective functioning of the probation office, or, by extension, the sentencing court; rather, disclosure would constitute a positive hindrance to the probation office’s performance of its obligation to provide the sentencing court with a comprehensive analysis of the defendant’s character. For these reasons, we do not believe that a first amendment right of access attaches to pre-sentence reports.
III.
Under either the common law or the first amendment, the question of public access to presentence reports is resolved by examining the considerations which support the confidentiality of these reports. Three general factors justify the secrecy of pre-sentence reports: (1) the privacy interests *230 of the defendant, the defendant’s family and the crime victim; (2) the interest of the court in full disclosure of information relevant to sentencing; and (3) the interest of the government in the secrecy of information related to ongoing criminal investigations, and information derived from grand jury proceedings. We consider these factors in turn.
A.
Privacy Interests of the Defendant and Others
The criminal defendant has a strong interest in maintaining the confidentiality of his or her presentence report. Sentencing proceedings, and particularly the presen-tence investigation, often involve a broad-ranging inquiry into a defendant’s private life, not limited by traditional rules of evidence. See 18 U.S.C. § 3661 (“No limitation shall be placed on the information concerning the background, character, and conduct of a person convicted of an offense which a court of the United States may receive and consider for the purpose of imposing an appropriate sentence.”). The district judge may consider the defendant’s family history, mental and physical health, financial situation and other personality traits affecting the defendant’s social adjustment. 5 A sentencing judge may also consider allegations (even if supported only by hearsay or illegally obtained evidence) that the defendant has committed other, uncharged crimes; the court may even consider prior acquittals, or crimes committed by the defendant as a juvenile, for limited purposes. 6
The contents of the presentence report reflect the breadth of information on which the sentencing court may rely. Rule 32(c)(2)(A) provides generally that the pre-sentence report “shall contain” “information about the history and characteristics of the defendant, including his prior criminal record, if any, his financial condition, and any circumstances affecting his behavior that may be helpful in imposing sentence or in the correctional treatment of the defendant.” A monograph prepared by the Probation Division of the Administrative Office of the United States Courts provides a more expansive discussion of the goals of the presentence report.
The presentence report describes the defendant’s character and personality, evaluates his or her problems, helps the reader understand the world in which the defendant lives, reveals the nature of his or her relationships with people, and discloses those factors that underlie the defendant’s specific offense and conduct in general.
The Presentence Investigation Report 1 (2d ed. 1984). To fulfill this function, the presentence report should contain: a listing of juvenile adjudications involving the defendant (which is normally confidential under state law); allegations concerning the defendant’s involvement in other, uncharged offenses; the defendant’s physical and mental health (including the defendant’s I.Q., results of psychiatric tests, history of substance abuse problems and any “[ujnusual fears, hostilities, obsessions, compulsions, depressions, or sexual deviations”); any history of child abuse or neglect; details of the defendant’s relationship with his or her spouse or “significant other”; and a detailed accounting of the defendant’s financial condition. Id. at 10-16. The monograph also provides that the presentence report should contain information about the defendant’s family, including *231 any “[hjistory of emotional disorders, diseases, and criminal behavior.” Id. at 13. 7
Criminal Rule 32(c)(3) allows the defendant to challenge the accuracy of factual statements contained in the presentence report.
See generally United States v. Brown,
The concern that the presentence report may contain minimally substantiated and unchallenged allegations of the defendant’s involvement in other, uncharged crimes is identical to one of the central considerations underlying the general rule of grand jury secrecy.
8
Courts have recognized that the target of a grand jury investigation has an interest in preventing the disclosure of allegations of criminality which he or she has had no opportunity to rebut, and which may be based on nothing more than rumor or speculation.
9
The Supreme Court has
*232
recognized the privacy interest of uncharged or acquitted targets, and has suggested that the secrecy of grand jury materials is a significant factor mitigating any concern about the procedural informality of grand jury proceedings themselves.
Illinois v. Abbott & Assocs., Inc.,
Rule 32(c)(2)(D) also provides that the presentence report should contain a statement assessing “the financial, social, psychological, and medical impact” of the crime on its victims. Thus, quite apart from information about the defendant, the presentence report may also contain personal information concerning the crime victim’s physical, emotional and financial injuries. See The Presentence Investigation Report 10 (including, in sample victim impact statement, fact that victim suffers from “anxiety attacks,” needs psychiatric counseling, and is in precarious financial condition). The wide dissemination of this information would discourage participation by victims in the sentencing process, thus frustrating an important goal of Rule 32.
B.
Possible Adverse Effects of Disclosure on the Free Flow of Information to the Sentencing Judge
The sentencing court has a substantial interest in insuring that all information relevant to the sentencing decision is made available to the court. The Supreme Court recognized forty years ago that “conscientious judges” seek “to sentence persons on the best available information rather than on guesswork and inadequate information.”
Williams v. New York,
Lower courts addressing third parties’ requests for access to presentence reports have relied upon the Supreme Court’s basic insight that publication of the contents of a presentence report would tend to discourage full disclosure to the sentencing judge. In
United States v. Greathouse,
In
United States v. Schlette,
With regard to Schlette’s “common sense” finding that the prospect of disclosure of the presentence report to the defendant is the only factor which might discourage potential witnesses, we simply disagree. Certainly, persons questioned about the defendant’s character might be more forthcoming if they could be assured that the defendant would not have access to their comments. However, simply because an individual is willing to speak, knowing his or her comments will be disclosed to the defendant, does not indicate that the witness is willing to have those comments broadcast to the public at large.
See United States v. Charmer Indus., Inc.,
Schlette’s intuition that broader disclosure would not affect the information received by the sentencing court also ignores the most important source of presentence information: the defendant. The Administrative Office’s manual for probation officers provides that the defendant should be interviewed at least twice, with one interview in the defendant’s home, in order “to establish a cooperative relationship and to give the defendant confidence in the probation officer.” The Presentence Investigation Report 3. The manual stresses that the presentence investigation can be an important first step in the rehabilitation of the defendant.
During the presentence investigation the defendant may be amenable to personal change. The investigation may have both a salutary and traumatic effect on the defendant. The crisis of the situation often brings about a reevaluation of the offender’s personal situation. Thus, it is an excellent time to develop a positive atmosphere for the subsequent supervisory relationship.
*234 Id. at 4. 12 Certainly, the defendant will not be deterred from speaking sincerely and forthrightly by the disclosure regime of Rule 32. However, the defendant might be reluctant to disclose details of his or her private life due to the possibility that the contents of the presentence report might one day end up in a newspaper. The defendant should not be denied the opportunity to participate fully in the important rehabilitative process of the presentence investigation because of the risk that intimate details of his or her. personal life may eventually be published. Nor should the sentencing court be denied this highly relevant information, which may provide greater insight into the defendant’s character than all other sources of presentence information combined.
Scklette’s empirical analysis is not sufficient to overcome our belief that broader disclosure of presentence reports would tend to reduce the information available to the sentencing court. Scklette relied exclusively on a single study prepared for the Federal Judicial Center as support for its empirical analysis. The main focus of this study, (published as Fennell and Hall, Due Process at Sentencing: An Empirical and Legal Analysis of the Disclosure of Presentence Reports in Federal Courts, 93 Harv.L.Rev. 1613 (1980)), was on the effects of disclosure to the defendant on the quality and quantity of presentence information received by the court; it concluded that defense access to the presen-tence report had not had an appreciable effect on the “free flow of information” to the sentencing judge. However, the report noted that “third-party disclosure may adversely affect the court’s ability to obtain information,” id. at 1684, and included in its recommendations a suggestion that “the district courts should restrict noncorrec-tional parties’ access to the presentence report.” Id. at 1696. We fail to see how this study supports the Ninth Circuit’s conclusion that third-party access to the pre-sentence report would not adversely affect the information received by the sentencing court.
More generally, we reject Schlette’s analytical approach, which focuses narrowly on the risks of disclosure of a particular presentence report. We believe that a district court faced with a request for access to a presentence report should take a broader view, and examine the potential effects of disclosure on future presentence investigations. In a related area, the Supreme Court has stressed that a district judge ruling on a petition for disclosure of grand jury materials must consider the possible “systemic effects” of disclosure on future grand juries before releasing grand jury materials in . any particular case.
[I]n considering the effects of disclosure on grand jury proceedings, the courts must consider not only the immediate effects upon a particular grand jury, but also the possible effect upon the functioning of future grand juries. Persons called upon to testify will consider the likelihood that their testimony may one day be disclosed to outside parties. Fear of future retribution or social stigma may act as powerful deterrents to those who would come forward and aid the grand jury in the performance of its duties.
Douglas Oil Co. v. Petrol Stops Northwest,
C.
Government’s Interest in Preventing Disclosure of Grand Jury Materials, and Information Which May Compromise Ongoing Criminal Investigations
The government also has an interest in preventing the disclosure of presentence reports. The presentence report will often contain information regarding the defendant’s past or future cooperation with the government. The report may also include information conveyed by informants or cooperating codefendants regarding the defendant’s relative culpability for the offense for which he has been convicted, and the defendant’s involvement in other crimes which may be under investigation. Especially where the defendant was a member of an organized, ongoing criminal enterprise, disclosure may pose a substantial risk to the safety of government informants, even though the defendant is incarcerated. And disclosure of the defendant’s cooperation with the government may increase the risk of retaliation against the defendant, both during his or her imprisonment, and upon release. Therefore widespread disclosure of the presentence report may obstruct the government’s ability to investigate crimes.
See United States v. Boesky,
The presentence report may also contain information derived from grand jury materials. Grand jury proceedings are protected under a separate, related rule of secrecy, and their indirect disclosure through the wide dissemination of presentence reports would be unacceptable. In a recent decision, the Second Circuit approved the district court’s consideration of grand jury materials in sentencing, but found that the court had erred by permitting public disclosure of the materials; the court suggested that the grand jury materials should have been filed under seal, “paralleling] the treatment given to presentence reports.”
United States v. Alexander,
D.
Relevance of Mandatory Disclosure to the Defendant Under Rule 32 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure
The district court relied on “th[e] gradual relaxation of Rule 32’s restraints on disclosure” to support its conclusion that the “tradition of confidentiality, without more, does not justify withholding presentence reports.” We cannot agree that the amendments to Rule 32 have any significant bearing on the issue of third-party access to presentence reports.
As the American Bar Association has noted, “[n]o issue in the law of sentencing has attracted the same sustained attention and controversy as that of the defendant’s asserted right to disclosure of the presen-tence report.”
Standards for Criminal Justice
Standard 18-5.4, commentary at 18-364 to -365 (2d ed. 1980). Initially, Rule 32 was silent as to the defendant’s right to inspect the presentence report; subsequently, the rule authorized the district court to release the report upon request; finally, the rule was amended in 1983 to
require
disclosure to the defendant, request or no.
See generally, United States Dep’t of Justice v. Julian,
However, while the bonds of secrecy surrounding the presentence report were loosened to permit defense access, the framers of the Federal Rules remained sensitive to the concerns of law enforcement officials that unlimited access to the report might discourage full disclosure of relevant information to the sentencing judge, and might jeopardize ongoing criminal investigations. Thus, unless the district court directs otherwise, Rule 32(c)(3)(E) requires that “copies of the presentence investigation report made available to the defendant ... shall be returned to the probation officer immediately following the imposition of sentence.” The Advisory Committee Notes to the 1974 amendment of Rule 32 make clear that this return requirement is meant “to insure that [presentence reports] do not become available to unauthorized persons. ‘Such reports shall be part of the record but shall be sealed and opened only on order of the court.’ ”
Despite the amendments to Rule 32 mandating disclosure to the defendant in all cases, the Probation Division of the Administrative Office of the United States Courts continues to take the position that the pre-sentence report is a confidential document, which should be disclosed only to correctional authorities. The Presentence Investigation Report 2. The Administrative Office also recommends that the probation officer obtain the defendant’s written consent prior to any third-party disclosure. Id. at 3.
Similarly, the ABA’s Standards for Criminal Justice, while mandating disclosure of the presentence report to the defendant based on considerations of “[fundamental fairness,” Standard 18-5.4(a), also state quite emphatically that the report should not be disclosed to third parties, except the sentencing and appellate courts, and persons having a “legitimate professional interest” in the report’s contents. Standard 18-5.3. The commentary notes:
[T]hese standards take the position that the presentence report should not be a matter of public record. No legitimate interests are served by public disclosure. The incentive both for the offender and for sources close to the offender to cooperate candidly in the presentence investigation might be lessened if they knew that their statements could become part of the public record. Alternatively, the desire to protect sources from harassment and revenge might lead to the preparation of presentence reports that fail to convey candidly the information gathered- In turn, such evasive phrasings might also make effective rebuttal of the report impossible. Finally, the offender has a continuing right to privacy in matters in his or her life and background that are not connected with the offense for which the offender stands convicted. An obvious social interest exists in minimizing unnecessary stigmati *237 zation of the offender, since any failure to facilitate the eventual reentry of offenders into society is in turn a likely cause of recidivism.
Id. at 18-362.
The successive amendments of Rule 32, culminating in an extremely broad right of access for defendants, are based on compelling considerations of fairness to the person most directly affected by the contents of the presentence report — the defendant. These considerations have no relevance to third-party requests for access. In fact, to the limited extent that the procedures for defense access have any bearing on the present inquiry, they would suggest that third-party access to a presentence report should be an infrequent occurrence.
IV.
Showing Required to Justify Disclosure of Presentence Report
The considerations discussed above demonstrate that, as a general matter, public disclosure of the contents of presentence reports would interfere with the proper functioning of the probation office and the sentencing court. The presentence investigation is a process whereby the defendant, and others with knowledge of the defendant, engage in a critical evaluation of the defendant’s entire persona: his or her family relationships, religious and ethical views, past proven or suspected criminal activity, emotional and sexual attitudes, and a wide range of other matters. The ultimate goal of the investigation is not to prove any specific act, but instead to understand the motivating forces underlying the defendant’s conduct. Given the wide-ranging nature and purpose of the inquiry, and the relaxed evidentiary standards governing it, the presentence investigation is more closely akin in degree of intimacy to psychiatric or spiritual counseling than to the public, adversarial cast of the trial of the guilt phase of a criminal proceeding.
In order to find that a document is subject to a right of access under the first amendment, the court must consider whether the document has historically been available to the public, and whether public access would promote the proper functioning of the government agency producing or considering the document. Presentence reports have not generally been available to the public, and publicity would not help to insure that the presentence investigation is properly conducted. We therefore hold that there is no first amendment right of access to presentence reports. 15
Our analysis under the common law right of access is somewhat different. Since the presentence report is undoubtedly in the district court’s possession, the common law right of access attaches to this document. However, the important question is what kind of showing will be sufficient to warrant disclosure of the contents of the report to a third party. Relying on the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Schlette, the district court held that disclosure was appropriate where the newspaper had made a “threshold showing that disclosure will serve the ends of justice”; once such a showing was made, the parties opposing disclosure were required to show, with *238 specificity, a “competing interest” which supported the continued confidentiality of the report. The court found that Pulitzer had made a sufficient “threshold showing,” since it had asserted “a public interest in keeping watch over official misconduct.” The court also found that the government had not sufficiently rebutted this showing, since its reliance on the “traditional confidentiality of presentence reports” was nothing more than a “conjectural statement.” We cannot agree with the district court’s analysis, which essentially places the burden on the government to make a particularized showing that disclosure is unwarranted, preceded only by the most generalized showing of “need” by the news organization seeking access to the report. Instead, we believe that the news organization seeking access to a presentence report must make a substantial, and specific, showing of need for disclosure before a district court may allow public inspection of the report.
In
United States Department of Justice v. Julian,
[I]n both civil and criminal cases the courts have been very reluctant to give third parties access to the presentence investigation report prepared for some other individual or individuals. As the Government points out, one reason for this is the fear that disclosure of the reports will have a chilling effect on the willingness of various individuals to contribute information that will be incorporated into the report. A second reason is the need to protect the confidentiality of the information contained in the report. Accordingly, the courts have typically required some showing of special need before they will allow a third party to obtain a copy of the presentence report. See, e.g., Charmer, supra, at 1174-1176 (following Hancock Brothers, Inc. v. Jones, supra, in concluding that a report may not be disclosed “in the absence of a compelling demonstration that disclosure of the report is required to meet the ends of justice”). .
Id. at 1613 (emphasis in original; other citations omitted).
Julian does not, of its own force, control the result in this case. The Supreme Court’s discussion of third-party requests for access was not strictly necessary to the decision in that case, since, whatever the rights of third parties to a presentence report, the question before the Court involved the rights of the subject of the report under the Freedom of Information Act. However, while not binding, the Supreme Court’s discussion carries substantial weight, especially since it is consistent with the holdings of this circuit and every other circuit (except perhaps the Ninth Circuit in Schlette) to consider the issue.
This court has previously addressed third-party requests for access to presentence reports in cases where criminal defendants sought disclosure of the presentence reports of prosecution witnesses. In these cases, where the third party sought access for use in a judicial proceeding in which the requester’s liberty was at stake, this court held that disclosure is only appropriate where “absolutely essential to effective presentation of a defense and therefore required in the interests of justice.”
United States v. Cyphers,
Although decided under what we believe to be an incorrect legal standard, the request for access in Scklette may well have satisfied the standard which we have outlined. In Schlette, a convicted defendant who had been released on probation by a federal court murdered an attorney who had prosecuted the defendant for a prior offense. The attorney’s estate sought access to the presentence report in order to determine whether the probation office may have been liable under a tort theory for failing to recognize the danger posed by release of the defendant. In these circumstances, the information sought could not be obtained elsewhere — for the crucial issue was whether the Probation Office knew information which should have alerted it to the risks of releasing the defendant on probation. And, since the defendant had committed suicide, the privacy interests of the subject of the report, which might normally counsel against disclosure, were also substantially diminished. In this situation, a compelling need for disclosure may well have been demonstrated.
Under the standard we have outlined, there will probably be some situations in which a presentence report or a portion of such a report may be disclosed *240 to meet a particularized need arising out of pending or contemplated litigation. In the present case, Corbitt’s presentence report is not sought for litigation purposes, but instead by the news media for publication. Obviously, there may be a public interest in disseminating some information underlying the sentencing of a public figure for crimes related to his public office. We do not by any means foreclose the possibility that the press may be able to show a “compelling need” with sufficient specificity to merit disclosure of a presentence report in whole or in part. But a particularized purpose sufficient to establish a compelling need is the key to press disclosure just as it is in connection with disclosure for litigation purposes. The facts of the Schlette case may provide a useful illustration. In Schlette, not only did the deceased attorney’s estate seek access to the presentence report, but the press also sought disclosure of the contents of the report. In the circumstances presented in Schlette, the public might indeed have had a “compelling need” to learn the factors which affected the decision to release an individual bent on revenge, who ultimately carried out his previously expressed intention. We emphasize that the public’s particularized interest in the sentencing decision in Schlette is of a different order than the generalized public interest present in every criminal case (including those involving public officials), to evaluate the district court’s sentencing decision. The latter general interest in the functioning of the sentencing court is ordinarily insufficient to justify disclosure; the public must generally be satisfied with the information, often (as here) quite extensive, disclosed during an open sentencing hearing or otherwise obtainable from sources available to the press. 20 However, we do not undertake to decide where the present case falls in the spectrum between the facts of Schlette and the routine criminal sentencing. The determination whether disclosure to the press is warranted is properly left to the district court in the first instance, applying the “compelling, particularized need” standard discussed above. This case will be vacated and remanded for that purpose.
The judgment of the district court is
Vacated and Remanded for Further Proceedings Consistent with this Opinion.
Notes
. Since the issue of disclosure of the presen-tence report is independent of the merits of the criminal prosecution of defendant Corbitt, we have jurisdiction over the government's appeal under the collateral order doctrine of
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
The government did not object in the district court to disclosure of the letters written on Corbitt’s behalf, and does not challenge disclosure of the letters on appeal. This opinion therefore only addresses the propriety of disclosure of Corbitt’s presentence report.
. See The Times Mirror Co. v. The Copley Press, Inc.,
.
See also, e.g., The Times Mirror Co. v. The Copley Press, Inc.,
. Other courts have apparently held that if the press has a right to attend a given judicial proceeding, it thereby acquires the conditional right to inspect documents filed in connection with the hearing.
See, e.g., United States
v.
Gerena,
.
See, e.g., Williams v. New York,
.
See United States v. Agyemang,
.
See also Gregg v. United States,
. As the references to the treatment of grand jury materials throughout this opinion indicate, we believe that presentence reports should generally remain confidential for the same reasons supporting grand jury secrecy.
United States
v.
Charmer Indus., Inc.,
. See, e.g., United States v. Sells Eng’g, Inc.,
. This "free flow of information” rationale has been accepted as a factor favoring nondisclosure by other courts considering this issue.
United States v. McKnight,
. Similarly, even where a witness’ grand jury testimony has been disclosed to the criminal defendant or grand jury target, courts have still found that the individual witness retains an interest in preventing the wholesale disclosure of that testimony to third parties.
See, e.g., Illinois v. Sarbaugh,
. See also id. at 10 (defendant’s version of the offense may be especially helpful to a full understanding of defendant's character and motivations); Fennell & Hall, supra note 7, at 1623-25 & n. 51 (confronting defendant with apparently false statements from earlier interviews may provide valuable insights into defendant’s character and extent of remorse).
.
See also, e.g., Illinois v. Abbott & Assocs., Inc.,
. Courts upholding the secrecy of grand jury materials have also noted the government’s paramount interest in preventing the release of information which may reveal the direction and progress of ongoing criminal investigations.
See generally
cases cited
supra
note 8.
See also The Times Mirror Co. v. The Copley Press, Inc.,
. Several courts have similarly held that the first amendment right of access does not comprehend grand jury proceedings, since grand juries have traditionally conducted their investigations in closed hearings, and secrecy is necessary in order for the grand jury to carry out its investigative function.
Press-Enterprise Co.
v.
Superior Court,
. See also
United States v. Anderson,
. The party seeking disclosure of grand jury materials must show a “compelling necessity* or "particularized need" for the grand jury materials; where an appropriate showing has been made, the district court must take care to disclose materials “discretely and limitedly.”
Douglas Oil,
. Rule 6(e) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure provides that grand jury materials may only be disclosed to third parties "when so directed by a court preliminarily to or in connection with a judicial proceeding.” Fed.R. Crim.P. 6(e)(3)(C)(i). The limitation to requests made in connection with a judicial proceeding emphasizes the fact that disclosure should be allowed only in limited situations.
See generally United States v. Baggot,
.Where disclosure of even limited portions of the presentence report is authorized, the district court should specify in detail the procedures for disclosure, to insure that the report is no more widely disseminated than absolutely necessary.
Cf. Douglas Oil Co. v. Petrol Stops Northwest,
. Besides attending the sentencing hearing, the press and public may also be able to glean information regarding the defendant’s conviction and sentencing from other, non-confidential documents submitted in connection with sentencing (such as the testimonial letters disclosed here), and from interviews with the defendant and the attorneys for prosecution and defense. Moreover, the press and public may also obtain information regarding the criminal acts for which a defendant has been convicted by attending the criminal trial itself or the hearing at which the court accepts a defendant’s plea of guilty. In the latter circumstance, Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure 11(c)(1) and (f) require that the district court assure itself that the defendant understands "the nature of the charge’’ and that there is "a factual basis for the [guilty] plea.”
See McCarthy v. United States,
