delivered the opinion of the court:
We address an appeal by Chicago Tribune Company from an order entered by the trial court in this criminal trial. We dismissed an earlier appeal for lack of jurisdiction in an order dated July 19, 1995. We dismiss this appeal for lack of jurisdiction as well.
On June 28, 1995, the Tribune filed a "Petition for Access to Sidebar and In-Chambers Conferences” in this case. It requested access to "all recordings and transcripts of any sidebar conferences conducted at trial.” (Emphasis added.) The trial court ruled that it would allow the Tribune access to all sidebar conferences at the end of the trial, but then entered a written order that in form appeared to be a final and appealable order under Supreme Court Rule 304(a) (134 Ill. 2d R. 304(a)).
The Tribune appealed and we declined jurisdiction, holding in part: "Taken literally, the order merely denied a pretrial motion for blanket access to the transcripts of all sidebar conferences which might take place during the course of the trial. *** [Tjhat decision cannot be fully and finally made until the content of the sidebar conference is known and the defendant has had the opportunity to assert his rights. An order that purports to finally determine the rights of a party to a controversy, which at the same time effectively forecloses the right of another party before it can be asserted, cannot be a final order.” People v. Reynolds (1st Dist. 1995), No. 1—95—2260 (unpublished order under Supreme Court Rule 23).
After we issued our first order, the Tribune filed, in the circuit court, a motion for reconsideration of the July 5, 1995, order and for access to transcripts of sidebar conferences held on July 25, 1995. The court held a hearing and denied the motion on July 26, 1995. The court then entered an order which states:
"1. Tribune’s motion for access to transcripts of sidebar conferences of July 25, 1995, is hereby denied;
2. The court reporter is hereby ordered to not release transcripts of the two sidebar conferences conducted on the record prior to the court’s lunchbreak on the morning of July 25, 1995.”
The Tribune filed a notice of appeal on July 27, 1995. It also filed a motion to expedite the appeal, which we granted.
As with the order under review in the first appeal, we are required to examine the substance of the order before us, not just its form, and determine independently of the trial court or the parties whether we have jurisdiction. Kinkin v. Marchesi (1991), 213 Ill. App. 3d 176, 571 N.E.2d 501.
The Tribune contends, as it contended in its first appeal, that this court now has jurisdiction under Supreme Court Rule 304 or, in the alternative, under Rules 301 and 303 "pursuant to the collateral order doctrine as articulated in Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corporation (1949), 337 U.S. 541.” We rejected each basis for jurisdiction in our order dismissing the first appeal. We reject them here for the reason set out below. We also reject the Tribune’s statement made in its brief that this court "suggested Tribune seek access to a particular sidebar transcript, the denial of which would constitute a final order that would confer jurisdiction.” Our order of July 19, 1995, contains no such suggestion or conclusion.
The order under review — and the serious constitutional issues properly raised in the Tribune’s brief — cannot be lifted out of the context in which the order arose. The trial court, in an oral ruling on July 5,1995, made it perfectly clear that all sidebar transcripts would be released to the media at the end of the trial. This ruling sharpens our focus: the issue is not one of presumption of access, but when access — in conformity with first amendment principles the Tribune relies upon in its brief — should be allowed. The trial court has resolved the issue of access in favor of the Tribune by holding that the transcripts will be released to it at the end of the trial. The order of July 26, 1995, was, in our view, a ministerial and administrative implementation of the court’s previous oral ruling. The order was drafted by the Tribune with language to support a characterization of finality (see 134 Ill. 2d R. 304), but, as we have noted, we have the duty to examine the substance as well as the form. When the record of everything the trial court carefully enunciated in the hearings that preceded entry of the orders of July 5 and July 26 is examined, the ministerial nature of the orders is clear. The trial court never modified or withdrew its ruling granting access to the Tribune of all sidebar transcripts at the end of the trial.
We reject the idea that in a criminal trial, and under the circumstances in this case, a denial of contemporaneous access to sidebar conferences is final and appealable under Rule 304(a) or Rule 301 while the trial is in progress.
We must, however, examine the order, though not final, to determine whether it is the sort of interlocutory order appealable under Supreme Court Rule 307(a)(1). The parties have not raised the issue. Our duty to determine independently of the parties or the trial court whether we have jurisdiction would, under ordinary circumstances, prompt us to order the parties to brief the question. But the Tribune requested and was granted a motion to expedite. So we consider it appropriate to confront the question without benefit of briefs.
Rule 307(a)(1) allows an appeal to be taken to the appellate court from an interlocutory order of court "granting, modifying, refusing, dissolving, or refusing to dissolve or modify an injunction.” (134 Ill. 2d R. 307(a)(1).) An injunction is defined as a "prohibitive, equitable remedy issued or granted by a court at the suit of a party complainant, directed to a party defendant in the action, or to a party made a defendant for that purpose, forbidding the latter to do some act *** which he is threatening or attempting to commit.” Black’s Law Dictionary 705 (5th ed. 1979); see also In re A Minor (1989), 127 Ill. 2d 247, 537 N.E.2d 292.
In In re A Minor, the trial court entered an order which prohibited a newspaper from publishing the name of a minor the newspaper had already obtained from a nonjudicial source. The supreme court held the order was a restraint upon publication reviewable under Rule 307(a)(1) as an interlocutory injunction. The supreme court also stated: "Not every nonfinal order of a court is appealable, even if it compels a party to do or not to do a particular thing. Orders of the circuit court which can be properly characterized as 'ministerial,’ or 'administrative’ — because they regulate only the procedural details of litigation before the court — cannot be the subject of an interlocutory appeal.” In re A Minor, 127 Ill. 2d at 261-62.
We distinguish the court’s holding in In re A Minor on the ground that the trial court in this case did not enjoin the Tribune from publishing information. The Tribune was not enjoined from doing anything. The order entered by the trial court does not prevent the Tribune from publishing information in its possession or from writing whatever it pleases, and so is not a prior restraint. The Tribune may obtain and publish whatever information it desires from any source except the court reporter. The Tribune is not prevented from investigating other available sources to obtain the desired information. We do not interpret the court’s order which temporarily limits access to sidebar transcripts as an injunction applicable to the Tribune. We conclude that this court is without jurisdiction to entertain this appeal.
Appeal dismissed. Mandate to issue instanter.
S. O’BRIEN, J., concurs.