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In the Matter of the Grand Jury Proceeding re Will Lewis,
Applicant. Will LEWIS, Applicant-Appellant,
v.
UNITED STATES of America, Respondent-Appellee.
501 F.2d 418
No. 74-2170.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
July 19, 1974.
PER CURIAM:
Appellant Will Lewis appeals from a judgment of the District
Court finding him in contempt for refusing to produce a document
and a tape recording pursuant to subpoena by the Grand Jury and
for refusing to answer questions propounded by that body.
The judgment was entered on June 19, 1974, and commitment
was ordered as of that date. Under the mandate of 28 U.S.C. §
1826 we issue this opinion within the 30 day period following
the filing of appeal. We affirm.
Appellant Will Lewis is the Station Manager of KPFK, a local
FM radio station with offices located in North Hollywood, California.
On May 31, 1974, KPFK received a three-page mimeographed document
purportedly issued by an organization calling itself 'The Weather
Underground,' which contained information relative to a recent
bombing of a government building. KPFK made copies of the document
available to law enforcement agencies produced a news broadcast
about the document, and turned over the original document to
the custody of appellant. KPFK was not the only news media to
receive a copy of that document; others received it as well,
including the Los Angeles Times. [FN1] On or about June 7, 1974,
KPFK received a tape purportedly issued by 'The Symbionese Liberation
Army' which contained information relative to Patricia Hearst
and William and Emily Harris. [FN2] KPFK made tape dubs of that
original, made copies available to law enforcement agencies,
produced a radio program based upon it and turned over the original
tape to the custody of appellant. Since that time, appellant
has been in possession of both the original document and the
original tape.
FN1. The station had provided law enforcement officers and
others a copy of the letter and a copy of the tape.
FN2. Finding No. 5 of the court was as follows:
'5. That on June 7, 1974 at approximately 6:30 a.m. an employee
at radio station KPFK received a telephone call from an anonymous
individual stating that a tape recording from Patricia Hearst
had been placed behind a mattress at the rear of the station.
The caller stated that the recording was in a manila envelope
and directed that it be played over the air. The tape was played
on the radio station at approximately 12:00 noon on that date.'
C.T. at 73.
On June 3, 1974, the Federal Grand Jury for the Central District
of California was investigating the possible violation of federal
laws which it had good cause to believe involved the bombing
of the office of the Attorney General of the State of California
and the activities of the Symbionese Liberation Army within its
jurisdiction. On that date it issued a subpoena duces tecum calling
for Mr. David Finkel, attorney for the station, to appear forthwith
and bring with him the original of the document the station had
received from persons claiming to have been responsible for the
bombing. On June 5, 1974, Mr. Finkel appeared but did not produce
the document requested and did not answer questions with respect
to it. He told an Assistant United States Attorney that he had
given the letter in question to Station Manager, Will Lewis.
He also advised the Assistant United States Attorney that he
intended to claim a privilege based upon the station's right
to protect the sources of news information.
Following the broadcast of the tape on June 7, 1974, the Grand
Jury on June 11, 1974, issued a subpoena duces tecum to Will
Lewis directing him to appear and bring with him both the letter
and the tape. On June 12, Mr. Lewis appeared and stated that
the document and the tape both existed and that he had access
to them but that he had purposely refused to bring them before
the Grand Jury. As to other questions, he declined to answer
after consulting his attorney, Mr. Finkel, in an anteroom, on
the ground that he was privileged to refuse under amendments
to the United States Constitution numbers 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 9
and 10.
Following this appearance the district court held a hearing
during which the failure of Mr. Lewis to produce the evidence
requested was recounted. The court thereupon on June 12, 1974,
set June 17, 1974, as the time at which it would consider a contempt
citation. A formal motion for such a citation was filed at the
court's instruction on June 14. On June 17, the witness was granted
immunity under 18 U.S.C. §§ 6001, 6002 and 6003, and
directed to reappear before the jury on June 19 at 10:00 a.m.
The court further directed that any further proceedings, if required,
would be taken up at 2:00 p.m. on the same day.
On the morning of June 19 Mr. Lewis again refused to produce
the two items of physical evidence requested or to answer questions.
Thereafter and at noon, the court having accelerated the time
for hearing, held an evidentiary hearing at which the court reporter
for the Grand Jury read the questions asked and the answers given.
The court then heard argument and adjudged Mr. Lewis in contempt
and ordered his incarceration. Findings of Fact and Conclusions
of Law were subsequently filed.
[1] Appellant's first argument is that he was not given procedural
due process because of the summary and inadequate proceedings
held by the court. We disagree. Recognizing the need for orderly
process under Rule 42(b), Harris v. United States, 382 U.S. 162,
164-166, 86 S.Ct. 352, 15 L.Ed.2d 240 (1965), we are of the opinion
that appellant was accorded the process that was due under the
rule. As early as June 3, 1974, it was made plain to the station
manager and his attorney that the originals of the physical evidence
would be required by the Grand Jury. [FN3]
FN3. Finding No. 4 of the court was as follows:
4. That on May 31, 1974 Special Agent Kayleen Drissell of
the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) went to radio station
KPFK, Los Angeles, California, in response to a telephone message
from that station's personnel in which they had informed the
agent that they had received a letter from the Weather Underground
Group in which letter this organization claimed responsibility
for the bombing of the California State Attorney General's Office
which bombing had taken place at approximately 2:30 a.m. on that
date.
'Special Agent Drissell was informed by Will Lewis, station
manager, that he would not be willing to supply the original
letter itself, on the grounds that such refusal was justified
in order to protect the confidentiality of the source of the
information.' C.T. at 72-73.
It was clearly announced in response that the custodian, Mr.
Lewis, would refuse to produce them based upon his claimed First
Amendment rights of free press and associational privacy. The
demands of the Grand Jury continued until a motion for a citation
for contempt was formally filed and the court announced on June
12 that a hearing would be held on June 17. That hearing was
continued until June 19 and a request for a further continuance
until June 24 was denied.
In United States v. Alter, 482 F.2d 1016 (9th cir. 1973),
we declared that ordinarily five days' notice of a contempt hearing
constitutes a reasonable time for a respondent to prepare his
defense. We noted, however, a reasonable time might well vary
depending upon the circumstances in a particular case. Here appellant
was well aware more than a week before the hearing on June 19
not only that the Grand Jury wanted the document and tape, but
that he would be cited for contempt if he refused to produce
them. Moreover, by moving to quash the subpoena and filing a
brief in support of his motion, he raised the very issues that
were later asserted at the contempt hearing. In these circumstances
we fail to understand how Lewis was surprised or otherwise prejudiced.
Much of appellant's argument based upon lack of time to prepare
is predicated upon a Supplemental Memorandum filed by the Government
on June 19, 1974, at the time of the contempt hearing. This memorandum,
however, was in response to appellant's Supplemental Memorandum
of Points and Authorities in Support of Motion to Quash Subpoena
Duces Tecum filed on Friday, June 14, prior to the hearing on
Wednesday, June 19. To this memorandum was appended an affidavit
of Will Lewis making for the first time the claim of illegal
electronic surveillance. The Government's response contained
affidavits of denial of such surveillance.
Furthermore, if we permit a late filing of a bare claim of
illegal electronic surveillance to establish a new date from
which orderly due process in a proceeding under Rule 42(b) is
to be measured, *422 we invite the very mini-trials and preliminary
evidentiary hearings which impede the work of the Grand Jury.
United States v. Dionisio, 410 U.S. 1, 17, 93 S.Ct. 764, 35 L.Ed.2d
67 (1973).
Here the appellant, as the station manager, and Mr. Finkel,
his attorney, had been aware of the demand of the Grand Jury
since June 3, 1974. Yet no claim of unauthorized surveillance
had been made until June 14, just three days prior to the scheduled
contempt hearing on June 17.
[2] But more than that, we decide this case upon the somewhat
narrow ground that the refusal of the witness to produce the
original physical objects in this case does not involve an inquiry
into claimed illegal surveillance. The evidence sought here was
not 'the primary product of an unlawful act' within 18 U.S.C.
§ 3504. [FN4] The original document from persons claiming
to have been responsible for the bombing of the office of the
Attorney General in Los Angeles and the original tape with the
message to the public from the Symbionese Liberation Army were
not requested by the Grand Jury until their existence had been
established by the acts of the radio station and Mr. Lewis.
The tape, or presumably a copy of it, was played over the
air on June 7, and the document was made public by broadcasting
its contents on May 31 and the distribution of copies thereafter.
It was after this occurred that the Grand Jury requested the
originals and information from their custodian. No question of
confidentiality of source could be present because the presence
of the tape behind a mattress near the station was disclosed
by an anonymous telephone call. The document was received by
the station in a manner not disclosed. In either case the existence
of the items was made known by the station itself and not as
a result of electronic surveillance. The demand for their production
for examination could not have been the result of exploitation
of illegal acts within the meaning of 18 U.S.C. § 3504.
FN4. Section 3504, in pertinent part, reads as follows: '(a)
In any trial, hearing, or other proceeding in or before any court,
grand jury, department, officer, agency, regulatory body, or
other authority of the United States--
(1) upon a claim by a party aggrieved that evidence is inadmissible
because it is the primary product of an unlawful act or because
it was obtained by the exploitation of an unlawful act, the opponent
of the claim shall affirm or deny the occurrence of the alleged
unlawful act; . . .'
[3] Likewise, questions relating directly to the physical
objects themselves, such as their condition, any changes made
by the witness during his custody, where, how and by whom they
were discovered or received, would also not be within the proscription
of the statute, but the subject of legitimate inquiry concerning
the items involved. The questions which the Grand Jury directed
to the witness, Lewis, were these kinds of questions and within
the above limitations. We conclude that they were proper and
the trial court so ruled.
[4] Finally, appellant would persuade us that to compel production
of the physical objects and to answer questions about them violated
his First Amendment rights of free press and associational privacy.
We recognize that appellant is not forsaken by the Constitution
simply because a Federal Grand Jury would obtain information
from him. As the Court said in Branzburg v. Hayes, 408 U.S. 665,
707, 92 S.Ct. 2646, 2670, 33 L.Ed.2d 626 (1972):
'Finally, as we have earlier indicated, news gathering is
not without its First Amendment protections, and grand jury investigations
if instituted or conducted other than in good faith, would pose
wholly different issues for resolution under the First Amendment.
*423 Official harassment of the press undertaken not for purposes
of law enforcement but to disrupt a reporter's relationship with
his news sources would have no justification. Grand juries are
subject to judicial control and subpoenas to motions to quash.
We do not expect courts will forget that grand juries must operate
within the limits of the First Amendment as well as the Fifth.'
An examination of the relative posture of the parties before
the trial court would clearly justify the resort to the subpoenas
here. There was no evidence that the requests of the Grand Jury
were in the course of 'official harassment of the press' and
not for legitimate purposes of law enforcement. The office of
the Attorney General of California had been bombed and it was
public knowledge that the Symbionese Liberation Army working
with a willing or coerced Patricia Hearst had engaged in violent
crime of recent date. The trial court found that the requests
of the Grand Jury were entirely legitimate and justified. We
find them overwhelmingly so.
Further, there was no request by the suppliers of the document
and the tape to keep the information contained in them private
or to withhold the articles themselves from examination. Even
had there been such, the lesson from Branzburg, supra, is that
such a request, either explicit or implict, may not override
the authority of the Grand Jury.
Assuming, arguendo, that appellant has standing to raise the
question, we are not convinced that the court was clearly erroneous
in finding as it did that the interdepartmental guidelines for
the issuance of subpoenas to news media were properly followed
to the extent that they were applicable.
The judgment is affirmed. The mandate shall be issued on the
tenth day following the filing of this opinion.
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