FEDERAL COURT / BRIDGEPORT, July 10 â
Federal courts are supposed to be public; there is case
law about the public's right to access courtroom and
documents.
Inner City Press submitted a letter to
Judge Kari A. Dooley of the United States District Court
for the District of Connecticut opposing the government's
motion to seal sentencing exhibits in United States v.
Sakal, No. 3:25-cr-00222 (KAD), the response from chambers
was that under Local Rule 57.1(f), a non-party wishing to
oppose sealing in a criminal case must file a formal
motion for leave to intervene.
Inner City Press on June 17 ran
around and served a motion on the Clerk of Court and again
by email to the US Attorney's Office and both defense
counsel (none of the four deigned to e-confirm receipt -
must be a Connecticut thing, though one of the defense
lawyers is from New York).
Inner City Press has immediately replied - by email - [and, before the mailed version arrived, it was docketed]
Now on July 10, Judge Kari Dooley has ruled â granting Inner City Press's motion to intervene and directing the Clerk to unseal the government's redacted sentencing exhibits (ECF Nos. 57 through 57-3) and strip their ex parte designation. The redacted versions the government had filed "under seal for the Court's examination" â an oxymoron Inner City Press flagged, since the entire office of a redacted version is to be public â should now go on the public docket, where the prosecutors pointedly put Inner City Press' stories in this series.
And the order leaves the door open, not closed: the Court "will address the Intervenor's remaining arguments as to the additional information sought to be unsealed in due course," noting that it has not yet entered a Restitution Order, "the structure of which may well impact adjudication" of the sealing dispute. That is precisely Inner City Press's point â convicted Salim Sakal's actual balances, expenditures and assets are what let the public judge whether victims' restitution is set to match his real ability to pay. Watch this site.
Inner City Press is becoming familiar with
the varied intervention procedure in many federal district
courts. In the Southern District of New York â where Lee
v. Greenwood, 145 F.4th 248 (2d Cir. 2025) was decided,
recognizing the First Amendment right of non-party media
organizations to be heard on sealing motions â Inner City
Press sends a letter to chambers, and it is docketed and
the parties given time to respond.
The same is true in the District of
Massachusetts, where ICP's letter opposing sealing in UMG
Recordings v. Suno was docketed as Docket 233 without any
formal motion to intervene being required. In the District
of Maryland, Judge Matthew J. Maddox recently docketed
ICP's letter opposing wholesale sealing of a sentencing
memorandum the same day it was received. In the District
of Colorado, Local Rule 7.2(d) expressly invites "any
interested party" to file a response to a restriction
motion â no intervention motion required. Inner City Press
has a Zoom hearing there on June 24 on an application to
unseal.
The District of Connecticut's Local Rule
57.1(f) is different. It requires a formal motion for
leave to intervene. That motion must be docketed â which
for a non-attorney means appearing at the Clerk's Office
in Bridgeport or navigating the court's CM/ECF system,
which requires special authorization. The motion must then
be briefed and opposed, and the court must rule on the
intervention question before even reaching the sealing
question. The practical consequence is a meaningful
procedural barrier that does not exist in other courts in
the same circuit. But it can still work.
The case: Salim Sakal, 55, a Brooklyn
jeweler who pleaded guilty to conspiring with a Colombian
burglary ring to fence more than $4.4 million in stolen
jewelry from mall-based kiosks in six states, is scheduled
for sentencing before Judge Dooley. The government moved
to seal three sentencing exhibits: Sakal's financial
statement submitted to the US Attorney's Office, and
police reports of crimes committed against Sakal and his
jewelry business. Those police reports â government
documents describing crimes against the defendant â are
among the most public-facing law enforcement records that
exist.
Watch this site.