Many of the detainees have been charged with criminal violations. According to a report issued
by the Justice Department in November, at least 93 people have been charged with assorted
federal crimes and will be tried in federal district court. Their cases are not sealed.
Since then, criminal terrorism charges have been brought against Zacarias Moussaoui and John
Walker Lindh. They will be tried in federal court in Alexandria, Va.
In the past, accused terrorists have been tried in federal court, and there was some press access to
the proceedings. Although the trials could not be televised, the press was permitted to attend the
trial of Timothy McVeigh and the trials of the 1993 World Trade Center bombing conspirators.
Federal judges should not close any of the criminal proceedings without first evaluating the First
Amendment issues involved.
The Supreme Court has established procedural requirements that must be carried out before
closing a courtroom in a criminal case. In Globe Newspaper, the Court stated that
"representatives of the press and general public 'must be given an opportunity to be heard on the
question of their exclusion.'" For the "opportunity to be heard" to be meaningful, some notice
must be provided before the trial court closes a courtroom. (Globe Newspaper Co. v. Superior
Court; United States v. Cojab)
If a trial court wants to close its courtroom following the hearing, it must issue specific findings
of fact that "closure is essential to preserve higher values [than the constitutional right of access]
and is narrowly tailored to serve that interest." One reason that this procedural component is so
important is so "that a reviewing court can determine whether the closure order was properly
entered." (Press-Enterprise Co. v. Superior Court (Press-Enterprise I); Press-Enterprise Co. v.
Superior Court (Press Enterprise II))
Any judge who wishes to close a proceeding should make the necessary determinations with
written findings on the record before excluding the press.
SIDEBAR:
What is the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act Court?
The FISA court is not a court that holds trials. The only job of the FISA court is to review
applications for search and surveillance warrants. It allows intelligence officials to request
warrants without compromising the secret or security-oriented information that may be used to
justify the warrant.
The FISA court -- a group of seven judges from different federal circuits that meets twice a
month in Washington, with two judges always available in Washington -- is entirely confidential
and there is no public or press access to its proceedings or records. It is required to release only
the number of applications for warrants and the number of warrants approved each year. The only
way the public learns about any particular FISA court warrant is if criminal charges are
eventually filed against the suspect.
With regard to the "War on Terrorism," the FISA court is not involved in the detainment or trial
processes, but may be used by the Justice Department to obtain surveillance warrants to spy on
those who have been released or others suspected of any potential terrorist involvement.