Alex Rosas et al v. Leroy Baca et al

Filing 292

ORDER GRANTING MOTIONS TO UNSEAL COURT RECORDS, 276 , [268, 269] by Judge Dean D. Pregerson: Movants Motion to Unseal is GRANTED.6 The six redacted videos lodged under seal by Defendants on November 7, 2023 (Dkt. 291) are hereby ordered unsealed. Th e following sealed documents are also hereby ordered unsealed; (1) Plaintiffs' memorandum of Points and authorities in support of Motion to Modify Implementaion Plan (Dkt. 255); (20 Declaration of Stephen Sinclair (Dkt. 255-1); (30 Declaration o f Raymond Dunn (Dkt. 255-3); (40 Declaration of Shamsher Samra (Dkt. 255-6); (5) Declaration of Matthew Thomas (Dkt 255-7); (6) Plaintiff's Reply Brief, (Dkt. 262); (7) Declaration of Matthew Thomas (Dkt. 262-1); (8) Declaration of Stephen Sincl air (Dkt.262-2); (9) Declaration of Melissa Camacho (Dkt. 262-3); and (10) Declaration of MarisolDominguez-Ruiz (Dkt 262-4). Furthermore, the following lodged documents are ordered to be filed: (1) Plaintiffs Supplemental Statement in Response to Court Order (Dkt. 285-1); and (2) Amended Declaration of Erin Bigler (Dkt 285-2). IT IS SO ORDERED. (shb)

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1 2 O 3 4 5 6 7 8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 9 CENTRAL DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10 11 12 ALEX ROSAS and JONATHAN GOODWIN, on behalf of themselves and of those similarly situated, 13 Plaintiff, 14 v. 15 16 17 18 19 20 LEROY BACA, Sheriff of Los Angeles County Jails; PAUL TANAKA, Undersheriff, Los Angeles Sheriff's Department; CECIL RHAMBO, Assistant Sheriff, Los Angeles Sheriff's Department and DENNIS BURNS, Chief of Custody Operations Division, Los Angeles Sheriff's Department, ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) Case No. CV 12-00428 DDP (SHx) ORDER GRANTING MOTIONS TO UNSEAL COURT RECORDS [Dkt. 268, 269] 21 Defendants. 22 23 24 Presently before the court are two separate motions to unseal 25 court records filed by Los Angeles Times Communications LLC (“LA 26 Times”) (Dkt. 268) and WitnessLA (Dkt. 269) (collectively, 27 “Movants”). 28 heard oral argument, the court grants the motions and adopts the Having considered the submissions of the parties and following Order. 1 I. 2 Background The facts of this case are set out in greater detail in this 3 Court’s prior Order granting Movants’ motions to intervene in this 4 matter. 5 to seek to unseal certain videos, and references thereto, filed by 6 Plaintiffs under seal in support of their Motion to Modify 7 Implementation Plan (Dkt. 252).1 8 intervene for that purpose. 9 represented that they had no objection to the unsealing of one (Dkt. 279). In short, Movants sought leave to intervene This Court permitted Movants to (Dkt. 279.) At argument, Defendants 10 video exhibit, and Movants indicated that they had no objection to 11 Defendants’ proposed redactions of the remaining video exhibits.2 12 In accordance with this Court’s prior Order, Defendants have now 13 submitted those redacted exhibits for the court’s review, along 14 with a statement, appended to this Order, providing additional 15 context about the events depicted in the videos. 16 addresses Movants’ motion to unseal these materials. 17 II. 18 The court now Discussion As a general principle, there is a strong presumption that 19 court records should be open to public inspection. Center for Auto 20 Safety v. Chrysler Grp., LLC, 809 F.3d 1092, 1096 (9th Cir. 2016) 21 (citing Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc., 435 U.S. 589, 597 22 (1978)). “[M]ost judicial records may be sealed only if the court 23 24 25 26 27 1 Since the filing of the motion, the court has heard oral argument and held numerous status conferences regarding the parties’ ongoing discussions regarding the issues raised in the motion. Counsel have worked diligently and cooperatively to resolve the majority of the disputes, and continue to meet and confer as to two remaining issues. 2 28 Defendants also do not object to the unsealing of various written references to the videos and events depicted therein. 2 1 finds ‘compelling reasons.’ However, a less exacting ‘good cause’ 2 standard applies to . . . previously sealed discovery attached to a 3 nondispositive motion.’”3 4 1025 (9th Cir. 2014) (internal quotation marks and citations 5 omitted); see also Kamakana, 447 F.3d at 1180 (“Unlike private 6 materials unearthed during discovery, judicial records are public 7 documents almost by definition, and the public is entitled to 8 access by default. 9 production when a document, formerly sealed for good cause under Oliner v. Kontrabecki, 745 F.3d 1024, This fact sharply tips the balance in favor of 10 Rule 26(c), becomes part of a judicial record.”) (internal citation 11 omitted). 12 This common law presumption of access to judicial records does 13 not attach, however, to materials that are “traditionally kept 14 secret.” 15 Mirror Co. v. United States, 873 F.2d 1210, 1219 (9th Cir.1989)); 16 see also Forbes Media LLC v. United States, 61 F.4th 1072, 1081 17 (9th Cir. 2023). 18 law enforcement-related documents. 19 Rather, the “traditionally secret” “carve-out is a ‘term of art’ 20 that refers to materials for which there is neither a history of 21 access nor an important public need justifying access.” 22 Forbes, 61 F.4th at, 1081. 23 exemplars of traditionally secret materials are “grand jury 24 transcripts and warrant materials in the midst of a pre-indictment Kamakana, 447 F.3d at 1178 (9th Cir. 2006) (quoting Times This category does not necessarily encompass all Kamakana, 447 F.3d at 1185. The archetypical, but not exclusive, 25 26 27 28 3 The terms however, literal Safety, 809 F.3d motion to unseal underlying cause “dispositive” and “nondispositive” are not, or “mechanical classifications.” Center for Auto at 1098. Rather, the question is whether the is “more than tangentially related to the of action.” Id. at 1099, 1101. 3 1 investigation.” 2 In Forbes, for instance, Department of Justice requests to a travel 3 agency for information about a fugitive’s travel plans were held to 4 be akin to these “paradigmatic” examples, and thus fell outside the 5 presumption of public access as materials “traditionally kept 6 secret.” 7 Id. at 1082 (quoting Kamakana, 447 F.3d at 1185). Id. at 1075-76, 1082. Here, Movants seek access to videos taken inside correctional 8 facilities, and descriptions of and references to the same. 9 Movants do not contend that there is any “history of public access” 10 to such materials. 11 it is self-evident that access to carceral facilities and 12 information about their inner workings is highly restricted.4 13 even in the absence of a historical tradition of access, a 14 sufficiently important public need may create a presumption of 15 access where the “ends of justice” so demand. 16 at 1082; Kamakana 447 F.3d at 1185 (“a class of documents is 17 [‘traditionally kept secret’] if there is ‘neither a history of 18 access nor an important public need justifying access.’”) (emphasis 19 original) (quoting Times Mirror, 873 F.2d at 1219). 20 case. 21 22 Forbes, 661 F.4th at 1082. Nor could they, as But See Forbes,61 F.4th This is such a Putting aside any apportionment of blame, the indisputable fact remains that, even after the better part of a decade, 23 24 25 26 27 28 4 It bears mention, however, that materials that are “traditionally kept secret” at one point in time may change in character at a later date. The Ninth Circuit has recognized, for example, that even paradigmatically secret pre-indictment warrant materials have historically been made public after an investigation is terminated, and that the common law right of access attaches at that point. United States v. Bus. of Custer Battlefield Museum & Store Located at Interstate 90, Exit 514, S. of Billings, Mont., 658 F.3d 1188, 1192-94 (9th Cir. 2011). 4 1 Defendants are not in full compliance with all of the terms of the 2 Settlement Agreement. 3 whether and how current implementation plans should be modified to 4 best achieve full compliance, and to seek the court’s guidance as 5 to those questions. 6 Monitors’ recommendations, and this Court’s determinations are 7 based, in part, on evaluations of materials currently inaccessible 8 to the public. 9 understanding of the function and operation of the judicial The parties continue to disagree as to The parties’ respective positions, the This lack of access hampers “the public’s 10 process,” weakens “a check on the judiciary,” and impairs “the 11 legitimate interests of the public and the press in keeping a 12 watchful eye on the workings of public agencies.” 13 Battlefield Museum, 658 F.3d at 1194 (internal quotation marks and 14 alteration omitted). 15 important here, where progress toward full compliance with the 16 Settlement Agreement, or lack thereof, may be laid at the feet of 17 past, present, or future elected policymakers. 18 public need for fuller information about conditions within the 19 jails, the materials at issue here do not qualify for the 20 “traditionally kept secret” exception to the presumption of public 21 access. 22 Custer This latter interest is particularly Given the important To overcome a presumption of access, a party seeking to seal a 23 judicial record must “articulate compelling reasons supported by 24 specific factual findings that outweigh the general history of 25 access and the public policies favoring disclosure.” 26 F.3d at 1178-79 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). 27 Defendants have not met this burden. 28 that release of the videos may implicate privacy concerns or 5 Kamakana, 447 Although Defendants contend 1 interfere with investigative efforts, the Ninth Circuit has made 2 clear that “[s]imply mentioning a general category of privilege, 3 without any further elaboration or any specific linkage with the 4 documents, does not satisfy the burden.”5 5 1184. 6 to the common law right of access, [privacy and other concerns] may 7 be redressed through a court’s discretion [] to release redacted 8 versions of the documents.” 9 1194. Kamakana, 447 F.3d at Moreover, “in a particular case involving materials subject Custer Battlefield Museum, 658 F.3d at In compliance with the court’s prior Order, and absent 10 objection from Movants, Defendants here have diligently worked to 11 redact information that might implicate privacy or safety concerns 12 of both jail staff and inmates, without compromising the 13 informational value of the exhibits Movants seek to unseal. 14 court is therefore confident that the balance of the public’s 15 interest in access to the sealed materials against any competing 16 interest of Defendants weighs strongly in favor of the former. 17 III. Conclusion 18 The For the reasons stated above, Movants Motion to Unseal is 19 GRANTED.6 20 on November 7, 2023 (Dkt. 291) are hereby ordered unsealed.7 The six redacted videos lodged under seal by Defendants The 21 5 22 23 24 25 26 27 Indeed, Defendants have represented that the events depicted in Exhibit 5, which has already been publicized from another source, have already resulted in a referral for criminal prosecution. 6 Having determined that the materials should be unsealed pursuant to common law, the court does not address WitnessLA’s additional First Amendment argument. See Forbes, 61 F.4th at 1082 (“[T]he common law, like the First Amendment, turns on roughly similar considerations of historical tradition and the risks and benefits of public disclosure.”). 7 28 The parties have represented to the court that the videos (continued...) 6 1 following sealed documents are also hereby ordered unsealed: (1) 2 Plaintiffs’ Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of 3 Motion to Modify Implementation Plan (Dkt. 255); (2) Declaration of 4 Stephen Sinclair (Dkt. 255-1); (3) Declaration of Raymond Dunn 5 (Dkt. 255-3); (4) Declaration of Peter Eliasberg (Dkt. 255-4); 6 Declaration of Shamsher Samra (Dkt. 255-6); (5) Declaration of 7 Matthew Thomas (Dkt. 255-7); (6) Plaintiff’s Reply Brief (Dkt. 8 262); (7) Declaration of Matthew Thomas (Dkt. 262-1); (8) 9 Declaration of Stephen Sinclair (Dkt.262-2); (9) Declaration of 10 Melissa Camacho (Dkt. 262-3); and (10) Declaration of Marisol 11 Dominguez-Ruiz (Dkt 262-4).8 12 documents are ordered to be filed: (1) Plaintiffs’ Supplemental 13 Statement in Response to Court Order (Dkt. 285-1); and (2) Amended 14 Declaration of Erin Bigler (Dkt 285-2).9 Furthermore, the following lodged 15 16 17 18 19 20 IT IS SO ORDERED. Dated: November 8, 2023 DEAN D. PREGERSON United States District Judge 21 22 23 24 7 25 26 (...continued) will be accessible to the public via Plaintiffs’ counsel’s website and the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department website. 8 27 28 The Declaration of Erin David Bigler (Dkt. 255-2) shall not be unsealed. 9 See note 8, above. 7 APPENDIX 1 2 3 STATEMENT FROM THE LOS ANGELES COUNTY SHERIFF’S DEPARTMENT 4 ACCOMPANYING EDITED VIDEOS OF FORCE INCIDENTS 5 The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department is aware of Judge Dean Pregerson’s ruling 6 unsealing certain use of force materials in the Rosas case, including six videos of force incidents 7 that took place in the Los Angeles County Jail between October 2019 and July 2022. The 8 Department views Judge Pregerson’s decision as an opportunity to build further trust within the 9 community it serves. In keeping with its mission of transparency and accountability, the Sheriff’s 10 Department welcomes the opportunity to reveal the steps it has taken to better serve our 11 incarcerated population. In collaboration with the independent outside monitors, and with the 12 assistance of the ACLU, use of force incidents in the Los Angeles County Jail are under constant 13 review and scrutiny. The Department welcomes that scrutiny and opportunity for improvement, as 14 it has led to meaningful revisions to the use of force policies in the jails with the anticipation those 15 changes are providing deputies with better guidance when it comes to understanding the 16 difference between appropriate and inappropriate uses of force, and all Department employees are 17 held accountable for their actions if they fail to recognize that difference. 18 We also appreciate the opportunity provided by Judge Pregerson to give context to the six 19 videos of use of force incidents that are being unsealed and made available to the public in the 20 redacted form directed by the court. Such context is epssential for several important reasons. 21 First, it is important to stress that the use of force incidents captured in these six videos are 22 not representative of interactions between deputies and inmates in the Los Angeles County Jail 23 system. The Los Angeles County jail system is the largest of the more than 3,000 county jail 24 systems in the United States, and every year over the past three years between roughly 53,000 and 25 60,000 inmates pass in and out of Los Angeles County Jail facilities. Accordingly, there are 26 millions of interactions between deputies and inmates in the Los Angeles County Jail system each 27 year. The videos that have been unsealed represent six of the millions of interactions that 28 occurred over a more than two and one-half year period between October 24, 2019 (the date of the earliest use of force incident depicted) and July 4, 2022 (the date of the most recent use of force incident depicted). 1 Second, the incidents depicted in these six videos do not reflect the measures now in place 2 to hold deputies accountable when they violate the Department’s stringent use of force policies. 3 Every one of the uses of force incidents depicted in these videos took place during a prior Sheriff’s 4 administration, and all but one took place prior to material changes to use of force policies at the 5 jails that were put into effect last year and continue to be refined in order to ensure that all uses of 6 force are employed only when necessary, particularly in cases when a use of force poses the 7 highest threat of injury to an inmate. These policy changes have proven to be effective. In 2022, 8 there was a 17% decline in the number of force incidents involving inmates when compared to 9 2021; thusfar in 2023, the number of uses of force at the Los Angeles County Jail facilities that are 10 at issue in the Rosas case are on pace to fall by an additional 20% when compared to those 2022 11 figures and a full 33% when compared to the number of uses of force in the jail in 2021. 12 Furthermore, the number of uses of force involving “head strikes” (punches to the head) -- which 13 amounts to only a small fraction of cases involving uses of force -- have also fallen dramatically 14 during this time period. In 2022, uses of force involving punches to the head fell by over 40% 15 when compared to 2021 figures; and in 2023, the number of uses of force involving head strikes 16 has fallen further still. Indeed, the Department is currently on pace to have only 48 uses of force 17 that involve head strikes in 2023, less than in any previous year since this litigation commenced in 18 2012. 1 Accordingly, in recent years, and particularly since Sheriff Luna took office, the number 19 of force incidents in the Los Angeles County Jail system has fallen dramatically; the number of 20 cases involving the most serious uses of force, including head strikes, has plummeted; and the 21 number of times when deputies have successfully taken steps to avoid uses of force has climbed to 22 a point where that number now far outpaces the number of occasions when deputies engage in 23 uses of force with inmates. At the same time, Sheriff Luna has set a new tone when it has come to 24 making it clear that, regardless of this dramatic drop in uses of force involving inmates, when 25 26 1 In contrast, monitors overseeing compliance with use of force provisions at Rikers Island in New York City, a jail in a metropolitan area holding far fewer inmates than the Los 27 Angeles County Jail, have recently reported that guards at that facility administered head strikes 28 more than 400 times during a two-month period in 2022 alone. 603389499 2 STATEMENT 1 deputies engage in uses of force in a manner that violates the Department’s strict use of force 2 policies, they will be held accountable for doing so. In fact, in the case of the most recent force 3 incident captured in the videos covered by Judge Pregerson’s unsealing order, the actions of the 4 deputies are currently being scrutinized by the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office at 5 the request of the Department for possible criminal prosecution. 6 Lastly, it is important to keep in mind that even the six videos at issue spanning a 36- 7 month time frame during a prior Sheriff’s administration only provide a limited insight into the 8 particular force incidents they partially capture. For instance, in one case (Exhibit B to the 9 Declaration of Peter Eliasberg) the video at issue shows an inmate laying on the ground and 10 apparently injured, but it does not show the events leading up to when the inmate was injured. In 11 that case, the inmate at issue was being accompanied to the bathroom by a deputy at the inmate’s 12 request; the inmate stopped in the middle of a hallway, removed his pants, and stated that he was 13 going to urinate in the hallway; the inmate attempted to elbow the deputy after he was told he 14 could not urinate in the hallway; the inmate then punched the deputy in the face, after which the 15 deputy punched the inmate in the head. Indeed, the ACLU’s use of force expert who examined 16 this incident concluded that, in his professional experience, the head strike that inflicted the injury 17 ultimately captured in the video resulted from a justifiable use of force. As Judge Pregerson recently recognized in this case, deputies working in the Los Angeles 18 19 County Jail work under tremendously difficult circumstances. The inmate population in the jails 20 consists of many violent individuals who pose a tremendous security risk; and deputies working in 21 the jails are frequently called upon to make split-second decisions on how to respond when 22 confronted with inmates who may pose a serious risk to their safety, to the safety of other inmates, 23 or the inmate’s own safety. The Department is committed to meeting these challenges with conduct that follows the 24 25 Department’s strict guidelines governing the appropriate use of force against an inmate. In the 11 26 years since this case was instituted, there has been a complete cultural shift away from the days 27 when such abuses were tolerated, and Sheriff Luna is intent on building on that progress 28 comprehensively, and at a more rapid pace than his predecessors. The Sheriff’s Department will 603389499 3 STATEMENT 1 continue to have an open dialogue with the ACLU and the court-appointed monitors in this case to 2 explore ways to improve the Department’s performance and will continue to be forthcoming in its 3 efforts to ensure an honest analysis of every use of force incident that occurs. There is significant 4 transparency in the Rosas case in the form of semi-annual reports to the court on the Department’s 5 compliance, as well as public reports the Department makes to the Los Angeles County Board of 6 Supervisors. The Department welcomes the feedback this scrutiny involves so it may incorporate 7 it as the Department continues to work diligently toward achieving full compliance in this case. 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 603389499 4 STATEMENT

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