United States v. Erie County , 763 F.3d 235 ( 2014 )


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  •      13-3653
    United States v. Erie County
    1                                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    2
    3                                       FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    4
    5                                  ____________________________________
    6
    7                                           August Term, 2013
    8
    9      (Argued:      June 18, 2014                                       Decided: August 18, 2014)
    10
    11                                           Docket No. 13-3653-cv
    12                                  ____________________________________
    13
    14                                     UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    15
    16                                            Plaintiff-Appellee,
    17
    18                                                    v.
    19
    20                                       ERIE COUNTY, NEW YORK,
    21
    22                                           Defendant-Appellee,
    23
    24                                                    v.
    25
    26                            NEW YORK CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION (NYCLU),
    27
    28                                           Intervenor-Appellant.
    29
    30                                  ____________________________________
    31
    32                      Before: CALABRESI, PARKER, and LYNCH, Circuit Judges.
    33
    34                                  ____________________________________
    35
    36
    37           The United States brought an action against Erie County, alleging that two of the
    38   County’s correctional facilities violated the federal constitutional rights of their inmates. The
    39   action was settled. Pursuant to the stipulated order of dismissal, the parties agreed that
    1
    1   compliance consultants were to prepare reports measuring the County’s progress in improving
    2   conditions in the correctional facilities. The reports were to be filed with the district court, which
    3   retained jurisdiction over the matter. The district court (Skretny, C.J.) allowed those reports to be
    4   filed under seal, and the New York Civil Liberties Union (“NYCLU”) sought to intervene in
    5   order to have the reports unsealed. The district court allowed NYCLU to intervene, but denied its
    6   motion to unseal the reports. We reverse this denial, and hold that the First Amendment requires
    7   public access to the reports.
    8                                          ERIN ASLAN (Mark L. Gross, on the brief), for Jocelyn
    9                                          Samuels, Acting Assistant Attorney General, U.S.
    10                                          Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., for Plaintiff-
    11                                          Appellee.
    12
    13                                          MICHELLE M. PARKER, for Michael A. Siragusa, Erie
    14                                          County Attorney, Buffalo, N.Y., for Defendant-Appellee.
    15
    16                                          ALEXIS KARTERTON (Arthur Eisenberg, Jordan Wells,
    17                                          Christopher Dunn, on the brief), New York Civil Liberties
    18                                          Union, New York, N.Y., for Intervenor-Appellant.
    19
    20
    21   CALABRESI, Circuit Judge:
    22          This case is about public access to judicial documents.1 The documents in this case are
    23   compliance reports, filed with the district court pursuant to a settlement agreement between the
    24   United States and Erie County. The reports measure Erie County’s progress in improving the
    25   conditions of its prisons, which the United States alleged violated the Fourteenth and Eighth
    26   Amendments of the Constitution in the suit that led to the settlement agreement. If the reports
    1
    1             Whether an equivalent right exists in other cases involving other government
    2   institutions is not before us, and we therefore express no view on that subject.
    2
    1   show that Erie County is failing to fulfill the conditions outlined in the settlement’s stipulated
    2   order of dismissal, the United States is empowered to bring an enforcement proceeding, and the
    3   district court can provide “any relief permitted by law or equity.” Joint App’x at 219.
    4          Today, we hold that the public’s fundamental right of access to judicial documents,
    5   guaranteed by the First Amendment, was wrongly denied when the compliance reports in this
    6   case were sealed. Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s decision, and order that the judicial
    7   documents be unsealed.
    8                                                     I.
    9          Following a two-year investigation into the conditions of confinement at two Erie County
    10   correctional facilities, the United States brought an action in the Western District of New York
    11   against Erie County and several of its officials.2 The action, filed in September of 2009, alleged
    12   that the conditions at the Erie County facilities violated the federal constitutional rights of the
    13   inmates housed there by failing (a) to protect them from harm, (b) to provide adequate mental
    14   health care or medical care, and (c) to engage in adequate suicide prevention.
    15          In June of 2010, the District Court approved a partial settlement between the parties,
    16   which would resolve only the claims relating to suicide prevention. Pursuant to this agreement,
    17   the parties appointed a compliance officer, who would file with the Court reports measuring the
    18   extent to which Erie County was taking steps to prevent suicides.
    2
    1          The action was brought pursuant to the Civil Rights of Institutionalized Persons
    2   Act of 1980, 42 U.S.C. § 1997a et seq.
    3
    1           The United States’ other claims against Erie County remained. When Erie County moved
    2   to dismiss these claims, the District Court denied the motion but ordered the United States to file
    3   an amended complaint. The United States did so, alleging Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment
    4    violations for, inter alia, medical indifference, substandard mental health and medical care, and
    5    environmental health and safety failings.
    6           In August of 2011, the United States and Erie County proposed a settlement agreement to
    7    resolve these remaining claims. Under the agreement, the claims against the individual
    8   defendant-officials were dismissed, and while Erie County did not admit wrongdoing, it did
    9   agree to implement practices and procedures to remediate what the United States had contended
    10   were unconstitutional conditions of confinement.
    11          To ensure that the terms of the order were fulfilled, the settlement provided for the
    12   appointment of two compliance consultants. One would monitor mental health issues, and the
    13   other would oversee medical issues. 3 Every six months, the compliance consultants were to
    14   produce written reports—which are the focus of this litigation—outlining Erie County’s
    15   progress, or lack thereof, in remedying the issues that led to the suit and settlement. The reports
    16   were first to be given to the parties, who could provide comment, and were then to be filed with
    17   the District Court. The compliance consultants would report to the Court whether Erie County
    18   was in substantial compliance, partial compliance, or non-compliance with the settlement
    19   agreement.
    3
    1            Since the suicide prevention settlement was incorporated in this agreement, the
    2    above referenced compliance consultants would also replace the compliance officer
    3    selected under the initial suicide prevention settlement.
    4
    1          In an order entered later that August, the District Court agreed that the parties’ proposed
    2   stipulated settlement order satisfied the requirements for prospective relief under the Prison
    3   Litigation Reform Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3626(a)(1)(A), inasmuch as it was narrowly drawn and
    4   employed the least intrusive means to correct the alleged violations of the federal rights at issue.
    5   The Court therefore approved the stipulated order dismissing the government’s suit, but it also
    6   retained jurisdiction over the matter until the terms of the settlement were fulfilled.
    7          Importantly, the settlement agreement allows either party to move to reopen the case at
    8   any time “should issues requiring [the] Court's intervention arise.” Under such circumstances,
    9   the compliance reports would form the record for any appropriate enforcement action before the
    10   District Court. Should, for example, Erie County fail to abide by the settlement, the agreement
    11   provides that the Court is fully empowered to order “any relief permitted by law or equity.”
    12   Significantly, the agreement does not purport to preclude the District Court from providing such
    13   relief sua sponte if, on the basis of the reports, it finds non-compliance.
    14          After the first compliance report was produced, Erie County moved that the order be filed
    15   under seal. The United States did not oppose the motion, and the District Court granted it. The
    16   Court also permitted future sealing of the reports.
    17          In June of 2012, the New York Civil Liberties Union (“NYCLU”) moved to intervene
    18   and to unseal the compliance reports.4 The District Court granted NYCLU’s motion to intervene,
    19   but denied its motion to unseal the reports. United States v. Erie County, N.Y., No. 09-cv-849S,
    4
    1           NYCLU clarifies here that in intervening, it only seeks to unseal the compliance
    2   reports, and not Erie County’s own compliance records. See Intervenor-Appellant’s Br. at
    3   15 n.2.
    5
    1   
    2013 WL 4679070
    (W.D.N.Y. Aug. 30, 2013). In so deciding, the Court found that the
    2   compliance reports qualified as judicial documents, since they were filed with the Court in a
    3   matter over which the Court retained jurisdiction and since they were relevant to the Court’s
    4   exercise of judicial authority. 
    Id. at *8-11.
    It then considered whether, under the First
    5   Amendment or the common law, the presumption of public access that applies to such judicial
    6   documents would mandate unsealing, and concluded that it would not. 
    Id. at *12,
    *14.
    7          The Court first found that the reports, though judicial documents, were not within the
    8   subset of such documents entitled to a First Amendment right of access. The Court construed the
    9   compliance reports to be akin to settlement negotiation documents, and believing that they had
    10   little bearing on its own exercise of Article III power, it held that they were not the types of
    11   judicial documents that the First Amendment would require be made available to the public. 
    Id. 12 at
    *11-12.
    13          The Court also found that while the common law presumption of access was applicable
    14   to the reports, it was a weak presumption. 
    Id. at *13-14.
    Here, too, the reports were construed by
    15   the Court to be similar to settlement negotiation documents and, as such, subject to the need for
    16   the kind of frank discussion among the parties that might be diluted upon disclosure. On that
    17   basis, the Court determined that the common law presumption of access was overcome. 
    Id. 6 1
              Accordingly, the District Court denied NYCLU’s motion to unseal the compliance
    2    reports and declined to vacate its own standing order regarding the sealing of future reports. 5 
    Id. 3 at
    *15. NYCLU appeals.6
    4          We review the District Court’s decision for abuse of discretion, although, since the First
    5   Amendment is implicated, we give the documents and proceedings “close appellate scrutiny.”
    6   Newsday LLC v. County of Nassau, 
    730 F.3d 156
    , 163 (2d Cir. 2013). Indeed, in such cases, “we
    7   have traditionally undertaken an independent review of sealed documents, despite the fact that
    8   such a review may raise factual rather than legal issues.” 
    Id. 9 II.
    10          The notion that the public should have access to the proceedings and documents of courts
    11   is integral to our system of government. To ensure that ours is indeed a government of the
    12   people, by the people, and for the people, it is essential that the people themselves have the
    13   ability to learn of, monitor, and respond to the actions of their representatives and their
    14   representative institutions. This principle, as it applies to courts, has a long history. Indeed, the
    5
    1            Although the District Court’s decision on NYCLU’s motion to unseal the reports
    2    and vacate the standing order regarding the future sealing of reports is an interlocutory
    3    order, we have jurisdiction to review it pursuant to the collateral order doctrine. See
    4    generally United States v. Graham, 
    257 F.3d 143
    , 147 (2d Cir. 2001).
    6
    1            The United States has also filed a brief urging us to vacate the District Court’s
    2    order. Erie County argues that, while we may consider NYCLU’s argument, the United
    3    States’ brief is not properly before us since the United States did not file a notice of
    4    appeal. A notice of appeal, however, only needed to be filed by NYCLU, since it was the
    5    only party against whom the district court ruled. See Fed. R. App. P. 4(a). We therefore
    6    consider the United States’ arguments.
    7
    1   common law right of public access to judicial documents is said to predate even the Constitution
    2   itself. See United States v. Amodeo, 
    44 F.3d 141
    , 145 (2d Cir. 1995) (“Amodeo I”).
    3          As the common law right of public access has developed in this Circuit’s doctrine, our
    4   approach to determining whether a document is a judicial document, and therefore one presumed
    5   to be publicly accessible, has been to emphasize the role of the document in the judicial process.
    6   Thus, in order to decide whether a document is a judicial document protected by the common
    7   law right of access, this Court considers whether it is “relevant to the performance of the judicial
    8   function and useful in the judicial process.” Lugosch v. Pyramid Co. of Onondaga, 
    435 F.3d 110
    ,
    9   119 (2d Cir. 2006) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    10          If we find that a document is a judicial document and therefore that at least a common
    11   law presumption of access applies, we must “determine the weight” of the presumption of
    12   access. 
    Id. The weight
    to be given to the presumption of access is “governed by the role of the
    13   material at issue in the exercise of Article III judicial power and the resultant value of such
    14   information to those monitoring the federal courts.” United States v. Amodeo, 
    71 F.3d 1044
    ,
    15   1049 (2d Cir. 1995) (“Amodeo II ”). “Finally, after determining the weight of the presumption of
    16   access, the court must balance competing considerations against [disclosure].” Lugosch, 
    435 17 F.3d at 120
    (internal quotation marks omitted). Only when competing interests outweigh the
    18   presumption may access be denied. 
    Id. at 119-20.
    19          But, and in a sense more tellingly, our Constitution, and specifically the First
    20   Amendment to the Constitution, also protects the public’s right to have access to judicial
    21   documents. See Hartford Courant Co. v. Pellegrino, 
    380 F.3d 83
    , 91 (2d Cir. 2004). Indeed, the
    8
    1   First Amendment protection has been understood to be stronger than its common law ancestor
    2   and counterpart. 
    Id. To determine
    whether this First Amendment right attaches in circumstances
    3   such as the one before us, we look, first, to whether “experience and logic” support making the
    4   document available to the public. 
    Lugosch, 435 F.3d at 120
    . That is, we consider (a) whether the
    5   documents “have historically been open to the press and general public” (experience) and (b)
    6   whether “public access plays a significant positive role in the functioning of the particular
    7   process in question” (logic). 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    8          Once a First Amendment right of access to judicial documents is found, the documents
    9   “may be sealed [only] if specific, on the record findings are made demonstrating that closure is
    10   essential to preserve higher values and is narrowly tailored to serve that interest.” 
    Id. (internal 11
      quotation marks omitted). And, “[b]road and general findings by the trial court . . . are not
    12   sufficient to justify closure.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted).
    13                                                    III.
    14          Under our precedents, therefore, before determining whether the common law or First
    15   Amendment requires that the compliance reports be made accessible to the public, we must
    16   consider whether they indeed are judicial documents. See Amodeo 
    I, 44 F.3d at 145
    (common
    17   law); Hartford 
    Courant, 380 F.3d at 91-92
    (First Amendment). We hold, as did the District
    18   Court, that the reports are such documents.
    19          The focus of our analysis is on whether the compliance reports are “relevant to the
    20   performance of the judicial function and useful in the judicial process.” 
    Lugosch, 435 F.3d at 119
    9
    1   (quoting Amodeo 
    I, 44 F.3d at 145
    ). The conclusion that the reports fulfill this standard flows
    2   easily from our holding in Amodeo 
    I, 44 F.3d at 145
    -46. There, as here, the reports were filed
    3   with the District Court by an expert whose duties were to oversee compliance. 
    Id. While the
    4   reports in Amodeo I were prepared by a court-appointed officer pursuant to a consent decree, and
    5   the compliance consultants here were instead chosen by the parties and appointed pursuant to a
    6   settlement agreement, this distinction is of little importance. What matters is that the reports are
    7   filed with the District Court and become relevant to its judicial activities. That is, as in Amodeo
    8   I, the compliance reports would be considered by the Court for the purpose of ruling on an
    9   enforcement motion brought by either of the parties. 
    Id. at 146.
    10          Importantly, moreover, the compliance reports could form the basis for the District Court
    11   reinstating the civil proceedings sua sponte if the Court believes that the substance of the
    12   stipulated order of dismissal is not being fulfilled. The District Court “retains the power to
    13   enforce the Stipulated Order of Dismissal.” Joint App’x at 226. As a result, while the Court may
    14   be moved by one of the parties to enforce the terms of the order, its power to ensure the
    15   fulfillment of the terms of the stipulated order of dismissal is not contingent on such motions by
    16   the parties. See, e.g., Geller v. Branic Int'l Realty Corp., 
    212 F.3d 734
    , 737 (2d Cir. 2000)
    17   (holding that the district court has a “duty to enforce the stipulation that it has approved”);
    18   Meetings & Expositions, Inc. v. Tandy Corp., 
    490 F.2d 714
    , 717 (2d Cir. 1974) (per curiam)
    19   (holding that a stipulated order of settlement “was a consent to the exercise of the court’s power
    20   to compel compliance”); Limbright v. Hofmeister, 
    566 F.3d 672
    , 674-75 (6th Cir. 2009) (“A
    21   district court may rely on any basis of jurisdiction to summarily enforce a settlement agreement
    22   that produced the dismissal of an earlier federal suit.”); Blue Cross & Blue Shield Ass'n v. Am.
    10
    1    Express Co., 
    467 F.3d 634
    , 638 (7th Cir. 2006) (“As long as [28 U.S.C.] § 1332 supplies
    2    authority to decide, the court may act without a fresh complaint.”); cf. Kokkonen v. Guardian
    3    Life Ins. Co., 
    511 U.S. 375
    , 381 (1994) (noting that if the district court “‘retain[ed] jurisdiction’
    4    over the settlement agreement” then “a breach of the agreement would be a violation of the
    5    order, and ancillary jurisdiction to enforce the agreement would therefore exist”).
    6           The fact that the District Court has not yet acted sua sponte or adjudicated an
    7    enforcement action brought by the parties does not alter our analysis. The presumption of access
    8    to judicial documents is “based on the need for federal courts . . . to have a measure of
    9   accountability and for the public to have confidence in the administration of justice.” Amodeo II,
    
    10 71 F.3d at 1048
    . In light of the District Court’s inherent “supervisory power over its own records
    11   and files,” Nixon v. Warner Commc’ns, Inc., 
    435 U.S. 589
    , 597 (1978), even the District Court’s
    12   inaction is subject to public accountability. The public’s ability to scrutinize such judicial
    13   decision-making helps assure its confidence in the orderly administration of justice. If the reports
    14   show progress in compliance, the public can be confident that the judge’s failure to intervene is
    15   appropriate; if the reports show worsening conditions, legitimate questions could be raised about
    16   the court’s inaction.
    17          In light of the role of the compliance reports in any sua sponte action by the District
    18   Court, as well as in any enforcement action brought by the parties, the compliance reports are
    19   manifestly relevant to the District Court’s performance of its judicial function, and therefore are
    20   judicial documents.
    21
    11
    1                                                    IV.
    2          Having determined that the reports are judicial documents and therefore that at least a
    3   common law presumption of access applies to them, we would ordinarily continue with the
    4   common law analysis and determine the weight of the presumption and measure it against
    5   competing considerations. See 
    Lugosch, 435 F.3d at 119
    -20. This case, however, does not
    6   require such an approach. Since we find that the compliance reports are subject to a First
    7   Amendment right of access, which is stronger and can only be overcome under more stringent
    8   circumstances than the common law presumption, see infra Part VI, we need not, and do not,
    9   engage in such a common law analysis.
    
    10 Va. 11
             In this case, a trio of government bodies—Erie County, the Department of Justice, and
    12   the District Court for the Western District of New York—are involved in effectuating a
    13   settlement agreement to improve conditions at two public correctional institutions. Erie County
    14   wishes to keep the reports which measure its progress, or regress, under seal and, therefore, out
    15   of public view. Yet every aspect of this litigation is public. The United States Department of
    16   Justice is a public agency, which brought a claim before a public court, the District Court for the
    17   Western District of New York, arguing that a public government, Erie County, failed to meet
    18   constitutional requirements in operating two public institutions, the Erie County correctional
    19   facilities. And, critically, although a settlement is now in place, the public court retains
    20   jurisdiction over the dispute, and indeed may be moved, or move itself, to reinstitute civil
    21   proceedings. In a case where every aspect and angle is public, Erie County seeks, nonetheless, to
    12
    1   keep the compliance reports under the darkness of a seal. But the First Amendment does not
    2   countenance Erie County’s position. Neither experience nor logic supports sealing the
    3   documents, and the District Court erred in concluding otherwise.
    
    4 A. 5
             In considering “experience,” we focus on whether the documents are ones that “have
    6   historically been open to the press and general public.” Hartford 
    Courant, 380 F.3d at 92
    7   (internal quotation marks omitted). First, as a baseline matter, we note that the notion of public
    8   access to judicial documents is a capacious one: the courts of this country have long recognized a
    9   “general right to inspect and copy public records and documents, including judicial records and
    10   documents” in part because the public has an interest in “keep[ing] a watchful eye on the
    11   workings of public agencies.” Nixon v. Warner Commc’ns, Inc., 
    435 U.S. 589
    , 597-98 (1978).
    12          Second, NYCLU points to several instances where reports like the ones at hand have
    13   been accessible to the public. It cites ongoing cases in district courts across the country where
    14   the reports of monitors appointed pursuant to consent decrees and settlement agreements in
    15   institutional-change litigation are publicly available. See, e.g., United States v. State of New
    16   York, No. 10-cv-858 (N.D.N.Y. filed July 14, 2010) (settlement agreement appointing monitors);
    17   United States v. City of New York, No. 10-cv-0060 (E.D.N.Y. filed Jan. 7, 2010) (consent
    18   judgment appointing monitors); United States v. Cook County, No. 10-cv-029460 (N.D. Ill. filed
    19   Dec. 3, 2013) (settlement agreement appointing monitors); Harper v. Fulton County, No. 04-cv-
    20   1416 (N.D. Ga. filed Oct. 21, 2013) (consent order approving settlement and appointing
    21   monitors). NYCLU also notes that the Supreme Court, in Brown v. Plata, 
    131 S. Ct. 1910
    , 1924-
    13
    1   25 (2011), a case about the constitutional rights of prisoners, relied on publicly available reports
    2   regarding California’s compliance with consent decrees.
    3          In light of these precedents making available the reports of monitors in institutional-
    4   change litigation and settlements, and especially those involving settlement agreements such as
    5   the one here, it is clear to us that “experience” supports unsealing the reports in this case.7
    
    6 Barb. 7
             We also find that logic bears out this experience, since “public access plays a significant
    8   positive role in the functioning of the particular process in question.” 
    Lugosch, 435 F.3d at 120
    9   (internal quotation marks omitted). The issues involved are manifestly ones of public concern
    10   and therefore ones which the public has an interest in overseeing. As the Supreme Court
    11   succinctly put it, the “conditions in this Nation’s prisons are a matter that is both newsworthy
    12   and of great importance.” Pell v. Procunier, 
    417 U.S. 817
    , 830 n.7 (1974). Moreover, the
    7
    1           Erie County argues that, since NYCLU did not raise this “argument” below, we
    2   may not consider the fact that an early report pursuant to the suicide prevention
    3   agreement was made available to the public. While the fact that this report was made
    4   publicly available is not needed for our holding, and hence is not listed among the
    5   “experience” examples in the text, we pause to note that Erie County misunderstands our
    6   law in this regard. We may, and often do, decline to consider new arguments on appeal.
    7   See, e.g., United States v. Lauersen, 
    648 F.3d 115
    , 115 (2d Cir. 2011) (per curiam)
    8   (declining “to address the arguments” raised for the first time on appeal). But NYCLU’s
    9   argument—that experience supports unsealing the reports—is not new on appeal; it was
    10   powerfully made below. On appeal, NYCLU offers an additional fact in support of that
    11   argument: that one such report was made available pursuant to the previous agreement.
    12   This fact, readily available in the record below, is one that we could properly consider if
    13   we wished.
    14           Similarly, NYCLU’s reference to other cases where the reports of monitors have
    15   made been available to the public is not, as Erie County again argues, a new argument
    16   made on appeal. Instead, it is an appropriate citation to authority, which is germane to,
    17   and part of, NYCLU’s First Amendment argument, made both here and below.
    14
    1   public’s interest is one that directly relates to the “functioning of governmental processes.”
    2   Press-Enter. Co. v. Super. Ct. of California, 
    478 U.S. 1
    , 9 (1986). Access to the compliance
    3   reports enables the public to understand, monitor, and respond to the progress made towards
    4   altering what the Department of Justice, as enforcer of the nation’s laws, alleged were
    5   unconstitutional conditions in Erie County correctional facilities. Access also permits the public
    6   to evaluate the Court’s role in overseeing that progress. In short, access enables the public to
    7   decide whether the Court and the parties—all governmental entities—are doing their jobs in
    8   fulfilling the terms of the settlement agreement.
    9          In this sense, allowing public access to the documents that inform judicial decisions
    10   reminds judges, in the exercise of their power, of the sovereign body which authorizes that
    11   power. See, e.g., Amodeo 
    II, 71 F.3d at 1048
    (“Monitoring both provides judges with critical
    12   views of their work and deters arbitrary judicial behavior.”). These principles apply directly to
    13   this case. The United States District Court, and indeed the United States Department of Justice,
    14   will read the compliance reports and decide whether or not the terms of the stipulated order are
    15   being fulfilled, and if not, what action to take. As these public bodies exercise discretion and
    16   authority, it is important that they know that the public has access to the documents which form
    17   the basis of their decisions.
    18          We therefore hold, in light (i) of the practice of providing access to reports such as these
    19   and (ii) of the logic of democratic monitoring of judicial processes, that the First Amendment
    20   right of access applies to the compliance reports at issue in this case.
    21
    15
    1                                                      VI.
    2          Recognizing that the First Amendment applies and protects the public’s right of access
    3   does not end the matter, however. Our precedents hold that even this right can be overcome by
    4   “specific, on-the-record findings that higher values necessitate a narrowly tailored sealing.”
    5   
    Lugosch, 435 F.3d at 126
    .
    6          The District Court did not find that a First Amendment right attached and hence did not
    7   consider whether it could be overcome in this instance. Accordingly, we would ordinarily
    8   remand this question to that Court to engage in whatever additional fact-finding was needed for
    9   its resolution. See 
    id., 435 F.3d
    at 126-27. And this is what the United States, in its brief,
    10   recommends that we do. See United States of America Br. at 22.
    11          At oral argument, however, Erie County conceded that it would have nothing to offer
    12   before the District Court that it had not already proffered. In light of this concession, we take it
    13   as given that we have Erie County’s full array of facts and arguments in favor of a narrowly
    14   tailored sealing of the compliance reports. We are therefore able to consider the issue directly.
    15   Doing so, we conclude that the County’s arguments, and the facts upon which they are premised,
    16   cannot justify even a narrowly tailored sealing.
    17          In attempting to keep the reports sealed despite their First Amendment protection, the
    18   County posits a supervening need for frank, and hence confidential, discussions among the
    19   parties. In doing so, it analogizes this case to ones involving settlement negotiations. But that
    20   argument ignores the crucial fact that, in the case before us, a settlement has already been
    16
    1   reached. As the Department of Justice points out, unlike the documents sought in United States
    2   v. Glens Falls Newspapers, Inc., 
    160 F.3d 853
    , 854 (2d Cir. 1998)—which included draft
    3   settlement agreements and attorney work product produced in preparation for settlement—the
    4   compliance reports are not documents made in preparation for settlement. In this case, settlement
    5   has long since been achieved. And many of the privacy concerns that inhere in pre-settlement
    6   negotiations simply do not apply. Thus, to mention just two, there is here no issue of attorney-
    7   client confidentiality or of divulging strategy.
    8           Significantly, Erie County, in basing its sealing argument only on the aforementioned
    9   settlement contention, does not invoke “privacy interests,” In re New York Times Co., 
    828 F.2d 10
      110, 116 (2d Cir. 1987), or safety concerns, see 
    Lugosch, 435 F.3d at 120
    , or for that matter, any
    11   other value that plausibly might be construed as being “higher” than the First Amendment values
    12   at stake.
    13           On the basis of this record, we therefore find that the First Amendment right of access
    14   has not been overcome, and recognizing the “importance of immediate access where a right to
    15   access is found,” 
    id. at 126,
    we reverse the District Court’s decision and order that the reports be
    16   unsealed forthwith. 8
    17
    18
    8
    1           In so ordering, we do not, of course, exclude the possibility that the District Court
    2   may determine that some redactions may be necessary upon unsealing. See Amodeo I, 
    44 3 F.3d at 147
    . At argument, NYCLU conceded as much. For example, redacting medical
    4   information identifiable to particular prisoners would be especially appropriate.
    17
    1                                           CONCLUSION
    2          We REVERSE the District Court’s decision to keep the compliance reports under seal and
    3   VACATE its standing order that permitted future reports to be sealed.
    18