       [Cite as State ex rel. Cincinnati Enquirer v. Hunter, 2013-Ohio-4567.]
                 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS
             FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT OF OHIO
                  HAMILTON COUNTY, OHIO



STATE EX REL. THE CINCINNATI :                                      CASE NO. C-130397
ENQUIRER,
                             :
      Petitioner,                                                       O P I N I O N.
                             :
  vs.
                             :
HONORABLE TRACIE M. HUNTER,
JUDGE,        HAMLTON COUNTY :
JUVENILE COURT,
                             :
     Respondent.




Original Action in Prohibition

Judgment of Court: Writ Denied

Date of Judgment Entry on Appeal: October 16, 2013


Graydon Head & Ritchey LLP and John C. Greiner, for Petitioner,

McKinney and Namei, Farooz T. Namei and James F. Bogen, for Respondent.
                    OHIO FIRST DISTRICT COURT OF APPEALS



H ILDEBRANDT , Presiding Judge.

        {¶1}   Relator the Cincinnati Enquirer (“the Enquirer”) instituted this

original action seeking a writ of prohibition to stop respondent, the Hon. Tracie

Hunter, in her capacity as a judge for the Hamilton County Juvenile Court, from (1)

denying members of the press and public access to her courtroom without first

conducting a closure hearing; (2) requiring the media to seek permission prior to

attending proceedings in her courtroom; and (3) prohibiting the media from

publishing the names of juveniles and their parents as a condition of admittance to

delinquency proceedings in her courtroom. For the following reasons, we deny the

writ.

        {¶2}   Both parties have moved for summary judgment, stipulating to the

record in this case, which includes the affidavits of Jennifer Baker, a reporter

working for the Enquirer, John Greiner, the attorney for the Enquirer, and Karen

Oakley-Everson, the staff attorney working for Judge Hunter. From these affidavits

the following undisputed facts are established.

        {¶3}   Baker had been reporting on the beating of a man in the North

College Hill neighborhood of Cincinnati that had occurred in August 2012. Three of

the six juveniles involved in that case appeared before Judge Hunter on June 25,

2013, for a hearing on their motions to close their delinquency proceedings to the

press and public. Baker and Greiner attended that hearing.

        {¶4}   During the hearing, two of the juveniles requested that the hearing on

the motion to close the proceedings be closed to the press and public. Judge Hunter

chose to review the evidence supporting this motion in camera, and continued the

matter until July 10, 2013. Near the end of this hearing, one of the juveniles asked

Judge Hunter to hear a motion for bond or release on an unrelated charge


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immediately following the current hearing. Judge Hunter consented. Baker wanted

to attend the bond hearing, but Oakley-Everson stated that Baker had not requested

media access.    Because Baker indicated that she only wanted to listen, Oakley-

Everson said that she would ask Judge Hunter if Baker could attend the hearing.

When Oakley-Everson returned to the courtroom, the hearing was already in

progress and Judge Hunter was speaking.         As soon as Judge Hunter finished

speaking, the hearing was over. Because the hearing had ended, Oakley-Everson did

not inform Judge Hunter that Baker had wanted to attend the hearing. Oakley-

Everson told Baker that the hearing had ended and Baker left the court.

       {¶5}     To be entitled to the requested writ of prohibition the Enquirer must

establish that (1) Judge Hunter is about to exercise judicial or quasi-judicial power;

(2) that the exercise of that power is unauthorized by law; and (3) that denying the

writ would result in injury for which no other adequate remedy exists in the ordinary

course of law. Chesapeake Exploration, L.L.C v. Oil & Gas Comm., 135 Ohio St.3d

204, 2013-Ohio-224, 985 N.E.2d 480, ¶ 9.

       {¶6}     In her motion for summary judgment, Judge Hunter argues that the

Enquirer cannot support the first prong necessary to prove entitlement to a writ of

prohibition. Specifically, she maintains that there is no evidence demonstrating that

she is about to exercise judicial power to deny access to the media and public without

a closure hearing, to require members of the media to request permission to attend

hearings, and once granted access, to prohibit the media from publishing the names

of the juveniles. And we are constrained to agree based on the record before us.

       {¶7}     First, the record is devoid of evidence that Judge Hunter routinely

denies the media and public access to her courtroom without first holding a closure

hearing. And we cannot even say that the facts established here demonstrate an



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example of the Enquirer’s claim. Oakley-Everson never had the opportunity to relay

Baker’s request to attend the hearing to Judge Hunter. Thus, Judge Hunter did not

even have the opportunity to deny Baker access to the bond hearing without first

holding a closure hearing.

       {¶8}    The record also lacks evidence that Judge Hunter has a standing

order requiring members of the media, not wanting to electronically record the

proceedings but merely listen, to request permission to attend a hearing. Therefore,

there is no support for the assertion that Judge Hunter is about to exercise judicial

power requiring the media to seek permission to attend a proceeding in her

courtroom. Although Oakley-Everson states in her affidavit that she had told Baker

that she “had not filled out a media request form,” this does not support an assertion

that Judge Hunter has a policy requiring members of the media wanting to listen to,

but not electronically record, a proceeding to request permission to attend a hearing,

given that Oakley-Everson chose to speak with Judge Hunter after learning that

Baker merely wanted to listen to the hearing.

       {¶9}    Finally, there is no evidence in the record demonstrating that Judge

Hunter is about to exercise judicial power by prohibiting members of the media who

attend hearings in her courtroom from publishing the names of juveniles who appear

before her. Although the Enquirer did attach a copy of one judgment entry in which

Judge Hunter prohibited the media from publishing the name of the juvenile in that

case, this does not sufficiently demonstrate that Judge Hunter will always prohibit the

media from publishing the names of juveniles in every delinquency proceeding in her

courtroom.

       {¶10}   Because there is simply no evidence that Judge Hunter is about to

exercise judicial power in an unauthorized manner, we deny the Enquirer’s motion for



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summary judgment, grant Judge Hunter’s motion for summary judgment, and deny the

requested writ.

                                                                          Writ denied.

C UNNINGHAM , and D INKELACKER , JJ., concur.



Please note:

       The court has recorded its own entry on the date of the release of this opinion.




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