javac has longstanding behavior, apparently unspecified, to reject 
accessibility modifiers on classes nested within an anonymous or local class. 
The changes involved in supporting statics inside of local classes have drawn 
attention to this behavior.

    void m() {
        class Local {

            private class C1 {} // error
            class C2 {}
            protected class C3 {} // error
            public class C4 {} // error

            class Inner {
                private class D1 {} // error
                class D2 {}
                protected class D3 {} // error
                public class D4 {} // error
            }
        }
    }

There's nothing in 8.1.1, 14.3, 15.9.5, or 8.5 to suggest this behavior. 
(There's a rule about modifiers on a local class declaration itself, but 
nothing about its members.)

In practice, members of local classes are essentially private anyway—there is 
no way to refer to them outside of the local class's enclosing method. So the 
access modifiers don't seem that useful. But they do affect things like 
inheritance (local class B extends local class A) and reflection. And while 
this same argument applies to fields, javac allows unrestricted use of field 
access modifiers inside local classes.

I think the appropriate resolution is to treat this as a javac bug and remove 
the access modifier restriction. Any reasons not to do so?

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