I am not sure whether this ruling was posted to a.r.s. before. Note the sentence where it says:
Those [documents seized during the raids in 1982] in the possession of anyone but the district court, the government, and Scientology may be freely disseminated.The text is now also available from http://wpxx02.toxi.uni-wuerzburg.de/~krasel/CoS/legal/821693.html (If you are aware of any other pages, please let me know.)
[snips]
UNITED STATES of America
v.
Mary Sue HUBBARD, et al.
Appeal of CHURCH OF SCIENTOLOGY OF CALIFORNIA.
No. 82-1693.
United States Court of Appeals,
District of Columbia Circuit.
Argued July 23, 1982.
Decided Aug. 10, 1982.
Appeal was taken in criminal cases from decisions of the United States
District Court for the District of Columbia, Aubrey E. Robinson, Jr.,
J., with respect to motions seeking disclosure of documents seized
from religious group. The Court of Appeals held that the District
Court should not bring about disclosure of documents of religious
group at request of Commissioner of Internal Revenue, defendant in tax
court action in which group sought tax refund, or at request of party
in pending lawsuits in federal district courts in Boston and Los
Angeles, the decision to disclose or not to disclose should be made by
tax court and such district courts and documents should remain sealed
until they had been received in such courts.
Order accordingly.
MacKinnon, Circuit Judge, filed concurring opinion.
CRIMINAL LAW
In criminal cases, district court in District of Columbia should not
bring about disclosure of documents of religious group at request of
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, defendant in tax court action in
which group sought tax refund, or at request of party in pending
lawsuits in federal district courts in Boston and Los Angeles,
decision to disclose or not to disclose should be made by tax court
and such district courts and documents should remain sealed until they
had been received in such courts. *956 **330 Appeal from the United
States District Court for the District of Columbia (D.C. Criminal No.
78-401).
Michael Lee Hertzberg of the Bar of the New York Court of Appeals, pro
hac vice, by special leave of court, with whom Leonard B. Boudin, Eric
M. Lieberman, New York City, and Roger C. Spaeder, Washington, D. C.,
were on the brief, for appellant.
Thomas Hoffman, Boston, Mass., of the Bar of the Supreme Judicial
Court of Massachusetts, pro hac vice, by special leave of court, for
petitioner-appellee Paulette Cooper.
Judith Hetherton, Asst. U. S. Atty., with whom Stanley S. Harris, U.
S. Atty., and John A. Terry and Raymond Banoun, Asst. U. S. Attys.,
Washington, D. C., were on the brief, for appellee United States.
Before ROBINSON, Chief Judge, and MacKINNON and WALD, Circuit Judges.
Opinion PER CURIAM.
Concurring opinion filed by Circuit Judge MacKINNON.
PER CURIAM:
In 1977, following issuance of a very comprehensive search warrant,
the United States Government seized several thousand documents from
two Los Angeles premises of the Church of Scientology of California
(Scientology). To aid in a criminal prosecution of several
Scientologists, photocopies of a large subset of these documents were
placed in the hands of the clerk of the United States District Court
for the District of Columbia, under seal. [FN1] On the day before
entering guilty verdicts on a stipulated record, the district court
judge presiding over the criminal prosecutions of nine Scientologists
unsealed the court's copies of all of these documents, except for
certain ones whose originals had been returned to Scientology. Nine
months later, we reversed, holding that the district court should
release generally only those documents in which the public, or some
member of the public, had a particularized interest sufficient to
overcome Scientology's privacy interest. United States v. Hubbard, 650
F.2d 293 (D.C.Cir.1980). On remand, a different district judge [FN2]
found no particularized interests warranting disclosure. We therefore
ordered all of the documents in the district court's possession
resealed. United States v. Hubbard, 650 F.2d 293, 332-33
(D.C.Cir.1981) (supplemental opinion).
FN1. See generally United States v. Hubbard, 650 F.2d 293, 296-99 &
n.6 (D.C.Cir.1980).
[ Back ]
FN2. The original trial judge had recused himself.
[ Back ]
_________________________________________________________________
During the nine months between the district court's unsealing order
and our reversal, the district court's copies of the documents were
available for public inspection and photocopying.[FN3] Scientology
asked us to recall and modify our mandate to seal the copies made
during this nine-month period. We denied Scientology's motion in an
unpublished order on January 19, 1982, mainly on the ground that it
would be impractical to restrict third parties' use of their copies of
the documents.[FN4]
FN3. A motions panel of this court had denied a stay of the unsealing,
the court en banc had denied reconsideration, and Chief Justice
Burger, as Circuit Justice, had denied a stay.
[ Back ]
FN4. The operative portion of our January 19 memorandum reads as
follows:
Recall and modification of a mandate is guided by equitable
considerations. 7 J. Moore, Federal Practice P 60.19. Recall and
modification are limited to exceptional cases involving not just
"good cause" and a need to prevent injustice but falling within one
of several "special reason(s)." See Greater Boston Television
Corporation v. F.C.C., 463 F.2d 268, 275-80 (D.C.Cir.1971). This is
not an exceptional case warranting the exercise of our power.
Scientology fears that without additional protection from this
court, private persons who have obtained copies of the documents
while they were improperly unsealed will be free to use them as
they please without judicial oversight of the kind involved in the
course of ordinary discovery procedures. The additional protection
sought is general, i.e., requiring return of all copies, enjoining
their future use, and making the sealing order effective nunc pro
tunc back to the time of the improper unsealing. Scientology itself
cautions that we ought not fashion a protective order deciding
which documents are relevant to or discoverable in litigation in
the various courts throughout the country. That caution is well
taken; the various courts overseeing civil actions in which the
documents are or may be involved are best able to oversee use of
the copies made while the documents were improperly unsealed as
well as to supervise discovery. Further, the general prohibition
Scientology seeks here however would apply to unidentified
non-litigants who acted in good faith in obtaining the documents
and whose actions would now be governed by an order they had no
meaningful opportunity to contest. Any such general prohibition
would not only extend the court's mandate to unknowable limits but
would realistically be unenforceable as well. See also infra note
6.
[ Back ]
_________________________________________________________________
We thus have made clear the status of two sets of copies of the seized
documents: those in the district court's possession are, *957 **331
for the time being, [FN5] under seal; those in the possession of
anyone but the district court, the government, and Scientology may be
freely disseminated. [FN6] This appeal requires us to address for the
first time [FN7] the status of a third set of the documents: the
originals still in the government's hands. The district court
concluded that the government's originals could be produced, without
seal, to parties having a need for them. We believe a more moderate
procedure will best accommodate the legitimate interests of the
parties before us, as well as the various courts that must consider
these documents. We therefore modify the district court's order.
FN5. Both Scientology and the government indicated at oral argument
that they expect at some point in the future to file motions to change
the status of the court's copies. We note that many circumstances have
already changed since we filed the Hubbard opinions in 1980 and
1981-the seizure of the documents has been upheld against a fourth
amendment attack, criminal convictions have been obtained and
affirmed, and the Supreme Court has denied certiorari with respect to
all but two of the defendants. See generally United States v. Heldt,
668 F.2d 1238 (D.C.Cir.1981), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 102 S.Ct.
1971, 72 L.Ed.2d 440 (1982). We do not, of course, decide whether
these changed circumstances would justify a general unsealing of the
documents at this time, for neither the district court nor this court
has been presented with a motion for such unsealing.
[ Back ]
FN6. Scientology makes an argument that some people who copied the
district court's documents during their period of availability may not
have done so "in good faith" and are therefore outside the scope of
our January 19 memorandum. See supra note 4. We disagree. Anyone who
wished to copy the documents during those nine months was totally free
to do so; "bad faith" in this context is a meaningless term.
Nonlitigants (in the criminal case below) who copied these documents
are subject only to the oversight of "courts overseeing civil actions
in which the documents are or may be involved." Id.
[ Back ]
FN7. The oral argument in this appeal made clear that no one contends
that our Hubbard opinions addressed in terms the government's
originals. Scientology contends only that those opinions have logical
implications for the government's originals.
[ Back ]
_________________________________________________________________
I.
The Commissioner of Internal Revenue is defendant in an action in the
Tax Court in which Scientology is seeking a tax refund, claiming it
should be afforded tax-exempt status for 1970, 1971, and 1972. The
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) wishes to use part of one of the seized
documents ("Exhibit FX") in this litigation. The trial judge in the
Tax Court, however, has declined to admit the document into evidence
without some indication from a court in this jurisdiction that to do
so would not violate Hubbard. The government thus moved in the
district court on January 13, 1982 that Exhibit FX be "certified" to
the Tax Court.[FN8]
FN8. The IRS has apparently long been in possession of Exhibit FX,
having obtained copies both from the United States Attorney or Federal
Bureau of Investigation (FBI) for law-enforcement purposes, and from
the district court during the nine-month period of unsealing. The
government's January 13 motion in the district court, therefore,
pertained not to actual release of anyone's copy of Exhibit FX, but to
the Tax Court's use of the document.
[ Back ]
_________________________________________________________________
Paulette Cooper is plaintiff in one tort action, and defendant in
another, against Scientology. She has copies of several hundred of the
seized documents, having made copies in the district court clerk's
office *958 **332 during the unsealed period. She wishes to use these
documents in her pending lawsuits, one in federal district court in
Boston, the other in federal district court in Los Angeles. She sought
through ordinary discovery to have Scientology confirm the
authenticity of the documents in her possession, but Scientology would
only admit that they were true copies of the documents returned to it
by the FBI, suggesting that they might differ in some way from the
originals seized from Scientology. Ms. Cooper therefore sought to
depose the custodian of the original seized documents so that she
could authenticate her copies. She served a subpoena duces tecum on
the United States. The United States, in accord with a disposition
agreement entered into with the criminal defendants, [FN9] provided
Scientology with ten days' notice of its intention to comply with the
subpoena, and Scientology promptly sought from the district court here
a protective order prohibiting disclosure of these documents, or the
deposition transcript, to the public.
FN9. The disposition agreement is discussed briefly in Hubbard, 650
F.2d at 300-01, and reprinted in full in United States v. Heldt, 668
F.2d 1238, 1286-88 (D.C.Cir.1981), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 102
S.Ct. 1971, 72 L.Ed.2d 440 (1982). The relevant paragraph, number 8,
is reprinted in id. at 1287. Scientology was not a party to the
disposition agreement, and we held in Hubbard, 650 F.2d at 319-20,
that its interests are distinct from those of the individual criminal
defendants. Scientology is, however, a third-party beneficiary of the
disposition agreement in this context.
[ Back ]
_________________________________________________________________
On February 17, 1982, the district court ruled on the IRS' motion and
Scientology's motion. In a thoughtful analysis of our Hubbard opinion,
the court held that the original seized documents now in the hands of
the government, as well as all copies of the documents obtained by
individuals during the nine month unsealing, fall within the scope of
the sealing order placed on the documents by the Court of Appeals'
decision in United States v. Hubbard, 650 F.2d 293 (D.C.Cir.1980).
These documents, although not physically located within the confines
of the United States Courthouse, are nevertheless under seal and may
not be disseminated without first securing from this Court an
unsealing order specifically permitting such dissemination. This is
true whether the proposed dissemination would result in "wholesale
public access" to the documents or in a more limited disclosure of the
documents. Memorandum opinion at 5-6. The court went on to hold,
however, that both the IRS and Ms. Cooper had a particular need for
the documents, so that certification of Exhibit FX and Ms. Cooper's
deposition, with its accompanying documents, could go forward, so long
as Exhibit FX and the deposition transcript were placed under seal in
the courts in which they were to be used. [FN10] Id. at 7-10.
FN10. We understand the district court's finding that Ms. Cooper and
the IRS had a need for these documents to be undisputed. In any event,
it is indisputable.
[ Back ]
_________________________________________________________________
Scientology neither sought reconsideration of nor took an appeal from
the February 17 ruling. The government, however, sought
reconsideration and modification of the opinion and order, and Ms.
Cooper sought "clarification." [FN11] In its twenty-two-page motion,
the government complained at length that the February 17 decision had
the effect of retroactively making illegal numerous disseminations of
the documents that had already taken place within the federal
government. In a single paragraph, the government also argued that
there was no need for a seal on the Tax Court document because of the
"strong public policy in favor of full disclosure of evidence upon
which a court relies in rendering its decisions." R. 948 at 21 (citing
Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc., 435 U.S. 589, 98 S.Ct. 1306, 55
L.Ed.2d 570 (1977); Hubbard, 650 F.2d at 317-18 & n.96).[FN12] Ms.
Cooper *959 **333 attached to her motion copies of three letters in
which counsel for Scientology or Scientologists had advised Ms. Cooper
and others that the February 17 opinion required that they not
disseminate their copies of the documents, and further that they
withdraw the copies attached to their pleadings in pending litigation.
Ms. Cooper's motion argued that this was an unconstitutional prior
restraint on free speech and that these documents were already in the
public domain. R. 949. Both the government and Ms. Cooper also relied
heavily on our January 19 memorandum, see supra note 4, which for some
reason had not come to the attention of the district judge when he
ruled on February 17.[FN13]
FN11. Times Publishing Company, a publisher of two Florida newspapers,
also sought to intervene and to have the district court modify its
order. The district court denied intervention, and Times Publishing
Company has not appealed.
[ Back ]
FN12. "R." refers to the numbered documents in the district court
record.
[ Back ]
FN13. The record sheds no light on why this was so. It appears there
may have been some inadvertent breakdown in communications between our
clerk's office and the parties.
_________________________________________________________________
In another thoughtful opinion, the district judge on June 10 vacated
his February 17 order. In light of our January 19 memorandum, he held
that "when the Court of Appeals imposed the seal in United States v.
Hubbard, supra, it intended to seal only those documents actually
located in the court files." Memorandum opinion at 4. He therefore
removed all restrictions on government dissemination except those
found in the disposition agreement, see supra p. 958 & note 9, removed
all restrictions on private party dissemination, and ordered that the
certification of Exhibit FX and Ms. Cooper's depositions go forward
without the seals previously imposed.
Scientology appealed this ruling and sought a stay pending appeal from
the district court. The district court denied a stay, and Scientology
then sought an emergency stay from this court. We granted a temporary
stay on July 14 and on July 20 ordered that all briefing of the entire
appeal be completed by July 22 and that oral argument take place on
July 23.[FN14] We now decide the full appeal.
FN14. No one objected to this schedule.
[ Back ]
_________________________________________________________________
II.
In our opinion, this case presents exceedingly narrow issues. We need
only decide whether the district court in the District of Columbia
should bring about public disclosure, at the request of these parties,
of the particular documents at issue in this litigation. We believe it
should not at this time.
The government's interest in certification of Exhibit FX to the Tax
Court is legitimate. Certification of Exhibit FX under seal fully
satisfies that interest. The further interest asserted by the
government-public disclosure of evidence upon which a court relies
-may be satisfied by public disclosure when and if the Tax Court in
fact relies on Exhibit FX. A Tax Court decision to disclose or not to
disclose Exhibit FX will contravene neither the letter nor the spirit
of our Hubbard decision and our January 19 memorandum. In short, the
government's prodisclosure arguments and Scientology's antidisclosure
arguments should be addressed to the Tax Court judge. Our function is
simply to assure the Tax Court freedom to rule as it sees fit by
ordering the government's copy of Exhibit FX kept under seal unless
and until the Tax Court rules otherwise. In this connection it may
exercise its sound judicial discretion. It is not bound by the seal of
the district court.
Similarly, Ms. Cooper's interest in authentication of her documents is
legitimate.[FN15] This interest is protected by taking the deposition
and placing it under seal. As counsel for Ms. Cooper admitted at oral
argument, his client has no interest in further dissemination. There
may be others who have an interest in obtaining access to *960 **334
the transcript of the deposition, but they were not before the
district court and are not before us. Furthermore, should they
eventually appear, their arguments should not be addressed to us or to
the district court here, but to the courts in which the deposition
transcript will be used. Our jurisdiction, it should be obvious, does
not extend to Boston or Los Angeles; we cannot, should not, and do not
restrict the district courts in those places from unsealing the
deposition transcript, or portions thereof, in accord with the usual
principles governing public access to the fruits of discovery,[FN16]
and documents in the record of court proceedings. Our jurisdiction
does, of course, extend to the district court here, and we hold that
that court should have recognized the Boston and Los Angeles courts'
freedom to rule by ordering the deposition transcript kept under seal
unless and until they rule otherwise.
FN15. Scientology has raised a question as to whether copies of the
documents produced by the subpoena duces tecum may be attached to the
transcripts of the deposition taken by Ms. Cooper, or whether instead
the FBI agent producing them may only testify as to his visual
comparison of the originals and Ms. Cooper's copies. We think it clear
that copies of the documents may be attached, in furtherance of Ms.
Cooper's legitimate interest. Whether nothing, the transcript without
attachments, or the transcript with attachments is made public is a
matter for determination by the courts in which the transcript is
used.
[ Back ]
FN16. These principles, of course, largely depend on a balancing
similar to that we undertook in Hubbard, and these courts may well
look to our Hubbard opinion (with due regard to changed circumstances,
see supra note 5) for guidance. They are, however, clearly not bound
by our Hubbard opinion.
[ Back ]
_________________________________________________________________
We therefore hold that the seal on Exhibit FX and the deposition
transcript is retained until they have been received in the courts in
which they are to be used. Those courts may then rule on the status of
such documents as they consider proper.
Two other points require brief elaboration. We affirm the district
court's June 10 order insofar as it removes restrictions on
third-party dissemination of the documents obtained during the
unsealing period. The June 10 order in this respect comports fully
with our January 19 memorandum. See also supra note 6. Also, we affirm
the June 10 order insofar as it removes any retroactive invalidation
of intragovernmental dissemination of those documents. No matter how
broadly or narrowly our Hubbard opinion is read, it certainly allows
dissemination by the government "to appropriate law enforcement
agencies." Hubbard, 650 F.2d at 323.[FN17] The record reflects that
the government has done no more than give copies of the documents to
such agencies.[FN18]
FN17. In Hubbard we said that the district court could make copies
available to such agencies. Counsel for Scientology, however, does not
contend that the government is more restricted in this regard.
[ Back ]
FN18. "(A)ppropriate law enforcement agencies," as we used that term
in Hubbard, encompasses agencies charged with enforcing both the
criminal and civil laws (including internal revenue laws). The public
has a strong interest in the enforcement of both. Cf. Hubbard, 650
F.2d at 323 ("(A)ccess might be ... warranted ... where the remedies
of grievously injured and unknowing victims would be jeopardized if
the documents never entered the public domain".).
[ Back ]
_________________________________________________________________
III.
We remand this case to the district court. The district court shall
modify its June 10 order to require that Exhibit FX be kept under seal
unless and until the Tax Court orders otherwise. The district court
shall also modify its order to require that the transcript of the
deposition taken by Paulette Cooper of FBI Agent Varley be transmitted
under seal to the United States District Courts for the District of
Massachusetts and for the Central District of California. Once the
transcript is in the possession of those courts, they may rule on its
status. In all other respects, the district court is affirmed.
So ordered.
MacKINNON, Circuit Judge (concurring).
I concur generally in the foregoing opinion but desire to comment
additionally. At oral argument appellant's counsel stated they were
proceeding on the theory that they could eventually obtain the return
of all the original evidentiary documents seized from the Church of
Scientology (Scientology) which were introduced as exhibits in the
case. Implicit in this theory as advanced was the assumption that the
Government would also surrender all copies of the exhibits. If the
theory of Scientology eventuated, the evidentiary record in this case
would end up devoid of reliable substantiation. Scientology's theory
cannot *961 **335 prevail. The court must at all times retain a
complete and authoritative record.
It was further claimed at oral argument that our decision in United
States v. Wilson, 540 F.2d 1100 (D.C.Cir.1976), supports Scientology's
position. Having authored Wilson, which is apparently the leading
case, I believe it worthwhile to correct some misconceptions. We held
in Wilson that a federal district court possesses both the
jurisdiction and duty "in a criminal case to return to the defendant
that property seized from him in the investigation but which is not
alleged to be stolen, contraband, or otherwise forfeitable, and which
is not needed, or is no longer needed, as evidence." Id. at 1101.
Wilson involved money, whereas here we are dealing with corporate
records and documents. There was no intent in Wilson to deal with
other property. Money, to which the Government has no further claim,
is usually properly returned to a defendant when the case is over and
its evidentiary value, if any, has been exhausted.
Corporate records and documents, however, are of a different character
and involve some different considerations. Generally when corporate
business records are admitted into evidence, if they are needed by the
corporation for its operations, copies are furnished and the practice
is for the court to exercise its discretion to allow the return of the
originals to the corporation. The originals need not be returned,
however, if they are needed by the court. After the case is finally
completed the court may, in its discretion, permit the substitution of
copies for the originals. It is important that the court's evidentiary
record at all times be complete and authoritative. This is
particularly important in criminal cases where some defendants attempt
to attack their convictions many years after they became final; an
authoritative evidentiary record may be required to resolve issues.
Courts may also allow the government to retain seized documents and
other property not used at trial for investigations relating to other
possible criminal actions. Such was the conclusion of the Sixth
Circuit in United States v. Murphy, 413 F.2d 1129 (6th Cir.), cert.
denied, 396 U.S. 896, 90 S.Ct. 195, 24 L.Ed.2d 174 (1969), where it
stated:
The main point of appellants' argument in this regard was that they
had the right to the return of other property and documents which
were seized by the Government at the time of their arrest and were
not exhibits in the case. This property and the other documents
were being held so that it could be determined whether they were
stolen from other institutions, and could be used as exhibits in
numerous subsequent actions commenced against appellant in
different parts of the country. But the withholding of this
property from appellants resulted in no error or prejudice to them
in this case.
Id. at 1140. The reasoning of the Sixth Circuit appears to have
particular relevance here where additional criminal and civil actions
have either been commenced or may yet be instituted. Amidst the
prospect or actuality of subsequent litigation the integrity of seized
documents that were admitted into evidence in an earlier proceeding
must be preserved against the contention that any copies are not true
and correct. Appellant here has already claimed that copies of some
documents are not correct copies of documents seized pursuant to the
search warrant. Under such circumstances the court in its discretion
might decide to retain the originals if appellants are unable to show
a legitimate business need for them. It is difficult to imagine what
legitimate business need appellants could show for the documents in
question because they are not ordinary business records but were
seized because of their relevance to certain criminal offenses which
have resulted in convictions and sentences. It may be that appellants
are attempting to obstruct plaintiffs from obtaining evidence
necessary for some civil actions that are pending or might be brought
against Scientology or its officials.[FN1]
FN1. Counsel for Intervenor-Appellee Paulette Cooper at oral argument
mentioned his efforts to authenticate some of the documents that are
relevant to her pending civil litigation with Scientology. Cooper
should also consider whether such authentication might be accomplished
by (1) the inventory of the search that was filed with the court and
(2) by any additional notes or memoranda that the Government may have
made contemporaneously with the search.
[ Back ]
_________________________________________________________________
The disposition to be made of evidentiary documents lies within the
sound discretion of the trial court which should be alert to *962
**336 preserve an accurate and complete evidentiary record covering
all proceedings and exhibits.
As the Third Circuit held in United States v. Premises Known as 608
Taylor Ave., 584 F.2d 1297 (3d Cir. 1978), a district court's
determination of the reasonableness of the retention of property
should include "consideration of the purposes for which the property
is being held." Id. at 1304. The Third Circuit further admonished that
district courts should be "sensitive to the need to balance the
owner's interests and the often complex and varied governmental
interests in retaining evidence for trial." Id. The retention of an
authentic record should also figure in this equation. Only if the
Government's retention is unreasonable in light of all the
circumstances should the district court order the return of the seized
property.
[snips]
--Cornelius.
--
/* Cornelius Krasel, U Wuerzburg, Dept. of Pharmacology, Versbacher Str. 9 */
/* D-97078 Wuerzburg, Germany email: phak004@rzbox.uni-wuerzburg.de SP4 */
/* "Science is the game we play with God to find out what His rules are." */