Re: the Unsealing of the Grand Jury Proceedings Concerning Eric Garner’s Death at the Hands of the Police, a “Compelling and Particularized Need” for Disclosure Had Not Been Demonstrated—the Public Interest in Preserving Grand Jury Secrecy Outweighed the Public Interest in Disclosure
The Second Department, in an extensive, detailed decision (not fully summarized here), determined that the grand jury proceedings concerning the death of (unarmed) Eric Garner at the hands of the police (who were not indicted) should not be unsealed. As a threshold issue, the court found that New York City’s Public Advocate, pursuant to the terms of the City Charter, did not have the capacity to bring the petition. However, the other petitioners, the Legal Aid Society, the New York Civil Liberties Union, and the local branch of the NAACP, had standing to bring the petition. In essence, the court held that petitioners had not demonstrated the requisite “compelling and particularized” need for disclosure and the public interest in preserving grand jury secrecy outweighed the public interest in disclosure. In response to the District Attorney’s argument that the underlying order denying the petition to unseal the records was not appealable, the Second Department explained that the order was civil, not criminal, in nature (and therefore appealable). The court explained the general analytical criteria as follows:
The legal standard that must initially be applied to petitions seeking the disclosure of grand jury materials is whether the party seeking disclosure can establish a “compelling and particularized need” for access to them … . Only if the compelling and particularized need threshold is met must the court then balance various factors to determine whether the public interest in the secrecy of the grand jury is outweighed by the public interest in disclosure … . The decision as to whether to permit disclosure is committed to the trial court’s discretion … . However, “without the initial showing of a compelling and particularized need, the question of discretion need not be reached, for then there simply would be no policies to balance” … .
A party seeking disclosure will not satisfy the compelling and particularized need threshold simply by asserting, or even showing, that a public interest is involved. The party must, by a factual presentation, demonstrate why, and to what extent, the party requires the minutes of a particular grand jury proceeding “to advance the actions or measures taken, or proposed (e.g. legal action, administrative inquiry or legislative investigation), to insure that the public interest has been, or will be, served” … . “[I]f the supposed societal benefit of maximizing the public’s awareness could by itself trump all other considerations,” there would not exist a “legal presumption against disclosure of grand jury evidence, let alone a rule providing that such presumption may be overcome only by a showing of a particularized and compelling need for disclosure” … . Significantly, courts that have permitted disclosure of grand jury evidence have uniformly done so for some purpose other than generalized public interest and dissemination … . Matter of James v Donovan, 2015 NY Slip Op 06348, 2nd Dept 7-29-15