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Janice M. Bellucci, Esq, SBN 108911
475 Washington Boulevard
Marina Del Rey, California 90292
Tel: (805) 896-7854
Fax:
310) 496-5701
[email protected]
Attorney for Plaintiffs
JOHN DOE #1, an individual•; JOHN DOE
#2, an individual; JOHN DOE #3, an
individual; JOHN DOE #4, an individual;
JOHN DOE #5, an individual,. JOHN DOE
#6 an individual; and JOHN DOE #7, an
individual;
Plaintiffs,
VS.
JOHN KERRY, in his official capacity as
Secre
of State of the United States; JEH
JOHNSON, in his official capacity as
Secretary of Homeland Security; LORETTA
LYNCH, in her official capacity as Attorney
General of the United States; SARAH
SALDANA, in her official capacity as
Assistant Secretary of Immigration and
Customs Enforcement; R. GIL
ICERLIKOWSICE, in his official capacity as
Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border
Protection; DAVID HARLOW, in his
official capacity as Acting Director of the
United States Marshals Service; and DOES
1 to 20, inclusive,
Defendants.
Case No.: 4:16-CV-654-PJH
[Violation of First and Fifth
Amendments and the Ex Post Facto
Clause]
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INTRODUCTION
1.
For the first time in the history of this nation, the United States Government
will publicly stigmatize a disfavored minority group using a document foundational to
citizenship: their United States passport.
2.
Specifically, and as more fully alleged herein, the United States
Government will mandate that individuals required to register as sex offenders for an
offense involving a minor (hereinafter "Covered Individuals") shall be issued passports
emblazoned with a "conspicuous" "unique identifier" advertising their status as "sex
offenders." The United States has never before used passports to differentiate among
citizens or to otherwise mark or stigmatize a specific group of disfavored individuals.
3.
This legislation applies in a blanket fashion to all Covered Individuals,
without regard to the circumstances of their conviction, the age of their conviction, or
whether the Covered Individuals pose a current risk to public safety. For example,
Covered Individuals whose passports will now publicly identify them as "sex offenders"
will include individuals convicted of minor misdemeanor offenses such as "sexting" or
public urination, individuals convicted of voluntary sexual contact with a girlfriend or
boyfriend while both were teenagers, individuals convicted decades ago and who have
never reoffended, and even individuals who are currently minors or who committed their
offense while a minor.
4.
Notably, the United States Department of Justice confirms that more than
25 percent of the individuals on sex offender registries nationwide are juveniles.' Many
jurisdictions, including California — which has the nation's largest State sex offender
David Finkelhor, et al., Juveniles Who Commit Sex Offenses Against Minors, OFFICE OF JUVENILE
JUSTICE & DELINQUENCY PREVENTION, JUVENILE JUSTICE BULLETIN I, 1 (Dec. 2009), available at
hups://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffilesUojjdp/227763.pdf.
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registry'- that treats all sex offenses with equal severity — place juveniles who commit a
sex offense on the State's sex offender registry for life.
5.
As numerous examples demonstrate, compelling Covered Individuals to
identify themselves as sex offenders will invite serious risk of physical harm and
harassment upon Covered Individuals, their families, their business associates, and
anyone with whom they are traveling, whether for personal or business reasons. This
legislation will also impose significant burdens on a Covered Individual's constitutional
rights to the freedom of speech, due process, domestic and international travel, and the
right to earn a living, among other unconstitutional deprivations.
6.
This civil rights action challenges the constitutionality of certain provisions
of the recently enacted International Megan's Law to Prevent Demand for Child Sex
Trafficking, H.R. 515 (hereinafter the "IML"), which was signed into law3 by the
President on February 8, 2016, in that, on its face, the IML violates the First Amendment
and Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, as well as the Ex Post Facto
Clause of the United States Constitution.
7.
Specifically, and as more fully alleged herein, the IML imposes a proverbial
Scarlet Letter and compels speech in violation of the First Amendment by forcing
Covered Individuals to identify themselves publicly as "sex offenders" on their United
States passport, which serves both as a primary form of identification within the United
States as well as an essential international travel document.
8.
Additionally, and as more fully alleged herein, the IML also establishes an
international travel blacklist for Covered Individuals previously convicted, or mistakenly
believed by the government to be convicted, of a sex offense involving a minor in the
2 According to the California Department of Justice, there are currently more than 108,000 individuals
required to register as a sex offender pursuant to California Penal Code section 290, et seq. See
http://www.meganslaw.ca.gov/statistics.aspx?lang=ENGLISH. The total number of individuals in the
nation who are required to register as a sex offender is over 840,000. See National Center for Missing
and Exploited Children, Registered Sex Offenders in the United States and its Territories per 100,000
Population, available at http://www.missingJdds.corn/en_US/documents/Sex_Offenders_Map.pdf.
1 Public Law 114-119.
3
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United States, including individuals whose conviction is not related to sex trafficking.
That is, the IML's blacklist includes individuals whose convictions involved no
domestic or international travel and involved no physical contact with victims, as well as
those who are no longer required to register as a sex offender in any jurisdiction.' The
IML's blacklist also includes individuals whose convictions pose no risk of involvement
in sex trafficking such as those convicted of misdemeanors, those convicted of offenses
committed while they were minors, those who are still minors, and those whose
convictions have been expunged.
9.
The IML also imposes significant burdens on the rights and protected
liberty interests of Covered Individuals, including the right to international travel, the
right to associate with family, economic liberty, and equal protection. Further, the IML
stigmatizes Covered Individuals in a manner that substantially infringes on their
protected liberty interests by communicating that Covered Individuals pose a current risk
to public safety because they are engaged in, or at risk of engaging in, international child
sex trafficking.
10.
This is a civil rights action seeking to enjoin the implementation of Sections
4(e), 5, 6 and 8 of the IML, as well as a declaration that Sections 4(e), 5, 6, and 8 of the
IML violate the First Amendment, the Fifth Amendment, and the Ex Post Facto Clause
of the United States Constitution.
11.
This court has jurisdiction over this action under 28 U.S.C. sections 1331,
2201, and 2202; as well as 5 U.S.C. section 702, which waives the sovereign immunity
of the United States with respect to any action for injunctive relief under 28 U.S.C.
Section 1331.
4 On information and belief, the number of California residents who were previously required to
register as a sex offender but who are no longer required to register exceeds 750. On information and
belief, the number of Americans who were previously required to register but who are no longer
required to register exceeds 10,000.
4
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12.
Under 28 U.S.C. Section 1391(e), venue is proper in this Federal district
because defendants are officers of agencies of the United States sued in their official
capacities, and because this judicial district is where Plaintiffs John Doe #1 and John
Doe #2 reside, and where a substantial part of the events giving rise to the claims have
occurred and will continue to occur.
PARTIES
13.
Plaintiff John Doe #1 is an individual residing in San Francisco, California.
Plaintiff John Doe #1 was convicted of a felony sex offense involving a minor over
twenty-five years ago and has been required to register as a sex offender in California
since 1994. Plaintiff John Doe #1 serves as an officer of a corporation with facilities and
customers in Europe and Asia, and routinely travels to various countries within Europe
and Asia for business purposes.
14.
Plaintiff John Doe #2 is an individual residing in San Francisco, California.
Plaintiff John Doe #2 was convicted by plea of a sex offense in 2007 due to chatting
online with someone found to be a minor and/or law enforcement, without ever having
direct personal contact, and has been required to register as a sex offender in California
since 2007. Plaintiff John Doe #2 has committed no other criminal or civil offenses, and
has served notably since 2009 in state and local civil rights and reentry efforts through
government councils, nonprofits, and public/private or faith-based community
organizations. Plaintiff John Doe #2, by invitation of public healthcare representatives,
is active in a joint patient/provider advisory program addressing ongoing services
improvements and offerings for individuals and families in San Francisco
public/community hospitals and health care clinics. Plaintiff John Doe #2 does not have
a passport, but desires to travel with his longtime partner to Mexico, Canada, Europe,
and other countries for business, recreational, cultural, and spiritual purposes. Plaintiff
John Doe #2 also desires to obtain a passport as a form of primary U.S. citizen
identification.
5
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15.
Plaintiff John Doe #3 is an individual residing in Orange County, California
and is a licensed attorney who was first admitted to the State Bar of California in 1991.
Plaintiff John Doe #3 pled guilty to felony sex offenses involving a teenaged minor in
July 1998, and was placed on probation and required to register as a sex offender.
Plaintiff John Doe #3 subsequently resigned from the State Bar of California. On
September 9, 2003, the Los Angeles Superior Court reduced his convictions from
felonies to misdemeanors. On January 7, 2004, the Los Angeles Superior Court set aside
Plaintiff John Doe #3's guilty verdict and dismissed his case. Under California law,
Plaintiff John Doe #3's convictions are now expunged. On October 10, 2008, the State
Bar of California reinstated Plaintiff John Doe #3 to the practice of law, and on
October 23, 2011, the California Department of Justice terminated Plaintiff John Doe
#3's requirement to register as a sex offender in California. Furthermore, on January 17,
2012, the Orange County Superior Court granted Plaintiff John Doe #3's petition for a
Certificate of Rehabilitation, declaring that he was rehabilitated and fit to exercise all
civil and political rights of citizenship. Therefore, under California law, Plaintiff John
Doe #3 is no longer convicted of a sex offense, and is also not required to register as a
sex offender in any jurisdiction. Plaintiff John Doe #3 routinely travels to countries in
Europe, Asia, and Latin America in connection with his legal representation of clients,
and for other business purposes.
16.
Plaintiff John Doe #4 is an individual residing in the State of Hawaii.
Plaintiff John Doe #4 served in the United States Navy for nearly 30 years and retired as
a naval officer. In 2009, Plaintiff John Doe #4 pled guilty to one count of Violation of
Privacy in the First Degree in the State of Hawaii, a sex offense involving a minor, and
was sentenced to a five-year term of probation, but was not required to register as a sex
offender. However, about two years after his conviction, the State of Hawaii informed
Plaintiff John Doe #4 that he would face criminal prosecution if he did not immediately
register as a sex offender in that State. Despite this breach of his plea agreement,
6
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Plaintiff John Doe #4 complied. In February 2013, Plaintiff John Doe #4 was granted an
early release from probation. Plaintiff John Doe #4 is married to a citizen of the
Philippines who currently resides in the Philippines and who is forbidden to travel to the
United States because of current visa restrictions for Filipinos. International travel to the
Philippines is therefore the only means by which Plaintiff John Doe #4 can visit his wife.
17.
Plaintiff John Doe #5 is an individual residing in the State of Texas.
Plaintiff John Doe #5 is required to register as a sex offender due to an offense involving
a minor that occurred in 2002. Plaintiff John Doe #5 has committed no other criminal or
civil offenses and is employed full-time as a pilot for an airline that transports cargo to
and from various locations around the world. Due to the changing nature of the air cargo
industry, Plaintiff John Doe #5 does not know the country or countries to which he will
fly when he arrives at work. Therefore, he is unable to provide the government with 21
days advance notice of his international travel.
18.
Plaintiff John Doe #6 is an individual residing in the State of Hawaii.
Plaintiff John Doe #6 is required to register as a sex offender due to his conviction in
2005 for an offense involving a minor. Plaintiff John Doe #6 has committed no other
criminal or civil offenses and is employed full time as a construction project manager.
Plaintiff John Doe #6 married a citizen of Taiwan on the island of Guam in August 2009.
They subsequently lived there for about a year and traveled to Taiwan to visit members
of the family. Plaintiff John Doe #6 and his wife attempted to re-enter the United States
together; however, his wife was denied entry. Plaintiff John Doe #6 made eight trips to
Taiwan between 2010 and 2013; however, he was denied entry into that country in June
2013 and deported. The reason given for his deportation was information from the
United States government. He was told that he will not be allowed to re-enter Taiwan,
where his wife lives, for five to ten years.
19.
Plaintiff John Doe #7 was born in Tehran, Iran, but moved to the United
States in 1979. He has resided in the State of California since 1989. Plaintiff John Doe
7
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#7 is required to register as a sex offender due to conviction of a sex offense involving a
minor in 2010. Plaintiff John Doe #7 is the only child of his father who lives in Iran.
Upon the death of his father, Plaintiff John Doe #7 will be entitled to receive his father's
real property, personal property and financial wealth. In order to actually receive that
property and wealth, Plaintiff John Doe #7 must travel to Iran. Because Iran believes in
and practices the death penalty for sex offenders, Plaintiff John Doe #7 will be killed
upon entry into that country if the United States notifies Iran that he has been convicted
of a sex offense or adds a conspicuous unique identifier to his passport.
20.
Plaintiffs John Doe #1, John Doe #2, John Doe #3, John Doe #4, John Doe
#5, John Doe #6, and John Doe #7 will be referred to collectively herein as "Plaintiffs."
21.
Defendant John Kerry is the Secretary of State of the United States and
heads the United States Department of State. Defendant Kerry and the Department of
State oversee the implementation of certain provisions of the IML, as set forth below.
22.
Defendant Jeh Johnson is the Secretary of the United States Department of
Homeland Security and heads the Department of Homeland Security ("DHS").
Defendant Johnson and the DHS oversee the implementation of certain provisions of the
IML, as set forth below.
23.
Defendant Loretta Lynch is the Attorney General of the United States and
heads the United States Department of Justice ("DOJ"). Defendant Lynch and the DOJ
oversee the implementation of certain provisions of the IML, as set forth below.
24.
Defendant Sarah Saldana is The Assistant Secretary for U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement within the DHS and, pursuant to the IML, will head the
Center from which notifications regarding Covered Individuals are issued. IML § 4(c),
(d).
25.
Defendant R. Gil Kerlikowske is the Commission of U.S. Customs and
Border Protection within the DHS and, pursuant to the IML, is a member of the Center
from which notifications regarding Covered Individuals are issued. IML § 4(d).
a
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26.
Defendant David Harlow is Acting Director of the United States Marshals
Service (the "Marshals Service"). Defendant Harlow and the Marshals Service are
responsible for implementing certain provisions of the IML, as set forth below.
27.
The true names and capacities of Defendants sued as Does 1 through 20 are
unknown to Plaintiffs, who therefore sue such Defendants by fictitious names. Plaintiffs
will seek leave to amend this Complaint, if necessary, to reflect the true names once they
have been ascertained.
28.
Defendants Kerry, Johnson, Lynch, Saldana, Kerlikowske, Harlow, and
Does 1 through 20 are collectively referred to herein as "Defendants."
FACTS
A.
International Me2an's Law and International Sex Trafficking
29.
The purported purpose of the IML is "to protect children from exploitation,
especially from sex trafficking tourism, by providing advance notice of intended travel
by registered child-sex offenders outside the United States to the government of the
country of destination, . . . and for other purposes." IML, Preamble and § 12.
30.
Despite its stated purpose, the IML is not rationally tailored to serve its
stated interest, that is, to protect children from sex trafficking, and instead is inconsistent
with currently available empirical evidence, including Federal and State government
data regarding the low risk of re-offense posed by registered sex offenders for any sex
crime, particularly a crime related to sex trafficking.
31.
According to Federal government data, sex trafficking and child sex
tourism is a rare crime. As stated in an earlier version of the IML introduced in 2010,
the Department of Justice "obtained 73 convictions of individuals from the United States
charged with committing sexual crimes against minors in other countries," an average of
only 10 convictions per year during a seven-year period from 2003 through 2009.5
5 See H.R. 5138, 111th Cong., Report No. 111-568, Part 1, § 2(a)(12), available at
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/B ILLS- 1 1 1 hr5138rIghtml/BILLS-111hr5138rh.htm.
9
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32.
According to state government data, most new sex offenses, including sex
trafficking and child sex tourism, are not committed by people required to register as a
sex offender. The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation ("CDCR")
cites research concluding that "first-time offenders" accounted for "95.9% of all arrests
for any [registrable sex offense], 95.9% of all arrests for rape, and 94.1% of all arrests
for child molestation."6
33.
Also according to state government data, and contrary to popular myth, the
re-offense rate for individuals on a sex offender registry is extremely low.' For example,
the CDCR reports that the re-offense rate for California registrants on parole is 0.8
percent, the lowest re-offense rate for any crime except murder! In addition, research
by Karl Hanson, Ph.D., the world-renown expert on this topic, confirms that, at five
years post-offense, the re-offense rate for low-risk offenders is 2 percent, while the re-
offense rate for moderate-risk offenders is 7 percent, with the risk of re-offense for both
groups diminishing with each passing year.9
34.
The California Sex Offender Management Board ("CASOMB"), the State's
policy expert on sex offender issues, has adopted research by Dr. Hanson which
confirms that even high risk sex offenders who have not re-offended in 17 years are no
more likely to commit a new sex offense than someone who has never committed a sex
6 CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS AND REHABILITATION, A BETTER PATH TO COMMUNITY
SAFETY 2 & n. 4 (2014) (emphasis added).
7
While the rate at which individuals on sex offender registries recidivate by committing crimes other
than sex offenses may be higher, recent research demonstrates that this phenomenon is largely caused
by the numerous legal restrictions that destabilize the lives of registrants and impede their
reintegration into society, such as presence and residency restrictions, the stigma of public sex
offender registries, discrimination in employment and housing opportunities, and myriad other
burdens indiscriminately imposed by legislatures, such as the provisions of the IML challenged in this
action. See Generally CALIFORNIA SEX OFFENDER MANAGEMENT BOARD, HOMELESSNESS AMONG
CALIFORNIA'S REGISTERED SEX OFFENDERS: AN UPDATE (Aug. 2011).
8 CALIF. DEPT. OF CORRECTIONS AND REHABILITATION, 2014 OUTCOME EVALUATION REPORT 30 (July
2015), available at http://www.cdcr.ca.gov/Adult_Research_Branch/Research_
Documents/2014_Outcome_Evaluation_Report_7-6-2015.pdf. The exact rate was 0.8%. Another 2%
of the cases involved a violation of the sex offender registry requirements, and the remaining 5.3% of
those who returned to prison committed a new offense that was not a sex crime.
9 R. Karl Hanson, et al., High-Risk Sex Offenders May Not Be High Risk Forever, 29 (15) J. OF
INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE 2792, 2802 (2014).
10
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offense.1' Further, the United States Department of Justice reports that the overall re-
offense rate for all sex offenders nationwide is only 5.3 percent."
35.
The IML applies to Covered Individuals regardless of the details of their
offense, their actual risk of re-offense, or the age of their conviction. Other than by
limiting its application to sex offenses against minors, the IML's designation of "covered
sex offender" is overbroad because it is not limited to individuals who have been
convicted of sex trafficking or sex tourism, or even to those crimes that would rationally
predict some risk of such an offense. IML § 3(3), (10). Rather, the IML applies to all
Covered Individuals whose offense involved a minor. IML § 3(3), (10). By definition,
therefore, the IML applies to individuals who are minors, or who were convicted of a
misdemeanor, as well as individuals whose offenses do not involve contact with a
victim, such as sexting, streaking, urinating in public, or viewing child pornography.
The IML also applies to individuals whose convictions have been expunged (e.g.,
Plaintiff John Doe #3), whose convictions were limited to sexual activity with another
teenager, and whose convictions are decades old and therefore pose no current threat to
public safety (e.g., Plaintiffs John Doe #1 and John Doe #6).
36.
The IML also applies to individuals, such as Plaintiff John Doe #3, who are
no longer required to register as a sex offender because they have been deemed by a
state judge to be rehabilitated and therefore no longer a risk or public safety.'2 IML §
2(3).
R. Karl Hanson, et al., The Field Validity of Static-99/R Sex Offender Risk Assessment Tool in
California, 1 J. OF THREAT ASSESSMENT AND MGMT. 102 & n. 12 (2014).
FROM PRISON IN 1994, at 7 (Nov. 2003).
12 Oninformation and belief, the number of individuals in California determined to be rehabilitated by a
state judge exceeds 750. These determinations are based upon a lengthy process, including a
comprehensive evaluation of an individual by mental health professionals and state prosecutors
pursuant to California Penal Code Section 290.05.
11
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37.
Finally, the IML applies to individuals in states outside of California who
have automatically been removed from their state's registry due to the passage of time
and absence of a subsequent offense.13 IML § 2(3).
38.
The purported "findings" of the IML in support of its draconian measures
are predictably brief, conclusory, and (other than by exempting the government from
liability) reveal no studied consideration of either the impact of the IML on public safety
or the massively disruptive consequences of the IML for Covered Individuals and their
families. Specifically, the "findings" are limited to the following three observations:
a. "Law enforcement reports indicate that known child-sex
offenders are traveling internationally;"
b. "The International Labour Organization has estimated that
1,8000,000 [sic] children worldwide are victims of child sex
trafficking and pornography each year;" and
c. "Child sex tourism . . . is a form of child exploitation and,
where commercial, child sex trafficking."
IML § 2(4)-(6). The IML provides no empirical evidence in any form, including facts,
statistics, reports, or analyses, to justify the significant punitive burden imposed on
Covered Individuals by this law, as summarized herein.
39.
Among the publicly cited bases for the IML is a sensationalistic 2012 report
by the Government Accountability Office ("GAO") entitled "Passport Issuance: Current
Situation Results in Thousands of Passports Issued to Registered Sex Offenders." This
document reports "that of over 16 million U.S. passports issued in 2008, about 4,500 [or
13
On information and belief, the number of individuals in the nation who have been automatically
removed from their state's registry due to the passage of time exceeds 10,000. For example, the
registry maintained by the State of New York, the nation's fourth-largest state registry, took effect in
1996 and imposes a 20-year registration requirement on Registrants who are assigned to either no
risk classification, or to a Tier I risk classification. See N.Y. Corrections Law § 168-h(a).
Accordingly, all New York Registrants who were assigned to either risk classification and whose
registration period commenced in 1996 are no longer required to register in 2016 and beyond.
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less than 0.03%] were issued to registered sex offenders."14 However, in commentary
published along with the GAO report, the U.S. State Department labeled the entire report
"very misleading" and stated the following:
a. "Starting with the title . . . we are concerned that it conveys more `shock
value' than factual accuracy... . [T]he title fails to convey that GAO
found no lawful reasons for the Department to deny or revoke the
passports of the case study sex offenders based on their status of sex
offenders."
b. "Congress has already provided the Department authority to deny
passports to individuals convicted of the crime of sex tourism involving
minors and who used their passports or passport card or otherwise
crossed an international border in committing an offense."
c. "The title also fails to convey that GAO found no evidence that the
offenders used their passports to commit sex offenses abroad. . . . The
report appears to suggest, without any foundation, that the Department's
issuance of passports to certain Americans facilitated their commission
of sex offenses abroad."I5
B.
The IML's "Unique Passport Identifier"
40.
The IML mandates that Covered Individuals who are required to register as
a sex offender in any jurisdiction ("Registrants") will be forced to identify themselves
publicly as registered sex offenders by means of a "unique identifier" on their passports.
The IML defines "unique identifier" as "any visual designation affixed to a conspicuous
location on the passport indicating that the individual is a covered sex offender." IML
§§ 8(a) and (b)(1), (c)(B)(2) (hereinafter, the "Passport Identifier Provision").
14
United States Government Accountability Office: Passport Issuance — Current Situation Results in
Thousands of Passports Issued to Registered Sex Offenders (June 2012), available at
http://www.gao.gov/products/GAO-10-643.
15 Id. Appendix II: Comments from the Department of State, at 17-20 (emphasis added).
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41.
Thus, for the first time in our nation's history, the Federal government will
require American citizens to carry and communicate a "conspicuous" public mark — akin
to the proverbial Scarlet Letter — on an object intimately associated with their person.
This mark will force the individual to communicate any number of negative messages to
the public about himself or herself, including that he or she poses a current threat to
public safety because he or she engages in, or is at risk of engaging in, child sex
trafficking. In most cases, these messages are false and effectively force such
individuals to invite significant risk of harm to themselves, their families, and others
with whom they may be traveling.
42.
Subsequent to the establishment of publicly disclosed sex offender
registries in or about 2006, there have been dozens of reports of vigilante reprisals,
physical attacks, and even murders of individuals on sex offender registries that occurred
solely because the victim was required to register as a sex offender. For example:
a. In January 1995, only a few months after their State instituted its public
registry, Kenneth Kerkes of Phillipsburg, NJ, and his son, Kenneth Jr.,
found a neighbor, Michael Groff, on that registry. They broke into the
home at Mr. Groff's address at 3 a.m. intending to beat up Mr. Groff but
instead mistakenly beat up another man who was staying there.
b. In April 2003, Lawrence Trant downloaded a list of addresses in
Concord, MA, from the public registry and proceeded to set fire to each
home on the list. Later that month, he was arrested when he confronted
one of the men on his list, Lawrence Sheridan, with a baseball bat and a
knife and stabbed him.
c. In February 2004, police in Bakersfield, CA, distributed a flyer with
information from the public registry about Vincent Verdile. About two
weeks later, Gabriel Garcia went to the front door of Mr. Verdile's home
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and threatened to kill him while kicking in the door until police shot and
killed Mr. Garcia to prevent his entry into Mr. Verdile's home.
d. In August 2005, Michael Mullen went to an address in Bellingham, WA,
that he found listed on the public registry. He impersonated an FBI
agent in order to gain entry to the residence, where he then shot and
killed two Registrants, Hank Eisses and Victor Vasquez.
e. In April 2006, Stephen Marshall took the addresses of William Elliott
and Joseph Gray of Corinth, ME, from the public registry. He first went
to Mr. Elliott's home where he shot and killed him. Then he went to Mr.
Gray's home and did the same to him. He intended to continue killing
people on the public registry until he shot and killed himself when
approached by police about the murders. Mr. Elliott was on the public
registry because, at age 19, he had sexual contact with his girlfriend
three weeks before her 16th birthday.
f. In September 2006, Donald Keegan was charged with attempted murder
for plotting to set fire to the Long Island, NY, residence of four men
listed on the public registry.
g; In November 2007, Ivan Oliver of Lakeport, CA, misinterpreted
information on the public registry about his new neighbor, Michael
Dodele, to mean that Mr. Dodele's offense involved a minor, which it
had not. Worried for his four-year-old son's safety, he went to Mr.
Dodele's home and killed him by stabbing him 65 times.
h. In August 2009, Steven Banister chose the Palm Springs, CA, address
of Edward Keeley from the public registry. He and Travis Cody went
to the 75-year-old man's home, where they robbed and killed him.
i. In June 2012, Patrick Drum shot and killed Gary Blanton, who was a
registered sex offender because he had sexual contact with his girlfriend
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when he was a senior in high school and she was a freshman. He then
drove to the home of registrant Jerry Ray in nearby Agnew and fatally
shot him as well. Mr. Drum said he killed both men "because they were
sex offenders" and that he had planned on killing more of them until he
was caught. In a court hearing, Mr. Blanton's widow reported that
people who considered Drum a hero had stalked her home, spat on her
family, and thrown things at her car.
i
In December 2012, in San Juan Capistrano, CA, Robert Vasquez
murdered Bobby Ray Rainwater after he learned that Rainwater was a
registrant. Both men lived in the same trailer park. Mr. Rainwater was
attacked from behind and was stabbed so many times he was practically
decapitated.
k. In July 22 2013, in Lockhart, SC, Jeremy Moody murdered registrant
Charles Parker and his wife, Gretchen Parker, inside their home. Mr.
Moody pretended to have car problems outside the home and asked to
use the couple's home phone to call a tow truck. After his arrest, Mr.
Moody told police that he killed Mr. and Mrs. Parker because Mr. Parker
was a registered sex offender.
L In September 2015, in Redding, CA, registrant Roy Matagora was shot
three times and significantly injured by Timothy Gould when Mr.
Matagora opened the front door of his home. After his arrest, Mr. Gould
told police that he shot Mr. Matagora solely because he is a sex offender.
43.
Prior to the IML, obtaining information regarding registered sex offenders
required an individual seeking that information to access the Internet. However, the
Passport Identifier Provision of the IML would, for the first time, compel Registrants to
communicate affirmatively their status as a registered sex offender, along with numerous
other false and stigmatizing messages implied by that status, to the public on an object
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that they carry with them and that they are legally required to use for identification and
other purposes. As evidenced by the reports summarized above, this communication
could result in serious risks of harm to Registrants, their families, their business
associates, and any individuals with whom they are traveling.
44.
Tellingly, the IML exempts the relevant government officials and
departments from liability arising from any harm that the Passport Identifier Provision
causes to Registrants. IML § 8(a) and (d).
C.
The IML's "Notification Provision"
45.
In addition to the Passport Identifier Provision, the IML provides that DHS
shall establish a Center known as the "Angel Watch Center" within the Child
Exploitation Investigations Unit of the DHS's United States Immigration and Customs
Department (the "Center"). IML § 4(a). The mission of the Center is to communicate
with foreign countries regarding a Covered Individual's international travel. The IML
further provides that the Center shall be headed by the Assistant Secretary for U.S.
Immigration and Customs Enforcement, shall include as its additional "members" the
Commissioner of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, and certain "analysts" and
"program managers" designated by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Department
or the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement Department. ILM § 4(c)-4(d).
46.
The IML operates as follows:
a. Self-reporting. Pursuant to the Adam Walsh Child Protection and Safety
Act of 2006, certain Covered Registrants are required to inform law
enforcement of their international travel plans "in conformity with any
time and manner requirements prescribed by the Attorney General,"
including "any anticipated dates and places of departure, arrival, or
return, carrier and flight numbers for air travel, destination country and
address or other contact information therein, means and purpose of
travel, and any other itinerary or other travel-related information
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required by the Attorney General." IML § 6. A Covered Registrant who
fails to inform law enforcement of his or her travel plans faces a fine or
imprisonment for a term up to ten (10) years. IML § 8.
b. Reporting by the Center. Independent of an individual's self-reporting
obligation, the Center shall also determine if individuals traveling
abroad are Covered Individuals at least "48 hours before scheduled
departure, or as soon as practicable before scheduled departure." IML §
4(e)(1). The Center may "transmit relevant information to the
destination country about a sex offender," and share such information
with other agencies within the United States Government. IML §
4(e)(3). The IML neither defines the term "relevant information .
about a sex offender" nor provides any guidelines about the information
to be provided to the destination country about the Covered Individual.
Further, the IML does not provide any guidelines by which the Center is
to determine whether to provide information to a destination country in
the first place.16
c. Reporting by the Marshals Service. Independent of the Center, the
United States Marshals Service may also provide information to
destination countries regarding Covered Individuals intending to travel
there, and shall also provide information regarding Covered Registrants
to the Center and to other government agencies, "within twenty-four
hours before the intended travel, and not later than 72 hours after." IML
§§ 4(e)(2), 5. The IML fails to identify the information to be provided
by the Marshals Service regarding Covered Individuals, and fails to
establish guidelines for the information to be provided. Further, the IML
16 The Center is also to receive incoming notifications from foreign countries regarding individuals
with sex offenses who seek to enter the United States pursuant to provisions that are not challenged
in this action. IML § 4(b).
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fails to prescribe guidelines regarding whether such information should
be provided in the first place.
d. Provision of Information to the State Department. The Center shall also
provide the United States Department of State with information
regarding the status of Covered Individuals in connection with the
Passport Identifier Provision discussed above. IML § 4(e)(5).
D.
Inadequacy of the IML's Notice and Redress Procedures
47.
Critically, the IML contains no mechanism by which Covered Individuals
are to receive notice that the Center or the Marshals Service has compiled information
regarding them and/or their international travel plans. In addition, the IML contains no
mechanism whereby Covered Individuals are notified that information regarding them
has been communicated to one or more destination countries.
48.
Further, the IML also contains no mechanism by which a Covered
Individual is to be notified regarding the nature of the information compiled by the
Center or the Marshals Service. Finally, the IML contains no mechanism whereby the
Covered Individual may identify and correct errors or omissions in the information
compiled by the Center or the Marshals Service before that information is communicated
to a destination country or countries.
49.
By its terms, the time frame for transmission of information by the Center
or the Marshals Service to a Covered Individual's destination country or countries
effectively ensures that a Covered Individual will receive notice of the communication
only after he or she has made travel plans, incurred significant expense, and has actually
traveled to the destination country or countries. Specifically, the IML provides no
mechanism whereby a Covered Individual is notified of the nature of the information
communicated to the destination country even after he or she has been detained and
deported from the destination country.
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50.
Instead, the IML provides that the Center and the United States Marshals
Service shall establish procedures by which "complaints" regarding the Notification
Provision shall be received and reviewed. IML § 4(e)(7), 5(d). However, the IML does
not provide that corrective procedures shall be available or effective before any
information regarding the individual is provided to the destination country or countries,
or before the covered individual arrives in the destination country or countries after
making travel plans, and incurring significant travel time and expenses.
51.
The corrective mechanisms of the IML Notification Provision are therefore
ineffective to prevent, respond to, or otherwise remedy deprivations of the liberty
interests of a Covered Individual, or the stigma or risk of harm imposed upon Covered
Individuals by the information communicated about them to the destination country or
countries.
E.
The IML's Secretive Legislative History
52.
Despite the IML's historic, controversial, and extraordinarily punitive
nature, the legislation was never even once the subject of substantive debate or
discussion in either the House of Representatives ("House") or the Senate. Instead, the
IML, designated as H.R. 515, was passed by a voice vote in the Senate on December 17,
2015, under a "suspension of the rules" with no discussion or debate about its historic
significance. Because there was a voice vote only, there is no permanent record of
which Senators voted for or against the bill.
53.
H.R. 515 was subsequently considered in the House, again under a
"suspension of the rules," which permitted the bill to be considered and passed without
substantive discussion or debate regarding its historic significance. Suspension of the
rules in the House is reserved solely for noncontroversial legislation and is not to be
applied to controversial legislation such as H.R. 515. Indeed, the House vote on H.R.
515 was one in a series of eight votes taken on other bills that were truly
noncontroversial, such as funding for a Veterans' memorial. Because the IML was
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considered under a suspension of the rules, a voice vote was also taken in the House and
there is no record of which House members voted for or against it.
54.
The process by which the IML became law, and in particular the lack of
substantive consideration or debate regarding its historic significance, bespeaks a wanton
indifference toward the constitutional rights of Covered Individuals, their family
members, friends, and business associates, as well as the deprivations of liberty wrought
by this ill-considered legislation, which constitute multiple violations of the U.S.
Constitution.
FIRST CLAIM
(First Amendment — Compelled Speech)
55.
Plaintiffs re-allege paragraphs 1 through 54 of this Complaint as though
fully set forth herein.
56.
By requiring Covered Individuals to communicate their status publicly as
registered sex offenders on their United States Passports, Defendants unconstitutionally
compel the speech of Plaintiffs in violation of the First Amendment. The Passport
Identifier Provision of the IML forces Plaintiffs and other affected Registrants to invite
significant harm to themselves, including physical harm, harassment, and property
damage. The Passport Identifier Provision of the IML also forces Plaintiffs and all
affected Registrants to communicate messages that they do not wish to communicate,
that may be false, and with which they disagree, such as that they pose a current risk for
engagement in international child sex trafficking or are otherwise a current danger to
public safety. The Passport Identifier Provision of the IML also forces Plaintiffs and
other affected Registrants to stigmatize themselves publicly on their personal passports,
which are objects intimately associated with their persons.
57.
The injuries that Plaintiffs and other affected Registrants will suffer as a
result of the Passport Identifier Provision of the IML are severe, irreparable, and
ongoing, and there is no plain, adequate, complete, or speedy alternative remedies
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available to redress the violations of law committed by Defendants in this action, nor are
there any available and non-futile administrative remedies available to redress the
violations of law committed by Defendants.
SECOND CLAIM
(Fifth Amendment — Substantive Due Process)
58.
Plaintiffs re-allege paragraphs 1 through 57 of this Complaint as though
fully set forth herein.
59.
By enforcing the Notification and Passport Identifier Provisions of the IML
against all individuals convicted of sex offenses involving a minor without regard to the
details of those offenses or the current threat posed by each individual to public safety,
Defendants deprive Plaintiffs and other affected Registrants of rights guaranteed by the
Fifth Amendment, including the Due Process right to be free from arbitrary,
unreasonable, and oppressive state action that bears no rational relationship to the State's
goal of protecting the public.
60.
Plaintiffs and other affected Registrants also have a right to be free from
governmental stigmatization that falsely implies that they are individuals who pose a
current risk to public safety, including but not limited to a current risk for engaging in
international child sex trafficking, without any reasonable basis for such stigmatization.
61.
The injuries that Plaintiffs and other affected Registrants will suffer as a
result of the Notification Provision of the IML are severe, irreparable, and ongoing, and
there is no plain, adequate, complete, or speedy alternative remedies available to redress
the violations of law committed by Defendants in this action, nor are there any available
and non-futile administrative remedies available to redress the violations of law
committed by Defendants.
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THIRD CLAIM
(Deprivation of Liberty without Due Process of Law — Right to Travel)
62.
Plaintiffs re-allege paragraphs 1 through 61 of this Complaint as though
fully set forth herein.
63.
Plaintiffs and other affected Registrants have a liberty interest in traveling
free from unreasonable burdens within, as well as to and from, the United States.
64.
The Notification Provision of the IML operates as an international travel
blacklist list for Covered Individuals and contains no means by which Covered
Individuals are notified of their designation as Covered Individuals, or the basis for the
same. In addition, the IML provides no meaningful opportunity to redress the errors and
omissions communicated by Defendants regarding each Covered Individual before or
after such deprivations are suffered.
65.
Further, Plaintiffs and other affected Registrants have a right to be free from
governmental stigmatization that falsely implies that they are individuals who pose a
current risk to public safety, including but not limited to a risk of engagement in
international child sex trafficking, when such harm arises in conjunction with the
deprivation of their right to travel on the same terms as other travelers, and/or the
deprivation of their liberty interests under the Fifth Amendment to travel without
unreasonable burdens imposed by the government.
66.
59.
The injuries that Plaintiffs and other affected Registrants will suffer
as a result of the Notification Provision of the IML are severe, irreparable, and ongoing,
and there are no plain, adequate, complete, or speedy alternative remedies available to
redress the violations of law committed by Defendants in this action, nor are there any
available and non-futile administrative remedies available to redress the violations of
law committed by Defendants.
73
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FOURTH CLAIM
(Deprivation of Liberty without Due Process of Law — Economic Liberty)
67.
Plaintiffs re-allege paragraphs 1 through 66 of this Complaint as though
fully set forth herein.
68.
Plaintiffs and other affected Registrants have a constitutionally protected
economic liberty interest, including the right to travel freely for the purpose of earning
an income. Plaintiffs John Doe #1, John Doe #3 and John Doe #5 are required to travel
internationally for business purposes, and a significant portion of their respective
incomes depends upon the freedom to travel internationally.
69.
The Notification and Passport Identifier Provisions of the IML will
unconstitutionally interfere with the economic liberties of Plaintiffs and other affected
Registrants by operating as an international travel blacklist that unreasonably interferes
with the exercise of such economic liberties.
70.
The injuries that Plaintiffs and other affected Registrants will suffer as a
result of the Notification and Passport Identifier Provisions of the IML are severe,
irreparable, and ongoing, and there is no plain, adequate, complete, or speedy alternative
remedies available to redress the violations of law committed by Defendants in this
action, nor are there any available and non-futile administrative remedies available to
redress the violations of law committed by Defendants.
FIFTH CLAIM
(Due Process — Right to Associate with the Family)
71.
Plaintiffs re-allege paragraphs 1 through 70 of this Complaint as though
fully set forth herein.
72.
Plaintiffs and other affected Registrants have a constitutionally protected
liberty interest in associating and being physically present with their spouses, children,
and other family members.
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73.
The Notification and Passport Identifier Provisions of the IML will
unconstitutionally interfere with the right of Plaintiffs and other affected Registrants to
associate with family members who reside or are otherwise present overseas because the
IML operates as an international travel blacklist list that prevents Covered Individuals
from traveling internationally to be with family members, including but not limited to
their spouses and children.
74.
Plaintiffs and other affected Registrants also have a right to be free from
governmental stigmatization that falsely implies that they are individuals who pose a
current risk to public safety, including but not limited to a risk of engagement in
international child sex trafficking, when such harm arises in conjunction with the
deprivation of their right to associate with family members on the same terms as others,
and/or the deprivation of their liberty interests under the Fifth Amendment to associate
with family members without unreasonable burdens imposed by the government.
75.
The injuries that Plaintiffs and all affected Registrants will suffer as a result
of the Notification Provision of the IML are severe, irreparable, and ongoing, and there
is no plain, adequate, complete, or speedy alternative remedies available to redress the
violations of law committed by Defendants in this action, nor are there any available and
non-futile administrative remedies available to redress the violations of law committed
by Defendants.
SIXTH CLAIM
(Equal Protection)
76.
Plaintiffs re-allege paragraphs 1 through 75 of this Complaint as though
fully set forth herein.
77.
In the United States, individuals convicted of sex offenses constitute a
discrete and insular minority that is uniquely subject to public and private
discrimination, and whose rights are uniquely subject to unconstitutional deprivation by
state action, including by state action that is motivated by malice, that is arbitrary and
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capricious, that bears no rational relationship to any legitimate government purpose, and
that is not sufficiently tailored to serve a legitimate government purpose.
78.
Legislation that targets individuals convicted of sex offenses involving
minors therefore deserves heightened scrutiny to ensure that the purpose and effect of
such legislation is constitutionally permissible.
79.
Alternatively, any legislation that specifically targets any class of
individuals cannot survive constitutional scrutiny unless it is rationally related to a
legitimate government purpose.
80.
The Notification and Passport Identifier provisions of the IML cannot
survive any level of scrutiny because they are not rationally related to any legitimate
government purpose, and are not sufficiently tailored to serve any legitimate government
purpose. Therefore, these provisions violate the Equal Protection guarantee of the Fifth
Amendment.
81.
Additionally, as they apply broadly to all individuals convicted of a sex
offense involving a minor without regard to the individual circumstances of those
offenses or the legitimate needs of public safety, the Notification and Passport Identifier
Provisions of the IML constitute arbitrary, capricious, and unreasonable government
action in violation of the Equal Protection guarantee of the Fifth Amendment.
82.
The injuries that Plaintiffs and all affected Registrants will suffer as a result
of the Notification and Passport Identifier Provisions of the IML are severe, irreparable,
and ongoing, and there are no plain, adequate, complete, or speedy alternative remedies
available to redress the violations of law committed by Defendants in this action, nor are
there any available and non-futile administrative remedies available to redress the
violations of law committed by Defendants.
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SEVENTH CLAIM
(Ex Post Facto Clause)
83.
Plaintiffs re-allege paragraphs 1 through 82 of this Complaint as though
fully set forth herein.
84.
By applying the Notification and Passport Identifier Provisions of the IML
to Covered Individuals, Defendants are imposing retroactive punishment in violation of
the Ex Post Facto Clause of the United States Constitution.
85.
By applying the Notification and Passport Identifier Provisions of the IML
to Covered Individuals, including to individuals whose convictions for sex offenses have
been overturned, expunged, or otherwise vacated, Defendants are imposing retroactive
punishment in violation of the Ex Post Facto Clause of the United States Constitution.
86.
By applying the Notification Provision of the IML to Covered Individuals
who are no longer required to register as sex offenders in any jurisdiction, Defendants
are imposing retroactive punishment in violation of the Ex Post Facto Clause of the
United States Constitution.
87.
The injuries that Plaintiffs and all affected Registrants will suffer as a result
of the Notification and Passport Identifier Provisions of the IML are severe, irreparable,
and ongoing, and there are no plain, adequate, complete, or speedy alternative remedies
available to redress the violations of law committed by Defendants in this action, nor are
there any available and non-futile administrative remedies available to redress the
violations of law committed by Defendants.
EIGHTH CLAIM
(Declaratory Relief)
88.
Plaintiffs re-allege paragraphs 1 through 87 of this Complaint as though
fully set forth herein.
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89.
An actual controversy exists between Plaintiffs and Defendants regarding
the constitutionality and enforceability of the Notification and Passport Identifier
Provisions of the IML.
90.
Plaintiffs are entitled to a declaration of their rights with regard to the
IML's Notification and Passport Identifier Provisions.
Pursuant to the claims alleged above, Plaintiffs seek judgment against Defendants
as follows:
a.
A declaratory judgment that Sections 4(e), 5, 6 and 8 of the International
Megan's Law to Prevent Demand for Child Sex Trafficking, Public Law 114-1195, on
their face, violate the First Amendment and the Fifth Amendment to the United States
Constitution, as well as the Ex Post Facto Clause of the United States Constitution;
b.
That Defendants be enjoined in perpetuity from enforcing or giving effect
to Sections 4(e), 5, 6 and 8 of the IML;
c.
That Plaintiffs recover from the Defendants all of Plaintiffs' reasonable
attorneys' fees, costs and expenses of this litigation as provided by law; and
d.
That Plaintiffs recover such relief as the Court deems just and proper.
Dated: March 9, 2016
By:
/s/ Janice M. Bellucci
Janice M. Bellucci
Attorney for Plaintiffs
28
EFTA01186604
Case 4:16-cv-00654-PJH Document 31 Filed 03/09/16 Page 29 of 29
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I, the undersigned, certify and declare that I am over the age of 18; I am a resident
of the County of San Luis Obispo, State of California, and not a party to the above-
entitled cause. On March 9, 2016, I served a true copy of the FIRST AMENDED AND
as follows:
KATHRYN L. WYER
U.S. Department of Justice. Civil Division
20 Massachusetts Avenue. N.W.
Washington, DC 20530
[email protected]
CM/ECF NOTICE OF ELECTRONIC FILING: I filed the document(s)
electronically with the Clerk of the Court using the CM/ECF system. Participants in the
case who are registered CM/ECF users will be served by the CM/ECF system.
Participants in the case who are not registered CM/ECF users will be served by mail or
other means permitted by the court rules and agreed to by the parties.
I declare under penalty of perjury under the laws of the State of California that the
foregoing is true and correct. Executed on this 9 th day of March, 2016, in Oceano,
California.
Mamie Page,
MAMIE PAGE
29
EFTA01186605