Lead Opinion
ORDER
The opinion and concurrence filed on June 27, 2017, are amended as follows:
1. At page 17 of the slip opinion, delete the sentence: < Perhaps, because of self-selection or other factors, the coaching population differs from the population studied. >.
2. At page 20 of the slip opinion, change <predict the racial effect> to < analyze the racial effect>, and delete con the NCAA’s applicant pool in particular >.
The concurring opinion is amended as follows:
1. At page 28 of the slip opinion, change <Co> to <Co.>.
2. At page 33 of the slip opinion, change cpredict the racial effect of individualized assessments on the NCAA’s applicant pool in particular > to < analyze the racial effect of individualized assessments >.
The panel has voted to deny the petition for panel rehearing. Judges Tallman and Friedland have voted to deny the petition for rehearing en banc and Judge Faber so recommends.
The full court has been advised of the petition for rehearing and no judge has requested a vote on whether to rehear the matter en banc. Fed. R. App. P. 35.
The petition for panel rehearing and the petition for rehearing en banc are DENIED. No further petitions for rehearing or rehearing en banc will be entertained.
Concurrence by Judge Faber
OPINION
Plaintiff Dominic Hardie appeals the district court’s entry of summary judgment in his suit against the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA). Hardie, who is African American, alleges that the NCAA’s policy of excluding anyone with a felony conviction from coaching at NCAA-certified youth athletic tournaments violates Title II of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000a(a), which prohibits racial discrimination in places of public accommodation. Hardie’s suit rests on a disparate-impact theory of Title II liability. We have never endorsed or rejected disparate-impact liability under Title II, and we need nót' decide this issue today. We hold that even if disparate-impact claims are cognizable under Title II, Hardie has not shown that an equally effective, less discriminatory alternative to the NCAA’s felon-exclusion policy exists, as he must do under the three-step analysis for disparate-impact claims set forth in Wards Cove Packing Co. v. Atonio,
I
The NCAA is a voluntary, unincorporated association of over 1,200 colleges and
The NCAA’s guidelines impose a number of requirements on tournament operators to ensure the safety of participants and preserve the integrity of college athletics recruiting. The guidelines restrict the number of games athletes may play in, for example, and they mandate that tournament operators obtain insurance and hire medical personnel. Importantly here, the guidelines require that tournament operators abide by the NCAA Participant Approval Policy. The Participant Approval Policy provides that anyone seeking to coach at an NCAA-certified nonscholastic tournament must submit to a criminal background check. Under the current version of the policy, anyone who has been convicted of a felony is automatically denied approval to coach in an NCAA-certified tournament. If a tournament operator fails to comply with NCAA guidelines, in-eluding the Participant Approval Policy, the tournament will not receive NCAA certification, and NCAA Division I coaches and recruiters may not attend the uncerti-fied tournament to scout for new talent.
The NCAA did not always ban anyone with a felony conviction from coaching at certified tournaments. The first Participant Approval Policy governing women’s basketball, adopted in 2006, disqualified only prospective coaches who had been convicted of a violent felony,
In light of these challenges, the NCAA amended the Participant Approval Policy in 2011 to eliminate the violent-nonviolent felony distinction. Now, anyone with a felony conviction, no matter how old, is denied entry approval to coach. Any prior sex offense conviction, regardless of the charge level, and “active criminal cases” are also disqualifying. Coaches approved under the Participant Approval Policy may coach at NCAA-certified tournaments for two years, and then must reapply.
After exhausting his administrative remedies without obtaining approval to coach, Hardie sued the NCAA in federal district court to enjoin enforcement of the Participant Approval Policy.
To prove the Participant Approval Policy’s disparate impact, Hardie offers a report prepared by economist Marc Bendick.
The NCAA moved for summary judgment on Hardie’s Title II claim. The district court granted summary judgment for the NCAA, concluding that disparate-impact claims arfe not cognizable under Title II, Hardie timely appealed. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II
“We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo, and may affirm on any basis supported by the record.” Gordon v. Virtumundo, Inc.,
Ill
On appeal, the NCAA does not challenge Hardie’s argument that Title II encompasses disparate-impact claims. Instead, the NCAA asks us to affirm entry of summary judgment in its favor on either of two other grounds advanced below, assuming arguendo that disparate-impact claims are cognizable under Title II. First, the NCAA contends that it did not deny Har-die a privilege of a place of public accommodation because tournament operators, not the NCAA, enforce the Participant Approval Policy. Second, the NCAA argues that Hardie has failed to meet his burden under Wards Cove Packing Co. v. Atonio
A
Neither the Supreme Court nor we have decided whether disparate-impact claims are cognizable under Title II. A few courts have found that Title II authorizes disparate-impact claims, see Olzman v. Lake Hills Swim Club, Inc.,
We express no view today on whether Title II encompasses disparate-impact claims. Even if Title II authorized such claims, Hardie has not met his burden under Wards Cove of showing that an equally effective, less discriminatory alternative to the Participant Approval Policy exists.
B
In Wards Cove, the Supreme Court laid out a burden-shifting framework that applies to disparate-impact claims.
Wards Cove burden shifting proceeds in three steps. First, a plaintiff must establish a prima facie case that the defendant’s challenged policy or practice has , a “significantly disparate impact on nop-whites.” Wards Cove,
Next, if a plaintiff makes out a prima facie case, “the case will shift to any business justification [defendants] offer for their use of these practices.” Wards Cove,
At the justification step of Wards Cove burden shifting, the defendant must show that the “challenged practice serves, in a significant way, the legitimate ... goals of the [defendant].” Id. at 659,
Finally, if the defendant provides a legitimate justification for the challenged practice, the plaintiff must demonstrate that an alternative practice (1) would “serve the [defendant’s] legitimate ,.. interests],” and (2) would not have a “similarly undesirable racial effect.” Id. at 660,
Applying the Wards Cove framework here, Hardie relies on the Bendick report to establish a prima facie case of disparate impact. The Bendick report reveals that African Americans were significantly overrepresented—by a factor of 1.52 to 1.72— among felony-denied applicants compared to approved applicants. The NCAA does
At Wards Cove step two, the NCAA contends that the Participant Approval Policy serves the NCAA’s interest in “protecting the safety of the children who participate in the tournaments and the integrity of the NCAA’s recruiting process and college athletics more generally.” For the most part, Hardie accepts that the NCAA’s proffered rationale .for the Participant Approval Policy is legitimate. We also agree.
The parties’ disagreement thus focuses on step three of the Wards Cove analysis. To satisfy his burden at step three, Hardie proposes two alternatives to the Participant Approval Policy: (1) the NCAA could revert to the pre-2011 version of the policy, which disqualified applicants with violent but not nonviolent felony convictions that were at least seven years old; or (2) the NCAA could conduct individualized assessments of applicants with felony convictions to determine if they would pose an unacceptable risk to the safety of tournament participants. We hold that Hardie has failed to show that either of his proposed alternatives would be both equally effective compared to, and less discriminatory than, the current policy. We address each of these alternatives in turn.
1.
Hardie first proposes that the NCAA revert to the version of the Participant Approval Policy that was in effect before 2011. The pre-2011 policy excluded applicants convicted of a violent felony, a sex offense, or a crime involving children, no matter how old, or a nonviolent felony conviction if the conviction was less than seven years old.
We find Hardie has failed to establish that the pre-2011 policy would be equally effective as the current policy in serving the NCAA’s legitimate interests. Hardie contends that the pre-2011 policy was proven equally effective because no documented safety incidents occurred during the few years when that version of the policy was in force. But the NCAA could have reasonably concluded that the level of risk under the pre-2011 policy was unacceptable, even if no tournament participants had yet been harmed'. Cf. El v. Se. Pa. Transp. Auth.,
To compare the relative effectiveness of the pre-2011 policy and the current policy, Hardie submits a report by Dr. Kiminori Nakamura, a criminologist and expert on recidivism. The Nakamura report concludes that the probability that someone with a prior conviction will recidivate decreases the longer that person goes without committing another crime. At some point, known as the “redemption time,” the risk that someone with a prior conviction will reoffend becomes equal to the risk of
For several reasons, the Nakamura report does not establish that the pre-2011 Participant Approval Policy overall screens coaching applicants as effectively as the current policy. First, it does not attempt to quantify and compare the risk of future arrest for those permitted to coach under the current Participant Approval Policy with .the risk of those permitted under the pre-2011 version. Second, Nakamura acknowledges that, even after many years have passed, the risk of future arrest for someone who has a criminal record may remain' higher than the risk of future arrest for someone who has never been arrested. Hardie has offered no evidence to suggest that this difference in risk, even if small, is immaterial to achieving the NCAA’s interests. Particularly considering that NCAA-approved coaches work with minors, we cannot conclude on the record before us that this additional risk is insignificant.
We view this case as similar to El v. Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority,
We must also note that reverting to the pre-2011 policy would impose some increased administrative burden on the NCAA’s participant approval process. The NCAA submitted evidence that the 2011 amendment to the Participant Approval
In sum, Hardie has not carried his burden at step three of the Wards Cove framework with respect to this proposed alternative. He has not adduced sufficient evidence from which a reasonable jury could conclude that excluding violent felons, but not nonviolent felons, from coaching would be equally effective at achieving the NCAA’s goals as the current policy. While we recognize that the plaintiffs burden at the alternatives stage is a demanding one, courts must take caution before displacing reasonable business judgments. Wards Cove,
2
As a second alternative, Hardie proposes that the NCAA conduct individualized assessments of applicants with a felony conviction to calculate the actual risks posed by an applicant. Hardie’s expert on human resources practices, Lester S. Rosen, states that individualized assessments may take into account factors such as “any mitigating circumstance about the offense, the age of the offense, ... past employment, educational achievements ;since the offense, and other signs of rehabilitation.”
Hardie’s individualized assessments alternative fails at step three of the Wards Cove analysis, because hé has put forward no evidence from which a reasonable jury could conclude that individualized assessments would have less disparate impact than the current Participant Approval Policy. None of Hardie’s experts analyze the expected racial impact of individualized assessments using the criteria Hardie proposes. The Rosen report only remarks generally that “[t]here is widespread recognition that a policy of automatically rejecting an applicant oh the basis of a felony conviction, without any consideration of the offense, the position in' question, the age of the offense, and evidence of rehabilitation, is both unfair and potentially violates Civil Rights laws.” Hardie also points to EEOC Guidelines that recommend employers adopt individualized assessments as a tool to avoid Title VII liability in the employment context. U.S. Equal Emp. Opportunity Comm’n, No. 915.002, EEOC Enforcement Guidance: Consideration of Arrest and Conviction Records in Employment Decisions Under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 18 (2012). Neither the Rosen report nor the EEOC Guidelines analyze the racial effect of individualized assessments. Without more, we cannot say that Hardie has met his burden to show that individualized assessments would be a less discriminatory alternative to the current Participant Approval Policy.
Because neither of Hardie’s proposed alternatives to the Participant Approval Policy pass muster .at the final stage of
C
Alternatively, the NCAA urges us to affirm summary judgment on the ground that it has not actually denied Hardie a “privilege! ] • • • of [a] place of public accommodation,” 42 U.S.C. § 2000a(a), because tournament operators, rather than the NCAA, actually enforce the Participant Approval Policy. Because we find that Hardie failed to produce sufficient proof at step three of the Wards Cove analysis, we need not reach this alternative basis for upholding summary judgment.
IV
We do not decide today whether Title II of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 encompasses disparate-impact claims. Even assuming arguendo that disparate-impact claims are cognizable under Title II, Hardie has not created a genuine issue of material fact that one of his proposed alternatives to the NCAA’s Participant Approval Policy would be both equally effective and less discriminatory. The NCAA is therefore entitled to summary judgment.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Nonscholastic tournaments are tournaments in which the participating teams are unaffiliated with schools.
. The NCAA defined "violent felonies” as crimes committed against a person and punishable by at least one year in prison.
. Hardie's First Amended Complaint also named the operator of the MidSummer Night’s Madness tournament, the International Girls Basketball Organization (IGBO), and the owners of the tournament venues, Alliant International University and Town and Country Hotel, LLC, as defendants. Hardie later jointly agreed to dismiss his claims against these defendants.
. Title II provides that "[a]ll persons shall be entitled to the full and equal enjoyment of the goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages, and accommodations of any place of public accommodation ... without discrimination or segregation on the ground of race, color, religion, or national origin.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000a(a). "Public accommodations” include, among other things, "sports arena[s], stadium[s] or other placets] of exhibition or entertainment,” so long as their "operations affect commerce, or if discrimination or segregation by it is supported by State’ action.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000a(b). The NCAA does not dispute that coaching in NCAA-certified athletic tournaments constitutes a “privilege” of a place of public accommodation. See Daniel v. Paul,
. “Geocoding” involves using U.S. Census Bureau data to predict the race of applicants . based on their home addresses. In his supplemental report, Bendick used 'geocoding to predict the race of 1,105 applicants using home addresses provided by the NCAA.
. Bendick undertook these data-gathering efforts because the NCAA did not itself collect information, on the race of applicants for coaching approval.
.
. The Civil Rights Act of 1991, Pub. L. No. 102-166, § 105, 105 Stat. 1071, 1074 (1991), abrogated Wards Cove with respect to claims under Title VII, but the Supreme Court has continued to apply Wards Cove burden shifting to other antidiscrimination statutes. See Smith v. City of Jackson,
. Hardie would have us frame the “less disparate impact” question somewhat differently. He contends that, to satisfy this part of the third step of the Wards Cove analysis, he would only need to show that prohibiting coaches with nonviolent felonies independently has a disparate impact on African Americans. By Hardie’s logic, if people with nonviolent felonies, a group that is disproportionately African American, were allowed to coach, African Americans would disproportionately benefit. We need not evaluate this argument. As explained below, one of Har-die’s proposed alternatives—reverting to the pre-2011 policy—falters on the "equally effective” prong of the third step of the Wards Cove analysis, not the "less disparate impact” prong. And Hardie’s logic does not even apply to his other alternative—individual assessments—because not all prospective coaches with nonviolent felonies would necessarily be allowed to coach under that policy.
. The Nakamura report measures general population risk including people With' and without criminal histories.
. We do not mean to suggest that the small - risk posed by individuals with nonviolent felony convictions will always be material. In some cases, the risk presented by a felony conviction will be a generalized one, attenuated from the work of the organization in question. We are not presented with that situation here, though. In this context, where coaches often travel with, are responsible for, and have a great deal of influence over minors, and where certain crimes are particularly relevant to the integrity of college athletics recruiting, the risk is material.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and concurring in the judgment:
I agree with the Court that under Title II, Appellant Dominic Hardie has not stated a cognizable claim. Yet the Court skirts a key issue that this case squarely presents: Whether disparate-impact claims are cognizable under Title II.
In my view, Title II’s text does not recognize disparate-impact liability, and we should clearly say so.
I. Title II’s Text Prechides Disparate-Impact Liability.
The text of Title II does not authorize disparate-impact liability, which typically flows from “practices that have a ‘disproportionately adverse effect on minorities’ and are otherwise unjustified by a legitimate rationale.” Inclusive Cmtys. Project,
42 U.S.C. § 2000a(a) (“Equal Access”); which is
All persons shall be entitled to the full and equal enjoyment of the goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages, and accommodations of any place of public accommodation, as defined in this section, without discrimination or segregation on the ground of race, color, religion, or national origin.
Title II imposes no liability on organizations based on an individual’s exclusion from public places over which the organization did not have actual control, or at least some close connection. In order to impose Title II liability, a court must find that the defendant intentionally has engaged in racial discrimination in the enjoyment of public accommodations—also known as disparate treatment. Hence, the defendant itself must have denied someone or withheld from someone a privilege of a public accommodation or, at a bare minimum, have a concrete, material link to the public accommodation in question. See Clegg v. Cult Awareness Network,
The National Collegiate Athletic Association (“NCAA”) does not have such a connection to any place or activity from which Hardie was allegedly excluded, nor does it have such a connection to any act of exclusion itself. Any decision to exclude Hardie was made and carried out by entities separate from the NCAA; the NCAA had no authority or control over those entities. Such places and activities were free to continue these tournaments, albeit without NCAA approval. The federal courts must be extremely hesitant to second-guess the decisions of non-governmental entities charged with the responsibility of developing standards and running activities. Here, the NCAA has that responsibility, and is better equipped to exercise it than the courts are. Therefore, any exclusion of Hardie should not be attributed to the NCAA.
Furthermore, the courts must demand that Title II contain a “clear statement” of congressional intent in order to infer that it authorizes disparate-impact liability. I.N.S. v. St. Cyr,
Disparate-impact liability implicates two constitutional, concerns: equal protection and federalism. With respect to equal protection, when the courts racially balance the participants in public accommodations, they impose what is effectively a quota— be it fixed or moving. This quota arrangement confines a participant to the playing room allotted to her race; like Linda Brown and her contemporaries more than sixty-three years ago, today’s participant must learn to tailor her aspirations to the quota system’s ingenious separate but equal regime. See Brown v. Board of Education,
'As for federalism, federaUanti-discrimi-nation statutes like Title II often deter state and local governments from implementing their own affairs, including their traditional police-power prerogatives. See, e.g., Inclusive Cmtys. Project, — U.S. —,
Title II contains no such clear statement. “All persons shall be entitled to the full and equal enjoyment ... without discrimination or segregation,” Title II says. 42 U.S.C. § 2000a(a). Since “[t]he statute does not define ‘discriminatpon]’ ” or “segregation,” I consult “the ordinary meaning[s] of the word[s].” CSX Transp., Inc. v. Ala. Dept. of Revenue,
• In this context, making personnel selection or preferring one person over another on an impermissible basis presupposes the defendant’s subjective intent; it involves disparate treatment. No actor can absentmindedly, by relying on subconscious stereotypes, or otherwise without a deliberately discriminatory intent or motive slip into intentional behavior such as preferring persons on a racial or ethnic basis. That would be an oxymoron. When English speakers say that someone has discriminated against a person on a forbidden ground, they are saying that committing discrimination was the actor’s intent or motive. Statistical disparities indicating that certain “practices ... fall more harshly on one group than another,” International Broth. of Teamsters v. United States,
Similarly, under Title II, “segregation” is the “[unlawful] policy of separating people on the basis of color, nationality, religion, or the like.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1388 (8th ed. 2004) (emphasis added). This definition, too, presupposes the actor’s subjective intent; it involves disparate treatment. No actor can absentmindedly, by relying on subconscious stereotypes, or otherwise without a deliberately segregation-effectuating intent or motive slip into intentional behavior such as separating persons on a forbidden basis. When English speakers say that someone has segregated members of one group from members of another group on a prohibited basis, they are saying that committing segregation was the actor’s intent or motive. Racially-correlated statistical disparities do not establish that the defendant’s disfavor on the basis of “the protected trait ... actually motivated [her] decision” to segregate persons from one another. Hazen Paper Co.,
Besides, Title II lacks a catch-all mechanism encompassing disparate-impact claims. Unlike the Fair Housing Act (“FHA”), which the Inclusive Cmtys. Project Court understood to authorize disparate-impact liability, Title II contains no “results-oriented phrase” such as “ ‘otherwise make unavailable.’”
" II. Business-Necessity Defense under Title II Protects the NCAA.
Even if Title II had authorized disparate-impact liability, the business-necessity defense would immunize the NCAA’s policy. In Inclusive Cmtys. Project, the Supreme Court highlighted the long pedigree of the “ ‘business[ ]necessity’ ... defense to disparate-impact claims.”
The NCAA’s or, for that matter, similar organizations’ legitimate, bona fide interest in setting up a wholesome environment with good role models for youth cannot be outweighed by some need to give former felons a chance to assimilate into society at this level. The NCAA’s interest in promoting “efficient and trustworthy [relationships]” among the athletes and their coaches, id., cannot be served without having coaches who are good role models for youth, which is not a criterion that Title II prohibits. Perhaps in the NCAA’s eyes, a felony conviction disqualifies someone from being a good role model. Moreover, the NCAA might not want to enhance its risk of exposure to liability, if the former felon should commit a crime or a tort while he is a participant. Thus, the NCAA does not wish to be affiliated with youth athletic tournaments coached by former felons. The NCAA has the right, one with robust constitutional dimensions, to decide with whom it will associate, see Boy Scouts of America v. Dale,
III. Resorts to Irrelevant and Extraneous Evidence are Impermissible.
The majority’s application of extraneous evidence such as human resources ex
That a disproportionately high number of felons might self-identify' as members of any particular race(s) does not somehow convert the NCAA policy into a racially discriminatory one. Certainly, “[s]ome activities may be such an irrational object of disfavor that, if they are targeted, and if they also happen to be engaged in exclusively or predominantly by a particular class of people, an intent to disfavor that class can readily be presumed. A tax on wearing yarmulkes is a tax on Jews,” for instance. Bray v. Alexandria Women’s Health Clinic,
The future need not be grim with limitless disparate-impact claims under Title II. Think of the children and young adults, some of the most vulnerable members of our society. What will happen to" entertainment platforms for young people to demonstrate their gifts and diligence? Must such platforms admit former felons, just because those former felons belong to certain races? Does it depend on what some criminologist, sociologist, statistician or other social’scientist has to say about the matter today? No and it should not. What about swimming meets where coaches can see the swimmers in compromising attire? Do former felons who happen to self-identify with particular'races get a free pass-in hiding behind their races and taking part in those meets? Why would Hardie’s argú
The courts undoubtedly have no power to so authorize on the basis of fickle evidence, namely protean materials like the Nakamura report, with respect to which the Court says that “Hardie has offered no evidence to suggest that this difference in risk, even if small, is immaterial to achieving the NCAA’s interests.” Maj. op. at 322. But what if Hardie had—and the Court had thought it valid?'What if tomorrow Dr. Kiminori Nakamura expands or contracts the study’s scope, makes new findings and devises Version 2.0 of the same report? Does Title II’s meaning or application have to evolve based on what these non-vetted, democratically non-legitimized academic studies have to say? The federal courts’ privileging certain sympathetic studies without adequately'investigating their probative value or the prejudicial effect they will have is akin to our “look[ing] over the heads of the crowd and pickling] out [our] friends.” Antonin Scalia, A Matter op Interpretation: Federal Courts and the Law 36 (1997).
Likewise, today “[n]either the Rosen report nor the [Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (‘EEOC’)] Guidelines” happen to “analyze the racial effect of individualized assessments.” Maj. op. at 323. So the Court deems them insufficiently helpful to Hardie’s claim. However, if just a few years down the road the Rosen report, the EEOC Guidelines, and other extraneous evidence do end up predicting such a “racial effect,” id., will we then allow an identical claim to proceed? I hope not, for that would turn us into dilettante social scientists, and, worse, into omnipotent social engineers, a role we have neither the expertise nor the authority to fulfill. Consulting the cognoscenti’s■ social-science research, which frequently is fraught with flawed methodologies and philosophical, political, and other biases,' to decide legal questions' is tantamount to putting a thumb on the scales to produce a palatable result.
None of this reflects the limitations attending a federal judicial commission, Alexander Hamilton believed that the federal courts would be “the best.expedient which can be devised in any government” because they help “secure a steady, upright, and impartial administration of the laws” that the whole of the American People, not just the conclave of experts, have enacted. The Federalist No. 78, p. 465 (C. Rossiter ed. 1961) (A. Hamilton). Accountable to and representative of the American People, the political branches are composed of members “sufficiently numerous to feel all the passions which actuate a multitude.” The Federalist No. 47, p. 332 (C. Van Doren ed. 1945) (J. Madison), Neither of these traits is true of the experts or, for that matter, of the federal courts, Designed to be “the least dangerous” branch, The Federalist No. 78, p. 465, one without any “political rights,” id., we are empowered to exercise “neither force nor will but
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Since Title II lacks “unmistakably clear” language authorizing disparate-impact liar bility, it does not reach such claims. Atascadero State Hosp.,
I respectfully concur in part and concur in the judgment.
. The Court's statement that "the [National Collegiate Athletic Association ('NCAA') ] does not challenge Hardie's argument that Title II encompasses disparate-impact claims,” Maj. op. at 11, tells only part of the story. True, the NCAA chooses to devote no part of its brief before this Court on that issue. However, the NCAA did raise it below, prevailed on that ground before the district court, and preserved that ground for our consideration. In fact, the NCAA stated; "In light of the NCAA’s decision not to defend the district court’s reasoning, the Court may deem it appropriate to appoint an amicus curiae to do so.” In other words, the NCAA strategically chose to focus on the narrower reasons in its brief. However, amici Pacific Legal Foundation (“PLF”), the Competitive Enterprise Institute ("CEI”), and the Center for Equal Opportunity ("CEO”) have argued most ably that Title II does not authorize disparate-impact liability.
