Lead Opinion
OPINION
Don Earns and Robert Parker filed civil rights actions, against the New Jersey Transit. Corporation (“NJ Transit”) and NJ Transit Officers Kathleen Shanahan and Sandra McKeon Crowe in their official and individual capacities, .alleging violations of the First, Fourth, and Fourteenth Amendments. Officers Shanahan and Crowe arrested Earns and Parker for defiant trespass and obstruction of justice after Earns and Parker refused to vacate the NJ Transit .train platform. on which they- were preaching without the required permit. The District Court granted -the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on Eleventh Amendment immunity and qualified immunity grounds. This consolidated appeal followed. For the reasons that follow, we will affirm the District Court’s judgment.
I.
Earns and Parker are evangelical Christian ministers who regularly preach the Christian gospel. At around 6:00 a.m. on June 26, 2012, Earns and Parker were loudly preaching on the railway platform at the Princeton Junction station, which is owned by NJ Transit. They also carried, signs with Bible verses on them. Parker had previously been informed that a permit was required to preach on NJ Transit property pursuant to N.J. Admin. Code § 16:83-1.1, which provides that persons wishing to engage in non-commercial speech on NJ Transit property are required to obtain a non-commercial certificate of registration.
.! Officers Shanahan and Crowe are law enforcement officers who are NJ Transit employees. NJ Transit maintains a policy that its officers be familiar with and uniformly enforce the permitting regulations, and all NJ Transit officers were instructed on this policy. App. 136; App. 470-71; App. 858. This policy was communicated in an email dated May 6, 2010 from NJ Transit Deputy Chief Joseph Kelly.. App. 136. The email instructed that in the event a NJ Transit officer observes an individual engaging in non-commercial speech without a permit, the officer should explain the permitting rules .and provide ■ information about the permit application process. App. 136. The email directed that the officer shall take “appropriate enforcement action” if the individual has been made aware of the application process and. permit requirement and continues to engage in non-commercial expression. App. 136.
While on patrol on the morning of June 26, 2012, Officers Shanahan and Crowе received a radio dispatch informing them that individuals were preaching loudly on the Princeton Junction station platform. This was not the first incident of loud preaching on NJ Transit property. Rather, there had been several incidents involving “[c]ommuters complaining of loud preaching at different stations” throughout the NJ Transit system. App. 470. ■ ■
In response to the dispatch call, Officers Shanahan and Crowe approached the Princeton Junction station. The officers were able to hear shouting emanating from the platform from as far as the parking lot beside the station. Once on the train platform, Officers Shanahan and Crowe approached Karns and Parker, noticing that Parker’s behavior “was not the normal behavior of a commuter” and that he “was shaking uncontrollably.” App. 208. Officer Crowe indicated that she “wasn’t paying attention to what [the plaintiffs] were saying” as she approached them. App. 197. Karns and Parker ceased preaching as the officers approached them. Parker took out his cell phone to record the encounter, but Officer Shanahan requested that he put it away. Parker eventually complied. The officers then asked Karns and Parker whethеr they had. a permit to speak at .the station. They responded that they did not. Officer Shanahan informed them that a permit was required, but Parker responded that he had been preaching at the station for years without any form of permit.
The officers then asked Parker to provide- identification. Parker produced an expired college identification card. Karns refused to- provide any form of identification. Believing that Karns and Parker were interfering with their investigation by failing to produce sufficient identification, the officers then arrested Karns and Parker and charged them each with one count of obstruction under N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2C:29-1(a) and one count' of obstruction under N.J; Stat. Ann. § 2C:29-l(b). Karns and Parker were also each charged with one count -of defiant trespass in violation of N.J. Stat. Ann. § 2C:18-3(b)on the basis of the officers’ belief that- engaging in noncommercial expression on NJ Transit property without a permit constitutes trespassing.
■Karns was ultimately. acquitted of all charges. The obstruction of justice charges against Parker were dismissed, but he was convicted of defiant trespass. That charge was ultimately reversed by the New Jersey Superior Court.
On June 26, 2014, Karns and Parker jointly filed a complaint against NJ Transit and Officers Shanahan and Crowe in their official and individual capacities. The District Court ordered Karns to file an amended complaint and Parker to file a separate complaint. On July Í4, 2014, Karns and Parker filed individual complaints, each alleging violations of the First, Fourth, and Fourteenth Amendments. The actions were consolidated for discovery purposes, and NJ Transit and the officers moved for summary judgment. On March 31, 2016, the District Court granted summary judgment in favor of all of the defendants and against Karns and Parker.
Karns and Parker filed this timely appeal.
II.
The District Court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We exercise plenary review over a grant of summary judgment and apply the same standard as the District Court. Goldenstein v. Repossessors Inc.,
III.
Karns and Parker first argue that the District Court erred by concluding that NJ Transit was an “arm of the state” entitled to claim immunity from suit in federal court under the Eleventh Amendment. They relatedly argue that NJ Transit is liable for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for maintaining unconstitutional policies relating to the permitting scheme. We have considered Karns’s and Parker’s arguments and, for the following reasons, we will affirm the District Court’s judgment.
A.
The Eleventh Amendment to the United States Constitution provides: “The Judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State.” U.S. Const. amend. XI. The Supreme Court in Hans v. Louisiana,
It is “well established that even though a State is not named a party to the action, the suit may nonetheless be barred by the Eleventh Amendment.” Edelman v. Jordan,
We apply a fact-intensive three-part test to determine whether an entity is an “arm of the state” for Eleventh Amendment purposes. Fitchik v. N.J. Transit Rail Operations, Inc.,
We historically considered the first factоr—the state-treasury factor—as “most important.” Fitchik,
The Supreme Court’s holding in Regents of the University of California has led us to depart from the analytical framework articulated in Fitchik, and we thus “no longer ascribe primacy to the [state-treasury] factor.” Benn v. First Judicial Dist. of Pa.,
Notwithstanding this fundamental shift in our approach to Eleventh Amendment immunity analysis, Earns and Parker argue that the balancing analysis we conducted in Fitchik must control the outcome of this case. Earns and Parker specifically maintain that NJ Transit is collaterally estopped
Our Internal Operating Procedures also do not prevent us from revisiting the balancing' analysis conducted in Fitchik. Pursuant to those procedures, “the holding of a panel in a precedential opinion is binding on subsequent panels.” 3d Cir. I.O.P. 9.1. We are therefore generally obligated to follow our precedent absent en banc reconsideration. United States v. Tann,
Adherence to our holding in Fitchik here must yield in light of the Supreme Court’s Regents of the University of California decision, which unquestionably presents an intervening shift in the applicable Eleventh Amendment immunity analytical framework. Further, a reflexive application of our original Fitchik framework here would be at odds with the analytical approach employed by our esteemed colleagues in many other Eleventh Amendment cases, thus generating a potentially fractured body of jurisprudence. Compare Cooper,
1.
Turning to the analysis of whether an entity is an arm of the' state, we first ask “[wjhether the money that would pay the judgment would come from the state,” which includes considering “whether payment will come from the state’s treasury, whether the agency has the money to satisfy the judgment, and whether the sovereign has immunized itself from responsibility for the agency’s debts.” Fitchik,
The Fitchik Court concluded that NJ Transit is financially independent from the state. See Fitchik,
We do not agree, and NJ Transit’s reliance on both cases is misplaced. We have consistently observed that both Alaska Cargo Transportation and Morris are inapplicable when Congress has not “put a proverbial ‘gun to the head’ of the State to sustain the entity even without a legal obligation.” Maliandi,
•2.
We turn next to the second Fitchik factor, which requires consideration of the status of the agency under state law. Considerations include “how state law treats the agency generally, whether the entity is separately incorporated, whether the agency can sue or be sued in its own right, and whether it is immune from state taxation.” Fitchik,
There is considerable indication that New Jersey law considers NJ Transit an arm of the state. First, consistent with the New Jersey Constitution, NJ Transit is “allocated within the Department of Transportation,” N.J. Stat. Ann. § 27:25-4, which is a principal department within the Executive Branch of the State- of New Jersey, N.J. Stat. Ann. § 27:lA-2. NJ Transit, moreover, is statutorily “constituted as an instrumentality of the State exercising public and essential governmental functions,” N.J. Stat. Ann. § 27:25-4. Although NJ Transit can sue and be sued, N.J. Stat. Ann. § 27:25-5, this is not dis-positive. Cf. Coll. Sav. Bank v. Fla. Prepaid Postsecondary Educ. Expense Bd.,
State case law also regards NJ Transit as an agency of the state. For instance, in Muhammad v. New Jersey Transit,
3.
Third, we must consider the autonоmy of the entity. The Fitchik Court concluded that state’s fairly “substantial control” over NJ Transit counseled in favor of according it Eleventh Amendment immunity. Fitchik,
All of these facts suggest that NJ Transit is an instrumentality of the state, exercising limited autonomy apart from it. See, e.g., Bowers,
⅝ # $ # ⅜
After giving equal consideration to all three factors, we weigh and balance them. We no longer adhere to the balancing analysis conducted -in Fitchik in light of intervening changes in Eleventh Amendment immunity analysis articulated by the Supreme Court. Applying the revised analysis, we- determine that while- the state-treastiry factor counsels against awarding Eleventh Amendment immunity, the state law and autonomy factors both tilt in favor of immunity. Indeed, in the intervening years since our decision in Fitchik, it has become apparent that the state law factor weighs heavily in - favor of a' finding of immunity. Weighing and balancing the qualitative strength of each factor in- the context of the circumstances presented, we hold that NJ Transit’ is an arm of the state. We therefore conclude that NJ Transit is entitled to claim the protections of Eleventh Amendment immunity, which in turn functions as an absolute bar to any claims in this case’agаinst NJ Transit'and the officers in their official capacities.
B.
Earns and Parker argue that NJ Transit is hable for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for purportedly maintaining an unconstitutional custom of discriminatory enforcement of the permitting requirement. Earns and Parker Br. 24. They also claim that NJ Transit maintained a policy of promoting illegal arrests unsupported by probable cause. Earns and Parker Br. 33-35. Neither claim is viable.
A plaintiff seeking relief .under 42 U.S.C, § 1983 must establish that the individual or entity who -allegedly committed .the constitutional violation is a.“person” for the purposes of § 1983. 42 U.S.C. § 1983; see also Indep. Enters. Inc. v. Pittsburgh Water & Sewer Auth.,
IV.
Earns and Parker also brought several claims of constitutional wrongdoing pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Officers Crowe and Shanahan in their individual capacities. Earns and Parker specifically alleged that the officers violated: (1) the First and Fourteenth Amendments by selectively enforcing N.J. Admin. Code § 16:83-1.4; (2) the First Amendment by arresting them in retaliation for their protected speech; (3) the Fourth Amendment by arresting them without probable cause; and (4) the First Amendment by curtailing their right to record police officers during an investigative detention. The District Court concluded that Crowe and Shanahan were entitled to qualified immunity as to each of these claims. For the following reasons, we agree.
A plaintiff seeking relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 must demonstrate “that the defendants, acting under color of law, violated the plaintiffs federal constitutional or statutory rights, and thereby caused the complained of injury.” Elmore v. Cleary,
A.
Earns and Parker first argue that the officers were not entitled to qualified immunity on their selective enforcement claim
A plaintiff seeking to establish a selective enforcement claim must demonstrate (1) that hе was treated differently from other similarly situated individuals;
Karns and Parker have proffered insufficient evidence to support a cognizable selective enforcement claim as а matter of law. Indeed, apart from their wholly generalized allegation that “selective enforcement of the law by a state officer is a violation of the constitution,” Karns and Parker Br. 20, Karns and Parker point to no evidence that Officers Shanahan and Crowe treated similarly situated individuals differently. • They do not even identify other individuals who might be similarly situated.
B.
We next address Kams’s and Parker’s retaliation claim. To establish unlawful'retaliation under the First Amendment, a plaintiff must prove: “(1) constitutionally protected conduct, (2) retaliatory action sufficient to deter a person of ordinary firmness from exercising his constitutional rights, and (B) a causal link between the constitutionally protected conduct and the retaliatory action.” Thomas v. Indep. Twp.,
Even assuming Karns and Parker could show sufficient facts supporting their retaliation claim, their claim fails on the “cleariy established” prong of the qualified immunity analysis. Karns and Parker maintain that the law was clearly established that the First Amendment prohibits government officials from subjecting individuals to retaliation for thеir protected speech. Karns and Parker Br. 22-23. This articulation of the relevant right, however, “put[s] the question of whether the ‘clearly established’ standard has been met at much too high a level of abstraction.” Zaloga v. Borough of Moosic,
The Suprdme Court’s decision in Reichle, which was decided just weeks before Karns’s and Parkers’ arrests, conclusively disposes of this inquiry. The Court, on the facts of that case, held that “it was not clearly established that an arrest supported by probable cause could give rise to a First Amendment violation.”
C.
We turn to Karns’s and Parker’s claim allеging that the officers" lacked probable cause to arrest them. As noted, the determination of whether there was sufficient . probable cause to support Karns’s and Parker’s arrests is relevant both to their First Amendment retaliation claim and to their Fourth Amendment claim that the officers lacked a reasonably objective basis for their arrests.
Officers who “reasonably but mistakenly conclude that probable cause is present” are entitled to qualified immunity. Hunter v. Bryant,
We look to the elements of the offense to determine whether an arrest was supported by probable cause. See Wright,
The record in this case indicates that Parker knew that a permit was required to engage in speech at the station. App. 118, 244-45. Moreover, the officers affirmatively informed Earns and Parker of this requirement befоre requesting that they vacate the platform. Karas and Parker were, thus, well aware that they were not licensed to be on the train platform. Earns and Parker also led the officers to believe that they would remain on the platform despite knowing that they lacked the requisite permit. These facts amply support the officers’ determinátion of probable cause that Karas and Parker were engaged in criminal trespass. See Paff,
As a result, Officers Shanahan and Crowe were entitled to qualified immunity on their claim that the officers arrested them without probable cause.
D.
Turning finally to Karns’s and Parker’s “right to record” claim, it was not clearly established as of the date of Karns’s and Parker’s arrests that there was a First Amendment right to videotape police officers during an investigative stop. In Kelly v. Borough of Carlisle,
V.
For the foregoing reasons, we will affirm the District Court’s entry of summary judgment.
Notes
. Permits are available on a first-come, first-served basis. App. 241. All permits are approved as long as the applicant executes the permit and states his or her understanding of the relevant regulations. App. .243. NJ Transit typically issues ten to twenty permits weekly. App. 243. Indeed, the record shows that between June 2012 and July 2012, NJ Transit received forty-six permit requests, including thirty from religious organizations or entities and fifteen from political campaigns or entities. App. 116; 118-19. Only two of these requests were denied, either because the permit was returned too late or not at all. App. 119-20. Permit holders are required to remain at specific locations within the station as determined by the station manager to ensure the safety of NJ Transit customers and permit holders. App. 241-42.
. As we have discussed in other contexts, “the Eleventh Amendment does not define the scope of the States’ sovereign immunity; it is but one particular exemplification of that immunity.” Lombardo,
. Collateral estoppel, also known as issue preclusion, prohibits relitigation of an issue that has been fully and fairly litigated previously. The elements for collateral estoppel are satisfied when; "(1) the issue sought to be precluded [is] the same as that involved in the prior action; (2) that issue [was] actually litigated; (3) it [was] determined by a final and valid judgment; and (4) the determination [was] essential to the prior judgment,” Nat'l R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Pa. Pub. Util. Comm’n,
. Our dissenting colleague does not address these significant changes in New Jersey law, all of which post-dated our Fitchik decision. ' Even assuming that the factual record has remained largely unchanged since our Court decided Fitchik, we cannot consider that "status under state law” factor as it was in 1989, Rather, we must contend with relevant legal developments in the twenty-eight years since we first considered the issue,
, Defendants sued in their official capacities are entitled to claim the same Eleventh Amendment immunity that the "entity, qua entity, may possess.” Kentucky v. Graham,
. We emphasize that the Eleventh Amendment and § 1983 determinations are "analytically distinct,” although sometimes overlapping. Estate of Lagano v. Bergen Cty. Prosecutor's Office,
.NJ Transit additionally argues that summary judgment is appropriate because Earns and Parker have failed to adduce sufficient evidence to support their unconstitutional permitting -policy, NJ Transit Br. 50, The District Court did not reach the factual underpinnings of this claim against NJ Transit. We, too, deem it unnecessary to analyze this claim because it is apparent that Karns and Parker cannot overcome the Eleventh Amendment bar in this case.
. This claim arises from Karns’s and Parker’s contention that NJ Transit's permitting policy was selectively epforced against religious speech or speech that the officers deemed "subjectively objectionable.” Kams and Parker Br.-19.
. "Persons are similarly situated ... when they are alike in 'all relevant aspects.’ ” Startzell v. City of Philadelphia,
. The sole evidence that Karns and Parker proffer in support of this claim is the deposition testimony of two NJ Transit employees who are responsible for preparing and approving non-commercial speech permits. App. 559, 628. According to that testimony, political candidates are not required to obtain permits to speak on NJ Transit property, App. 559, 628. Karns and Parker have not, however, offered any factual detail as to the identities of the political candidates against whom the permit requirement was purportedly unenforced. Karns and Parker have also adduced no facts suggesting that Crowe and Shanahan were aware of such a purportedly discriminatory policy, much less involved in executing it with respect to the individual plaintiffs in this case.
. We decline to address whether. Kams's and Parker's failure to produce valid identification created probable cause for the obstruction offenses, NJ. Stat. Ann. § 2C:29-l(a), (b). The existence of probable cause as to the trespass offense is an independently adequate ground on which to affirm the award of qualified immunity to the officers on the Fourth Amendment claim. See Barna,
. In the intervening period since Karns's and Parker’s arrests in 2012, our Court has held that "the First Amendment protects the act of photographing, filming, or otherwise recording police officers conducting their official duties in public.” Fields v. City of Philadelphia,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Were we writing on a blank slate, it would be within the prerogative of the Majority to decide this case as it does. But the slate is not blank. The precise question that we examine here, whether NJ Transit is an “arm of the state” entitled to Eleventh Amendment sovereign immunity,” we have already fully considered and resolved en banc in Fitchik, v. N.J. Transit Rail Operations, Inc.
I.
The doctrine of stare decisis is simple: Like cases should be decided alike. We should not overturn our precedential opinions absent special justification. Adherence to stare decisis thereby “permits society to presume that bedrock principles are founded in the law rather than in the proclivities of individuals[.]”
To be sure, there are exceptions to this rule. As the Majority notes, we may—even without the blessing of an en banc majority—depart from a precedential opinion when its holding is in conflict with intervening Supreme Court authority.
A. Intervening Legal Changes Do Not Require Fitchik’s Overruling
Fitchik explains the analytical framework that we use to determine whether a state entity, such as NJ Transit, is “an arm of the state,” entitled to Eleventh Amendment immunity. Fitchik instructs us to employ a fact-intensive, three-factor balancing test. We consider the funding factor, the status under state law factor, and the autonomy factor.
Fitchik treats the funding factor as the most important.
Even though Fitchik explicitly acknowledges that no single factor is determinative in its evaluation, the Majority believes that its treаtment of the funding factor as the most important warrants a complete overruling of the opinion. But in Fitchik, we engaged in a qualitative assessment of each factor; we explicitly considered the degree to which each factor counseled in favor of or against immunity. Based on the record that was before us—which is largely unchanged today—we held that NJ Transit is not entitled to immunity because the funding factor “provides extremely strong indication that NJT is not the alter ego of New Jersey” while “[t]he other factors—NJT’s treatment under state law, and its degree of autonomy—provide only weak support for the conclusion that NJT is New Jersey’s alter ego.”
Neither the Supreme Court’s Regents of the University of California decision nor Benny. First Judicial Dist. of Pa.’s pronouncement that the factors are now “coequal”
The qualitative strength of each factor has consistently guided our analysis. Fe-bres v. Camden Board of Education
The fact that in cases such- as Febres, Cooper, and Bowers, our assessment of the factors has declined to recognize immunity when at least two Fitchik factors' have cautioned against such a finding does not change our conclusion. Our post-Regents of the University of California cases have not considered a situation like the one we confronted in Fitchik—where one factor provides “extremely strong” support for one conclusion while the other two factors provide only “weak” support for the opposite outcome. Thus, those decisions are distinguishable and do not necessarily сonflict with Fitchik. As a result, I do not believe that the circumstances here rise to the kind of exceptional circumstances we ordinarily require to warrant a departure from a precedential opinion absent en banc consideration. Fitchik can and should be read harmoniously with Regents of the University of California and our subsequent opinions. Only an en bane majority of our Court should decide whether the “strong indication” compelled by New Jersey Transit’s funding can be overcome by the “weak support” of the “state law” and “autonomy” factors.
The Majority, however, fears that our continued application of Fitchik could generate “a potentially fractured body of jurisprudence.”
B. The Circumstances Have Not Changed So Significantly That Our Reexamination Is Required
Our Court has long recognized that principles of estoppel permit a litigant who was not a party to a prior judgment to use that judgment to prevent a defendant from re-litigating issues resolved in the earlier proceeding.
Fitchik held that the first factor— “whether the judgment would be paid by state funds—provides an extremely strong indication that NJT is not the alter ego of New Jersey.”
The second Fitchik factor requires us to consider “[t]he status of the agency under state law ....”
My colleagues conclude that the state law factor now favors a finding of immunity because NJ Transit is statutorily constituted as an instrumentality of the State, constitutionally allocated within the Department of Transportation, vested with the authority to exercise police powers, considered state property under state tax laws, designated as an “alter ego of the State” by a state’s trial and intermediate level courts, subject to the Administrative Procedures Act, and has the power of eminent domain.
[NJ Transit] is subject to New Jersey Tort Claims Act; is immune from state property tax; has the power of eminent domain; and is subject to the strictures of the state administrative procedure act. Further, the New Jersey Supreme Court has declared [NJ Transit] to be a “public” entity, although not in the context of sovereign immunity.35
Thus, NJ Transit’s allocation under the state constitution and the fact that it possesses official police powers are the only facts set forth here that we did not explicitly consider in Fitchik. I doubt that these facts are so significant that they warrant a new determination by this panel. NJ Transit offers the fact of the constitution’s treatment of the transit body to show that New Jersey deems it an instrumentality of the State exercising essential governmental functions. But Fitchik fully appreciated that, under state law, NJ Transit seems to be an arm of the state.
Under the third factor, we consider the degree of autonomy the entity has from the State.
NJ Transit suggests that there are additional considerations that compel us to conclude that the factor here “weighs heavily in finding immunity.”
As demonstrated, NJ Transit’s funding scheme, status under state law, and organizational structure have remained largely unchanged over the last twenty-seven years. NJ Transit’s arguments here were fully considered and resolved in Fitchik-, as a result, principles of collateral estoppel preclude NJ Transit from relitigating them here.
II.
In light of the principles underlying the doctrines of stare decisis and collateral estoppel, it has been the tradition of this court to refrain from overturning our precedents “lightly.”
.
. United States v. Babich,
. 3d Cir. I.O.P. 9.1 (2015).
. 3d Cir. I.O.P. 9.1.
. See Maj. Op. 513-14; Mennen Co. v. Atl. Mut. Ins. Co.,
. Maliandi v. Montclair State Univ.,
. Id. at 84 (citing Fitchik,
. Fitchik,
. Id. at 659-60.
. Maliandi,
. Id. (internal citations omitted).
. Fitchik,
. Benn v. First Judicial Dist. of Pa.,
. Cooper v. Se. PA Transp. Auth.,
.
. Id. at 232, 237 (emphasis added).
. Id. at 237.
.
.
. Id.
. Maj. Op. 515.
. Pardini v. Allegheny Intermediate Unit,
. Holland v. N.J. Dep't of Corrections,
. Burlington N. R.R. Co. v. Hyundai Merch. Marine Co.,
. Resp’t's Br, 19; Maj. Op. 517 (contending that "[i]n the twenty-seven years since our Court's decision in Fitchik,... it has become much more apparent that New Jersey law regards NJ Transit as an arm of the state,”).
. In addition, as we state in Part A above, the strength of each of the factors found in Fitchik was weighed qualitatively, a procedure which is consistent with the approach of the Court in Regents of the University of California.
. Fitchik,
. Maj. Op. at 515.
. Fitchik,
. Id. at 663.
. Id. (emphasis acjded).
. Maj. Op. 519.
. Maj. Op. 515-17.
. Fitchik,
. Id. at 662-663 (citations omitted).
. Id. at 662 ("There is some indication that New Jersey law considers [NJ Transit] to fae an arm of the state.”).
. Id. at 663 ("On the other side of the equation, New Jersey has given power to NJT in two spheres that Urbano identified as indicative that an agency is not entitled to sovereign immunity.”).
. NJ Transit does not suggest that its enforcement officers did not have general police authority at the time Fitchik was decided. Indeed, the statutory provision granting New Jersey Transit officers general police powers appears to have been passed in 1989, well before Fitchik.
. Maj. Op. 518.
. Fitchik,
. Id. at 664.
. Id.
. Maj. Op. 517.
. Resp’t’s Br. 27.
. Fitchik,
. Id. at 664.
. Al-Sharif v. U.S. Citizenship & Immigration Servs.,
