On February 23,1976, the Supreme Court granted certiorari with respect to our judgment entered pursuant to our opinion reported in
It is unnecessary to reach the question of whether this case is distinguishable on the merits from Rizzo, because we conclude that plaintiffs lack the standing Rizzo has shown to be necessary.
The individual plaintiffs’ conclusory allegations of the threat of renewed police misconduct
1
are not different in substance from those found wanting in
Rizzo
as “hypothetical” complaints about what some unknown policeman “might do to [the plaintiffs] in the future because of that unknown policeman’s perception of departmental disciplinary procedures.”
2
Application of
Rizzo
to the allegations here also defeats the standing of the organization plaintiffs. An organization “can have standing as the representative of its members only if it has alleged facts sufficient to make out a case or controversy
*1253
had the members themselves brought suit.”
Warth v. Seldin,
The organizations’ other alleged basis for standing,
viz.,
that they will incur expenses in processing claims of police misconduct unless the federal equity court intervenes, assuming this amounts to injury in fact,
3
is not within the zone of interests protected by the Fourteenth Amendment or 42 U.S.C. § 1983. See
Data Processing Service v. Camp,
Our ruling is without prejudice to the filing of an amended complaint by any plaintiff or plaintiffs in an attempt to satisfy the standing requirement of the Rizzo case. By this qualification of our affirmance, we do not imply that we have any opinion concerning whether it will be possible for any plaintiff to allege facts establishing such standing. We only wish to preserve any right to proceed which is undisturbed by Rizzo.
The order appealed from is affirmed. The ease is remanded for further proceedings with respect to issues still pending in the District Court. On remand that court will amend the order in accordance with the preceding paragraph of this opinion.
AFFIRMED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Plaintiffs allege (par. 4 of the complaint):
“The following rights secured to these Plaintiffs and other persons by the Constitution and laws of the United States have been and will, unless Defendants are enjoined, continue to be violated by Defendants and their agents and employees: [listing constitutional rights].”
Reading this as an allegation of future harassment specifically directed at plaintiffs would be “strain[ing] to read inappropriate meaning into the conclusory allegations” of the complaint. See
O’Shea v. Littleton,
. Claims for damages against twelve policemen named as defendants in the case at bar are still pending before the District Court. The fact that twelve of the allegedly offending policemen were identified does not improve plaintiffs’ standing as against the Superintendent of Police, the members of the Police Board, and the City of Chicago, who are the only appellees before us. The thrust of the complaint, as stated in our earlier opinion, is that the specific instances of police misconduct alleged are examples “of many similar occurrences recurring over the course of many years.”
. The organizations’ voluntary decision to assume the burden of processing these claims arguably breaks the causal chain between the defendants’ conduct and the expenses incurred by the organizations in processing the claims.
