In re 38 Studios Grand Jury ( 2020 )


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  • Issued February 19, 2020
    Issued February 19, 2020
    Corrected February 20,2020
    Supreme Court
    No. 2017-301-Appeal.
    (PM 17-701)
    :
    In re 38 Studios Grand Jury.           :
    :
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in
    the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Opinion
    Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250 Benefit Street, Providence,
    Rhode Island 02903, at Tel. 222-3258 of any typographical or other formal
    errors in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published.
    Supreme Court
    No. 2017-301-Appeal.
    (PM 17-701)
    In re 38 Studios Grand Jury.             :
    Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.
    OPINION
    Justice Flaherty, for the Court. In this controversy, two constitutional officers of this
    state, the Governor and the Attorney General, present us with conflicting views about whether
    certain grand jury materials should become available to the public or whether, in the alternative,
    those materials should be protected from public view in accordance with existing court rules and
    centuries of cautious precedent. The Governor and the Attorney General have both vigorously and
    articulately argued their positions as each sees her or his constitutional responsibilities. In essence,
    the question presented to this Court is: Is the Superior Court vested with the “inherent supervisory
    authority” to order the public disclosure of grand jury materials—materials that are generally kept
    secret—from a grand jury that adjourned less than five years ago, that could potentially be
    reopened, and that dealt with events for which the potentially relevant statute of limitations has
    not yet run? In her official capacity, Governor Gina M. Raimondo asks this Court to answer that
    question in the affirmative on appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court that answered the
    -1-
    question in the negative. For the reasons set forth in this opinion, this Court affirms the judgment
    of the Superior Court.
    I
    Facts and Travel
    There can be no question that the Governor’s appeal involves a matter of intense public
    concern with which many, if not most, Rhode Islanders are familiar. In 2010, the Economic
    Development Corporation (EDC), a quasi-public corporation created by the Rhode Island General
    Assembly, issued $75 million in bonds to guarantee loans for 38 Studios, a video game company
    headed by former Boston Red Sox World Series hero Curt Schilling. As is painfully well-known,
    just two years later 38 Studios failed and did not honor its obligation to repay the bonds, leaving
    the taxpayers of Rhode Island to foot an $88 million bill. 1
    In 2012, a statewide grand jury convened to investigate the possibility of potential
    criminality in connection with the 38 Studios deal. That grand jury sat for eighteen months and,
    as has been confirmed by the Attorney General, completed its work in 2015. During the course of
    the investigation, which began before the convening of the grand jury, approximately 146
    individuals, including members of the 2010 General Assembly, were interviewed or called to
    testify before the grand jury. However, at the conclusion of the grand jury investigation, in a joint
    statement, the Attorney General and the Rhode Island State Police announced that there were not
    any “provable criminal violations of the Rhode Island General [L]aws in connection with the
    funding of 38 Studios, the disbursement of funds to 38 Studios, and by 38 Studios to vendors.”
    1
    As is explained later in this opinion, the state initiated litigation against a host of what it regarded
    as responsible parties and recovered over $61 million in settlements.
    -2-
    Independent of the grand jury investigation, the state initiated civil litigation against
    persons and entities that had been involved in the 38 Studios deal. The settlements recovered in
    excess of $61 million for taxpayers, and hundreds of thousands of documents produced during the
    course of litigation were made public. Following the close of the civil litigation, the Governor
    filed a miscellaneous petition in the Superior Court in February 2017, seeking “the release of all
    38 Studios Grand Jury Records[.]”
    To support her petition, the Governor argued: (1) that the Superior Court, in exceptional
    circumstances, has the discretion to release grand jury materials; (2) that exceptional circumstances
    exist; and (3) that the need for grand jury secrecy is outweighed by those exceptional
    circumstances. The Attorney General opposed the Governor’s petition. The Presiding Justice of
    the Superior Court heard the petition in April 2017, and thereafter rendered a thorough twenty-
    four-page written decision in which she determined that, because the Governor was not seeking
    disclosure pursuant to Rule 6(e) of the Superior Court Rules of Criminal Procedure, which governs
    grand jury secrecy and permits disclosure of grand jury materials in certain enumerated instances,
    she was without authority to grant the Governor’s petition. However, although she founded her
    ruling on the Rules of Criminal Procedure, the Presiding Justice also conducted alternative
    analyses and ruled that, even if the Superior Court had the authority to go beyond Rule 6(e) to
    allow disclosure of the grand jury materials requested, the grand jury materials in this case should
    not be disclosed because the Governor had failed to demonstrate a particularized need for the
    information requested and, separately, because policy factors that courts consider when
    -3-
    determining if grand jury disclosure is appropriate did not support disclosure in this case.
    Judgment therefore entered denying the petition, and the Governor timely appealed. 2
    Before this Court, the Governor asserts that it was error for the Presiding Justice to read
    Rule 6(e) as the sole avenue by which grand jury materials may be disclosed. She argues that,
    beyond the specific provisions of Rule 6(e), the Superior Court is cloaked with the “inherent
    authority” to disclose the material that she has requested. The Governor also contends that the
    Presiding Justice erred when she engaged in alternative analyses. In this regard, the Governor
    maintains that the Presiding Justice should not have applied the “particularized need” test to the
    petition for disclosure because that test applies only when evaluating a request for disclosure
    pursuant to Rule 6(e). Further, the Governor argues that the Presiding Justice abused her discretion
    when she determined, in the Governor’s words, “that the Governor’s disclosure request failed to
    meet factors in favor of the release of grand jury material.”
    II
    Discussion
    This case raises a weighty question of first impression in this jurisdiction. That is, whether
    the Superior Court has inherent authority to disclose grand jury materials beyond the parameters
    of the permitted disclosures that are set forth in Rule 6(e) of the Superior Court Rules of Criminal
    Procedure. This question is of grave importance because it concerns an institution that plays a
    critical role in our criminal justice system. Indeed, it often has been said that the grand jury “serves
    the dual function of determining if there is probable cause to believe that a crime has been
    2
    We granted a motion by the American Civil Liberties Union of Rhode Island, Common Cause
    Rhode Island, The New England First Amendment Coalition, and the Rhode Island Press
    Association to file a brief as amicus curiae in support of the Governor’s petition. We have found
    that brief to be thoughtful and scholarly, and we thank the amici for their participation.
    -4-
    committed and of protecting citizens against unfounded criminal prosecutions.” In re Doe, 
    717 A.2d 1129
    , 1134 (R.I. 1998) (quoting United States v. Sells Engineering, Inc., 
    463 U.S. 418
    , 423
    (1983)). Despite these important roles, however, it remains true that the function of the modern-
    day grand jury is not well known, even to many lawyers. See Paul S. Diamond, Federal Grand
    Jury Practice & Procedure § 1.01 at 1 (5th ed. 2012).
    In Rhode Island, there exist both county and statewide grand juries. See G.L. 1956 chapters
    11 and 11.1 of title 12. An individual in Rhode Island cannot be tried on any felony carrying a
    maximum penalty of life imprisonment without an indictment having been issued by a grand jury.
    R.I. Const., art. 1, § 7; Super. R. Crim. P. 7(a). Grand juries not only pass on whether to indict
    those charged or suspected of serious crimes, but they also serve an investigatory function. See
    State v. Guido, 
    698 A.2d 729
    , 735 (R.I. 1997) (discussing the grand jury’s “interrelated but distinct
    functions” of investigation and indicting). A prosecutor who presents evidence and witnesses
    before the grand jury has the power to, “in practice, select the witnesses to be subpoenaed to appear
    before the grand jury and generally direct the investigation.”
    Id. at 736
    (quoting In re Melvin, 
    546 F.2d 1
    , 5 (1st Cir. 1976)). The prosecutor presents the evidence, and the relevant law, to the grand
    jury and may ultimately ask the grand jury to vote on an indictment. See Super. R. Crim. P. 6(f)
    (“An indictment may be found only upon the concurrence of twelve (12) or more jurors and shall
    be signed by each juror who concurred in the finding.”).
    In some cases, the prosecutor will have all of the information that he or she requires for an
    indictment readily available. Those types of cases would most commonly involve criminal
    offenses that require indictment by a grand jury, those that, as mentioned above, carry a maximum
    sentence of life imprisonment. That type of grand jury, which does not conduct an investigation
    but rather acts on a request to issue an indictment, is known as an “indicting grand jury.” 1 Sara
    -5-
    Sun Beale, Grand Jury Law and Practice § 1:7 at 31 (2d ed. 2018). In other cases, however, the
    state may be uncertain as to whether proof of criminal conduct exists; in that situation, it will use
    the grand jury to compel witness testimony and receive evidence to determine whether provable
    criminal conduct has taken place. See
    id. at 32-33
    (discussing the utility of the investigative grand
    jury and noting that it “is particularly well-suited to investigating business crime, political
    corruption, organized crime, and other criminal activity where there is no identifiable victim to
    report the offense and help investigative agencies”). When the government employs a grand jury
    in this way, it is commonly referred to as an “investigative grand jury.”
    Id. at 31.
    Of course, after
    the completion of the investigation, if the government believes that there is sufficient evidence of
    provable criminal conduct, it will ask the grand jury to vote on whether to indict. If an indictment
    is returned, the case is charged and proceeds to trial or other disposition.
    A grand jury that hears evidence, and that may be asked by the government to vote on
    indictments, is made up of between thirteen and twenty-three individuals who are selected at
    random from the general public. Sections 12-11.1-1 and 12-11.1-4; see G.L. 1956 § 9-9-1.1.
    Indeed, any person who is a citizen of the United States, resides in Rhode Island, is at least eighteen
    years of age, is able to understand and participate in the proceedings, and is capable of performing
    the duties of a juror is qualified to serve. Section 9-9-1.1. As such, the process is considerably
    democratic and affords targets of the grand jury the protection that accompanies review by their
    fellow citizens. However, and as previously discussed, the grand jury also affords the government
    considerable powers; if it suspects criminal activity, the government can hale witnesses and
    evidence before the grand jury in an inquisitorial fashion. See 
    Guido, 698 A.2d at 735
    (“[T]he
    grand jury may compel the production of evidence or the testimony of witnesses as it considers
    appropriate, and its operation generally is unrestrained by the technical procedural and evidentiary
    -6-
    rules governing the conduct of criminal trials.” (quoting United States v. Calandra, 
    414 U.S. 338
    ,
    343 (1974))). Importantly, and unlike the more familiar petit jury of twelve, unanimity is not
    required of a grand jury. See Super. R. Crim. P. 6(f).
    In order to better understand the “dual function” of the grand jury, and to better evaluate
    the Governor’s request to release the 38 Studios grand jury material, we will provide an overview
    of the history of the institution.
    A
    A Brief History of the Grand Jury and the Modern Secrecy Rule
    English Roots
    The history of the grand jury begins in England nearly a millennium ago during the twelfth
    century. King Henry II, in the enactment known as the Assize of Clarendon, established the initial
    form of the grand jury. Richard H. Helmholz, The Early History of the Grand Jury and the Canon
    Law, 50 U. Chi. L. Rev. 613, 613 (1983); Susan M. Schiappa, Preserving the Autonomy and
    Function of the Grand Jury: United States v. Williams, 43 Cath. U.L. Rev. 311, 324-25 (1993). 3
    In its early form, the grand jury was made up of twelve men from each township who charged the
    accused in place of the victim. Schiappa, 43 Cath. U.L. Rev. at 325. Far from being a bastion
    against unfounded accusations, it has been said that: “The repressive nature of the medieval grand
    jury cannot reasonably be questioned.” Diamond, supra, § 1.01 at 3. Indeed, the system as initially
    established was instituted as a means of increasing the power of the Crown, relative to the church
    and the nobility, and to raise money, because it was the King who received the resulting fines and
    3
    Historically, an assize could refer to a number of things, including “[a] session of a court or
    council” or “[a] law enacted by such a body[.]” Black’s Law Dictionary 150 (11th ed. 2019).
    Specifically, the Assize of Clarendon was “[a] decree issued in 1166 by Henry II to the justices in
    eyre and sheriffs concerning criminal procedure.”
    Id. at 151.
    -7-
    forfeitures. Mark Kadish, Behind the Locked Door of an American Grand Jury: Its History, Its
    Secrecy, and Its Process, 24 Fla. St. U.L. Rev. 1, 6 (1996); Schiappa, 43 Cath. U.L. Rev. at 326,
    326 n.76. In fact, “[i]f the jurors failed to accuse a ‘known’ criminal, they were heavily fined.”
    Diamond, supra, § 1.01 at 3. 4 Ominously, accusal by a grand jury was often followed by trial by
    ordeal; as such, “a grand jury’s accusation was tantamount to a finding of guilt.”
    Id., § 1.01
    at 4;
    see Kadish, 24 Fla. St. U.L. Rev. at 6-7; Schiappa, 43 Cath. U.L. Rev. at 325 n.71. 5
    By 1215, however, the incipient building blocks of due process were laid when King John
    signed the Magna Carta. Kadish, 24 Fla. St. U.L. Rev. at 7. Although the Magna Carta did not
    specifically refer to the grand jury, “[i]t did * * * introduce the concept of due process against
    which any procedural practice [of the day] must be measured.”
    Id. Then, by
    the fourteenth century,
    during the reign of Edward III, the process of criminal prosecution in England morphed once again.
    Id. at 8.
    The role of the twelve men who, under the reign of King Henry II, would have made
    accusations that were essentially confirmed by trial by ordeal, was altered.
    Id. The accusatorial
    role was, instead, assumed by twenty-four knights who were selected by the county sheriff.
    Id. The twelve
    men previously responsible for accusations now functioned to return a verdict in cases
    of capital crime.
    Id. This body
    of twelve was called the petit jury.
    Id. Accusation in
    a grand jury
    followed by trial by petit jury is reflective of the course of criminal prosecution today.
    Nevertheless, that does not mean that, in those early days, criminal justice included the protections
    4
    Professor Helmholz clarifies that, under the Assize, “sworn men of the inquest were asked not to
    accuse anyone * * * but to give voice to common fame[.]” Richard H. Helmholz, The Early History
    of the Grand Jury and the Canon Law, 50 U. Chi. L. Rev. 613, 616-17 (1983).
    5
    In one odd rendition of trial by ordeal, an accused would be made to swallow a piece of bread or
    cheese whole. Susan M. Schiappa, Preserving the Autonomy and Function of the Grand Jury:
    United States v. Williams, 43 Cath. U.L. Rev. 311, 324 n.68 (1993). Only if the accused did not
    choke to death would he be found not guilty.
    Id. The extent
    of usage of this particular ordeal is
    unclear; however, the use of water to try the accused seems to have been the preferred method. See
    id. at 325
    n.71; Helmholz, 50 U. Chi. L. Rev. at 617.
    -8-
    that we enjoy today. If the King was displeased, he could fine or imprison jury members who
    failed to convict—and he often did.
    Id. at 8-9.
    It was “[n]ot until the 17th century * * * [that] the English grand jury earn[ed] its reputation
    as a body that not only accused the guilty, but also shielded the innocent from unfounded charges.”
    Beale, supra, § 1:2 at 9. As early as 1642, Lord Coke, the famous English jurist, interpreted the
    Magna Carta as requiring “indictment or presentment of good and lawful men.” 6
    Id. Later, in
    1681, two separate London grand juries, despite facing significant pressure from the Catholic-
    leaning King Charles II, declined to indict two of the King’s Protestant enemies for treason. See
    id., § 1:2
    at 9-10; Diamond, supra, § 1.01 at 4; Schiappa, 43 Cath. U.L. Rev. at 327. Undaunted,
    the Crown empaneled a grand jury from a different county, resulting in the indictment of one of
    the King’s Protestant targets, who was ultimately tried and executed. See
    id., § 1:2
    at 10; Diamond,
    supra, § 1.01 at 5-6. The other target fled into exile. See id.; Diamond, supra, § 1.01 at 5-6. Even
    in the face of these outcomes, “the London grand juries’ refusal to indict in these cases was hailed
    as a demonstration that the grand jury was one of the chief safeguards of the liberty of
    Englishmen.”
    Id. America The
    grand jury was used for instituting criminal charges in all the English colonies in
    America. Beale, supra, § 1:3 at 11. In Rhode Island, for example, a grand jury was first empaneled
    nearly four hundred years ago, in 1640. 7
    Id., § 1:3
    at 12. Although it might be true that the grand
    6
    Lord Coke famously wrote in 1604 that “the house of every one is to him as his * * * castle and
    fortress[.]” Semayne’s Case (1604) 77 Eng. Rep. 194, 195; 5 Co. Rep. 91 a, 91 b. In addition, the
    phrase engraved above the bench of this Court: NON SUB HOMINE SED SUB DEO ET LEGE
    (meaning: Not under man but under God and Law), can also be traced back to Lord Coke, who, in
    1607, attributed a variation of this phrase to Lord Bracton. Prohibitions Del Roy (1607) 77 Eng.
    Rep. 1342, 1343, 12 Co. Rep. 63, 65.
    7
    This was a mere four years after Roger Williams founded Providence in 1636.
    -9-
    jury the colonists inherited from the mother country was “a governmental body by which the
    sovereign could enforce his will[,]” Diamond, supra, § 1.02 at 6, nonetheless, during the
    Revolutionary period some grand juries in the colonies “frustrated the efforts of royal officials to
    enforce unpopular laws.” Beale, supra, § 1:3 at 14. In Massachusetts, for example, a grand jury
    refused to indict the Boston Gazette for libel against the governor.
    Id. In New
    York, multiple
    grand juries similarly refused to indict publisher John Peter Zenger, of the New York Weekly
    Journal, for libel against the governor of that colony. Id.; Schiappa, 43 Cath. U.L. Rev. at 329.
    After this country had achieved independence, the tradition of using the grand jury for the
    bringing of criminal charges continued. Beale, supra, § 1:4 at 15-16. The former colonists’
    experiences with grand juries during the Revolution, as well as the English legal sources that the
    colonists had available to them, influenced the founders of the new state governments.
    Id., § 1:4
    at 16. Those sources, from Lord Coke to William Blackstone, “uniformly focused on the grand
    jury’s role in protecting suspects against malicious and unfounded accusations.”
    Id. It is
    true that
    the grand jury was not provided for in the United States Constitution when it was adopted, but by
    1791, the Fifth Amendment had been ratified. See
    id., § 1:4
    at 19; Kadish, 24 Fla. St. U.L. Rev. at
    11-12. That Amendment provides in part that: “No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or
    otherwise infamous crime, unless on presentment or indictment of a grand jury[.]” U.S. Const.
    Amend. V. The United States Supreme Court has, since at least the nineteenth century, described
    the grand jury as an institution “designed as a means, not only of bringing to trial persons accused
    of public offenses upon just grounds, but also as a means of protecting the citizen against
    unfounded accusation[.]” Ex parte Bain, 
    121 U.S. 1
    , 11 (1887) (quoting In re Charge to Grand
    Jury, 
    30 F. Cas. 992
    , 993 (C.C.D. Cal. 1872)).
    - 10 -
    Secrecy
    Of course, lying at the heart of this dispute is not the general history of the grand jury, but
    the specific history and tradition of grand jury secrecy. It should be recognized that, as the grand
    jury evolved, the tradition of grand jury secrecy was born. See Kadish, 24 Fla. St. U.L. Rev. at 12-
    13. The oath that members of the grand jury were required to take did not include a vow of secrecy
    until the fourteenth century.
    Id. at 13.
    However, by the seventeenth century, the oath that was
    administered to grand jurors was similar to the oath in use in the 1940s, when the Federal Rules of
    Criminal Procedure were established.
    Id. at 13-14.
            One eminent legal scholar of the late
    seventeenth century, John Somers, explained that there were five reasons behind grand jury
    secrecy: to prevent criminals from fleeing; to determine whether witnesses were biased; to prevent
    judicial oversight; to enhance the truth-finding process; and to allow for the evidence to be fully
    developed.
    Id. at 14-15.
    Somers explained that, even though those benefits were for the King’s
    interest, secrecy also had the effect of protecting the innocent accused.
    Id. at 15-16.
    That notion—that confidentiality benefited those who were brought before the grand
    jury—soon took root in the United States. For example, in an early and influential charge to a
    grand jury in the District of California in 1872, Circuit Justice Stephen Johnson Field, who would
    later serve on the United States Supreme Court, said:
    “You are * * * to keep your own deliberations secret; you are not at
    liberty even to state that you have had a matter under consideration.
    Great injustice and injury might be done to the good name and
    standing of a citizen if it were known that there had ever been before
    you for deliberation the question of his guilt or innocence of a public
    offense.” In re Charge to Grand 
    Jury, 30 F. Cas. at 995
    .
    In Rhode Island, albeit in a federal rather than a state court, the reasons for grand jury
    secrecy were expounded upon in a 1917 case decided by United States District Court Judge Arthur
    Lewis Brown, who served on that court for over thirty years, United States v. Providence Tribune
    - 11 -
    Co., 
    241 F. 524
    (1917). In that case, a newspaper published by the Providence Tribune Company
    had published an article divulging certain information that allegedly had come before a grand jury,
    purportedly related to cocaine trafficking by prominent physicians in the state. Providence Tribune
    
    Co., 241 F. at 524-25
    . In denying the publisher’s motion to dismiss the contempt case brought
    against it by the United States, Judge Brown explained the importance of grand jury secrecy:
    “Secrecy is essential to the proceedings of a grand jury for many
    reasons. Publicity may defeat justice by warning offenders to
    escape, to destroy evidence, or to tamper with witnesses. Even when
    indictments have been found and presented to the court, secrecy is
    extended until those indicted have been arrested.
    “* * * Even when [disclosure] does not lead to the flight of an
    offender, it may result in the disappearance of witnesses and of
    documentary proof, and thus in a failure of the grand jury to secure
    evidence sufficient for an indictment.
    “Secrecy is also required in order that the reputations of innocent
    persons may not suffer from the fact that their conduct is under
    investigation, or has been investigated, by a grand jury.
    “Secrecy is further required for the protection of witnesses who may
    go before the grand jury, and to encourage them to make full
    disclosure of their knowledge of subjects and persons under
    investigation, without fear of evil consequences to themselves.
    “Premature disclosures may thus injuriously affect and embarrass
    the attorneys for the United States in the duty of presenting matters
    to the grand jury, the grand jury itself in the duty of investigation,
    and court and grand jury alike in giving protection to witnesses and
    to other persons, by preventing scandals and rumors respecting
    matters which may or may not be under investigation. Furthermore,
    such premature reports may go further and prejudice the mind of the
    public, thus affecting a trial which may follow the action of the
    grand jury.”
    Id. at 526
    (internal citations omitted).
    Modern Disclosure Practice in Rhode Island
    Today, in this state, the grand jury is, for the most part, governed by Rule 6 of the Superior
    Court Rules of Criminal Procedure. Rule 6 contains provisions relating to the aspects of grand
    - 12 -
    jury procedure, from the number of grand jurors and their tenure to the making of objections. See
    Rule 6(a), (b), and (g). Of particular interest to us in this case is Rule 6(e), which relates to grand
    jury secrecy. Rule 6(e)(2) provides a general rule of secrecy that is followed by a number of
    exceptions, at Rule 6(e)(3), the effect of which are of significance to this appeal.
    B
    Standing
    i
    In advance of our addressing the Governor’s arguments, we must consider whether the
    Governor has the requisite standing to seek the relief she requests. See Carlson v. United States,
    
    837 F.3d 753
    , 757 (7th Cir. 2016). Although the Governor’s standing to petition the Superior
    Court to release the 38 Studios grand jury material was not challenged in the Superior Court,
    standing is a prerequisite to a court’s entertaining a claim or petition, and the issue may be raised
    by this Court sua sponte. Robinson v. Mayo, 
    849 A.2d 351
    , 353 n.2 (R.I. 2004) (acknowledging
    this Court’s “authority to reach the issue of standing * * * sua sponte”).
    Standing is a component of justiciability that ensures that a complaining party has “such a
    personal stake in the outcome of the controversy as to assure that concrete adverseness[,] which
    sharpens the presentation of issues upon which the court so largely depends for illumination of
    difficult * * * questions[,]” exists. Watson v. Fox, 
    44 A.3d 130
    , 135 (R.I. 2012) (quoting Baker v.
    Carr, 
    369 U.S. 186
    , 204 (1962)). To have standing, the party that believes itself to be aggrieved
    “must allege ‘that the challenged action has caused him injury in fact, economic or otherwise.’”
    Id. (quoting Rhode
    Island Ophthalmological Society v. Cannon, 
    113 R.I. 16
    , 22, 
    317 A.2d 124
    ,
    128 (1974)). That injury-in-fact must be “concrete and particularized[.]”
    Id. at 135-36
    (quoting
    McKenna v. Williams, 
    874 A.2d 217
    , 225 (R.I. 2005)). The party bringing suit, or in this case
    - 13 -
    petitioning the court, “must ‘demonstrate that he has a stake in the outcome that distinguishes his
    claims from the claims of the public at large.’”
    Id. at 136
    (quoting Bowen v. Mollis, 
    945 A.2d 314
    ,
    317 (R.I. 2008)). “[G]eneralized claims alleging purely public harm are an insufficient basis for
    sustaining a private lawsuit[,]”
    id., and are
    also an insufficient basis on which to petition the court.
    Arguments were not submitted to this Court on the issue of standing because, as
    acknowledged above, the issue was not raised in the Superior Court. Nevertheless, this Court
    ordered the parties to be prepared to address at oral argument whether the Governor does indeed
    have standing and whether, if this Court were to find that she does not, the lack of standing should
    be overlooked. At oral argument, the Governor argued that she has suffered a unique injury
    because, each year, when putting together the annual budget proposal for the state, she must
    allocate funds to pay off the remainder of the 38 Studios debt. She also argued that, as Governor
    and chairperson of the Rhode Island Commerce Corporation, her injury is unique. 8 At the same
    time, however, the Governor argues that the alleged injury is one shared by the general public; that
    is, the public’s inability to secure full transparency with respect to the series of events culminating
    in 38 Studios’ bankruptcy and the ensuing litigation. She also maintains that any member of the
    public has standing to petition the court to release court records.
    On the other hand, the Attorney General argues that the Governor does not have standing
    and that the disclosure the Governor seeks—disclosure to the general public—is reflective of the
    Governor’s lack of particularized harm. If the harm alleged by the Governor were particularized,
    the Attorney General argues, the Governor would be requesting that the materials sought be
    disclosed directly to the Governor alone to remedy the harm. Thus, the Attorney General contends,
    8
    The Rhode Island Commerce Corporation is the successor organization to the EDC, of which the
    office of the Governor was also the chairperson.
    - 14 -
    because disclosure is sought for the public at large, the harm cannot be characterized as
    “particularized.”
    To support her claim that she has standing, the Governor draws this Court’s attention to a
    2016 case from the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, Carlson, 
    cited supra
    .
    In that case, a three-judge panel of that court considered whether Carlson, “a journalist and
    historian with a special expertise in naval history” who petitioned the United States District Court
    for the Northern District of Illinois to unseal certain grand jury materials related to a 1942 Chicago
    Tribune article following the Battle of Midway that suggested that the United States had broken a
    Japanese code, while he was writing a book about that very article seventy years later, had
    standing. 
    Carlson, 837 F.3d at 755
    , 756, 757. The court determined that Carlson did have standing,
    reasoning that grand jury materials are court records and, because the public has a general right to
    view such records, as a member of the public his injury-in-fact was “the denial of access to
    government documents that he ha[d] a right to seek.”
    Id. at 758,
    759.
    Although we understand why the Governor believes that Carlson supports her position, we
    believe that the matter before us is readily distinguishable from Carlson, in particular with respect
    to the issue of standing. First, when a member of the general public brings a claim, that individual
    still needs to demonstrate a harm different from the harm shared by every other member of the
    public. See 
    Watson, 44 A.3d at 136
    . While Carlson, which was decided by a divided three-judge
    panel, may seem to suggest otherwise when it comes to petitioning for access to grand jury records,
    
    Carlson, 837 F.3d at 759
    (“That Carlson is a member of the public is sufficient for him to assert
    his ‘general right to inspect and copy judicial records.’”) (deletion and internal citation omitted),
    we disagree with that sweeping holding and note that the standing analysis in Carlson appears to
    have been colored by the fact that the petitioner was a historian writing a book about a long-ago
    - 15 -
    Chicago Tribune article that was the subject of the grand jury materials that he was seeking.
    
    Carlson, 837 F.3d at 756
    , 757. Thus, Carlson’s injury was particularized.
    In contrast, the Governor argued in the Superior Court that “Rhode Islanders should have
    full disclosure about [the] disastrous [38 Studios] deal. * * * [The Superior] Court should permit
    the release of all the grand jury material from the 38 Studios investigation so that our State can
    finally move past this unfortunate episode in our history.” This is a clear allegation of a harm that
    is shared by the public at large, not one that is particular to the Governor in any way.
    Second, in this case the Governor, unlike the petitioner in Carlson, is not seeking disclosure
    of the 38 Studios grand jury material as a member of the general public, but rather in her official
    capacity as the Governor of the State of Rhode Island. In that respect, and as has been recognized,
    the Governor argues that her injury is unique because she must allocate monies to pay off the
    remaining 38 Studios debt. Again, she also argues that her injury is unique given her position as
    Governor and chairperson of the successor organization to the EDC, which authorized the issuance
    of the 38 Studios bonds. Clearly, Carlson does not speak to such arguments. And, moreover, it is
    our opinion that, despite her responsibilities as Governor, which we certainly do not minimize,
    these arguments do not establish an injury-in-fact. Further, as the Attorney General points out, if
    the Governor’s harm was particularized, that harm could be remedied by disclosure directly to the
    Governor’s office. Instead, the Governor seeks public disclosure of all the grand jury material.
    Moreover, it is unclear to us how gaining access to the grand jury material would actually assist
    the Governor in the performance of her official duties.
    ii
    It is our opinion that the Governor does not meet the traditional requirements for standing
    that would enable her to petition for release of the materials she seeks. Nonetheless, it has long
    - 16 -
    been part of our jurisprudence that “on rare occasions this Court has overlooked the standing
    requirement to determine the merits of a case of substantial public interest.” 
    Watson, 44 A.3d at 138
    (brackets omitted) (quoting Burns v. Sundlun, 
    617 A.2d 114
    , 116 (R.I. 1992)); see Sennott v.
    Hawksley, 
    103 R.I. 730
    , 732, 
    241 A.2d 286
    , 287 (1968) (explaining that “because there was a
    substantial public interest in the adoption or rejection of a new constitution,” and due to other
    considerations, the Court would determine whether the constitutional convention exceeded its
    authority “without first resolving the standing question”).
    We cannot fail to recognize that the issue which has been framed is one that, as the
    Governor has so capably demonstrated, is of immense public interest. In her words, “[e]ven six
    years after the company closed its doors, the 38 Studios transaction and its consequences still
    makes front-page news.” Moreover, we emphasize that this case does contain an element of the
    “concrete adverseness” that this Court relies upon to “sharpen[] the presentation of issues[.]”
    
    Watson, 44 A.3d at 135
    (quoting 
    Baker, 369 U.S. at 204
    ). The case has been skillfully briefed and
    argued in the Superior Court and in this Court by some of the most highly regarded public attorneys
    in the state.
    For these reasons, we shall overlook the absence of the traditional elements of standing and
    reach the merits of the controversy before us.
    C
    Does the Superior Court Have the Inherent Authority to Release Grand Jury Materials
    Outside of Rule 6(e)?
    The Governor first argues that it was error for the Superior Court to read Rule 6(e) of the
    Superior Court Rules of Criminal Procedure as disallowing disclosure that does not have firm
    footing within the dictates of the rule. The Governor’s argument is that the Superior Court is
    cloaked with inherent supervisory authority over the grand jury and, as had been the case with
    - 17 -
    some federal decisions, that authority includes the discretion to disclose grand jury material where
    there exists “special or exceptional circumstances.” 9 Moreover, she argues that the permitted
    disclosures in Rule 6(e) are just that, permissive and nonexclusive, and that Rule 6(e) does not
    preclude disclosures by the Superior Court in other circumstances. The Governor further asserts
    that the general rule of secrecy contained in Rule 6(e) is limited to specific persons and does not
    apply to the Superior Court itself.
    In contrast, the Attorney General maintains that the disclosures permitted by Rule 6(e) are
    all-inclusive. Rule 6(e), the Attorney General argues, “requires grand jury secrecy be maintained
    ‘except as otherwise provided for in these rules[.]’” (Quoting Rule 6(e)(2).) According to the
    Attorney General, because the Governor does not seek disclosure pursuant to the rigid
    requirements of Rule 6(e), the Governor’s request must fail.
    Whether the Superior Court has inherent authority to release grand jury materials outside
    of the permitted disclosures set forth in Rule 6(e) is a question of law. As such, our standard of
    review is de novo. Dellagrotta v. Dellagrotta, 
    873 A.2d 101
    , 109 (R.I. 2005).
    We begin our analysis with the text of that rule. In its current form, Rule 6(e)(2) provides
    the “General Rule of Secrecy.” It states:
    “A grand juror, an interpreter, a stenographer, an operator of a
    recording device, a typist who transcribes recorded testimony, an
    attorney for the State, or any person to whom disclosure is made
    under subdivision (e)(3)(A)(ii) shall not disclose matters occurring
    before the grand jury, except as otherwise provided for in these
    rules. A knowing violation of Rule 6 may be punished as a contempt
    of court.” Super. R. Crim. P. 6(e)(2).
    The very next provision of Rule 6(e) permits certain “[d]isclosure otherwise prohibited by this
    rule” that “may be made” in a number of circumstances. Rule 6(e)(3)(A) and (C).                    Rule
    9
    The Governor forthrightly states that she “is not seeking disclosure pursuant to Rule 6(e).”
    - 18 -
    6(e)(3)(A)(i) and (ii) permit disclosure to “[a]n attorney for the State for use in the performance of
    such attorney’s duty” and to “government personnel * * * deemed necessary by an attorney for the
    State to assist an attorney for the State in the performance of such attorney’s duty to enforce
    criminal law.” Rule 6(e)(3)(C) permits disclosure in four other circumstances, three of which
    require that the court itself must pass on the propriety of the disclosure:
    “(i) When so directed by a court preliminarily to or in connection
    with a judicial proceeding; (ii) When permitted by a court at the
    request of the defendant * * *; (iii) When the disclosure is made by
    an attorney for the State to another grand jury; or (iv) When
    permitted by a court at the request of an attorney for the State * * *
    to an appropriate official of the federal government for the purpose
    of enforcing such [federal criminal] law.”
    Rule 6(e), as we have said in the past, “codifies the traditional rule of grand jury secrecy[.]”
    In re 
    Doe, 717 A.2d at 1134
    . We have not yet, however, had occasion to determine just how much
    control Rule 6 exercises over the Superior Court’s common-law authority over the grand jury.
    Both the Governor and the Attorney General make strong arguments. The Governor rightly points
    out that Rule 6(e)(2), the general secrecy provision, does not mention the Superior Court itself as
    an entity held to secrecy. Rather, the rule specifically lists “[a] grand juror, an interpreter, a
    stenographer, an operator of a recording device, a typist * * *, an attorney for the State, or any
    person to whom disclosure is made [pursuant to a particular provision permitting disclosure]” as
    those entities bound to secrecy. Super. R. Crim. P. 6(e)(2). On the other hand, the Attorney General
    also rightly points out that Rule 6(e)(2) specifically holds to secrecy those employees of the
    Superior Court, in his words, “who would have direct knowledge or possession of grand jury
    materials” and, he adds, that it is sensible for the Superior Court itself not to be enumerated in the
    rule because the Superior Court itself does not actually come into contact with grand jury material.
    - 19 -
    With respect to the Governor’s assertion that Rule 6(e) is permissive, the stripes of this
    argument bleed into the question of whether the Superior Court has inherent authority to release
    grand jury materials outside of the exceptions to grand jury secrecy listed above. That is, if
    disclosure is a matter of total discretion within the Superior Court’s inherent authority, then the
    rule is in fact permissive, or demonstrative, of that authority. On the other hand, if such inherent
    authority does not exist, the rule expresses the full extent of the Superior Court’s authority with
    respect to disclosure. We therefore move directly to whether the Superior Court has such inherent
    authority.
    The Governor is correct that we have in the past endorsed the principle “that the grand jury
    is an arm of the Superior Court[,]” and also that “[i]t is not under the control of the Attorney
    General.” In re Young, 
    755 A.2d 842
    , 843 (R.I. 2000) (mem.). The Governor also argues that
    historically included in the inherent authority of courts over the grand jury is the discretion to
    disclose grand jury materials that would normally be secret; she points out that Rhode Island courts
    have recognized that “[t]he granting of access to Grand Jury materials is a matter within the
    discretion of the Superior Court.” In re Station Fire Grand Jury, 2006 R.I. Super. LEXIS 193, at
    *4 (R.I. Super. Ct. Dec. 21, 2006). Indeed, this Court has determined that whether to disclose
    grand jury materials is, in appropriate instances, a matter within the discretion of the Superior
    Court. See State v. Ouimette, 
    110 R.I. 747
    , 764, 
    298 A.2d 124
    , 135 (1972).
    In Ouimette, a case tried in the Superior Court two years before the adoption of the Superior
    Court Rules of Criminal Procedure and decided by this Court just months after their adoption, we
    considered whether a justice of the Superior Court erred in denying the requests of two defendants
    to inspect grand jury minutes in connection with their defenses at their trials for murder. 
    Ouimette, 110 R.I. at 763-64
    , 298 A.2d at 134-35. While we ultimately concluded that the Superior Court
    - 20 -
    did not commit error because the defendants failed to demonstrate a particularized need for the
    information requested, we indicated that we were making our determination through the prism of
    an abuse of discretion standard.
    Id. at 764,
    298 A.2d at 135. That case, however, cannot stand for
    the proposition that our Superior Court has, or always has had, wide-reaching discretion when it
    comes to disclosure of grand jury materials. The defendants in Ouimette were seeking to make
    use of grand jury materials in connection with their defenses to the capital crimes with which they
    had been charged—a circumstance under which Rule 6(e) would not prevent disclosure. See Rule
    6(e)(3)(C)(i) (permitting disclosure “[w]hen so directed by a court preliminarily to or in connection
    with a judicial proceeding”). 10
    Similarly, In re Station Fire Grand Jury, the case which the Governor quotes for the
    proposition that Rhode Island courts have the discretion to disclose grand jury material,
    specifically addressed whether disclosure was appropriate in connection with ongoing litigation,
    pursuant to Rule 6(e)(3)(C)(i). In re Station Fire Grand Jury, 2006 R.I. Super. LEXIS 193, at *3,
    *4, *5-6, *21. These cases, therefore, provide little guidance as we grapple with the question
    before us. 11
    10
    It is noteworthy that today, Rule 16 of the Superior Court Rules of Criminal Procedure, the
    reciprocal discovery rule, independently provides for disclosure of certain grand jury materials in
    instances such as those in State v. Ouimette, 
    110 R.I. 747
    , 
    298 A.2d 124
    (1972).
    11
    The United States Supreme Court cases on which the Governor relies for the general proposition
    that historically the courts had discretion to disclose grand jury materials that would normally be
    secret similarly provide us scant guidance as we consider the Governor’s disclosure request. Both
    cases cited by the Governor for that proposition include allusions to the discretion of the trial court,
    but in very different circumstances than the case presently before us. See Pittsburgh Plate Glass
    Company v. United States, 
    360 U.S. 395
    , 399, 401 (1959) (stating that “Rule 6(e) is but declaratory
    of” the principle that disclosure of grand jury material is “committed to the discretion of the trial
    judge” in a case where defendants argued they had an absolute right to inspect certain grand jury
    minutes); United States v. Socony-Vacuum Oil Co., 
    310 U.S. 150
    , 233 (1940) (stating that the “use
    of grand jury testimony for the purpose of refreshing the recollection of a witness rests in the sound
    discretion of the trial judge”). Interestingly, in Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company, the United States
    - 21 -
    As the Attorney General points out, this Court, in a case that was decided after the adoption
    of the Superior Court Rules of Criminal Procedure, endorsed the concept that where a “disclosure
    request would pierce the veil of secrecy shielding the matters which occurred before the grand
    jury, the [request] must be denied unless an exception can be shown.” In re 
    Young, 755 A.2d at 847
    . This language strongly indicates that only in those cases where an enumerated Rule 6(e)
    exception is applicable should the Superior Court consider whether disclosure is appropriate.
    However, In re Young dealt with the requests of the City of Providence and the estate of police
    Sergeant Cornel Young, Jr., to access materials from the grand jury that investigated the shooting
    and death of Sergeant Young by two fellow Providence police officers.
    Id. at 845.
    Both the city
    and the estate of Sergeant Young sought the information because the Sergeant’s estate had filed a
    notice of claim with the Providence City Council seeking significant damages and equitable relief,
    which carried the specter of a potential civil lawsuit.
    Id. at 845,
    848. As was made clear in that
    case, the issue was whether disclosure was appropriate under Rule 6(e)(3)(C)(i).
    Id. at 846-48.
    As
    such, In re Young also provides little insight into disclosure requests that, like the Governor’s
    request, lie outside the reach of Rule 6. 12
    Supreme Court also stated: “[A]ny disclosure of grand jury minutes is covered by Fed.Rules Crim.
    Proc. 6(e)[.]” Pittsburgh Plate Glass 
    Company, 360 U.S. at 398
    .
    12
    It is noteworthy that, as the Attorney General also points out, we have said that: “In construing
    Rule 6(e), courts begin with the ‘fundamental policy of grand jury secrecy.’” In re Doe, 
    717 A.2d 1129
    , 1134 (R.I. 1998) (quoting In re Grand Jury Investigation, 
    642 F.2d 1184
    , 1190 (9th Cir.
    1981)). While true, that statement does not provide an answer to the question of whether the
    disclosures a court is permitted to make under Rule 6(e) are exhaustive or permissive.
    Significantly, the language of In re Doe is used by both the Governor and the Attorney General to
    support their respective positions. That is because in In re Doe, we also indicated that “the secrecy
    extended to grand jury proceedings is not absolute[,]”
    id., and that
    “[t]here is no per se rule against
    disclosure of any and all information which has reached the grand jury chambers.”
    Id. (quoting Senate
    of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico v. United States Department of Justice, 
    823 F.2d 574
    ,
    582 (D.C. Cir. 1987)). In any event, In re Doe is also of little guidance because it did not concern
    the question of under which circumstances a court can disclose grand jury material. Rather, it
    concerned whether notice to a patient that a subpoena had been issued by the grand jury for his
    - 22 -
    The Governor, recognizing that the question before us is one of first impression for this
    Court, directs us to federal caselaw. She argues that “the great weight of federal cases” supports
    her contention that “the Superior Court has the inherent authority to disclose grand jury material
    outside the confines of Rule 6(e).”
    Indeed, it is true that a number of federal appellate courts have concluded that the federal
    district courts have the inherent authority to disclose grand jury materials, even if those disclosures
    fall outside of the exceptions set out in Rule 6(e) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure. See
    
    Carlson, 837 F.3d at 767
    (“The district courts retain certain inherent powers * * * . One such
    power relates to their supervision of the disclosure of grand-jury materials. * * * Rule 6(e)(3)(E)
    does not displace that inherent power.”); United States v. Aisenberg, 
    358 F.3d 1327
    , 1347 (11th
    Cir. 2004) (“Although Rule 6(e)(3) enumerates the exceptions to the traditional rule of grand jury
    secrecy, the Supreme Court and this Court have recognized that the district courts have inherent
    power beyond the literal wording of Rule 6(e)(3) to disclose grand jury material and that Rule
    6(e)(3) is but declaratory of that authority.”); In re Petition of Craig, 
    131 F.3d 99
    , 102 (2d Cir.
    1997) (explaining that under federal Rule 6(e)(3), “district courts, as part of their supervisory
    authority over the grand juries that they have empaneled, are explicitly given the discretion to
    determine whether, if one or more of the listed exceptions to grand jury secrecy apply, disclosure
    of records is appropriate”; and also explaining that, because “Rule 6(e) * * * reflects rather than
    creates the relationship between federal courts and grand juries[,]” “there are certain ‘special
    medical records, a disclosure that was required by the Confidentiality of Health Care
    Communications and Information Act, violated Rule 6(e).
    Id. at 1130.
    We were not satisfied that
    the subpoena constituted “a matter occurring before the grand jury.”
    Id. at 1135
    (brackets omitted)
    (quoting Super. R. Crim. P. 6(e)).
    - 23 -
    circumstances’ in which release of grand jury records is appropriate even outside of the boundaries
    of the rule”).
    However, the point of view that Rule 6(e)(3) can be circumvented is not unanimous. Last
    year, a three-judge panel of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
    ruled that federal courts lack the “inherent authority” to authorize the disclosure of grand jury
    materials in circumstances not covered by the explicit exceptions in federal Rule 6(e). McKeever
    v. Barr, 
    920 F.3d 842
    , 844 (D.C. Cir. 2019), cert. denied, __ S. Ct. __ (Jan. 21, 2020). McKeever
    rejected the view articulated in the federal cases relied upon by the Governor, holding instead that
    “the district court has no [inherent] authority” “to disclose what we assume are historically
    significant grand jury matters.”
    Id. After reviewing
    the competing and conflicting authority, and after carefully considering
    the thoughtful arguments of the opposing constitutional officers, we are confronted with the
    ultimate question: Does our Superior Court have the authority to disclose grand jury materials if
    that disclosure is not authorized by Rule 6(e)? Importantly, as we have in the past recognized,
    “the Superior Court is statutory in origin and derives its powers from statutes duly enacted by the
    Legislature.” State v. Briggs, 
    934 A.2d 811
    , 815 (R.I. 2007) (quoting State v. DiStefano, 
    764 A.2d 1156
    , 1167-68 (R.I. 2000)). That is to say, the Superior Court does not generally have the right to
    exercise “inherent authority,” and the Superior Court is not permitted to act outside of the mandates
    of a statute or, as in this case, court rule. Put another way, our general rule is: That which is not
    prescribed by statute or rule is forbidden—not that anything that is not expressly forbidden is
    permissible. See Drago Custom Interiors, LLC v. Carlisle Building Systems, Inc., 
    57 A.3d 668
    ,
    673-74 n.5 (R.I. 2012) (rejecting the notion that the Superior Court has “inherent authority to
    remand an arbitration award”); 
    Briggs, 934 A.2d at 815
    , 816 (explaining that because “the
    - 24 -
    Legislature * * * has established an explicit statutory scheme for maintaining, handling,
    expunging, and sealing Bureau of Criminal Identification * * * records[,]” the Superior Court does
    not have authority to expunge records outside of that scheme); State v. Dearmas, 
    841 A.2d 659
    ,
    661-62 (R.I. 2004) (explaining that, where the General Assembly has created a statutory scheme
    for the issuance of search warrants, “the Superior Court does not possess any inherent authority”
    to go outside of that scheme to accomplish a seizure); see also State v. Manocchio, 
    743 A.2d 555
    ,
    557 (R.I. 2000) (“[D]espite the inherent supervisory power provided to Superior Court justices to
    govern proceedings before them and to vindicate their authority by appropriate sanctions, such
    supervisory power is limited by rules that are constitutionally authorized.”). 13 Therefore, we are
    constrained to answer the question in the negative: There is no inherent authority in the Superior
    Court to disclose grand jury materials beyond that which is permitted by the Superior Court Rules
    of Criminal Procedure.
    13
    It is true that this Court has recognized certain inherent powers of the Superior Court, in
    particular those powers necessary for the Superior Court to vindicate its own authority. See Lett v.
    Providence Journal Company, 
    798 A.2d 355
    , 365 (R.I. 2002) (“[T]rial courts possess the inherent
    authority to protect their integrity by sanctioning any fraudulent conduct by litigants that is directed
    toward the court itself or its processes, as informed by the procedures and sanctions available to
    the court and to the parties under [the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure].”); State v. DiPrete,
    
    710 A.2d 1266
    , 1275 (R.I. 1998) (“We concur with the general proposition that justices of the
    Superior Court have inherent power to govern proceedings before them and to vindicate their
    authority by appropriate sanctions including the sanction of contempt.”); Mello v. Superior Court,
    
    117 R.I. 578
    , 583-84, 
    370 A.2d 1262
    , 1265 (1977) (explaining that the Superior Court has inherent
    authority to revoke a defendant’s bail even though the Rules of Criminal Procedure provide other
    sanctions for breach of a condition and the General Assembly has not granted the Superior Court
    such authority, because “a court with jurisdiction over a criminal case has the power to enforce its
    orders as to bail just as it has control over other orders”). Another example of this kind of power
    is that of the trial justice “to sequester witnesses during trial testimony for the purpose of
    preventing that witness from shaping his or her testimony to conform to that of other witnesses.”
    State v. Perez, 
    882 A.2d 574
    , 583 (R.I. 2005). Other inherent powers of the Superior Court do
    exist; however, none of those are at all similar to the asserted inherent power here. See State v.
    Lead Industries Association, Inc., 
    951 A.2d 428
    , 479 (R.I. 2008) (“Courts have the inherent
    authority to review attorney contingent fee contracts in order to prevent unreasonableness.”).
    - 25 -
    In reaching this conclusion, we harken back to our long-standing principles expressed in
    In re Opinion to the Governor, 
    62 R.I. 200
    , 
    4 A.2d 487
    (1939), in which we said that: “One of [the
    grand jury’s] main purposes was to protect the rights of the individual citizen against possible
    oppression by the crown or its agencies in the prosecution of crimes[,]” In re Opinion to the
    
    Governor, 62 R.I. at 203
    , 4 A.2d at 488; and in In re Buxton, 
    111 R.I. 480
    , 
    304 A.2d 350
    (1973),
    in which we endorsed the principle that “the grand jury was a shield which would protect an
    accused from governmental oppression[.]” In re 
    Buxton, 111 R.I. at 482
    , 304 A.2d at 352. We are
    of the opinion that, as the history reflects, grand jury secrecy plays an integral part not only in the
    effective prosecution of crimes, but also in the protection of those upon whom the grand jury casts
    its considerable inquisitorial powers, which in turn is a protection potentially afforded to every
    member of the public. We decline to hold that the Superior Court has the authority to act as the
    Governor advocates. We affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.
    D
    Did the Governor Present Special or Exceptional Circumstances?
    In light of our conclusion that the Superior Court is not garbed with the inherent authority
    to disclose grand jury materials outside of Rule 6(e)(3), it is not necessary for us to consider the
    Governor’s arguments that the Superior Court erred in its alternative analyses. However, in view
    of the heightened public nature of the issues implicated by this case, and considering that the matter
    concerns a legal battle between two constitutional officers, we think it appropriate that we highlight
    that, even had we held that the Superior Court did have inherent authority to act as the Governor
    advocates, we would have had no hesitation in determining that it would have been well within
    the Presiding Justice’s discretion to deny the Governor’s petition. That is so because we are
    confident that even those courts that allow the release of grand jury material under special or
    - 26 -
    exceptional circumstances would not have granted the Governor’s petition. In fact, the cases the
    Governor urges upon us to support her argument, in which petitioners uninvolved in the underlying
    proceedings sought public disclosure of grand jury materials, differ starkly from this case.
    In the vast majority of the cases offered by the Governor to support her argument, in which
    a court has publicly released grand jury material under special or exceptional circumstances, the
    subject of the grand jury was of unquestionably intense national historical interest; a significant
    amount of time—decades—had passed since the grand jury proceedings had closed; the
    disclosures were sought by historians; and the courts released but a limited amount of information.
    See 
    Carlson, 837 F.3d at 756
    -57 (affirming disclosure of transcripts of witness testimony from
    grand jury that investigated newspaper’s publication of a 1942 article after the critical Battle of
    Midway on petition from historian who was writing a book about the article “more than 70 years
    later”); In re Pitch, 
    275 F. Supp. 3d 1373
    , 1375-76, 1379, 1383 (M.D. Ga. 2017) (ordering the
    disclosure of “the 71-year-old transcripts” from grand jury that investigated the 1946 Moore’s Ford
    lynching on petition of historian); 14 In re Petition of National Security Archive, 
    104 F. Supp. 3d 625
    , 626-27 (S.D.N.Y. 2015) (ordering disclosure of testimony transcript of two witnesses who
    testified before grand jury that indicted Julius and Ethel Rosenberg in 1950, for conspiracy to
    commit espionage by handing information related to the atomic bomb to Soviet agents, on petition
    of nonprofit organization, various historical associations, and journalist); 15 In re Petition of Kutler,
    14
    In re Pitch, 
    275 F. Supp. 3d 1373
    (M.D. Ga. 2017), was heard on appeal by the United States
    Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit. Pitch v. United States, 
    915 F.3d 704
    (11th Cir. 2019).
    That court, after affirming the decision of the district court,
    id. at 707,
    granted rehearing en banc
    and vacated the panel’s affirmance. See Pitch v. United States, 
    925 F.3d 1224
    (11th Cir. 2019).
    The full panel of the court has yet to issue an opinion on rehearing.
    15
    It is worthy of mention that other witness testimony from the same grand jury proceedings had
    previously been released by the same court; however, an extensive analysis was not provided. See
    In re National Security Archive, No. 08 Civ. 6599 (AKH), 
    2008 WL 8985358
    , at *1 (S.D.N.Y.
    Aug. 26, 2008).
    - 27 -
    
    800 F. Supp. 2d 42
    , 43, 49, 50 (D.D.C. 2011), abrogated by McKeever, 
    cited supra
    (ordering
    disclosure of President Richard Nixon’s 1975 grand jury testimony and associated materials thirty-
    six years after he testified, and seventeen years after his death, on petition of historian, various
    historical associations, and the Society of American Archivists); In re American Historical
    Association, 
    49 F. Supp. 2d 274
    , 277-78, 292, 297 (S.D.N.Y. 1999) (ordering the disclosure of
    certain grand jury transcripts from the two grand juries convened from 1947 to 1950 that
    investigated Alger Hiss for “historical reasons fifty years after the proceedings ended[,]” on
    petition of various historical associations). 16
    In our opinion, the Governor’s case is not analogous in any way to any of those cases.17
    First, the Governor seeks disclosure, not of a limited nature, but, as the Presiding Justice put it, of
    16
    We also observe that certain grand jury materials related to the 1998 investigation conducted by
    Independent Counsel Kenneth W. Starr into President William Clinton’s relationship with Monica
    Lewinsky were ordered to be released by the United States District Court for the District of
    Columbia on petition of CNN and one of its journalists. In re Unseal Dockets, 
    308 F. Supp. 3d 314
    , 317 (D.D.C. 2018), abrogated by McKeever v. Barr, 
    920 F.3d 842
    (D.C. Cir. 2019), cert.
    denied, __ S. Ct. __ (Jan. 21, 2020). Although the proceedings in that case “took place two decades
    ago[,]”
    id. at 327,
    which is not as substantial an amount of time as in the cases listed above, and
    no historians were involved, public interest on a national scale in that matter was beyond question.
    However, even in that case, the court did not order a wholesale release of all information.
    Id. at 319,
    328, 329, 331, 333-34. Moreover, as has been set 
    forth supra
    , this decision has been
    abrogated by virtue of a ruling by the D.C. Circuit that the district courts do not have inherent
    authority to disclose grand jury material outside of Rule 6(e). 
    McKeever, 920 F.3d at 843
    .
    17
    In a very recent decision, Lepore v. United States, No. 18-mc-91539-ADB, slip op. (D. Mass.
    Feb. 4, 2020), a judge of the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts granted
    in part the petition of a professor from Harvard University to release grand jury records from two
    1971 federal grand juries that investigated the famous disclosure of the so-called “Pentagon
    Papers.” Lepore, slip op. at 1-2. We find it noteworthy that that decision relates to a petition which
    presented circumstances that are significantly different from the petition before us. The petitioner
    in Lepore sought disclosure of grand jury information from an event that was undoubtedly of
    immense national historical interest. Moreover, the grand juries in that case convened in 1971,
    almost fifty years ago.
    Id. And, importantly,
    the court refused to grant wholesale disclosure,
    stating: “The Court will not * * * grant Lepore unfettered access to the materials she seeks.”
    Id. at 11.
    For example, the court explained that it would release transcripts and exhibits related to
    witnesses, still living, who had consented to the release and to deceased witnesses, but that the
    government would have an opportunity to propose redactions and withholdings.
    Id. at 12,
    15.
    - 28 -
    “all materials or documents presented to the grand jury, including transcripts, recordings, exhibits,
    and all other documents.”        Second, no historians, journalists, or historical or educational
    institutions seeking to advance a historical record are involved in the case. Third, and extremely
    significantly, the grand jury completed its work only five years ago. And, fourth, in light of the
    relatively brief period of time that has passed since the events at issue occurred, the public interest,
    while intense, is not yet historical in nature, nor has it been tested by the passage of time. See In
    re Petition of 
    Craig, 131 F.3d at 107
    (explaining that sustained interest over time can demonstrate
    the substantiality of the interest).
    We conclude that, had we determined that it was necessary to address whether the
    Governor presented special or exceptional circumstances, the timing of the Governor’s petition
    alone would have been all but fatal to her request. As has been explained by the Second Circuit
    Court of Appeals in In re Petition of Craig, “[t]he timing of [a] request remains one of the most
    crucial elements” for at least three reasons. In re Petition of 
    Craig, 131 F.3d at 107
    . “First, if
    historical interest in a specific case has persisted over a number of years, that serves as an important
    indication that the public’s interest in release of the information is substantial.”
    Id. “Second, the
    passage of time erodes many of the justifications for continued secrecy.”
    Id. And “[t]hird,
    the
    passage of time eventually, and inevitably, brings about the death of the principal parties involved
    Finally, the court said that it would consider a stay in the event that the government sought review
    by a higher court.
    Id. at 15.
            While the decision, which determined that the federal courts have “inherent authority to
    disclose grand jury records[,]” Lepore, slip op. at 8, is clearly at odds with our holding that our
    Superior Court does not have inherent authority to release grand jury materials outside of our Rule
    6(e), we think it important to point out that, even that court refused wholesale disclosure, “only
    reluctantly allow[ed] the release[,]” recognized that “[g]rand jury proceedings have traditionally
    been kept secret and with good reason[,]” was “loath to erode this presumption of secrecy[,] and
    [was] wary of the risk of unintended consequences.”
    Id. at 14-15.
    The court also highlighted that
    it was “concerned that any ‘historical’ exception could be expanded beyond the very limited
    exception the Court recognize[d][.]”
    Id. at 15.
    - 29 -
    in the investigations, as well as that of their immediate families. And the continued existence and
    vulnerability of such parties is, of itself, a factor that a court should consider.”
    Id. 18 It
    cannot be said that time has eroded the justification for secrecy because, in the context
    of existing jurisprudence, a substantial amount of time has not passed. The grand jury adjourned
    in 2015, and the Governor petitioned the Superior Court for release of all grand jury materials less
    than two years later, in 2017. As the Attorney General points out, the statute of limitations to bring
    criminal charges for potential conduct that might be related to 38 Studios has not yet expired. And,
    as the Presiding Justice stated in her analysis, given that the grand jury investigation at issue
    concluded in 2015, it is “highly likely that the principals of the grand jury proceedings, along with
    witnesses, would still be alive[.]” Individuals who may have been under investigation but were
    not indicted do not deserve to have their names placed in the crucible of public opinion. 19 Nor
    18
    In In re Petition of Craig, 
    131 F.3d 99
    (2d Cir. 1997), the court provided a number of
    considerations as potentially relevant in determining whether special circumstances exist. Those
    considerations are:
    “(i) the identity of the party seeking disclosure; (ii) whether the
    defendant to the grand jury proceeding or the government opposes
    the disclosure; (iii) why disclosure is being sought in the particular
    case; (iv) what specific information is being sought for disclosure;
    (v) how long ago the grand jury proceedings took place; (vi) the
    current status of the principals of the grand jury proceedings and that
    of their families; (vii) the extent to which the desired material—
    either permissibly or impermissibly—has been previously made
    public; (viii) whether witnesses to the grand jury proceedings who
    might be affected by disclosure are still alive; and (ix) the additional
    need for maintaining secrecy in the particular case in
    question.” In re Petition of 
    Craig, 131 F.3d at 106
    .
    While we do not discuss each consideration in the body of this text, we are convinced that virtually
    none of these factors would weigh in favor of granting the Governor’s petition.
    19
    Although the Governor has argued that the public likely already knows the identity of those that
    were under investigation by the grand jury because of the 38 Studios civil litigation and wide media
    coverage, we think the operative word in that argument is “likely.” Moreover, the Governor’s
    argument that there is no need to protect exonerated targets because the Investigation Results stated
    - 30 -
    should witnesses, who relied on advice and precedent that their testimony would remain secret, in
    the absence of a public trial, be subjected to their accounts of events being displayed on the front
    pages of newspapers or broadcast over the airwaves.
    Again, had we reached the question of whether the Presiding Justice abused her discretion
    in denying the Governor’s petition, we would have unhesitatingly held that she did not.
    III
    Conclusion
    For many people in this state, particularly those who are currently holding public office,
    the 38 Studios situation and the company’s bankruptcy, occurring as it did just as the entire country
    was clawing its way out of the Great Recession, still stings. We certainly understand those
    feelings. However, after careful consideration of the issues ably briefed and argued by the parties,
    the judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed. The papers in this case shall be returned to the
    Superior Court.
    that there was insufficient evidence to offer a criminal charge for consideration by the grand jury
    would similarly be unpersuasive.
    - 31 -
    STATE OF RHODE ISLAND AND                                  PROVIDENCE PLANTATIONS
    SUPREME COURT – CLERK’S OFFICE
    OPINION COVER SHEET
    Title of Case                        In re 38 Studios Grand Jury.
    No. 2017-301-Appeal.
    Case Number
    (PM 17-701)
    Date Opinion Filed                   February 19, 2020
    Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and
    Justices
    Indeglia, JJ.
    Written By                           Associate Justice Francis X. Flaherty
    Source of Appeal                     Providence County Superior Court
    Judicial Officer From Lower Court    Presiding Justice Alice B. Gibney
    For the Governor:
    Claire J. Richards, Esq.
    Adam J. Sholes, Esq.
    For the Attorney General:
    Attorney(s) on Appeal
    Michael W. Field, Esq.
    Susan Urso, Esq.
    Rebecca Tedford Partington, Esq.
    Kate C. Brody, Esq.
    SU‐CMS‐02A (revised June 2016)