     10-0372-cv
     New York Civil Liberties Union v. New York City Transit Authority
 1
 2
 3                        UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
 4
 5                              FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
 6
 7
 8
 9                                     August Term, 2010
10
11             Argued: December 16, 2010               Decided: July 20, 2011
12                               Amended: January 4, 2012
13
14                                   Docket No. 10-0372-cv
15
16
17
18                         NEW YORK CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION,
19
20                                     Plaintiff-Appellee,
21
22                                           – v. –
23
24                       NEW YORK CITY TRANSIT AUTHORITY,
25
26                                    Defendant-Appellant,
27
28                   H. DALE HEMMERDINGER, ELLIOT G. SANDER,
29
30                                        Defendants.
31
32
33
34   Before: LEVAL, CALABRESI, LYNCH, Circuit Judges.
35
36            The New York City Transit Authority (“NYCTA”) appeals from an order of the
37   district court for the Southern District of New York (Sullivan, J.) enjoining the
38   enforcement of an NYCTA policy requiring third parties to obtain the consent of those
39   contesting notices of violation before NYCTA’s Transit Adjudication Bureau in order to
40   observe such hearings. We hold that the First Amendment guarantees the public a
41   presumptive right of access to the NYCTA’s adjudicatory proceedings, and that the
42   NYCTA has not overcome that presumption.
43            Affirmed.
44



                                                                                              1
 1                                      CHRISTOPHER DUNN, New York Civil Liberties Union
 2                                      Foundation, (Arthur Eisenberg, on the brief), New York,
 3                                      N.Y., for Plaintiff-Appellee.
 4
 5                                      RICHARD SCHOOLMAN, Office of the General Counsel,
 6                                      New York City Transit Authority, (Valerie K. Ferrier, on
 7                                      the brief), New York, N.Y. for Defendant-Appellant.
 8
 9                                      David A. Schulz, Jacob P. Goldstein, Levine Sullivan Koch
10                                      & Schulz, LLP, New York, N.Y., for Amici Curiae The
11                                      New York Times Company, et al., in support of Plaintiff-
12                                      Appellee.
13
14                                      Brian Kreiswirth, Committee on Civil Rights, The
15                                      Association of the Bar of the City of New York, Marjorie
16                                      Lindblom, Evan Saucier, Kirkland & Ellis LLP, New York,
17                                      N.Y. for Amicus Curiae The Association of the Bar of the
18                                      City of New York.
19
20
21   CALABRESI, Circuit Judge:

22           Defendant-Appellant New York City Transit Authority (“NYCTA”) promulgates

23   Rules of Conduct (“Rules”) for those who use the city’s public transportation and its

24   associated facilities. N.Y. Pub. Auth. Law § 1204(5-a); see N.Y. Comp. Codes R. &

25   Regs. § 1050 et seq.1 All New York City police officers are authorized to issue citations

26   for violations of the Rules. New York Civil Liberties Union v. New York City Transit

27   Authority, 675 F. Supp. 2d 411, 414 (S.D.N.Y. 2009) (“NYCLU”); see N.Y. Comp. Codes

28   R. & Regs. § 1050.12. A police officer has discretion to issue either a summons to New

29   York Criminal Court (“Criminal Court”) or a notice of violation for the Transit

30   Adjudication Bureau (“TAB”), a department in the NYCTA where an alleged Rule-

31   breaker may contest the citation in an in-person hearing. NYCLU, 675 F. Supp. 2d at 414;


     1
       The NYCTA is “municipal board and public-benefit corporation established by the laws of New York
     state,” empowered to operate, maintain, and control public transit facilities in New York City. New York
     Civil Liberties Union v. New York City Transit Authority, 675 F. Supp. 2d 411, 413 & n.1, 2 (S.D.N.Y.
     2009).


                                                                                                                2
 1   see N.Y. Pub. Auth. L. § 1209-a(3). In each forum, a neutral decisionmaker determines

 2   whether the alleged violator has broken a Rule and imposes a penalty for such violations.

 3            When a person who is issued a summons contests the citation in court, that

 4   hearing is, by statute, open to the public. N.Y. Judiciary Law § 4 (stating that, absent

 5   exceptions not relevant here, “[t]he sittings of every court within this state shall be public,

 6   and every citizen may freely attend the same . . . .”). NYCTA policy, in contrast,

 7   excludes from a TAB proceeding any observer to whose presence the person contesting

 8   the notice of violation, or “respondent,” objects.

 9            Plaintiff-Appellee New York Civil Liberties Union (“NYCLU”) brought suit

10   under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to enjoin this policy, claiming, inter alia, that the policy violated

11   the NYCLU’s First Amendment right of access to government proceedings.2 The district

12   court (Sullivan, J.) granted a preliminary, and then a permanent, injunction. NYCLU, 675

13   F. Supp. 2d at 439; New York Civil Liberties Union v. New York City Transit Authority,

14   No. 1:09-cv-3595 (RJS) Doc. 39 (January 22, 2010), Doc. 40 (January 29, 2010). On

15   appeal, the NYCTA claims that the public has no right of access to administrative

16   adjudicatory proceedings generally and that, even if such a right exists, it should not

17   apply to TAB hearings. We disagree.

18            The public’s right of access to an adjudicatory proceeding does not depend on

19   which branch of government houses that proceeding. To determine whether a particular

20   adjudicatory forum should be presumptively open to the public, courts ask whether the

21   forum has historically been open and whether openness enables its proper functioning. In


     2
       Although the NYCLU argued below for a “federal common law” right of access, see 675 F. Supp. 2d at
     423 n.20, it does not advance that theory on appeal as an alternative basis for affirming the district court’s
     judgment. We accordingly deem the theory abandoned.


                                                                                                                      3
 1   the present case, both lines of inquiry lead squarely to the same answer. We reach no

 2   broad conclusions about the openness required of administrative proceedings generally.

 3   But we conclude that the First Amendment guarantees the public a qualified right of

 4   access to the administrative adjudicatory forum at issue in this case, and that no grounds

 5   have been adduced by the NYCTA supporting its rules limiting that right. We therefore

 6   affirm.

 7                                          BACKGROUND

 8   I. The Transit Adjudication Bureau

 9             From 1966, when the Rules were first enacted, until 1986, when the TAB first

10   began operating, the New York Criminal Court (“Criminal Court”) had exclusive

11   jurisdiction over citations for Rules violations. NYCLU, 675 F. Supp. 2d at 415. A 1984

12   statute created the TAB to lessen the burden on the Criminal Court and to increase the

13   rate at which fines were collected from Rules violators. See N.Y. Pub. Auth. Law § 1209-

14   a. The statute also increased the fine that could be imposed: while the Criminal Court is

15   limited to a fine of no more than $25 for a violation of an NYCTA Rule, the TAB may

16   fine a violator up to $100, with an additional penalty of up to $50 for failing to respond to

17   a notice of violation. N.Y. Pub. Auth. Law § 1204(5-a); see also NYCLU, 675 F. Supp. 2d

18   at 414. (The Criminal Court may also sentence a violator to a maximum of 10 days’

19   imprisonment, NYCLU, 675 F. Supp. 2d at 414, but the record suggests that this penalty

20   is rarely, if ever, imposed.)

21             The police officer citing the violation has discretion to choose whether to issue a

22   citation to Criminal Court or a notice of violation to the TAB. As the district court

23   observed, “no violation appears to be, by definition, only returnable to one of the


                                                                                                     4
 1   venues.” NYCLU, 675 F. Supp. 2d at 415; see N.Y. Pub. Auth. Law § 1209-a(3) (giving

 2   the TAB “non-exclusive jurisdiction over violations of” the Rules).

 3            A person who receives a TAB notice of violation may pay the fine without

 4   contesting it, contest it by mail, or contest it at an in-person hearing. In 2008, officers

 5   issued 125,155 notices of violation returnable to the TAB. That same year, 88,236 notices

 6   of violation were paid without contest, and 19,028 were contested at in-person TAB

 7   hearings. Attorneys appointed by the NYCTA President and paid on a per-diem basis

 8   preside over TAB hearings as TAB hearing officers. N.Y. Pub. Auth. Law § 1209-a(2).

 9            The TAB can issue subpoenas, “accept pleas[,] . . . hear and determine . . .

10   charges of transit infractions[,] . . . impose civil penalties[,] . . . [and] enter judgments and

11   enforce them, without court proceedings, in the same manner as the enforcement of

12   money judgments in civil actions.” N.Y. Pub. Auth. Law § 1209-a(4)(a)-(e), (g). A final

13   order issued by the TAB serves as a “bar to . . . criminal prosecution” for the same

14   conduct. Id. 1209-a(9)(b). TAB guidelines provide that respondents may be represented

15   by counsel. NYCLU, 675 F. Supp. 2d at 417; see Guidelines Governing Proceedings

16   Before the Transit Adjudication Bureau § 1.7 (“TAB Guidelines”).3 Respondents may

17   show up at the TAB office any time during the period stated on their notices of violation

18   and receive a hearing on a first-come, first-served basis.4 But if a hearing is scheduled by

19   the TAB (as is sometimes done to facilitate the production of witnesses or evidence), the

20   respondent must be told its date and location. NYCLU, 675 F. Supp. 2d at 417. Hearing

21   officers identify the parties and issues in the case; advise respondents of their rights to a


     3
       The NYCTA promulgates guidelines governing TAB proceedings pursuant to statutory authority. N.Y.
     Pub. Auth. Law § 1209-a(4)(d); see NYCLU, 675 F. Supp. 2d at 416 & n.7.
     4
       The accusing officer’s written notice serves as prima facie evidence of a violation. TAB Guidelines § 2.1.


                                                                                                                5
 1   hearing, representation, cross-examination, document production, and appeal; and

 2   oversee the presentation of motions, cases in chief, and rebuttals. Id. at 417-18. TAB

 3   guidelines govern the timing, formats, and procedures for filing documents, id. at 418,

 4   and specify that a Rules infraction must be established by clear and convincing evidence,

 5   with any affirmative defenses to be established by a preponderance of the evidence, id.

 6   Witnesses are sworn and exhibits may be introduced. Id. Respondents may appeal a

 7   hearing officer’s decision to an internal appeals board and, from there, to state court. Id.

 8   at 419. The TAB is required by statute to “compile . . . complete and accurate records

 9   relating to all charges and dispositions.” N.Y. Pub. Auth. Law § 1209-a(4)(f). In other

10   words, in these and many other particulars, the TAB acts very much like a court of first

11   instance.

12          At the same time, the TAB’s powers and procedures are not the same as a court’s.

13   To enforce a subpoena that is not obeyed, the TAB “may make application to the [New

14   York] supreme court.” Id. § 1209-a(7)(e). Although a TAB final order “may be enforced

15   without court proceedings in the same manner as . . . money judgments entered in civil

16   actions,” id. § 1209-a(9)(b), the TAB may need to “apply to a court of competent

17   jurisdiction for enforcement of” such a decision, id. § 1209-a(4)(g). Most of the rules of

18   evidence do not apply to TAB hearings, id. § 1209-a(7)(e), and no pre-hearing motions or

19   discovery are permitted, TAB Guidelines §§ 2.3, 2.8. The notice of violation itself,

20   without additional corroboration, is deemed prima facie evidence of a violation. Id. § 2.1.

21   And, significantly, the records the TAB compiles on charges and dispositions are, by




                                                                                                    6
 1   statute, exempt from disclosure under New York’s Freedom of Information Law. N.Y.

 2   Pub. Auth. Law § 1209-a(4)(f); see N.Y. Pub. Officers Law § 87.5

 3   II. The TAB’s Access Policy

 4            The NYCTA describes its long-term access policy as one of presumptive

 5   openness to the public. Under that policy, a person who wishes to observe a TAB hearing

 6   must twice obtain the consent of the respondent whose case is being heard. If the

 7   respondent objects either time, the observer must be excluded from the hearing. A

 8   prospective observer must give TAB security personnel her name and inform them of her

 9   wish to observe a hearing. When the respondent is called, TAB officials are supposed to

10   call the observer as well. The hearing officer, who meets respondents at the door leading

11   to the hearing rooms, then asks the respondent if he objects to the observer’s presence at

12   the hearing. If the respondent objects, the observer may not enter. If the respondent does

13   not object, the three proceed to a hearing room. There, the observer must state her name

14   for the record, and the hearing officer again asks whether the respondent objects to the

15   observer’s presence. If he does not, the hearing can proceed. If the respondent does object

16   to the observer’s presence, the observer must leave before the hearing begins. TAB

17   personnel do not ask why a respondent objects to an observer’s presence and do not



     5
       By statute, these records “shall be deemed exempt from disclosure under the [New York State] freedom of
     information law as records compiled for law enforcement purposes.” N.Y. Pub. Auth. Law § 1209-a(4)(f).
     New York’s Freedom of Information Law exempts records “compiled for law enforcement purposes” if
     their disclosure would lead to specific consequences, including interfering with law enforcement
     investigations, judicial proceedings, or the right to a fair trial; or revealing a confidential source,
     confidential criminal investigation information, or non-routine criminal investigative techniques or
     procedures. N.Y. Pub. Officers Law § 87(2)(e). The TAB statute does not specify which of these
     consequences TAB records implicate. New York’s Freedom of Information Law also insulates records that
     “are specifically exempted from disclosure by state or federal statute.” Id. § 87(2)(a). Whether the statutory
     exemption of TAB records from the Freedom of Information Law violates a presumptive right of access to
     government proceedings is not before us, and we do not address that question here.



                                                                                                                 7
 1   attempt to evaluate the reason, significance, or propriety of the observer’s presence. A

 2   respondent’s objection by itself conclusively bars an observer from a hearing.

 3            Although this policy was only put in writing in March 2009, after the NYCLU

 4   complained to the NYCTA about access to TAB hearings, Martin Schnabel, the

 5   NYCTA’s vice president and general counsel, testified that the policy had been in place

 6   for many years as an unwritten practice. Mr. Schnabel also stated that the NYCTA Board

 7   and the Metropolitan Transit Authority played no role in adopting the access policy,

 8   which has not been formally promulgated as a rule. Instead, he testified, “the matter was

 9   discussed among . . . TAB personnel and Transit Authority legal personnel.” But, he

10   continued, the “ultimate judgment as to what the policy should be at this juncture is

11   mine.”

12            Mr. Schnabel stated his belief that “allow[ing] people to attend regardless of the

13   wishes of the respondent may well have the effect of chilling the appearance of some

14   percentage of respondents,” who would feel their privacy so invaded by an open hearing

15   as to lead them to decline to have a hearing at all. Mr. Schnabel explained that the

16   rationale underlying the policy was preventing such a “chilling” effect on respondents

17   who might otherwise avail themselves of the opportunity to contest their notices of

18   violation, but who would do so in person only if they had the power to exclude third

19   parties from their hearings.

20            Mr. Schnabel further testified that he had collected no evidence and conducted no

21   studies on which he based his conclusion that open access would discourage respondents

22   from seeking TAB hearings. The NYCTA did submit a declaration from Debra Siedman

23   DeWan, a long-time TAB hearing officer, who listed reasons respondents might “wish to


                                                                                                   8
 1   maintain [their] privacy when testifying.” These included the existence of embarrassing

 2   medical conditions or other physical or mental illnesses; an inability to pay the fines; and

 3   the fear that a parent or a parole or probation officer would learn of the hearing.

 4   III. The NYCLU’s Allegations

 5          According to its complaint, the NYCLU is an organization that advocates for

 6   “open governmental and judicial proceedings.” As an example, the NYCLU submitted

 7   materials indicating that it had worked successfully to open hearings at the New York

 8   City Taxi and Limousine Commission to the public.

 9          The NYCLU further asserts that it is “involved in advocacy about [New York

10   City Police Department] policies and practices.” For instance, the NYCLU has urged the

11   New York City Police Department to ensure that officers know that bystanders are

12   entitled to film and photograph police activity in public transit areas and advocated

13   changes in the police department’s public transit sting operations. The NYCLU has also

14   investigated the demographic characteristics of those stopped and frisked by New York

15   City Police Department officers on public transit, and concluded that minorities receive a

16   disproportionate number of citations for Rule violations. These investigative and

17   advocacy activities, the NYCLU alleges, give it “a particular interest in observing TAB

18   hearings in which [New York City Police Department] officers testify.”

19          The NYCLU also represents clients issued notices of violation. The NYCLU

20   alleges that the inability to observe TAB hearing freely leaves it “seriously hampered in

21   its ability to advise clients” about their own hearings. Finally, the NYCLU has asserted

22   that it “plan[s] to promptly start monitoring TAB hearings” if the access policy is

23   enjoined.


                                                                                                 9
 1          According to the NYCLU’s complaint, law students working under the direction

 2   of an NYCLU attorney attempted to observe TAB hearings on several occasions. Some

 3   would-be observers were simply denied access to hearings without more. Security guards

 4   or hearing officers told them that observation was against the law, that the hearings are

 5   not open to the public, or just that they could not enter. Others were told they had to

 6   obtain a respondent’s consent. On one occasion, on January 14, 2009, “[t]he head hearing

 7   officer denied the law student’s request to observe a hearing unless she could identify a

 8   consenting respondent. This requirement prevented her from observing a hearing.” On

 9   another occasion, on January 29, 2009, after having been told that observers were not

10   permitted, a law student spoke to the head hearing officer who, recognizing the student,

11   “offered to request a random individual’s permission to let the student sit in on a

12   hearing,” which the student was allowed to do “[o]nce someone consented.”

13   IV. Proceedings Below

14          The district court determined that TAB hearings are presumptively open under the

15   First Amendment, and that therefore limits to access are subject to strict scrutiny. Since a

16   respondent’s objection conclusively bars a third party from observing a hearing and

17   “respondents may object for any reason at all” to the presence of an observer, the district

18   court held that the policy was not strictly tailored to a compelling governmental purpose,

19   and specifically is not tailored to the NYCTA’s stated purpose of preventing the chilling

20   of respondents’ willingness to contest their notices of violation in person. NYCLU, 675 F.

21   Supp. 2d at 438-39.

22          Accordingly, the court granted the NYCLU’s motion for a preliminary, and

23   ultimately a permanent, injunction requiring the NYCTA to open TAB hearings to the


                                                                                                 10
 1   public absent “specific, on-the-record findings that closure of a proceeding is narrowly

 2   tailored to meet a higher governmental value.” Id. at 439. The NYCTA appeals this

 3   decision, claiming that no presumptive right of access adheres to administrative

 4   adjudicatory proceedings. In the alternative, the NYCTA argues that, even if such a right

 5   attached to some administrative adjudicatory proceedings, it should not apply to the TAB.

 6   The NYCTA also challenges the NYCLU’s standing to sue. For the reasons that follow,

 7   we affirm the district court.

 8                                          DISCUSSION

 9   I. Standards of Review

10          We review a district court’s grant of a preliminary injunction for abuse of

11   discretion, which “occurs when the district court bases its ruling on an incorrect legal

12   standard or on a clearly erroneous assessment of the facts.” Bronx Household of Faith v.

13   Bd. of Educ., 331 F.3d 342, 348 (2d Cir. 2003). “To obtain a preliminary injunction a

14   party must demonstrate . . . that it will be irreparably harmed if an injunction is not

15   granted.” Id. at 348-49. For mandatory injunctions, which “alter rather than maintain the

16   status quo,” such as the one at issue here, “the movant must show a ‘clear’ or

17   ‘substantial’ likelihood of success” on the merits. Id. at 349. The requirements for a

18   permanent injunction are “essentially the same” as for a preliminary injunction, except

19   that the moving party must demonstrate “actual success” on the merits. The district court

20   is authorized to determine, as it did here, that the evidence before it suffices for that

21   purpose. Amoco Prod. Co. v. Village of Gambell, 480 U.S. 531, 546 n.12 (1987). Our

22   standard of review remains the same.




                                                                                                 11
 1          Whether a plaintiff has standing to sue is a question of law that we review de

 2   novo. Shain v. Ellison, 356 F.3d 211, 214 (2d Cir. 2004).

 3   II. Standing

 4          To have standing, a plaintiff must demonstrate an “actual and imminent, not

 5   conjectural or hypothetical” threat of a “concrete and particularized” injury in fact that is

 6   “fairly traceable to the challenged action of the defendant” and that “a favorable judicial

 7   decision will [likely] prevent or redress.” Summers v. Earth Island Inst., 129 S. Ct. 1142,

 8   1149 (2009) (citing Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc., 528

 9   U.S. 167, 180-81 (2000)).

10          An organization can have standing to sue in one of two ways. It may sue on

11   behalf of its members, in which case it must show, inter alia, that some particular

12   member of the organization would have had standing to bring the suit individually. See,

13   e.g., Warth v. Seldin, 422 U.S. 490, 511 (1975) (calling this approach “representational”

14   standing); Irish Lesbian & Gay Org. v. Giuliani, 143 F.3d 638, 649 (2d Cir. 1998)

15   (calling it “associational” standing). In addition, an organization can “have standing in its

16   own right to seek judicial relief from injury to itself and to vindicate whatever rights and

17   immunities the association itself may enjoy.” Warth, 422 U.S. at 511; Havens Realty

18   Corp. v. Coleman, 455 U.S. 363, 379 n.19 (1982) (“[O]rganizations are entitled to sue on

19   their own behalf . . . .”). Under this theory of “organizational” standing, the organization

20   is just another person—albeit a legal person—seeking to vindicate a right. To qualify, the

21   organization itself “must ‘meet[] the same standing test that applies to individuals.’” Irish

22   Lesbian & Gay Org., 143 F.3d at 649 (quoting Spann v. Colonial Village, Inc., 899 F.2d

23   24, 27 (D.C. Cir. 1990)) (alteration in the original); see also Nnebe v. Daus, No. 09-4305-


                                                                                                 12
 1   cv, --- F.3d ----, 2011 WL 2149924, at *6-*7 (2d Cir. March 25, 2011, revised May 31,

 2   2011) (confirming that “nothing prevents an organization from bringing a § 1983 suit on

 3   its own behalf so long as it can independently satisfy the requirements of Article III

 4   standing,” and that “only a perceptible impairment of an organization’s activities is

 5   necessary for there to be an injury in fact” satisfying the requirements of standing

 6   (internal quotation marks omitted)).

 7           The NYCTA claims that the NYCLU lacks standing because it failed to identify

 8   any individual member of the NYCLU who currently has standing to challenge the TAB

 9   access policy. But as the district court explained in its lucid opinion, the NYCLU does

10   not bring its challenge under an associational/representational theory of standing. Rather,

11   it sues to vindicate its own rights as an organization with goals and projects of its own.

12   NYCLU, 675 F. Supp. 2d at 425-26. As it does not sue on behalf of injured members, it

13   need not identify any that have standing. The individuals described in the NYCLU’s

14   submissions as having attempted to observe TAB hearings are not listed because they are

15   injured members of the organization. They are, instead, its agents or representatives, and

16   it is the organization itself that claims injury.

17           The NYCTA also claims that the district court was wrong to conclude that the

18   NYCLU’s attempts to observe TAB hearings “have been frustrated in the past.” Id. at

19   427. According to the NYCTA, NYCLU attempts to observe TAB hearings were blocked

20   by misinformed individual employees acting “in violation of long-standing TAB policy.”

21   The NYCTA suggests that this problem was resolved once the access policy was written

22   down and distributed.




                                                                                                  13
 1          The NYCTA is correct that, in order to have standing to challenge the TAB

 2   access policy, the NYCLU must establish that it (through its agents) suffered a concrete

 3   injury as a result of the policy. The NYCLU has done so. As discussed above, the

 4   NYCLU’s complaint detailed an incident on January 29, 2009, during which the head

 5   hearing officer correctly applied the policy as written and excluded an NYCLU observer

 6   from a hearing until TAB personnel found a respondent who assented to the observer’s

 7   presence. In addition, during an earlier visit on January 14, 2009, TAB personnel

 8   excluded an NYCLU representative from a hearing, telling the NYCLU representative

 9   (incorrectly) that it was her responsibility to find and identify a consenting respondent.

10          Although the NYCTA’s official policy was misapplied during that January 14,

11   2009 visit, the deviation was so slight as to be immaterial for standing purposes. What

12   NYCLU seeks to challenge is a policy by which respondents are permitted, for any

13   reason or no reason at all, to exclude members of the public from TAB hearings. During

14   the NYCLU’s January 14, 2009 visit, TAB officials may have misconstrued the precise

15   manner in which the respondent veto provision of the access policy was supposed to

16   function. The constitutionally relevant point, however, is that the respondent was in fact

17   given a veto over the observer’s attendance. In any event, the exclusion caused by this

18   misapplication of the policy was fairly traceable to the policy itself, which required TAB

19   personnel to monitor the public’s access to the hearing room on an ongoing basis.

20   Accordingly, NYCLU has established that it suffered an actual injury—exclusion from at

21   least some TAB hearings—as a result of the NYCTA’s access policy.

22          This injury, in turn, is to a cognizable interest. The NYCLU has alleged an

23   interest in open access to TAB hearings as a matter of professional responsibility to



                                                                                                  14
 1   clients. In order to represent clients before the TAB, NYCLU must prepare, in part, by

 2   observing TAB hearings. The NYCLU has shown that the access policy has impeded,

 3   and will continue to impede, the organization’s ability to carry out this aforementioned

 4   responsibility.

 5          Since the NYCLU has alleged a cognizable interest and both past and imminent

 6   injuries to it, we determine that the district court correctly found that the NYCLU has

 7   standing to bring its challenge. We therefore turn to the putative right of access on which

 8   that standing is based.

 9   III. The First Amendment Right of Access to Government Proceedings

10          Courts and commentators have long recognized the centrality of openness to

11   adjudicatory proceedings: “‘Without publicity, all other checks are insufficient: in

12   comparison of publicity, all other checks are of small account.’” In re Oliver, 333 U.S.

13   257, 271 (1948) (quoting 1 Jeremy Bentham, Rationale of Judicial Evidence 524 (1827)).

14   While the Sixth Amendment guarantees “the right to a . . . public trial” to “the accused,”

15   U.S. Const. amend. VI, the value of openness for the defendant has not always been

16   strictly distinguished from its value to the public and to the adjudicatory proceeding

17   itself. “The knowledge that every criminal trial is subject to contemporaneous review in

18   the forum of public opinion is an effective restraint on possible abuse of judicial power.”

19   In re Oliver, 333 U.S. at 270. In Oliver, seemingly Sixth Amendment public access was

20   seen as a guarantor of fairness, accuracy, and correct procedure—as much because these

21   further democratic values and help adjudicators reach correct results as because they

22   protect defendants.




                                                                                                15
 1           The distinction in protected values was drawn clearly in Gannett Co., Inc. v.

 2   DePasquale, 443 U.S. 368 (1979), which held that the Sixth Amendment guaranteed only

 3   the right of the accused to have his trial held before the public and did not protect the

 4   right of the public to observe the proceeding. A year later, however, a plurality of the

 5   Court found this public right to be “implicit in the guarantees of the First Amendment.”

 6   Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia, 448 U.S. 555, 580 (1980) (plurality opinion). It

 7   stated that “without the freedom to attend such trials, . . . important aspects of freedom of

 8   speech and of the press could be eviscerated.” Id. (internal quotation marks and footnote

 9   omitted).6 “Free speech,” the plurality opinion noted, “carries with it some freedom to

10   listen.” Id. at 576.

11           The First Amendment’s guarantees of freedom of speech and the press entail that

12   “‘the government [be prohibited] from limiting the stock of information from which

13   members of the public may draw.’” Id. (quoting First National Bank of Boston v. Bellotti,

14   435 U.S. 765, 783 (1978)). Public access to trials helps “give meaning to those explicit

15   guarantees” of freedom of speech and the press—guarantees that protect the right “to

16   speak and to publish concerning what takes place at a trial,” and that “would lose much

17   meaning if access to observe the trial could . . . be foreclosed arbitrarily.” Id. at 575, 576-

18   77.

19           As this implies, the First Amendment right of access to criminal trials is not

20   absolute. It does not foreclose the possibility of ever excluding the public. What offends

21   the First Amendment is the attempt to do so without sufficient justification.
     6
       Richmond Newspapers did not produce a majority opinion, but seven of the eight Justices who
     participated agreed that the First Amendment, together with the Fourteenth, guaranteed a right of public
     access to criminal trials. Justice Powell, who did not participate in the decision in Richmond, had
     previously expressed this same view. Gannett Co., 443 U.S. at 397 (Powell, J., concurring); see also Saxbe
     v. Washington Post Co., 417 U.S. 843, 850 (1974) (Powell, J., dissenting).


                                                                                                             16
 1            This right, incidentally, is also consistent with the rights of the accused. As

 2   Gannett “made clear[,] . . . although the Sixth Amendment guarantees the accused a right

 3   to a public trial, it does not give [her] a right to a private trial.” Id. at 580 (citing Gannett,

 4   443 U.S. at 382). And the presumptive First Amendment right of access precludes a

 5   judge or a defendant, or both together, from arbitrarily closing a criminal proceeding.7

 6            Justice Brennan’s concurrence in Richmond Newspapers offered “two helpful

 7   principles” to guide courts in determining whether a qualified right of access attaches to a

 8   given government proceeding. Id. at 589 (Brennan, J., concurring). First, courts should

 9   inquire into “experience” (history) and “consider[] whether the place and process have

10   historically been open to the . . . public.” Press-Enterprise v. Superior Court, 478 U.S. 1,

11   8 (1986) (“Press-Enterprise II”) (internal quotation marks omitted). Second, courts

12   should consider “logic” (functionality) and ask whether public access “plays a significant

13   positive role in the functioning of the particular process in question.” Id. Courts apply this

14   experience and logic test to determine whether a qualified right of public access attaches

15   to a given government forum. See, e.g., Globe Newspaper, 457 U.S. at 605; Hartford

16   Courant Co. v. Pellegrino, 380 F.3d 83, 94-95 (2d Cir. 2004).

17            Reading Richmond Newspapers broadly, the Supreme Court has subsequently

18   held that the First Amendment safeguards a qualified right of access not only to criminal


     7
       Open access also serves larger purposes of accountability, legitimation, and democratic governance.
     Because “court rulings impose official and practical consequences upon members of society at large,” a
     trial is “a genuine governmental proceeding” that is “pre-eminently a matter of public interest.” Id. at 595-
     96. Public access “serves to ensure that the individual citizen can effectively participate in and contribute to
     our republican system of self-government.” Globe Newspaper Co. v. Superior Court, 457 U.S. 596, 604
     (1982). In doing so, it has systemic effects not only on government proceedings but on perceptions of their
     legitimacy. Because public access allows “people not actually attending trials [to] have confidence that
     standards of fairness are being observed[,] . . . . [o]penness . . . enhances both the basic fairness of the
     criminal trial and the appearance of fairness so essential to public confidence in the system.” Press-
     Enterprise Co. v. Superior Court, 464 U.S. 501, 508 (1984).


                                                                                                                  17
 1   trials but to related proceedings such as witness testimony, Globe Newspaper, 457 U.S. at

 2   608-10; the transcripts of voir dire proceedings, Press-Enterprise v. Superior Court, 464

 3   U.S. 501, 505-10 (1984) (“Press-Enterprise I”); and preliminary hearings, Press-

 4   Enterprise II, 478 U.S. at 13-15.

 5            Our circuit has further held that the presumption of access applies to other aspects

 6   of criminal trials as well, including judicial records such as videotapes of defendants, In

 7   re Application of Nat’l Broad. Co. (United States v. Myers), 635 F.2d 945, 952 (2d Cir.

 8   1980); pretrial suppression hearings, In re Application of the Herald Co. (United States v.

 9   Klepfer), 734 F.2d 93, 99 (2d Cir. 1984); plea agreements and plea hearings, United

10   States v. Haller, 837 F.2d 84, 86-87 (2d Cir. 1988); information on the payment of court-

11   appointed counsel, United States v. Suarez, 880 F.2d 626, 630-31 (2d Cir. 1989); bail

12   hearings, United States v. Abuhamra, 389 F.3d 309, 323-24 (2d Cir. 2004); live voir dire

13   proceedings, ABC, Inc. v. Stewart, 360 F.3d 90, 100 (2d Cir. 2004); and sentencing

14   hearings, United States v. Alcantara, 396 F.3d 189, 191-92 (2d Cir. 2005). We have also

15   held that the public’s right implies that particular individuals may not be summarily

16   excluded from court. Huminski v. Corsones, 396 F.3d 53, 83-84 (2d Cir. 2005).8

17            Most relevant for the present case, we have concluded that the First Amendment

18   guarantees a qualified right of access not only to criminal but also to civil trials and to

19   their related proceedings and records. Westmoreland v. Columbia Broad. Sys., Inc., 752

20   F.2d 16, 22 (2d Cir. 1984); see also Hartford Courant, 380 F.3d at 93 (civil and criminal

21   docket sheets). Significantly, all the other circuits that have considered the issue have

     8
      There is nothing to the contrary in the brief mention of this issue in Posr v. Court Officer Shield #207, 180
     F.3d 409, 414 (2d Cir. 1999), where the complainant sought to assert the right to bring into the courtroom a
     bicycle pump, which was reasonably prohibited with the kind of time, place, and manner restrictions
     explicitly allowed in Richmond Newspapers and its progeny. Richmond Newspapers, 448 U.S. at 578.


                                                                                                                18
 1   come to the same conclusion. See, e.g., Rushford v. New Yorker Magazine, Inc., 846 F.2d

 2   249, 253-54 (4th Cir. 1988); In re Continental Ill. Secs. Litig., 732 F.2d 1302, 1308 (7th

 3   Cir. 1984); Publicker Indus., Inc. v. Cohen, 733 F.2d 1059, 1070 (3d Cir. 1984); In re

 4   Iowa Freedom of Info. Council, 724 F.2d 658, 661 (8th Cir. 1983); Newman v. Graddick,

 5   696 F.2d 796, 801 (11th Cir. 1983).9

 6            This recognition of the right to attend civil trials derives from the fact that the

 7   First Amendment, unlike the Sixth, does not distinguish between criminal and civil

 8   proceedings; nor does it distinguish among branches of government. Rather, it protects

 9   the public against the government’s “arbitrary interference with access to important

10   information.” Richmond Newspapers, 448 U.S. at 583 (Stevens, J., concurring). As the

11   district court below aptly noted, “[o]nce unmoored from the Sixth Amendment, there is

12   no principle that limits the First Amendment right of access to any one particular type of

13   government process.” NYCLU, 675 F. Supp. 2d at 431 (internal quotation marks omitted).

14            However, neither our Court nor the Supreme Court has had occasion to consider

15   under what conditions, if at all, a qualified right of access attaches to non-trial civil

16   proceedings like the administrative adjudication at issue here. It is to that question that

17   we now turn.

18   A.       Applicability of the Experience and Logic Test

19            The NYCTA would have us forgo the Richmond Newspapers test: it argues that

20   administrative proceedings are never subject to a presumption of public access and that

21   Richmond Newspapers and its progeny apply only to courts. The NYCTA argues that,

     9
      The Supreme Court has not yet considered whether the public right of access applies to civil trials, but
     “six of the eight sitting Justices” in Richmond Newspapers “clearly implied that the right applies to civil
     cases as well as criminal ones.” Huminski, 396 F.3d at 82 n.30.


                                                                                                                   19
 1   since administrative proceedings were rare, if not nonexistent, in the early Republic, they

 2   are totally different from either criminal or civil trials, which enjoyed centuries of open

 3   access, dating back before the Founding. The First Amendment, the NYCTA claims,

 4   could not possibly guarantee a right to access something that barely existed at the time of

 5   the Founding. Instead, the NYCTA suggests, the issue of public access to administrative

 6   proceedings is one for the legislature or the administrative agency itself to decide, free

 7   from judicial supervision. This argument fails for several reasons.

 8          The Supreme Court has not specified how courts should determine whether the

 9   experience and logic test applies to administrative proceedings. But we have good reason

10   to think that this determination does not involve asking whether the proceedings in

11   question have a history of openness dating back to the Founding. As the Sixth Circuit has

12   stated, the “Supreme Court effectively silenced this argument in Press-Enterprise II,

13   where the Court relied on exclusively post-Bill of Rights history in determining that

14   preliminary hearings in criminal cases were historically open.” Detroit Free Press v.

15   Ashcroft, 303 F.3d 681, 700 (6th Cir. 2002) (citing Press-Enterprise II, 478 U.S. at 10-

16   12).

17          More importantly, the NYCTA’s claim is refuted by the reasoning of the public

18   access cases themselves. These focus not on formalistic descriptions of the government

19   proceeding but on the kind of work the proceeding actually does and on the First

20   Amendment principles at stake. “[T]he First Amendment question cannot be resolved

21   solely on the label we give the event, i.e., ‘trial’ or otherwise, particularly where the

22   [proceeding] functions much like a full-scale trial.” Press-Enterprise II, 478 U.S. at 7. In

23   extending the right of public access from the criminal trial to its components and on to



                                                                                                   20
 1   civil trials, the Supreme Court and the circuits have emphasized the importance of access

 2   to public participation and to government accountability—values, the courts have

 3   emphasized, that are central to democracy. “[T]he First Amendment . . . has a structural

 4   role to play in securing and fostering our republican system of self-government,”

 5   Richmond Newspapers, 448 U.S. at 587 (Brennan, J., concurring). And public access

 6   “serves to ensure that the individual citizen can effectively participate in and contribute

 7   to” self-government. Globe Newspaper, 457 U.S. at 604. There is little cause to think that

 8   this reasoning has significantly less force in the administrative context. And this is

 9   especially so when the administrative process at issue so closely resembles that of the

10   courts. See Detroit Free Press, 303 F.3d at 710 (“A government operating in the shadow

11   of secrecy stands in complete opposition to the society envisioned by the Framers of our

12   Constitution.”).

13          Of course, widespread administrative adjudication is a relatively new

14   phenomenon. Fed. Mar. Comm’n v. S. C. State Ports Auth., 535 U.S. 743, 755 (2002)

15   (noting that “formalized administrative adjudications were all but unheard of in the late

16   18th century and early 19th century”). But changes in the organization of government do

17   not exempt new institutions from the purview of old rules. Rather, they lead us to ask

18   how the new institutions fit into existing legal structures. If, as the NYCTA suggests,

19   government institutions that did not exist at the time of the Framers were insulated from

20   the principles of accountability and public participation that the Framers inscribed in the

21   First Amendment, legislatures could easily avoid constitutional strictures by moving an

22   old governmental function to a new institutional location. Immunizing government

23   proceedings from public scrutiny by placing them in institutions the Framers could not



                                                                                                   21
 1   have imagined, as the NYCTA urges, would make avoidance of constitutional protections

 2   all too easy.

 3           Two other circuits have considered a similar question, and they have likewise

 4   concluded that “Richmond Newspapers is a test broadly applicable to issues of access to

 5   government proceedings,” North Jersey Media Group, Inc. v. Ashcroft, 308 F.3d 198,

 6   208-09 (3d Cir. 2002), and especially to “quasi-judicial” administrative proceedings,

 7   because “there is a limited First Amendment right of access to certain aspects of the

 8   executive and legislative branches,” Detroit Free Press, 303 F.3d at 695. As a result,

 9   these circuits have each applied the experience and logic test in the administrative

10   context. See id. at 705 (holding that the experience and logic test applies to removal

11   proceedings and that the public has a qualified right of access to those proceedings);

12   North Jersey Media Group, 308 F.3d 198 (holding that the experience and logic test

13   applies to removal proceedings and that the public lacks a qualified right of access to

14   those proceedings). The fact that, in applying this test, the circuits differed on how the

15   test played out in no way counters their holdings, with which we agree, that the test

16   applies to administrative trials.

17           Similarly, albeit in a different line of cases, the Supreme Court has recognized

18   that the adjudicatory work of administrative agencies can be sufficiently like that of the

19   courts to warrant requiring the agencies to follow principles that apply to courts. For

20   instance, Butz v. Economou, 438 U.S. 478 (1978), which extended the absolute immunity

21   enjoyed by Article III judges to administrative law judges, noted that judicial immunity

22   “stems from the characteristics of the judicial process rather than its location” within one

23   or another branch of government. Id. at 512. And, the Court determined, “adjudication



                                                                                                  22
 1   within a federal administrative agency shares enough of the characteristics of the judicial

 2   process” to render the work of “the modern federal hearing examiner or administrative

 3   law judge within this framework . . . functionally comparable to that of a judge.” Id. at

 4   512-13 (internal quotation marks omitted). More recently, Federal Maritime Commission

 5   v. South Carolina State Ports Authority concluded that states retained the sovereign

 6   immunity they enjoyed in court when they were subject to an administrative adjudicatory

 7   proceeding that “‘walks, talks, and squawks very much like a lawsuit.’” Fed. Mar.

 8   Comm’n, 535 U.S. at 757 (quoting South Carolina State Ports Authority v. Fed. Mar.

 9   Comm’n, 243 F.3d 165, 174 (4th Cir. 2001)).

10          Such cases recognize that the principles governing adjudication do not lose

11   validity when the adjudication moves to another branch of government. Indeed, as the

12   Supreme Court has stated, “when governmental agencies adjudicate or make binding

13   determinations which directly affect the legal rights of individuals, it is imperative that

14   those agencies use the procedures which have traditionally been associated with the

15   judicial process.” Hannah v. Larche, 363 U.S. 420, 442 (1960).

16          In the present case, the TAB acts as an adjudicatory body, operates under

17   procedures modeled on those of the courts, and “impose[s] official and practical

18   consequences upon members of society.” Richmond Newspapers, 448 U.S. at 595

19   (Brennan, J., concurring). When a neutral adjudicator determines whether public transit

20   users have violated a Rule, that determination has the force of law and, like the criminal

21   trial for which it substitutes, it is “a genuine governmental proceeding.” Id. at 506. The

22   TAB and the court serve similar functions, in similar ways, and have a similar effect on

23   the parties before them.



                                                                                                   23
 1           In so holding, we need not, and should not, make any broad pronouncement about

 2   the right of access to administrative processes generally. Given the wide variety of

 3   proceedings that characterize the administrative state, that would be as foolhardy as it is

 4   unnecessary. But we have no trouble concluding that the First Amendment guarantees a

 5   presumptive right of access at least to this administrative forum. We therefore proceed to

 6   examine the experience and logic of open access to the TAB’s proceedings.10

 7   B.      The Experience of Public Access to TAB Hearings

 8           Our inquiry is considerably simplified by the jurisdiction the TAB shares with the

 9   Criminal Court. The fact that an alleged violator may be subject either to a court or to a

10   TAB proceeding at the total discretion of the police officer, rather than by reference to

11   any alleged conduct, suggests that the two forums are “functionally comparable.” Butz,

12   438 U.S. at 513 (internal quotation marks omitted). The Richmond Newspapers test looks

13   not to the formal description of the forum but to the historical “experience in that type or

14   kind of hearing throughout the United States.” El Vocero de Puerto Rico v. Puerto Rico,

15   508 U.S. 147, 150 (1993) (internal quotation marks omitted) (emphasis in the original).

16           While the TAB’s relaxed procedures and administrative placement differentiate it

17   somewhat from the Criminal Court, the jurisdictional overlap and shared function of the

18   two forums render them in important ways the same “type or kind of hearing.” Id.

19   Because of this, how the experience and logic inquiry comes out with respect to the

20   Criminal Court largely determines how it comes out for the TAB as well. And, since

21   access to criminal court hearings is the core of the entire Richmond Newspaper line of

     10
       The Supreme Court has called the experience and logic prongs of the Richmond Newspapers test
     “complementary,” Press-Enterprise II, 478 U.S. at 8, but it has not specified how much weight courts
     should give each prong. We need not determine the issue in this case, because both experience and logic
     lead clearly to the conclusion that the TAB is subject to a First Amendment right of access.


                                                                                                               24
 1   cases, a similar result for the TAB seems almost foreordained. The government cannot

 2   simply dress up a criminal trial in the guise of an administrative hearing and thereby

 3   evade the well-established requirement that criminal proceedings be open to the public.

 4            Even without the functionally equivalent Criminal Court as a guide, however, we

 5   would come to the same conclusion. The NYCTA argues that because there is no history

 6   of open access to the TAB dating back to the First Amendment, TAB proceedings cannot

 7   be presumptively open under that amendment. But the Supreme Court has instructed us to

 8   ask not whether the First Amendment was formulated with some particular forum in

 9   mind, but whether “the place and process have historically been open.” Press-Enterprise

10   II, 478 U.S. at 8. If we understood this instruction to require us to look to the physical

11   location and institutional proceeding at issue, we might conclude, as the NYCTA urges,

12   that the offices of the TAB and its hearings have been subject to the current access policy

13   for the TAB’s entire brief history. To take this view, however, would be to rely on

14   precisely the kind of formalism that the Richmond Newspapers line of cases eschews.11

15   The process that goes on at TAB hearings is a determination of whether a respondent has

16   violated a Transit Authority Rule. And that process was presumptively open from the




     11
        The Supreme Court has not stated how long a history of openness the experience prong of the Richmond
     Newspapers test requires, and we need not resolve this issue here. “[W]e are mindful that ‘[a] historical
     tradition of at least some duration is obviously necessary, . . . [or] nothing would separate the judicial task
     of constitutional interpretation from the political task of enacting laws currently deemed essential.’” Detroit
     Free Press, 303 F.3d at 701 (quoting In re The Reporters Comm. for Freedom of the Press, 773 F.2d 1325,
     1332 (D.C. Cir. 1985)) (alterations in original). At the same time, we note that it makes less sense to
     assume that First Amendment principles require centuries of openness for validation than to evaluate the
     length of a tradition by reference to the kind of institution and proceeding involved in the particular case.
     As a result, the fact that the Rules governing behavior on New York public transit are themselves less than
     half a century old is less relevant to our inquiry than that their violation was prosecuted exclusively in open
     court for the first two decades of their existence, and that it continues to be so prosecuted when the citing
     police officer, in his or her discretion, issues a summons to Criminal Court rather than a notice of violation
     returnable to the TAB. Cf. Suarez, 880 F.2d at 631 (holding Criminal Justice Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3006A,
     forms presumptively accessible even though the statute was enacted only in 1964).


                                                                                                                 25
 1   inception of the Rules system in 1966, when such proceedings were heard only in open

 2   criminal courts.12

 3   C.       The Logic of Public Access to TAB Hearings

 4            Our answer to the logic part of the inquiry is, again, guided by the logic of access

 5   to the Criminal Court, which has been well established. As with the experience prong,

 6   however, looking just to the TAB itself yields the same result. The logic prong of the

 7   inquiry essentially asks whether openness enhances the ability of the government

 8   proceeding to work properly and to fulfill its function. Press-Enterprise II, 478 U.S. at 8.

 9   This inquiry requires an understanding of what the function of a particular process is and

10   an evaluation of the role of openness in it.13



     12
        We are inclined to think that treating TAB hearings not as substitutes for Criminal Court hearings but as
     administrative proceedings in their own right might well yield the same result. The tradition of openness in
     formal administrative adjudicatory proceedings generally has amply demonstrated the “favorable judgment
     of experience.” Richmond Newspapers, 448 U.S. at 589 (Brennan, J., concurring). As amici New York
     Times et al. point out, administrative hearings at which individual rights are adjudicated have traditionally
     been open. Already in 1933, the District of Columbia Circuit noted that a “number of . . . acts of Congress
     creating [administrative] bodies . . . provi[de] . . . that all proceedings shall be public.” Hughes, Inc. v.
     FTC, 63 F.2d 362, 363 (D.C. Cir. 1933); see id. at 363-64 (finding that “public hearings” serve the same
     purposes “whether in courts or bureaus” and are “wholly consonant with the modern view of functions of
     government”).
               The Supreme Court sounded a similar note when it required a few years later “that the inexorable
     safeguard of a fair and open hearing be maintained” in administrative adjudication. Ohio Bell Telephone
     Co. v. Public Utilities Comm’n, 301 U.S. 292, 304 (1937) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
     Contemporaneously, the Court described “a fair and open hearing” as one of “the rudimentary requirements
     of fair play,” and found it “essential alike to the legal validity of . . . administrative regulation and to the
     maintenance of public confidence.” Morgan v. United States, 304 U.S. 1, 15 (1938). That these values are
     essentially the same as those Richmond Newspapers ascribed to open court proceedings suggests that the
     history of quasi-judicial administrative proceedings includes an analogously strong tradition of public
     access. Mindful of the Supreme Court’s injunction not to make unnecessary constitutional adjudications,
     see Ashwander v. TVA, 297 U.S. 288, 346-47 (1936) (Brandeis, J., concurring), we make clear that the
     discussion in this footnote is not an alternative holding.
     13
        The Third Circuit has posited that this inquiry “perforce must take account of the flip side—the extent to
     which openness impairs the public good,” because, “were the logic prong only to determine whether
     openness serves some good, it is difficult to conceive of a government proceeding to which the public
     would not have a . . . right of access.” North Jersey Media, 308 F.3d at 217. Of course, the test has never
     been “whether openness serves some good,” id., but “whether [it] plays a significant positive role in the
     functioning of the particular process in question.” Press-Enterprise II, 478 U.S. at 8. We think this phrasing
     already encompasses “the flip side.” North Jersey Media, 308 F.3d at 217.


                                                                                                                  26
 1          Court trials, which serve both as a “mechanism for judicial factfinding, [and] as

 2   the initial forum for legal decision making,” Richmond Newspapers, 448 U.S. at 596

 3   (Brennan, J., concurring), have been held to depend on publicity as a check that

 4   “enhance[s] the fairness of the trial itself,” United States v. Doe, 63 F.3d 121, 126 (2d

 5   Cir. 1995). TAB proceedings similarly serve an adjudicatory function that determines

 6   respondents’ rights. As a proceeding that, like a trial, involves both factfinding and legal

 7   decision making, the TAB hearing is subject to the same dangers—whether willful or

 8   accidental—as a trial, dangers that can be reduced significantly by the kind of “[p]ublic

 9   scrutiny . . . [that] enhances the quality and safeguards the integrity of the factfinding

10   process.” Globe Newspaper, 457 U.S. at 606.

11          Furthermore, in a TAB proceeding, individuals confront the power of their

12   government to judge and penalize their actions; like a trial, it is a part of the “general

13   administration of justice” that is central to government authority. Doe, 63 F.3d at 126. In

14   this sense, like a trial, one of the TAB’s functions is to maintain the public perception of

15   government as a legitimate authority that satisfies “the appearance of fairness so essential

16   to public confidence in the system.” Press-Enterprise I, 464 U.S. at 508. And it is this

17   “appearance of fairness” that has been held to be “enhance[d]” by open access. Id. at 508,

18   509.

19          Finally, because the TAB, like other administrative agencies, forms a part, albeit

20   small, of a larger web of government authority, “[f]ree access [to it] . . . informs the

21   populace of the workings of government and fosters more robust democratic debate,”

22   Doe, 63 F.3d at 126, thereby “serv[ing] to insure that the individual citizen can




                                                                                                  27
 1   effectively participate in and contribute to our republican system of self-government,”

 2   Globe Newspaper, 457 U.S. at 604.

 3           The NYCTA has not argued that public access would not enhance the TAB’s

 4   functioning in these ways. Rather, it suggests that the possibility that some respondents

 5   would be dissuaded from contesting their notices of violation in person suffices to

 6   outweigh any potential benefits of publicity. But far from showing that this danger is real,

 7   the NYCTA has “offered no empirical support for th[is] claim.” Id. at 609. Like the Sixth

 8   Circuit, “we do not believe speculation should form the basis for . . . a . . . restriction of

 9   the public’s First Amendment rights.” Detroit Free Press, 303 F.3d at 709. To the extent

10   that a particular defendant or witness has a legitimate interest in excluding the public

11   from a specific proceeding before the TAB, the NYCTA retains the authority to close the

12   hearing room on an ad hoc basis, provided that its decision complies with the

13   requirements set out in Williams v. Artuz, 237 F.3d 147 (2d Cir. 2001), and delineated

14   below. Accordingly, because public access “plays a significant positive role in the

15   functioning of the [TAB] process,” Press-Enterprise II, 478 U.S. at 8, we hold that TAB

16   proceedings are subject to a public right of access under the First Amendment.

17   D.      Requirements for Closing Hearings and the TAB Policy

18           The First Amendment right of access is always qualified. “Just as a government

19   may impose reasonable time, place, and manner restrictions upon the use of its streets in

20   the interest of such objectives as the free flow of traffic, so may a trial judge, in the

21   interest of the fair administration of justice, impose reasonable limitations on access to a

22   trial.” Richmond Newspapers, 448 U.S. at 581 n.18 (plurality opinion) (internal citation

23   omitted). The same, of course, applies as to other government proceedings subject to the


                                                                                                      28
 1   right of access. The Supreme Court has stated, however, that “the State’s justification in

 2   denying access must be a weighty one,” Globe Newspaper, 457 U.S. at 606, and that

 3   “[c]losed proceedings, although not absolutely precluded, must be rare and only for cause

 4   shown,” Press-Enterprise I, 464 U.S. at 509. The Globe Newspaper Court, for instance,

 5   held that even the State’s interest in shielding minor victims of alleged sex crimes “from

 6   further trauma and embarrassment” and “encourag[ing] . . . such victims to come forward

 7   and testify,” 457 U.S. at 607, was insufficient to justify a statute requiring an across-the-

 8   board, mandatory closure of a court whenever such minors testified. Rather, Globe

 9   Newspaper made the trial court determine the necessity and propriety of closure on a

10   “case-by-case basis.” Id. at 608.

11          The standard for exclusion, as stated by the High Court, is that there be “an

12   overriding interest based on findings that closure is essential to preserve higher values

13   and is narrowly tailored to serve that interest. The interest is to be articulated along with

14   findings specific enough that a reviewing court can determine whether the closure order

15   was properly entered.” Press-Enterprise I, 464 U.S. at 510; see also Globe Newspaper,

16   457 U.S. at 606-07 (“Where, as in the present case, the [government] attempts to deny the

17   right of access in order to inhibit the disclosure of sensitive information, it must be shown

18   that the denial is necessitated by a compelling governmental interest, and is narrowly

19   tailored to serve that interest.”). The “same standard applies whether the defendant is

20   seeking or objecting to closure,” and whether the motion is made under the Sixth

21   Amendment or the First. Doe, 63 F.3d at 128.

22          In our circuit, a government proceeding subject to a qualified First Amendment

23   right of access may be closed if four factors are satisfied: “‘[1] the party seeking to close



                                                                                                 29
 1   the hearing must advance an overriding interest that is likely to be prejudiced, [2] the

 2   closure must be no broader than necessary to protect that interest, [3] the trial court must

 3   consider reasonable alternatives to closing the proceeding, and [4] it must make findings

 4   adequate to support the closure.’” Williams, 237 F.3d at 152 (quoting Waller v. Georgia,

 5   467 U.S. 39, 48 (1984));14 see also Doe, 63 F.3d at 127 (“Given the presumption of

 6   openness, ‘proceedings cannot be closed unless specific, on the record findings are made

 7   demonstrating that closure is essential to preserve higher values and is narrowly tailored

 8   to serve that interest.’”) (quoting Press-Enterprise II, 478 U.S. at 13-14) (internal

 9   quotation marks and citation omitted).

10            Accordingly, we have recognized that “a person’s physical safety” as well as “the

11   privacy interests of individuals” such as witnesses, third parties, and those investigated in

12   connection with a legal violation, may “warrant closure.” Doe, 63 F.3d at 127. Thus, we

13   have allowed a court to exclude the public from proceedings during the testimony of

14   police officers whose undercover work was ongoing, Ayala v. Speckard, 131 F.3d 62, 72

15   (2d Cir. 1997) (en banc); to exclude the public from part of voir dire, where the trial

16   judge had made on-the-record findings that the risk of juror dishonesty about racial bias

17   in a highly publicized case sufficed to warrant keeping in camera voir dire transcripts

18   sealed until after a jury had been impaneled, United States v. King, 140 F.3d 76 (2d Cir.

19   1998); and to limit the entrance of new observers to a trial during the testimony of a key

20   witness in order not to distract the jury, Williams, 237 F.3d at 152.




     14
       Waller dealt the closure of a criminal suppression hearing under the Sixth Amendment, but, as previously
     noted, although the interests at stake in Sixth Amendment and First Amendment publicity of government
     proceedings differ, the standards for closure are the same. Doe, 63 F.3d at 128. Indeed, Waller cites Press-
     Enterprise I on this point. Waller, 467 U.S. at 48.


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 1            The TAB’s access policy, however, does not come close to meeting our standard

 2   for justifying closure. A respondent need not articulate any interest prejudiced by public

 3   access; the closure is total for that respondent’s hearing; and the hearing officer neither

 4   considers alternatives nor makes any findings regarding the relative weight of the

 5   interests at stake. See Williams, 237 F.3d at 152. Indeed, the TAB’s policy resembles one

 6   explicitly addressed by the Supreme Court in a case that struck down a local court rule

 7   “allowing [preliminary criminal] hearings to be closed upon the request of the defendant,

 8   without more.” El Vocero de Puerto Rico, 508 U.S. at 150. That case and others have

 9   made clear that the government may not arbitrarily close its proceedings to the public

10   when, as in the case before us, it does so by allowing private parties to wield the arbitrary

11   power.

12                                         CONCLUSION

13            We conclude that the TAB’s current access policy violates the public’s First

14   Amendment right of access to government proceedings. We further conclude that the

15   NYCLU’s ability to carry out its mission would be irreparably harmed through the

16   continued violation of this right.

17            We have considered all of the NYCTA’s arguments and find them to be without

18   merit. We therefore AFFIRM the district court’s order permanently enjoining the

19   NYCTA from enforcing the TAB’s current access policy and requiring any future closure

20   of TAB hearings to the public to comport with the narrow tailoring and on-the-record

21   factfinding required by the First Amendment.




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