What are the facts?
In October 1975, a suspect, Erwin Simants, was arrested and charged with six counts of first-degree murder following the killings of six members of a family in the small town of Sutherland, Nebraska. The crime drew intense local and national media attention. Concerned that reporting on Simants's alleged confessions and other highly inculpatory facts would prejudice potential jurors, a county trial judge (the respondent, Judge Stuart) entered an order restraining the press from publishing or broadcasting accounts of confessions or admissions attributed to the accused, the existence or nature of certain forensic tests, and other facts deemed strongly implicative of Simants's guilt. The order was to remain in effect until a jury was impaneled. Various news organizations, including the Nebraska Press Association, challenged the order as an unconstitutional prior restraint on speech and publication. The Nebraska Supreme Court narrowed but largely upheld the restrictions, reasoning that the extraordinary publicity risked denying the defendant a fair trial. The U.S. Supreme Court granted certiorari and reviewed whether the First and Fourteenth Amendments permitted the restraint.
What is the legal issue?
May a state court constitutionally impose a prior restraint on the press—barring publication of alleged confessions and other strongly incriminating facts—to protect a criminal defendant's Sixth Amendment right to a fair trial?
What rule applies?
Prior restraints on speech and publication carry a heavy presumption against constitutional validity and are permissible, if at all, only when supported by specific findings showing that: (1) the nature and extent of pretrial publicity pose a serious and imminent threat to the fairness of the trial; (2) alternative measures short of prior restraint (such as change of venue, continuance, careful voir dire, sequestration, emphatic jury instructions, and restrictions on participant speech) would be inadequate to mitigate the threat; and (3) a restraining order would effectively prevent the threatened harm. Any order must be narrowly tailored and precisely drawn.
What did the court hold?
No. The prior restraint on the press violated the First and Fourteenth Amendments. On the record presented, the State failed to demonstrate that the restraining order was necessary, that less restrictive alternatives would be ineffective, or that the order would be an effective means of protecting the defendant's fair-trial rights.
What is the reasoning?
Chief Justice Burger, writing for a unanimous Court, reaffirmed that prior restraints are presumptively unconstitutional and "the most serious and the least tolerable infringement" on First Amendment rights. The Court emphasized the need to reconcile the press's right to report on criminal proceedings with the defendant's right to an impartial jury, but placed the burden squarely on the party seeking restraint to justify it through concrete, particularized findings. Applying a three-part analysis, the Court first considered the nature and extent of the publicity. While publicity was undoubtedly intense in the small community, generalized fears that jurors would be prejudiced were insufficient. Courts must move beyond abstractions and develop a record showing how publicity will likely result in juror bias that cannot be cured through trial management. Second, the Court assessed the availability and likely efficacy of alternatives to a prior restraint. Drawing on Sheppard v. Maxwell, the Court cataloged tools at the trial judge's disposal—change of venue, continuance, intensive voir dire to expose bias, sequestration, searching and repeated jury instructions, and firm control over extrajudicial statements by parties, counsel, law enforcement, and court personnel. The record lacked findings that these measures would be inadequate. Indeed, the small-community context often makes such techniques particularly salient and effective. Third, the Court examined whether the order would be effective in preventing the feared prejudice. It doubted that the order could realistically stem the flow of information, given multiple media outlets and the practical impossibility of hermetically sealing a community from news. Moreover, the order's vagueness—prohibiting "other facts strongly implicative of the accused"—risked chilling a broad range of lawful reporting and was not narrowly tailored. The Court stressed that speculative efficacy cannot justify suppressing speech. The Court explicitly did not hold that prior restraints to protect fair-trial rights are categorically impossible. But under the heavy presumption against such restraints, the State failed to carry its burden in this case. The Court thus reversed, instructing that trial judges must rely on targeted, less restrictive measures and reserve prior restraints, if ever permissible, for rare, extreme circumstances demonstrably beyond the reach of those alternatives.
Why is this case significant?
Nebraska Press is the leading case on gag orders targeting the press in criminal cases. It operationalizes the heavy presumption against prior restraints and provides a structured framework—assessing publicity's scope, alternatives' adequacy, and the restraint's likely efficacy—before any suppression of reporting may be contemplated. For law students, it is essential for understanding how courts balance First Amendment freedoms against Sixth Amendment fair-trial guarantees, the centrality of narrow tailoring and specific findings, and the primacy of alternative remedies identified in Sheppard v. Maxwell. The decision also informs later jurisprudence on truthful, lawfully obtained information and on permissible restrictions directed at participants rather than at the press.
What makes a prior restraint different from other speech restrictions?
A prior restraint prevents speech before it occurs—typically via injunctions or licensing—rather than punishing speech after publication. Because they suppress information in advance and chill a wide swath of protected expression, prior restraints face a "heavy presumption" of unconstitutionality and must meet the highest justificatory burden, including proof of necessity, ineffectiveness of alternatives, and likely efficacy.
Did the Supreme Court say a prior restraint can never be used to ensure a fair trial?
No. The Court declined to announce an absolute bar but made clear that any such order must satisfy an exacting standard. A court would need specific, record-based findings showing a serious and imminent threat to fairness, the inadequacy of all reasonable alternatives, and that a carefully tailored restraint would effectively prevent the harm. Nebraska Press found those showings absent on the record.
What alternatives should trial courts consider before restraining the press?
Courts should exhaust less restrictive tools, including change of venue, trial continuances to allow publicity to abate, comprehensive and probing voir dire, sequestration of the jury, emphatic and repeated limiting instructions, insulation of witnesses, and restricting extrajudicial statements by participants (lawyers, parties, police, and court staff). These measures aim to neutralize prejudice without suppressing public reporting.
How does Nebraska Press relate to Sheppard v. Maxwell and later cases like Gentile v. State Bar?
Sheppard emphasized trial management and participant-focused controls over speech to protect fair-trial rights. Nebraska Press extends that approach by placing stringent limits on gag orders against the press. Gentile upheld certain restrictions on lawyers' extrajudicial statements under a lower threshold ("substantial likelihood of material prejudice") because participants are officers of the court; that distinction underscores why direct restraints on the press face much stricter scrutiny.
Does the case protect publication of alleged confessions obtained lawfully by the press?
Yes, absent extraordinary circumstances meeting the Nebraska Press framework. Truthful reporting of lawfully obtained information lies at the core of First Amendment protection. Without concrete, specific findings demonstrating necessity, the inadequacy of alternatives, and the likely effectiveness of a narrow restraint, courts cannot prohibit publication of such material to protect fair-trial rights.
Why did the Court find the Nebraska order particularly problematic in scope and effectiveness?
The order used vague terms like "other facts strongly implicative," chilling a broad range of reporting, and it applied across media in a way unlikely to contain information effectively. The Court doubted that the restraint could realistically prevent the spread of news within or beyond the small community, and the record did not show why traditional trial safeguards would be inadequate.