DC Judge Restores Public
Call-In For Capitol Riots Proceedings After
Inner City Press Opposes
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon
Podcast Song Letter
BBC
- Guardian
UK - Honduras
- ESPN
FEDERAL COURT,
July 16 --
On July 16,
after
months of
public access
to the Capitol
Breach
criminal proceedings
in the U.S.
Court for the
District of
the District
of Columbia,
DDC Judge
Randolph D.
Moss issued a
minute
order that
there would be
no public
access call-in
to his July 19
sentencing of
defendant Paul
Hodgkins.
Inner City Press
immediately wrote
to Chambers
formally
requesting
that the
call-in line
be maintained
/ restored:
(and, podcast here).
And, mere
hours later,
Judge Moss' law clerk
emailed Inner
City Press
this updated
order: "MINUTE
ORDER as to
PAUL ALLARD
HODGKINS (1):
Earlier today
the Court
issued a
Minute Order
indicating
that, in light
of the ability
of the public
to access
proceedings in
this matter
in-person
pursuant to In
re: Updated
Access
Restrictions
and Masking
Protocols
During the
Covid-19
Pandemic,
Standing Order
21-42 (BAH)
(July 15,
2021), the
public dial-in
would not be
available for
the hearing
scheduled for
July 19, 2021
at 10:00 a.m.
Minute Order
(July 16,
2021). The
Court has
since heard
from at least
one member of
the press who
indicated that
some
individuals
may not be
able to access
the courtroom
or the
overflow
courtroom due
to health and
safety
concerns
presented by
the ongoing
Covid-19
pandemic,
including the
need for
social
distancing in
the
courtrooms.
Having
conferred with
Chief Judge
Beryl A.
Howell, in
light of the
significant
limits on
access to the
courtroom due
to the ongoing
pandemic, and
pursuant to
the temporary
exception
approved by
the Executive
Committee of
the Judicial
Conference to
the
prohibition on
broadcasting
of proceedings
in federal
district
courts in
Volume 10,
Chapter 4 of
the Guide to
Judiciary
Policy, it is
hereby ORDERED
that the
public dial-in
shall be made
available for
the hearing
scheduled for
July 19, 2021
at 10:00 a.m.
Signed by
Judge Randolph
D. Moss on
07/16/2021." Inner
City Press has
thanked both.
Re:
Press and
Public Access
via call-in
audio line for
first Capitol
Breach felony
sentencing in
US v.
Hodgkins,
21-cr-188
(RDM)
Dear
Judge
Moss:
This concerns
the abrupt
curtailment of
press and
public access
via call-in
audio line
included in
your Minute
Order issued
earlier today
in the
above-captioned
felony
criminal case,
for the
Capitol
Riots.
This is
a formal
request that
you not put an
end to public
access such as
existed for
more than a
year, and at
every previous
stage of this
particularly
important
case.
To
put this
request in
context, I am
a journalist
based at the
Southern
District of
New York
courthouse but
who has been
covering the
Capitol Breach
cases, mostly
in the
District for
the District
of Colombia,
since January
2021. See,
e.g., January
10, 2021,
Seattle Times,
"Seattle man
charged with
assaulting a
federal
officer at
U.S. Capitol
siege,
"Leffingwell’s
attorney said
in court that
he intended to
return to
Seattle, and
the magistrate
judge ordered
him to stay
away from
Washington,
D.C.,
according to
reporting by
Inner City
Press
journalist
Matthew
Russell Lee,"
here.
The January 6
defendants
come from all
over the
country, and
it is
important that
their
neighbors and
local media in
their
communities
continue to
have access to
these
proceedings.
Be aware that
Federal
criminal
proceedings
all over the
country are
still allowing
remote access.
See, only
yesterday,
July 15, Daily
Mail (UK),
"While
appearing in a
California
court on
Thursday,
Jordan
reportedly
agreed to face
charges in the
Southern
District of
New York and
he was ordered
to be released
on a $150,000
bond,
according to
the Twitter
account Inner
City
Press.
An Assistant
U.S. Attorney
told the court
that a case
agent had
confirmed that
none of the
charges
involved
minors, Inner
City Press
reported," here.
Even for those
physically in
DC, many
either will
not or even
cannot access
the overflow
room to which
your Minute
Order refers.
Given the
exclusion and
limitation on
transparency
that the
abrupt
discontinuance
of call-in
audio access
represents,
what justifies
it?
This is a
formal request
for call-in
audio access,
as before, to
the July 19
sentencing in
the above
captioned
case, and to
other Capital
Breach cases.
Full
letter on
Inner City
Press'
DocumentCloud
here.
Previously
in DDC on July
13, months
after the DC
Circuit's
decision in US
v. Munchel,
DDC
Magistrate Judge G.
Michael Harvey
had before him
Capitol breach
defendant Robert
Morss -
and his
parents.
Both parents
testified
under oath,
about a road
trip with
Robert and his
substitute
teaching after
graduating
from Penn
State. The US
brought
up new
text messages
about a
tactical vest that
carried
armored
plates. Morss
and his lawyer
will get that,
and redacted
into the
docket, then
reconvene.
Inner City
Press live
tweeted it here.
Now on July
14, Magistrate
Judge Harvey
continued the
hearing, but
there were
more questions
about videos
that the US
Attorney's
Office has not
provided even
to the
court, while withholding
them from the
public. Inner
City Press
live tweeted
it here:
We will
have more on
this.
Inner
City Press
live tweeted
Riley June
Williams on
January 25, here.
From January
22, song here:
Thread here.
Inner City
Press' John Earle Sullivan
song on SoundCloud here.
***
Your
support means a lot. As little as $5 a month
helps keep us going and grants you access to
exclusive bonus material on our Patreon
page. Click
here to become a patron.
Feedback:
Editorial [at] innercitypress.com
SDNY Press Room 480, front cubicle
500 Pearl Street, NY NY 10007 USA
Mail: Box 20047, Dag
Hammarskjold Station NY NY 10017
Reporter's mobile (and weekends):
718-716-3540
Other, earlier Inner City Press are
listed here,
and some are available in the ProQuest
service, and now on Lexis-Nexis.
Copyright 2006-2021 Inner City
Press, Inc. To request reprint or other
permission, e-contact Editorial [at]
innercitypress.com
|