Petitioner's wife was bludgeoned to death July 4, 1954. From the
outset officials focused suspicion on petitioner, who was arrested
on a murder charge July 30 and indicted August 17. His trial began
October 18 and terminated with his conviction December 21, 1954.
During the entire pretrial period, virulent and incriminating
publicity about petitioner and the murder made the case notorious,
and the news media frequently aired charges and countercharges
besides those for which petitioner was tried. Three months before
trial, he was examined for more than five hours without counsel in
a televised three-day inquest conducted before an audience of
several hundred spectators in a gymnasium. Over three weeks before
trial, the newspapers published the names and addresses of
prospective jurors causing them to receive letters and telephone
calls about the case. The trial began two weeks before a hotly
contested election at which the chief prosecutor and the trial
judge were candidates for judgeships. Newsmen were allowed to take
over almost the entire small courtroom, hounding petitioner and
most of the participants. Twenty reporters were assigned seats by
the court within the bar and in close proximity to the jury and
counsel, precluding privacy between petitioner and his counsel. The
movement of the reporters in the courtroom caused frequent
confusion and disrupted the trial, and, in the corridors and
elsewhere in and around the courthouse, they were allowed free rein
by the trial judge. A broadcasting station was assigned space next
to the jury room. Before the jurors began deliberations they were
not sequestered, and had access to all news media, though the court
made "suggestions" and "requests" that the jurors not expose
themselves to comment about the case. Though they were sequestered
during the five days and four nights of their deliberations, the
jurors were allowed to make inadequately supervised telephone calls
during that period. Pervasive publicity was given to the case
throughout the trial, much of it involving incriminating matter not
introduced at the trial, and the jurors were thrust into the role
of celebrities. At least some of the publicity deluge reached the
jurors. At the very inception
Page 384 U. S. 334
of the proceedings and later, the trial judge announced that
neither he nor anyone else could restrict the prejudicial news
accounts. Despite his awareness of the excessive pretrial
publicity, the trial judge failed to take effective measures
against the massive publicity, which continued throughout the
trial, or to take adequate steps to control the conduct of the
trial. The petitioner filed a habeas corpus petition contending
that he did not receive a fair trial. The District Court granted
the writ. The Court of Appeals reversed.
Held:
1. The massive, pervasive, and prejudicial publicity attending
petitioner's prosecution prevented him from receiving a fair trial
consistent with the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Pp.
384 U. S.
349-363.
(a) Though freedom of discussion should be given the widest
range compatible with the fair and orderly administration of
justice, it must not be allowed to divert a trial from its purpose
of adjudicating controversies according to legal procedures based
on evidence received only in open court. Pp.
384 U. S.
350-351.
(b) Identifiable prejudice to the accused need not be shown if,
as in
Estes v. Texas, 381 U. S. 532, and
even more so in this case, the totality of the circumstances raises
the probability of prejudice. Pp.
384 U.S. 352-355.
(c) The trial court failed to invoke procedures which would have
guaranteed petitioner a fair trial, such as adopting stricter rules
for use of the courtroom by newsmen as petitioner's counsel
requested, limiting their number, and more closely supervising
their courtroom conduct. The court should also have insulated the
witnesses; controlled the release of leads, information, and gossip
to the press by police officers, witnesses, and counsel; proscribed
extrajudicial statements by any lawyer, witness, party, or court
official divulging prejudicial matters, and requested the
appropriate city and county officials to regulate release of
information by their employees. Pp.
384 U. S.
358-362.
2. The case is remanded to the District Court with instructions
to release petitioner from custody unless he is tried again within
a reasonable time. P.
384 U. S.
363.
346 F.2d 707, reversed and remanded.
Page 384 U. S. 335
MR. JUSTICE CLARK delivered the opinion of the Court.
This federal habeas corpus application involves the question
whether Sheppard was deprived of a fair trial in his state
conviction for the second-degree murder of his wife because of the
trial judge's failure to protect Sheppard sufficiently from the
massive, pervasive and prejudicial publicity that attended his
prosecution. [
Footnote 1] The
United States District Court held that he was not afforded a fair
trial, and granted the writ subject to the State's right to put
Sheppard to trial again,
231 F. Supp.
37 (D.C.S.D. Ohio 1964). The Court of Appeals for the Sixth
Circuit reversed by a divided vote, 346 F.2d 707 (1965). We granted
certiorari, 382 U.S. 916 (1965). We have concluded that Sheppard
did not receive a fair trial consistent with the Due Process Clause
of the Fourteenth Amendment and, therefore, reverse the
judgment.
I
Marilyn Sheppard, petitioner's pregnant wife, was bludgeoned to
death in the upstairs bedroom of their lakeshore
Page 384 U. S. 336
home in Bay Village, Ohio, a suburb of Cleveland. On the day of
the tragedy, July 4, 1954, Sheppard pieced together for several
local officials the following story: he and his wife had
entertained neighborhood friends, the Aherns, on the previous
evening at their home. After dinner, they watched television in the
living room. Sheppard became drowsy and dozed off to sleep on a
couch. Later, Marilyn partially awoke him saying that she was going
to bed. The next thing he remembered, was hearing his wife cry out
in the early morning hours. He hurried upstairs and, in the dim
light from the hall, saw a "form" standing next to his wife's bed.
A s he struggled with the "form," he was struck on the back of the
neck and rendered unconscious. On regaining his senses, he found
himself on the floor next to his wife's bed. He rose, looked at
her, took her pulse and "felt that she was gone." He then went to
his son's room and found him unmolested. Hearing a noise, he
hurried downstairs. He saw a "form" running out the door and
pursued it to the lake shore. He grappled with it on the beach, and
again lost consciousness. Upon his recovery, he was lying face down
with the lower portion of his body in the water. He returned to his
home, checked the pulse on his wife's neck, and "determined or
thought that she was gone." [
Footnote 2] He then went downstairs and called a neighbor,
Mayor Houk of Bay Village. The Mayor and his wife came over at
once, found Sheppard slumped in an easy chair downstairs and asked,
"What happened?" Sheppard replied: "I don't know, but somebody
ought to try to do something for Marilyn." Mrs. Houk immediately
went up to the bedroom. The Mayor told Sheppard, "Get hold of
yourself. Can you tell me what happened?"
Page 384 U. S. 337
Sheppard then related the above-outlined events. After Mrs. Houk
discovered the body, the Mayor called the local police, Dr. Richard
Sheppard, petitioner's brother, and the Aherns. The local police
were the first to arrive. They, in turn, notified the Coroner and
Cleveland police. Richard Sheppard then arrived, determined that
Marilyn was dead, examined his brother's injuries, and removed him
to the nearby clinic operated by the Sheppard family. [
Footnote 3] When the Coroner, the
Cleveland police and other officials arrived, the house and
surrounding area were thoroughly searched, the rooms of the house
were photographed, and many persons, including the Houks and the
Aherns, were interrogated. The Sheppard home and premises were
taken into "protective custody," and remained so until after the
trial. [
Footnote 4]
From the outset, officials focused suspicion on Sheppard. After
a search of the house and premises on the morning of the tragedy,
Dr. Gerber, the Coroner, is reported -- and it is undenied -- to
have tod his men, "Well, it is evident the doctor did this, so
let's go get the confession out of him." He proceeded to
interrogate and examine Sheppard while the latter was under
sedation in his hospital room. On the same occasion, the Coroner
was given the clothes Sheppard wore at the time of the tragedy,
together with the personal items in them. Later that, afternoon
Chief Eaton and two Cleveland police officers interrogated Sheppard
at some length, confronting him with evidence, and demanding
explanations. Asked by Officer Shotke to take a lie detector test,
Sheppard said he would if it were reliable. Shotke replied that it
was "infallible," and "you might as well tell us
Page 384 U. S. 338
all about it now." At the end of the interrogation, Shotke told
Sheppard: "I think you killed your wife." Still later in the same
afternoon, a physician sent by the Coroner was permitted to make a
detailed examination of Sheppard. Until the Coroner's inquest on
July 22, at which time he was subpoenaed, Sheppard made himself
available for frequent and extended questioning without the
presence of an attorney.
On July 7, the day of Marilyn Sheppard's funeral, a newspaper
story appeared in which Assistant County Attorney Mahon -- later
the chief prosecutor of Sheppard -- sharply criticized the refusal
of the Sheppard family to permit his immediate questioning. From
there on, headline stories repeatedly stressed Sheppard's lack of
cooperation with the police and other officials. Under the headline
"Testify Now In Death, Bay Doctor Is Ordered," one story described
a visit by Coroner Gerber and four police officers to the hospital
on July 8. When Sheppard insisted that his lawyer be present, the
Coroner wrote out a subpoena and served it on him. Sheppard then
agreed to submit to questioning without counsel, and the subpoena
was torn up. The officers questioned him for several hours. On July
9, Sheppard, at the request of the Coroner, reenacted the tragedy
at his home before the Coroner, police officers, and a group of
newsmen, who apparently were invited by the Coroner. The home was
locked, so that Sheppard was obliged to wait outside until the
Coroner arrived. Sheppard's performance was reported in detail by
the news media, along with photographs. The newspapers also played
up Sheppard's refusal to take a lie detector test and "the
protective ring" thrown up by his family. Front-page newspaper
headlines announced on the same day that "Doctor Balks At Lie Test;
Retells Story." A column opposite that story contained an
"exclusive" interview with Sheppard headlined: "
Loved My Wife,
She Loved Me,' Sheppard Tells
Page 384 U. S.
339
News Reporter." The next day, another headline story
disclosed that Sheppard had "again late yesterday refused to take a
lie detector test," and quoted an Assistant County Attorney as
saying that, "at the end of a nine-hour questioning of Dr.
Sheppard, I felt he was now ruling [a test] out completely." But
subsequent newspaper articles reported that the Coroner was still
pushing Sheppard for a lie detector test. More stories appeared
when Sheppard would not allow authorities to inject him with "truth
serum." [Footnote 5]
On the 20th, the "editorial artillery" opened fire with a
front-page charge that somebody is "getting away with murder." The
editorial attributed the ineptness of the investigation to
"friendships, relationships, hired lawyers, a husband who ought
to have been subjected instantly to the same third-degree to which
any other person under similar circumstances is subjected. . .
."
The following day, July 21, another page-one editorial was
headed: "Why No Inquest? Do It Now, Dr. Gerber." The Coroner called
an inquest the same day, and subpoenaed Sheppard. It was staged the
next day in a school gymnasium; the Coroner presided with the
County Prosecutor as his advisor and two detectives as bailiffs. In
the front of the room was a long table occupied by reporters,
television and radio personnel, and broadcasting equipment. The
hearing was broadcast with live microphones placed at the Coroner's
seat and the witness stand. A swarm of reporters and photographers
attended. Sheppard was brought into the room by police who searched
him in full view of several hundred spectators. Sheppard's counsel
were present during the three-day inquest, but were not permitted
to participate.
Page 384 U. S. 340
When Sheppard's chief counsel attempted to place some documents
in the record, he was forcibly ejected from the room by the
Coroner, who received cheers, hugs, and kisses from ladies in the
audience. Sheppard was questioned for five and one-half hours about
his actions on the night of the murder, his married life, and a
love affair with Susan Hayes. [
Footnote 6] At the end of the hearing, the Coroner
announced that he "could" order Sheppard held for the grand jury,
but did not do so.
Throughout this period, the newspapers emphasized evidence that
tended to incriminate Sheppard and pointed out discrepancies in his
statements to authorities. At the same time, Sheppard made many
public statements to the press, and wrote feature articles
asserting his innocence. [
Footnote
7] During the inquest on July 26, a headline in large type
stated: "Kerr [Captain of the Cleveland Police] Urges Sheppard's
Arrest." In the story, Detective McArthur
"disclosed that scientific tests at the Sheppard home have
definitely established that the killer washed off a trail of blood
from the murder bedroom to the downstairs section,"
a circumstance casting doubt on Sheppard's accounts of the
murder. No such evidence was produced at trial. The newspapers also
delved into Sheppard's personal life. Articles stressed his
extramarital love affairs as a motive for the crime. The newspapers
portrayed Sheppard as a Lothario, fully explored his relationship
with Susan Hayes, and named a number of other women who were
allegedly involved with him. The testimony at trial never showed
that
Page 384 U. S. 341
Sheppard had any illicit relationships besides the one with
Susan Hayes.
On July 28, an editorial entitled "Why Don't Police Quiz Top
Suspect" demanded that Sheppard be taken to police headquarters. It
described him in the following language:
"Now proved under oath to be a liar, still free to go about his
business, shielded by his family, protected by a smart lawyer who
has made monkeys of the police and authorities, carrying a gun part
of the time, left free to do whatever he pleases. . . ."
A front-page editorial on July 30 asked: "Why Isn't Sam Sheppard
in Jail?" It was later titled "Quit Stalling -- Bring Him In."
After calling Sheppard "the most unusual murder suspect ever seen
around these parts," the article said that, "[e]xcept for some
superficial questioning during Coroner Sam Gerber's inquest, he has
been scot-free of any official grilling. . . ." It asserted that he
was "surrounded by an iron curtain of protection [and]
concealment."
That night, at 10 o'clock, Sheppard was arrested at his father's
home on a charge of murder. He was taken to the Bay Village City
Hall, where hundreds of people, newscasters, photographers and
reporters were awaiting his arrival. He was immediately arraigned
-- having been denied a temporary delay to secure the presence of
counsel -- and bound over to the grand jury.
The publicity then grew in intensity until his indictment on
August 17. Typical of the coverage during this period is a
front-page interview entitled: "DR. SAM:
I
Wish There Was Something I Could Get Off My Chest -- but There
Isn't.'" Unfavorable publicity included items such as a cartoon of
the body of a sphinx with Sheppard's head and the legend below: "
I
Will Do Everything In My Power to Help Solve This Terrible
Page 384 U. S. 342
Murder.' -- Dr. Sam Sheppard." Headlines announced,
inter
alia, that: "Doctor Evidence is Ready for Jury," "Corrigan
Tactics Stall Quizzing," "Sheppard
Gay Set' Is Revealed By
Houk," "Blood Is Found In Garage," "New Murder Evidence Is Found,
Police Claim," "Dr. Sam Faces Quiz At Jail On Marilyn's Fear Of
Him." On August 18, an article appeared under the headline "Dr. Sam
Writes His Own Story." And reproduced across the entire front page
was a portion of the typed statement signed by Sheppard:
"I am not guilty of the murder of my wife, Marilyn. How could I,
who have been trained to help people and devoted my life to saving
life, commit such a terrible and revolting crime?"
We do not detail the coverage further. There are five volumes
filled with similar clippings from each of the three Cleveland
newspapers covering the period from the murder until Sheppard's
conviction in December, 1954. The record includes no excerpts from
newscasts on radio and television, but, since space was reserved in
the courtroom for these media, we assume that their coverage was
equally large.
II
With this background, the case came on for trial two weeks
before the November general election at which the chief prosecutor
was a candidate for common pleas judge and the trial judge, Judge
Blythin, was a candidate to succeed himself. Twenty-five days
before the case was set, 75 veniremen were called as prospective
jurors. All three Cleveland newspapers published the names and
addresses of the veniremen. As a consequence, anonymous letters and
telephone calls, as well as calls from friends, regarding the
impending prosecution were received by all of the prospective
jurors. The selection of the jury began on October 18, 1954.
The courtroom in which the trial was held measured 26 by 48
feet. A long temporary table was set up inside
Page 384 U. S. 343
the bar, in back of the single counsel table. It ran the width
of the courtroom, parallel to the bar railing, with one end less
than three feet from the jury box. Approximately 20 representatives
of newspapers and wire services were assigned seats at this table
by the court. Behind the bar railing there were four rows of
benches. These seats were likewise assigned by the court for the
entire trial. The first row was occupied by representatives of
television and radio stations, and the second and third rows by
reporters from out-of-town newspapers and magazines. One side of
the last row, which accommodated 14 people, was assigned to
Sheppard's family, and the other to Marilyn's. The public was
permitted to fill vacancies in this row on special passes only.
Representatives of the news media also used all the rooms on the
courtroom floor, including the room where cases were ordinarily
called and assigned for trial. Private telephone lines and
telegraphic equipment were installed in these rooms so that reports
from the trial could be speeded to the papers. Station WSRS was
permitted to set up broadcasting facilities on the third floor of
the courthouse next door to the jury room, where the jury rested
during recesses in the trial and deliberated. Newscasts were made
from this room throughout the trial, and while the jury reached its
verdict.
On the sidewalk and steps in front of the courthouse, television
and newsreel cameras were occasionally used to take motion pictures
of the participants in the trial, including the jury and the judge.
Indeed, one television broadcast carried a staged interview of the
judge as he entered the courthouse. In the corridors outside the
courtroom, there was a host of photographers and television
personnel with flash cameras, portable lights and motion picture
cameras. This group photographed the prospective jurors during
selection of the jury. After the trial opened, the witnesses,
counsel, and jurors were
Page 384 U. S. 344
photographed and televised whenever they entered or left the
courtroom. Sheppard was brought to the courtroom about 10 minutes
before each session began; he was surrounded by reporters and
extensively photographed for the newspapers and television. A rule
of court prohibited picture-taking in the courtroom during the
actual sessions of the court, but no restraints were put on
photographers during recesses, which were taken once each morning
and afternoon, with a longer period for lunch.
All of these arrangements with the news media and their massive
coverage of the trial continued during the entire nine weeks of the
trial. The courtroom remained crowded to capacity with
representatives of news media. Their movement in and out of the
courtroom often caused so much confusion that, despite the
loudspeaker system installed in the courtroom, it was difficult for
the witnesses and counsel to be heard. Furthermore, the reporters
clustered within the bar of the small courtroom made confidential
talk among Sheppard and his counsel almost impossible during the
proceedings. They frequently had to leave the courtroom to obtain
privacy. And many times when counsel wished to raise a point with
the judge out of the hearing of the jury, it was necessary to move
to the judge's chambers. Even then, news media representatives so
packed the judge's anteroom that counsel could hardly return from
the chambers to the courtroom. The reporters vied with each other
to find out what counsel and the judge had discussed, and often
these matters later appeared in newspapers accessible to the
jury.
The daily record of the proceedings was made available to the
newspapers, and the testimony of each witness was printed verbatim
in the local editions, along with objections of counsel, and
rulings by the judge. Pictures of Sheppard, the judge, counsel,
pertinent witnesses, and the jury often accompanied the daily
newspaper
Page 384 U. S. 345
and television accounts. At times, the newspapers published
photographs of exhibits introduced at the trial, and the rooms of
Sheppard's house were featured, along with relevant testimony.
The jurors themselves were constantly exposed to the news media.
Every juror except one testified at
voir dire to reading
about the case in the Cleveland papers or to having heard
broadcasts about it. Seven of the 12 jurors who rendered the
verdict had one or more Cleveland papers delivered in their home;
the remaining jurors were not interrogated on the point. Nor were
there questions as to radios or television sets in the jurors'
homes, but we must assume that most of them owned such
conveniences. As the selection of the jury progressed, individual
pictures of prospective members appeared daily. During the trial,
pictures of the jury appeared over 40 times in the Cleveland papers
alone. The court permitted photographers to take pictures of the
jury in the box, and individual pictures of the members in the jury
room. One newspaper ran pictures of the jurors at the Sheppard home
when they went there to view the scene of the murder. Another paper
featured the home life of an alternate juror. The day before the
verdict was rendered -- while the jurors were at lunch and
sequestered by two bailiffs -- the jury was separated into two
groups to pose for photographs which appeared in the
newspapers.
III
We now reach the conduct of the trial. While the intense
publicity continued unabated, it is sufficient to relate only the
more flagrant episodes:
1. On October 9, 1954, nine days before the case went to trial,
an editorial in one of the newspapers criticized defense counsel's
random poll of people on the streets as to their opinion of
Sheppard's guilt or innocence in an
Page 384 U. S. 346
effort to use the resulting statistics to show the necessity for
change of venue. The article said the survey "smacks of mass jury
tampering," called on defense counsel to drop it, and stated that
the bar association should do something about it. It characterized
the poll as "nonjudicial, nonlegal, and nonsense." The article was
called to the attention of the court, but no action was taken.
2. On the second day of
voir dire examination, a debate
was staged and broadcast live over WHK radio. The participants,
newspaper reporters, accused Sheppard's counsel of throwing
roadblocks in the way of the prosecution and asserted that Sheppard
conceded his guilt by hiring a prominent criminal lawyer.
Sheppard's counsel objected to this broadcast and requested a
continuance, but the judge denied the motion. When counsel asked
the court to give some protection from such events, the judge
replied that "WHK doesn't have much coverage," and that
"[a]fter all, we are not trying this case by radio or in
newspapers or any other means. We confine ourselves seriously to it
in this courtroom, and do the very best we can."
3. While the jury was being selected, a two-inch headline asked:
"But Who Will Speak for Marilyn?" The front-page story spoke of the
"perfect face" of the accused. "Study that face as long as you
want. Never will you get from it a hint of what might be the
answer. . . ." The two brothers of the accused were described
as
"Prosperous, poised. His two sisters-in law. Smart, chic, well
groomed. His elderly father. Courtly, reserved. A perfect type for
the patriarch of a staunch clan."
The author then noted Marilyn Sheppard was "still off-stage,"
and that she was an only child whose mother died when she was very
young and whose father had no interest in the case. But the author
-- through quotes from Detective Chief James McArthur -- assured
readers that the prosecution's exhibits would speak for
Page 384 U. S. 347
Marilyn. "Her story," McArthur stated, "will come into this
courtroom through our witnesses." The article ends:
"Then you realize how what and who is missing from the perfect
setting will be supplied."
" How in the Big Case justice will be done."
" Justice to Sam Sheppard."
" And to Marilyn Sheppard."
4. As has been mentioned, the jury viewed the scene of the
murder on the first day of the trial. Hundreds of reporters,
cameramen and onlookers were there, and one representative of the
news media was permitted to accompany the jury while it inspected
the Sheppard home. The time of the jury's visit was revealed so far
in advance that one of the newspapers was able to rent a helicopter
and fly over the house taking pictures of the jurors on their
tour.
5. On November 19, a Cleveland police officer gave testimony
that tended to contradict details in the written statement Sheppard
made to the Cleveland police. Two days later, in a broadcast heard
over Station WHK in Cleveland, Robert Considine likened Sheppard to
a perjurer and compared the episode to Alger Hiss' confrontation
with Whittaker Chambers. Though defense counsel asked the judge to
question the jury to ascertain how many heard the broadcast, the
court refused to do so. The judge also overruled the motion for
continuance based on the same ground, saying:
"Well, I don't know, we can't stop people, in any event,
listening to it. It is a matter of free speech, and the court can't
control everybody. . . . We are not going to harass the jury every
morning. . . . I t is getting to the point where if we do it every
morning, we are suspecting the jury. I have confidence in this
jury. . . . "
Page 384 U. S. 348
6. On November 24, a story appeared under an eight-column
headline: "Sam Called A
Jekyll-Hyde' By Marilyn, Cousin To
Testify." It related that Marilyn had recently told friends that
Sheppard was a "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde" character. No such
testimony was ever produced at the trial. The story went on to
announce:
"The prosecution has a 'bombshell witness' on tap who will
testify to Dr. Sam's display of fiery temper -- countering the
defense claim that the defendant is a gentle physician with an even
disposition."
Defense counsel made motions for change of venue, continuance
and mistrial, but they were denied. No action was taken by the
court.
7. When the trial was in its seventh week, Walter Winchell
broadcast over WXEL television and WJW radio that Carole Beasley,
who was under arrest in New York City for robbery, had stated that,
as Sheppard's mistress, she had borne him a child. The defense
asked that the jury be queried on the broadcast. Two jurors
admitted in open court that they had heard it. The judge asked
each: "Would that have any effect upon your judgment?" Both
replied, "No." This was accepted by the judge as sufficient; he
merely asked the jury to "pay no attention whatever to that type of
scavenging. . . . Let's confine ourselves to this courtroom, if you
please." In answer to the motion for mistrial, the judge said:
"Well, even, so, Mr. Corrigan, how are you ever going to prevent
those things, in any event? I don't justify them at all. I think it
is outrageous, but in a sense, it is outrageous even if there were
no trial here. The trial has nothing to do with it in the Court's
mind, as far as its outrage is concerned, but -- "
Page 384 U. S. 349
"Mr. CORRIGAN: I don't know what effect it had on the mind of
any of these jurors, and I can't find out unless inquiry is
made."
"The COURT: How would you ever, in any jury, avoid that kind of
a thing?"
8. On December 9, while Sheppard was on the witness stand, he
testified that he had been mistreated by Cleveland detectives after
his arrest. Although he was not at the trial, Captain Kerr of the
Homicide Bureau issued a press statement denying Sheppard's
allegations which appeared under the headline: "
Bare-faced
Liar,' Kerr Says of Sam." Captain Kerr never appeared as a witness
at the trial.
9. After the case was submitted to the jury, it was sequestered
for its deliberations, which took five days and four nights. After
the verdict, defense counsel ascertained that the jurors had been
allowed to make telephone calls to their homes every day while they
were sequestered at the hotel. Although the telephones had been
removed from the jurors' rooms, the jurors were permitted to use
the phones in the bailiffs' rooms. The calls were placed by the
jurors themselves; no record was kept of the jurors who made calls,
the telephone numbers or the parties called. The bailiffs sat in
the room where they could hear only the jurors' end of the
conversation. The court had not instructed the bailiffs to prevent
such calls. By a subsequent motion, defense counsel urged that this
ground alone warranted a new trial, but the motion was overruled,
and no evidence was taken on the question.
IV
The principle that justice cannot survive behind walls of
silence has long been reflected in the "Anglo-American distrust for
secret trials."
In re Oliver, 333 U.
S. 257,
Page 384 U. S. 350
333 U. S. 268
(1948). A responsible press has always been regarded as the
handmaiden of effective judicial administration, especially in the
criminal field. Its function in this regard is documented by an
impressive record of service over several centuries. The press does
not simply publish information about trials, but guards against the
miscarriage of justice by subjecting the police, prosecutors, and
judicial processes to extensive public scrutiny and criticism. This
Court has, therefore, been unwilling to place any direct
limitations on the freedom traditionally exercised by the news
media for "[w]hat transpires in the courtroom is public property."
Craig v. Harney, 331 U. S. 367,
331 U. S. 374
(1947). The
"unqualified prohibitions laid down by the framers were intended
to give to liberty of the press . . . the broadest scope that could
be countenanced in an orderly society."
Bridges v. California, 314 U.
S. 252,
314 U. S. 265
(1941). And where there was "no threat or menace to the integrity
of the trial,"
Craig v. Harney, supra, at
331 U. S. 377,
we have consistently required that the press have a free hand, even
though we sometimes deplored its sensationalism.
But the Court has also pointed out that "[l]egal trials are not
like elections, to be won through the use of the meeting-hall, the
radio, and the newspaper."
Bridges v. California, supra,
at
314 U. S. 271.
And the Court has insisted that no one be punished for a crime
without "a charge fairly made and fairly tried in a public tribunal
free of prejudice, passion, excitement, and tyrannical power."
Chambers v. Florida, 309 U. S. 227,
309 U. S.
236-237 (1940).
"Freedom of discussion should be given the widest range
compatible with the essential requirement of the fair and orderly
administration of justice."
Pennekamp v. Florida, 328 U. S. 331,
328 U. S. 347
(1946). But it must not be allowed to divert the trial from the
"very purpose of a court system . . . to adjudicate
controversies, both criminal and civil, in the calmness and
solemnity of the
Page 384 U. S. 351
courtroom according to legal procedures."
Cox v. Louisiana, 379 U. S. 559,
379 U. S. 583
(1965) (BLACK, J., dissenting). Among these "legal procedures" is
the requirement that the jury's verdict be based on evidence
received in open court, not from outside sources. Thus, in
Marshall v. United States, 360 U.
S. 310 (1959), we set aside a federal conviction where
the jurors were exposed, "through news accounts," to information
that was not admitted at trial. We held that the prejudice from
such material "may indeed be greater" than when it is part of the
prosecution's evidence, "for it is then not tempered by protective
procedures." At
360 U. S. 313.
At the same time, we did not consider dispositive the statement of
each juror
"that he would not be influenced by the news articles, that he
could decide the case only on the evidence of record, and that he
felt no prejudice against petitioner as a result of the
articles."
At
360 U. S. 312.
Likewise, in
Irvin v. Dowd, 366 U.
S. 717 (1961), even though each juror indicated that he
could render an impartial verdict despite exposure to prejudicial
newspaper articles, we set aside the conviction, holding:
"With his life at stake, it is not requiring too much that
petitioner be tried in an atmosphere undisturbed by so huge a wave
of public passion. . . ."
At
366 U. S.
728.
The undeviating rule of this Court was expressed by Mr. Justice
Holmes over half a century ago in
Patterson v. Colorado,
205 U. S. 454,
205 U. S. 462
(1907):
"The theory of our system is that the conclusions to be reached
in a case will be induced only by evidence and argument in open
court, and not by any outside influence, whether of private talk or
public print."
Moreover, "the burden of showing essential unfairness . . . as a
demonstrable reality,"
Adams v.
United
Page 384 U. S. 352
States ex rel. McCann, 317 U.
S. 269,
317 U. S. 281
(1942), need not be undertaken when television has exposed the
community "repeatedly and in depth to the spectacle of [the
accused] personally confessing in detail to the crimes with which
he was later to be charged."
Rideau v. Louisiana,
373 U. S. 723,
373 U. S. 726
(1963). In
Turner v. Louisiana, 379 U.
S. 466 (1965), two key witnesses were deputy sheriffs
who doubled as jury shepherds during the trial. The deputies swore
that they had not talked to the jurors about the case, but the
Court nonetheless held that,
"even if it could be assumed that the deputies never did discuss
the case directly with any members of the jury, it would be
blinking reality not to recognize the extreme prejudice inherent in
this continual association. . . ."
At
379 U. S.
473.
Only last Term, in
Estes v. Texas, 381 U.
S. 532 (1965), we set aside a conviction despite the
absence of any showing of prejudice. We said there:
"It is true that, in most cases involving claims of due process
deprivations, we require a showing of identifiable prejudice to the
accused. Nevertheless, at times, a procedure employed by the State
involves such a probability that prejudice will result that it is
deemed inherently lacking in due process."
At
381 U. S.
542-543. And we cited with approval the language of MR.
JUSTICE BLACK for the Court in
In re Murchison,
349 U. S. 133,
349 U. S. 136
(1955), that "our system of law has always endeavored to prevent
even the probability of unfairness."
V
It is clear that the totality of circumstances in this case also
warrants such an approach. Unlike Estes, Sheppard was not granted a
change of venue to a locale away from
Page 384 U. S. 353
where the publicity originated; nor was his jury sequestered.
The Estes jury saw none of the television broadcasts from the
courtroom. On the contrary, the Sheppard jurors were subjected to
newspaper, radio, and television coverage of the trial while not
taking part in the proceedings. They were allowed to go their
separate ways outside of the courtroom, without adequate directions
not to read or listen to anything concerning the case. The judge's
"admonitions" at the beginning of the trial are representative:
"I would suggest to you and caution you that you do not read any
newspapers during the progress of this trial, that you do not
listen to radio comments, nor watch or listen to television
comments, insofar as this case is concerned. You will feel very
much better as the trial proceeds. . . . I am sure that we shall
all feel very much better if we do not indulge in any newspaper
reading or listening to any comments whatever about the matter
while the case is in progress. After it is all over, you can read
it all to your heart's content. . . ."
At intervals during the trial, the judge simply repeated his
"suggestions" and "requests" that the jurors not expose themselves
to comment upon the case. Moreover, the jurors were thrust into the
role of celebrities by the judge's failure to insulate them from
reporters and photographers.
See Estes v. Texas, supra, at
381 U. S.
545-546. The numerous pictures of the jurors, with their
addresses, which appeared in the newspapers before and during the
trial itself exposed them to expressions of opinion from both
cranks and friends. The fact that anonymous letters had been
received by prospective jurors should have made the judge aware
that this publicity seriously threatened the jurors' privacy.
The press coverage of the Estes trial was not nearly as massive
and pervasive as the attention given by the
Page 384 U. S. 354
Cleveland newspapers and broadcasting stations to Sheppard's
prosecution. [
Footnote 8]
Sheppard stood indicted for the murder of his wife; the State was
demanding the death penalty. For months, the virulent publicity
about Sheppard and the murder had made the case notorious. Charges
and countercharges were aired in the news media besides those for
which Sheppard was called to trial. In addition, only three months
before trial, Sheppard was examined for more than five hours
without counsel during a three-day inquest which ended in a public
brawl. The inquest was televised live from a high school gymnasium
seating hundreds of people. Furthermore, the trial began two weeks
before a hotly contested election at which both Chief Prosecutor
Mahon and Judge Blythin were candidates for judgeships. [
Footnote 9]
While we cannot say that Sheppard was denied due process by the
judge's refusal to take precautions against the influence of
pretrial publicity alone, the court's later rulings must be
considered against the setting in which
Page 384 U. S. 355
the trial was held. In light of this background, we believe that
the arrangements made by the judge with the news media caused
Sheppard to be deprived of that "judicial serenity and calm to
which [he] was entitled."
Estes v. Texas, supra, at
381 U. S. 536.
The fact is that bedlam reigned at the courthouse during the trial,
and newsmen took over practically the entire courtroom, hounding
most of the participants in the trial, especially Sheppard. At a
temporary table within a few feet of the jury box and counsel table
sat some 20 reporters, staring at Sheppard and taking notes. The
erection of a press table for reporters inside the bar is
unprecedented. The bar of the court is reserved for counsel,
providing them a safe place in which to keep papers and exhibits
and to confer privately with client and co-counsel. It is designed
to protect the witness and the jury from any distractions,
intrusions or influences, and to permit bench discussions of the
judge's rulings away from the hearing of the public and the jury.
Having assigned almost all of the available seats in the courtroom
to the news media, the judge lost his ability to supervise that
environment. The movement of the reporters in and out of the
courtroom caused frequent confusion and disruption of the trial.
And the record reveals constant commotion within the bar. Moreover,
the judge gave the throng of newsmen gathered in the corridors of
the courthouse absolute free rein. Participants in the trial,
including the jury, were forced to run a gauntlet of reporters and
photographers each time they entered or left the courtroom. The
total lack of consideration for the privacy of the jury was
demonstrated by the assignment to a broadcasting station of space
next to the jury room on the floor above the courtroom, as well as
the fact that jurors were allowed to make telephone calls during
their five-day deliberation.
Page 384 U. S. 356
VI
There can be no question about the nature of the publicity which
surrounded Sheppard's trial. We agree, as did the Court of Appeals,
with the findings in Judge Bell's opinion for the Ohio Supreme
Court:
"Murder and mystery, society, sex and suspense were combined in
this case in such a manner as to intrigue and captivate the public
fancy to a degree perhaps unparalleled in recent annals. Throughout
the pre-indictment investigation, the subsequent legal skirmishes,
and the nine-week trial, circulation-conscious editors catered to
the insatiable interest of the American public in the bizarre. . .
. In this atmosphere of a 'Roman holiday' for the news media, Sam
Sheppard stood trial for his life."
165 Ohio St. at 294, 135 N.E.2d at 342. Indeed, every court that
has considered this case, save the court that tried it, has
deplored the manner in which the news media inflamed and prejudiced
the public. [
Footnote
10]
Much of the material printed or broadcast during the trial was
never heard from the witness stand, such as the charges that
Sheppard had purposely impeded the murder investigation, and must
be guilty, since he had
Page 384 U. S. 357
hired a prominent criminal lawyer; that Sheppard was a perjurer;
that he had sexual relations with numerous women; that his slain
wife had characterized him as a "Jekyll-Hyde"; that he was "a
bare-faced liar" because of his testimony as to police treatment;
and, finally, that a woman convict claimed Sheppard to be the
father of her illegitimate child. As the trial progressed, the
newspapers summarized and interpreted the evidence, devoting
particular attention to the material that incriminated Sheppard,
and often drew unwarranted inferences from testimony. At one point,
a front-page picture of Mrs. Sheppard's blood-stained pillow was
published after being "doctored" to show more clearly an alleged
imprint of a surgical instrument.
Nor is there doubt that this deluge of publicity reached at
least some of the jury. On the only occasion that the jury was
queried, two jurors admitted in open court to hearing the highly
inflammatory charge that a prison inmate claimed Sheppard as the
father of her illegitimate child. Despite the extent and nature of
the publicity to which the jury was exposed during trial, the judge
refused defense counsel's other requests that the jurors be asked
whether they had read or heard specific prejudicial comment about
the case, including the incidents we have previously summarized. In
these circumstances, we can assume that some of this material
reached members of the jury.
See Commonwealth v. Crehan,
345 Mass. 609,
188
N.E.2d 923 (1963).
VII
The court's fundamental error is compounded by the holding that
it lacked power to control the publicity about the trial. From the
very inception of the proceedings, the judge announced that neither
he nor anyone else could restrict prejudicial news accounts. And
he
Page 384 U. S. 358
reiterated this view on numerous occasions. Since he viewed the
news media as his target, the judge never considered other means
that are often utilized to reduce the appearance of prejudicial
material and to protect the jury from outside influence. We
conclude that these procedures would have been sufficient to
guarantee Sheppard a fair trial, and so do not consider what
sanctions might be available against a recalcitrant press, nor the
charges of bias now made against the state trial judge. [
Footnote 11]
The carnival atmosphere at trial could easily have been avoided,
since the courtroom and courthouse premises are subject to the
control of the court. As we stressed in
Estes, the
presence of the press at judicial proceedings must be limited when
it is apparent that the accused might otherwise be prejudiced or
disadvantaged. [
Footnote 12]
Bearing in mind the massive pretrial publicity, the judge should
have adopted stricter rules governing the use of the courtroom by
newsmen, as Sheppard's counsel requested. The number of reporters
in the courtroom itself could have been limited at the first sign
that their presence would disrupt the trial. They certainly should
not have been placed inside the bar. Furthermore, the judge should
have more closely regulated the conduct of newsmen in the
courtroom. For instance, the judge belatedly asked them not to
handle and photograph trial exhibits lying on the counsel table
during recesses.
Page 384 U. S. 359
Secondly, the court should have insulated the witnesses. All of
the newspapers and radio stations apparently interviewed
prospective witnesses at will, and in many instances disclosed
their testimony. A typical example was the publication of numerous
statements by Susan Hayes, before her appearance in court,
regarding her love affair with Sheppard. Although the witnesses
were barred from the courtroom during the trial, the full verbatim
testimony was available to them in the press. This completely
nullified the judge's imposition of the rule.
See Estes v.
Texas, supra, at
381 U. S.
547.
Thirdly, the court should have made some effort to control the
release of leads, information, and gossip to the press by police
officers, witnesses, and the counsel for both sides. Much of the
information thus disclosed was inaccurate, leading to groundless
rumors and confusion. [
Footnote
13] That the judge was aware of his responsibility in this
respect may be seen from his warning to Steve Sheppard, the
accused's brother, who had apparently made public statements in an
attempt to discredit testimony for the prosecution. The judge made
this statement in the presence of the jury:
"Now, the Court wants to say a word. That he was told -- he has
not read anything about it at all -- but he was informed that Dr.
Steve Sheppard, who
Page 384 U. S. 360
has been granted the privilege of remaining in the courtroom
during the trial, has been trying the case in the newspapers and
making rather uncomplimentary comments about the testimony of the
witnesses for the State."
"Let it be now understood that, if Dr. Steve Sheppard wishes to
use the newspapers to try his case while we are trying it here, he
will be barred from remaining in the courtroom during the progress
of the trial if he is to be a witness in the case."
"The Court appreciates he cannot deny Steve Sheppard the right
of free speech, but he can deny him the . . . privilege of being in
the courtroom if he wants to avail himself of that method during
the progress of the trial."
Defense counsel immediately brought to the court's attention the
tremendous amount of publicity in the Cleveland press that
"misrepresented entirely the testimony" in the case. Under such
circumstances, the judge should have at least warned the newspapers
to check the accuracy of their accounts. And it is obvious that the
judge should have further sought to alleviate this problem by
imposing control over the statements made to the news media by
counsel, witnesses, and especially the Coroner and police officers.
The prosecution repeatedly made evidence available to the news
media which was never offered in the trial. Much of the "evidence"
disseminated in this fashion was clearly inadmissible. The
exclusion of such evidence in court is rendered meaningless when
news media make it available to the public. For example, the
publicity about Sheppard's refusal to take a lie detector test came
directly from police officers and the Coroner. [
Footnote 14] The story that Sheppard had
been called
Page 384 U. S. 361
a "Jekyll-Hyde" personality by his wife was attributed to a
prosecution witness. No such testimony was given. The further
report that there was "a
bombshell witness' on tap" who would
testify as to Sheppard's "fiery temper" could only have emanated
from the prosecution. Moreover, the newspapers described in detail
clues that had been found by the police, but not put into the
record. [Footnote
15]
The fact that many of the prejudicial news items can be traced
to the prosecution as well as the defense aggravates the judge's
failure to take any action.
See Stroble v. California,
343 U. S. 181,
343 U. S. 201
(1952) (Frankfurter, J., dissenting). Effective control of these
sources -- concededly within the court's power -- might well have
prevented the divulgence of inaccurate information, rumors, and
accusations that made up much of the inflammatory publicity, at
least after Sheppard's indictment.
More specifically, the trial court might well have proscribed
extrajudicial statements by any lawyer, party, witness, or court
official which divulged prejudicial matters, such as the refusal of
Sheppard to submit to interrogation or take any lie detector tests;
any statement made by Sheppard to officials; the identity of
prospective witnesses or their probable testimony; any belief in
guilt or innocence; or like statements concerning the merits of the
case.
See State v. Van Duyne, 43 N.J. 369, 389,
204 A.2d
841, 852 (1964), in which the court interpreted Canon 20 of the
American Bar Association's Canons of Professional Ethics to
prohibit such statements.
Page 384 U. S. 362
Being advised of the great public interest in the case, the mass
coverage of the press, and the potential prejudicial impact of
publicity, the court could also have requested the appropriate city
and county officials to promulgate a regulation with respect to
dissemination of information about the case by their employees.
[
Footnote 16] In addition,
reporters who wrote or broadcast prejudicial stories could have
been warned as to the impropriety of publishing material not
introduced in the proceedings. The judge was put on notice of such
events by defense counsel's complaint about the WHK broadcast on
the second day of trial.
See p.
384 U. S. 346
supra. In this manner, Sheppard's right to a trial free
from outside interference would have been given added protection
without corresponding curtailment of the news media. Had the judge,
the other officers of the court, and the police placed the interest
of justice first, the news media would have soon learned to be
content with the task of reporting the case as it unfolded in the
courtroom -- not pieced together from extrajudicial statements.
From the cases coming here, we note that unfair and prejudicial
news comment on pending trials has become increasingly prevalent.
Due process requires that the accused receive a trial by an
impartial jury free from outside influences. Given the
pervasiveness of modern communications and the difficulty of
effacing prejudicial publicity from the minds of the jurors, the
trial courts must take strong measures to ensure that the balance
is never weighed against the accused. And appellate tribunals have
the duty to make an independent evaluation of the circumstances. Of
course, there is nothing
Page 384 U. S. 363
that proscribes the press from reporting events that transpire
in the courtroom. But where there is a reasonable likelihood that
prejudicial news prior to trial will prevent a fair trial, the
judge should continue the case until the threat abates, or transfer
it to another county not so permeated with publicity. In addition,
sequestration of the jury was something the judge should have
raised
sua sponte with counsel. If publicity during the
proceedings threatens the fairness of the trial, a new trial should
be ordered. But we must remember that reversals are but
palliatives; the cure lies in those remedial measures that will
prevent the prejudice at its inception. The courts must take such
steps by rule and regulation that will protect their processes from
prejudicial outside interferences. Neither prosecutors, counsel for
defense, the accused, witnesses, court staff nor enforcement
officers coming under the jurisdiction of the court should be
permitted to frustrate its function. Collaboration between counsel
and the press as to information affecting the fairness of a
criminal trial is not only subject to regulation, but is highly
censurable, and worthy of disciplinary measures.
Since the state trial judge did not fulfill his duty to protect
Sheppard from the inherently prejudicial publicity which saturated
the community and to control disruptive influences in the
courtroom, we must reverse the denial of the habeas petition. The
case is remanded to the District Court with instructions to issue
the writ and order that Sheppard be released from custody unless
the State puts him to its charges again within a reasonable
time.
It is so ordered.
MR. JUSTICE BLACK dissents.
[
Footnote 1]
Sheppard was convicted in 1954 in the Court of Common Pleas of
Cuyahoga County, Ohio. His conviction was affirmed by the Court of
Appeals for Cuyahoga County, 100 Ohio App. 345, 128 N.E.2d 471
(1955), and the Ohio Supreme Court, 165 Ohio St. 293, 135 N.E.2d
340 (1956). We denied certiorari on the original application for
review.
352 U. S. 910
(1956).
[
Footnote 2]
The several witnesses to whom Sheppard narrated his experiences
differ in their description of various details. Sheppard claimed
the vagueness of his perception was caused by his sudden awakening
the dimness of the light, and his loss of consciousness.
[
Footnote 3]
Sheppard was suffering from severe pain in his neck, a swollen
eye, and shock.
[
Footnote 4]
But newspaper photographers and reporters were permitted access
to Sheppard's home from time to time, and took pictures throughout
the premises.
[
Footnote 5]
At the same time, the newspapers reported that other possible
suspects had been "cleared" by lie detector tests. One of these
persons was quoted as saying that he could not understand why an
innocent man would refuse to take such a test.
[
Footnote 6]
The newspapers had heavily emphasized Sheppard's illicit affair
with Susan Hayes and the fact that he had initially lied about
it.
[
Footnote 7]
A number of articles calculated to evoke sympathy for Sheppard
were printed, such as the letters Sheppard wrote to his son while
in jail. These stories often appeared together with news coverage
which was unfavorable to him.
[
Footnote 8]
Many more reporters and photographers attended the Sheppard
trial. And it attracted several nationally famous commentators as
well.
[
Footnote 9]
At the commencement of trial, defense counsel made motions for
continuance and change of venue. The judge postponed ruling on
these motions until he determined whether an impartial jury could
be impaneled.
Voir dire examination showed that, with one
exception, all members selected for jury service had read something
about the case in the newspapers. Since, however, all of the jurors
stated that they would not be influenced by what they had read or
seen, the judge overruled both of the motions. Without regard to
whether the judge's actions in this respect reach dimensions that
would justify issuance of the habeas writ, it should be noted that
a short continuance would have alleviated any problem with regard
to the judicial elections. The court in
Delaney v. United
States, 199 F.2d 107, 115 (C.A. 1st Cir.1952), recognized such
a duty under similar circumstances, holding that,
"if assurance of a fair trial would necessitate that the trial
of the case be postponed until after the election, then we think
the law required no less than that."
[
Footnote 10]
Typical comments on the trial by the press itself include:
"The question of Dr. Sheppard's guilt or innocence still is
before the courts. Those who have examined the trial record
carefully are divided as to the propriety of the verdict. But
almost everyone who watched the performance of the Cleveland press
agrees that a fair hearing for the defendant, in that area, would
be a modern miracle."
Harrison, "The Press vs. the Courts," The Saturday Review (Oct.
15, 1955).
"At this distance, some 100 miles from Cleveland, it looks to us
as though the Sheppard murder case was sensationalized to the point
at which the press must ask itself if its freedom, carried to
excess, doesn't interfere with the conduct of fair trials."
Editorial, The Toledo Blade (Dec. 22, 1954).
[
Footnote 11]
In an unsworn statement, which the parties agreed would have the
status of a deposition, made 10 years after Sheppard's conviction
and six years after Judge Blythin's death, Dorothy Kilgallen
asserted that Judge Blythin had told her: "It's an open and shut
case . . . He is guilty as hell." It is thus urged that Sheppard be
released on the ground that the judge's bias infected the entire
trial. But we need not reach this argument, since the judge's
failure to insulate the proceedings from prejudicial publicity and
disruptive influences deprived Sheppard of the chance to receive a
fair hearing.
[
Footnote 12]
The judge's awareness of his power in this respect is manifest
from his assignment of seats to the press.
[
Footnote 13]
The problem here was further complicated by the independent
action of the newspapers in reporting "evidence" and gossip which
they uncovered. The press not only inferred that Sheppard was
guilty because he "stalled" the investigation, hid behind his
family, and hired a prominent criminal lawyer, but denounced as
"mass jury tampering" his efforts to gather evidence of community
prejudice caused by such publications. Sheppard's counterattacks
added some fuel but, in these circumstances, cannot preclude him
from asserting his right to a fair trial. Putting to one side news
stories attributed to police officials, prospective witnesses, the
Sheppards, and the lawyers, it is possible that the other publicity
"would itself have had a prejudicial effect."
Cf. Report
of the President's Commission on the Assassination of President
Kennedy, at 239.
[
Footnote 14]
When two police officers testified at trial that Sheppard
refused to tale a lie detector test, the judge declined to give a
requested instruction that the results of such a test would be
inadmissible in any event. He simply told the jury that no person
has an obligation "to take any lie detector test."
[
Footnote 15]
Such "premature disclosure and weighing of the evidence" may
seriously jeopardize a defendant's right to an impartial jury.
"[N]either the press nor the public had a right to be
contemporaneously informed by the police or prosecuting authorities
of the details of the evidence being accumulated against
[Sheppard]."
Cf. Report of the President's Commission,
supra, at 239, 240.
[
Footnote 16]
The Department of Justice, the City of New York, and other
governmental agencies have issued such regulations.
E.g.,
28 CFR § 50.2 (1966). For general information on this topic
see periodic publications (
e.g., Nos. 71, 124,
and 158) by the Freedom of Information Center, School of
Journalism, University of Missouri.