ENTRY ON MOTION FOR PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION
This сase presents yet another constitutional challenge to a nighttime juvenile curfew law in the State of Indiana. Plaintiffs, Nancy Hodgkins, and Colin and Caroline Hodgkins, on their own behalf and as representatives of all parents and legal guardians of minors who are residents of Marion County, Indiana and all minors *1137 who are residents of Marion County, Indiana, respectively, challenge the constitutionality of Indiana’s new juvenile curfew law enacted earlier this year. They claim the law is unconstitutionally overbroad because it violates minors’ First Amendment rights as it subjects to arrest minors engaged in First Amendment activities. Plaintiffs also claim that the law unlawfully impinges upon the substantive due process rights of parents and legal guardians to raise and control their minor children. Plaintiffs seek a preliminary injunction against Defendants Bart Peterson, in his official capacity as Mayor of the City of Indianapolis, Jack Cottey, in his official capacity as Sheriff of Marion County, and Scott Newman, in his official capacity as Prosecutor of Marion County. The State of Indiana has intervened to defend the constitutionality of the new juvenile curfew law. Plaintiffs seek to enjoin Defendants from enforcing the curfew law. Defendants oppose the motion. Upon considering the motion and the parties’ submissions and having heard oral argument, the court concludes that Indiana’s new curfew law withstands constitutional challenge.
I. FINDINGS OF FACT 1
Indiana has in effect a juvenile curfew law which makes it unlawful for a child fifteen, sixteen or seventeen years of age to be in a public place: between 1 a.m. and 5 a.m. on Saturday or Sunday; after 11 p.m. on Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday or Thursday; or before 5 a.m. on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, or Friday. See Ind.Code § 31-37-3-2. For a child less than fifteen years of age, it is unlawful for such child to be in any public place after 11 p.m. or before 5 a.m. on any day. See Ind.Code § 31-37-3-3. Under Indiana’s curfew law:
(a) It is a defensе to a violation under this chapter that the child was emancipated ... at the time that the child engaged in the prohibited conduct.
(b) It is a defense to a violation under this chapter that the child engaged in the prohibited conduct while:
(1) accompanied by the child’s parent, guardian or custodian;
(2) accompanied by an adult specified by the child’s parent, guardian or custodian;
(3) participating in, going to, or returning from:
(A) lawful employment;
(B) a school sanctioned activity;
(C) a religious event;
(D) an emergency involving the protection of a person or property from an imminent threat of serious bodily injury or substantial damage;
(E) an activity involving the exercise of the child’s rights protected under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution or Article 1, Section 31 of the Constitution of the State of Indiana, or both, such as freedom of speech and the right of assembly; or
(F) an activity conducted by a nonprofit or governmental entity that provides recreation, education, training, or other care under the supervision of one (1) or more adults; or
(4) engaged in interstate or international travel from a location outside of Indiana to another location outside Indiana.
Ind.Code § 31-37-3-3.5. 2 A child under 18 years of age commits a delinquent act if he *1138 or she violates the curfew law, see Ind. Code § 31-37-2-5. An adult commits the crime of contributing to the delinquency of a minor if he or she “knowingly or intentionally encourages, aids, induces, or causes a person under eighteen (18) years of age to commit an act of delinquency (as defined by IC 31-37-1 or IC 31-37-2).” Ind.Code § 35-46-8-1.
Indiana’s new curfew law was enacted in response to this judge’s decision striking down the curfew law, Indiana Code Section 31-37-3-1 (repealed 2001), see
Hodgkins v. Goldsmith,
No. IP 99-1528-C-T/G,
Also in response to this court’s decision in
Hodgkins I,
the City of Indianapolis adopted a juvenile curfew ordinance containing an express exception for First Amendment activities. That ordinance was challenged under the Fourteenth Amendment as an unlawful impingement upon the substantive due process right of parents and legal guardians to raise and control their children without undue government interference, see
Hodgkins v. Peterson,
No. IP00-1410-C-T/G,
Plaintiff Nancy Hodgkins is a Marion County resident. Plaintiffs Colin Hodg-kins and Caroline Hodgkins are two of her minor children. Ms. Hodgkins, on behalf of her minor children, wants them to have the opportunity to participate in activities protected by the First Amendment, but believes that, given the Indiana curfew law, they will run the risk of being arrested if they engage in these activities. Plaintiffs believe that there are other youths who may wish to engage in activities protected by the First Amendment, including religious, free speech, and assembly activities, who will be discouraged from doing so since they are subject to arrest under the amended curfew law even if they are engaging in these activities.
Nancy Hodgkins desires to assert her rights, as a parent, to give her children more privileges and responsibilities as they grow older if she believes that they can handle them. She believes this is part of a parent’s job of preparing a child for adulthood and should involve the parent having the right to determine if his or her child is mature enough to accept the responsibility of being out late, possibly past curfew hours. Nancy Hodgkins believes that a parent has the right to decide how late the child will be out depending on who they are with, what they are doing, and where they are going. She believes that the curfew law deprives parents of the right to allow their children to be in public, with parental permission, after the times *1139 proscribed by the law and indeed makes it a crime, under Indiana Code Section 35-46-1-8, for a parent to allow a child to be out after curfew unless the child is planning to engage in the behavior specified in the defenses to a curfew violation listed in Indiana Code Section 31-37-3-3.5.
Defendant Bart Peterson is the duly elected Mayor of the City of Indianapolis, Indiana. Defendant Jack Cottey is the duly elected Sheriff of Marion County, Indiana, which encompasses the City of Indianapolis. Defendant Scott Newman is the duly elected Prosecutor of Marion County, Indiana.
The evidence supports a finding that crime in Indianapolis and Marion County increases at night and that children are thus most vulnerable to victimization at night. 4 (See Aff. of Jeffrey S. Decker ¶ 14 (“the nocturnal curfew hours are some of the busiest hours for IPD [Indianapolis Police Department] in terms of addressing and dealing with criminal offenses generally, the curfew hours are, in my experience, the most dangerous hours for juveniles to be out ... without adult supervision”); Aff. of Timothy J. Motsinger ¶ 20 (“during the nocturnal [curfew] hours ... young people were the most vulnerable to and at risk of victimization”); Aff. of Richard Wit-mer ¶ 7 (stating that the busiest hours for the Beech Grove Police Department “were between the hours of 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. and, therefore, were potentially dangerous hours for juveniles because of lack of adult supervision”); Aff. of Brian Toepp ¶ 6 (“The community is also at risk due to the fact that those children who are in the community during the ‘curfew’ time ... have a high risk of becoming victims. ...”)).
II. CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
A. PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION
“A preliminary injunction is an extraordinary and drastic remedy, one that should not be granted unless the movant, by a clear showing, carries the burden of persuasion.”
Mazurek v. Armstrong,
The battle in this ease, however, is solely over Plaintiffs’ likelihood of success on the merits. Defendants do not dispute, and the court finds, that Plaintiffs have established the other elements necessary for an injunction to issue. The court, therefore, turns to Plaintiffs’ likelihood of' success on the merits.
*1140 B. FIRST AMENDMENT CHALLENGE
Plaintiffs first claim that the new curfew law is facially overbroad in violation of the First Amendment, applicable to the States through the Fourteenth Amendment,
see Santa Fe Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Doe,
Generally, a party lacks standing to assert the rights of others. “The traditional rule is that a person to whom a statute may constitutionally be applied may not challenge that statute on the ground that it may conceivably be applied unconstitutionally to others in situations not before the Court.”
Los Angeles Police Dep’t v. United Reporting Pub. Corp.,
The doctrine is not “casually employed.”
Los Angeles Police Dep’t,
When deciding a facial over-breadth challenge, “a court’s first task is to determine whether the enactment reaches a substantial amount of constitutionally protected conduct.”
City of Houston, Tex. v. Hill,
When seeking to enjoin the application of a statute as unconstitutional, the moving party must overcome a strong presumption of constitutionality.
See Concrete Pipe & Prods. of Cal., Inc. v. Constr. Laborers Pension Trust for S. Cal.,
1. Is A First Amendment Exception Required?
Before considering Plaintiffs’ challengе, the court needs to address a side distraction presented by Defendants. They maintain that Indiana’s curfew law need not contain an express exception or defense for First Amendment activities. Thus, they ask the court to reconsider its holding in
Hodgkins I.
See
Hodgkins I,
The State advances additional arguments for its position that no First Amendment activities exception is required of a juvenile curfew law that warrant consideration. The State first argues that the decision in
Gresham v. Peterson,
The State next contends that the cases upholding juvenile curfew laws do not explicitly hold that the Constitution demands a First Amendment activity exception. As this court has observed, “every reported federal case in which a curfew law has been upheld against constitutional challenge has involved a curfew law with ... an explicit First Amendment exception.”
Hodgkins I,
Arcara v. Cloud Books, Inc.,
The State contends that
Hutchins
does not hold that a First Amendment exception is necessary to avoid a disproportionate burden on those engaged in First Amendment activities. Following
Arcara
and having decided the curfew ordinance did not regulate expressive conduct, the
Hutchins
court concluded that the curfew was subject to First Amendment scrutiny only if it imposed a disproportionate burden on those engaged in First Amendment activity.
Hutchins, 188 F.3d
at 548 (citing
Arcara,
The State argues that the decisions in
Nunez, Johnson v. City of Opelousas,
The Johnson and Waters decisions are unpersuasive, the State argues, because they focus on whether the curfew impinged First Amendment activity at all and do not take into account the government’s interest in protecting minors. According to the State, the Waters court also erred because it found that the number of “innocent juveniles” exceeded the number of juveniles engaged in nocturnal crime. The Johnson and Waters courts did not apply the time, place and manner analysis, 8 but their conclusions that the curfew burdened minors’ First Amendment rights is supported by sound reasoning and con *1144 sistent with the other decisions striking down curfew laws lacking a First Amendment activity exception or defense. It is these conclusions and reasoning upon which this court relies rather than any failure to consider the government’s interest in protecting minors. Thus, the State fails to persuade the court that these two cases should not be followed.
Defendants have not convinced the court that it has erred in its conclusion that a juvenile curfew law needs a First Amendment activity exception, except to the extent that this entry clarifies that the protection afforded First Amendment rights need not be phrased as an exception. Rather, as the undersigned concludes herein, First Amendment rights may be adequately protected by a First Amendment activity defense. The court, therefore, declines Defendants’ invitation to reconsider the holding in Hodgkins I.
2. Does The First Amendment Invalidate This Statute?
Now the court addresses the Plaintiffs’ challenge to the new statute. As stated in
Hodgkins I,
the new curfew law is a time, place or manner restriction on the minors’ First Amendment rights in public fora. Under
Perry Education
As
sociation v. Perry Local Educators’
Association,
The government has a compelling interest in providing for the safety and well-being of its children and combating juvenile crime.
See generally
Ind.Code § 31-10-2-1 (listing the general purposes of Indiana’s family law statutes);
Sable Communications v. FCC,
In
Ward v. Rock Against Racism,
the Supreme Court held that the “narrow tailoring” requirement is satisfied “so long as the ... regulation promotes a substantial government interest that would be achieved less effectively absent the regulation.”
*1145 this standard does not mean that a time, place, or manner regulation may burden substantially more speech than is necessary to further the government’s legitimate interests. Government may not regulate expression in such a manner that a substantial portion of the burden on speech does not serve to advance its goals.
Ward,
Plaintiffs claim the new curfew law burdens the minors’ speech and expression because a child may be arrested even if he or she is participating in a First Amendment activity. This is so, they say, because under the new law participation in a First Amendment activity is an affirmative defense, 9 and an arresting officer need not consider affirmative defenses in determining probable cause to arrest. According to Plaintiffs, this burdens even more First Amendment rights than the former version of the law struck down by this court. The City Defendants respond that a probable cause determination, whether under federal or state law, must include consideration of affirmative defenses based on a constitutional right.
“Probable cause” to make an arrest means the “facts and circumstances within the officer’s knowledge that are sufficient to warrant a prudent person, or one of reasonable caution, in believing, in the circumstances shown, that the suspect has committed, is committing, or is about to commit an offense.”
Michigan v. DeFillippo,
Plaintiffs argue that under the new curfew law a police officer has probable cause to arrest a minor even if that minor is or was participating in a legitimate First Amendment activity. They maintain that in determining probable cause under the new curfew law, an officer need only decide whether a child is under the age of 18 and in public during the prescribed time period but need not consider any affirmative defenses. In support, Plaintiffs rely on a number of cases for the general rule that in determining probable cause an arresting officer does not have to consider the validity of any defense, see
Baker v. McCollan,
But even Plaintiffs concede that an exception to the general rule exists when the arresting officer actually has knowledge of facts and circumstances conclusively establishing an affirmative defense. In
Estate of Dietrich v. Burrows,
*1147
Thus,
Dietrich
holds that in determining whether probable cause to arrest exists, a police officer must consider all facts and circumstances within that officer’s knowledge, including facts and circumstances conclusively establishing a statutory affirmative defense. See also
Gardenhire v. Schubert,
Nothing in the cases relied upon by Plaintiffs conflicts with
Dietrich’s
holding. In
Baker v. McCollan
the Supreme Court said: “we do not think a sheriff executing an arrest warrant is required by the Constitution to investigate independently every claim of innocence, whether the claim is based on mistaken identity or a defense such as lack of requisite intent.”
*1148
Plaintiffs acknowledge that the First Amendment exception in two reported curfew cases is referred to as a “defense,” see
Hutchins v. District of Columbia,
An officer need not rule out the First Amendment activity defense in every case. However, both federal and state law require an arresting officer to consider the totality of the circumstances in determining whether probable cause exists to make an arrest.
See, e.g., Rucker,
To be sure, an officer observing a child who appears to be under the age of 18 out walking during curfew hours does not have to investigate the child’s assertion that he is returning from or going to a religious or political activity. So, children who appear to be under the age of 18 who are out during curfew hours walking to the Governor’s residence to protest an early morning execution might be arrested. This is because the officer might have to investigate whether the children are in fact walking to the Governor’s residence to the protest, and the officer is not required to undertake such an investigation in determining probable cause.
13
But this does not mean that the curfew law is facially unconstitutional. A statute is not facially invalid “merely because it is possible to conceive of a single impermissible application,”
Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
In arguing that the threat of arrest under the new curfew law chills minors from participating in First Amendment activities and chills parents’ willingness to allow such participation, Plaintiffs rely on
City of Houston, Tex. v. Hill,
Plaintiffs have presented no evidence to show that the threat of arrest for minors exercising First Amendment rights during curfew hours is a realistic threat. Though the new curfew law had been in effect for several months at the time of the preliminary injunction hearing, Plaintiffs offered no evidence that any minors participating in First Amendment activities had been arrested for curfew violations or had been threatened with arrest by a police officer for such activities. Given that their challenge is facial in nature, the absence of proof on this is not surprising. But they also have failed to show that the only fair interpretation of that language results in
*1150
such a threat. Thus, Plaintiffs have not shown that the new curfew law burdens a substantial amount of minors’ First Amendment conduct by subjecting them to arrest when they are out during curfew hours. The court agrees with
Hutchins
that the First Amendment defense “by definition provides full protection,”
Hutchins v. District of Columbia,
However, even assuming that the new curfew law burdens some of minors’ First Amendment conduct, • Plaintiffs have not demonstrated that a substantial portion of that burden fails to serve to advance the government’s legitimate interests. Plaintiffs seem to suggest that Defendants have offered no evidence that the governmental interests are advanced by the curfew law. But in contrast with
Hodgkins I,
Defendants herein have offered such evidence, namely the evidence incorporated from
Hodgkins II.
That evidence supports a finding that crime in general increases during the night. In
Qutb v. Strauss,
Plaintiffs contend that even if the curfew law is narrowly tailored to serve the government’s interests, it is unconstitutional because it does not leave open ample alternative channels of communication. This is so, they claim, since the law leaves no public fora in which a minor can exercise First Amendment rights during curfew hours without running the risk of being arrested and forced to prove his or her affirmative defenses at trial. “An adequate alternative does not have to be the speaker’s first or best choice, or one that provides the same audience or impact for the speech.”
Gresham,
The court finds that the new curfew law satisfies the requirement that there be ample alternative channels for communication. First, the curfew law does not foreclose all public fora to chil
*1151
dren during curfew hours. Quite the contrary. Given the First Amendment activity defense and religious events defense, minors may engage in protected communication in public during curfew hours.
14
In addition, minors may exercise their First Amendment rights in public during curfew hours provided they are accompanied by a parent, guardian or custodian, or an adult specified by a parent, guardian or custodian. Furthermore, minors may engage in protected expression from within the confines of their homes whether through, for example, the internet or the telephone. Moreover, the curfew leaves unaffected all forms of communication during non-curfew hours. Thus, minors of all ages may engage in protected expression in a public place at any time before 11 p.m. and after 5 a.m. For minors ages 15, 16 and 17, they also may engage in protected expression in a public place after 11 p.m. on Friday and Saturday and until 1 a.m. on Saturday and Sunday. The curfew law may not provide as many alternatives as did the panhandling ordinance upheld in
Gresham, see
The court finds that Indiana’s new curfew law does not reach a substantial amount of minors’ conduct protected by the First Amendment. Any burden on minors’ First Amendment rights created by the threat of arrest under the new curfew law is incidental. Further, the new curfew law is narrowly tailored to serve the State’s significant interests and leaves open ample alternative channels of communication. Accordingly, the court concludes that Plaintiffs have not shown some likelihood of success on the merits of their claim that Indiana’s new curfew law violates minors’ First Amendment rights.
C. FOURTEENTH AMENDMENT CHALLENGE 15
Plaintiffs claim the curfew law violates the fundamental rights of parents and legal guardians to raise and control their children without undue government interference. The parties have agreed to incorporate by reference their arguments made in support of and against the motion for preliminary injunction in Hodgkins II. Defendants contend that the new curfew is even less susceptible to a parental rights challenge because it contains several additional defenses that permit parents to exercise their rights to allow their children to be in public during curfew hours. 16
*1152
The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment provides that no State shall “deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” This “includes a substantive component that provides heightened protection against government interference with certain fundamental rights and liberty interests.”
Troxel v. Granville,
The
Troxel
Court relied on “extensive precedent,” including
Meyer v. Nebraska,
Two years later, in
Pierce,
the Supreme Court held unconstitutional a state statute compelling the attendance of children between 8 and 16 years of age at public schools.
See Pierce,
In upholding a child labor law prohibiting minors from selling magazines in streets or public places, the Supreme Court in
Prince
again recognized that parents have a right to direct the upbringing of their children.
See Prince,
Acting to guard the general interest in youth’s well being, the state as parens patriae may restrict the parent’s control by requiring school attendance, regulating or prohibiting the child’s labor, and in many other ways. Its authority is not nullified merely because the parent grounds his claim to control the child’s course of conduct on religion or conscience.
Prince,
In
Yoder,
the Supreme Court held that a statute requiring children to attend school until the age of sixteen was unconstitutional as applied to the Amish.
See Yoder,
Other Supreme Court decisions have recognized that certain parental rights are fundamental liberty interests, though the holdings were not based on parental rights.
See, e.g., Washington v. Glucksberg,
Given such precedent, the
Troxel
Court concluded: “[I]t cannot now be doubted that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects the fundamental right of parents to make decisions concerning the care, custody, and control of their children.”
Troxel,
The
Troxel
plurality, however, evoked disagreement from the other Justices regarding the scope of fundamental parental rights. Justice Souter recognized that parental rights “in the nurture, upbringing, companionship, care, and custody of children are generally protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.”
See Troxel,
Only three holdings of this Court rest in whole or in part upon a substantive constitutional right of parents to direct the upbringing of their children — two of them from an era rich in substantive due process holdings that have since been repudiated, [citing Meyer v. Nebraska,262 U.S. 390 ,43 S.Ct. 625 ,67 L.Ed. 1042 (1923), Pierce v. Society of Sisters,268 U.S. 510 ,45 S.Ct. 571 ,69 L.Ed. 1070 (1925), and Wisconsin v. Yoder,406 U.S. 205 ,92 S.Ct. 1526 ,32 L.Ed.2d 15 (1972) ]. The sheer diversity of today’s opinions persuades me that the theory of unenumerated parental rights underlying these three cases has small claim to stare decisis protection.... While I would not now overrule those earlier cases (that has not been urged), neither would I extend the theory upon which they rested to this new context.
Troxel,
Justice Scalia predicted that by embracing parental rights, the Supreme Court “will be ushering in a new regime of judicially prescribed, and federally prescribed, family law. I have no reason to believe that federal judges will be better at this than state
legislatures....” Id.
at 93,
These Justices’ concern over the breadth of the fundamental parental rights implied by the
Troxel
plurality opinion has support in Supreme Court precedent. As the Court noted less than ten years ago, “the Court has always been reluctant to expand the concept of substantive due process because guideposts for responsible decision-making in this unchartered area are scarce and open-ended.”
Collins v. Harker Heights,
As the court determined in
Hodgkins II, Flores, Glucksberg
and
Bowers
exemplify the precision with which the Supreme Court has described the asserted right when a substantive due process claim is raised. In
Glucksberg,
the Court rejected the following formulations of the asserted right: “a liberty interest in determining the time and manner of one’s death,” the “right to die,” the liberty “to choose how to die,” the “right to control of one’s final days,” “the right to choose a humane, dignified death,” and “the liberty to shape death.”
Glucksberg,
“It is important ... to focus on the allegations in the complaint to determine how [the plaintiffs] describe[ ] the constitutional right at stake.... ”
Collins,
Though the Supreme Court has not examined parental rights in the context of a nocturnal juvenile curfew law, decisions from several lower federal courts have.
See Hutchins v. District of Columbia,
The Ninth and Fifth Circuits along with two district courts have held that curfew laws implicated parents’ fundamental due process rights.
See Nunez,
*1158
Subsequently, in
Nunez,
the Ninth Circuit relied upon
Ginsberg v. New York,
The
Bykofsky
court recognized that “[t]he Constitution protects the right of parents to direct their children’s upbringing and family autonomy against state interference.”
Bykofsky,
In contrast with
Bykofsky,
the district court in
McCollester
held that the curfew ordinance at issue impermissibly impinged the parents’ liberty and privacy interests in family and childbearing.
See McCollester,
The District of Columbia Circuit and the Fourth Circuit along with a district court, on the other hand, have held that curfew laws did not implicate a parent’s substantive due process rights.
See Hutchins,
The other seven judges on the court were of the opinion that the curfew did implicate the parents’ substantive due process rights.
See Hutchins,
In
Schleifer,
the plaintiffs claimed that a city curfew ordinance violated the parents’ constitutional rights to direct their children’s upbringing without undue government interference, including the right to decide whether to allow their children to engage in activities during curfew hours.
See Schleifer,
litigants could simply artfully plead violations of parental rights to avoid the Supreme Court’s determination that children do not possess all the freedoms of adults. Arguments based on minors’ rights to engage in particular conduct would be routinely recast as arguments based on parents’ rights to allow their children to engage in precisely the same conduct.
Id. at 852. Furthermore, the court stated that several of the ordinance’s exceptions accommodated the parents’ rights, including the accompaniment and errand exceptions. See id. at 853. It concluded, based on the limited scope of the curfew and its exceptions, that the ordinance satisfied even strict scrutiny. See id. at 851, 853.
One judge dissented from the
Schleifer
majority, emphasizing the Supreme Court’s “deference to the traditional authority of parents over the activities of their children.”
Schleifer,
The
Ramos
court held that the parents’ liberty interests were not unconstitutionally infringed by the curfew ordinance. The court first observed that the Supreme Court had yet to clearly definе the limits of a state’s ability to interfere with the parents’ rights to raise their children as they see fit.
See Ramos,
As noted, none of the federal decisions involving parental rights in the curfew context were decided with the benefit of the opinions in
Troxel v. Granville,
First and foremost, the nature of the parental rights that the Supreme Court has recognized as fundamental is quite important. The parental right asserted in
Troxel
was the mother’s right to control the persons with whom her children associated and consequently, the persons who would have influence over them. Subsumed within that right is the right to limit visitation with her children by others.
See Troxel,
Meyer’s repeatedly recognized right of upbringing would be a sham if it failed to encompass the right to be free of’ judicially compelled visitation by “any party” at “any time” a judge believed he “could make a ‘better’ decision” than the objecting parent had done. The strength of a parent’s interest in controlling a child’s associates is as obvious as the influence of personal associations on the development of the child’s social and moral character. Whether for good or for ill, adults not only influence but may indoctrinate children, and a choice about a child’s social companions is not essentially different from the designation of the adults who will influence the child in school.
Troxel,
The parental rights asserted in the instant case and the parental rights recognized as fundamental by the Supreme Court are qualitatively different. The fundamental parental rights recognized in
Meyer
(education),
Pierce
(education and religion),
Prince
(religion),
Yoder
(education and religion) and
Troxel
(associations) are of a higher quality than that claimed by Plaintiff in the instant case. So, too, are the parental rights recognized as fundamental in a host of other Supreme Court cases.
See, e.g., M.L.B. v. S.L.J.,
Further support for the conclusion that parents have no fundamental right to allow their minor children to be in public places with parental permission during curfew hours may be found in the Supreme Court’s decision of
Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey, 505
U.S. 833,
Our law affords constitutional protection to personal decisions relating to marriage, procreation, contraception, family relationships, child rearing, and education. Carey v. Population Services International, [431 U.S. 678 ], 685,97 S.Ct. at 2016 [1977].... Our precedents “have respected the private realm of family life which the state cannot enter.” Prince v. Massachusetts,321 U.S. 158 , 166,64 S.Ct. 438 , 442,88 L.Ed. 645 (1944). These matters, involving the most intimate and personal choices a person may make in a lifetime, choices central to personal dignity and autonomy, are central to the liberty protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. At the heart of liberty is the right to define one’s own concept of existence, of meaning, of the universe, and of the mystery of human life. Beliefs about these matters could not define the attributes of personhood were they formed under compulsion of the State.
Id.
at 851,
Plaintiff still has not persuaded the court that the decision of a parent whether to allow his or her minor child to be in a public place during curfew hours is an intimate family matter that fundamentally affects a person.
See Hutchins,
Moreover, recognition of a fundamental right in the instant case would be contrary to common sense and sound judgment. To be sure, a limitation of fundamental parental rights solely to the parents’ home and a child’s formal education is much too restrictive. On this point the undersigned disagrees with the
Hutchins
plurality. But the expansive definition of fundamental parental rights sought by Plaintiffs fails to allow sufficient consideration for the government’s (sometimes competing) interest in the welfare of its children. Further, recognition of a fundamental right in this context would embroil the federal courts in family law and family matters traditionally left to the states. And, as the
Schleifer
court noted, recognition of a fundamental parental right in this context would create a significant risk of artful pleading in the future. It would be far too easy for plaintiffs to assert “parental rights” in order to elevate the rights of children to the same status of those of adults,
28
yet children’s constitutional rights are not always coextensive with those of adults,
see, e.g., Vernonia Sch. Dist. 47J v. Acton,
The court concludes that the right of a parent to allow his or her minor children to be in public with parental permission during curfew hours is not a fundamental right. That decision made, the court must *1164 determine what level of judicial scrutiny is the most appropriate in this case.
When neither a fundamental right nor a suspect class is involved, courts generally review legislation with the lowest level of judicial scrutiny.
29
Thus, a law is upheld if it is rationally related to a legitimate government interest.
See, e.g., Vacco v. Quill,
But there is good reason to doubt that the lowest level of review is the most appropriate in the context of a juvenile curfew law. The rationale for a heightened level of review is that the parental right at stake, though not fundamental, is indeed significant. Parents, guardians, the children and the government all have important interests at stake: The children have a liberty interest, and the government has an interest in the welfare of its children. A heightened level of review of intermediate scrutiny balances the often competing interests of parents, their children, and the government.
See Hutchins,
A law survives intermediate scrutiny if it is “substantially related” to an “important” government interest.
See Clark v. Jeter,
The court concludes that Plaintiff has not made a clear showing at this stage that the new curfew law fails to survive review at the intermediate level of scrutiny. The curfew law seems to be substantially related to the government’s interests of protecting its youth from victimization and protecting others from crimes committed by youth during curfew hours. These interests are indeed important government interests; Plаintiffs have not argued otherwise. The evidence supports a finding that crime increases at night and that minors therefore are most vulnerable to victimization at night. (See Aff. of Jeffrey S. Decker ¶ 14 (“the nocturnal curfew hours are some of the busiest hours for IPD [Indianapolis Police Department] in terms of addressing and dealing with criminal of *1165 fenses generally, the curfew hours are, in my experience, the most dangerous hours for juveniles to be out ... without adult supervision”); Aff. of Timothy J. Motsinger ¶ 20 (“during the nocturnal [curfew] hours ... young people were the most vulnerable to and at risk of victimization”); Aff. of Richard Witmer ¶ 7 (stating that the busiest hours for the Beech Grove Police Department “were between the hours of 6 p.m. to 6 a.m. and, therefore, were potentially dangerous hours for juveniles because of lack of adult supervision”); Aff. of Brian Toepp ¶ 6 (“The community is also at risk due to the fact that those children who are in the community during the ‘curfew’ time ... have a high risk of becoming victims.... ”)). Plaintiffs argue, correctly, that the evidence does not directly establish that juvenile crime rates increase at night or whether only the overall crime rates increase at night. 30 Such a level of specificity, however, is not necessary at this preliminary injunction stage. One could reasonably infer that juvenile crime rates, like the overall crime rates, increase at night. But even if juvenile crime rates don’t increase at night, it seems obvious that because crime generally increases at night, juveniles, like all other persons, are more likely to be victimized during the night.
Some parents, like Ms. Hodgkins, may disagree that the law empowers them to set and enforce limits on their children’s nighttime and early morning activities. But the law need not be substantially related to each and every purpose it is intended to serve. It is enough that the law is substantially related to some important government interest.
See, e.g., Clark,
Plaintiff has urged the court to apply the strictest level of scrutiny. They rely on supplemental authority from the Florida Supreme Court, a court which has received much national attention in the last year. In
T.M. v. State,
But even if the strict scrutiny were applied, the court believes that the curfew law satisfies even this standard. Under strict scrutiny, the law can be upheld only if it is narrowly tailored to serve a compelling government interest.
See Reno v. Flores,
The curfew is narrow in scope. It prohibits children under fifteen from being in a public place after 11:00 p.m. or before 5:00 a.m. any day of the week. As for children aged fifteen through seventeen, it prohibits them from being in a public place between 1:00 a.m. and 5:00 a.m. on Saturday or Sunday, after 11:00 p.m. on Sunday through Thursday, and before 5:00 a.m. on Monday through Friday. The curfew affects fewer hours at night than the curfew upheld under strict scrutiny in
Qutb v. Strauss,
Careful consideration leads this court to the conclusion that Indiana’s new curfew law withstands Ms. Hodgkins’ Fourteenth Amendment challenge. Parents do not have a fundamental right to allow their minor children to be in public during curfew hours, and the curfew law appears to be substantially related to the government’s interests of protecting its youth from victimization, protecting others from crimes committed by youth during curfew hours, and enhancing parent-child relationships.
*1167 III. CONCLUSION
Plaintiffs have not made a clear showing of some likelihood of success on the merits of their claim that Indiana’s new juvenile curfew is unconstitutionally overbroad and facially invalid in that it violates minors’ First Amendment rights. Nor have they clearly shown some likelihood of success on the merits of their claim that the curfew law unlawfully impinges upon the substantive due process rights of parents and legal guardians to raise and control their minor children. Accordingly, Plaintiffs’ motion for a preliminary injunction must be, and hereby is, DENIED.
Notes
. Any Finding of Fact more appropriately considered a Conclusion of Law should be so construed, and vice versa; the labels given findings and conclusions are not controlling.
. As Plaintiffs note, there is some overlap between subdivisions (3)(C) and (3)(E), see U.S. Const, amd. I.
. The former curfew law provided that the statute did not apply to a child who is "(1) accompanied by the child's parent, guardian, or custodian; (2) accompanied by an adult specified by the child's parent, guardian, or custodian; or (3) participating in, going to, or returning from: (A) lawful employment; (B) a school sanctioned activity; or (C) a religious event.” Ind.Code § 31-37-3-1.
. This evidence was presented in Hodgkins II and is incorporated by reference without any objection from Plaintiffs.
. In any event, the court need not reconsider its holding in Hodgkins I as the new curfew law does contain a First Amendment activities defense. Of course, the court would need to reconsider Hodgkins I were it to find that the curfew law unlawfully burdened minors’ First Amendment rights.
. Arcara
held that enforcement of a state statute authorizing closure of premises used as a place for prostitution and lewdness against a bookstore did not implicate the First Amendment.
. The State’s argument that being in public late at night is not integral to all First Amendment activity of minors (see Resp. Of Intervenor State Pis.’ Mot. Prelim. Inj. at 9) concerns the alternate channels of communication prong of the time, place and manner analysis, rather than whether a curfew ordinance should be scrutinized under the First Amendment in the first place.
. The
Waters
court expressly states that the curfew law is not narrowly drawn, however.
See Waters,
. The statute’s language includes 'participating in, going to, or returning from” a First Amendment activity, but in the interests of brevity the court uses the terms "participation” and "participating” as short hand to cover all of these terms.
. The City Defendants err in attempting to distinguish Humphrey by suggesting that an officer must consider the First Amendment activity affirmative defense because of its constitutional roots. It is not whether the defense is rooted in the constitution or statute that matters, but rather, whether the facts and circumstances giving rise to the defense are known to the arresting officer. It would be unreasonable to expect law enforcement officers to differentiate between defenses rooted in a constitution and other defenses.
.Under the curfew: "If, after questioning an apparent offender to determine his age and reason for being in a public place, a police officer reasonably believes that an оffense has occurred under the curfew law and that no defense exists, the minor will be detained by the police...." Id.
. Under the ordinance, an officer could make an arrest only if he or she reasonably believed that the person violated the ordinance and that no defenses applied. Id.
. Of course, nothing prevents the officer from investigating the child's assertion of the First Amendment activity defense prior to making an arrest for a curfew violation.
. The First Amendment activity defense and parental accompaniment defense also saves the curfew law from the concerns expressed in
American Amusement Machine Ass'n v. Kendrick,
. Pursuant to the parties' stipulation, they have incorporated by reference and repeat the arguments made in the briefs on this issue filed in Hodgkins II.
.These are an emergency involving the protection of a person or property from an imminent threat of serious bodily injury or substantial damage; an activity protected under the First Amendment or Article 1, Section 31 of the Constitution of the State of Indiana, or both; a nonprofit or governmental entity activity providing recreation, education, training, or other care under the supervision of an adult; or interstate or international travel. See Ind.Code § 31-37-3-3.5.
. Similarly, in
Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Health,
.Johnson
has little bearing on the issues before this court because the curfew ordinance was held to violate the constitutional rights of minors due to its over breadth.
See Johnson,
. The ordinance challenged in Qutb applied to persons under 17 and contained the following exceptions: (1) minors accompanied by parent or guardian; (2) minors on an errand for a parent or guardian; (3) minors in motor vehicles traveling to or from a place of employment or involved in employment related activities; (4) minors attending school, religious or civic organization functions or general exercise of First Amendment speech and associational rights; (5) minors engaged in interstate travel; (6) minors on the sidewalk in front of the minor’s home or that of a neighbor; and (7) in case of an emergency. See id. at 490.
. One judge concurred in the result, but expressed no view on the majority’s reasoning. See id. at 496 (King, J., concurring in result).
. The ordinance at issue in
Nunez
applied to minors under the age of 18 but did not apply when the minor was (1) accompanied by a parent, guardian, or other adult having the care and custody of the minor; (2) on an emergency errand directed by parent, guardian, or other adult having the care and custody of the minor; (3) returning directly home from a meeting, entertainment or recreational activity directed, supervised, or sponsored by local educational authorities; or (4) engaged in legitimate employment.
See Nunez,
. The Bykofsky curfew ordinance, which applied to minors under the age of 18, contained the following exceptions: "(a) The minor is accompanied by a parent (defined to include a legal guardian, a person who stands in loco parentis, or a person to whom legal custody has been given by court order); (b) The minor is accompanied by an adult authorized by the parent to take the parent's place in accompanying the minоr for a designated period of time and specific purpose within a specified area; (c) The minor is exercising first amendment rights protected by the Constitution, such as free exercise of religion, freedom of speech, and the right of assembly ...; (d) In a case of reasonable necessity but only after the minor's parent has communicated to the Middle town police station personnel ‘the facts establishing such reasonable necessity ...; (e) The minor is on the sidewalk of his residence, or on the sidewalk of either next-door neighbor, so long as the neighbor does not object to the minor's presence on his sidewalk; (f) The minor is returning home by a direct route from, and within thirty minutes of the termination of, a school activity or an activity of a religious or other voluntary association, provided prior notice of said activity and the place and probable time of termination has been given in writing to the Chief of Police or the officer assigned by him on duty at the police station; (g) The minor has been authorized, by special permit obtained from the Mayor, to be on the streets during the curfew hours for normal or necessary nighttime activities inadequately provided for by other exceptions in the ordinance; (h) The minor is a member of a group of minors permitted by a 'regulation' issued by the May- or to be on the streets during the curfew hours for normal or necessary nighttime activities inadequately provided for by other exceptions in the ordinance, there being too many persons involved for use of the individualized permit procedure of exception (g) above; (i) The minor carries a certified card of employment; (j) The minor is in a motor vehicle with parental consent for normal travel, with interstate travel through Middletown excepted in all cases from the curfew; (k) A minor is seventeen years of age and is except *1159 ed from the curfew by ‘formal rule' promulgated by the Mayor excepting designated minors, minors in a defined group or area, or all minors seventeen years of age.” Id. at 1246-47.
. The ordinance in
McCollester
prohibited juveniles under 16 from being on public streets or any public place from 10 p.m. until 5 a.m. The ordinance excepted juveniles: (1) accompanied by a parent, legal guardian, or person over 18 authorized by the parent or guardian; (2) in transit to or from employment; (3) in transit between 10 p.m. and midnight to or from a restaurant, library, movie theater, store, or other place of public accommodation; and (4) in transit between 10 p.m. and midnight to or from a church, meeting hall, school, courthouse, or other place of public worship or assembly.
See McCollester,
. The curfew considered in
Hutchins
contained eight defenses which were that the minor was: (1) accompanied by a parent, guardian, or adult authorized by the parent to be a caretaker for the minor; (2) on an errand for the parent, guardian or authorized caretaker; (3) in a vehicle involved in interstate commerce; (4) engaged in employment activity; (5) involved in an emergency; (6) on the sidewalk abutting the minor’s residence or next-door-neighbor’s residence, provided the neighbor had not complained to police; (7) in attendance at an official school, religious, or other recreational activity sponsored by the District of Columbia, a civic organization, or other similar entity taking responsibility for the minor; and (8) exercising First Amendment rights. Travel to and from such activities recognized as defenses to the curfew also was included in the defenses.
See Hutchins,
. The ordinance considered by the
Schleifer
court prohibited persons under seventeen from remaining in a public place, motor vehicle, or establishment during curfew hours. It contained eight exceptions: (1) parental accompaniment; (2) parental errand; (3) employment; (4) attendance at supervised activities sponsored by schоol, civic, religious, or other public organizations; (5) interstate travel; (6) sidewalks abutting the minor's parents’ residence; (7) emergencies; and (8) exercise of First Amendment rights.
See
. The ordinance, which was applicable to minors under 18 years of age, also excepted minors engaged in specific business or activity directed or permitted by a parent, guardian, or other adult having the care and custody of the minor; minors engaged in legitimate employment; and minors exercising First Amendment rights.
Ramos,
. As this court acknowledged in Hodgkins II, the mere fact that the Supreme Court has not yet decided whether parents have a fundamental right to allow their minor children to be in public places during curfew hours does not by itself constrain this court from doing so. The undersigned, however, does not believe that, if faced with such a claim, the Supreme Court would recognize the claimed right as a fundamental right.
. For example, it could be argued that a parent has the right to determine the age at which his or her child may smoke, consume alcohol, drive a motor vehicle or quit school. The government clearly has the right to regulate the ages at which children may conduct these types of activities.
. Age is not a suspect class.
See Kimel v. Fla. Bd. of Regents,
. This same criticism also applies to the evidence regarding sexually transmitted diseases ("STDs”). The affidavit does not state that youth are more likely to contract STDs during curfew hours. But common sense suggests that they are.
. Parents may allow their children to be in public if accompanied by them; if the children are participating in, going to, or returning from lawful employment, school sanctioned activities, religious events, emergencies, First Amendment activities, or nonprofit or governmental activities providing recreation, education, training, or other care under the supervision of an adult; or if the child is engaged in interstate or international travel from a location outside of Indiana to another location outside Indiana.
