[Mb-civic] Annals of creeping fascism: Disappearing Dockets

swiggard at comcast.net swiggard at comcast.net
Mon Mar 6 14:37:14 PST 2006


Disappearing dockets 
When public dockets have holes, the public's right to open judicial
proceedings is jeopardized. 
By Kirsten B. Mitchell and Susan Burgess
from: The News Media and the Law - Winter 2006
http://www.rcfp.org/news/mag/30-1/_contents.html

It was a novel defense by any stretch of the imagination: Julio, a.k.a.
Pepe — he was known as both in the Colombian drug world — rebuffed an
alleged deal that would have shaved time off his prison sentence if he paid
$30 million-plus to federal drug informants. 

To help prove his case — and the alleged massive U.S. government conspiracy
— Fabio Ochoa-Vasquez, as he is known to U.S. prosecutors, wanted access to
court documents in the case of Colombian drug lord Nicolas Bergonzoli, who
could testify firsthand about the government's alleged corruption scheme.

But there was a problem. Bergonzoli was prosecuted, convicted, sentenced
and imprisoned in total secrecy, hampering Ochoa-Vasquez's trial
preparation. Bergonzoli's case was so secret, it wasn't even listed as
"SEALED." The case number — 99-00196-CR — was missing from the public
docket at the federal courthouse.

The case simply didn't exist. 

The U.S. District Court in Miami, where both men went on trial, isn't
unique. During the past five years, 469 cases in U.S. District Court in
Washington, D.C., have been prosecuted and tried in complete secrecy, with
no public knowledge even of the cases' existence and no way for the public
to challenge the secrecy. 

The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press found the cases by
searching the court's entire civil and criminal docket for the past five
years. During the five-year period ending Dec. 30, an average of 18 percent
of nearly 3,000 criminal cases were not docketed in Washington's U.S.
District Court — one of 94 federal courts nationwide. Undocketed civil
cases were so few — 65 of more than 12,000 — as to be statistically
insignificant. (See chart, page 5) 

Many, if not all, of the civil off-the-docket cases are believed to be
whistle blower suits filed under the federal False Claims Act, which allows
private citizens to sue on behalf of the U.S. government charging fraud by
government contractors and other entities receiving or using government
money. By law, such qui tam suits are filed under seal for 60 days while
the government decides whether to intervene in the case, allowing time to
investigate the alleged wrongdoing without the company knowing. After two
months, such suits may or may not appear on the docket.

Cases missing from the criminal docket are typically gang-related
prosecutions that tend to culminate in multi-defendant drug and murder
conspiracy trials, say court officials and lawyers with access to the cases
who were interviewed for this story. Very few, if any, of the cases are
terrorism related, they say.

The incomplete public dockets raise important public policy concerns about
openness to court proceedings, an attribute of English and American trials
for centuries.

Although neither the U.S. Supreme Court nor the U.S. Court of Appeals in
Washington, D.C., has ruled on the issue, two federal appellate courts have
ruled secret docketing unconstitutional. 

Off the docket v. sealed

Keeping cases off the docket — and off the public record — is different
from sealing cases. The only way to determine the existence of
off-the-docket cases is to scroll through public dockets searching for
missing case numbers. (See "Finding hidden dockets," page 6)

Sealed cases are assigned case numbers that appear on the public docket.
Some 12 percent of cases, the vast majority of them criminal, were listed
as "SEALED" in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., according to a June
2005 search of the U.S. Party/Case Index, an electronic federal court
records database. All of those "SEALED" cases were assigned public docket
numbers, allowing the public to know that they exist. 

"You must disclose that a case exists and is moving through the courts. If
you don't do that, you can't have monitoring by the public, press, or
different government agencies on what these cases are all about," said Dan
Christensen, a reporter who broke the 2003 story of Mohamed K. Bellahouel,
an Algerian-born U.S. resident detained secretly for five months after the
Sept. 11 attacks. Christensen, a former Miami Daily Business Review
reporter now with The Miami Herald, spotted the case after its docket
number disappeared from the public record. (Shrouded in secrecy,
Bellahouel's case went all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court, which
declined to hear the case in 2004.)

In Washington's federal district court, most off-the-docket criminal cases
were kept off the public docket after prosecutors asked judges to seal the
cases, according to those who handle such cases.

While Justice Department guidelines recognize a strong presumption against
closing criminal proceedings and outline limited reasons allowing for
closure, they don't specifically address nonpublic docketing.

Both the department's arguments for and the judge's approval of sealing an
undocketed case are shielded from public view, making it impossible to know
whether the guidelines are followed. What's more, the U.S. Attorney's
Office in Washington does not monitor how many requests it makes to seal
cases or how many requests are approved.

Prosecutors seek to seal cases in part to protect ongoing investigations by
the government with an eye toward nabbing more criminals and keeping
informants and witnesses alive, said Stevan E. Bunnell, chief of the
Criminal Division at the U.S. Department of Justice.

Under the department's "Policy with Regard to Open Judicial Proceedings,"
requests to seal cases must be approved by a deputy attorney general, a
sufficiently burdensome and time-consuming process that prosecutors are
reluctant to do unless they really need to, Bunnell said.

The guidelines say that proceedings may be closed if failure to close them
will produce "a substantial likelihood and imminent danger to the safety of
parties, witnesses, or other persons."

In the nation's capital, "there are people who would be in serious danger,
who would be killed, if it was known they cooperated with the government,"
said an official with the Office of the Federal Public Defender for the
District of Columbia. "And all the stake holders in the situation
understand that and so the case is sealed to protect the individual."

A former public defender who requested anonymity said "when a case is not
even docketed, that presumably reflects a decision by a judge that the
existence of a case on the docket — even without more identifying
information — could be detrimental to the government's investigation or the
safety of the defendant, although one may tend to view that rationale with
skepticism from the perspective of the public's right to know."

In Washington, a 67-square-mile city sharply divided by income, education
levels and race, the bulk of criminal investigations take place in a small
geographic area, increasing the likelihood that cooperators will run into
the people that they have informed on. 

At one point, prosecutors noticed that criminals used public court records
to spot cases in which nothing had happened since an arrest. The criminals,
correctly concluding that defendants in such cases were cooperating, often
retaliated by killing them, said an official with the U.S. Attorney's
Office.

"In 30 years, I don't know how many gangs I've seen prosecuted. There's the
K Street gang, the L Street gang, the M Street gang and on and on," said
one court official who did not want to be named because he does not speak
for the court. "I think there's a heightened concern by this court over the
health and welfare of witnesses."

That plays out in the number of off-the-docket criminal cases, which has
risen in recent years — from a low of 79 in 2003 to a high of 111 in 2005. 

The vault

How do off-the-docket cases end up in the secret vault?

All cases — public and secret — are randomly assigned to one of 21 federal
judges in Washington and then sent by those judges to the clerk's office
where clerks enter the cases into the docketing system. The judge will have
specified any cases that are to be kept off the docket. Cases that are off
the public docket are entered in a section of the docketing system closed
to the public and even to some employees of the clerk's office. No note is
made in the public docket that the cases even exist. 

While Chief Judge Thomas F. Hogan does not approve non-docketed criminal
cases, he does review civil cases that are not on the public docket,
according to Sheldon Snook, administrative assistant to the chief judge and
spokesman for the court. 

Court officials say the judges follow the "Rules for the U.S. District
Court in Washington, D.C.," in sealing cases, but the rules, like the rules
prosecutors follow, provide no procedures for keeping cases off the public
docket. 

And judges who agree to seal cases or keep them off the docket do not
justify their actions publicly through a public order weighing the public's
right to know against the need for secrecy. 

But Snook said judges are careful not to abuse their power to shield entire
cases from the public.

"The judges here in Washington, they are sensitive to the whole issue of
sealing cases," he said. "There's a presumption that the court's business
should be done in public."

All 21 U.S. District Court judges contacted by the Reporters Committee
either did not return phone calls or declined to discuss secret docketing,
referring all questions to Snook. 

The federal district court's rules outline a process in which "[a]ny news
organization or other interested person, other than a party or a subpoenaed
witness" can apply to the court for "relief relating to any aspect of the
proceedings in a criminal case." But, as Ochoa-Vasquez learned in defending
his case, that is difficult or impossible when the only thing anyone knows
about these cases is that they are not docketed. 

Ochoa-Vasquez intervened in Bergonzoli's case and succeeded in unsealing a
few docket entries in that case, but he was able to do that only because a
record in U.S. District Court in Connecticut, where the indictment was
first filed, contained the post-transfer case number assigned by the U.S.
District Court in Florida. 

The court record now reflects that Bergonzoli cooperated with the
government, entered a plea agreement, and, on Jan. 30, 2002, was sentenced
to just over three years in prison. But many key documents in the case
remain sealed to this day. Bergonzoli was never called to testify in
Ochoa-Vasquez's case. 

In Washington, D.C., and many federal district courts nationwide, once
off-the-docket cases have been entered on the secret docket, they don't go
onto rows and rows of shelves holding burgeoning case files. They go
straight to a vault in the clerk's office, shielded from the public and
where few court employees have access.

Courts weigh in

Secret dockets have been ruled unconstitutional in the Eleventh Circuit —
covering federal district courts in Alabama, Georgia and Florida — and in
the Second Circuit – covering Connecticut, New York and Vermont.

In Ochoa-Vasquez's case, which was combined with Bergonzoli's case on
appeal, the U.S. Court of Appeals in Atlanta (11th Cir.) ruled in October
that sealed dockets violate the First Amendment. Magistrate judges in
Ochoa-Vasquez's case had ordered transcripts and court orders related to a
co-defendant not only sealed, but "held in the vault and not docketed,"
according to the appellate court ruling. (See "A rare glimpse," page 8) 

Although the U.S. District had since moved those documents to the public
docket and unsealed many other documents at issue in the case, the
three-judge appeals panel used its authority to weigh in on secret
docketing. 

Acknowledging that the issue was not properly before the court, "We
nevertheless exercise our supervisorial authority to remind the district
court that it cannot employ secret docketing procedures that we explicitly
found unconstitutional" in United States v. Valenti in 1993. In that case,
the court ruled that a dual docketing system, one public and one nonpublic,
unconstitutionally infringed on the public and press' right of access to
criminal proceedings. 

"[P]ublic docket sheets are essential to provide 'meaningful access' to
criminal proceedings," Judge B. Avant Edenfield, a visiting U.S. district
judge from Savannah, Ga., wrote for the panel in Ochoa-Vasquez.

Dockets act "as both an index and a publication," Edenfield wrote. "As an
index, the docket catalogues all the proceedings and information taken
before a court in that case. It permits both the court and observers to
locate documents and proceedings that otherwise would be lost within the
court's vast record collections. It also allows one to quickly determine
the status of a case, the actions of the parties, and the determinations of
the judge, without requiring the inspection of every item in the case file.
As a publication, the docket sheet provides the public and press with
notice of case developments. This role assumes particular importance when
the court is considering sealing a proceeding or judicial record."

The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press submitted a
friend-of-the-court brief in the Ochoa-Vasquez case but took no position on
anything other than courtroom openness. 

The appellate court, which noted the centuries-old history of open criminal
proceedings in England and America, affirmed Ochoa-Vasquez's conviction and
sentence, ruling that he had not shown that he did not receive a fair trial
because of the secret docketing or the court's failure to articulate its
reasons for sealing documents. 

The entire appellate court denied rehearing the case in January. 

In the Valenti case, the 11th Circuit case cited by the Ochoa-Vasquez
panel, a different three-judge panel ruled that a dual docketing system
used in U.S. District Court in Tampa violated the public's First Amendment
right of access to criminal proceedings by rendering it impossible for
anyone to exercise that right. The public and the press had no knowledge
that the case at issue — which involved conspiracy, extortion and bribery
charges against a Florida defense attorney and an assistant state attorney
— even existed.

Judge Joseph W. Hatchett wrote for a unanimous three-judge panel that the
"maintenance of a public and a sealed docket is inconsistent with affording
the various interests of the public and the press meaningful access to
criminal proceedings" and that the "dual-docketing system can effectively
preclude the public and the press from seeking to exercise their
constitutional right of access to the transcripts of closed bench
conferences."

The U.S. Court of Appeals in New York City (2nd Cir.) similarly ruled in
2004 that the press and public have a qualified First Amendment right to
inspect docket sheets. Writing for a unanimous three-judge panel in The
Hartford Courant Co. v. Pellegrino, Judge Robert A. Katzmann explained that
"the ability of the public and press to attend civil and criminal cases
would be merely theoretical if the information provided by docket sheets
were inaccessible." 

"[T]he docketing of a hearing on sealing provides effective notice to the
public that it may occur," Katzmann wrote.

Striking down the Connecticut state court's secret docketing system, the
panel reasoned that both history and logic support the finding of a
presumptive First Amendment right to access court dockets. As early as the
1800s, the court explained, English dockets were open to the public, as
demonstrated by the definition of the word "docket" in Thomas E. Tomlins'
"Law Dictionary" of 1809: "[w]hen rolls of judgments are brought into
[Common Bench] they are docketted, and entered on the docket of that term;
so that upon any occasion you may soon find out a judgment, by searching
these dockets, if you know the attorney's name." And in the United States,
the court noted, early legislatures passed state laws mandating the use of
open docket books to permit public viewing and copying.

The public policy behind a First Amendment right to court proceedings
supports an open docket system as well, the court said. "Precisely because
docket sheets provide a map of the proceedings in the underlying cases,
their availability greatly enhances the appearance of fairness. They have
also been used to reveal potential judicial biases or conflicts of
interest," Katzmann wrote. "In addition, docket sheets furnish an
'opportunity both for understanding the system in general and its workings
in a particular case.' By inspecting materials like docket sheets, the
public can discern the prevalence of certain types of cases, the nature of
the parties to particular kinds of actions, information about the
settlement rates in different areas of law, and the types of materials that
are likely to be sealed."

Katzmann explicitly noted, however, that the presumptive openness of docket
sheets could be rebutted "upon demonstration that suppression is essential
to preserve higher values and is narrowly tailored to serve that interest."
For instance, if the government alleges an "extraordinary situation" where
"'an individual might be [put] at risk' from public docketing, the district
court may take steps to protect the privacy interests involved." This did
not mean, however, that courts could withhold all information about the
case's existence from the public docket, only that identifying information
could be withheld if it was necessary to protect the privacy interests at
stake.

The Reporters Committee also filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the
Courant case. 

Changes 

Under Connecticut's old system of sealing, parties to cases could request
that everything about the case be sealed and kept off the docket; that only
the docket number but no other information be made public; or that both the
docket number and parties' names, but nothing else, be public.

Secret docketing no longer exists in Connecticut. The state's Superior
Court judges adopted new rules abolishing the use of secret dockets as a
result of The Hartford Courant case and a subsequent legislative
investigation, said Dan Klau, attorney for The Connecticut Law Tribune, one
of the plaintiffs in the case. The rules incorporate the state high court's
standard for sealing cases, which dictates that a judge must give notice
when he considers sealing something and an opportunity for the public to
speak out against closure.

The judicial branch also added a section to its Web site listing all
sealing motions on a court calendar.

Before the docketing procedures were revised, some Connecticut courts were
keeping cases off the docket at the request of litigants because some
judges incorrectly believed that keeping the case off the docket was a
reasonable way to seal the case, Klau said. 

"There was a real lack of understanding of the constitutional limitations
when it comes to sealing files," he said, "and as a result of the case,
judges have a much more heightened awareness of the constitutional
standards that must be met when you seal something."

Sheryl Loesch, the clerk of court in Florida's middle district — which
covers a broad swath of central Florida from Jacksonville to Tampa, said
that secret docketing also is a thing of the past in federal courthouses
there. All cases, even those that are completely sealed, are on a public
docket sheet, she said. 

But an electronic search of the criminal docket for the U.S. District Court
in Tampa found that between Oct. 20, when the 11th Circuit ruled in
Ochoa-Vasquez, and Feb. 10, there were 11 of 175 criminal cases missing
from the docket, suggesting that at least in Tampa, secret docketing
continues. Court staff in the middle district explained that those docket
numbers are assigned to sealed criminal cases that are stored in a vault
until they become public. But it is unclear when — or if — those cases will
be made public.

It also is unclear whether federal district courts in southern Florida have
changed their practices. Clerk of Court Clarence Maddox did not return
several telephone calls and e-mail messages, and it is impossible to run
docket reports remotely because the state's Southern District does not yet
use Case Management/Electronic Case Files, the Web-based case management
system used by most federal bankruptcy and district courts.

"There's no way to know if there's been a change," said G. Richard Strafer,
one of Ochoa-Vasquez's defense attorneys. "Most judges may be less inclined
to go along with prosecutors' requests [for secret docketing], but how you
ever know that — that's the problem with this."

Christensen shared Strafer's skepticism, recalling the coincidences that
led him to uncover the secret docketing in southern Florida's federal
district courts. "The nature of this is that you may never know that
something is going on," he said. "There are cases going on in secret and
you wouldn't even know to ask a question in the first place."

Ochoa-Vasquez's case illustrates several problems caused by undocketed
cases, including defendants' inability to confront their accused when
government cooperation programs shield the people who outed them, and the
public's inability to learn about allegations of corrupt government
prosecutors, Strafer said. 

The case, "was a perfect source of material for an investigative reporter
to dig into — [but] it took years to unearth it all and since the
revelations were so piecemeal, no reporters really got into it. The sealing
helped prevent the public and the media from doing their job. There's a
corrupt sentencing program that the government has admitted to — you'd
think there would be judges upset they'd been bamboozled by the
government's own attorneys."

None of the federal courts' oversight agencies have dictated any rules
regarding secret dockets for the nation's 94 federal courts. The Judicial
Conference of the United States, a committee of federal judges who set
policy for the federal courts, has never officially addressed the issue,
said Bob Deyling, assistant general counsel at the Administrative Office of
the U.S. Courts. The office, which does not monitor courts' docketing
procedures, expects courts to administer their dockets independently. 

Even if district courts tracked such data, they would not necessarily
report on it, said David Sellers, the office's assistant director of public
affairs. 

And in Washington, D.C., the federal court's Rules Committee, a panel of
lawyers that advises the court on its rules, has not dealt with secret
docketing, Snook said. 

Once and forever

Once a case is off the public docket in U.S. District Court in Washington,
D.C., it's likely to remain that way forever. In some cases, a judge may
order a case sealed for a particular amount of time — say two years —
unless the parties seek to keep it sealed longer. But in most cases,
there's no such provision. 

Even after defendants have served prison sentences, witnesses have died or
informants have gone into witness protection, the court won't transfer a
case to the public docket unless someone — prosecutors or an interested
member of the public — petitions the court to do so.

"The court would not arbitrarily lift a seal without being asked," Snook
said. 

Nor does the D.C. U.S. Attorney's Office review cases it has requested be
kept off the public docket. "From a cooperator's perspective, there's
almost never a reason to unseal his or her case," said a former public
defender. "Depending on the case, a cooperator may face potential danger
both in prison and after he or she returns to the community. A defense
lawyer in these circumstances has a duty to try to protect his or her
client to the maximum extent possible."

That means that even after a case ends, the public remains completely in
the dark about defendants prosecuted, tried and sentenced in a court system
based for centuries on judicial openness. The cases, for all intents and
purposes, simply do not exist. Stacey Sutton, an attorney who filed a brief
on behalf of the American Civil Liberties Union in Ochoa-Vasquez's case, is
troubled by that. 

"It's a bedrock of our constitutional system that courts are open to the
public," she said. "That there are entire cases closed to the public is
inherently adverse to our system."


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