OPINION AND ORDER
In a letter dated October 20, 2006, WNBC reporter Jonathan Dienst requested immediate access to various sealed documents related to the sentencing of the defendants in this case. After receiving Mr. Dienst’s letter on October 23, the Court issued an order, dated October 26, 2006 (“10/26/06 Order”), which explained that few documents submitted to the Court by the parties had been submitted under seal although some submissions had not yet been filed, and that the vast bulk of the sentencing submissions had already been publicly filed. The Court indicated that some documents that had been submitted to the Court but not yet filed should be filed, that a small number of documents that raised specific reasons for sealing should remain under seal, and that the parties submit objections or comments to the proposed disposition by October 31. Only defendant Stewart responded. Defendant Stewart, in a letter from counsel dated November 1, 2006, identified four documents that she contended should remain under seal. On November 2, 2006, the Court ordered that the documents indicated in the 10/26/06 Order be filed, with the exception of the four documents identified by Stewart, 1 for which the Court requested the Government’s position. 2
Among these four documents is a July 5, 2006 letter from defendant Stewart’s counsel Joshua L. Dratel, Esq. transmitting a psychiatric report that was prepared by Stephen S. Teich, M.D., concerning defendant Stewart. The Government contends that the letter from Mr. Dratel together with the first twelve pages and the beginning of the thirteenth page of the report should be unsealed based on the common law right of access to judicial documents. The Government contends that the remaining three documents, which consist of *384 various letters from Stewart’s counsel, should remain under seal because they do not affect the sentence but relate to other matters, including scheduling, submissions, and seating, and raise substantial privacy concerns.
Defendant Stewart concedes that portions of Mr. Dratel’s letter and Dr. Teich’s report can be unsealed, primarily to the extent that they have already been publicly disclosed in her sentencing submissions. However, she resists further disclosure. Defendant Stewart would redact about two thirds of what the Government contends should be disclosed, based on her contention that her disclosures to Dr. Teich were made in confidence, with the expectation that they would be treated confidentially in connection with the sentencing process. Moreover, she contends that her expectations of privacy are sufficient to support the continued filing of her proposed redacted portions of the report under seal. Defendant Stewart agrees with the Government that the remaining three letters should remain under seal.
I.
The public has a qualified right of access to judicial proceedings and documents, under both the common law and the First Amendment.
Nixon v. Warner Communications,
The common-law right of access to judicial proceedings and documents creates a presumption in favor of public access to, and against sealing of, judicial documents.
United States v. Amodeo,
The Supreme Court has also recognized a presumptive right of access to judicial proceedings and documents under the First Amendment. Determination of this right involves an inquiry referred to as the “experience and logic” test.
Press-Enterprise II,
II.
A.
With respect to the letter from Mr. Dratel and the accompanying report from Dr. Teich, it is clear that the documents are “judicial documents” to which a common law presumption of access attaches. To be designated as a judicial document, “the item filed must be relevant to the performance of the judicial function and useful in the judicial process ...”
Lugosch,
The second step of the inquiry is to determine the weight to be given to the presumption of access. “[T]he weight to be given the presumption of access must be governed by the role of the material at issue in the exercise of Article III judicial power and the resultant value of such information to those monitoring the federal courts.”
Amodeo II,
Most recently in the
Lugosch
case, the Court of Appeals made clear that the weight of the presumption is not affected by the fact that the Court may not have relied upon the document submitted or found the document useful. The presumption of access is entitled to great weight if a party submits the document to the court for purposes of adjudication.
Lugosch,
Defendant Stewart points to Judge Block’s thorough opinion in
United States v. Gotti
Although the letter from Mr. Dra-tel and the report by Dr. Teich are entitled to a presumption of access that is accorded great weight, the presumption can be overcome by sufficiently compelling countervailing interests. One countervailing interest that has been identified by the Court of Appeals and that is directly at issue in this case is the privacy interest of the person resisting disclosure.
See Amodeo II,
*388 In this case, the Court has carefully reviewed the letter from Mr. Dratel and the report by Dr. Teich. There are several small portions of the first twelve pages of the report and the first five lines on page 13 that concern highly personal family matters relating to defendant Stewart as to which there is a sufficient privacy interest, well-recognized by the Court of Appeals, that is sufficiently compelling to warrant redaction. The Court has indicated those redactions in a copy of the letter and report that is being filed under seal. There is no reason to believe that the details of these highly-personal family matters have otherwise been disclosed, and the disclosure of these matters would not promote any of the values associated with public scrutiny of the sentencing process.
Similarly, the report by Dr. Teich beginning with “Additional History” on page 13 concerns a description of the details of defendant Stewart’s personal life. It is not directly related to the opinions given by Dr. Teich and includes highly personal details of defendant Stewart’s history and family life. As with the redactions in the first twelve pages, the interests of personal privacy in that history are sufficiently compelling to overcome the presumption of access. Both the Government and defendant Stewart agree that these pages should be redacted.
The bulk of the redactions that defendant Stewart would make in the first twelve plus pages of Dr. Teich’s report, but which the Court finds should be disclosed, concern the details of defendant Stewart’s representation of Sheikh Omar Abdel Rahman and her reactions to that representation, her conduct in connection with the crimes at issue in the current case, and her prior representation of Dominic Maldonado. However, defendant Stewart has conceded that some portions of the sections dealing with these issues should be disclosed, apparently because she already disclosed them in her publicly filed sentencing memorandum.
Nonetheless, the remainder of the discussions with respect to these issues should also be disclosed. They relate to public issues rather than private matters, and having publicly discussed part of the subjects and their relevance to Dr. Teich’s opinion, defendant Stewart cannot claim a privacy interest that is sufficiently compelling to shield the remainder of the discussion.
Defendant Stewart also attempted to redact the portion of the report dealing with the contempt charge against her. But this was a public rather than a private issue and was also discussed in the public affirmation submitted by her counsel, dated June 30, 2006, at paragraphs 35-39. There is no basis for a selective appeal to privacy on the same subject matter.
See, e.g., Gill v. Gilder,
No. 95 Civ. 7933,
Defendant Stewart also defends her re-dactions on the grounds that they deal with matters that she conveyed in confidence to Dr. Teich. However, Dr. Teich’s report indicated that he told defendant Stewart that he was conducting the interviews for her attorney in connection with sentencing, that he would be making a report to her attorney, and that he might be called to testify. Under these circumstances — where the report was submitted to the Court and Dr. Teich was available to testify about his opinion and the basis for it — defendant Stewart cannot rely on any confidentiality in addition to the protection otherwise afforded to matters of personal privacy, where that privacy is sufficiently compelling to overcome the presumption of access.
B.
It is unnecessary to decide whether the First Amendment right of access applies to Mr. Dratel’s letter and Dr. Teich’s report because, even assuming that the right does apply, the interest in personal privacy for the matters redacted from the report provides a sufficiently compelling interest to overcome that right. The Court has carefully redacted the documents to assure that the redactions are narrowly tailored to redact only the matters as to which there is a sufficiently compelling interest in personal privacy.
In
Gotti,
the court found that there was no First Amendment presumption of access that attached to the unsolicited sentencing letters sent directly to the court because there was “no historic basis for the disclosure of sentencing letters under the ‘experience’ prong of the ‘experience and logic’ test, and there is no ‘logic’ in chilling the free flow of information by publicly disclosing letters sent in confidence to the court.” Moreover, according to the court, sentencing letters are not a necessary corollary to attending a sentencing proceeding because they have nothing to do with the ability of the public and the press to attend such proceedings.
Gotti
For these reasons, both the Government and defendant Stewart doubt that there is a First Amendment right of access to these documents, which were filed under seal in connection with sentencing. As explained above, it is unnecessary to decide that issue in this case because, even if the right does apply, the Court has complied with that right by redacting the documents and disclosing those portions for which there is not a sufficiently compelling interest in personal privacy to overcome any First Amendment right of access.
See United States v. Kaczynski,
III.
Both the Government and defendant Stewart agree that there is neither a common law right of access nor a First Amendment right of access to the three remaining documents at issue that have been filed under seal. Each of the documents was a brief letter that defendant Stewart’s counsel sent to the Court and none of the letters were part of the sentencing submissions to the Court. The letters dealt with administrative matters such as scheduling, submissions and seating. These documents were not submitted *390 in connection with the exercise of the judicial function of sentencing. Thus, it is doubtful that these documents are “judicial documents.” Even if they were, these documents are so far removed from the exercise of a judicial function that any presumption of access that attaches to them would be entitled to little weight, and any such presumption would be overcome by the privacy and security matters that caused the letters to be submitted under seal. Similarly, neither “experience” nor “logic” warrants public disclosure of these letters; the letters are not a necessary corollary to the right to attend a judicial proceeding; and any First Amendment presumption of access has been overcome by the interests of privacy and security attached to the letters. Each of the letters is brief and there is no reasonable way that they could be redacted.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons explained above, defendant Stewart should file within five (5) days a copy of Mr. Dratel’s letter and Dr. Teich’s report with the redactions indicated in the documents that the Court is providing to counsel and filing under seal. Defendant Stewart should also file at that time her proposed redacted copy of Mr. Dratel’s letter and Dr. Teich’s report.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. There were several additional brief documents or portions of documents that the Court had ordered remain under seal for specific compelling reasons, as indicated in the 10/26/06 Order, which none of the parties have disputed should remain under seal and which are not at issue in the present Order.
. At present, the great bulk of the documents submitted by counsel for the defendants and counsel for the Government in connection with sentencing have been filed in the open docket of the Court, including two volumes of exhibits submitted by defendant Stewart. Those volumes include over four hundred and forty letters and other exhibits. Other public submissions included a sentencing memorandum, an affirmation, and a reply memorandum by defendant Stewart with additional letters and submissions and a sentencing memorandum by the Government. There were also extensive sentencing submissions on behalf of defendants Sattar and Yousiy, which had been submitted to the Court and which the Court directed be publicly filed.
. Other cases that have dealt with sentencing letters sent to the court do not undercut a right of access to materials submitted to a sentencing court as part of the defendant's sentencing submission. See
United States v. Boesky,
. Indeed, the privacy interest in medical records has been expressly recognized by the Judicial Conference of the United States ("Judicial Conference”). In March 2004, the Judicial Conference approved a set of guidelines implementing privacy and public access policies for electronic criminal case files, which were prepared by a specially-created subcommittee consisting of members from the Committees on Court Administration and Case Management, Criminal Law and Defender Services. See Judicial Conference, Guidance for Implementation of the Judicial Conference Policy on Privacy and Public Access to Electronic Criminal Case Files (March 2004), http://www.privacy.uscourts.gov/crimimpl. htm. While the guidelines were drafted to deal with the privacy concerns raised by remote electronic access to criminal records, they also set out cautions that apply to the public filing of any records in a criminal case. Those guidelines outline a model "Notice of Electronic Availability of Criminal Case File Documents,” which provides in part:
Because filings will be remotely, electronically available and may contain information implicating not only privacy but also personal security concerns, exercise caution *388 when filing a document that contains any of the following information and consider accompanying any such filing with a motion to seal. Until the court has ruled on any motion to seal, no document that is the subject of a motion to seal, nor the motion itself or any response thereto, will be available electronically or in paper form.
1) any personal identifying number, such as driver’s license number;
2) medical records, treatment and diagnosis;
3) employment history;
4) individual financial information;
5) proprietary or trade secret information;
6) information regarding an individual’s cooperation with the government;
7) information regarding the victim of any criminal activity;
8) national security information; and
9) sensitive security information as described in 49 U.S.C. § 114(s).
Id. (emphasis added).
