The Volokh Conspiracy

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Free Speech

No First Amendment Right to Publish Videos of Depositions

A court may impose restrictions on redistribution of material obtained through court-ordered discovery (as opposed to obtained through other means)—though if the depositions are quoted in court filings or played in court, the material used would "become part of the public record, creating a presumption of public access."

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From Elswick v. Hall, decided today by Magistrate Judge Cheryl Eifert (S.D. W. Va.):

Pending before the Court is Defendant Officers' Motion for Protective Order, under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 26(c). Defendants seek to prevent Plaintiff's counsel from publishing the videotaped depositions of Defendants Hall, Rahmati, Lowther, and of a witness, Kenny Davis, on counsel's YouTube channel. Defendants contend that publication of the depositions will lead to embarrassment and annoyance and will expose the defendants and the witness, who are police officers, to unnecessary risk. Defendants also seek attorneys' fees and expenses incurred in moving for the protective order.

Plaintiff has filed a response to the Motion, indicating that he will agree not [to] publish or disseminate the videotaped depositions until after conclusion of the jury trial or other adjudication of the case, but he objects to a protective order that grants "broad post-trial restraint." Plaintiff asserts that he has a First Amendment right to use the depositions and that right should not be unnecessarily restricted.

Defendants have submitted a reply memorandum in which they argue that they are not asking the Court to limit Plaintiff's right to use the information in the depositions. They simply do not want the videotapes themselves to be published. They reiterate concerns for their safety and argue that a protective order is necessary to ensure that approval is obtained from the Court before the depositions are published to the general public. Defendants point out that the depositions were taken for discovery purposes and may never become a part of the public record….

A court may issue a protective order controlling the publication of discovery materials pursuant to Rule 26(c) if the moving party demonstrates good cause. Plaintiff's counsel has agreed not to publish or disseminate the videotaped depositions while the case is pending. Given the safety concerns expressed by the defendants, and because the publication of these depositions may taint the jury pool in case of a jury trial, especially seeing as Plaintiff's counsel's YouTube channel has viewers in West Virginia and Putnam County, Defendants have demonstrated good cause for issuing the protective order.

However, the Court currently is not in a position to determine whether the protective order should terminate upon adjudication of the case, as that determination depends upon factors not yet known. The issue may become moot, as it is possible that the parties will agree not to publish the videotaped depositions as part of a compromise and settlement. —. See Seattle Times v. Rhinehart (1984) (analyzing the First Amendment implications of a protective order barring dissemination of discovery materials not part of the public record). Thus, the Court will not place an expiration date on the protective order.

Since both parties agree that the videotaped depositions will not be published during the litigation, it is simplest for the order to remain in place indefinitely. Once the case is tried, settled, or otherwise dismissed, Plaintiff can move to vacate the protective order, and the matter can be reconsidered at that time.

Contrary to Plaintiff's assertions, this protective order is not an unconstitutional prior restraint on speech. Id. ("[A]n order prohibiting dissemination of discovered information before trial is not the kind of classic prior restraint that requires exacting First Amendment scrutiny."). Though Plaintiff cites Seattle Times for the proposition that these kinds of protective orders require First Amendment analysis, the Supreme Court's opinion in Seattle Times stresses that courts must have discretion in fashioning protective orders to prevent abuse of the discovery process, which may uncover information only tangentially related to the pending case.

The Supreme Court explicitly stated that a protective order supported by good cause and limited to pretrial civil discovery, without restricting dissemination of information found in other sources, does not offend the First Amendment. The protective order issued here complies with that description in Seattle Times and is therefore constitutional.

Congratulations to Sandra Henson Kinney (Lewis Glasser PLLC), who represents the police officers.