Court Opinion

ID: 9948208
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-03-06 17:14:37.126449+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:29:18.821468
License: Public Domain

J-S99001-23

                                   2024 PA Super 39

    IN RE: SEALED ARREST WARRANTS               :    IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    PURSUANT TO PA. R.CRIM.513.1                :         PENNSYLVANIA
                                                :
                                                :
    APPEAL OF: THE HERALD                       :
    STANDARD-UNIONTOWN                          :
    NEWSPAPERS, INC, MON VALLEY                 :
    INDEPENDENT, AND OBSERVER                   :
    REPORTER                                    :    No. 21 WDA 2023

              Appeal from the Order Entered December 14, 2022
            In the Court of Common Pleas of Westmoreland County
                     Criminal Division at No: 801 MD 2022

BEFORE: STABILE, J., DUBOW, J., and KING, J.

OPINION BY STABILE, J.:                              FILED: March 6, 2024

       Presently before us is the appeal of Appellants, The Herald Standard-

Uniontown Newspapers, Inc., Mon Valley Independent, and Observer Reporter

from the trial court’s order of December 14, 2022, denying their petition to

intervene and unseal arrest warrant information that had been sealed

pursuant to Pa.R.Crim.P. 513.1.1 As explained in more detail below, we issued

an order on February 8, 2022, affirming in part and reversing in part the trial

court’s sealing order. Specifically, we reversed the order insofar as it denied

Appellants’ petition to intervene and insofar as it sealed the public dockets.

We affirmed the trial court’s order insofar as it sealed other arrest warrant

information.       Given    the   sensitivity   of   the   Commonwealth’s   ongoing

____________________________________________

1  Rule 513.1 is titled “Sealing of Arrest Warrant.”            We will address the
pertinent subsections throughout this opinion.
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investigation, we awaited the expiration of the sealing order prior to issuing

this opinion in support of the order.

       This matter arises from the criminal prosecution of Keven Van Lam,

currently pending in Westmoreland County.2           On November 6, 2022, in

response to a petition from the Westmoreland County District Attorney, the

trial court issued an order pursuant to Rule 513.1 sealing the arrest warrant

information for 60 days.        Pursuant to that order, local media outlets were

denied access to any information pertaining to the Van Lam case, including

the public dockets.

       On November 22, 2022, Appellants filed an emergency petition to

intervene and unseal the criminal record, arguing that the prosecution,

involving a fatal shooting in Rostraver Township, was of public interest and

that the media could not monitor and report on the case with the entire record

sealed.    The trial court conducted a hearing on Appellants’ petition on

December 14, 2022. At the hearing, Appellants asked, at a minimum, that a

public docket be made available. N.T. Hearing, 12/14/22, at 5, 13-15. For

its part, the Commonwealth indicated that it would not object to the release

____________________________________________

2 This sealed arrest warrant proceeding is docketed at Westmoreland County
Court of Common Pleas number CP-65-MD-0000801-2022. The criminal
proceeding against the defendant was docketed at Magisterial District Court
docket number MJ-10103-CR-0000479-2022. Now that the preliminary
hearing has been held and the charges bound over for court, the Magisterial
District Court docket is closed and the criminal prosecution is pending at
Westmoreland County Court of Common Pleas docket number CP-65-CR-
0003527-2023.

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of a public docket so long as the docket did not include arrest warrant

information as defined under Rule 513.1. Id. at 18-19. The trial court denied

all requested relief at the conclusion of the hearing:

             I am going to state on the record that, as the presiding
       judge over this matter and the one who signed the order to seal
       the record to maintain the integrity of the Commonwealth’s
       investigation, I find that it is absolutely imperative that the arrest
       record warrant, the information contained in my order of
       November 6th and 7th, that that information continue to remain
       sealed by virtue of the arguments made at the hearing today.

Id. at 22.    The trial court advised Appellants of the date and time of the

preliminary hearing and directed the prosecutor to advise Appellants’ counsel

of any continuance(s). Id. at 23.

       Appellants timely appealed3 to this Court on December 28, 2022. They

filed a motion to expedite the appeal on January 5, 2023. This Court granted

the motion on January 13, 2023. On February 8, 2023, after an in camera

review of the sealed information, this Court issued an order affirming in part

and reversing in part as set forth above.        Order, 2/8/23.   Meanwhile, the

preliminary hearing in the Van Lam matter was continued seven times, with

the consent of the defendant, until it finally occurred on October 18, 2023. At

the conclusion of the preliminary hearing, the charges against Van Lam of

first-degree murder, criminal homicide, and evidence tampering were held for

____________________________________________

3  The trial court’s order in this matter is immediately appealable.
Commonwealth v. Fenstermaker, 530 A.2d 414, 421 (Pa. 1987).

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court, and the sealing order expired. We now issue the following opinion in

support of our order of February 8, 2023.

      “As a preliminary matter, we note that the determination of whether an

item will be considered a public judicial record or document subject to the

common law right of access is a question of law, for which the scope of review

is plenary.”   Commonwealth v. Upshur, 924 A.2d 642, 647 (Pa. 2007)

(plurality). “However, the trial court’s decision regarding access to a particular

item will be reviewed for abuse of discretion.”           Id.      “Regarding the

constitutional right of access, at least, the court should issue individualized,

specific, particularized findings on the record that closure is essential to

preserve   higher   values   and   is   narrowly   tailored   to   that   interest.”

Commonwealth v. Curley, 189 A.3d 467, 473 (Pa. Super. 2018).

      Rule 513.1 permits the sealing of “arrest warrant information” for “good

cause shown.” Pa.R.Crim.P. 513.1(A), (B). Arrest warrant information is “the

criminal complaint in cases which an arrest warrant is issued, the arrest

warrant, any affidavit(s) of probable cause, and documents or information

related to the case.” Pa.R.Crim.P. 513.1(A). The judge and clerk of courts

may not make arrest warrant information available for public inspection until

the sealing order expires. Pa.R.Crim.P. 513.1(G). Per its official comment,

Rule 513.1 was adopted to codify the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s opinion

in Commonwealth v. Fenstermaker, 530 A.2d 414, 420 (Pa. 1987). There,

our Supreme Court set forth some principles guiding our analysis of the issue

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before us. Most significantly, our criminal courts operate under a presumption

of openness. Id. at 417, 420.

             The importance of the public having an opportunity to
      observe the functioning of the criminal justice system has long
      been recognized in our courts. Criminal trials in the United States
      have, by historical tradition, and under the First Amendment, been
      deemed presumptively open to public scrutiny and this “...
      presumption of openness inheres in the very nature of the criminal
      trial under our system of justice.” Richmond Newspapers, Inc.
      v. Virginia, 448 U.S. 555, 573 (1980).

Id. at 417. The presumption of openness is enshrined in Article I, § 9 of the

Pennsylvania Constitution, which guarantees the right to a “speedy public

trial,” and Article I, § 11 begins with the phrase, “[a]ll courts shall be open.”

Id.; PA. CONST. art I, §§ 9, 11. Likewise, Article I, § 7 of the Pennsylvania

Constitution guarantees a right of access to criminal proceedings and judicial

records. Curley, 189 A.3d at 472; PA. CONST. art I, § 7. “‘It is clear that the

courts of this country recognize a general right to inspect and copy public

records and documents, including judicial records and documents.’ There is a

‘presumption—however gauged—in favor of public access to judicial records.’”

Fenstermaker,      530    A.2d   at   418    (quoting     Nixon    v.   Warner

Communications, Inc., 435 U.S. 589, 602 (1978)).

      Public inspection of arrest warrant information discourages perjury on

the part of the affiant, encourages police and prosecutors to ensure they have

sufficient cause, serves as a check on the discretion of issuing authorities, and

promotes a public perception of fairness regarding arrest warrants. Id. at

418. “More generally, the public right to review and copy judicial records and

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documents provides an important check on the criminal justice system,

ensuring not only the fair execution of justice, but also increasing public

confidence and understanding.” Upshur, 924 A.2d at 647 (citing Richmond

Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia, 448 U.S. 555, 572 (1980)).                But the

presumption of openness is rebuttable for reasons such as unfair prejudice

arising from pretrial publicity, the need to protect the safety of informants,

the need to preserve the integrity of an ongoing investigation, and alternative

means to protect the interests threatened by disclosure. Fenstermaker, 530

A.2d at 420. Thus, to show good cause under Rule 513.1, the Commonwealth

must rebut the presumption of openness.

      In its petition to seal the arrest warrant information, the Commonwealth

alleged that victim Boyke Budiarachman was killed in an “execution style

murder-for-hire.” Petition to Seal Arrest Warrant, 11/7/2022, at ¶ 3. The

defendant had confessed to paying a third party, who in turn hired a gunman

to kill the victim. Id. As of the filing of the sealing petition, these potential

codefendants were unidentified and the Commonwealth asserted that release

of the arrest warrant information “would expose investigative details, which

could lead to the destruction of evidence and/or the intimidation or retaliation

against other involved and uninvolved witnesses.” Id. at ¶ 4. Further, the

Commonwealth alleged that “the integrity of the investigation and the safety

of witnesses and/or co-conspirators depend on the sealing of the instant arrest

warrant information.” Id. at ¶ 6.

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      During the December 14, 2022 hearing, however, the parties appeared

to agree that basic docketing information would not compromise the

Commonwealth’s investigation. The prosecutor had little to say against the

availability of a public docket:

           THE COURT:        Hold on a second.     Isn’t there a criminal
      complaint file?

           [PROSECUTOR]: Yes, but the criminal complaint is filed at
      801 MD 2022 at the Clerk of Court’s Office here at the courthouse.

            THE COURT: And you are saying on the record that that’s
      the only number under which any charges have been filed would
      be under this miscellaneous file?

             [PROSECUTOR]: That’s the only way that we are permitted
      to file when we pursue a sealed arrest warrant. Whether or not
      the magistrate has created a docket number that’s associated with
      that for the purposes of scheduling a preliminary hearing, I don’t
      have that information and that’s all I’m saying.

            THE COURT: Let’s assume that he did.

            [PROSECUTOR]: Okay.

             THE COURT: The magistrate created a separate docket with
      the entries, what’s your position as to whether the press would be
      entitled to have access to that information?

            [PROSECUTOR]: As long as the information does not
      include the arrest warrant information as defined under 513.1, we
      have no problem with that. That would include the charges that
      shouldn’t be released, names of the victim are often included in
      the secure docket, that shouldn’t be included.

            We don’t have any – we didn’t ask for a specific ruling that
      a docket be sealed. But what I am suggesting to the Court is that
      the Court doesn’t have enough information other than the
      allegations of the intervenors that there is a docket and that it was
      sealed.

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N.T. Hearing, 12/20/22, at 18-19. In other words, the prosecutor did not

specifically ask that the docket be sealed and he was unaware of whether a

docket had been created.4 The prosecutor did not want the pending charges

and the identity of the victim to be revealed, but he did not explain why.

       Counsel for Appellants explained her position as follows:

               So, journalists don’t have access to whatever private login
       information that the District Attorney’s Office would have or court
       staff. So, on the public-facing portal, the information would be as
       Your Honor articulated, you know, the attorney’s name, the MDJ
       in charge, if there’s a preliminary hearing scheduled, when that
       would be, when the arraignment was, bail amount, is the person
       still in custody, I believe the defendant’s date of birth and partial
       home address are available, and most importantly, the charges.

             So, when someone is incarcerated, arrested, and held, we
       typically have the very basic information to know, you know, Bob
       Smith has been picked up for attempted murder or what have you,
       because we live in a democracy where we believe in, you know,
       understanding why someone has been taken into a custodial
       setting. So, right now, because there is none of that very basic
       information, we literally don’t know – other than through these
       proceedings where we learned who defense counsel was, you
       know, up until this point, defense counsel was unknown. The bail
       status remains unknown. If and when an arraignment was held,
       that’s unknown. If and when a preliminary hearing will occur,
       none of that is available.

Id. at 19-20.

       For its part, the trial court reasoned as follows:

____________________________________________

4  In its brief to this Court, the Commonwealth argued that Appellants were
not entitled to relief because they failed to produce evidence that a docket
existed. Commonwealth’s Brief at 15. This argument is not well taken
because it ignores the Commonwealth’s burden to overcome the presumption
of openness and because it places Appellants in the impossible position of
proving the existence of a criminal proceeding that had been entirely walled
off from public access.

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              When I think of the docket, somebody looking at a docket
       on the UJS portal, I’m thinking of things like what magisterial
       district the case is going to be heard in, what’s the date of the
       preliminary hearing, counsel of record, things like that. […] No
       identifying information about any ongoing investigation. It’s really
       just informational factors concerned with where the hearing is
       going to be, what’s the date, what’s the time of the hearing, who
       is counsel of record.

Id. at 16.

       Nonetheless, the trial court entered an order effectively sealing the

entire record in this case, including the docket, reasoning that doing so was

necessary to maintain the integrity of the Commonwealth’s investigation:

             When presented with a request to seal and extend [the
       sealing of] the arrest warrant information, the Court was made
       aware by the Commonwealth attorneys that there is an active,
       ongoing investigation for two potential co-defendants, involved in
       this matter, who they are attempting to identify and locate. The
       defendant, Keven Van Lam, is charged with homicide and related
       offenses, and there is significant concern for the safety of others
       and the integrity of this ongoing investigation if the potential co-
       defendants are to become aware of this pending investigation and
       leave Westmoreland County’s jurisdiction.

Trial Court Opinion, 2/6/23, at 4.5 The trial court confirmed that a docket

existed and remained under seal: “The language of the relevant court orders

does not specifically state that the criminal dockets, themselves, are to be

sealed; however, as the arrest warrant information contained in the dockets

is sealed, no criminal docket relevant to the matter is accessible to the public.”

____________________________________________

5  The trial court issued this supplemental opinion under seal in accordance
with a directive from this Court.

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Id. at 3. In essence, then, the trial court concluded that dockets are “arrest

warrant information” as defined in Rule 513.1(A).

      Appellants argue to this Court, without citation to authority, that Rule

513.1 does not apply to dockets.        The Commonwealth and the trial court

apparently assume, also without citation to authority, that public dockets may

be “documents or information related to the case” under Rule 513.1(A). We

find little guidance on this issue in our caselaw, other than to note that docket

entries in a criminal proceeding are public records. Curley, 189 A.3d at 473.

And public judicial records “must be available for inspection and copying

unless the party seeking to seal the materials demonstrated compelling

reasons   to   preclude   access[.]”   Upshur,   924    A.2d   at   646   (citing

Fenstermaker, 530 A.2d at 420-21).

      Dockets serve many purposes, such as notifying the public of the

identity of parties and counsel, as the trial court explained during the hearing.

In particular, dockets are a means of notifying the public (and the news media)

of upcoming hearing dates. In this case, given the absence of a docket, the

trial court left Appellants with no means of learning the potential continuance

and rescheduling of a preliminary hearing other than directing the prosecutor

to provide a courtesy call. And the court left the public at large with no means

of monitoring the prosecution of Van Lam. Constitutionally mandated open

courtroom proceedings are of little value if the public has no means of learning

where and when they will occur, or if the public is entirely unaware that a

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prosecution is pending. In Doe v. Public Citizen, 749 F.2d 246, 268 (4th

Cir. 2014), the Fourth Circuit explained the problem with sealed dockets:

              By sealing the entire docket sheet during the pendency of
       the litigation, as the district court permitted in this case, courts
       effectively shut out the public and the press from exercising their
       constitutional and common-law right of access to civil
       proceedings. But there is a more repugnant aspect to depriving
       the public and press access to docket sheets: no one can
       challenge closure of a document or proceeding that is itself
       a secret.

Id. at 268 (emphasis added).             Thus, a sealed docket violates the First

Amendment right of access, a right that can be restricted only based on a

compelling interest. Id.

       Ultimately, this case does not require the announcement of a blanket

rule as to whether a public docket, or some portion thereof, can be sealed as

arrest warrant information for good cause under Rule 513.1, or under any

other potentially applicable standard. We dispose of this case on narrower

grounds—the lack of an express request for the docket to be sealed and the

trial court’s failure to offer specific findings on the need for sealing the docket

(and effectively secreting the existence of the criminal prosecution of Van

Lam6).

       As noted above, the prosecutor conceded that the Commonwealth did

not initially ask for the docket to be sealed. For that reason alone, the docket

____________________________________________

6  Courts of other jurisdictions have held that the burden on the proponent of
closure increases with the extent of the requested closure. United States v.
Doe, 63 F.3d 121, 129 (2d Cir. 1995).

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should have remained available for public inspection.         To overcome the

presumption of openness as to public judicial documents, be it by a showing

of good cause under Rule 513.1 or any other applicable burden, the

Commonwealth must specify exactly which documents it wishes the trial court

to seal. Then it must explain why. The Commonwealth cannot simply file a

motion tracking the language of Rule 513.1(A) and leave it to the trial court

to discern, at some later time in the event of an objection to its sealing order,

which documents were sealed.        Likewise, the order itself must leave no

question as to which documents are to be withheld from public scrutiny by the

court’s administrative staff.   Rule 513.1(G) forbids the clerk of courts to

release sealed documents until a sealing order expires. The staff at a clerk of

courts office should not be left to guess which documents are sealed, nor

should they be forced to err on the side of caution by withholding the entire

record, including the docket.

      Furthermore, even though the hearing seemed to clarify that Appellants’

primary concern was access to a public docket, the trial court never made

specific, individualized findings, as contemplated in Curley, justifying its

decision to keep the docket under seal. That is, the court never explained

how sealing the docket would help maintain the integrity of the investigation

and/or protect the safety of any individual, especially in light of public

knowledge of the shooting and of Van Lam’s arrest.          By the time of the

December 14, 2022 hearing, local media already had reported that Van Lam

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was arrested in connection with the fatal shooting of Budiarachman.         See,

e.g., Karen Mansfield (contributing), Suspect Revealed in Case Involving Fatal

Rostraver   Township    Shooting,    Observer    Reporter   Nov.   16,      2022

(www.observer-reporter.com/news/2022/nov/16/suspect-revealed-in-case-

involving-fatal-rostraver-township-shooting/) (last visited 2/1/2024). Thus,

any desire the Commonwealth had to maintain the secrecy of the victim’s

identity and/or Van Lam’s arrest in connection with the shooting had already

been thwarted.    Given the vital importance of a public docket and the

presumption of openness applicable to it, nothing in the record before us

supports the trial court’s decision to keep the docket sealed and keep the

criminal proceeding against Van Lam entirely walled off from public view.

      The trial court’s order also sealed the arrest warrant, probable cause

affidavit, and complaint, in accord with the express terms of Rule 513.1. The

trial court’s rationale for sealing items other than the docket—protecting the

integrity of the Commonwealth’s ongoing investigation of two possible co-

defendants in a murder-for-hire case, and concern for the personal safety of

those involved—are expressly in accord with the official comment to Rule

513.1:

            The rule establishes a standard of ‘good cause’ for sealing
      the arrest warrant information. When determining whether good
      cause exists to seal the arrest warrant information, the justice or
      judge must consider whether the presumption of openness is
      rebutted by other interests that include, but are not limited to,
      whether revealing the information would allow or enable flight or
      resistance, the need to protect the safety of police officers
      executing the warrant, the necessity of preserving the integrity of

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       ongoing criminal investigations, and the availability of reasonable
       alternative means to protect the interest threatened by disclosure.

Pa. R. Crim. P. 513.1, cmt.

       On this issue, Appellants’ brief asserts that the trial court failed to

articulate the factors it took into consideration and/or consider alternative

means to protect the interest threatened by disclosure, as per the official

comment to Rule 513.1.7 Appellants’ Brief at 29-31. We agree that the trial

court’s original sealing order and opinion in support thereof could and should

have been more thorough. But the trial court's ability to explain itself more

fully was somewhat cabined by the need to avoid revealing sensitive

information pertaining to the ongoing investigation.       For that reason, we

directed the trial court to file a supplemental opinion under seal to this Court.

Based on that supplemental opinion and our in camera review of the arrest

warrant affidavit, we concluded that the trial court did not err in sealing arrest

warrant information in a case that involved the Commonwealth’s continued

pursuit of two as yet unidentified individuals believed to be part of a murder-

for-hire.     The trial court’s supplemental opinion was based on the

Commonwealth allegations that alerting Van Lam’s alleged co-conspirators to

the ongoing investigation into their identity and whereabouts could lead to the

destruction of evidence and threats to the safety of potential witnesses.

____________________________________________

7  As explained in the main text above, the hearing clarified that Appellants’
primary concern was access to a public docket.

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Petition to Seal Arrest Warrant, 11/7/2022.        These circumstances are

sufficient to support the temporary sealing of arrest warrant information, as

all of them are vitally related to the integrity of the Commonwealth’s

investigation, as per the official comment to Rule 513.1.       As such, the

Commonwealth sufficiently overcame the presumption of openness with

regards to    arrest warrant documents revealing sensitive           information

pertaining to the underlying investigation. See Fenstermaker, 530 A.2d at

420 (“Where the presumption of openness attached to a public judicial

document is outweighed by circumstances warranting closure of the document

to public inspection, access to the document may be denied.”). Further, these

circumstances leave no viable alternative to the temporary sealing of the

arrest warrant documents.

      For the reasons explained above, we conclude that the trial court abused

its discretion in denying Appellant’s motion to intervene and in sealing the

public docket. We affirm the remainder of the trial court’s order.

      Order affirmed in part and reversed in part. Jurisdiction relinquished.

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3/6/2024

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