MEMORANDUM OPINION
I. INTRODUCTION
This case concerns the constitutional right to hang political posters on lampposts in the nation’s capital. The District of Columbia permits anyone to post a sign expressing a general political message for sixty days. Signs related to a specific event must be removed within thirty days of its occurrence, but they may hang for an indefinite period before the event.
The Act Now to Stop War and End Racism Coalition (“ANSWER”) and Muslim American Society Freedom Foundation (“MASF”) allege that these regulations violate the First Amendment. They further claim that the District’s enforcement mechanism contravenes the Due Process Clause, and ANSWER alleges that the District subjected it to retaliatory enforcement for exercising its First Amendment rights, thus violating 42 U.S.C. § 1983. In 2008, the District moved to dismiss, and this Court granted its motion on standing and abstention grounds. 1 The Court of Appeals reversed and remanded the case for further consideration. In the opinion below, this Court will clarify the posture of the case and address plaintiffs’ claims.
II. BACKGROUND
From 1980 until after the filing of this lawsuit in 2007, the rules for posting on the District’s lampposts were outlined by Title 24: Public Space and Safety, Chapter 1: Occupation and Use of Public Space, Section 108: Signs, Posters, and Placards of the District of Columbia Municipal Regulations. 24 D.C.M.R. § 108. The relevant provisions provided as follows:
108.5: A sign, advertisement, or poster shall not be affixed for more than sixty (60) days, except the following:
(a) Signs, advertisements, and posters of individuals seeking political office in the District who have met the requirements of § 210 of the D.C. Campaign Finance Reform and Conflict of Interest Act (D.C.Code § 1-1420 (1981)); and
(b) Signs designed to aid in neighborhood protection from crime shall be exempt from the sixty (60) day time period.
108.6: Political campaign literature shall be removed no less than thirty (30) days following the general election.
108.7: Each sign, advertisement, or poster shall contain the date upon which it was initially affixed to a lamppost.
*140 108.8: Each sign, advertisement, or poster shall be affixed securely to avoid being torn or disengaged by normal weather conditions.
108.9: Signs, advertisements, and posters shall not be affixed by adhesives that prevent their complete removal from the fixture, or that do damage to the fixture.
108.10: No more than three (3) versions or copies of each sign, advertisement, or poster shall be affixed on one (1) side of a street within one (1) block.
108.11: Within twenty-four (24) hours of posting each sign, advertisement, or poster, two (2) copies of the material shall be filed with an agent of the District of Columbia so designated by the Mayor. The filing shall include the name, address, and telephone number of the originator of the sign, advertisement, or poster.
Id.
In the summer of 2007, ANSWER — a “grassroots civil rights organization which seeks to engage the public in communications opposing war and racism, among other issues,” Affidavit of Brian Becker 1-2, Mar. 14, 2008, ECF No 11-1 [“ANSWER Affidavit”] — posted signs advertising its September 15th “March to Stop the War” on public lampposts and electrical boxes throughout the city. The District cited ANSWER for numerous violations of § 108.9, the provision regarding the use of adhesives. See Def.’s Mot. Dismiss, Ex. 1, Feb. 6, 2008, ECF No. 8-1 (reproducing four Notices of Violation, all referencing § 108.9) [“Def.’s First Mot. Dismiss”]. ANSWER contested the tickets before the District’s Office of Administrative Hearings (“OAH”). That adjudicatory process continues. See Notice Regarding Activity Before The Office of Administrative Hearings, Oct. 25, 2010, ECF No. 34 [“OAH Notice”].
In addition to its,claims before the OAH, ANSWER challenged the District’s postering regulations as unconstitutional in this Court. Compl, Aug. 21, 2007, ECF No. 1. Unlike in the administrative proceeding, ANSWER sued in federal court with a co-plaintiff, MASF, which “focuses on empowering the Muslim-American community through civic education, participation, community outreach, and coalition building including First Amendment assemblies in opposition to war and in support of civil rights.” Affidavit of Imam Mahdi Bray, Mar. 14, 2008, ECF No 11-2 [“MASF Affidavit”].
In a complaint that the Court of Appeals later characterized as having “rather a blunderbuss quality,”
ANSWER Coal. v. Dist. of Columbia (ANSWER II),
*141
The District moved to dismiss the complaint. Def.’s First Mot. Dismiss. The District argued, among other theories, that MASF lacked standing because it had suffered no injury from the regulations,
id.
at 14-20, and that the Court should abstain from adjudicating ANSWER’S claims under the doctrine of
Younger v. Harris,
On November 2, 2009 — shortly before the Court of Appeals heard oral arguments — the District’s Department of Transportation issued a Notice of Emergency and Proposed Rulemaking revising the poster rules. 56 D.C. Reg. 8759-60 (Nov. 6, 2009). The new rules allowed:
all signs that are not lewd, indecent, or vulgar, or do not pictorially represent the commission of or the attempt to commit any crime to be posted on a structure in public space for sixty (60) days, and a sign, advertisement, or poster related to a specific event may be affixed any time prior to an event but shall be removed no later than thirty (30) days following the event for which it is advertising or publicizing.
Id. at 8759. The Department explained that the emergency rulemaking was “necessitated by the immediate need to address the continuing threat to the public welfare posed by an unequal treatment of non-commercial advertising in the public space.” Id. The Department characterized the new regulations as “a technical amendment” that “removes a time limit distinction that exists between political and nonpolitical advertising that has raised First Amendment concerns.” Id. The new provisions, which became final on January 8, 2010, 57 D.C.Reg. 528 (Jan. 8, 2010), read as follows:
108.5: A sign, advertisement, or poster not related to a specific event shall be affixed for no more than sixty (60) days.
108.6: A sign, advertisement, or poster related to a specific event may be affixed any time prior to the event but shall be removed no later than thirty (30) days following the event to which it is related.
24 D.C.M.R. §§ 108.5-108.6 (2011).
The Court of Appeals decided the case on grounds that did not require consideration of these new rules. The Court first reversed on the issue of MASF’s standing. Judge Williams explained that the Foundation’s affidavit “plainly indicat[ed] an intent to engage in conduct violating the 60-day limit” and that this qualified as the “credible statement by the plaintiff of intent to commit a violative act” that the D.C. Circuit had previously held to constitute standing in a First Amendment facial challenge.
ANSWER II,
The Court of Appeals also remanded on some of the claims by ANSWER that this Court had initially declined to consider under the Younger abstention doctrine. Judge Williams explained that “the district court appropriately abstained” on the claims related to § 108.9, the adhesive provision, which ANSWER had directly challenged in the OAH. Id. But on the other claims, the Court of Appeals held that “consistent with Younger, ANSWER may raise constitutional challenges in federal district court that are completely independent of and severable from the violations it *142 is facing in the District’s administrative proceedings.” Id.
With the case back before this Court, plaintiffs updated their complaint to account for the revised regulations. Supplemental Pleading, -May 5, 2010, ECF No. 22-1 [“Suppl. Pldg.”]. They maintained all the claims that they had asserted previously, including their principal allegation that the regulations draw an unconstitutional, content-based distinction between signs carrying a general political message and signs related to political campaigns. Id. ¶ 4. While the new regulations replaced the explicit exception for signs posted in support of “individuals seeking political office” with a more general category for signs “related to a specific event,” plaintiffs argued that the District had “simply substituted a new set of unconstitutional content-based distinctions for the prior set of unconstitutional content-based distinctions.” Id. Their basis for this argument is their allegation “on information and belief’ that the District would interpret political campaigns as “events,” thus allowing them to continue to be treated differently from general political messages. Id. ¶¶ 9-10. Several months later, plaintiffs removed the “on information and belief’ designation after the D.C. Board of Elections and Ethics noted on its website that “the new rules allow campaign posters to remain up 30 days after the general election....” Notice to the Court That Complaint Allegations Are No Longer “On Information and Belief,” Sept. 16, 2010, ECF No. 32 (quoting www.dcboee.org/ candidate_info/generaLinfo/campaign_ posters.asp) [“Pl.’s Notice”].
Plaintiffs added two new counts in their supplemental pleading. First, in addition to facially challenging §§ 108.5-108.6 of the new regulations, they added an “as applied” challenge alleging that the provisions are improperly content-based and undefined. Suppl. Pldg. ¶¶ 102-04. Second, ANSWER added a claim that the District had violated 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by issuing “baseless” citations “in retaliation for the ANSWER Coalition’s exercise of its lawful rights to free speech through lawful postering activities.” Id. ¶¶ 105-06. ANSWER based this claim on ninety-nine citations it received from the District in March and April 2010, which it alleges were issued “notwithstanding the fact that the Coalition had fully complied with the [amended] regulations.” Id. ¶ 44 (emphasis in original).
The District again moved to dismiss all of plaintiffs’ claims. Def.’s Mot. Dismiss, June 2, 2010, ECF No. 26 [“Def.’s Mot.”]. After plaintiffs had filed their opposition and the District had replied, the OAH issued an order announcing that proceedings would be scheduled in ANSWER’S challenge to the tickets it received in 2007. OAH Notice. ANSWER then voluntarily dismissed its claims for prospective relief related to its constitutional challenges to the regulations in this Court. Stipulation of Dismissal, Oct. 25, 2010, ECF No. 35. Plaintiffs and the District stipulated that the dismissal would “eliminate the legal issues pertaining to abstention” while preserving MASF’s challenges to the regulations and ANSWER’S § 1983 claim. Id. at 1. Those are the claims the District now seeks to dismiss.
III. LEGAL STANDARD
While this case is more than four years old, it remains at the motion to dismiss stage of the proceedings. A motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) tests the legal sufficiency of a complaint.
Browning v. Clinton,
A court, however, may not “accept inferences drawn by plaintiffs if such inferences are unsupported by the facts set out in the complaint.”
Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
IY. ANALYSIS
A. Standing
The core of this case is plaintiffs’ First Amendment challenge, but before turning there the Court must clarify a lingering issue related to standing. When the Court of Appeals held that MASF had standing to pursue its claims, the only constitutional challenge asserted was a facial challenge to the District’s postering regulations. In fact, the Court of Appeals explicitly analyzed the elements necessary “to confer standing on a litigant bringing
a pre-enforcement facial challenge.” ANSWER II,
It is almost equally certain, however, that MASF lacks standing to bring the “as applied” challenge that plaintiffs added as Count Two of their Supplemental Pleading.
Id.
¶¶ 102-04. While ANSWER may have had standing to litigate this issue, it voluntarily dismissed its claim for relief to help remove the abstention issue. Stipulation of Dismissal, at 2. MASF, by contrast, has refrained from posting signs in violation of the regulations, so the District has not enforced the law against the organization. Logically, then, MASF cannot bring an as applied challenge.
Cf. Hill v. Colorado,
B. First Amendment Framework
The First Amendment provides that “Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech.” U.S. Const., amend. I. The Supreme Court has long held that this restriction applies not only to Congress, but also to municipal governments.
Lovell v. Griffin,
303 U.S.
*144
444, 450,
Courts in this Circuit generally follow three steps in assessing a First Amendment challenge: “first, determining whether the First Amendment protects the speech at issue, then identifying the nature of the forum, and finally assessing whether the ... justifications for restricting ... speech ‘satisfy the requisite standard.’ ”
Mahoney v. Doe,
The first step here is undisputed. “[Sjigns are a form of expression protected by the Free Speech Clause.... ”
City of Ladue v. Gilleo,
The second step is to determine the nature of the forum in which the protected speech occurs. This is slightly more complicated than the first step, but it still raises no serious doubt. The “lamppost[s] and appurtenances” referenced by the regulations, 24 D.C.M.R. § 108.1, are government property. Public forum doctrine “divides government property into three categories for purposes of First Amendment analysis.”
Oberwetter v. Hilliard,
The District’s lampposts do not rise to the level of a traditional public forum. Their purpose is not to serve as a means of expression. Unlike streets and parks, the quintessential public fora, they have not “immemorially been held in trust for the
*145
use of the public and, time out of mind, ... been used for purposes of assembly, communicating thoughts between citizens, and discussing public questions.”
Hague v. C.I.O.,
The third step in the First Amendment analysis is to assess whether the regulations meet the legal standard for a designated public forum. The test for a designated public forum is the same as that for a traditional public forum.
Id.
at 46,
C. The Event / Non-Event Distinction in §§ 108.5-108.6
1. Content Neutrality
One of the bedrock principles of First Amendment law is that the “government has no power to restrict expression because of its message, its ideas, its subject matter, or its content.”
Ashcroft v. ACLU,
This principle is conceptually clear, but applying it is “not always a simple task.”
Turner Broad.,
The District asserts several times that its regulations are content-neutral, Def.’s Mot. 13, 14, 19-21, because it has not “ ‘adopted a regulation of speech because of a disagreement with the message it conveys.’ ”
Id.
at 19-20 (quoting
Hill,
The District also contends that the regulations are content-neutral because they do not “ ‘totally prohibit a type of expression or a specific message’ ” but rather “ ‘merely regulate the manner in which the message may be conveyed.’” Def.’s Mot. 20 (quoting
ISKCON of Potomac, Inc. v. Kennedy,
Finally, the District argues that the regulations should be judged content-neutral “even if those regulations have some incidental effect on speech” because they promote a content-neutral purpose — reducing litter and blight. Def.’s Mot. 21. The Supreme Court considered a law with similar characteristics in
City of Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc.,
The District defends §§ 108.5-108.6 on this rationale. Because the regulation is “ ‘justified without reference to the [content] of the regulated speech,’ ” the District insists that it is content-neutral.
Id.
at 19 (quoting
Ward,
The Supreme Court illustrated this principle in
City of Cincinnati v. Discovery Network, Inc.,
The District similarly defends §§ 108.5-108.6 as a way to promote its esthetic interest “in ensuring that public property is not permanently marred or damaged by improperly attached posters,” Def.’s First Mot. Dismiss 5, and its interest in combating litter. Def.’s Mot. 3. These interests are undoubtedly valid.
Taxpayers for Vincent,
Viewed on its own, § 108.5, which limits posters “not related to a specific event” to a hanging time of sixty days, is unproblematic. An across-the-board durational restriction would limit litter by requiring posters of all types to be taken down after a certain number of days. Likewise, the provision of § 108.6 requiring posters related to events to be “removed no later than thirty (30) days following the event” is straightforward. A poster for an event that has already occurred is more likely to constitute litter and blight than a poster for a future event or a general political message. This Court’s concern arises from the other half of § 108.6, which allows posters related to a specific event to be “affixed any time prior to the event.” It is not clear how allowing posters to hang for an indefinite period of time before an event advances the District’s interest in reducing litter. Indeed, it seems likely to have the opposite effect. Posters advertising events in the distant future— the “Bring our troops home: Vote the Peace Party candidate in 2016” sign discussed above, for example — are virtually certain to fall off, blow away, or get torn down. Because the organizations that post them will not be responsible for removing them until thirty days after the events occur, the cost of cleaning them up will fall on the District and its taxpayers.
In the absence of an explanation for how this distinction between event and nonevent signs advances the District’s objective of litter prevention, the differential burdens imposed by §§ 108.5-108.6 present serious First Amendment concerns.
City of Ladue,
2. Narrow Tailoring
Having assessed the primary issue of the content-neutrality as some length, the Court can address the remaining aspects of the plaintiffs’ claim relatively briefly. In this case, the requirement that a time, place, and manner restriction be “narrowly tailored to serve a significant government interest,”
Burson,
This is simply another way of asking the question we posed above: Can the District show that the event/non-event distinction drawn by §§ 108.5-108.6 actually advances its anti-littering and esthetic interests? If so, the regulation will be both content-neutral and narrowly tailored. If not, it will be neither. While this is not the situation in every First Amendment challenge, to answer one inquiry is to answer both in this case. As Justice Kennedy observed in a similar setting, “In some cases, a censorial justification will not be apparent from the face of a regulation which draws distinctions based on content, and the government will tender a plausible justification unrelated to the suppression of speech or ideas. There the compelling-interest test may be one analytical device to detect, in an objective way, whether the asserted justification is in fact an accurate description of the purpose and effect of the law.”
Burson,
3. Alternative Channels for Communication
The third requirement of a time, place, and manner restriction is that it must leave open ample alternative channels for communication.
Id.
at 191,
*150 4. Facial Challenge
There is one final issue to address with respect to plaintiffs’ claim that §§ 108.5-108.6 violates the First Amendment. MASF challenges the constitutionality of the regulations on their face. In a general facial challenge, a plaintiff must “establish that no set of circumstances exists under which [the provision challenged] would be valid, or that the statute lacks any plainly legitimate sweep.”
United States v. Stevens,
— U.S. -,
As explained above, posting signs is constitutionally protected speech. If the event/non-event distinction is content-based and thus “presumptively invalid,”
Playboy,
D. Plaintiffs’ Other Constitutional Claims
1. Vagueness
In addition to attacking §§ 108.5-108.6 as improperly content-based, plaintiffs also challenge those provisions as “unconstitutionally vague.” First. Am. Compl. ¶ 42. A law can be invalidated for vagueness if it “fail[s] to provide the kind of notice that will enable ordinary people to understand what conduct it prohibits” or if it “may authorize or even encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.”
City of Chicago v. Morales,
Plaintiffs object that § 108.6’s provision excepting posters “related to a specific event” from the sixty-day limit “does not define what content qualifies a sign to be considered as ‘related to a specific event’ ” and thus “delegates overly-broad and unconstrained discretion to the enforcement” officer. Pl.’s Opp’n 20. As a result, they claim, the “person affixing the sign has no way of knowing in advance what his or her obligations for removal actually are.” Id. at 21.
The District counters that “[determining whether there is an ‘event’ is not remotely a ‘subjective’ exercise; either there is an event referenced on the poster, or *151 there is not.” Def.’s Reply 6, Aug. 23, 2010, ECF No. 30. The District has clarified that elections do constitute events. Pi’s Notice. As far as the Court is aware, this is the only limiting construction the District has provided publicly. In its Reply, the District suggests that the dictionary definition of “event” — “ ‘something that happens: occurrence’ ” — provides sufficient guidance for people considering posting on public lampposts. Def.’s Reply at 6 n.6 (quoting Webster’s New Collegiate Dictionary 396 (7th ed. 1973)). While the District deserves recognition for embracing the recent legal trend in dictionary citation, see Adam Liptak, Justices Turning More Frequently to Dictionary, and Not Just for Big Words, N.Y. Times, June 13, 2011, this particular definition offers little in the way of clarity. Plaintiffs present a series of hypotheticals demonstrating potential vagueness about the meaning of “event” in the context of §§ 108.5-108.6. For example, could a sign reading “Enact Civil Rights Bill No. XXX!” be posted for sixty days only, or indefinitely until the “event” of the bill’s passage? Pl.’s Opp’n 22. Certainly the passage of the bill is “something that happens,” thus meeting the dictionary definition supplied by the District. Plaintiffs also raise questions about a sign bearing only the name of a political candidate, such as “Graham.” Id. at 20-21. Is this a general political message or an event-related sign that can remain up indefinitely until thirty days after the election? Does it matter if the election is years into the future? If candidate Graham loses a primary election, must the sign come down in thirty days? Or is the “something that happens” the general election?
Some of plaintiffs’ other scenarios strike the Court as a bit far-fetched, and courts “must be careful not to go beyond the statute’s facial requirements and speculate about ‘hypothetical’ or ‘imaginary’ cases.”
Wash. State Grange v. Wash. State Republican Party,
2. Anonymous Speech
Plaintiffs allege that the registration requirement, § 108.11, represents an unconstitutional restraint on their right to anonymous speech. This argument lacks merit and can be disregarded.
While safeguarding the “respected tradition of anonymity in the advocacy of political causes,”
McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Comm’n,
The Supreme Court outlined a framework for this inquiry in
Buckley.
In that case, the Court considered a Colorado law that required petition organizers seeking signatures to, among other restrictions, wear name badges and file affidavits disclosing their addresses.
Buckley,
The provision challenged here, § 108.11, closely resembles the affidavit requirement upheld by the
Buckley
Court. Like the affidavit requirement, and unlike the name badge requirement, it imposes no burden at the moment plaintiffs seek to engage their intended audience — the time of posting. In fact, it requires no pre-posting disclosure at all. It merely directs the organization posting the sign to file copies and basic identifying information with the District within twenty-four hours of posting. § 108.11. This advances the District’s valid law enforcement interest without exposing the organization to potential harassment or revealing its identity to the public in any way. Plaintiffs therefore cannot state an anonymous speech claim.
Buckley,
As a general matter, plaintiffs can “prevail under the First Amendment if they can show ‘a reasonable probability that the compelled disclosure ... will subject them to threats, harassments, or reprisals from either Government officials or private parties.’ ”
Reed,
3. Strict Liability Enforcement
Plaintiffs’ final constitutional claim is that the District imposed a system of “strict liability” enforcement in violation of the Due Process Clause. First Am. Compl. ¶¶ 25-34. This argument is also unpersuasive.
Plaintiffs base their claim largely on
Schneider v. New Jersey,
The Schneider Court based its decision on the First Amendment, not a Due Process Clause strict liability theory. But in any event, the regulation at issue here can be distinguished from the one invalidated in Schneider. Unlike the leafleters in Schneider, plaintiffs here do not hand their posters to people who willingly accept them and then make a conscious choice to discard them as litter. Here, the potential litter takes the form of a sign on a public lamppost. No one voluntarily accepts it and decides to turn it into litter. If it remains posted beyond the durational limits and then blows away, there is no one to hold responsible but the organization that produced the poster and, presumably, benefited from its public placement. The only alternative would be to leave the cleanup cost with the District’s taxpayers.
The Sixth Circuit reached a similar conclusion in
Jobe v. City of Catlettsburg,
The Supreme Court has made clear that “[ijmposing liability without independent fault” can be constitutional when it “rationally advances the State’s goal.”
Pac. Mut. Life v. Haslip,
E. ANSWER’S § 1983 Claim
ANSWER’S remaining claim is that the District harassed it with a series of “bogus and false notices of violation” under 24 D.C.M.R. § 108 in March and April 2010. Suppl. Pldg. ¶ 42. Because *154 ANSWER alleges that it “fully complied with the letter of the new and amended postering regulations,” id. ¶ 40, the organization claims that the District lacked “the slightest colorable factual basis,” id. ¶ 63, for issuing the tickets and therefore must have targeted ANSWER in retaliation for its First Amendment-protected “postering free speech activities.” Pl.’s Opp’n 36. This, ANSWER argues, constitutes a § 1983 violation by the District. Id.
To prove a § 1983 violation by the District, a plaintiff must allege both “a violation of his rights under the Constitution or federal law” and “also that the municipality’s custom or policy caused the violations.”
Warren v. Dist. of Columbia,
ANSWER then “bears the burden of pleading the existence of a municipal custom or practice that abridges [its] federal constitutional or statutory rights.”
Bonaccorsy v. Dist. of Columbia,
Ultimately, the whole of ANSWER’S claim is that the District’s unconstitutional “custom or practice” was to issue one organization a batch of arguably questionable tickets over a single two-month period. While there is no hard-and-fast way to characterize a “custom or practice” in pleading a § 1983 claim, this narrow allegation does not rise to the level of any previously validated approach.
See Trimble v. Dist. of Columbia,
This is not to suggest that ANSWER has no way to contest the allegedly “bogus” tickets it received. It can challenge the validity of those citations in the OAH, where plaintiff has previously and appropriately turned to challenge the propriety of individual Notices of Violation. See OAH Notice. If the tickets were indeed issued wrongfully, ANSWER will receive its remedy in that forum. But it has not presented the allegations necessary to support a § 1983 claim in this federal Court. The District’s motion to dismiss the § 1983 claim is thus granted.
V. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the District’s motion to dismiss is denied with respect to Count One, MASF’s facial challenge to the regulations based on the First Amendment. The motion is granted with respect to Count Two, since MASF cannot raise an as-applied challenge, and Count Three, ANSWER’S § 1983 claim.
The case will now proceed to discovery, and the District will have an opportunity to clarify the questions remaining about the meaning of the term “event” and the relation of event/non-event distinction in §§ 108.5-108.6 to the anti-littering interest it asserts. The Court harbors no preconceived view and will consider the District’s arguments with an open mind. But if the Court finds that the regulations restrict expression based on content without furthering a content-neutral purpose, it will have little choice but to conclude that they favor election-related communications over general political advocacy in violation of the First Amendment.
There is, of course, another alternative available to the District’s officials. They can revise the regulations to include a single, across-the-board durational restriction that applies equally to all viewpoints and subject matters. This would address the problem of litter, remove the suspicion that politicians are carving out exceptions to benefit their own campaigns, and uphold the tradition of vibrant free expression in the nation’s capital.
A separate Order consistent with these findings shall issue this date.
Notes
. The case was assigned to Judge Kennedy from its filing in 2007 until May 4, 2011, when it was transferred by consent to Chief Judge Lamberth. Reassignment of Civil Case, May 4, 2011, ECF No. 36.
. If the regulations are found to be content-based, they can still be constitutional if they survive strict scrutiny.
Burson,
