OPINION AND ORDER RESOLVING MOTIONS FOR JUDGMENT
Plaintiffs John Does # 1-5 and Mary Doe bring the instant action against Governor Richard Snyder and Director of the Michigan State Police Colonel Kriste Etue, named in their official capacities, challenging Michigan’s Sex Offenders Registration Act (“SORA”), as amended in 2011 and 2013. Both parties have filed Rule 52 motions for judgment on the stipulated facts and records submitted by the parties. (See Dkt. ## 90-95). Plaintiffs seek a declaratory judgment and permanent injunction, and ask the court to grant judgment in their favor on Counts IV, V, VI, VII, and IX of their First Amended Complaint. (Dkt. # 96, 5669-70.) Defendants move the court to find Plaintiffs’ challenges without merit and grant judgment in their favor. (Dkt. # 97, Pg. ID 5721.) The parties have willingly waived their right to a full trial in their Rule 52 motions and have stipulated that the court may enter judgment based on the record submitted by the parties. For the reasons set forth below, Plaintiffs’ motion will be granted in part and denied in part and Defendants’ motion will be granted in part and denied in part.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Statutory History
Michigan enacted SORA in 1994. 1994 Mich. Pub. Acts 295. The 1994 Act established a confidential database containing information about sex offenders that was available only to law enforcement. 94 Mich. Pub. Acts 295, § 10. SORA has been amended numerous times. See 1996 Mich. Pub. Acts 494; 1999 Mich. Pub. Acts 85; 2002 Mich. Pub. Acts 542; 2004 Mich. Pub. Acts 238, 239, 240; 2005 Mich. Pub. Acts 121, 127, 132; 2006 Mich. Pub. Acts 46; 2011 Mich. Pub. Acts 17, 18; 2013 Mich. Pub. Acts 149. As of April 1997, SORA requires law enforcement agencies to make certain registration information available for public inspection, 1996 Mich. Pub. Acts 494, § 10(2), and following the 1999 amendments to SORA, registry information became available through the Internet. See 1999 Mich. Pub. Acts 85, §§ 8(2), 10(2), and 10(3). The amendments between 2002 and 2006, inter alia, increased reporting requirements for registrants; introduced a one-time registration fee; removed the registration requirement for certain individuals assigned to youthful trainee status; prohibited registrants from working, residing, or loitering within 1,000 feet of a school; and created a program whereby members of the public could be notified electronically when a sex offender moved into a particular zip code. See generally 2002 Mich. Pub. Acts 542; 2004 Mich. Pub. Acts 238, 239, 240; 2005 Mich. Pub. Acts 121, 127, 132; 2006 Mich. Pub. Acts 46.
The 2011 amendments significantly altered SORA to comply with the federal Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (“SORNA”), 42 U.S.C. § 16901 et seq. In its current form, SORA categorizes registrants into three tiers which determine the length of time that individuals must register and the frequency with which they
B. Plaintiffs
All six Plaintiffs are Michigan residents who are Tier III offenders and thus required by law to register as sex offenders and comply with SORA for life. (Dkt. # 90, Pg. ID 3729.) Following are brief descriptions of Plaintiffs and their offenses.
In 1990, after losing his job at McDonald’s, Doe # 1 attempted to rob his former employer. (Id. at 3737.) During the robbery, Doe # 1 forced the McDonald’s manager and her fourteen-year-old son into the restaurant; when the manager did not open up the safe, Doe # 1 struck the manager and kicked her son. (Id.) The manager and her son were able to escape. (Id.) Doe # 1 was charged with eleven felony counts. He pleaded no contest to kidnapping (for holding the fourteen-year-old child against his will) and pleaded guilty to the other charges, including armed robbery. (Id.) In 1991, Doe # 1 was sentenced to twenty-two to forty years in prison. (Id. at 3738.) He was paroled in November 2009 and completed his parole in November 2011. (Id. at 3739.) Although Doe # l’s criminal offense lacked an overtly sexual component, under the 2011 amendments to SORA, he is classified as a Tier III offender and is required to comply with SORA for life because he was convicted of kidnapping a minor. (Id.) He has two adult children and one toddler, and he co-parents his fíancée’s teenage daughter. (Id.)
Doe # 2 pleaded guilty under the Holmes Youthful Trainee Act (“HYTA”), Mich. Comp. Laws § 750.520d(l)(a), to criminal sexual conduct III after having a sexual relationship with his fourteen-year-old “girlfriend” in 1996 when he was eighteen years old. (Id. at 3741.) His plea was based on the prosecutor’s promise that his records would be sealed. (Id. at 3743.) Under the HYTA, Doe #2 was assigned the status of “youthful trainee” and sentenced to two years probation. (Id. at 3742.) After completing his probation, his case was dismissed without conviction being entered pursuant to Mich. Comp. Laws § 762.14(1). Designation as a “youthful trainee” is included in the definition of “convicted” under SORA, Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.722(b). Doe # 2 is classified as a Tier III offender and must therefore comply with SORA for life. (Id. at 4745.) Doe # 2 currently has a teenage daughter. The daughter’s mother has full custody, and Doe # 2 has weekend visitation rights. (Id. at 3747.)
In 1998, at the age of nineteen, Doe # 3 had a sexual relationship with a fourteen year old. (Id. at 3748.) Doe # 3 pleaded guilty to attempted criminal sexual conduct and was sentenced to four years of probation under the HYTA. (Id. at 3750.) During his last year on probation, Doe # 3 failed to timely register under SORA. (Id. at 3751.) His HYTA status was revoked, and a conviction was entered. (Id.) Doe # 3 has a nine-year-old son, a six-year-old son, and an infant son. (Id.) He was originally required to register for a period of twenty-five years on a non-public registry,
Doe #4 pleaded guilty to attempted criminal sexual conduct III in 2006 after having a sexual relationship with a female under the age of sixteen, who he met in a nightclub restricted to those aged eighteen years and older. (Id. at 3752-53.) He was twenty three years old at the time. (Id. at 2752.) Doe # 4 was sentenced to five years probation, which he completed. (Id. at 3753.) He is currently involved in a romantic relationship with his victim, who is now over eighteen years old. They have a seven-year-old daughter and an infant child, and Doe # 4 has two other children as well. (Id. at 3754.) In 2011, Doe # 4 was classified as a Tier III offender, extending his period of registration from twenty-five years to life. (Id.)
Doe # 5 was added to this action by a stipulated order entered on August 27, 2013. (Dkt.# 34.) In 1980, he was convicted of criminal sexual conduct III and sentenced to two to fifteen years of imprisonment. (Dkt. # 90, Pg. ID 3757.) At the time of the conduct, Doe # 5 was twenty one years old and the victim was seventeen years old. (Id.) The victim testified at trial that the sexual conduct was noncon-sensual, and Doe # 5 and his sister testified that it was consensual. (Id.) Doe # 5 served approximately twenty-one months of his sentence. (Id.) He was not required to register as a sex offender until 2011 after he pleaded guilty to larceny pursuant to SORA’s “recapturé” provisions, added by the 2011 amendments, which require registration for eligible recidivists who are convicted of any additional felony after July 2011. See Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.724(5). (Dkt. # 90, Pg. ID 375.) Doe # 5 did not timely register and was therefore cited for a probation violation and jailed for ninety days. (Id. at 3759.) He has children and grandchildren. (Id. at 3761)
Ms. Doe was convicted in Ohio of one count of unlawful sexual conduct with a minor in 2003 for having a sexual relationship with a fifteen-year-old male when she was twenty-nine years old. (Id. at 3761-62.) She was sentenced to three years in prison, but was granted judicial release after serving less than eight months of her sentence. (Id. at 3763-65.) Ms. Doe was assigned to the lowest risk level of Ohio’s sex offender registry, which required address verification once a year for ten years. (Id. at 3763-64.) She moved to Michigan in 2004 after her judicial release. She was initially required to register quarterly for twenty-five years, but was reclassified as a Tier III offender in 2011. (Id. at 3765-66.) Ms. Doe has a teenage daughter, step-children, and three grandchildren under the age of ten, and she is expecting another grandchild. (Id.)
C. The Constitutional Challenges
Plaintiffs claim that the retroactive nature of SORA, its extensive reporting requirements and prohibitions, and its broad application violate their constitutional rights. Their First Amended Complaint seeks declaratory and injunctive relief enjoining Defendants from enforcing certain provisions of SORA and barring the retroactive application of the 2011 and 2013 amendments to Plaintiffs. (Dkt. # 46, Pg. ID 903-04, 911.) The complaint alleges nine counts: (1) violation of the Ex Post Facto Clause by the retroactive application of the 2011 amendments (Count I); (2) violation of Plaintiffs’ fundamental rights to travel protected by the Due Process Clause (Count II); (3) violation of Plaintiffs’ fundamental right to engage in common occupations of life protected under the Due Process Clause (Count III); (4) violation of Plaintiffs’ right to direct the education and upbringing of their children under the Due Process Clause (Count IV); (5) violation of Plaintiffs’ right to free
Defendants filed a motion to dismiss Plaintiffs’ original complaint. The court granted in part and denied in part the motion, dismissing with prejudice Counts I, II, and III, dismissing with prejudice VI inasmuch as it applies to the retroactive application of SORA to Does ## 1 and 2, and dismissing without prejudice Count VIII. The motion was denied with respect to Counts IV, V, and VII. It was denied with respect to Count VI inasmuch as it applies to the retroactive extension the lifetime registration requirement to Does ## 3 and 4 and Ms. Doe. (Dkt. # 27, Pg. ID 703-04) (published at Does v. Snyder,
II. STANDARD
Both parties have moved for a summary bench trial on the records submitted by the parties, in the form of a joint statement of facts and accompanying exhibits (Dkt. ## 90-95). “[A] district court may decide a case by summary bench trial upon stipulation of the parties as long as the parties have willingly foregone their right to a full trial.” Acuff-Rose Music, Inc. v. Jostens, Inc.,
III. DISCUSSION
A. Count VII: Vagueness, Impossibility, and Strict Scrutiny
In Count VII, Plaintiffs claim SORA violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment because provisions of SORA are improperly vague, impossible to comply with, and/or wrongly impose strict liability. In particular, Plaintiffs challenge (1) the prohibition on working within a student safety zone, Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 28.733- 734; (2) the prohibition on loitering within a student safety zone, Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 28.733- 734; (3) the prohibition on residing within a student safety zone, Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 28.733, 28.735; (4) the requirement to immediately report changes in personal data, Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.725; (5) the requirement to report educational information, Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.724a; and (6) the requirement to maintain a driver’s li
1. Void for Vagueness
“It is a basic principle of due process that an enactment is void for vagueness if its prohibitions are not clearly defined.” Grayned v. City of Rockford,
“The degree of vagueness that the Constitution tolerates ... depends in part on the nature of the enactment.” Vill. of Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc.,
On the other hand, the rule of lenity reduces the risk of unfair notice and unclear enforcement standards. “[A]s a sort of ‘junior version of the vagueness doctrine,’ the canon of strict construction of criminal statutes, or rule of lenity, ensures fair warning by so resolving ambiguity in a criminal statute as to apply it only to conduct clearly covered.” United States v. Lanier,
It is unclear from Plaintiffs’ complaint whether their vagueness claim was intended as a facial or as applied challenge. However, “it is well established that vagueness challenges to statutes which do not involve First Amendment freedoms must be examined in the light of the facts of the case at hand.” United States v. Krumrei,
When contesting the constitutionality of a criminal statute, it is not necessary that [the plaintiff] first expose himself to actual arrest or prosecution to be entitled to challenge [the] statute that he claims deters the exercise of his constitutional rights. When the plaintiff has alleged an intention to engage in a course of conduct arguably affected with a constitutional interest, but proscribed by a statute, and there exists a credible threat of prosecution thereunder, he should not be required to await and undergo a criminal prosecution as the sole means of seeking relief.
Babbitt v. United Farm Workers Nat'l Union,
i. Geographic Exclusion Zones
Plaintiffs first challenge SORA’s geographic exclusion zones as void for vagueness. SORA makes it a crime for a registrant to work, “loiter,” or reside “within” a “student safety zone.” Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 28.734(1)(a)-(b), 28.735(1). SORA defines “school safety zone” as “the area that lies 1,000 feet or less from school property.” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.733(f). SORA defines “school property” to mean:
[A] building, facility, structure, or real property owned, leased, or otherwise controlled by a school, other than a building, facility, structure, or real property that is no longer in use on a permanent or continuous basis, to which either of the following applies: (I)[i]t is used to impart educational instruction[, or] (ii)[i]t is for use by students not more than 19 years of age for sports or other recreational activities.
Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.738(e).
Plaintiffs contend that the term “school safety zone” is unconstitutionally vague because SORA provides insufficient guidance for how the 1,000 feet zones should be measured. (Dkt. #96, Pg. ID 5681-86.) Plaintiffs note that the zones are not physically marked, and registrants are not provided with maps demarking the boundaries. Without demarcation or maps, the typical registrants are unable to identify the zones because they lack the software and data to map the zones, and Michigan has not provided a list of school properties or parcel data to registrants or law enforcement. (Dkt. #96, Pg. ID 5681-82.) Additionally, Plaintiffs argue that the term is vague because there is no guidance as to whether the 1,000 feet distance should be measured “point to point” or “property-line to property line” nor whether it should be measured “as the crow flies or as people actually travel.” (Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5681-82.)
“Because plaintiffs cannot know where .the zones are, they must ‘over-police’ themselves, erring on the side of caution.” (Id. at 5684.) For example, Doe #4’s partner testified that Doe # 4 does not live with her and their two children because their house is down the street from a school, and she was not sure if the school was within 1,000 feet of her home. (Dkt. # 90, Pg. ID 3863.) Likewise, Doe # 1, Doe # 3, and Ms. Doe testified that they had difficulties searching for new homes because they were unable to accurately calculate the 1,000 feet distances. (Id. at 3831-42.) Ms. Doe testified that she looked at properties farther than 1,000 feet from schools “so that I know that I’m okay.” (Id. at 3842.)
While a prescribed distance may appear concrete on its face, without adequate guidance about how to measure the distance, such provisions are suspectible to vagueness concerns. For example, in Cunney v. Bd. of Trustees,
It is unclear whether SORA’s exclusion zones should be measured from only the real property on which educational instruction, sports, or other recreational activities take place — excluding the parking lot, administrative buildings, and other real prop
Assuming the 1,000 feet zones were measured from the property line, registrants would still be unable to reasonably determine the boundaries of the exclusion zones, resulting in the sort of “over-policing” described by Doe # 4’s partner. Michigan has not provided registrants with a map of exclusion zones or a list of all school properties. Defendants suggest that registrants can rely on Google maps (www.google.com/maps) and phone books to determine if their potential address is within 1,000 feet of an exclusion zone. (Dkt. # 97, Pg. ID 5767.) However, such tools do not eliminate many of the sources of vagueness. First, neither Google maps nor phone books provide parcel data or clearly mark property lines. Second, while Google maps can provide helpful estimates as to distances between two properties, it would not provide a registrant with the necessary detail to determine whether a property that is close to 1,000 feet away from a school property line falls within an exclusion zone.
Furthermore, Defendants acknowledge that neither the Michigan State Police nor current registrants have the necessary data to precisely determine the geographic exclusion zones. Michigan is developing software called Offender Watch that reportedly will provide law enforcement with a standardized guideline for determining exclusion zones, but Offender Watch cannot currently conduct parcel to parcel measurements because the State Police do not have the necessary data. (Dkt. # 90, Pg. ID 3831 (“The [Michigan State Police’s Sex Offender Registration] Unit has tried but been unable to obtain parcel data....”).) Moreover, Offender Watch will not include all properties as defined by SORA, but only “active schools according to the Michigan Department of Education.” (Dkt. # 90, Pg. ID 3830-31.) Nothing in Defendants’ Rule 52 motion or the Joint Statement of Facts suggests that law enforcement has the means to calculate the exclusion zones if a court should determine that the 1,000 feet distance should be measured from only the parts of a school’s real property used for instruction, sports, or other recreational activities.
SORA does not provide sufficiently definite guidelines for registrants and law enforcement to determine from where to measure the 1,000 feet distance used to determine the exclusion zones, and neither the registrants nor law enforcement have the necessary data to determine the zones even if there were a consensus about how they should be measured. Accordingly, due to SORA’s vagueness, registrants are forced to choose between limiting where they reside, work, and loiter to a greater
ii. Loitering
Next, Plaintiffs contend that SORA’s prohibition against “loiter[ing]” within 1,000 feet of school property is unconstitutionally vague because the meaning of “loiter” is “totally unclear.” (Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5686.) SORA defines “loiter” to mean “to remain for a period of time and under circumstances that a reasonable person would determine is for the primary purpose of observing or contacting minors.” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.733(b). Plaintiffs argue that it is unclear “whether they are permitted to attend parent-teacher conferences, go to a school movie night, or take their children to a school playground on the weekend.” (Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5687.) Defendants counter that the term is clear, and describe Plaintiffs’ argument as “making some kind of ‘as-applied’ challenge without the statute actually having been applied in the manner they argue.” (Dkt. #97, Pg. ID 5770.) But Plaintiffs’ challenges are more than hypothetical. As discussed above, they need not risk violating SORA in order to challenge the law; Plaintiffs may challenge the définition of “loiter” to the extent that it has curtailed their conduct. Cf. Babbitt v. United Farm Workers Nat’l Union,
SORA’s prohibition on loitering has curtailed Plaintiffs’ conduct. For example, in order to avoid risking a SORA violation, Doe # 3 does not “attend school activities like movie nights, math nights, bingo nights, open house/meet the teacher, talent shows, musicals, concerts or plays.” (Dkt. # 90, Pg. ID 3861.) Likewise, Doe # 3’s wife suggests that Doe # 3 avoids “waiting for [her] children to come out of school and talk to his niece or nephew or observe his own children walking down from school” for fear that this conduct would violate the prohibition on loitering. (Dkt. # 90, Pg. ID 3853.) Thus, the court construes the vagueness challenge against the definition of “loiter” as an as applied challenge.
The definition of “loiter” contains two parts: (1) “remaining] for a period of time” and (2) “under circumstances that a reasonable person would determine is for the primary purpose of observing or contacting minors.” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.733(b). As this is an as applied challenge, the court will review the vagueness of this term as it relates to the activities from which Plaintiffs claim to have refrained. First, “ordinary people, exercising ordinary common sense can understand” the meaning of the phrase “remain for a period of time.” United States v. Salisbury,
The second component of the definition of “loiter” raises a more difficult question. In City of Chicago v. Morales,
Similarly, just as it would be difficult to determine if a Chicagoan were standing in a place with no apparent purpose, in many circumstances, it would be difficult — perhaps not as difficult, but difficult nonetheless — to determine if a Michigander were standing in an exclusionary zone “apparently” for the specific, primary purpose of observing or contacting minors. Conduct such as a registrant starting a conversation with a minor, videotaping a minor, or standing on a playground by himself watching minors, would likely fall within the definition of “loitering” with little room for a registrant to argue ambiguity. However, it remains ambiguous whether a registrant may attend a school movie night where he intends only to watch the screen, or a parent-teacher conference where students may be present. The Morales plurality explained that “the purpose of the fair notice requirement is to enable the ordinary citizen to conform his or her conduct to the law [because] ‘[n]o one may be required at peril of life, liberty or property to speculate as to the meaning of penal statutes.’ ” Id. (quoting Lanzetta v. New Jersey,
iii. Reporting Requirements
Plaintiffs also argue that SORA’s reporting requirements are unconstitutionally vague. In particular, Plaintiffs challenge the requirement that a registrant must “report in person and notify the registering authority ... immediately after ... the individual purchases or begins to regularly operate any vehicle,” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.725(1)(g), and the requirements that a registrant must report (1) “[a]ll telephone numbers registered to the individual or routinely used by the individual,” (2) “[a]ll electronic mail addresses and instant message addresses assigned to the individual or routinely used by the individual,” and (3) “[t]he license plate number, registration number, and description of any motor vehicle, aircraft, or vessel owned or regularly operated by the individual and the location at which the motor vehicle, aircraft, or vessel is habitually stored or kept.” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.727(1)(h)-(j). Plaintiffs assert that the terms “routinely used,” “regularly operated,” and “habitually stored and kept” are vague and undefined. (Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5687-88.)
The requirements to report telephone numbers and e-mail and instant message addresses implicate First Amendment free speech rights and are, therefore, subject to facial vagueness challenges. The requirement to report vehicles does not implicate First Amendment rights, but Plaintiffs ad
SORA does not define “regularly” or “routinely” as used in §§ 28.725(1)(g) and 727(1)(h)-(j). “Unless they are otherwise defined, the words in a statute ‘will be interpreted as taking their ordinary, contemporary, common meaning.’ ” Deutsche Bank Nat’l Trust Co. v. Tucker,
This second point is illustrated by the complaint’s averment that John Doe IV was told by police officials that borrowing a car three times is the threshold for regular operation. (See Compl. ¶ 31.) There is no explanation in either the complaint or the attached exhibits, and Defendants offer none in their briefing, of how police could have arrived at the conclusion that the borrowing of a vehicle three times equals regular operation. If the individual police officers arrived at this conclusion on their own, the reporting provision certainly raises red flags.On the other hand, and only hypothetically, if police based this three-event standard on some formal guidance published by the State and made available to the public, the vagueness objection to § 28.725(l)(g) may be obviated. A more robust factual record is essential in this regard. However, the court cannot dismiss Count VII simply because Defendants contend that the challenged provisions have been in effect for several years and Plaintiffs have allegedly satisfied the provisions.
(Dkt. # 27, Pg. ID 699-700.)
In their Rule 52 motion, Defendants reassert the same argument made in their motion to dismiss that “none of the Plaintiffs expressed any doubt or uncertainty over what ‘regularly’ means.” (Dkt. # 97, Pg. ID 5765.) Defendants also note that the phrase “regularly operate” was introduced into SORA at the request of the ACLU (Id. at 5766); however, this is inap-posite to whether the is phrase is unconstitutionally vague. The Joint Statement of Facts indicates that Plaintiffs and law enforcement are unsure as to the meaning of the term “regularly” (Dkt. # 90, Pg. ID 3930-37), and nothing in Defendants’ motion alleviates the court’s concern, expressed in its previous order, that the term “regularly” is vague under both parts of the vagueness test.
The term “routinely” implicates the same vagueness concerns as the term “regularly.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1981 (3d ed.1981) defines “routine” as, inter alia, “a standard practice,” “the habitual method of performance of established procedures,” and “of a commonplace or repetitious character.” Both of these terms indicate to registrants and police officers that some degree of normal repetition is needed to be deemed to have regularly or routinely engaged in an activity. But these terms are not sufficiently concrete (1) “to ensure fair notice to the citizenry” or (2) “to provide standards for enforcement by the police, judges, and juries.” Columbia Natural Res., Inc. v. Tatum,
The court’s analysis of these terms is guided by Belle Maer Harbor v. Charter Twp. of Harrison,
D. The amount of open water created by a bubbling system shall be controlled as follows:
1. In canals one hundred ten (110') feet or less in width, a person choosing to bubble shall operate, maintain and periodically inspect the bubbling system apparatus so as to maintain an open water radius surrounding the bubbled object not to exceed five (5') feet, or as determined by the inspecting officer to be a reasonable radius.
Id. at 555 n. 3.
The plaintiffs in Belle Maer Harbor challenged the ordinance as void for vagueness, and the Sixth Circuit focused on whether the term “reasonable” “bound[ed] the inspection officer’s enforcement decisions sufficiently to prevent ad hoc, discriminatory enforcement of the open water restriction.” Id. at 558. The court noted that “a failure to define a term within a statute or ordinance does not render the statute unconstitutionally vague, where the common meaning of the word provides both adequate notice of the conduct prohibited and of the standards for enforcement.” Id. The court concluded that “a commonly accepted meaning [did
Similar to the ordinance’s use of the word “reasonable” in Belle Maer Harbor, the commonly accepted meaning of the terms “regularly” and “routinely” do not provide sufficient guidance to law enforcement or registrants to survive a due process challenge both generally and as applied to Plaintiffs. The frequency and consistency with which Doe # 1 must drive his employers’ vehicles in order to trigger the registration requirement is unclear. Likewise, it is ambiguous whether Doe # 2’s use of his girlfriend’s car a few times a quarter constitutes regular use, particularly in light of the rule of lenity, and a reasonable person and well-intentioned law enforcement officer would struggle to determine whether Doe # 4’s occasional use of his mother’s phone was “routine.” The ambiguity in the reporting requirements is further highlighted by officers’ and prosecutors’ responses to an informal telephonic survey questions conducted by volunteers for Plaintiffs, law enforcement officers’ answers to deposition questions, and law enforcement officers’ guidance to Plaintiffs.
Volunteers for Plaintiffs asked local law enforcement agencies and prosecutors’ offices how often a registrant could use a vehicle before triggering SORA’s reporting requirements. “[S]ome respondents did not know the answer, and others provided answers ranging from once or twice, to six or seven times, to ‘whatever is reasonable.’ ” (Dkt. # 90, Pg. ID 3931.) When asked during a deposition whether a registrant who used a vehicle once during a three-month period had to report the vehicle, the law enforcement officer testified, “That would be probably a judgment call by the prosecutor or the law enforcement agency.” (Dkt. # 60-8, Pg. ID 1853.) He answered in the affirmative when asked if “each law enforcement agency might- come to a different conclusion about what regular use means.” (Id.) Furthermore, law enforcement told Doe # 4 that “if he borrows a car more than three times he must immediately report in person,” but such use does not clearly trigger SORA’s reporting requirements. (Dkt. # 90, Pg. ID 3935.) Similarly, a local police department informed Ms. Doe that she had to register a vehicle “if she was driving it or if it was parked in her driveway.” (Id. at 3936.)
The disparate views of the meaning of the term “regularly use” exemplify the lack of a standardized guidelines for the enforcement of SORA’s reporting provisions. The Belle Maer Harbor court emphasized, “although we do not require impossible clarity in standards governing conduct, the court must apply a relative strict standard of scrutiny here where criminal sanctions apply.” Belle Maer Harbor,
iv. Additional Terms and Phrases Challenged by Plaintiffs
In Plaintiffs’ Response to Interrogatory 11, Plaintiffs challenge several additional terms and phrases as unconstitutionally vague, including, inter alia, the terms “employee,” “immediately,” “residence,” “student,” and many others. (See Dkt. # 64-1, Pg. ID 2137-42.) In addition to the other terms discussed in this Section, Plaintiffs’ Rule 52 Motion specifically identifies as vague the terms “immediate,” “employer,” “temporarily reside,” and “designation used in Internet communications,” and it incorporates the other terms listed in the Response to Interrogatory 11 by reference. (Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5687-88.)
Plaintiffs may challenge SORA on vagueness grounds only as applied to Plaintiffs unless the challenges implicate the First Amendment. As stated above, the parties challenging the statutes “bear[ ] the burden of establishing that the statute is vague as applied to [their] particular case, not merely that the statute could be construed as vague in some hypothetical situation.” Kernell,
Section. 28.725(l)(f) requires registrants to “report in person and notify the registering authority ... immediately after ... [t]he individual establishes any electronic mail or instant message address, or any other designations used in internet communications or postings.” SORA defines “Immediately” to mean “within 3 business days.” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.722(g). This definition provides registrants with adequate notice and law enforcement with adequate guidance as to the immediacy with which Plaintiffs must report new Internet designations. Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed.2014) defines “business day” as “[a] day that most institutions are open for business, usu[ally] a day on which banks and major stock exchanges are open, excluding Saturdays, Sundays, and certain major holidays.” Courts regularly use the term “business days” as defined in Black’s. E.g., Ohio v. Akron Ctr. for Reproductive Health,
Likewise, the phrase “designation used in Internet communications or postings,” when given the narrowing construction discussed below, is sufficiently clear to give fair notice to registrants as to what information must be reported and adequate guidance to law enforcement and the courts to provide standard enforcement of the law. See Columbia Natural Res.,
The word [“defendant”] might be interpreted to encompass all witnesses, civil and criminal, parties or not. It might be read to connote any party offering a witness, in which event Rule 609(a)(1)’s balance would apply to civil, as well as criminal, cases. Finally, “defendant” may refer only to the defendant in a criminal case.
Id. at 511,
As with the seemingly unambiguous words “bad,” “last,” and “defendant,” the phrase “any other designations used in internet communications or postings” includes some degree of ambiguity. Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 612 (3d ed.1981) defines “designation,” inter alia, to mean “distinguishing name.” Law enforcement and registrants of ordinary intelligence would reasonably understand this phrase to include Internet aliases used to convey and exchange information. See Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 460 (3d ed.1981) (defining “communicate” to mean “to make
While the phrase uncontroversially includes social media aliases and other aliases used for the primary purpose of exchanging information with other Internet users, there are many Internet aliases that individuals use that involve some degree of Internet communication but do not clearly fall within SORA. Plaintiffs ask, “Must an individual report when setting up a new on-line bank account, Amazon account, Mlive account, gaming account, etc.?” (Dkt. # 64-1, Pg. ID 2139.) , Through an alias created for a massively multiplayer online role-playing game (“MMORPG”), a registrant would likely engage in substantial communication with other individuals, including minors. Through an Ebay account, a registrant might post items for sale, communicate bids, and engage in private communications with sellers or buyers about the status of a transaction. Individuals use online banking primarily to access their financial information, pay bills, deposit funds, and engage in other economic activity, but these accounts may also be used to communicate with bankers to facilitate such activities. In the broadest sense, virtually all online accounts are Internet designations used for some sort of communication.
In order to alleviate ambiguity and in light of the rule of lenity, the court interprets SORA’s catch-all Internet designation phrase to apply to Internet designations that are primarily used in Internet communications or postings. This construction is consistent with a plain reading of the statute. “[U]nder the established interpretive canons of noscitur a sociis and ejusdem generis, ‘[w]here general words follow specific words in statutory enumeration, the general words are construed to embrace only objects similar in nature to those objects enumerated by the preceding specific words.’ ” Wash. State Dept. of Soc. and Health Servs. v. Guardianship Estate of Keffeler,
This construction excludes designations used primarily to engage in e-commerce and online banking, or to read content like online newspaper accounts even though registrants may post comments at the end of online newspaper articles or “chat” with Amazon representatives. Meanwhile, a MMORPG alias is created for the primary
This narrowing construction also has the virtue of being consistent with how law enforcement is currently trained to enforce § 28.725(1)(f). The manager of Michigan’s sex offender registry testified that Michigan State Police’s Sex Offender Registration Unit trains law enforcement to record e-mail addresses and social media screen names, but not online banking information. (Dkt. # 60-6, Pg. ID 1800.) The manager also testified that online gaming screen names fall within SORA. (Id. at 1801.)
In sum, using this narrowing construction, § 28.725(l)(f) is sufficiently clear to provide fair notice to registrants and adequate guidance to law enforcement.
2. Strict Liability
Plaintiffs further contend that SORA violates the Due Process Clause because it imposes strict liability for many reporting and exclusion zone violations. (Dkt. # 46, Pg. ID 900; Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5690-92.) Defendants do not address Plaintiffs’ strict liability arguments in their responses to Plaintiffs’ Rule 52 Motion.
Similar to the void for vagueness doctrine, strict liability in the context of criminal statutes raises concerns of fair notice. “[E]ven when a statute is specific about which acts are criminal, [the] due process analysis is not complete. When ... predicate acts which result in criminal violations are commonly and ordinarily not criminal, [courts] must ask the fair notice question once again.” United States v. Apollo Energies, Inc.,
In Liparota v. United States,
SORA imposes myriad restrictions and reporting requirements that affect many aspects of registrants’ lives. Ambiguity in the Act, combined with the numerosity and length of the Act’s provisions, make it difficult for a well-intentioned registrant to understand all of his or her obligations. Moreover, law enforcement officers’ disparate answers to survey and deposition questions about what SORA’s reporting requirements and prohibitions highlight SORA’s imperfect ability to provide fair notice to all persons who it covers. The frequency with which SORA is amended, as well as today’s highly mobile population, make a knowledge requirement even more important to ensure due process of law.
Recognizing a knowledge requirement in SORA does not defang the legislation. Instead, it shifts responsibility to courts, law enforcement, and probation officers to make sure persons convicted of sex offenses are informed of their legal obligations. Such a sharing of responsibility is grounded in the text of SORA. SORA directs the department of corrections to “mail a notice to each individual registered under [SORA] who is not in a state correctional facility explaining the individual’s duties under this act as amended.” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.725a(1). The Act also directs the department of corrections to “provide written notice to [an] individual [upon the individual's release from a state correctional facility] explaining his or her duties under [SORA] and the procedure for registration, notification, and verification and payment of registration fee.” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.725a. SORA was not enacted to serve as a trap for individuals who have committed sex offenses in the past (and who already have served their sentences). Rather, the goal is public safety, and public safety would only be enhanced by the government ensuring that registrants are aware of their obligations.
3. Impossibility
Plaintiffs also allege that “SORA ... contains provisions with which compliance is impossible,” rendering the Act in violation of the Due Process Clause. (Dkt. #46, Pg. ID 900.) Their Rule 52 motion identifies two such provisions.
First, Plaintiffs contend that the requirement for registrants to report in person makes compliance with SORA impossible because it may be infeasible for persons subject to SORA who are ill or injured or facing an emergency to timely report in person. (Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5692.) Were Plaintiffs’ reasoning applied to all legislation, no law that imposes an affirmative duty on an individual to perform a task would be consistent with due process of law because it would always be the case that some individuals could be too infirm to perform the affirmative duty. If the court interprets Plaintiffs’ argument as applying exclusively to laws involving strict liability, adopting such an argument would still call into question the constitutionality of any strict liability statute or regulation imposing a duty to act.
Plaintiffs’ impossibility argument raises a serious constitutional issue, but it is unaccompanied by any allegations that persons have been penalized for failing to report in person when required under SORA, due to illness, injury, or emergency. Plaintiffs cite to an incident in 2001 when Doe # 3 failed to comply with the quarterly in-person reporting requirement because “Doe # 3 came back from a vaca
“It is the duty of federal courts to avoid the unnecessary decision of the constitutional questions.” Tower Realty v. City of E. Detroit,
Second, Plaintiffs argue that SORA violates the Due Process Clause because Doe # 4 “is automatically and unpreventably in violation” of SORA because “he is homeless [and] cannot update his driver’s license to match his registration address (which is ‘homeless’).” (Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5692.) Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.725a(7) provides:
An individual required to be registered under this act shall maintain either a valid operator’s or chauffeur’s license issued under the Michigan vehicle code,1949 PA 300 , MCL 257.1 to 257.923, or an official state personal identification card issued under1972 PA 222 , MCL 28.291 to 28.300, with the individual’s current address. The license or card may be used as proof of domicile or residence under this section. In addition, the officer or authorized employee may require the individual to produce another document bearing his or her name and address, including, but not limited to, voter registration or a utility or other bill. The department may specify other satisfactory proof of domicile or residence.
A violation of § 28.725a(7) subjects an individual to “imprisonment for not more than 2 years or a fine of not more than $2,000.00, or both.” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.729(2). Plaintiffs do not allege that Doe # 4 has been charged with violating SORA due to his failure to update his driver’s license or identification card. However, the court acknowledges that Doe # 4 is left in the unenviable position of fearing that he may, at any moment, be arrested and sentenced to imprisonment for violating SORA. Here, there is a credible threat of prosecution, and Doe #4 need not wait until he faces criminal prose
Absent from the record is information about if and how homeless persons may obtain state identification cards. The Supreme Court of Michigan has held that “homelessness is not a bar to compliance with SORA because homelessness does not preclude an offender from entering a police station and reporting to a law enforcement agency regarding the offender’s residence or domicile.” People v. Dowdy,
The Dowdy dissent insisted that § 28.725a(7)’s (then § 28.725a(8)) requirement for registrants to maintain a driver’s license or state personal identification card with their current address was unlawful because compliance is impossible for homeless registrants. Justice Kelly, writing for herself and two other justices, explained:
[T]o' obtain a driver’s license or state identification card, the Secretary of State requires an applicant to provide at least two documents “with [his or her] name and Michigan residence address.” Hence, by the Secretary of State’s own requirements, an individual cannot obtain a state identification card absent a valid residential address, which defendant did not have. Nor does the majority, the Michigan State Police, or the prosecutor indicate how a homeless sex offender like defendant could obtain an identification card without a permanent address, much less change an address to reflect transient accommodations.
Id. at 259 (Kelly, J., dissenting) (footnote omitted).
In order for the court to determine whether SORA’s requirement for registrants to maintain a driver’s license or state personal identification card is constitutional, as applied to Doe #4 and other homeless registrants, the court needs additional briefing on how and if homeless registrants can obtain such identification. The court will reserve ruling on the constitutionality of this provision until the parties have submitted additional briefing.
B. Count IV: The Fundamental Right to Participate in the Education and Upbringing of Children
In Count IV, Plaintiffs claim that SORA’s geographic exclusion zones violate the Due Process Clause of the Fourth Amendment because they (1) substantially interfere with Plaintiffs’ ability to participate in the upbringing and education of their children, (2) do not provide for individualized consideration before restricting this right, and (3) are not narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest. (Dkt. # 46, Pg. ID 897-98.) In particular, Plaintiffs first contend that SORA’s prohibition on loitering within 1,000 feet of a school safety zone does allow registrants to contact or observe their own children within the zones and thus prevent registrants from “observ[ing] or contacting their] children in half the city.” (Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5694.) Second, Plaintiffs argue that, even if the loitering ban does not apply to one’s own children, the ban nonetheless
Defendants argue that the loitering ban “does not implicate a fundamental right, [and therefore] it need only rationally advance some legitimate government purpose.” (Dkt. # 97, Pg. ID 5760.) They contend that this standard is met because the loitering ban advances a state interest in protecting children. (Id.) Further, Defendants assert that, “[e]ven were the student safety zones established by SORA to implicate a fundamental right, this claim still fails because the [loitering ban] is narrowly tailored to advance the State’s compelling interest in protecting children.” (Id. at 5760-61.)
“The substantive component of the Due Process Clause protects ‘fundamental rights’ that are so ‘implicit in the concept of ordered liberty’ that ‘neither liberty nor justice would exist if they were sacrificed.’ ” Doe v. Mich. Dep’t of State Police,
“[T]he interest of parents in the care, custody, and control of their children ... is perhaps the oldest of the fundamental liberty interests recognized by [the Supreme] Court.” Troxel v. Granville,
In the court’s previous opinion granting in part and denying in part Defendants’ motion to dismiss, the court found that the loitering ban “appears to prevent Plaintiffs from engaging in a plethora of activities closely related to the upbringing of their children” and that Defendants failed to “demonstrate that the loitering prohibition is actually narrowly tailored to the State’s interest and fails to explain why a less restrictive prohibition ... would not effectively achieve the State’s interest.” (Dkt. # 27, Pg. ID 693-95.) The court informed the parties that “[flactual development is warranted” in order for the court to determine whether the loitering ban leaves Plaintiffs with sufficient involvement in their children’s lives to warrant rational basis review and, if not, to determine when the ban is narrowly tailored to achieve a
Because of the geographical exclusion zones’ unconstitutional vagueness, the court is ill-equipped to. evaluate whether the loitering ban does in fact infringe on parents’ rights to participate in the upbringing and education of their children. Defendant contends that the loitering ban does not infringe on this right because “the [geographic exclusion zone] provisions do[ ] not outright ban an offender’s presence on school property.” (Dkt. # 97, Pg. ID 5756-57.) They note that registrants may drop off and pick up their children, go to a public library, and attend a parent-teacher conference. However, as previously discussed, ambiguity in the exclusion zones and in the term “loiter” leave registrants of ordinary intelligence unable to determine what behavior is prohibited by SORA. Due to SORA’s vagueness, it is unclear whether a registrant may visit a public library or attend a parent-teacher conference where minors are present without risking arrest from law enforcement. Furthermore, because it is unclear how the geographic exclusion zones are measured, the court is unable to determine the extent to which SORA infringes on a registrant’s ability to find a place to live with his children and the extent to which SORA prevents a registrant from accompanying his children to parks, playgrounds, movie theaters, restaurants, and other establishments and places in the state. Defendants do not themselves provide any viable means for determining how much of Michigan falls within the exclusion zones, and SORA is too vague for the court, registrants, and law enforcement to make this determination.
Defendants rely on Doe v. Miller,
The geographical restrictions on where the plaintiff (or any other sex offenders for that matter) may reside or “loiter,” substantially intrude upon significantfamily matters involving private and personal choices about how to raise and care for children, and decision-making about where to reside. The Ordinance restricts Elwell, a low risk offender, from accompanying his children to the school bus stop, going into a school or to a public park with his children, for fear of being charged with “loitering” because he is a convicted sex offender. The rights affected are significant, and are unnecessarily burdened by the Ordinance.
Id. at *15.
It is well-settled that Michigan has a compelling interest in protecting minors from violence and sexual abuse. (Dkt. # 90, Pg. ID 3767.) If the Michigan legislature amends SORA to provide effective clarity to the loitering ban, perhaps the court could find that the ban does not infringe on Plaintiffs’ associational rights and/or that the ban is narrowly tailored to achieve a compelling state interest. However, SORA’s vagueness leaves the court unable to determine to what extent SORA infringes on Plaintiffs’ right to participate in the upbringing and education of their children, or whether SORA is narrowly tailored to achieve that interest.
C. Count V: Violation of the First Amendment
In Count V, Plaintiffs allege that SORA’s “requirements to report information about on-line accounts and activity is invalid under the First Amendment both on its face and as applied because it is not narrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest- and because it prohibits a substantial amount of protected speech.” (Dkt. # 46, Pg. ID 898.) Plaintiffs specifically challenge the constitutionality of two of SORA’s provisions, Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 28.727(1)(i) and 28.726(1)(f). Section 28.727(1)(i) provides that a registrant must report “[a]ll electronic mail addresses and instant message addresses assigned to the individual or routinely used by the individual and all login names or other identifiers used by the individual when using any electronic mail address or instant messaging system.” Section 28.725(1)(f) requires registrants to “report in person and notify the registering authority ... immediately after ... [t]he individual establishes any electronic mail or instant message address, or any other designations used in internet communications or postings.”
Defendants argue that the registration and reporting requirements do not prevent Plaintiffs’ access to the Internet or regulate the content of their online speech. They maintain that the requirements “no more regulate[ ] speech than does the collection of other required information such as the offenders’ names, addresses, vehicle identification, or employer data.” (Dkt. # 97, Pg. ID 5746.)
The court denied Defendants’ motion to dismiss as it related to Count V, explaining that, “[without additional briefing and further information on the operation of the provisions, the court is unable to determine whether the provisions implicate registrants’ First Amendment rights.” (Dkt. # 27, Pg. ID 702.) The court expressed that the contention that SORA chills registrants’ speech “deserves more considered reflection” especially given that “at least one of the Plaintiffs refus[ed] to use the internet” in light of the reporting requirements. (Id. at 701 quoting Compl. ¶204 (“[John Doe IV] does not use the Internet because he would be required ... to register all email and Internet identifiers, and would need to report constantly in order to use different websites with different user-names.”).) Specifically, the court stated that “it is not at all clear to the court how the provisions interact with registrants’ ability to use the internet as a medium to engage in protected speech. Particularly of interest is what the State does with the
The First Amendment, as applied to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment, protects individuals from laws abridging the freedom of their speech. U.S. Const. amend. I. The Supreme Court has extended the First Amendment’s free speech protections to the Internet. Reno v. ACLU,
A regulation of the time, place, or manner of protected speech must be narrowly tailored to serve the government’s legitimate, content-neutral interests but that it need not be the least restrictive or least intrusive means of doing so. Rather, the requirement of narrow tailoring is' satisfied “so long as the ... regulation promotes a substantial government interest that would be achieved less effectively absent the regulation.”
Id. at 798-99,
SORA’s Internet reporting provisions are content neutral in that they “restrict speech without reference to the [speech’s] content.” Doe v. Prosecutor, Marion County, Indiana,
Both parties concede, and it is beyond cavil, that the state has a compelling interest in protecting minors from violence and sexual abuse. (Dkt. #90, Pg. ID 3767.) The parties, however, vigorously dispute whether the Internet reporting provisions are narrowly tailored to achieve this interest.
Plaintiffs contend that SORA’s Internet provisions are not narrowly tailored because “they do nothing beyond what is accomplished by existing laws to protect minors from sexual crime” and note that “those [minor solicitation] laws did a much better job at narrowly targeting the behavior the state wanted to curtail” than
Next, Plaintiffs attack SORA’s Internet provisions on the ground that they unconstitutionally restrict Plaintiffs’ right to anonymous speech. (Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5698-99.) The Supreme Court has recognized that “an author’s decision to remain anonymous, like other decisions concerning omissions or additions to the content of a publication, is an aspect of the freedom of speech protected by the First Amendment.” McIntyre v. Ohio Elections Comm’n,
Two recent circuit court opinions provide helpful guidance in addressing Plaintiffs’ argument. See Doe v. Shurtleff, 628 F.3d 1217 (10th Cir.2010) and Doe v. Harris,
In Shurtleff, the Tenth Circuit considered whether a Utah law requiring registered sex offenders to report their “internet identifiers” violated the First Amendment.
Meanwhile, in Doe v. Harris,
In particular, the Ninth Circuit found that “ambiguities in the statute may lead registered sex offenders either to overre-port their activity or underuse the Internet to avoid the difficult questions in understanding what, precisely, they must report.” Id. at 579. “This uncertainty undermines the likelihood that the [Act] has been carefully tailored to the [State’s] goal of protecting minors.” Id. (quoting Reno,
While neither of these cases are controlling, they are instructive. Both courts were concerned with who would have access to the reported information. In this regard, SORA is more akin to the Utah legislation than the enjoined California statutes. Both parties concede that “registrants’ internet identifiers are not made available to the general public.” (Dkt. # 90, Pg. ID 3875.) SORA explicitly provides:
The following information shall not be made available on the public internet website ... (e) Any electronic mail addresses and instant message addresses assigned to the individual or routinely used by the individual and any login names or other identifiers used by the individual when using any electronic mail address or instant messaging system.
Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.728(3).
Thus, SORA neither prohibits registrants from engaging in any particular speech on the Internet, nor - does it unmask registrants’ anonymity to the public. SORA does unveil registrants’ anonymity to law enforcement; however, this does not, by itself, infringe upon Plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights. In Laird v. Tatum,
In recent years this Court has found in a number of cases that constitutional violations may arise from the deterrent, or ‘chilling,’ effect of governmental regulations that fall short of a direct prohibition against the exercise of First Amendment rights. In none of these cases, however, did the chilling effect arise merely from the individual’s knowledge that a governmental agency was engaged in certain activities or from the individual’s concomitant fear that, armed with the fruits of those activities, the agency might in the future take some other and addition[a]l action detrimental to that individual. Rather, in each of these cases, the challenged exercise of governmental power was regulatory, proscriptive, or compulsory in nature, and the complainant was either presently or prospectively subject to the regulations, proscriptions, or compulsions that he was challenging.
Id. at 11,
The Sixth Circuit has construed Laird to stand for the proposition that, “to allege a sufficient injury under the First Amendment, a plaintiff must establish that he or she is regulated, constrained, or compelled directly by the government’s actions, instead of by his or her own subjective chill.” ACLU v. Nat'l Sec. Agency,
More problematic is § 28.725(1)’s requirement that registrants report “in person” immediately (i.e., within three business days) whenever they establish “any electronic mail or instant message address, or any other designation used in internet communications or postings.” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.725(l)(f). The requirement to report in person is surely more burdensome to registrants than the California law’s requirement to report new Internet identifiers by mail within twenty-four hours. In concluding that the “24-hour reporting requirement ... undoubtedly chills First Amendment Activity,” the Ninth Circuit explained:
[A]nytime registrants want to communicate with a new identifier, they must assess whether the message they intend to communicate is worth the hassle of filling out a form, purchasing stamps, and locating a post office or mailbox. The mail-in requirement is not only psychologically chilling, but physically inconvenient, since whenever a registered sex offender obtains a new ISP or Internet identifier, he must go somewhere else within 24 hours to mail that information to the State.
Harris at 581-82.
This court need not — and does not— agree that putting a stamp on an envelope and walking it to one’s front door or roadside mailbox constitutes a notable “hassle,” let alone one that “undoubtedly chills” a person’s ability to freely speak. It remains, however, that SORA’s “in person” reporting requirement imposes a substantially greater, and apparently unnecessary, burden on protected First Amendment speech. Accordingly, while SORA’s Internet reporting provisions serve the significant governmental interest of protecting minors and investigating sexual crimes, the ambiguity in the reporting requirements and the requirement to report “in person” render the provisions not narrowly tailored and, therefore, unconstitutional.
D. Count VI: Retroactive Application of Lifetime Registration Requirement
Plaintiffs claim that the 2011 SORA amendments’ imposition of retroactive lifetime registration violates the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. (Dkt. # 46, Pg. ID 898-99; see Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5699-700 (“The due process question before this Court is not whether myriad amendments to SORA over the last 20
The court held in its previous opinion that, “as a matter of law ..., retroactively applying SORA to [Does ## 1 and 2] is justified by a legitimate legislative purpose” and dismissed Count VI as it relates to the retroactive application of SORA to those Plaintiffs. (Dkt. # 27, Pg. ID 696.) However, the court found that, “at this early stage of the litigation, the court is unable to determine whether retroactively extending the registration period of Plaintiffs from twenty-five years to life is justified by a legitimate legislative purpose” and, accordingly, denied “Defendants’ motion as it applies to the extension of Plaintiffs’ registration periods.” (Id. at 697.) The court now considers this issue and concludes that the retroactive application of SORA’s lifetime registration requirement is constitutional.
1. Level of Scrutiny
Generally, “[r]etroactivity is not favored in the law.” Bowen v. Georgetown Univ. Hosp.,
Whereas Franklin County involves an act that “adjust[s] the burdens and benefits of economic life,” id., Plaintiffs argue that the court should apply strict scrutiny rather than rational basis review because SORA burdens fundamental rights — namely Plaintiffs’ fundamental right to parenting and free speech rights. (Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5701.)
It is well settled that “[gjovernment actions that burden the exercise of ... fundamental rights or liberty interests are subject to strict scrutiny, and will be upheld only when they are narrowly tailored to a compelling governmental interest.” Seal v. Morgan,
The court has not previously decided whether a heightened level of scrutiny or rational basis review applies to the determination of whether the 2011 Amendments’ retroactive extension of Doe # 3’s, Doe # 4’s, and Ms. Doe’s registration periods from twenty-five years to life violates the Due Process Clause. In denying Defendants’ motion to dismiss as to this claim, the court found that, “at this early stage of litigation, the court is unable to determine whether retroactively extending the registration period of Plaintiffs from twenty-five years to life is justified by a legitimate legislative purposes.” (Dkt. # 27, Pg. ID 697.) The court did not need to consider whether a heightened level of scrutiny applied because it found that the motion to dismiss standard was not met even applying rational basis review and because the parties did not litigate the proper standard of review. While it is true that the court granted the motion as to the retroactive application of SORA to Does ## 1 and 2 on the ground that such application “is justified by a legitimate legislative purpose,” (Dkt. # 27, Pg. ID 696), this ruling is separate from the court’s analysis of the retroactive application to the other Plaintiffs, as evidenced by the court’s disparate dispositions of the claim as applied to Does ## 1 and 2 and the other Plaintiffs. Moreover, in recognizing the doctrine of the law of the case, the Supreme Court made clear that, despite this doctrine, “[a] court has the power to revisit prior decisions of its own or of a coordinate court in any circumstance.” Christianson,
As discussed above, SORA’s Internet reporting requirements implicate Plaintiffs’ First Amendment free speech right rights and, due to SORA’s vagueness, the court is unable to determine whether the prohibition against loitering and residing in the geographical exclusion zones infringe on a Plaintiffs’ fundamental right to participate in the upbringing and education of their children. For the reasons discussed in Sections III.B and III.C, the court will enjoin the geographic exclusion zone provisions and the majority of the Internet reporting provisions. The court, however, will not enjoin Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.727(1)(f) inasmuch as it requires registrants to report “[a]ll electronic mail addresses and instant message addresses assigned to the individual ... and all login names or other identifiers used by the individual when using any electronic mail address or instant messaging system.” The retroactive application of the lifetime registration requirement implicates the First Amendment only to the extent that it
Plaintiffs also contend that the retroactive application of SORA’s lifetime registration should be subject to higher scrutiny because it alters the terms of plea agreements. (Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5701-02 (citing Lynch v. United States, 292 U.S. 571, 579,
“Plea agreements are contractual in nature.” United States v. Robison,
Plaintiffs argue that retroactively applying the lifetime registration requirement is unconstitutional because it offends fundamental fairness by altering a factor that may have affected Plaintiffs’ willingness to enter their plea agreements. (Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5703-05 (relying on St. Cyr,
Defendants proffer three governmental purposes for the retroactive application of SORA: to enhance public safety, to conform with federal law and avoid losing federal funding, and to create a uniform nation-wide sex offender registration system. (Dkt. # 97, Pg. ID 5738-41.) The retroactive application of the lifetime registration requirement is justified by all three purposes.
i. Public Safety
Plaintiffs conceded that public safety is an “important interest,” and the Sixth Circuit has found that states have a compelling interest in protecting public safety. E.g., Grider v. Abramson,
ii. Conform with Federal Law
In enacting the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (“SORNA”), 42 U.S.C. §§ 16901 et seq., Congress hoped “to protect the public from sex offenders and offenders against children” by “establishing a comprehensive national system for the registration of those offenders.” 42 U.S.C. § 16901. “Rather than establishing a federal agency to implement SORNA, Congress, through its spending power, U.S. Const. Art. I, § 8, directed all states and the District of Columbia to create local registries that comply with specific national standards. 42 U.S.C. §§ 16911(10), 16912(a).” United States v. Felts,
Plaintiffs assert that the desire to conform with federal law does not provide a rational basis for the retroactive application of the lifetime registration requirement for because SORNA does not compel Michigan to implement SORNA. (Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5710 (citing Printz v. United States,
Plaintiffs argue that the cost of SORNA compliance significantly outweighs the potential loss in federal funding. (Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5711-12.) This is not an easy calculation, in part because Michigan obtains other benefits from implementing a sex offender registry besides the federal funding, including enhanced public safety. This is evident because Michigan had enacted its offender registry before SORNA. Defendants urge the court that “[t]he only costs that can reasonably be considered costs of ‘SORNA compliance’ are the ... costs of the OffenderWatch software, which amount to only $260,000 for annual maintenance and support.” (Dkt. # 100, Pg. ID 5850.) Defendants’ suggestion is both overinclusive and underinclusive for the purposes of determining whether federal funding is a rational justification for applying the lifetime registration requirement retroactively. It is overinclusive in that major portions of the cost of the OffenderWatch software are unattributable to the retroactive application of the lifetime registration requirement. It is underinclusive because it does not include the cost of training and other personnel costs related to implementing SORNA. Yet, Michigan presumably would need to invest in substantially the same amount of overhead and training whether SORA’s lifetime registration requirement applies retroactively or merely prospectively. The court cannot determine the specific cost of applying the lifetime registration requirement retroactively, but it seems highly likely that it amounts to less than $1 to $2 million dollars per year. Increasing the likelihood of receiving full funding under the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Street Act of 1968 is a rational legislative purpose justifying the retroactive application of the lifetime registration requirement.
iii. Contributing to National Uniformity of Sex Registration Laws
The desire to contribute to the goal of national uniformity of sex registration
In sum, the court finds that the retroactive application of SORA’s lifetime registration requirement is justified by rational government purposes and is therefore constitutional. The court, however, reiterates that this finding does not apply to those SORA provisions which the court finds constitutionally infirm.
3. The Lifetime Registration Requirement’s Incorporation of the Internet Reporting Provision
By applying the lifetime registration requirement retroactively, SORA also extends its Internet reporting requirement retroactively. The requirement to report “[a]ll electronic mail addresses and instant message addresses assigned to the individual ... and all login names or other identifiers used by the individual when using any electronic mail address or instant messaging system” has a minimal impact on Plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights. Because of this minimal impact, the court must consider whether the reporting requirement’s retroactive application, due to its incorporation through the retroactive lifetime registration requirement, is narrowly tailored to serve a significant government interest, while leaving ample alternative channels for communicating information. Ward,
As discussed supra in Section III.C, the reporting requirement is content-neutral, it does not prohibit any protected speech, and it does not interrupt Plaintiffs’ right to anonymous speech by unveiling their identities to the public. Its impact on Plaintiffs’ free speech rights is minimal, and Michigan has a robust interest in protecting the individuals, especially children, from online predators. Nonetheless, Defendants have not briefed whether the retroactive application of the Internet reporting provision, through its incorporation in the lifetime registration requirement, survives intermediate scrutiny. Additional briefing would be helpful in resolving this issue. The court will reserve ruling on this question.
E. Count IX: Violation of the Ex Post Facto Clause
Plaintiffs assert that the November 2013 amendment to SORA instituting a require
Before determining whether the annual registration fee violates the Ex Post Facto Clause, the court must determine whether its review of this claim is barred by the Tax Injunction Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1341. The Tax Injunction Act provides: “The district courts shall not enjoin, suspend or restrain the assessment, levy or collection of any tax under State law where a plain, speedy and efficient remedy may be had in the courts of such State.” 28 U.S.C. § 1341.
The purpose of the Tax Injunction Act is “to promote comity and to afford states the broadest independence, consistent with the federal constitution, in the administration of their affairs, particularly revenue raising.” Wright v. McClain,
Plaintiffs argue that, although the first factor suggests that the registration fee is a tax because it was imposed by the Michigan legislature, the latter two factors support the alternate conclusion. The registration fee is imposed exclusively on registrants, and, pursuant to SORA, 60% of the fee goes to the Michigan State Police to be deposited in the sex offenders registration fund and the other 40% is “retained by the court, local law enforcement agency, sheriffs department, or departmental post.” Mich. Comp. Laws. § 28.725b. The money credited to the fund may only be used for training and law enforcement purposes related to SORA. Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.725b. In sum. Plaintiffs insist that the fee is not a tax because:
It is imposed only upon a tiny fraction of the state’s population; the clear purpose is to help defray the agency’s regulation-related expenses; the charge discourages particular conduct or makes it more expensive; the bulk of the money is segregated in a specially created account; none of the money is paid to general state funds unrelated to SORA’sadded costs; and unused SOR funds cannot lapse to the general fund.
(Dkt. # 99, Pg. ID 5838.) Plaintiffs’ argument is supported by Mueller v. Raemisch,
Sixth Circuit precedent, however, precludes the court from categorizing the annual registration fee as anything but a tax. In Wright, the Sixth Circuit considered whether a Tennessee law requiring parolees to make monthly payments to a supervision fund and a victim’s compensation fund imposed a tax within the meaning of the Tax Injunction Act.
Although the levies imposed under the statute are earmarked for the Corrections Department budget and not the general fund, they are no less for revenue raising purposes as distinguished from license or privilege fees, or punitive assessments. The purposes of the charges are to defray the cost to the general public of monitoring and supervising the behavior of convicted offenders and to compensate, in some measure, victims of criminal misconduct. Those purposes relate directly to the general welfare of the citizens of Tennessee and the assessments to fund them are no less general revenue raising levies simply because they are dedicated to a particular aspect of the commonwealth.
Id. at 145.
Similarly, although the annual registration fee is earmarked for the administration of SORA, SORA is hardly a privilege that registrants pay for their own benefit. Instead, the registration fee was implemented to “offset the loss of grant funding and other budget shortfalls” (Dkt. # 96, Pg. ID 5715) and fund the administration of SORA which serves the general welfare by protecting the general population from future sex crimes. Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.721a.
Plaintiffs ask the court to disregard Wright because it was decided before the Sixth Circuit adopted the three-part test articulated in Hedgepeth and American Landfill. (Dkt. # 99, Pg. ID 5836.) Under Plaintiffs theory, SORA’s annual registration fee is not a tax because, although the purpose of SORA’s annual registration fee is to serve the general welfare by administering SORA, “the assessment is ... used for the regulation ... of the parties upon whom the assessment is imposed.” Hedgepeth,
Wright is directly on point; the purpose of the $50 registration fee is “to defray the cost to the general public of monitoring and supervising the behavior of [sex] offenders.” and to compensate, in some measure, victims of criminal misconduct. Wright,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above,
IT IS ORDERED that Plaintiffs’ Rule 52 Motion for Judgment on the Papers (Dkt.# 96) is GRANTED' IN PART and DENIED IN PART.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Defendants’ Rule 52 Motion for Judgment on the Papers (Dkt.# 97) is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Sex Offender Registration Act, Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 28.721 et seq., shall be construed consistently with this opinion.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that SORA’s geographic exclusion zones provisions, Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 28.734, 28.735, are declared unconstitutional and their enforcement is enjoined, as applied to Plaintiffs.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the requirement “to report in person and notify the registering authority ... immediately after ... [t]he individual ... begins to regularly operate any vehicle,” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.725(1)(g), is declared unconstitutional and its enforcement is enjoined, as applied to Plaintiffs.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the requirement “to report in person and notify the registering authority ... immediately after ... [t]he individual establishes any electronic mail or instant message address, or any other designations used in internet communications or postings,” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.725(1)(f), is declared unconstitutional and its enforcement is enjoined.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the requirement to report “[a]ll telephone numbers ... routinely used by the individual,” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.727(1)(h), "is declared unconstitutional and its enforcement is enjoined.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the requirement to report “[a]ll electronic mail addresses and instant message addresses ... routinely used by the individual,” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.727(1)(i), is declared unconstitutional and its enforcement is enjoined.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the requirement to report “[t]he license plate number, registration number, and description of any motor vehicle, aircraft, or vessel ... regularly operated by the individual,” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.727(1)(j), is declared unconstitutional and its enforcement is enjoined, as applied to Plaintiffs.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the court reserves judgment on whether Mich.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the court reserves judgment on whether it is constitutional for the lifetime registration requirement’s incorporation of the requirement to report “[a]ll electronic mail addresses and instant message addresses assigned to the individual ... and all login names or other identifiers used by the individual when using any electronic mail address or instant messaging system,” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.727(1)(i), to be applied retroactively and will request additional briefing in a forthcoming order.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the court reserves judgment on Plaintiffs’ request for costs and attorneys’ fees pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1988 and Mich. Const. Art. 9, § 32, pending the resolution of the remaining issues in this case.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that judgment is entered in Defendants favor in all other respects.
Notes
. Plaintiffs have not alleged an as applied challenge to the phrase "habitually stored and kept,” and the court will not consider a facial challenge to this phrase.
. In 1989, Rule 609(a) provided in relevant part:
General Rule. For the purpose of attacking the credibility of a witness, evidence that the witness has been convicted of a crime shall be admitted if elicited from the witness or established by public record during cross-examination but only if the crime (1) was punishable by death or imprisonment in excess of one year under the law under which the witness was convicted, and the court determines that the probative value of admitting this evidence outweighs its prejudicial effect to the defendant, or (2) involved dishonesty or false statement, regardless of the punishment.
Green,
. In arguing that SORA’s Internet provisions are not narrowly tailored, Plaintiffs cite to Doe v. Prosecutor, Marion County, Indiana,
. The District of Nebraska rejected a due process challenge to the retroactive application
. Plaintiffs note that some aspects of SORA are not directly consistent with SORNA and therefore cannot contribute to national uniformity. (Dkt. # 99, Pg. ID 5812.) Not all of Michigan’s policy decisions must be related to achieving every one of its goals; this is impossible wherever goals conflict. The retroactive application of SORA may be justified by the goal of national uniformity even though some of SORA’s provisions do not contribute to uniformity.
