Page 18-Friday, August 1, 1980-TheMichigon-Doily Justice D sets closed-trial guidelines WASHINGTON (AP)-The Justice Department proposed rules yesterday for federal lawyers which would put up more barriers to closing trials than recent Supreme Court decisions have. The proposed rules would cover all lawyers working for or with the Justice Department and would apply to all federal, civil, or criminal trials, plus pretrial evidence hearings and pleas and senten- cing proceedings. THE RULES WOULD prevent government lawyers from requesting or agreeing to the closing of any trial or judicial proceeding without the express consent of either the associate or deputy attorney general. The guidelines set up a sixfold test to ensure that closings occur only when "plainly essential to the interests of justice." "These guidelines constitute an exercise of self- restraint," said Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti. "We are saying that even where the law would permit closure, we will not approve unless it is clearly necessary to serve the ends of justice. This depar- tment believes in an open judicial system." Considerable controversy over when the press and public can be excluded from trials has grown out of two Supreme Court decisions in the past year. IN JULY 1979, in the case of Gannett vs. DePas- quale, the high court gave judges virtually absolute discretion to close traditionally open pretrial proceedings if the defense requests that. In that case, which stemmed from a Rochester, N.Y. murder trial, the court held that Sixth Amendment guarantees of open trials apply only to the defendant, not to the press or public at large. But this July, in the case of Richmond newspapers vs. Virginia, the court held for the first time that the First Amendment protects the right to gather news at trials themselves. The court held that judges must have "overriding" reasons for closing trials, must state them, and must restrict the closing as much as possible, but the Supreme Court did not further define its standards. A I I THE MOVIES AT BRIARWOOD 1-94 & S. STATE. 0 769.8780 (Adjacent to J C Penned *DAILY EARLY BIRD MATINEES-Adults $1.50 DISCOUNT IS FOR SHOWS STARTING BEFORE 1:3 State supreme court favors open trials 0 LANSING (UPI) - The Michigan Supreme Court, acting in a Detroit sex crime case, ruled a defendant has no constitutional right to a private trial. Criminal trials should be closed only when absolutely necessary to ensure justice for the accused, the high court said. THE RULING came on an appeal by the Detroit Free Press of a Detroit Recorders Court ruling granting a defense request to close the trial of a high school teacher accused of commit- ting second-degree criminal sexual .onduct with a 14-year-old student. The lower court judge ruled the con- stitutional public trial rule can be waived by defendants since it is designed strictly for their protection. The teacher subsequently was found THE HIGH court unanimously agreed the trial should have been open, but there was some judicial bickering over why. An opinion signed by four of the seven justices cited common law tradition in concluding the public's right to know is at the root of open trial guarantees. The press serves a vital function in keeping the public informed. "We have concluded that an accused has no right to exclude the public from a trial by affirmative waiver," said the opinion signed by Justices Blair Moody, Thomas Kavanagh, G. Mennen Williams, and John Fitzgerald. Defendants seeking to close a trial must show a "substantial probability" that public proceedings would prejudice their case and that "closure will be effective in dealing with the danger and that no alternatives to closure exist that would protect the fair trial right," they said. No such proof was offered in the Detroit case, the court said. Chief Justice Mary Coleman and Justice Charles Levin concurred in a separate opinion. 40 THE SPECIAL EDITION OF THE THIRD KIND 10:00 1:00 3:45 7:00 9:45 (PG) I 10:00 12:15 2:30 7:00 9:15 (PG) Fri & Sat 12:00 mid SLOW DOWN, .you move too fast. I I LED-ZEPPELIN 1NSQH -WMAINHtSAt1E Fri & Sat 12:00 mid Fri & Sat 12:00 mid SAVE GAS! I