Full opinion text
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER WILLIAM K. THOMAS, District Judge. Each of these actions seeks declaratory and injunctive relief, and each is founded on 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1964) (deprivation of civil rights). Consolidated for trial each action requests a permanent injunction to bar the prosecution of the 25 persons secretly indicted on October 16, 1970, by a Special Grand Jury of Portage County (Ohio) Common Pleas Court, in 30 true bills of indictment covering 43 offenses. Also requested is an order to expunge a written report presented by the Special Grand Jury to the Honorable Edwin W. Jones, Judge of the Common Pleas Court of Portage County, at the same time the indictments were secretly returned. The indictments grow out of events of May 1 through May 4, 1970, that took place on and off the campus of Kent State University in Kent, Ohio. Dealing with those events on October 4, 1970, the President’s Commission on Campus Unrest issued a “Special Report — The Kent State Tragedy.” The Special Grand Jury Report, the validity of which is an issue in this case, attempts to chronicle the same events. The issues in these cases, as this court sees them, neither require nor permit a general factual inquiry, and this court makes no independent findings as to what transpired during those four days in May in the Kent community. However, it is material to record that responsive to a request of the Mayor of Kent, Ohio’s Governor James A. Rhodes on the evening of May 2, 1970, dispatched units of Ohio National Guardsmen to duty in Kent, Ohio to assist the local authorities. Apparently martial law was not declared. On the afternoon of May 4, 1970, confrontations involving students and Ohio National Guardsmen climaxed on Blanket Hill in the vicinity of Taylor Hall on the university campus. Ohio National Guardsmen shot and killed four students and wounded nine other students. Three persons are indicted for offenses alleged to have happened on Friday, May 1, 1970. These offenses include malicious injury to property and riot, second degree. Ten persons are charged with offenses alleged to have happened on Saturday, May 2, 1970. These offenses include arson of uninhabited building; attempt to burn property; throwing stones at a fireman; assault and strike a fireman; interfering with a fireman at scene of fire; riot, first degree; and riot, second degree. One person is charged with one count of inciting to riot on Sunday, May 3, 1970. With reference to Monday, May 4, 1970, 16 persons are each charged with a single count of riot, second degree; and one person is charged with a single count of inciting to riot. None of the National Guardsmen is indicted for any offense. Representative of the contentions of both complaints is this quote from the Hammond complaint: The making of the indictments, together with the [Special Grand Jury] Report was a bad-faith use of the State’s legal machinery with the purpose of inhibiting the exercise of free speech and has caused and will continue to cause, unless nullified and expunged, significant chilling effect on speech that cannot be avoided by future state court adjudication. There, are 20 plaintiffs in the Hammond case, six of whom are indicted and are charged with riot, second degree on May 4, 1970. One plaintiff is indicted on counts of arson of uninhabited dwelling and riot, first degree on May 2, 1970. Another plaintiff is charged with counts of riot, first degree; interference with fireman at scene of fire, and throwing stones at another, all offenses alleged to have occurred on May 2, 1970. The other indicted plaintiff in the Hammond case is charged with riot, second degree on May 1, 1970; with inciting to riot on May 3, 1970; and is charged with riot, first degree and interfering with fireman at the scene of fire on May 2, 1970. Other plaintiffs in the Hammond case include a student of Kent State University, not indicted by the Grand Jury, who sues on behalf of himself and all other students of Kent State University; and 10 persons who describe themselves as “concerned members of the Kent State University community or elsewhere in the community of Portage County, Ohio * * *» All plaintiffs in the Adamek case, 32 in number, are professors at Kent State University. The complaint charges that First, Fifth, Sixth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights are violated by the issuance of the Report. It stresses that First Amendment Rights (including academic freedom) have been jeopardized by the indictment of fellow plaintiff Professor Thomas Lough. His indictment charges him with inciting to riot on May 4, 1970. Attorney General Paul W. Brown and his appointed Special Counsel, Robert L. Balyeat, Seabury H. Ford, and Perry G. Dickinson, are defendants in each case. They are sued individually and in their respective capacities as Attorney General of Ohio and Special Counsel to the Attorney General. Attorney General Brown appointed these Special Counsel to conduct the investigation called for by Governor Rhodes on August 3, 1970. Governor Rhodes directed Attorney General Brown to convene a Special Grand Jury in Portage County, Ohio. In the Hammond case also sued are foreman Robert R. Hastings and 15 other members of the Special Grand Jury, and Lucy S. DeLeone, Clerk of the Common Pleas Court of Portage County. In the Adamek case, Robert W. Hastings, is sued individually and as a member of the Special Grand Jury and so are all others similarly situated. On November 13, 1970, this court overruled a consolidated motion of the plaintiffs in both eases to convene a three-judge court to pass on the constitutionality of Ohio’s anti-riot laws (Ohio Rev.Code § 2923.52-54). As seen, these sections, adopted in Ohio in 1968, form the most frequent basis of the offenses charged in the indictments. In plaintiffs’ motion it was claimed that these sections of law “on their face and as applied violate the Constitution of the United States and are, therefore, null and void.” In denying the motion for a three-judge court this court concluded and determined that “there is no substantiality to the claim of unconstitutionality of the Ohio anti-riot law.” An evidentiary hearing on the remaining issues of the two actions, involving the request for permanent injunctive and declaratory relief, was held from November 23, 1970 through December 3, 1970. Following the submission of proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, oral arguments were presented on January 5, 1971. I. In considering a case that petitions a federal district court to intervene in a state criminal case it is timely to first mark the permissible limits of federal intervention. The criminal jurisdiction of our country is apportioned between the coordinate federal and state judicial systems. Under Ohio law, state grand juries or state prosecutors have exclusive jurisdiction to charge (accuse) a person with violation of a state criminal law. Only a grand jury may indict (accuse) a person of a felony. A felony is any crime for which the sentence of incarceration may exceed one year. A state grand jury may also indict a person for a misdemeanor, a crime having a lesser sentence than a felony. An accused person may waive indictment and authorize a state prosecuting attorney to charge him by criminal information. A state common pleas court has exclusive jurisdiction to try a person charged with a felony. Comparably, persons may only be required to stand for trial for federal crimes amounting to felonies upon indictment by a federal grand jury. A federal grand jury may also indict (accuse) for a misdemeanor. A United States Attorney may prosecute by criminal information in misdemeanor cases or in felony eases when accusation by indictment is waived. United States district courts (federal trial courts) have exclusive jurisdiction to try persons accused of federal crimes. The complaints of the plaintiffs in both actions are founded on 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1964) (deprivation of civil rights under color of state statute); and, therefore, this court has jurisdiction of these actions by virtue of 28 U.S.C. § 1343(3) (4) (1957) (jurisdiction in civil rights cases). Jurisdiction under other sections is claimed, including 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201, 2202 (1958) (declaratory judgment). Abjuring damages the plaintiffs seek declaratory and injunctive relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1964). Title 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1964) is a frequent foundation for cases currently being brought in federal court. Enacted April 20, 1871, the Civil Rights Act of 1871, and its successors (now section 1983), soon will be a hundred years old. As here relevant this section provides: Every person who, under color of any statute * * * of any State * * subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for redress. In applying section 1983, one must consider the effect of 28 U.S.C. § 2283 (1948). Known as the Anti-Injunction Law, section 2283 and its predecessors have been in force since early in this country’s history. Section 2283 states: A court of the United States may not grant an injunction to stay proceedings in a State court except as expressly authorized by Act of Congress, or where necessary in aid of its jurisdiction, or to protect or effectuate its judgments. The Supreme Court of the United States recently enforced this statute in a non-civil rights case, Atlantic Coast Line R. R. v. Bhd. of Locomotive Engineers, 398 U.S. 281, 90 S.Ct. 1739, 26 L.Ed.2d 234 (1970). As yet the Supreme Court has reserved but not ruled on the question whether an action brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1964) may constitute an exception to 28 U.S.C. § 2283 (1948). Dombrowski v. Pfister, 380 U.S. 479, 85 S.Ct. 1116, 14 L.Ed.2d 22 (1965) and Cameron v. Johnson, 390 U.S. 611, 88 S.Ct. 1335, 20 L.Ed.2d 182 (1968) were both based on section 1983. In these cases the Supreme Court recognizes that injunctive relief against a state criminal prosecution may be granted where irreparable injury is established. This requires proof of “special circumstances,” amounting to a bad faith criminal prosecution that has a “chilling effect” on First Amendment rights. A recent application of Dombrowski, supra, and Cameron, supra, controlling on this court, is Honey v. Goodman, 432 F.2d 333 (6th Cir., October 9, 1970), a claim based on section 1983. The majority opinion, written by Judge Anthony J. Celebrezze, affirmed the trial judge’s refusal to request a three-judge court to consider the constitutionality of the Kentucky embracery law. He had declared the law constitutional. However, the case was remanded for an evidentiary hearing at which the appellants are to bear the “heavy burden" of showing that the state instituted proceedings in bad faith and with no real hope of ultimate success, in order to chill free expression of unpopular ideas, * * *. [432 F.2d at 334] The appellants had been indicted for embracery (a Kentucky crime defined to be “where one attempts to corrupt, or influence, or instruct a jury * * *”). The decision has direct significance because of its holding that a federal injunction against state court criminal proceedings may issue even after indictment “where proceeding may technically be under way, but not where the state trial of accused had begun; * * *.” II. On August 3, 1970, Governor Rhodes wrote Attorney General Brown that “We have reviewed together the status of investigation of the tragic disorders at Kent State University and the City of Kent during the first days of May this year.” The letter noted that the prosecuting attorney of Portage County had “informally asked my office to make $100,000 available to supplement the funds that he can expend on Grand Jury inquiries and prosecutions.” He noted that his staff, the Attorney General’s staff, and the Legislative Service Commission found the same answer: [T]he State can finance a Grand Jury inquiry and any prosecutions resulting therefrom if the Governor, in present circumstances (as the General Assembly is in sine die adjournment), directs the Attorney General to investigate or prosecute. The letter continues: Only a Grand Jury and the Courts can diminish the half-informed and misinformed commentary on events at Kent State that still is heard. Only a Grand Jury can say who should face prosecution and for what. Citing sections 109.02, 2939.10, and 2939.17 of the Ohio Revised Code, the Governor then directed the Attorney Genera] of Ohio: [T]o investigate (1) acts leading to or inducing illegal or criminal acts in any way associated with “campus unrest” that took place in the City of Kent or on the Campus of Kent State University on or about May 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5, 1970 and (2) such illegal or criminal acts themselves. Your investigation shall include the legality of official response to such illegal or criminal acts and to the general temper and situation prevailing in the environs of Kent and Kent State University before and during the dates mentioned. It was this language that Judge Edwin W. Jones repeated in his charge to the Special Grand Jury. He then told the Special Grand Jury that “this, Ladies and Gentlemen, states the purpose of convening this Special Grand Jury and the area of your inquiry.” Governor Rhodes concluded his letter to Attorney General Brown by saying: This direction requires investigation up to and including a Special Grand Jury inquiry. As specified by Section 2939.10 of the Revised Code, such proceedings will be under your exclusive supervision and control. In ordering an investigation of “acts leading to or inducing illegal or criminal acts in any way associated with ‘campus unrest’ * * *,” Governor Rhodes’ call appears to direct the Special Grand Jury to identify causes. Foreman Hastings apparently read the call that way. He testified the Grand Jury believed it should report “at least the causes as we saw them.” However, the scope of a governor’s call cannot enlarge the powers of a Special Grand Jury. Its proceedings are “of the same force and effect” as a regular grand jury, Ohio Rev.Code § 2939.17. Furthermore, under Ohio Rev.Code § 2939.10 the' Attorney General and his Special Counsel have and exercise the rights, privileges,, and powers of prosecuting attorneys. State ex rel. Doerfler, Prosecuting Attorney v. Price, Attorney General, 101 Ohio St. 50, 128 N.E. 173 (1920).. By letter dated August 4, 1970, Attorney General Brown informed Judge Jones of the Governor’s direction to him; and he forwarded a copy of Governor Rhodes’ call, to investigate. His letter requested Judge Jones to select and to convene a Special Grand Jury in Portage County for the purpose of proceeding in accordance with the foregoing on or about August 25, 1970, or as soon thereafter as you may determine to be practicable. Pursuant to an order of August 12, 1970, from Judge Jones, the Commissioners of Jurors of Portage County on August 18, 1970, drew the names of 285 prospective jurors to serve for the September 1970 term, “and in the case of the Special Grand Jury to serve until such time as it is discharged.” The first 50 names of persons drawn from the jury wheel were summoned to appear for jury service on the Special Grand Jury “to be convened at the request of the Attorney General of the State of Ohio.” The Special Grand Jury was impaneled by Judge Edwin W. Jones on September 14, 1970. Judge Jones appointed Robert R. Hastings as foreman from outside the jury wheel as empowered by Ohio Rev. Code § 2939.02. Before he charged the Special Grand Jury, Judge Jones administered the oath prescribed by Ohio Rev. Code § 2939.06, including its provision that: The counsel of the state, your own, and your fellows, you shall keep secret unless called on in a court of justice to make disclosures; * * *. By Ohio Rev.Code § 2939.07 the judge is required to charge the grand jurors after being sworn as to their duty. It specifies: [He] shall call their attention particularly to the obligation of secrecy which their oaths impose, and explain to them the law applicable to such matters as may be brought before them. revealed by Mr. Hastings under interrogation by Mr. Sheerer: At no point in his charge did Judge Jones authorize the Special Grand Jury to file a written report. However, Foreman Robert R. Hastings, in his trial testimony, volunteered that the filing of a grand jury report came up in a discussion between him and Judge Jones in the judge’s chambers on the first or second morning of the sessions. The judge’s feeling that a report should be filed was Q Does that complete your understanding of the purpose of the Grand Jury? A Are you referring now to the fact that we made a report in connection with the indictments? Q Well, perhaps. A This was also indicated to us by Judge Jones, that it was very common — in fact, practically usual —in the State of Ohio for a Grand Jury to conduct the thing, and part — at the end of the proceedings was to issue a written report. He even mentioned — and we sort of chuckled — he didn’t think it would be necessary for our Special Grand Jury to visit the jail and make a report on the condition of the jail. But that he felt, in view of the seriousness of what had happened over there and the extent with which we were going to be involved in the investigation, that a report should be filed with our indictments, if any. By order of September 5, 1970, Judge Jones and his fellow Judge Albert L. Caris had barred statements by witnesses, grand jurors, lawyers, and others. This order was relaxed on October 15, 1970. The supplemental order makes it clear that Judge Jones anticipated a report of the Special Grand Jury the next day. It reads: * * * Special Counsel for the Attorney General may hold one (1) press conference on October 16, 1970 at which time they may present to the news media that portion of the report of the Special Grand Jury which is not secret and may answer only general questions pertaining to such portions of the report of the Special Grand Jury without giving any specific information, commenting on any of the evidence presented to the said Special Grand Jury or making any interpretation of such report. The supplemental order further provided * * * that a copy of this Supplemental Order shall be made available to the Special Counsel of the Attorney General and to all representatives of the news media participating in said press conference. On October 16, 1970, an 18-page document was submitted to Judge Edwin W. Jones by Robert R. Hastings, foreman of the Special Grand Jury. The document consists of two titled parts. Page 1 is center-captioned: ENTRY ON SPECIAL GRAND JURY IN RE THE MATTER OF THE SPECIAL GRAND JURY: Page 4 is headed “REPORT OF THE SPECIAL GRAND JURY.” This center heading is immediately below an introduction which reads: “Also their report in writing to the Court in the following words and figures, viz:”. Bearing a file stamp “Court of Common Pleas, October 16, 1970,” the entry set forth on page 1 bears the court journal stamp, “Journal 113 page 374.” The entry lists the appearance of the Grand Jurors in court with their foreman and it reports his presentment of 30 bills of indictment to the court. Pages 2 and 3 of the Special Grand Jury Report named 25 persons in alphabetical order specifying the offense or offenses of each named person. At the top of page 2 is the statement: The following parties have not yet been arrested, and until they are, their eases are not to be entered upon the appearance docket, nor upon the trial docket, nor otherwise made public. This language of the entry is based on Ohio Rev. Code § 2939.22 that specifies that “Secret indictments shall not be docketed by name until after the apprehension of the accused.” Since the returned indictments were secret indictments, pages 2 and 3 were removed from the document and kept in the Clerk’s vault. By the time of this trial, however, all but three of the 25 indicted had been arrested. Accordingly, pages 2 and 3 have been restored to the document. Deleting the names and offenses of the three persons not then arrested it shows 22 names (see Hammond, Plaintiffs’ Exhibit 1). Since the hearing, the Clerk has supplied the court with the identification of the offenses and the dates of the offenses, but not the names of the persons not yet arrested. Directed to the Honorable Edwin W. Jones, Judge of Court of Common Pleas, Portage County, Ohio, the Report consists of 14 pages, 4 through 18. Each page bears the stamp of a separate journal page in the Court Journal: Journal 113 page 375 through page 389. An unlabeled preface of the Report surveys the testimony and physical evidence heard and received by the Special Grand Jury. Parts I through VII chronicle the events of May 1 through May 4, 1970, interspersing findings of riots and criminal conduct. Part VIII quotes a statement issued May 3, 1970, by 23 “Concerned Faculty,” and, among other things, the Special Grand Jury says the 23 must share “responsibility for the tragic consequences of May 4, 1970.” In Part IX the Special Grand Jury identifies what it determines to be the causes of the “incidents occurring on the Kent State University campus on May 2nd., 3rd., and 4th. * * * ” Thus, it says “major responsibility” for these incidents rests “clearly with those persons who are charged with the administration of the University.” It renders moral and social judgments on policies, attitudes, and conduct of the university administration, and some faculty and students. Below the conclusion of the Report on page 18 appears the date October 16, 1970, the words “Respectfully submitted,” and the signature “Robert R. Hastings, Foreman.” Under that appears a typed entry which reads: “There being no further business for said Special Grand Jury, they are recessed subject to the further order of the Court.” This entry is signed “Edwin W. Jones, Judge —Common Pleas Court.” The only reference to the indictments that appears in the body of the Report of the Special Grand Jury is a statement in the second paragraph of the Report that the Special Grand Jury “presented 30 true bills covering 25 defendants and 43 offenses, considered by us.” III. A fundamental position of the plaintiffs is that the indictments are inseparably a part of the Report. Asserting that the Report is invalid, the plaintiffs argue that the indictments are tainted by the Report. Hence, it is urged that the Report, including the indictments, must be expunged. It is evident from the journalized entry of October 16, 1970, regarding the Special Grand Jury, that the Special Grand Jury through its foreman presented to the court 30 bills of indictment, and that each indictment was endorsed a “true bill” and signed by the foreman, Robert R. Hastings. The entry reports the presentment of these bills of indictment to the court. These bills of indictment are neither physically attached to the document nor are they incorporated by reference. Each bill of indictment, endorsed a true bill, and signed by the foreman is separate and legally sufficient. Ruch v. State, 111 Ohio St. 580, 146 N.E. 67 (first syllabus) (1924). Indeed, an indictment cannot draw strength from the entry of the grand jury reporting the return of indictments. An indictment, void because it is unsigned by the foreman, cannot be cured by the entry of the grand jury that incorrectly reports that a secret indictment was signed by the foreman. Kennedy v. Alvis, 145 N.E.2d 361 (Franklin County C.P.1957). Upon the pertinent evidence and under Ohio law determined to be applicable, it is concluded and declared that the 30 indictments are detached and self-sufficient; and they are not embodied in the Report of the Special Grand Jury. At this point it is timely to consider another claim of the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs urge that this court should find the indictments insufficient because, as one of plaintiffs’ counsel argued orally, “I doubt if there is a single shred of evidence in this record that would show any basis for those indictments.” He argued further that as he reads Cameron, supra, “at least some evidence should be offered by the prosecution to support a finding by the court that Dombrowski relief is not warranted, that is, there must be some evidence to show that the charges were based on something.” Cameron, supra, is not directly comparable. The persons charged with violating the newly enacted Mississippi anti-picketing law were being prosecuted on affidavits and arrest warrants. There were no indictments as there are in the present case. Even so the three-judge court made it clear in Cameron v. Johnson, 262 F.Supp. 873 (S.D.Miss.1966), a ruling affirmed by the Supreme Court, that the federal claim under section 1983 could not be concerned with the guilt or innocence of the state charges. The evidence received was permitted to compare court house picketing on the days involving the charges with picketing of the court house on other days for which the accused were not charged. It was deemed relevant to determine whether selective enforcement, amounting to bad faith, had occurred. During the trial this court ruled out proposed testimony as to the events of May 4, 1970. It was offered allegedly to show bad faith of indictments that charge riot offenses on that day. The offer sought to contest a finding of the Report that “the gathering quickly degenerated into a riotous mob.” Relying on Costello v. United States, 350 U.S. 359, 363-364, 76 S.Ct. 406, 100 L.Ed. 397 (1956), this court concluded that [T]his Court cannot, and should not, assume the role of a super Grand Jury [n]or * * * should [it] assume the role of a reviewing body to review the propriety of these indictments based on the claim here of inadequate] or incompetent evidence as it is offered in support of the claim of bad faith. The law of Ohio conforms to Costello, supra. Turk v. State, 7 Ohio 240, Pt. 2; State v. Selby, Ohio Com.Pl., 126 N.E.2d 606, 607, 69 Ohio Law.Abst. 481 (1955) and Wickline v. Alvis, 103 Ohio App. 1, 144 N.E.2d 207 (1957). Thus, in State v. Selby, the court ruled: Where an indictment of the Grand Jury is regular upon its face, there is a conclusive presumption that there was sufficient evidence to warrant the indictment; * * * and, consequently even the Court itself cannot inquire whether there was sufficient evidence before the Grand Jury to warrant its return of the indictments in question. The indictments returned by the Portage County Special Grand Jury are deemed to be presumptively valid; and it is concluded that to show bad faith the plaintiffs in these cases cannot offer evidence that bears on the evidentiary adequacy or sufficiency of the indictments. In this trial it is found and declared that the state was under no duty to offer evidence to support the indictments. IV. One of the proposed conclusions of law of the Hammond plaintiffs states a basic claim of all plaintiffs. It reads: By issuing its Report, the special Grand Jury violated the rights of the plaintiffs and other persons indicted to a fair trial in that in the said Report the special Grand Jury commented, made findings and conclusions and determinations of fact and law with respect to the very events in the charges set forth in said indictments and made unlawful predeterminations of guilt of those indicted, thereby depriving them of the presumption of innocence provided by the Constitution of the State of Ohio and the Constitution of the United States and in violation of the rights, privileges and immunities of the indicted plaintiffs under 42 U.S.C., Section 1983. The first syllabus of the opinion in State ex rel. Doerfler, Prosecuting Attorney v. Price, Attorney General, supra, defines the function of a grand jury: The grand jury, in its inquest of crimes and offenses, and in its finding and presentation of indictments to the court of common pleas, does not exercise a judicial function. It only acts as the formal and constitutional accuser of crime and those it believes to be probably guilty thereof. Since the grand jury “only acts as the formal and constitutional accuser of crime” and since it “does not exercise a judicial function,” it is fundamental that grand jury proceedings are non-adversary. In Wickline v. Alvis, supra, 144 N.E.2d at 210-211, Judge Bryant wrote: Proceedings of the grand jury are not a trial but are more in the nature of an inquest. There are no parties, and no defendant has a right to appear before the grand jury; and, if he does appear, it is only upon permission granted and he then appears as a witness, not a defendant, and he has no right to take his attorney along with him. Thus the instructions of Judge Jones to the Special Grand Jury are on sound legal ground when he told them: As a Grand Jury you are not a trying body. You are simply an accusing body. Therefore it is not your province to determine in any case whether a person who may be accused of having committed a crime or offense is really guilty. He told the Jury that it had “a different duty to perform.” Its duty is to determine whether or not there is sufficient evidence to put the accused on trial before a petit jury or a trial jury. As to the evidence needed to “find” an indictment, Judge Jones’ instructions were in general terms but accurate. He told the Grand Jurors: [Y]ou ought to be fairly convinced that the crime charged has been committed insofar as the evidence goes. He added: [T]he Grand Jury ought not to indict unless convinced that the evidence produced, if it were unexplained and uncontradicted, would be sufficient to authorize a petit jury to convict that person of the crime which is imputed to him. These instructions emphasize that the grand jury is not expected to hear all the evidence. The Ohio law is unequivocal. The grand jury proceedings, is an inquest and not a trial. An accused party is not permitted to have his attorney present. Hence, there can be no cross-examination of witnesses, so essential to bring out all the evidence. Contrary to the judge’s explicit instruction that the Special Grand Jury is “not a trying body,” the Report in Parts I through VII, chronicling the events of May 1 through May 4, contains 70 findings. As is true of pages 1, 2, and 3 of the “ENTRY ON SPECIAL GRAND JURY,” the first two paragraphs of the “REPORT OF THE SPECIAL GRAND JURY” closely follow the form and wording of the standard grand jury form published and sold by Barrett Brothers, Publishers of Springfield, Ohio, including the last sentence of the second paragraph, which reads: The business of this Special Grand Jury has been transacted in an expeditious a manner as possible. Then the Report takes off on its own. Because of its relevance, and since defense counsel alluded to the form in oral argument, a blank form, sua sponte, is designated a court exhibit and is made a part of the record. In repeating in paragraph 3 that it received testimony from more than 300 witnesses, the Special Grand Jury did not disclose any secret. This total number could be computed from the public court records of the names of witnesses who were subpoenaed or who appeared before the Grand Jury. But the Special Grand Jury violated its oath of secrecy when it asserted that these witnesses have fairly represented every aspect, attitude, and point of view concerning the events which occurred in the city of Kent, Ohio and on the campus of Kent State University during the period of May 1, 1970 to May 4, 1970, inclusive. The Report further breaches secrecy when it alleges that: The persons called as witnesses, the order of their appearance, and the questions presented, clearly indicated an effort at complete impartiality with a full and complete disclosure of all available evidence. We are satisfied that each of these objects was accomplished. In his charge, Judge Jones admonished the Grand Jurors that: What is revealed in the Grand Jury room must remain locked forever in your minds and breasts unless you are required under the law to make disclosures in a Court of Justice. Yet, in clear violation of this admonition of secrecy the Grand Jury reported that it viewed and otherwise received all physical evidence believed to have any probative value, including numerous audio tapes, photographs, motion picture films, and physical evidence recovered at the scene. Further opening their “locked * * * minds and breasts” the Grand Jury stated that it has had available the independent investigative reports of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Ohio Highway Patrol, Ohio Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation, and all other police agencies involved. It then added: Their reports and all pertinent information and evidence have been examined in detail. To the extent that the Special Grand Jury Report described the evidence before the Jury, this court permitted trial interrogation of Special Counsel. Counsel’s testimony indicates that this last quoted statement of the Report is partly inaccurate and, therefore, misleading to the reader. The identified investigative reports were available to the Grand Jury. However, these reports were not introduced into evidence. Understandably they were not read in their entirety by the Grand Jurors. (The FBI report was described as consisting of 10,000 pages of statements of witnesses. It contains no conclusions.) Instead, selected portions of some of the volumes were read to the Grand Jury by Special Counsel. Special Counsel had examined the reports in detail; the Grand Jury did not. Apparently Special Counsel told the Grand Jury that it had examined the investigative reports in detail. But this is not what the Grand Jury Report states. The preface of the Report reflects an undoubtedly sincere effort to convince the reader of the depth and impartiality of its investigation, the credibility of its findings, and the cogency of its later moral and social judgments. Thus, the preface further says: In addition, the Grand Jury has received a substantial amount of additional information and evidence that was not available to the police agencies at the time of their investigations. Some facts were discovered subsequent to the investigation of other agencies. As held in State ex rel. Doerfler, supra, the grand jury serves only as an “accuser of crime” that makes findings of indictments based on probable cause. One of the Special Counsel admits that no such instruction was given to the Grand Jury. The Report fails to disclose that the Special Grand Jury’s determinations and findings can rest only on probable cause and “insofar as the evidence goes,” to quote from Judge Jones’ charge. Instead, the Special Grand Jury openly assumes the role of a careful trier of the fact as it concludes the preface of its Report: The Grand Jurors have determined numerous questions of fact relative to the issues presented. The Grand Jurors wish to stress the fact that our findings are entirely our own and no outside influences were exerted. In view of the many conflicting and contradictory accounts previously published concerning these events, we feel it appropriate to report those findings at this time. They are as follows: Part I of the Report states, in part: The incidents originating on North Water Street in Kent, Ohio on Friday, May 1,1970, and which spread to other parts of the downtown area and the University, constituted a riot. We find that no provocation existed for the acts committed there and that many persons participating in this riot were not students, but were of a type who always welcomed the opportunity to participate in the unjustified destruction of property. One of the 25 persons indicted is indicted for the offense of riot, second degree, a misdemeanor (Ohio Rev.Code § 2923.52), on May 1, 1970. He is a plaintiff in the Hammond action. Another person is indicted for malicious injury to property, a misdemeanor (Ohio Rev. Code § 2901.01) or felony (Ohio Rev. Code § 2907.08). Part II of the Report states, in part: We find that the rally on the Commons on Saturday, May 1, 1970, which resulted in the burning of the R.O.T.C. Building, constituted a riot. There can never exist any justification or valid excuse for such an act. The burning of this building and the destruction of its contents was a deliberate criminal act committed by students and non-students. Nor did the rioters stop with the burning of the R.O.T.C. Building. They also set fire to the archery shed and moved from there to East Main Street on the front campus where they engaged in further acts of destruction and stoned the members of the National Guard as they entered Kent. Arson is arson, whether committed on a college campus or elsewhere. The fact that some of the participants were college students changes nothing, except perhaps to further aggravate the seriousness of the offense. With reference to the indictments involving May 2, 1970, two persons are indicted for attempting to bum property, a felony (Ohio Rev.Code § 2907.06). Three persons, including one plaintiff, are indicted for the offense of arson of uninhabited building, a felony (Ohio Rev. Code § 2907.03). Eight persons, including three plaintiffs, are indicted for the offense of riot, first degree, a felony (Ohio Rev.Code § 2923.53). One person is indicted for the offense of riot, second degree, a misdemeanor (Ohio Rev. Code § 2923.52). Six persons, including two plaintiffs, are indicted for the offense of interfering with firemen at scene of a fire, a misdemeanor (Ohio Rev.Code § 2923.43). One person, a plaintiff, is indicted for the offense of throwing stones at another, a misdemeanor (Ohio Rev.Code § 2901.251), and two persons are indicted for the offense of assaulting and striking a fireman, misdemeanor or felony (Ohio Rev.Code § 2901.252). Part III of the Report is devoted to detailed findings that allege that the Kent State University police department is totally inadequate. Referring to the fire at the ROTC Building on May 2, 1970, the Report adds to earlier findings: The persons who attacked the firemen numbered no more than 4 or 5. The total number of those persons who actually attempted to fire the building did not exceed ten or twelve. It is obvious that the burning of the R.O. T.C. building could have been prevented with the manpower then available. If the burning had been prevented it is reasonable to believe that the events which followed on May 3rd and 4th would not have occurred. Part IV of the Report commences by saying: The Grand Jury finds that the events of Sunday, May 3, 1970, on campus and at the corner of Lincoln Street and East Main Street in Kent, Ohio constituted a riot. There follows a long paragraph which recites findings as to these events. One of the plaintiffs is indicted for inciting a riot on May 3, 1970, a felony, Ohio Rev. Code § 2923.54). Part V of the Report, except for the last sentence, reads: The gathering on the Commons on May 4, 1970, was a violation of the directive of May 3rd issued by the University Vice President in charge of Student Affairs. We find that all the persons assembled were ordered to disperse on numerous occasions, but failed to do so. Those orders, given by Kent State University policemen, caused a violent reaction and the gathering quickly degenerated into a riotous mob. It is obvious that if the order to disperse had been heeded, there would not have been the consequences of that fateful day. Those who acted as participants and agitators are guilty of deliberate, criminal conduct * *. Part VII of the Report also relates to the events of May 4, and elaborates the findings of Part V. Neither Part records the killing of the four students and the injuring of nine others by National Guardsmen. However, the Special Grand Jury indirectly refers to the killings in the last sentence of the opening paragraph of Part VII. The entire paragraph reads: It should be made clear that we do not condone all of the activities of the National Guard on the Kent State University campus on May 4, 1970. We find, however, that those members of the National Guard who were present on the hill adjacent to Taylor Hall on May 4, 1970, fired their weapons in the honest and sincere belief and under circumstances which would have logically caused them to believe that they would suffer serious bodily injury had they not done so. They are not, therefore, subject to criminal prosecution under the laws of this state for any death or injury resulting therefrom. To factually support its legal conclusion that the Guardsmen acted in self-defense for the unmentioned killings, Part VII goes on to make findings that relate to the movements of the National Guard across the “Commons” up Blanket Hill near Taylor Hall, to and from the practice football field, and back to Blanket Hill. The Report speaks of 58 Guardsmen injured by rocks and other objects. The Report refers to “several hundred hostile rioters” who forced the Guard to retreat back up the hill toward Taylor Hall under a constant barrage of rocks and other flying objects, accompanied by a constant flow of obscenities and chants such as “KILL, KILL, KILL.” The Report then states: Photographic evidence has established, beyond any doubt, that as the National Guardsmen approached the top of the hill adjacent to Taylor Hall, a large segment of the crowd surged up the hill, led by smaller groups of agitators approaching to within short distances of the rear ranks of the Guardsmen. With reference to May 4, 1970, 15 persons, including six of the Hammond plaintiffs, are indicted for the offense of riot, second degree, a misdemeanor (Ohio Rev.Code § 2923.52). Professor Thomas Lough is indicted for inciting to riot, a felony (Ohio Rev.Code § 2923.54). Findings and conclusions of the Special Grand Jury Report spanning the events of May 1 through May 4, 1970, have been quoted. These findings and conclusions cover or coincide with essential elements of the offenses that are charged in the indictments returned by the Special Grand Jury. For each of the four days there is a finding that the events constituted a riot. Establishing existence of a riot is a basic and essential element of at least 27 of the 43 charged offenses. Thus, the Special Grand Jury finds as true a basic element (in these 27 offenses) that the State is required to prove to a petit jury beyond a reasonable doubt. Finding the truth of essential elements of the crimes charged, for example that a riot had occurred, was not required of the Grand Jury, even in its secret deliberations. “As the formal and constitutional accuser of crime” a grand jury indicts “those it believes to be probably guilty thereof.” State ex rel. Doerfler, supra, first syllabus. In its secret deliberations, to indict, a grand jury need only find that each essential element of the indicted crime is probably true. At one point the Report finds that the evidence is “beyond doubt,” an even more exacting standard than “beyond a reasonable doubt." In addition, words connoting guilt occur throughout the findings. Thus, for example, five offenses of arson or similar offenses are charged in the indictments, yet the Report makes a specific finding that “arson is arson whether committed on a college campus or elsewhere.” The juxtaposition of the finding (in legal language) that the National Guardsmen who used their weapons on May 4th acted in self-defense is another way of saying that the “rioters” are guilty. In rendering these written findings in its Report the Special Grand Jury takes over the duty of a petit jury, acts as a trying body, and determines guilt. Simultaneously performing its real function as an accusing body it returned 30 indictments against 25 persons involving 43 offenses. “A fair trial in a fair tribunal is a basic requirement of due process.” In re Murchison, 349 U.S. 133, 136, 75 S.Ct. 623, 625, 99 L.Ed. 942 (1955). Similarly, Sheppard v. Maxwell, 384 U.S. 333, 362, 86 S.Ct. 1507, 1522, 16 L.Ed.2d 600 (1966), declares: Due process requires that the accused receive a trial by an impartial jury free from outside influences. Recently, in In re Winship, 397 U.S. 358, 364, 90 S.Ct. 1068, 1073, 25 L.Ed.2d 368 (1970), the Supreme Court explicitly holds that: [T]he Due Process Clause protects the accused against conviction except upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt of every fact necessary to constitute the crime with which he is charged. Earlier in the opinion the Court holds that: [This] standard provides concrete substance for the presumption of innocence — that bedrock “axiomatic and elementary” principle whose “enforcement lies at the foundation of the administration of our criminal law.” Coffin v. United States, [156 U.S. 432, 453, 15 S.Ct. 394, 39 L.Ed. 481 (1895)]. 397 U.S. at 363, 90 S.Ct. at 1072. In the trial of any of the persons indicted by the Special Grand Jury, prospective petit jurors surely will be asked various questions on voir dire examination. One essential question will be whether they accept the principle that a man is presumed innocent until and unless he is proved guilty by evidence beyond a reasonable doubt. They will be asked if they will be able to follow this law and presume the innocence of the accused. They will also be asked whether they will be able to accept and follow the law that an indictment is merely an accusation of crime, and that an indictment is neither evidence of guilt nor does it permit an inference of guilt. Assume that at the time of trial the Special Grand Jury Report remains journalized as an entry of an official body of citizens with its findings that in effect say that the 25 indicted persons are guilty. Under those circumstances it is unreasonable to expect or ask a prospective juror honestly to say and to promise to completely disregard these findings and to treat the indictment not as proof of guilt but only as an accusation of crime. The Special Grand Jury had a right to indict if the evidence before it indicated probable guilt. That right is not here questioned. Accounting to no one but its own conscience, as long as any indictment was impartially and fearlessly returned upon the basis of evidence heard or received, the Special Grand Jury would then have acted solely and lawfully as an accusing body. Because the Report harms the federal constitutional rights of the indicted persons these conclusions are reached as to the claim under consideration. It is concluded and declared that the Report’s continued existence in court files and in the court’s journal irreparably injures the right of each of the accused indicted to a fair trial, protected by the Due Process Clause. It is, therefore, found and declared that the continued vitality and official status of the Grand Jury Report deprive the indicted plaintiffs, and the other indicted persons similarly situated, of rights arising under the Constitution in violation of 42 U.S. C. § 1983 (1964). The Hammond plaintiffs, joined by the Adamek plaintiffs, assert that under the doctrine of pendent jurisdiction this court should hear and determine the claim of the plaintiffs that under Ohio law the Special Grand Jury had no right to issue its report. Invalidity and illegality of the Special Grand Jury Report under Ohio law, therefore, is said to furnish, as a state claim, an additional ground upon which the Special Grand Jury Report should be expunged. The doctrine of pendent jurisdiction is best and most fully elucidated in United Mine Workers v. Gibbs, 383 U.S. 715, 725, 86 S.Ct. 1130, 1138, 16 L.Ed.2d 218 (1966). It is said that “the federal claim must have substance sufficient to confer subject matter jurisdiction on the court.” Federal provisions 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1964) and 28 U.S.C. § 1343(3) (4) (1957) give this court jurisdiction to hear and to determine the claims in these cases. It is said United Mine Workers, supra, at 725, 86 S.Ct. at 1138, “the state and federal claims must derive from a common nucleus of operative fact.” The Special Grand Jury Report and the evidence surrounding its issuance have been analyzed in previous consideration of the federal claims in these eases. The same nucleus of fact now provides basis for a consideration and determination of the state claim that the Special Grand Jury Report is illegal and invalid. There is also conformance to these final requirements of Gibbs, supra at 725, 86 S.Ct. 1130. The federal and state claims without regard to their character are such that plaintiffs would ordinarily be expected to try them all in one judicial proceeding. Substantiality of the federal issues exists. Hence, it is concluded that there is power in this court to hear the whole. There are no common-law crimes in Ohio; nor is there common-law criminal procedure in Ohio. See State v. Whitmore, 126 Ohio St. 381, 185 N.E. 547, 548 (1933). The Ohio Code of Criminal Procedure, Chapter 2939: Grand Juries, contains only two sections that make provision for a grand jury report. With reference to its required visit to the county jail once a term, the grand jury is directed by Ohio Rev.Code § 2939.21: They shall report to the court of common pleas in writing whether the rules prescribed by such court have been faithfully kept and observed, and whether the law for the regulation of county jails has been observed or violated, stating the particulars of such violation. A further report is directed by Ohio Rev.Code § 2939.23. It provides: If an indictment is not found by the grand jury, against an accused who has been held to answer, such fact shall be reported by the foreman to the court of common pleas. The expression of specific power to issue these particularized reports by clear implication of law precludes a grand jury’s lawful exercise of any unexpressed power to render other types of written reports. Pressing the claim that there is common-law authority to authorize the issuance of written grand jury reports, the defendants argue that State ex rel. Doerfler, supra, provides authority for its position. Defendants rely on this language in the body of the opinion at 55 of 101 Ohio St., at 174 of 128 N.E. In short, the grand jury belongs to the people, to the government, and is not an adjunct of the court. The grand jury sits upon its own adjournments, and is comparatively without limit in the scope of its investigation, the bills that it may feturn, or the general findings that it may make. [Emphasis added by this court.] Defendants claim that the words “general findings” authorize a grand jury to report findings of fact of the type that are contained in the Special Grand Jury Report under consideration. Defendants’ reliance on Doerfler, supra, is misplaced. Doerfler was decided in 1920 before the adoption in 1929 of the Ohio Code of Criminal Procedure. Hence, whatever the law may have been as to grand jury procedure in 1920 it was codified in 1929. The Ohio Code of Criminal Procedure makes no provision for a report of the type represented by the Special Grand Jury Report. The about quoted language of the opinion on which the defendants rely is not carried into the syllabus of the case. The law of an Ohio Supreme Court opinion is found in the syllabus, Cassidy v. Glossip, 12 Ohio St.2d 17, 231 N.E.2d 64 (1967). Finally, the words “general findings” must be evaluated in the context of a distum that is typical of Judge Wanamaker’s style of opinions that so often stresses broad and historic legal principles and the fundamental rights of the people. Either his precise intended meaning of “general findings” cannot be fathomed or these words refer to “finding, * * * of indictments,” a phrase found in syllabus 1 of the opinion, quoted earlier in this opinion. The only reported Ohio decision that deals with grand jury reports is State v. Robinette, 143 N.E.2d 186, 187, 188 (C.P. Pike County, 1957). There a plea of abatement was sustained to a two-count perjury indictment. One of the grounds of the plea was that: The Grand Jury out of which the indictment grew was investigating a civil matter over which it had no jurisdiction and not a criminal matter as provided for by law as its report shows. According to the opinion of the trial judge “(t)he Grand Jury reported that the evidence presented before it justified the action of the Hospital Board in selecting this site * * The opinion continues: From this report the only conclusion which can be reached is that the Grand Jury had constituted itself as a reviewing body to pass upon the wisdom and authority of the Hospital Board in choosing the site selected. There is no hint of any criminal act or other irregularity having been committed by the Board or even of any criminal investigation by the Grand Jury with respect to the Board and its actions and decisions. In one sentence the court then described the authority of an Ohio grand jury. He said: It must be borne in mind that outside of inspecting the County Jail, the Grand Jury's sole duty and authority are the investigations of crimes and offenses. The court then added: [The Grand Jury] has no right or authority as an advisory board or reviewing body as to other public officers, board, commissioners or authorities. Though unstated by Judge Reynolds his conclusion conforms to a relevant constitutional principle. The grand jury in its inquest of crimes and offenses is part of the judicial branch of government. Like other branches of government the judicial branch is subject to the doctrine of separation of powers. State ex rel. Finley, Judge v. Pfeiffer, Bd. of County Commissioners, 163 Ohio St. 149, 126 N.E.2d 57 (Ohio Sup.Ct. 1955). The grand jury is part of the judicial branch of government and is separate and distinct from the legislative and executive branches of government; and the grand jury, therefore, may not “impinge upon the authority or rights of the others,” Finley, supra, at 149, 126 N.E.2d at 58. Hence, a grand jury is without authority to issue a report that advises, condemns or commends, or makes recommendations concerning the policies and operation of public boards, public officers, or public authorities. Protection of the “doctrine of the separation of powers” is carefully developed and relied on in a widely quoted and authoritative decision, Application of United Electrical, Radio & Machine Workers, 111 F.Supp. 858 (S.D.N.Y.1953), in which Judge Edward Weinfeld ordered expunged a “presentment” of a grand jury that was actually a report. The grand jury had returned no indictments. While not indicting officials of the Union the report in part stated that- non-Communist affidavits filed with the NLRB by officials of the Union are not ‘ worth the paper they are written on.” It further stated that the filing of such affidavits was a “subterfuge;” and that there, was “‘obvious non-compliance’ with § 9(h) of the Labor Management Relations Act,” Application, supra at 860. Moreover, a report of an Ohio grand jury is issued without authority if the report violates the grand jury’s secrecy against disclosure of evidence. In re Klausmeyer, 24 Ohio St.2d 143, 146, 265 N.E.2d 275, 277, 278 (Dec. 16, 1970), holds that the proceedings of an Ohio grand jury “must be legally sealed against divulgence.” They “must be kept inviolate, unless a court of competent jurisdiction determines otherwise after special circumstances have been revealed in an appropriate hearing.” A report of an Ohio grand jury, therefore, violates the oath of the grand jury and is, therefore, without authority, when it purports to summarize the evidence received by the grand jury or purports to make findings based upon the evidence. This conclusion conforms to a further conclusion of Judge Weinfeld in Application, supra, 111 F.Supp. at 866: In issuing the report based on evidence taken before them as an official body, they offended the rule of secrecy and the sanctity of their oaths. Attorney General Brown in his testimony and counsel for defendants in their arguments rely on the custom of the filing of grand jury reports in some Ohio counties. Writing on “The Grand Jury,” as a common pleas judge in Cuyahoga County, this court comijaented on the legality of this custom: The great strength of the grand jury is its broad investigative power into the possible commission of crime. It has no right or authority as an advisory board or reviewing body as to other public officers, boards, commissioners or authorities. However, a grand jury’s only statutory authority to report is to return a true bill or a no bill and to report in writing concerning the county jail. Nevertheless in Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court, and in other courts, grand juries have followed the custom of preparing a written report on matters generally coming to their attention during the term. When these reports describe some condition relating to the apparent cause or recommended cure for crime, as long as no public officials or private citizens are singled out for derogatory comment, they are, though without express or implied foundation in law, harmless and may serve some good. But when a report does not indict, when it refers to public officials or private citizens by name or identity in a critical or defamatory manner, then the report is unlawful and harmful. It may be suppressed or expunged. [“The Grand Jury, The City,” published by the City Club, Vol. XLVIX, No. 24, Feb. 10, 1964.] Eleven years earlier Judge Weinfeld distinguished between grand jury reports that are unlawful because they singled individuals for accusation or condemnation, and reports that only deal with general conditions in a community. As to the latter, he said in Application, supra at 869: We are not here concerned with reports of a general nature touching on conditions in the community. They may serve a valuable function and may not be amenable to challenge. From whatever standpoint one examines the lawfulness of an Ohio grand jury to issue a report, it is concluded and determined that whenever a report transgresses in any of the respects heretofore considered, the report under Ohio law is issued illegally and without lawful authority. A report that so offends is subject to' expungement. As to the indicted plaintiffs and the remaining indicted persons on whose behalf the indicted plaintiffs bring this action, it is determined and declared that the Report is issued unlawfully in violation of the Grand Jury’s oath of secrecy since its findings and conclusions in Parts I through VII itemize and comment upon the evidence heard and received by the Special Grand Jury. The vice of the violation of the oath of secrecy is that the Special Grand Jury finds commission of criminal offenses and ascribes guilt to participants in the described incidents. Involving the same subject matter the Special Grand Jury concurrently returned 30 indictments against 25 persons for 43 offenses. These findings and conclusions, unlawful violations of the Grand ■ Jury oath of secrecy, prejudice the indicted persons. If allowed to stand these findings and conclusions will irreparably injure their right to a fair trial. As Judge Weinfeld ruled, Application, supra at 869: The wide-spread and unfavorable publicity attendant upon the filing of the report might well prejudice a prospective defendant’s right to a fair trial — the right of every defendant, no matter what his alleged offense. VI. The non-indicted plaintiffs claim that Parts VIII and IX of the Report of the Special Grand Jury deprive them of constitutional rights under color of state law in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983; and that the issuance of the Report, as to them, is unlawful under state law. Part VIII of the Report begins by saying: Among other persons sharing responsibility for the tragic consequences of May 4, 1970, then must be included the “23 concerned faculty of