Case Information
*1 Before: LEVAL, HALL, and LOHIER, Circuit Judges.
Jоhn Doe appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Amon, C.J.) granting summary judgment in favor of defendants New York State Governor Andrew Cuomo and Acting Commissioner of the State of New York Division of Criminal *2 Justice Services M. Sean Byrne. Doe brought an as-applied constitutional challenge to the enforcement of amendments to the notification and registration requirements of the New York State Sex Offender Registration Act (‚SORA‛). The amendments post-dated Doe’s plea of guilty to misdemeanor attempted possession of a sexual performance by a child, for which he was classified as a level-one sex offender under SORA. We AFFIRM the judgment of the District Court.
Z ACHARY A. M ARGULIS -O HNUMA , New York, NY (Norman H. Siegel, Siegel, Teitelbaum & Evans LLP, New York, NY, on the brief), for Plaintiff- Appellant. V ALERIE F IGUEREDO , Assistant Solicitor General (Barbara D. Underwood, Solicitor General, Richard Dearing, Deputy Solicitor General, on the brief), for Eric T. Schneiderman, Attorney General of the State of New York, New York, NY, for Defendants-Appellees. LOHIER, Circuit Judge:
John Doe appeаls from the judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Amon, C.J.) granting summary judgment in favor of the Governor of the State of New York and the Acting Commissioner of the State of New York Division of Criminal Justice Services (‚DCJS‛) on Doe’s as-applied constitutional challenges to the enforcement of certain amendments to the New York State Sex Offender Registration Act *3 (‚SORA‛). The amendments we are asked to review were enacted after Doe pleaded guilty to misdemeanor attempted possession of а sexual performance by a child, as a result of which he was classified as a level-one sex offender required to register under SORA. The amendments extended the registration requirement for level-one sex offenders from ten years to a minimum of twenty years and also eliminated the ability of level-one sex offenders to petition for relief from registration. Doe argues, among other things, that requiring him to comply with these post-plea amendments violates the Ex Post Facto Clause and the Fourth Amendment, and deprives him of due process and equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment, in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. We disagree and affirm the judgment of the District Court.
BACKGROUND
In 1999, after he was arrested for downloading six images depicting child pornography, Doe pleaded guilty in Queens County Criminal Court to one count of attempted possession of a sexual performance by a child, a class A misdemeanor. During the plea colloquy, the State court told Doe that he could ‚petition *the court+ as to registration, reporting requirements and *4 relеase[] relief at some future point.‛ Doe was then sentenced principally to three years’ probation and designated a level-one sex offender, which required him to register under SORA.
At the time of Doe’s guilty plea, SORA required level-one sex offenders
to register annually for ten years from the initial date of registration, N.Y.
Correct. Law § 168-h (1996), and also provided that ‚*a+ny sex offender
required to register pursuant to this article may be relieved of any further
duty to register upon the granting of a petition for relief by the sentencing
court,‛ id. § 168-o. In 2006 the New York State Legislature amended sections
168-h and 168-o. The relevant change to § 168-h ‚increased the registration
requirement for level one offenders from ten to twenty years . . . effective as of
January 18, 2006.‛
[1]
Doe v. Pataki,
For a full decade, Doe complied with the conditions of his probation
and his obligations under SORA. Then, in 2009, he petitioned the Queens
County Criminal Court pursuant to the amended § 168-o to relieve him of his
registration requirements, to strike his name from the sex offender registry
maintained by DCJS, and to enjoin DCJS from publishing his identity to other
government entities or the public. Doe argued that § 168-o(2) affords level-
one offenders a statutory right to petition for an order adjusting their risk
level downward below level one, thereby ‚necessarily reliev*ing+ the offender
from any registration requirement.‛ Woe v. Spitzer,
As relevant to this appeal, in 2011 Doe sued the Governor and the Commissioner of DCJS in federal court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that SORA was unconstitutional as applied to him and seeking to enjoin the enforcement of sections 168-h and 168-o against him. When the defendants moved for summary judgment, the parties agreed that there were no disputed issues of fact. Concluding that all of Doe’s federal constitutional claims were meritless, the District Cоurt granted the summary judgment motion and dismissed the lawsuit.
Doe appealed.
DISCUSSION
We review de novo the District Court’s grant of summary judgment. Doe raises three main arguments on appeal. First, he claims that the 2006 amendments to sections 168-h and 168-o as applied to him transformed SORA’s registration and notification requirements into punitive measures, in violation of the Ex Post Facto Clause. Second, he argues that the State’s enforcement of the amendments deprived him of procedural and substantive *7 due process. Third, Doe claims that the State breached its plеa agreement with him, insofar as the agreement allowed him to petition for relief from SORA’s registration requirement. We address each argument in turn.
A. Ex Post Facto Challenge
The ex post facto prohibition ‚applies only to penal statutes which
disadvantage the offender affected by them.‛ Collins v. Youngblood, 497 U.S.
37, 41 (1990). ‚*I+f a legislative burden is imposed ‘for the purposes of
punishment—that is, to reprimand the wrongdoer, to deter others, etc., it has
been considered penal.’‛ Doe v. Pataki (‚Doe I‛),
In Doe I, a suit brought by a different anonymous plaintiff, we
considered a similar constitutional challenge to the version of SORA in effect
in 1997 and held that the statute’s notification and registration requirements
were nonpunitive and therefore did not violate the Ex Pоst Facto Clause. See
Doe I,
*9 1. Notification Provisions
Doe’s first argument concerns SORA’s amended notification provisions, which permit frеe public telephonic access to the registry and authorize law enforcement officers to disseminate information regarding level-one sex offenders to entities with vulnerable populations. We agree with the District Court that Doe failed to demonstrate that the amendment was punitive rather than regulatory or that his case is otherwise meaningfully distinguishable from Doe I. The text and structure of the amendments as well as their legislative history support our conclusion.
As an initial matter, we note that SORA’s notification рrovisions retain
the key features that we cited in Doe I as strong evidence of the Act’s
nonpunitive nature: (1) the calibration of notification requirements to the
offender’s perceived risk of re-offense; (2) the regulation of public access to
and limitations on dissemination of registrant information; and (3) the
protections against misuse of information. See Doe I,
1
misuse. See N.Y. Correct. Law § 168-p(1)–(2). And it remains the case that
2
‚the only affirmative dissemination that can be conducted by the state is to
3
entities with vulnerable populations, and not to neighbors, employers,
4
landlords, or news agencies‛; even then, law enforcement officials may not
5
reveal a level-one offender’s exact address. Doe I,
7 The legislative history of the two amendments also strongly supports 8 our view that the New York State Legislature’s intent was nonpunitive. The 9 Bill Jacket and accompanying materials relating to the law amending § 168- *11 l(6)(a) (the notification provision) indicate that the Legislature ‚authorize*ed+ local police to provide information [about level-one offenders] to entities serving vulnerable populations‛ out of a concern for public safety. See N.Y. Bill Jacket, S.B. 8457/A.B. 8370-A, 229th Leg., 2006 Sess., ch. 106, at 8–9 (2006). Likewise, the legislative history of the 2004 law amending § 168-p to remove the fеe for accessing the registry indicates that the Legislature sought to reduce child sexual abuse by facilitating registry checks by youth organizations rather than to punish offenders. See N.Y. Bill Jacket, S.B. 7552/A.B. 11590, 227th Leg., 2004 Sess., ch. 361, at 3–5 (2004).
The legislative purpose of the amendments aside, we also reject Doe’s
argument that the notification provisions are ‚punitive in fact.‛ See Doe I,
Finally, to the extent that Doe argues that the notification procedures
promote the aims of punishment and are excessive in relation to their
regulatory purpose, that argument, too, is foreclosed by Doe I. We have
expressly recognized that the legislature’s legitimate regulatоry aims include
the dissemination of information about offenders to communities with
vulnerable populations. Doe I,
*13 2. Registration Provisions
We are similarly unpersuaded by Doe’s efforts to characterize SORA’s
registration provisions as punitive. Initially, ‚the legislature enacted the
registration provisions primarily to serve the nonpunitive purpose of
enhancing future law enforcement efforts.‛ Doе I,
To distinguish Doe I, Doe points to the amended Act’s triennial
requirement that a level-one offender report to be photographed and
*14
fingerprinted rather than renew his registration in writing. See N.Y. Correct.
Law § 168-f(2)(b-3). But ‚the Supreme Court has consistently upheld [against
ex post facto challenges the] . . . termination of financial support[] and loss of
livelihood,‛ both of which, it seems to us, represent ‚far heavier burdens‛
than this triennial, in-person reporting requirement. Doe I,
B. Procedural Due Process Challenge
Pointing to a ‚protected liberty interest‛ in the terms of his plea agreement, which memorialized the then-applicable ten-year registration requirement and possibility of petitioning for relief from registration, Doe next argues that the 2006 amendments violate his procedural due process rights. On appeal as in his complaint, Doe asserts that he was deprived of procedural due process ‚when he was denied his petition for modification of his registration requirements without a hearing or other opportunity to show that he was not a danger to the community.‛ Joint App’x 30.
Although Doe contends that the State did not afford constitutionally adequate procedures in applying SORA to him, there was no fact that would require a protective procedure to determine. New York State has concluded—as it was constitutionally entitled to do—that the mere fact of conviction of certain sex offenses justifies the imposition of SORA’s rеgistration, notification, and other restrictions. Doe does not challenge the procedure by which New York State so legislated. Nor does he challenge the *16 procedure by which New York State convicted him of a relevant offense. He also does not challenge the procedure by which New York State determined that he was a level-one (low-risk) offender. And he does not suggest that he was not convicted of a relevant offense, in which case an inquiry into his criminal history might be required. All of the facts nеcessary to conclude that SORA restrictions apply to Doe are therefore known and unchallenged. There is no inquiry left to be made and no reason to require elaborate procedures to make it.
Notwithstanding the absence of any statutorily relevant facts in
dispute, Doe makes two procedural due process arguments. First, he
contends that he is entitled to due process in the determination whether he is
sufficiently dangerous to justify subjecting him to SORA and its amendments.
But whether Doe is actually dangerous is irrelevant under SORA. In
Connecticut Department of Public Safety v. Doe,
Doe also argues that he was deprived of due process when, as he
asserted in his complaint, ‚despite the sеntencing court’s promise to him, the
Legislature amended the law to abolish the petition for relief from
registration.‛ Joint App’x 30. We are no more persuaded by this second
argument than we were by the first. There is no serious dispute that the New
York State Legislature ‚provide*d+ constitutionally adequate process simply
by enacting [the SORA amendments], publishing [them], and . . . affording
those within the statute’s reach a reasonable opportunity both to familiarize
themselves with the general requirements imposed and to comply with thosе
requirements.‛ United States v. Locke,
*18 We therefore conclude that the District Court properly dismissed Doe’s procedural due process claim.
C. Substantive Due Process Challenge
Next, Doe argues that the District Court erred in holding that he lacked standing to mount a substantive due process challenge to those SORA provisions he contends infringed his rights to privacy and to travel. We see no error. Even assuming, without deciding, that the SORA provisions precluding registered offenders from obtaining insurance coverage or health benefits for erectile dysfunction imрlicate Doe’s privacy rights in intimate affairs, Doe failed to allege any injury as a result of those provisions, and no injury may reasonably be inferred. Nor did Doe allege that SORA prevented him from changing residence, obtaining employment, or using public facilities in violation of his right to travel. [5]
*19
Doe’s remaining substantive due process challenge is that, as they
apply to him, SORA’s reporting and notification requirements violate his
right to privacy of personal information, a right he describes as fundamental.
In Doe I, we observed that much of the information about a sex offender’s
identity was publicly available even before SORA was enacted. Doe I, 120
F.3d at 1280. Given the combination of the nature of the information released
(consisting in large part of matters of public record) and the State’s strong
interest in releasing it, Doe has not supported a claim for the violation of any
constitutional right to privacy. Cf. Paul v. Davis,
D. Doe’s Plea Agreement
We turn next to Doe’s argument on appeal that the State’s retroactive application of the 2006 SORA amendments violated the terms of his 1999 plea *20 agreement. This argument rests on Doe’s allegation that the State court judge who presided over his plea hearing promised him that he would have the ability to petition for relief from registration and would be required to register only for a ten-year period. More speсifically, Doe’s complaint alleged that, ‚*j+ust prior to entering the plea, Doe was assured by the court that he would be permitted to petition for release from registration as the statute explicitly permitted at that time.‛ Joint App’x 6–7. However, we do not construe the State court’s comment during the plea and sentencing proceedings that it would ‚allow [Doe] to petition [the court] as to registration, reporting requirements and release* + relief at some future point‛ as a representation that SORA would never be amended. See Joint App’x 52– 53. We therefore affirm the dismissal of Doe’s breach-of-plea claim.
E. Equal Protection and Fourth Amendment Challenges A self-described ‚demonstrably non-dangerous offender,‛ Doe also contends that his continued inclusion in the New York sex offender registry beyond ten years violates his right to equal protection because it is not rationally related to the Act’s aims of protecting the public. As we conclude *21 that the amendments withstand rational basis review, we reject this argument.
Lastly, Doe argues that the registration requirements violate his Fourth
Amendment right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures. Even if
we assume for argument that SORA’s requirements subject Doe to a search or
seizure for Fourth Amendment purposes, we cannot agree that any such
search or seizure is unreasonable. Here, any searches or seizures required by
SORA serve special needs—such as the protection of potential future victims
and the solving of crimes in the future—and purport neither to facilitate the
investigation of any specific crime nor primarily to serve a ‚general interest in
crime control.‛ See Nicholas v. Goord,
1 CONCLUSION
2 We have considered Doe’s remaining arguments and conclude that 3 they are without merit. For the foregoing reasоns, we AFFIRM the judgment 4 of the District Court.
Notes
[*] The Clerk of the Court is directed to amend the caption of this case as set forth above.
[1] The amended § 168-h provides, in relevant part: ‚The duration of registration and verification for a sex offender who has not been designated a sexual predator, or a sexually violent offender, or a predicate sex offender, and who is classified as a level one risk, or who has not yet received a risk level classification, shall be annually for a period of twenty years from the initial date of registration.‛ N.Y. Correct. Law § 168-h(1) (2006).
[2] Doe also urges us to consider the ‚myriad additional burdens and restrictions on offenders‛ that have arisen since Doe I, including ‚restrictions on residency, employment and use of public facilities.‛ As discussed infra at note 5, however, the majority of the burdens about which Doe complains stem not from SORA itself, but from local ordinances not challenged in this
[3] New York Correction Law § 168-l(6)(a) provides: If the risk of repeat offense is low, a level one designation shall be given to such sex offender. In such case the law enforcement agency or agencies having jurisdiction and the law enforcement agency or agencies having had jurisdiction at the time of his or her conviction shall be notified and may disseminate relevant information which may include a photograph and description of the offender and which may include the name of the sex offender, approximate address based on sex offender’s zip code, background information including the offender’s crime of conviction, modus оf operation, type of victim targeted, the name and address of any institution of higher education at which the sex offender is enrolled, attends, is employed or resides and the description of special conditions imposed on the offender to any entity with vulnerable populations related to the nature of the offense committed by such sex offender. Any entity receiving information on a sex offender may disclose or further disseminate such information at its discretion.
[4] Doe’s remaining arguments that the amended notification provisions render the Act punitive are also foreclosed by our decision in Doe I.
[5] SORA prohibits Doe from working on an ice cream truck. See N.Y. Correct. Law § 168-v. As the District Court observed, Doe neither alleges that he previously worked on an ice cream truck nor expresses any desire to do so. Except for the bar against working on an ice cream truck, the residency, employment, travel, and public facility use restrictions about which Doe complains are imposed by local ordinаnces, which are not before us. Likewise, the burdens on interstate travel about which Doe complains arise from federal law and the statutes of other States, not SORA.
[6] Although some information (for example, Doe’s zip code or affiliation with a school) may not be public, Doe’s complaint failed to allege that this specific personal information—unlike the fact of his registration as a sex offender— had been or was likely to be accessed by members of the public or circulated by law enforcement.
