This appeal requires us to consider whether post-September 11th security measures implemented by the United States Marshals Service at the entrance to a federal building complex in Rochester, New York containing courtrooms and other non-judicial governmental facilities violated Defendant-Appellant Wendell Smith’s First or Sixth Amendment rights. We hold that Smith’s Sixth Amendment right to a public trial was not violated by the requirement that court visitors show photo identification because the security measures effected at most a partial closure of Smith’s trial that satisfied the four-part test articulated in
Waller v. Georgia,
BACKGROUND
Wendell Smith was arrested in June 2002 and charged with one count of possession of a firearm and ammunition by a convicted felon.
See
18 U.S.C. § 922(g)(1). A three-day jury trial in the United States District Court for the Western District of New York (Siragusa,
J.)
concluded with a guilty verdict and Smith was sentenced
Smith’s trial was held in the United States District Court in Rochester, New York, which is part of the Kenneth B. Keating Federal Building complex. At the entrance to the building is a security station staffed by security personnel supervised by the Marshals Service. On February 7, 2003, pursuant to a directive from the Director of the Marshals Service, the Marshals Service, in conjunction with the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), began requiring all unknown building visitors to show photo identification before passing through magnetometers.
On the third day of trial, counsel for Defendant moved for a mistrial on the grounds that Defendant’s First and Sixth Amendment rights to public trial were violated by the requirement that visitors to the federal building show photo identification. Smith’s counsel submitted an affidavit which vaguely claimed “[u]pon information and belief’ that members of Smith’s family, members of counsel’s investigative staff, and members of the general public had been prevented from attending his jury trial as a result of the photo identification policy. Counsel did not provide any additional specific information regarding those who were allegedly denied access due to the photo identification policy. After closing arguments, the district court excused the jury and called Marshal Peter Lawrence to the stand to explain the photo identification requirement.
Marshal Lawrence testified that the requirement of showing a photo identification was part of a new policy implemented after the events of September 11, 2001, to protect federal buildings and courthouses. Under the policy, there are five numerical security levels, which correspond with the five color levels established by DHS. When the national alert level is 3 (yellow) or 4 (orange), Marshals must perform a photo identification check of all individuals seeking access to federal buildings. Because the national alert level at the time of Smith’s trial was 3, every person seeking access to the building who was unknown to security personnel was checked for photo identification and asked to sign-in. Individuals who could not produce a photo identification were denied entry. Marshal Lawrence testified that individuals were not asked for identification on the basis of race, national origin, or any other discriminatory ground.
Marshal Lawrence further testified that there was no “watch list” against which security personnel checked the names; therefore, any person who could produce a form of photo identification was permitted to enter the federal building containing courtrooms. Furthermore, it was left to the discretion of security personnel to determine whether an individual was sufficiently identified by the identification he or she tendered.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the district court made the following findings: (1) after September 11, 2001, the Marshals Service, in conjunction with DHS, adopted heightened security measures; (2) alert levels 3 and 4 require all unknown individuals to show photo identification in order to receive access to federal buildings; (3) such a policy “on a common sense basis” makes “perfect sense” because “[sjomeone who is forced to identify themselves is less likely to pose a threat than someone who is allowed to walk into the building without any at all;” (4) the policy was enforced without regard to race, ethnicity, or other improper classifications; and (5) where the district court did not itself restrict trial access, the Defendant’s Sixth Amendment right to a public trial was not implicated. The district court did not permit Smith to put on testimony showing that anyone had actually been excluded by the security
DISCUSSION
We review the district court’s legal conclusions
de novo, see United States v. Doe,
I. Sixth Amendment
The Sixth Amendment provides,
inter alia,
that “the accused shall enjoy the right to a ... public trial.” U.S. Const. amend. VI. Nevertheless, a criminal defendant’s right to a public trial “may give way in certain cases to other rights or interests.”
Waller v. Georgia,
Although
Waller
concerned the complete closure of a courtroom to the public for the duration of a hearing, this Circuit and others have held that where a narrow, “partial closure” occurs, the first
Waller
factor is less rigorous. In such cases, there must only be a “substantial reason,” rather than an “overriding interest” justifying the closure.
Woods v. Kuhlmann,
Here, however, the district court never reached the question of whether even a narrow closure occurred; instead, it concluded that Smith’s Sixth Amendment rights were not implicated because the district court itself had not denied anyone courtroom access. We believe the district court erred in assuming that a defendant’s Sixth Amendment rights cannot be violated unless a court itself restricts courtroom access. First, although cases involving the right to a public trial commonly arise in the context of courts entering formal closure orders, we believe that measures that limit the public’s access to federal buildings with courtrooms where public trials may be occurring implicate Sixth Amendment concerns. At least one other circuit has concluded that the Marshals Service’s
sua sponte
act of requiring spectators to produce photo identification before enter
Third, more important than
who
enacts restrictions on courtroom access is the question of whether those restrictions implicate the values that the Sixth Amendment’s public trial guarantee aims to protect. In
Peterson v. Williams,
We turn, then, to
Waller
to determine whether Smith’s Sixth Amendment rights were violated. At oral argument, the government conceded' — we think appropriately — that the requirement of showing photo identification at the door to the federal building effected at least a “partial closure” of Smith’s trial.
1
We further agree with the government, however, that the closure of Smith’s trial was at most “partial,” since the security measures “(1) barred only those would-be spectators who opted not to submit written identification, and (2) presumably may have ‘chilled’ attendance by some potential spectators who opted not to present themselves at the courthouse.”
DeLuca,
As already noted, the first prong of the
Waller
test is relaxed in situations involving a partial rather than a complete closure; the partial closure must be justified only by a “substantial reason” that is likely to be prejudiced in the absence of the closure.
See Guzman v. Scully,
In analyzing the first prong, we have repeatedly observed that a “positive correlation” exists between the extensiveness of the closure requested, and the gravity of the interest asserted and likelihood that the interest will be advanced by the closure.
Brown v. Kuhlmann,
if a party seeks a broad closure, it must demonstrate that the interest ... is especially grave, and that the risk that would be posed ... by not closing the courtroom is more than serious. Conversely, if a party seeks a relatively narrow courtroom closing, the burden it must carry is not a heavy one.
Id. (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Because the closure at issue is quite narrow — only those individuals who were unwilling or unable to show photo identification were allegedly excluded from Smith’s trial — we need not demand compelling record evidence that the goal of preventing a terrorist attack is advanced by requiring individuals to show photo identification. Indeed, the district court’s “common sense” conclusion that “[s]ome-one who is forced to identify themselves is less likely to pose a threat than someone who is allowed to walk into the building without any at all” satisfies this undemanding inquiry.
Under the second prong of the
Waller
test, the closure must not be broader than necessary to protect the asserted interest.
See Waller,
The third prong requires a trial court to consider reasonable alternatives to closing the proceedings.
See Waller,
Finally, the fourth prong requires the trial court to “make findings adequate to support the closure.”
Waller,
For those reasons, we conclude that the fourth prong was satisfied. In
Huminski v. Corsones,
[w]hen a judge, in the relative calm of chambers, issues [a closure] order, for example, the requirement of particularized findings obtains. In that context, findings are a necessary safeguard against arbitrary judicial abridgement of the constitutional right. But when the decision is made by an administrative or law-enforcement officer in the lobby of a courthouse, adherence to what in those circumstances would be the anomalous formality of the particularized findings cannot reasonably be expected.
Id.
at 87. Here, too, we believe that the requirement of particularized findings is unjustified, since the post-September 11th security measures were adopted by the Marshals Service and DHS to address a generalized threat.
See id.
Moreover, we have noted that “[t]he quality and extent of the evidence that will support a closure ... will vary from case to case, depending on the scope of the closure.”
Bowden,
II. First Amendment
Smith also claims that the partial closure violated his “First Amendment right to a public trial.” Br. of Appellant at 22. A defendant’s right to a public trial is most clearly rooted in the Sixth Amendment.
See Waller,
In
Waller,
the Supreme Court found it unnecessary to decide whether a defendant may bring a claim to an open trial under the First Amendment because it had already concluded that Waller’s Sixth Amendment rights had been violated.
See Waller,
We, too, need not decide whether Smith could bring a First Amendment open trial claim (either on his own behalf or to vindicate the rights of the public and press), for even assuming he could, “[tjhe same test applies whether a closure motion is made ... over the defendant’s Sixth Amendment objection or ... over the First Amendment objection of the government or press.”
Doe,
III. Control of Court Access
Although we conclude that Smith’s constitutional rights were not violated by the imposition of a photo identification require
Control by the courts is essential, because the judiciary is uniquely attuned to the delicate balance between defendants’ Sixth Amendment rights to public trial, the public and press’s First Amendment lights to courtroom access, and the overarching security considerations that are unique to the federal facilities containing courtrooms. Because of these factors, special concerns arise when security measures that seem obvious or commonplace in some settings are transferred to the door of such facilities. The judiciary is uniquely competent to strike the proper balance. It is especially important that the judiciary maintain control of security measures that may affect those having business before the courts, because of the danger that litigants could be excluded from the courtroom and procedurally penalized for their absence through no fault of their own and without the knowledge of the court. For these reasons, we expect the Marshals Service to consult with the courts before implementing general security measures that significantly affect court access. Such restrictions should then be approved by the judiciary through, for example, their relevant court security committees.
IV. Crosby Remand
Because Smith’s appeal was pending before this Court when the Supreme Court issued
United States v. Booker,
— U.S. -,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons provided, the judgment of the district court is Affirmed, and Remanded for proceedings consistent with
United States v. Crosby,
Notes
. In its brief on appeal, the government initially took the position that the requirement of showing photo identification did not effect a courtroom closure because it was merely a "universal pre-condition to courtroom access" analogous to a magnetometer screening. Appellee's Br. at 11. As the First Circuit noted in
DeLuca,
"no one would suggest” that magnetometer screenings violate the Sixth Amendment.
DeLuca,
. In an affidavit, Smith’s counsel averred, upon "[(Information and belief,” that Smith's family members and others were excluded by the photo identification requirement. "[T]his Court takes very seriously a defendant's right to have family members and friends present at his trial.”
Carson,
.
Huminski
involved the First Amendment right of a member of the public to courthouse access, but as explained in Part II,
infra,
"[t]he same test applies whether a closure motion is made ... over the defendant's Sixth Amendment objection or ... over the First Amendment objection of the [public] or press.”
Doe,
.
United States v. Alcantara,
. We note that Doe and other cases have only expressly considered the standard applicable to the First Amendment rights of the public and press. Nevertheless, we can see no reason why, to the extent a defendant may press a First Amendment claim on his own behalf (an issue we do not decide), the standard for analyzing such a claim would differ in any way from that of the public and press. Nor has Smith provided any reason for believing the standards would differ.
