USCA1 Opinion
December 23, 1992
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
____________________
Nos. 92-1239
92-1397
MIGUEL RIVERA-PUIG,
Plaintiff, Appellee,
v.
HON. GABRIEL GARCIA-ROSARIO,
Defendant, Appellant.
____________________
APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
[Hon. Jos
A. Fust , U.S. District Judge]
___________________
____________________
Before
Torruella, Circuit Judge,
_____________
Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,
____________________
and Stahl, Circuit Judge.
_____________
_____________________
Anabelle
Rodr guez,
Solicitor General,
____________________
Justice, for appellant.
Juan R. Marchand-Quintero for appellee.
_________________________
Department
of
____________________
____________________
TORRUELLA,
Circuit Judge.
______________
This
important constitutional issues requiring
between
state-created
freedom of the press
the United
paramount
States
in
due
process
appeal
us to strike a balance
and privacy
concerns,
rights protected by the First
Constitution.
this case,
and in
Because
light
presents
we find
of the
and
Amendment of
the
latter
Supreme Court's
decision in Press-Enterprise Co. v. Superior Court of California,
____________________
____________________________
478 U.S. 1 (1986) ("Press Enterprise II"), we affirm the district
___________________
court's
provision
decision1
of Rule
declaring
23(c) of
unconstitutional
the Puerto
Rico Rules
the
closure
of Criminal
Procedure, P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 34, App. II R. 23(c) (1991).2
____________________
1
Reported at Rivera-Puig
___________
(D. P.R. 1992).
2 Rule 23(c) of
provides:
the Puerto
(c)
v. Garc a-Rosario, 785
______________
Rico
Rules of
F. Supp. 278
Criminal Procedure
Proceeding during the hearing.
Proceeding during the hearing.
If the person appears at the preliminary
hearing and does
not waive it, the
magistrate shall hear the evidence.
The
___
hearing shall be held privately unless
_________________________________________
the
defendant
requests
at
the
_________________________________________
commencement thereof that it be public.
________________________________________
The defendant may cross-examine witnesses
against him and may introduce evidence in
his own behalf. The prosecuting attorney
may be present at the hearing and he may
also
examine
and cross-examine
all
witnesses and introduce new evidence.
Upon
being requested to do so, the
prosecuting attorney shall put at the
disposal
of
the
person the
sworn
statements of the witnesses
whom he
called to testify at the hearing that he
has in his possession. If in the opinion
of the magistrate the evidence shows that
there is probable cause to believe that
an offense has been committed and that
the defendant has committed
it, the
magistrate shall forthwith hold him to
answer for the commission of the offense
To
place this case in its legal context, we will first
discuss the Supreme Court's ruling in Press-Enterprise II.
___________________
I.
I.
Section
PRESS-ENTERPRISE II
PRESS-ENTERPRISE II
___________________
868
of
the
California
preliminary hearings to be open
of
the public is necessary
right
to a
to the public unless
in order to
fair and impartial
(West 1985).
Penal Code
trial."
A defendant charged
required
"exclusion
protect the defendant's
Cal. Penal
Code
with 12 counts of
868
murder and
subject to the death penalty requested closure of his preliminary
hearing.
Defendant's unopposed
conclusion
of
the
Enterprise's request
proceedings,
and
hearing,
motion
the
for the release
sealed the
record.
was granted.
magistrate
of the
The
At the
denied
Press
transcript of
state
and
the
Press-
Enterprise lost their appeal to the superior court on the grounds
that release of the
transcript might prejudice defendant's right
to a fair and impartial trial.
After the defendant
the
superior court
released
waived his right to a
the transcript.
jury trial,
Appeals to
higher courts in California nevertheless continued.
ruled that there was
the
These courts
no general First Amendment right
of access
to preliminary hearings, and that the defendant's right to a fair
and
impartial
trial by
jury uninfluenced
by
news accounts
____________________
in the appropriate Part and Division of
the Court of First Instance; otherwise
the magistrate shall exonerate him and
order that he be set free. . . .
(emphasis added).
-3-
shifted the burden in favor of closure if defendant established a
reasonable likelihood of substantial prejudice.
Ultimately,
Supreme Court.
process
open
assuring
case
to
neutral
observers is
States
an
important
means of
Press-Enterprise II, 478 U.S. at 7.
___________________
It then discussed
the
"tests
to public access attaches.
of two considerations:
public
United
the appearance of
it called
the
at the
well as maintaining
of experience
proceeding passes these tests,
to
arrived
The Court noted that maintaining a criminal trial
a fair trial as
fairness.
what
the
type of
access
These
these
tests are comprised
question
exists; and
significant
positive
functioning of the particular process in question."
Applying
If
whether a tradition of accessibility
hearing in
plays
logic."
a qualified First Amendment right
Id. at 9.
___
(1)
and
tests
to
California's
(2) "whether
role
in
the
Id. at 8.
___
preliminary
hearing, the Court first found that state and federal courts have
almost uniformly conducted
preliminary hearings
in open
court.
Id. at 10-11.
___
Under the second consideration
found that
public access to the
of the tests, the Court
California preliminary hearings
would play a significant positive role in the
of the process.
Id. at 11-12.
___
already determined
in
actual functioning
The Court reasoned
prior cases
that public
significant role in criminal trials.
Id.
___
that it had
access plays
It then concluded that
the "California preliminary hearings are sufficiently like trials
to justify
the same conclusion."
Id. at 12.
___
In both criminal
-4-
trials and the California preliminary hearing, the accused has an
absolute right to:
neutral
(1) an elaborate preliminary hearing before a
magistrate; (2)
representation by counsel;
(5)
present
exculpatory
obtained evidence.
preliminary hearing,
personally appear
at the
(4) cross-examine hostile
evidence;
Id. at 12-13.
___
and
(6)
hearing; (3)
witnesses;
exclude illegally
In addition, in the California
if the magistrate finds
probable cause, he
binds the
accused over for trial, which in most cases leads to a
guilty plea.
final and most
Consequently, "the preliminary hearing is often the
important step in
the criminal proceeding,"
and
"in many cases provides 'the sole occasion for public observation
of the criminal justice system.'"
News v. Municipal Court,
____
_______________
commented
makes
Id. (quoting San Jose Mercury___
_________________
638 P.2d 655, 663
that the very absence
access even
(1982)).
The
Court
of a jury
in these proceedings
as "an
inestimable safeguard
more important
against corrupt or overzealous prosecutor[s] and . . . compliant,
biased, or eccentric judge[s]."
Accordingly,
the
Id.
___
Court
ruled that
proceedings
remain open unless
specific, on-the-record findings
that
essential to
"'closure is
narrowly
(quoting
tailored
to
serve
preserve higher
that
Press-Enterprise Co.
_____________________
Enterprise I"), 464 U.S. 501,
_____________
interest.'"
v.
demonstrate
values and
Id. at
___
Superior
Court
________________
510 (1984)).
must
is
13-14
("Press______
Against this legal
backdrop we consider the present case.
II.
II.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
__________________
On April 4, 1991, Miguel Rivera-Puig ("Rivera-Puig"), a
-5-
newspaper
reporter for the San Juan, Puerto Rico daily El Vocero
_________
de Puerto Rico
_______________
("El Vocero"),
_________
hearing before the Hon.
judge
sought access
to a
preliminary
Gabriel Garc a-Rosario, a district court
of the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico.
Rivera-Puig filed a
written request, as a newspaper reporter, seeking physical access
to
the proceedings,
or
a recording
Garc a-Rosario denied this request.
to another preliminary
16, 1992.
press and
In
the hearing.3
Judge
Rivera-Puig requested access
hearing before the same judge
on January
The judge also denied this request.
Appellant
than
of
candidly
admits that
public from preliminary
the exclusion
hearings is the
the exception, pursuant to the
of the
rule, rather
requirements of Rule 23(c).
the face of this barrier Rivera-Puig
went in search of legal
redress for his federal constitutional claim.
III.
III.
THE DISTRICT COURT PROCEEDINGS
THE DISTRICT COURT PROCEEDINGS
______________________________
On January 17, 1992, Rivera-Puig filed an action in the
United
States
declaratory
judgment
unconstitutional
rule.
District
that the
and an
Although the
Court
for
Rule
injunction
suit
named
Puerto
23
Rico
seeking
closure provision
against enforcement
Judge Garc a-Rosario
was
of the
as
the
____________________
3
Rivera-Puig,
who has worked
for El Vocero since 1979, made
__________
several prior similar requests.
The local courts steadfastly
denied him admission to preliminary hearings pursuant to Rule
23(c).
Puerto Rican preliminary hearings generally are not recorded.
There is thus no opportunity for post-hearing access to these
proceedings.
It should be noted that in fiscal years 1987-1988,
28,796 preliminary hearings were held in the courts of Puerto
Rico. Rivera-Puig, 785 F. Supp. at 282.
___________
-6-
defendant,
the
Secretary
plaintiff
also
served
the
complaint
on
the
of Justice of the Commonwealth and the Director of the
Courts Administration of Puerto Rico.
In a motion filed with the
complaint,
two
Rivera-Puig claimed
that
preliminary
hearings
would soon take place
involving charges against prominent public
officials,4
the identity
but that
of the presiding
unknown until the day of the hearings.
challenge
judges was
Thus, it was difficult to
the closure of hearings beforehand.
Because he wanted
access to these hearings, Rivera-Puig sought an expedited hearing
to decide the validity of the closure provisions of Rule 23.
The
to
the facts
hearing was held on January 23, 1992.
previously
stated, the
district court
In addition
heard the
testimony
language
January
of Manny Su rez, a
reporter for the
daily, The San Juan Star.
___________________
22,
1992
he
was
denied
preliminary hearing determination
the
Superior Court of Puerto Rico
San Juan English
Su rez testified
access
to
held in the
review
that on
of
San Juan part
of
pursuant to Rule 24(c) of the
Puerto Rico Rules of Criminal Procedure.5
____________________
4 A preliminary hearing had been scheduled for February 3, 1992
regarding criminal charges against the Speaker of the House of
Representatives
of Puerto
Rico's
Legislature.
Similar
proceedings were scheduled for January 30, 1992, and March 17,
1992
involving
criminal
charges
against
an
Assistant
Superintendent of Police.
Both cases were highly charged with
public interest throughout Puerto Rico.
5
Rule 24 governs a proceeding which may be held after a
preliminary hearing.
Subdivision (c) allows the prosecuting
attorney to resubmit the case, using the same or different
evidence, to a judge in the superior court if the judge in the
Rule 23 preliminary hearing found no probable cause or found
probable cause for a lesser offense than the one charged. See
___
Pueblo
v. Cruz-Justiniano,
116
P.R.
Dec. 28
(Official
______
_______________
-7-
The district
court also
actions involving the validity
learned of three
of Rule 23(c).
local court
In the first
of
these suits, El Vocero de Puerto Rico v. Estado Libre Asociado de
________________________
________________________
Puerto Rico,
___________
the
Civil Appeal
superior
court
AC-90-191, (the "El Vocero appeal"),
__________
decided
constitutionality on January
Supreme
since
Court of
expedited
resolution
favor
29, 1990.
Puerto Rico
February 1, 1991.
in
of
An appeal
where it
sought
mandamus
rule's
went to
was pending
Appellants twice moved
and
the
the
resolution
that court for
against
the
seven
justices of the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, moving for decision
of the submitted appeal.
The court rejected these efforts
in a
cryptic ruling dated January 22, 1992.6
The
second suit
involving
Puerto Rico v. Lara-Imbert, CE-91-235
___________
___________
Rule 23(c)
was Pueblo de
__________
(June 28, 1991), in
which
the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico reversed a superior court ruling
which,
relying on
preliminary
Press-Enterprise II,
___________________
hearing.
That decision,
refused closure
however,
was based
of the
on a
perceived lack of a "case and controversy," not on the merits.
A third case, El Vocero de Puerto Rico v.
_________________________
Cab n-Garc a,
____________
92 J.T.S. 1 at
9121 (1992), was
Hon. Carlos
___________
dismissed by the
____________________
Translations
(1984); Alvarez v. Tribunal Superior, 102
_______
__________________
P.R. Dec. 236 (Off. Trans. at 296) (1974). Procedures under Rule
24 are not considered appeals from the judge's ruling but rather
are independent hearings. Cruz-Justiniano, 116 P.R. Dec. at 30
_______________
(Off. Trans. at 38). See also Rivera-Puig, 785 F. Supp. at 281
________ ___________
n.5.
6
The court
at 35)
concluded that it
lacked jurisdiction
to issue a
writ of mandamus against itself and that the appeal was receiving
the priority merited by the important nature of the controversy
in question.
-8-
Supreme Court of Puerto Rico for lack of jurisdiction.
In
comprehensive
federal district
1992.
The
"judicial
well-founded
court decided the
district
immunity
injunctive
and
court ruled
did
not
relief against
opinion,
present case on
that:
bar the
(1)
issuance
judicial officer
the
January 31,
the
doctrine of
of
prospective
acting in
[his]
judicial capacity," (quoting Pulliam v. Allen, 466 U.S. 522, 541_______
_____
42 (1984));
between
hearings,
(2) an
Rivera-Puig, who
and
provisions of
401
Article III "case
Judge
was denied
Garc a-Rosario
Rule 23; (3)
injunction of
requesting access
access to
any criminal
existed
the preliminary
who enforced
abstention under Younger
_______
U.S. 37 (1971), was inappropriate
seek an
and controversy"
the
closure
v. Harris,
______
because plaintiff did not
proceeding, but rather
was
to future preliminary hearings; (4) abstention
pursuant to Colorado River Water Conservation District v. United
___________________________________________
______
States ("Colorado River"), 424 U.S. 800 (1976), was inappropriate
______
______________
because the
"exceptional circumstances" alluded to
were not present
provision of
in this one; and on the
court
Notwithstanding this
refused to issue an
the Puerto
merits (5) the closure
Rule 23(c) fell squarely within
Press Enterprise II.
____________________
Rico judiciary
in that case
the prohibition of
ruling, the district
injunction because it
[would] comply with
without [the need for] further compulsion."
was "sure that
this declaration
Rivera-Puig, 785 F.
___________
Supp. at 290.
On February
entry to
12,
1992, Rivera-Puig
was again
several preliminary hearings despite
refused
the local judges'
-9-
knowledge
motion
of
with
the district
the
district
court's ruling.
court
renewing
injunctive
relief.7
The district
that "Rule
23(c)'s
closure provision
Thus, he
his
court judge
filed a
request
again concluded
flagrantly
and
patently
violate[d] express constitutional precedent by the Supreme
of
the
United
States," and
that
"[g]reat and immediate irreparable
this
for
violation
Court
was causing
first amendment injury."
Id.
___
at
292.
Yet,
expressing
pious
traditionally
he
again
hope
refused
that
responsible
the
to
issue
"Puerto
Rico
institution," would
decision without the need for
the
injunction,
judiciary,
comply
with the
"the strong remedy of injunction."
Id. at 292-93.
___
Defendant and the intervenor, the Department of Justice
of
the
whether
that
Commonwealth,8
the district
appealed,
raising three
court lacked
Article III
defendant-appellant
has no
interest
issues:
(1)
jurisdiction in
adverse
to that
of
Rivera-Puig; (2) whether the district court should have abstained
from
hearing the case pursuant to Younger, 401 U.S. 37, Colorado
_______
________
River, 424 U.S. 800,
_____
or Railroad Commission of Texas
____________________________
v. Pullman
_______
____________________
7 The motion was accompanied by a sworn statement setting out
the facts previously described as well as a newspaper account
which appeared in the February 12, 1992 San Juan Star quoting the
_____________
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico as stating that
"[e]ach individual judge is free to follow the [federal court]
decision, which is persuasive, but is not binding."
Robert
Friedman, Andreu:
Hearings Ruling Not Binding, San Juan Star,
______________________________________ ______________
February 12, 1992, at 6.
8 We found nothing in the record that granted the Department of
Justice intervenor
status.
However, they
have acted as
intervenors throughout the case, and we will treat them as such.
-10-
Co.
___
("Pullman"), 312 U.S. 496 (1941); and (3) whether Rule 23(c)
_______
runs contrary to Press Enterprise II.
___________________
Before discussing these issues we will recount the most
recent development in this convoluted case.
-11-
IV.
IV.
On
July 8,
THE EL VOCERO APPEAL
THE EL VOCERO APPEAL
____________________
1992,
the Supreme
decided the El Vocero appeal.
__________
Court
of Puerto
El Vocero de Puerto Rico, et al.
_________________________________
v. Estado Libre Asociado de Puerto Rico, 92 J.T.S.
_____________________________________
1992).9
promulgated
The
court
Rico
found
that
the
108 (July 8,
preliminary
hearing
by Rule 23 differed from the California one found to
be invalid by Press Enterprise II, and ruled
____________________
It is crystal clear
that we lack appellate or
it constitutional.
non-habeas corpus
jurisdiction over decisions of the courts of any state, including
the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.
of Appeals v. Feldman, 460
___________
_______
See District of Columbia Court
___ __________________________
U.S. 462 (1983);
Trust Co., 263 U.S. 413 (1923).
_________
Rooker v. Fidelity
______
________
However, the El Vocero appeal is
_________
at
the heart of many of appellants'
this ruling, not in
garner
arguments.
We thus discuss
an appellate or supervisory posture,
the Puerto
Rico Supreme
Rule 23(c) procedure and
Court's definitive
to determine how that
but to
position on
position affects
the federal proceedings.
The case
concerns the same
the constitutionality
issue as the
present one:
of Rule 23(c); however, the
El Vocero and
_________
another reporter brought the case.
The
Puerto Rico
Supreme
Court, by
concluded that criminal defendants'
la intimidad") and
right of
access
to a
by
the
4 to
vote,
right to privacy ("derecho a
fair and impartial
public
or press
trial override
in
the
Rule
any
23(c)
____________________
9
This is the Spanish language citation as the decisions are no
longer routinely translated to English.
-12-
preliminary hearing.
A large
and
philosophical
system
during
the
part of the
majority opinion is
discourse regarding
Spanish
regime
as
the
Puerto
it
relates
a historical
Rican legal
to
Press______
Enterprise II and California's preliminary hearing.
_____________
the court,
California's preliminary hearing had been open to the
public since its
inception in
1872.
However,
this not to be the case in Puerto Rico.
at 9832-42.
Procedure
Code
preliminary
Puerto Rico
except
hearings.
until 1964
that
for
a comparative
provisions
Id. at 9842.
___
the one
in California,
applied the
at
court opinion then
right
to privacy
the Puerto
right
to a fair trial, against the
____________________
See P.R. Const., art. II,
___
logic tests, id.
___
would seem appropriate before rather
than after reaching a conclusion under that case.
10
and Californian
Id. at 9846.
___
Press-Enterprise II experience and
___________________
in
federal
procedure, investigative-
enough, however, the
9847, an analysis which
It was
not resemble a trial sufficiently
to have Press-Enterprise II apply."
___________________
Interestingly
by the
with
the local one, contrary to
"is a limited
judicial in nature, which does
Criminal
The court then engaged
the Puerto Rican
preliminary hearings, concluding that
change in
dealing
9842 (citation omitted).
"'fundamentally inspired'
______________________
analysis of
found
See El Vocero, 92 J.T.S.
___ _________
adopted California's
those
Id. at
___
rule," Rule 23 was adopted.
in
the court
According to the court, shortly after the
sovereignty in 1898,
not
According to
8.
Rico
Balancing
the
Constitution,10 and
the
right of access by the press
-13-
and
public to
the preliminary hearing,
reiterated the validity
the Puerto
of the closure provision
Rican court
of Rule 23(c).
Id. at 9847-52.
___
V.
V.
A.
A.
ARTICLE III JURISDICTION
ARTICLE III JURISDICTION
On
lacked
LEGAL ANALYSIS OF THE PRESENT APPEAL
LEGAL ANALYSIS OF THE PRESENT APPEAL
____________________________________
appeal, appellants
jurisdiction
to
argue that "the
entertain the
defendant-appellant in his official
have no adverse
legal interest
district court
complaint
filed against
capacity because the parties
for Article III
purposes or
no
actual controversy within the meaning of the Declaratory Judgment
Act is present."
raised
this issue
Article
III "case
Appellants' Brief at p. 11.
before
the district
or controversy"
Rivera-Puig had not personally
injury.11
Because
Their original
argument asserted
only that
suffered any actual or threatened
jurisdictional issues
stage of a federal case, Morrison
________
(1988), we address this
court.
Appellants never
can be raised
at any
v. Olson, 487 U.S. 654, 669-70
_____
new argument even though we
consider it
disingenuous.
In
every recent
Supreme Court
challenges
to
defendant.
See Press-Enterprise II, 478 U.S. 1
___ ___________________
Court
court rules,
major
of California);
(Superior
the
enforcing
Press-Enterprise I,
__________________
Court of California);
case
involving
court was
party
(1986) (Superior
464 U.S.
Pulliam v. Allen,
_______
_____
501 (1984)
466 U.S. 522
____________________
11 We note that appellants' original claim lacks merit.
The
district court correctly found that Rivera-Puig suffered actual
or threatened injury in that he was prevented from exercising his
qualified First Amendment right of access.
-14-
(1984) (Magistrate
for the County of
Culpeper, Virginia); Globe
_____
Newspaper Co. v. Superior Court for County of Norfolk,
_____________
_____________________________________
457 U.S.
596 (1982) (Superior Court of Norfolk County, Massachusetts).
In
fact, in appellants' Motion to Dismiss before the district court,
among
the
grounds
urged
as
basis
for
that
relief
was
plaintiff's alleged failure to join as indispensable parties "the
superior
courts which
are entertaining
the
criminal actions."
See Motion to Dismiss, at 1-2.
___
Moreover, Judge Garc a-Rosario, as
Rule 23(c)
the enforcer of the
________
closure provisions, has an interest
adverse to those
seeking access to preliminary hearings conducted before him.
Pulliam
_______
v. Allen,
_____
county magistrate
practice
of
466 U.S.
to
prevent
1983
persons
(Virginia Supreme
individual and official
action
for
action against
enforcement
___________
waiting
of
trial
her
for
was proper); Supreme Court of Virginia
__________________________
Consumers Union of United States, Inc.,
________________________________________
(1980)
1983
prospective
incarcerating
nonincarcerable offenses
v.
522 (1984)
See
___
Court and
its
446 U.S.
chief justice,
capacity, were proper defendants
declaratory
and
injunctive
relief
719, 736
in his
in a
against
enforcement of court-promoted rules).
___________
Appellants characterize
Judge Garc a-Rosario's actions
with respect to the closure provisions of
"a neutral adjudicator."
By
Rule 23(c) as those of
this allegation appellants seek
to
invoke In re Justices of the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico ("In re
__________________________________________________
_____
Justices"),
________
695 F.2d 17,
21 (1st Cir.
1982), in
which we held
that "ordinarily, no 'case or controversy' exists between a judge
-15-
who adjudicates claims under a statute and a litigant who attacks
the constitutionality of
both adjudicative
justices
that statute."
and enforcement
were at issue.
However,
administrative
it
functions of the
Puerto Rico
actions related to his adjudicatory
also
ruled
that,
responsibilities, they
"case or controversy"
that case, however,
In re Justices prohibits a suit against
______________
Judge Garc a-Rosario for any
functions.
In
are
if
judges
proper
purposes on those issues.
possess
parties
Id.
___
at 27; see
___
also Consumers Union, 446 U.S. at 734-37 (judges can be
____ _______________
declaratory
and
injunctive
relief
in
connection
for
sued for
with
their
enforcement of court rules).
Judge Garc a-Rosario is an adjudicator with respect
criminal defendants
With respect to
that come
members of
hearings, however, he is
Judge Garc a-Rosario is
before him
in Rule 23
the public seeking
hearings.
access to
those
an enforcer or "administrator."
a proper party in this case
to
Thus,
under In re
_____
Justices.
________
Moreover,
present case,
there
are
two
___
appellant
Judge Garc a-Rosario and
parties
in
the
the commonwealth's chief
___
enforcement officer,
intervenor status.
the Secretary
See "Notice
___
Appeal," and "Motion
Rule
the district
Notice of
Urgent Motion under
Injunctive Relief
court had
has assumed
of Appeal," "Amended
in Opposition to
52(b) Requesting
Thus,
of Justice, who
and Hearing
FRCP
Thereof."
Article III jurisdiction
even if
Judge Garc a-Rivera was an improper party under In re Justices.
______________
We thus
come to neuralgic
issues involving principles
-16-
of federalism and comity that wander through the El Vocero appeal
_________
like meteors lost in space, and which we must solve before we are
free to consider more mundane questions.
B.
B.
ABSTENTION AND RELATED MATTERS12
ABSTENTION AND RELATED MATTERS
Appellants argue
abstained
pending
that the district
from hearing the case
in
the
Puerto Rico
principle cases in support
court should
have
because the El Vocero case was
__________
courts.
Appellants offer
of that argument:
Younger,
_______
three
401 U.S.
37, Colorado River, 424 U.S. 800, and Pullman, 312 U.S. 496.
______________
_______
1. Younger Abstention.
1. Younger Abstention.
_______
Younger,
_______
court injunctions
401 U.S. at
43-54, counsels
of state criminal
the federal plaintiff, absent
Pursue, Ltd., 420 U.S. 592,
____________
against federal
proceedings pending against
special circumstances.
Huffman v.
_______
604 (1975), extended this
principle
____________________
12 Res judicata, estoppel, and similar matters are not at issue.
At oral argument,
appellants specifically disclaimed these
defenses. That is just as well, as they are affirmative defenses
that are waived unless raised in the answer. See Fed. R. Civ. P.
___
8(c); Badway v. United States, 367 F.2d 22, 25 (1st Cir. 1966).
______
_____________
Appellants failed to raise these defenses in their answer.
Moreover, even if appellants had properly raised these
defenses, it is doubtful that they would have been available in
this case. Federal courts must look to state law to see what
effect will be given to state court judgments. Allen v. McCurry,
_____
_______
449 U.S. 90, 96 (1980); Schneider v. Colegio de Abogados de
_________
_______________________
Puerto Rico, 546 F. Supp. 1251, 1269 (D.P.R., 1982). Puerto Rico
___________
requires the parties in each case to be identical for these
defenses to apply.
P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 21,
3343 (1991).
Neither plaintiff nor defendant in the present case are parties
in the El Vocero case. That action is not a class action, and
_________
the interests of a newspaper are not necessarily the same of
those of a reporter.
Thus, the required "perfect identity of
parties" does not exist in this case. See In re Justices, 695
___ _______________
F.2d at 26 (where some plaintiffs in federal suit did not
participate in previous state suit, claims in federal suit not
barred by res judicata or collateral estoppel).
-17-
to
state civil
plaintiff.
enforcement
The Supreme Court
civil proceedings pending
(1) are
cases pending
judicial
in
against the
further extended the
against the
nature; (2)
federal
defenses.13
concern
an
pending
held
that
against
intertwined
the
individuals
with the
Miranda, 422
_______
doctrine includes
U.S. 332,
who
have
federal plaintiff's
348 (1974).
which:
important
state
an opportunity to
Middlesex Ethics Comm.
________________________
State Bar Ass'n., 457 U.S. 423, 432 (1981).
________________
Court
doctrine to
federal plaintiff
interest; and (3) afford the federal plaintiff
raise
federal
v.
Garden
______
Finally, the Supreme
state
criminal
interests
that
interests.
Collectively,
cases
are
Hicks v.
_____
these cases
establish the Younger abstention doctrine.
_______
The
Younger
_______
abstention
in
ruling did
not enjoin
pending
against
the present
attend
are
future
case
doctrine
because
or interfere
Rivera-Puig
intertwined with his.
to
abstention
or
with
anyone
does
not
permit
the district
court's
any state
whose
proceeding
interests
are
The criminal cases that Rivera-Puig wishes
preliminary
hearings
of
third-person
criminal defendants.
Cf. Bettencourt v.
___ ___________
Board. of Registration
______________________
in Medicine, 904 F.2d 772 (1st Cir. 1990).
___________
These defendants have
no relation whatsoever to Rivera-Puig.
Similarly, the
El Vocero case was
_________
not pending against
_______________
____________________
13
Because the El Vocero proceeding is not a criminal or civil
_________
enforcement case, and it is not "uniquely in the furtherance of
the state courts' ability to perform their judicial functions,"
New Orleans Pub. Serv., Inc. v. New Orleans, 491 U.S. 350, 368
______________________________
___________
(1988), we doubt that the present case implicates the type of
important state interest contemplated in Middlesex Ethics Comm..
_______________________
However, we need not reach that issue today.
-18-
Rivera-Puig or someone whose interests were intertwined with his.
___________
Appellants point out that Rivera-Puig's employer, who brought the
El Vocero case, had similar interests as Rivera-Puig.
_________
422
U.S. at 348-50 (theater
See Hicks,
___ _____
employees being prosecuted in state
court had intertwining interests with theater which filed suit in
federal court
proceedings
to enjoin proceedings against them).
in
El Vocero
were not
pending against
However, the
El Vocero.
_________
Kercad -Mel ndez
________________
1989).
the
__________________________
v. Aponte-Roque,
____________
829 F.2d
255, 259
(1st Cir.
"In the paradigm situation calling for Younger restraint,
_______
state
defendant brings
statute [which
Fern ndez
_________
is
federal
simultaneously being
v. Tr as Monge, 586
___________
action challenging
applied against
F.2d 848, 851
the
him]."
(1978); see, e.g.,
___ ____
Penzoil Co. v. Texaco, Inc., 481 U.S. 1 (1987) (federal plaintiff
___________
____________
seeking to enjoin state plaintiff from enforcing judgment against
him); Moore
_____
v. Sims,
____
442 U.S.
seeking
to
enjoin
abuse);
United Books, Inc. v. Conte, 739 F.2d 30 (1984) (federal
__________________
_____
state
415
proceedings against
plaintiff seeking to enjoin future
the
present case, El Vocero
even if
its interests
present
situation is not
Rule 23.
Rule 23 against
were intertwined with
the type
plaintiffs
them
for
child
prosecutions against it).
brought the state
_______
determine the constitutionality of
El Vocero was not applying
__________
(1979) (federal
In
court lawsuit to
The state
court in
Rivera-Puig.
Thus,
Rivera-Puig's, the
contemplated by
the Younger
_______
abstention doctrine.
The
best that can be said in appellants' favor is that
a parallel state suit,
involving parties with similar interests,
-19-
has been decided in
the
a manner adverse to Rivera-Puig's
federal action.
present
To
find that
the district
claims in
court
in the
case should have abstained because of the El Vocero case
_________
would make abstention the
Mut. Ins. v.
__________
rule rather than the exception.
LaPlante,
________
480 U.S.
9,
22 (1987)
Iowa
____
(Stevens,
J.,
concurring in part and dissenting in part) ("The mere fact that a
case involving the
same issue
is pending in
another court
has
never been considered sufficient reason to excuse a federal court
from performing
before it.'")
its duty
'to adjudicate a
(citation omitted);
controversy properly
County of Allegheny
___________________
v. Frank
_____
Mashuda Co., 360 U.S. 185, 188 (1959); McClellan v. Carland, 217
____________
_________
_______
U.S. 268, 282
is
no bar
Federal
to
(1910) ("pendency of an action
proceedings concerning
court having jurisdiction").
conflict in the results
warrant
The
same matter
in
of
federal
jurisdiction."
at 816-17 (citing England v.
_______
375 U.S. 411, 415 (1964)).
the
"mere potential for
of adjudication does not, without
staying exercise
River, 424 U.S.
_____
the
in the state court
more,
Colorado
________
Medical Examiners,
_________________
Last, but
present
in
not least, there
this case
which
federal court action.
are extraordinary
militate
against our
reasons
restraining
First, we believe that Rivera-Puig
had a
clear First Amendment right which is being flagrantly violated by
the commonwealth authorities.
Comm'n, 906 F.2d 25,
______
of
federal courts,
declaratory
and
See Playboy Enter. v. Public Serv.
___ ______________
____________
31 (1st Cir. 1990) (there is a "willingness
including
the Supreme
injunctive
actions
Court, to
against
entertain
prospective
-20-
enforcement
of
expression").
the
state
laws
sought
in
was
of
constitutional
before
for
no
to
the commonwealth
access were
public interest, but were also
time
threaten
discourage
Second, the nature of the matters being decided in
preliminary hearings
Rivera-Puig
which
the
essence
rights.
Third,
not
only
courts to
highly charged
unique and non-recurring.
in
the
which
determining
matters
with
Thus,
Rivera-Puig's
had been
pending
the commonwealth courts for an inordinate length of time,
reason
apparent
from
the
record.
These
factors
additionally counsel against Younger abstention in this case.
_______
2. Colorado RIVER Abstention.
2. Colorado RIVER Abstention.
______________
Under Colorado River, 424 U.S. at 813 (citing County of
______________
_________
Allegheny v. Frank Mashuda Co., 360 U.S. 185, 188-89
_________
__________________
federal
court
circumstances.
jurisdiction
may
ordinarily
Because a
is relaxed
abstain
"federal
in the
(1959)), a
under
court's
exceptional
duty to
declaratory judgment
Fuller Co. v. Ram n I. Gil, Inc., 782 F.2d 306, 308-09
__________
___________________
Cir. 1986),
a court may
abstain in declaratory
less than exceptional circumstances.
Recently, in
n.3 (1st
judgments under
931 F.2d 140,
a number of factors that
(1) whether either court has assumed
jurisdiction
over
a
res; (2)
the
inconvenience of the federal forum; (3)
the desirability of avoiding piecemeal
litigation; (4) the order in which the
forums obtained jurisdiction; (5) whether
federal law or state law controls; and
(6)
whether
the
state forum
will
146 (1st
have emerged
as the core of the Colorado River abstention doctrine:
______________
-21-
context,"
Id.
___
Burns v. Watler,
_____
______
Cir. 1991), we identified
exercise
adequately protect the
parties. . . .
(citations omitted).
principles
We
underlying
interests of
the
also found that we should
removal
jurisdiction
and
federal litigation is contrived or vexatious.14
This
numerical
However,
list
is
not
scorecard
of
these
points
in
assessing
it
is
helpful
exhaustive,
appropriate.
In balancing these
do
abstention.
not favor
Second,
we
can
litigating in the federal
Third,
there is
no
not
whether
there
additional
is no
and
strict
determinative.
abstention
litigation
res
is
involved.
inconvenience
forum as opposed to
no piecemeal
the
Id.
___
id.,
___
is
whether
factors, we conclude that they
First,
perceive
consider the
from
the commonwealth.
because each
case is
self-contained and involves different parties and facts.
Fourth,
federal law controls the outcome of the underlying issue.
Fifth,
there is no allegation or evidence that the federal litigation is
vexatious
or contrived, and this
case was not
removed from the
state courts.
Moreover,
jurisdiction
the sequence
is irrelevant
Vocero case are
______
action.
because this
not identical.
and different defendants,
in which
the forums
obtained
litigation and
There are different
and the El Vocero case is
_________
the El
__
plaintiffs
not a class
Furthermore, although the legal principles are the same,
the factual basis giving rise
to the present case, and
those in
____________________
14 These factors "run substantially parallel to the criteria
that historically have been deemed relevant in determining
whether to accept or decline jurisdiction over a [declaratory
judgment action]." Fuller Co., 782 F.2d at 308-09 n.3.
__________
-22-
the
El Vocero case, differ.
_________
espoused
Finally, the right of accessibility
by Press-Enterprise II is not limited to the press, but
___________________
also
includes the
U.S.
at 8.
"general public."
Thus, Rivera-Puig,
Press-Enterprise II, 478
____________________
either
in his
capacity
as a
professional reporter, or as part of the "general public," should
not be restricted in
bringing a federal suit to
protect against
the violation of his constitutional rights, irrespective of other
___
suits filed by other members of the press or general public.
_____
With respect to whether the state forum will adequately
protect the interests of the parties, although some of the events
reported
as
the
in this case are disturbing indeed, we refuse, at least
record
[commonwealth]
now stands,
judges
will
to
"rule
not
on
be
the assumption
faithful
to
that
their
constitutional responsibilities."
Huffman
_______
v. Pursue, Ltd.,
____________
U.S. at 611; see also In re Justices, 695 F.2d at
_________ ______________
420
23, ("[I]t is
ordinarily presumed that judges will comply with a declaration of
a
statute's
unconstitutionality
without
further
compulsion.").15
____________________
15
We do not question the power of the commonwealth courts to
reach their own
conclusions in the
separate commonwealth
proceedings.
Although we do not believe that the Rule 23(c)
closure provisions are in any way ambiguous, the El Vocero
__________
opinion is helpful because it definitively expresses the views of
the highest Commonwealth court regarding its view of the Rule 23
___
proceedings and of the validity of the closure provisions of Rule
23(c), thus leaving no doubt as to how it will be interpreted in
that jurisdiction. Cf. Huffman, 420 U.S. at 616 n.2 ("Abstention
____
___ _______
[may be] appropriate where authoritative resolution by state
courts of ambiguities in a state statute is sufficiently likely
to avoid or significantly modify federal questions raised by the
statute. . . . Abstention is justified in such cases primarily
by
the policy
of
avoidance of
premature constitutional
adjudication.").
-23-
In
conclusion,
the
Colorado River
_______________
warrant abstention in the present case.
factors
do
not
3. Pullman Abstention.
3. Pullman Abstention.
_______
Appellants contend that the district court
abstained under
have
waived
this argument
district court.
908
F.2d
1041,
appellants
the doctrine enunciated in
E.g.,
____
by failing
to
should have
Pullman.
_______
Appellants
raise it
before the
Boston Celtics Ltd. Partnership
_______________________________
1045
(1st
properly argued
Cir.
for
1990).
Pullman
_______
However,
v. Shaw,
____
even
had
abstention below,
the
argument would fail.
Under Pullman,
_______
abstain when state law
law in a pending
312 U.S. at 501,
is uncertain, and a clarification
desirability
rulings
on
of
having federal
Federal Practice and Procedure,
______________________________
warrant
state
a
courts
unnecessary
Miller &
Cooper,
4241 at 33 (2d ed. 1988).
over the
and (2) there must
avoid
Wright,
Pullman abstention:
_______
substantial uncertainty
issue;
The Pullman doctrine rests on
_______
constitutional issues.
To
of the
state court case might make the federal court's
constitutional ruling unnecessary.
the
federal courts should
meaning
be a reasonable
(1)
there must
be
of the
state law
at
possibility that the
court's clarification of the law will obviate the need for
federal constitutional
ruling.
Hawaii Housing Authority v.
_________________________
Midkiff, 467 U.S. 229, 236-37 (1983).
_______
When
the
federal
claim
is
not
entangled
with
complicated
unresolved
state
law
questions,
abstention
is
____________________
-24-
inappropriate.
(1971).
are
Wisconsin
_________
v. Constantineau,
_____________
Indeed, abstention in
unambiguous
is
400 U.S.
cases where state
impermissible
because
it
433, 438
law questions
"would
abstention from an exception into a general rule."
convert
Examining Bd.
_____________
of Engineers, Architects & Surveyors v. Flores de Otero, 426 U.S.
____________________________________
_______________
572,
598 (1976); see also Harris County Comm'rs. Court v. Moore,
________ ____________________________
_____
420 U.S.
77, 84-85 (1975).
simply to give a
federal rights.
A federal court
should not abstain
state court the first opportunity
to vindicate
McNeese v. Board of Education, 373 U.S. 668, 672
_______
__________________
(1963).
No
closure
uncertainty surrounds the
provision.
[preliminary]
hearing
The
meaning of
rule explicitly
states
shall
be held privately
___________________________
Rule 23(c)'s
that
"[t]he
unless
the
defendant
requests
at
the
public." (emphasis added).
commencement
thereof
that
This issue has long been
it
be
pending in
the commonwealth courts, and Rivera-Puig and the public have been
suffering irreparable constitutional harm by
appellants' refusal
to comply with the law of the land.
Moreover, "[a] district court stay pursuant to
abstention
is
entered with
litigation will resume in
obtain relief in
the
expectation
that the
the event that the plaintiff
state court
on state-law grounds."
Pullman
_______
federal
does not
Moses H.
_________
Cone Memorial Hosp. v. Mercury Construction Corp., 460 U.S. 1, 10
___________________
__________________________
n.9
(1983); see also England
________ _______
Examiners,
_________
375
Rivera-Puig
U.S. 411
v. Louisiana State Bd. of Medical
_______________________________
(1964).
would be back in
Even
after a
Pullman stay,
_______
federal court after
the El Vocero
_________
-25-
decision.
Abstention, under
inappropriate
in this
any of
case.16
its multiple
We thus
doctrines, was
arrive at
the central
issue of
the case,
the constitutional
validity of the
closure
provisions of Rule 23(c).
C.
C.
RULE 23(c)
RULE 23(c)
Having
before
us,
we
constitutionality
determined
are
that this
duty-bound
of Rule
to
23(c).17
controversy
independently
is properly
assess
the
Press-Enterprise II,
___________________
478
U.S. at 7.
Rights protected by the Free Speech Clause of the First
Amendment
apply
in
Puerto
Rico.
Posadas de
Puerto Rico
__________________________
____________________
16 Appellants also suggest that the factors elaborated by this
court in El D a v. Hern ndez Col n, 963 F.2d 488 (1st Cir 1992),
______
_______________
to guide the discretion of district courts in determining whether
to grant declaratory relief require us to reverse the district
court's grant of declaratory relief here. These factors include:
(1) the general policy that unsettled questions of constitutional
law should be addressed only when absolutely necessary; (2) the
extent to which a federal case is ripe for adjudication; (3) the
desirability of abstention; (4) comity between federal and
commonwealth courts; and (5) the equity-like nature of the
action.
Id. at 494-98.
For the reasons discussed herein, we
___
find El D a distinguishable from the facts of the present case.
______
Rather than compelling us to reverse the district court's grant
of declaratory relief, we think that the principles elaborated in
El D a support the district court's conclusion that declaratory
______
relief was warranted.
17 As we have indicated, the Puerto Rican Supreme Court's vision
of the Rule 23(c)
preliminary hearing aids our analysis.
However, Spanish 19th century criminal procedure cannot be the
litmus test against which we measure the validity of the rule.
Indeed, even Spain's constitutional courts look to the United
States Supreme Court for precedent. See M. Rodr guez Pi ero, Los
___
___
Tribunales Constitucionales en Europa, 57 Rev. Jur. U.P.R. 5, 31
_____________________________________
(1988) (The author is an associate justice on the Constitutional
Court of Spain).
-26-
Associates v. Tourism Co.,
__________
___________
principles
espoused in
478 U.S. 328,
331 (1986).
Press-Enterprise II
___________________
Thus
have full
the
vigor in
this case, and we must apply the experience and logic tests.
See
___
Press-Enterprise II, 478 U.S. at 9.
___________________
Under these
there
is
tradition
preliminary hearing.
concluded
been
refers
to the
essentially
hearings,
to
the
experience
uniformly been open.
in
that
States, not
duplicate the
the
Rule
hearings have
However, Press-Enterprise II, 478
____________________
Indeed,
which
accessibility
Rico's preliminary
the United
jurisdiction.
of
consideration is whether
23(c)
In El Vocero, the Puerto Rico Supreme Court
_________
that Puerto
private.
throughout
tests, the first
the
type or kind
______________
the experience
Puerto
California
Supreme
Court
Id. at 10-11.
Rico
and
U.S. at
of
10,
hearing
in only
one
preliminary hearings
federal
determined
Thus,
always
preliminary
have
almost
there is a tradition
___
of openness that applies to the Rule 23(c) preliminary hearing.
The
second
consideration
plays a significant positive role"
hearing.
trials
Id. at 8.
___
pass
preliminary
According
this test.
hearing at
23(c) preliminary hearing
is
"whether
public access
in the Rule 23(c) preliminary
to the Supreme
Id. at
___
issue in
11-12.
Like
Court, criminal
the California
Press-Enterprise II,
___________________
is sufficiently like
the Rule
a trial to
the test as well.
The hearings are held before a detached
neutral magistrate; both prosecutor and
defense counsel are present; evidence may
be presented by both sides, including
exculpatory evidence
by the accused;
witnesses are heard and can be cross-27-
examined; and based on the evidence, the
magistrate will either hold the accused
over for trial or exonerate and set him
or her free.
It is clear that the
magistrate is performing an adjudicative
function in the preliminary hearing and,
like California, this hearing may be the
only formal judicial proceeding, both in
the cases where the accused pleads guilty
and in those cases where no probable
cause is found.
pass
Rivera-Puig, 785 F. Supp. at 289.
___________
these conclusions,
Thus,
under
and we
Appellants have not challenged
find that they
the experience
and
logic
are uncontrovertible.
tests, the
Rule
23(c)
preliminary hearings trigger First Amendment protection.
Moreover,
Press Enterprise II
___________________
because the Rule 23(c)
preliminary hearings are almost identical
to the California preliminary
case.
decides this exact case
hearing that was at issue
in that
The following comparison between the California and Puerto
Rico proceedings demonstrates that similarity:
(1) Both proceedings are held before a
neutral,
detached
magistrate,
who
performs an
adjudicative function as
judge,
not
as
investigator or
as
interested party.
See People v. Opio___ ______
_____
Opio, 104 P.R. Dec. 65 (Off. Trans. at
____
65) (1975); Young v. Superior Court of
_____
__________________
San Joaquin County, 253 Cal.App.2d 848
____________________
(1967).
(2) The judge must rule on issues of law
as applied to the facts of each case.
See People v. Opio-Opio, 104 P.R. Dec. 65
___ ______
_________
(Off. Trans. at 65) (1975); Young v.
_____
Superior Court of San Joaquin County, 253
____________________________________
Cal.App.2d 848 (1967).
(3) Both hearings result in a ruling of
probable cause to hold over for trial, or
in the dismissal of charges against the
accused. People v. Rodr guez-Aponte, 116
______
________________
P.R.
Dec. 653 (Off. Trans. at 850)
-28-
(1986); People v. Uhlemann, 511 P.2d 609,
______
________
610 (Cal. 1973).
(4) Ultimate guilt or innocence of the
accused beyond reasonable doubt is not
decided at this stage; the hearing offers
the prosecutor the opportunity to show
that there exists probable
cause to
believe
that
an
offense has
been
committed and that the accused committed
it. People v. Figueroa-Castro, 102 P.R.
______
_______________
Dec. 279 (Off. Trans. at 352) (1974);
Cal. Penal Code.
866.
(5) Due to dismissal of charges, and the
plea bargaining generated after a finding
of probable cause, often the hearing is
the only opportunity for the public or
the press to observe the functioning of
the criminal process and the government
officials involved.
People v. Cruz______
_____
Justiniano, 116 P.R. Dec. 28 (Off. Trans.
__________
at 35) (1984); San Jose Mercury-News v.
______________________
Municipal Court, 638 P.2d 655, 659 (Cal.
_______________
1982).
(6) The accused may appear before the
judge assisted by counsel, who has the
right
to
cross-examine the
state's
witnesses,
present
evidence,
and
otherwise
defend
his client
within
formalities similar to trial. El Vocero
_________
de Puerto Rico, 92 J.T.S. 108 (1992).
______________
(7) The accused may present exculpatory
evidence, as well as certain defenses.
People v. V lez-Pumarejo, 113 P.R. Dec.
______
______________
349 (Off. Trans. at 455) (1982); Jennings
________
v. Superior Court of Contra Costa County,
_____________________________________
428 P.2d 304, 312 (Cal. 1967).
(8) Both judicial proceedings provide due
process
to the accused in order to
minimize
the
possibility
that
an
individual will be submitted arbitrarily
to the rigors of trial. See People v.
___ ______
L pez-Camacho, 98 P.R. Dec. 687, 689
_____________
(1970); Jones v. Superior Court of San
_____
______________________
Bernardino, 483 P.2d 1241 (1971).
__________
(9) The People must provide
to the
accused the sworn statements of witnesses
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against him.
In Puerto Rico,
the
documents are shown at the hearing; in
California,
the
judge
reads
the
statements to the accused. Rule 23(c);
Cal. Penal Code.
864.
(10) The prosecutor does not have to
submit all the evidence he has at this
stage; the People can rest when he feels
that
sufficient
evidence
has
been
presented. See V lez-Pumarejo, 113 P.R.
___ ______________
Dec.
349; McDaniel v. Superior Court of
________
_________________
San Diego County, 55
Cal.App.3d 803
__________________
(1976).
(11)
Evidence
rules
are
followed
substantially
in both
jurisdictions.
Rule 23; People v. Esteves-Rosado, 110
______
______________
P.R. Dec. 334 (Off. Trans. at 424 (1980);
People v. Schuber, 163 P.2d 498, 499
______
_______
(Cal. 1945); Cal. Penal Code.
872.5.
(12) In both jurisdictions, the hearing
must be held within "speedy trial" time
limitations.
Opio-Opio, 104 P.R. Dec.
_________
65; P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 34 App II. R.
64(n)(4) and (5);
825 Cal. Penal Code.
(13) If the accused desires to discover
evidence not used in the hearing against
him,
he
may
use
other
discovery
mechanisms which are available after the
hearing is held.
See Rodr guez-Aponte,
___ ________________
116 P.R. Dec. 653; People v. Superior
______
________
Court of Shasta County, 264 Cal.App.2d
________________________
694 (1968).
(14) The prosecutor can file a second
time if he does not prevail. P.R. Laws.
Ann. tit. 34 App II R. 24; See also
___ ____
People v. F lix-Avil s, 91 J.T.S. 50
______
____________
(1991); People v. Uhlemann, 511 P.2d 609
______
________
(1973); Cal. Penal Code.
871.
(15) Neither proceeding is
grand jury investigation.
Aponte,
116
P.R. Dec.
______
Enterprise II, 478 U.S. 1.
_____________
similar to a
Rodr guez__________
653; Press______
(16) Both are
statutory in
nature.
Rule 23 established the proceeding in
1964; the original California statute was
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adopted in 1851.
There is
Rico and
scope
no substantial difference between
California preliminary
or
purpose,
judicial setting,
the Puerto
hearings with respect
importance
of
the
proceeding
or legal context within
to basic
within
the
the criminal process.
Distinguishing these two proceedings is an attempt to distinguish
the "indistinguishable."
Chard n v.
_______
Fern ndez, 454
_________
U.S. 6,
(1981).
Finally,
access
were
the
hearings
highly charged
with
to
which
Rivera-Puig
public interest.
sought
Thus, the
"'community therapeutic value' of openness," Press-Enterprise II,
___________________
478 U.S.
U.S.
at 13 (quoting
Richmond Newspapers, Inc.
_________________________
555, 570 (1980)), helps
or overzealous
prosecutor and
v. Virginia,
________
to "'safeguard against the corrupt
against the compliant,
biased or
eccentric judge,'" id. at 12-13 (quoting Duncan v. Louisiana, 391
___
______
_________
U.S. 145, 156 (1968)),
so essential
thus giving the "'appearance
to public confidence
in the system.'"
of fairness
Id.
at 13
___
(quoting
Press-Enterprise I,
__________________
access to preliminary
Rico
will play
464 U.S.
hearings as they
a particularly
at 508).
Thus,
public
are conducted in
Puerto
significant role
in the
actual
functioning of the process.
VI.
VI.
CONCLUSION
CONCLUSION
__________
We conclude that the qualified First Amendment right of
access to criminal proceedings applies to preliminary hearings in
Puerto
affirm
______
Rico as they
the
are conducted
judgment
of
the
under Rule
district
23(c).
court
We thus
declaring
-31-
unconstitutional the provisions of that rule.
We
remand this case to the district court to take such
actions as are necessary to achieve compliance with this judgment
"with
all deliberate speed."
349 U.S. 294, 301 (1955).
district court
Cf. Brown v.
___ _____
Board of Education,
__________________
If required by the circumstances, the
shall issue injunctive relief.
See Supreme Court
___ _____________
of Virginia v. Consumers Union of United States, Inc.,
___________
_______________________________________
446 U.S.
719, 734-37 (1980).
The judgment of the district
case
court is affirmed and the
________
is remanded for action consistent with this opinion.
________
are granted to appellee.
Affirmed and remanded.
_____________________
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Costs