MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
Given the complexity of this case and for the reader’s convenience, this opinion is prefaced with the following table of contents.
*1085 I. INTRODUCTION........................................................1086
II. JURISDICTION AND VENUE............................................1088
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW................................................1088
IV. BACKGROUND.........................................................1090
A. Ratification of Amendment No. 744....................................1090
B. Parties .............................................................1090
C. Sheriff Warren’s Rules and Regulations Governing Bingo in Macon County............................................................1093
1. Original Rules (December 2003) ...................................1093
2. First Amended Rules (June 2004)..................................1097
3. Second Amended Rules (January 2005).............................1098
4. VictoryLand’s Electronic Bingo Licenses...........................1100
5. VictoryLand’s and the Charities’ Income...........................1102
6. Lucky Palace’s Pursuit of Class B Bingo Operations in Macon County........................................................1103
7. This Lawsuit (December 2006).....................................1106
8. Third Amended Rules (December 2008).............................1107
V. DISCUSSION............................................................1108
A. RICO (Counts I and II) ..............................................1108
1. § 1962(c) — Count I...............................................1108
a. Bribery: Alabama Code § 13A-10-61(a)........................1109
i. Nature of the Theory.....................................1109
ii. Grounds for Summary Judgment..........................1110
iii. Thing of Value, Pecuniary Benefit, and Corrupt Influence.............................................1110
iv. Alabama Bribery Law....................................1112
v. Application .............................................1115
b. Honest Services Mail and Wire Fraud: § 1962(c)................1119
i. Nature of the Theory.....................................1119
ii. Initial Observation: Skilling .............................1120
iii. Grounds for Summary Judgment..........................1122
iv. § 1964(c): RICO Standing................................1123
a. Injury to Business of Property........................1123
b. Proximate Cause ....................................1125
2. § 1962(d) — Count II..............................................1134
B. Equal Protection (Counts III and IV)..................................1134
1. Vice Activities...................................................1136
2. Facial Challenges to the Second Amended Rules (The First Category)......................................................1137
a. Rational Basis Review........................................1137
b. Existing Facility Requirement................................1140
c. Numerical Licensing Requirements............................1145
d. Plaintiffs’ Arguments Against Rational Basis Review...........1150
3. Disparate Impact (Second Category)...............................1153
4. Unequal Administration of a Facially Neutral Statute (Third Category)......................................................1155
a. Nature of the Theory.........................................1155
b. Analysis......................................................1156
i. Intentional Discrimination...............................1156
(a) E & T Realty and Olech..............................1156
(b) Analysis.............................................1159
ii. Similarly Situated.......................................1162
c. Conclusion ..................................................1167
5. § 1983 Conspiracy to Deny Equal Protection........................1167
a. Defendants’ Summary Judgment Motion.......................1167
*1086 b. Plaintiffs’ Summary Judgment Motion.........................1168
C. Issues Particular to Sheriff Warren’s Summary Judgment Motion........1168
1. Absolute Legislative Immunity....................................1168
2. Qualified Immunity..............................................1170
3. Article III Standing..............................................1170
4. Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies............................1173
5. Equal Protection Claims and Statute of Limitations: RG Apartments and Greater White Church...........................1173
a. Count III....................................................1174
b. Count IY....................................................1176
D. State Law Claims Against Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand ..............1177
1. Tortious Interference with Contractual or Business Relationships (Count V)......................................................1178
a. Knowledge (Element Two)....................................1178
i. Plaintiffs’ Arguments....................................1178
ii. Defendants’ Arguments..................................1179
iii. Analysis................................................1180
b. Intentional Interference (Element Four).......................1182
c. Summary....................................................1185
2. Tortious Interference with Prospective Business Relationships (Count VI).....................................................1185
3. Statute of Limitations............................................1188
4. Summary........................................................1190
VI. CONCLUSION ..........................................................1190
VII. ORDER.................................................................1192
I. INTRODUCTION
Before 1983, Macon County, Alabama, was primarily known as the home of historic Tuskegee Institute, now Tuskegee University, and its famous founder and first president, Dr. Booker T. Washington. The quiet hamlet began to awaken in 1983 when parimutuel gambling came to Macon County in the form of VictoryLand greyhound racing. Officially named Macon County Greyhound Park, Inc., Victory-Land was and still is run by its president and majority shareholder, Milton McGregor.
In 2003, with dog racing having run its course, so to speak, the Alabama legislature proposed a constitutional amendment allowing “charitable” bingo in Macon County, and a majority of the qualified Macon County voters favored the amendment. Lest the reader deduce that Alabama requires a constitutional amendment for mere games of pleasure such as, say, Monopoly® or canasta, what the Alabama legislature had in mind was charitable bingo gambling. And what others had in mind was electronic bingo gambling, though the word “electronic” does not appear in the amendment.
The constitutional amendment charged the sheriff of Macon County with writing the regulations and with enforcing them. 1 The word “electronic” surfaced in the sheriffs regulations governing bingo in Macon County. The regulations were written and adopted within thirty-one days of the passage of the constitutional amendment, and within thirteen days after that, charitable electronic bingo was licensed by Sheriff Warren at VictoryLand. (According to the regulations, charities have to be licensed first and then contract, if they wish, with an operator of electronic bingo gaming. VictoryLand is a for-profit *1087 operator of charitable electronic bingo, operating under an operator’s license, for nonprofit organizations that have bingo licenses. The distinction between the operator’s license and the charity bingo license is important.) Since December 2003, VictoryLand has been the only “qualified location” for charitable electronic bingo licensed by the sheriff of Macon County.
It is said that charity begins at home, and by any measure short of the national debt, charitable electronic bingo in Macon County was immediately, and has continued to be, successful for VietoryLand and its investors. It is not surprising, then, that other charitable-minded business people noticed an opportunity. In 2004, with some Macon County charities in tow, Lucky Palace, Inc., formed by its president Paul Bracy after the passage of the constitutional amendment, began a conversation with Sheriff Warren about licensing another electronic bingo operation in Macon County in competition with VietoryLand. Soon thereafter, in June 2004, Sheriff Warren amended the regulations, making the licensing of electronic bingo a bit more challenging.
Nevertheless, Lucky Palace continued its planning and stayed in touch with Sheriff Warren. After charitable electronic bingo drew the attention of the public and the Attorney General of Alabama, the Attorney General conducted a road trip investigation of electronic bingo and issued a written news release on the topic in late 2004. Sheriff Warren articulated the findings in that news release as the reason he amended the regulations again, on January 1, 2005, this time to redefine “bingo” and to limit the number of available charity licenses for electronic bingo in Macon County.
Lucky Palace filed an application for an operator’s license with Sheriff Warren in November 2004, which was denied in January 2005. The reason given for the denial was that Lucky Palace did not have a “qualified location” for electronic bingo in Macon County. By “qualified location” the sheriff meant a completed facility ready to inspect. The charities which had aligned with Lucky Palace filed an application for their licenses in July 2005; Sheriff Warren denied their applications on the same basis, that there was no “qualified location.” To date, no Plaintiff has received a license from Sheriff Warren.
In an attempt to cover its bets, and considering that the regulations had been amended twice in thirteen months, Lucky Palace took a political detour in 2006 and tried to defeat Sheriff Warren in his reelection bid. Sheriff Warren took Lucky Palace to the woodshed, winning an overwhelming reelection victory. Lucky Palace and its charities, having not been so lucky, turned to the courts for relief. That is this case, which is against Sheriff Warren, VietoryLand and Mr. McGregor.
As it turns out, Sheriff Warren had considerable help drafting the bingo regulations and subsequent amendments. After a conversation with Mr. McGregor within a week or so of the passage of the constitutional amendment, Sheriff Warren called his own lawyer to help with drafting the regulations. That lawyer is the son and law partner of the lawyer who has represented VietoryLand and has been a minority shareholder in VietoryLand since its founding in 1983. Mr. McGregor offered the services of other attorneys retained by him or VietoryLand, an offer Sheriff Warren’s attorney accepted.
Because VietoryLand attorneys had a hand in drafting the regulations adopted by the sheriff, Lucky Palace and its charities allege that VietoryLand corruptly influenced Sheriff Warren’s lawyer to draft and recommend regulations and amendments thereto, by bribery, loss of honest services, and conspiracy to do the same, all *1088 in violation of the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (“RICO”), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961-1968, and to the damage of Plaintiffs. (None of the involved attorneys is a party to this suit, however.) Moreover, Plaintiffs allege violations of their right to equal protection under the United States Constitution through 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in what they claim is unequal treatment by Sheriff Warren and his regulations, and the conspiracy of all Defendants to violate the Constitution to the detriment of Plaintiffs. 2 Finally, Plaintiffs contend Alabama law has been violated by Mr. McGregor’s and VictoryLand’s unlawful interference with business and contractual relations between Lucky Palace and its charities, and with unnamed future patrons of a proposed Lucky Palace charitable electronic bingo operation. Plaintiffs seek money damages and injunctive relief.
These claims are before the court on motions for summary judgment. Presently pending are: (1) One motion filed by Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand (Doc. # 421); (2) six motions filed by Sheriff Warren (Docs. # 423, 425, 427, 429, 431, 433); (3) and one motion filed by Plaintiffs (Doc. # 445). 3 The motions have been fully briefed, and are ready for adjudication.
II. JURISDICTION AND VENUE
The parties do not dispute subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1367; nor do the parties contest personal jurisdiction or venue. There are adequate allegations in support of each.
III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
“Summary judgment is appropriate if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Greenberg v. BellSouth Telecomms., Inc.,
If the movant meets its evidentiary burden, the burden shifts to the nonmoving party to establish, with evidence beyond the pleadings, that a genuine issue material to each of its claims for relief exists. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e)(2);
Clark v. Coats & Clark, Inc.,
A genuine issue of material fact exists when the nonmoving party produces evidence that would allow a reasonable fact-finder to return a verdict in its favor.
Greenberg,
Thus, in cases where the evidence before the court is admissible on its face or can be reduced to admissible form and indicates there is no genuine issue of material fact, and where the party moving for summary judgment is entitled to it as a matter of law, summary judgment is proper.
Celotex Corp., All
U.S. at 323-24,
The standard of review is unaffected by the filing of cross-motions for summary judgment.
See Gerling Global Reinsurance Corp. of Am. v. Gallagher,
*1090 IV. BACKGROUND
A. Ratification of Amendment No. 744
On November 4, 2003, in a referendum, a majority of the qualified electors in Macon County, Alabama, approved a proposed constitutional amendment, which became Amendment No. 744 to the Alabama Constitution. See Ala. Const. 1901 amend. No. 744; see also Ala. Const. 1901 Art. XVIII § 284.01 (Recomp.) (Amend. No. 425 & Amend. No. 555). 4 Amendment No. 744 5 makes it legal for nonprofit organizations to operate bingo in Macon County and requires the sheriff to promulgate rules and regulations governing licensing and operation of the county’s bingo games. 6
B. Parties
Defendant Macon County Greyhound Park, Inc., which does business as Victory-Land (“VietoryLand”), currently operates the only electronic bingo facility in Macon County, Alabama. 7 VietoryLand was incorporated in 1983 for the purpose of conducting parimutuel wagering in Macon County. 8 Defendant Milton McGregor *1091 (“McGregor”) is VictoryLand’s president and majority shareholder. (McGregor Dep. 66-67 (Ex. 3 to Doc. # 443 & Ex. I to Doc. #446).) VictoryLand operates electronic bingo under the rules and regulations as implemented, amended, and enforced by Defendant David Warren (“Sheriff Warren”). In November 2003, and at all relevant times to this litigation, Warren was the sheriff of Macon County.
Plaintiff Lucky Palace, LLC (“Lucky Palace”), also desires to conduct electronic bingo operations in Macon County, but, as detailed later, Sheriff Warren’s rules, as amended, have been applied so as to preclude it from doing so. In a nutshell, the current form of the rules requires Class B Bingo Licenses for electronic bingo to be issued only to nonprofit organizations, which in turn can contract with an operator to run electronic bingo gaming. However, “[a]t no time shall there be issued and outstanding more than sixty (60) Class B Licenses for the operation of bingo in Macon County.” (2d Am. Rules § 2.) Victory-Land operates electronic bingo at its greyhound racing facility for sixty nonprofit organizations that are Class B Bingo License-holders, meaning that no more Class B Bingo Licenses are available in Macon County (until an incumbent licensee surrenders it license or a licensee loses its license). 9 (Warren Dep. 113 (Ex. 8 to Doc. # 443 & Ex. M to Doc. # 446).)
Presently joined with Lucky Palace as plaintiffs in this lawsuit are fifteen Macon County nonprofit organizations (“Plaintiff Charities”) that have contracted with Lucky Palace to conduct electronic bingo at a presently undeveloped location in Macon County. The Plaintiff Charities are: (1) Hope for Families & Community Services, Inc.; (2) Beulah Missionary Baptist Church; (3) E.D. Nixon Apartments, Inc.; (4) Greater White Church; (5) McRae Prostate Cancer Awareness Foundation; (6) Milstead Community Center, Inc.; (7) New Elam Missionary Baptist Church; (8) RG Apartments, Inc.; (9) Shorter Community Development, Inc.; (10) Shorter Lodge # 533; (11) Shorter Volunteer Fire Department; (12) Sweet Gum AME Zion Church; (13) Tabernacle Baptist Church; (14) Tubman Gardens, Inc.; and (15) Tuskegee Macon County Community Foundation, Inc. (6th Am. Compl. (Doc. # 342).)
The operative complaint, which is the Sixth Amended Complaint, also implicates three “relevant non-parties.” (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 25-27.) They are: (1) the law firm of Gray, Langford, Sapp, McGowan, Gray, Gray & Nathanson, P.C. (“Gray Law Firm”), an Alabama professional corporation; (2) Fred D. Gray Sr. (“Gray Sr.”), who is Mr. Gray Jr.’s father, and who is an attorney and the majority owner of the Gray Law Firm (Gray Sr. Dep. 25-26, 233 (Ex. 14 to Doc. #443 & Ex. F to Doc. # 446)); and (3) Fred D. Gray Jr. (“Gray Jr.”), who, as an associate in the Gray Law Firm, 10 represented Sheriff Warren in drafting the bingo rules and regulations and certain amendments to those rules. (See generally Gray Jr. Dep. (Ex. 13 to Doc. # 443 & Ex. G to Doc. # 446).)
*1092 The Gray Law Firm has performed legal work for VictoryLand since 1983, but does not represent VictoryLand in this lawsuit. (McGregor Aff. ¶ 10 (Ex. 39 to Doc. # 441); Gray Sr. Aff. 1, 3 (Ex. 2 to Doc. # 445).) Since 1984, VictoryLand has paid the Gray Law Firm a quarterly retainer, and the amount of the retainer has not changed. (McGregor Aff. ¶ 11; Gray Sr. Dep. at 54-55 (Ex. 14 to Doc. # 443).) The Gray Law Firm also has received other payments from VictoryLand for legal representation in litigation and other matters. (VictoryLand Receipts, FGJ0174, FGJ0217, FGJ0220-21 (Ex. 4 to Doc. # 445); Gray Sr. Dep. 47; McGregor Dep. 77, 84.) 11 Mr. Gray Sr. has represented VictoryLand on non-bingo legal matters continuously since 1983. (Gray Sr. Aff. 1-2; McGregor Dep. 198.) Mr. Gray Sr. and Stanley Gray are the primary attorneys in the Gray Law Firm who have represented VictoryLand. 12 (Gray Sr. Aff. 3; Gray Sr. Dep. 62.) Mr. Gray Sr. typically determines which lawyers work on which VictoryLand matters. 13 (Gray Sr. Aff. 3)
In addition to being a shareholder of the Gray Law Firm, Mr. Gray Sr. also has been a minority shareholder in Victory-Land since 1983, and has received dividend payments as a VictoryLand shareholder based upon an ownership percentage that has never changed. 14 (Gray Sr. Aff. 1-2.) He has received regular shareholder dividends from VictoryLand based on his ownership interest in the company. (McGregor Aff. ¶¶ 13, 16-17; Gray Sr. Dep. 47.)
Mr. Gray Jr. “ha[s] been [Sheriff Warren’s] attorney for years” (Warren Dep. 50-51 (Ex. 8 to Doc. #443 & Ex. M to Doc. # 446); Gray Jr. Dep. 57), and in that capacity, rendered legal advice regarding all versions of the bingo rules promulgated by Sheriff Warren. 15 (Gray Sr. Aff. 2;
*1093 Warren Dep. 52-55, 69-70.)
C. Sheriff Warren’s Rules and Regulations Governing Bingo in Macon County
At the core of this litigation are the rules promulgated by Sheriff Warren pursuant to the authority vested in him by Amendment No. 744. See Ala. Const.1901 amend. No. 744 (“The sheriff shall promulgate rules and regulations for the licensing and operation of bingo games within the county.”). The Original Rules have been amended three times, pursuant to a section in all versions of the Rules that “reserves” the sheriffs “right to amend” them “from time to time as necessary.” (See Original Rules, effective Dec. 5, 2003 (Ex. A to Doc. # 342); 1st Am. & Restated Rules & Regulations for the Licensing & Operation of Bingo Games in Macon County, Alabama, effective June 2, 2004 (Ex. B to Doc. # 342); 2d Am. & Restated Rules & Regulations for the Licensing & Operation of Bingo Games in Macon County, Alabama, effective Jan. 1, 2005 (Ex. C to Doc. # 342); 3d Am. & Restated Rules & Regulations for the Licensing & Operation of Bingo Games in Macon County, Alabama, effective Dec. 15, 2008 (Ex. D to Doc. # 342).) 16
1. Original Rules (December 2003)
Sheriff Warren adopted the Original Rules thirty-one days after the passage of Amendment No. 744. In summary, two types of bingo licenses are authorized by the Original Rules: Class A Bingo Licenses (paper bingo) and Class B Bingo Licenses (electronic bingo). 17 (See, e.g., Original Rules §§ 1(g), (h) & 4.) Nonprofit organizations are permitted to operate bingo games, but must have a license from the sheriff of Macon County to do so. 18 To obtain a Class B Bingo License, a nonprofit organization must complete an application and submit it to the sheriff for approval or denial. The holder of a Class B Bingo License can conduct electronic bingo games only at a “qualified location,” which has been “inspected and approved by the sheriff’ and for which “satisfactory evidence” of specified criteria has been demonstrated. A nonprofit organization can contract with another entity to operate electronic bingo games on its behalf at a “qualified location.” Here is how the Original Rules came to be.
Within a week of voter approval of Amendment No. 744, and after a telephone call from Mr. McGregor, Sheriff Warren sought assistance from Mr. Gray Jr. in drafting the Rules for electronic bingo in Macon County. (Warren Dep. 50-51; Gray Jr. Dep. 57.) At that time, Mr. Gray Jr. was an associate, not a shareholder, in the Gray Law Firm. 19 (Gray Sr. Dep. 185.) *1094 Sheriff Warren “did not care if Mr. Gray [Jr.] discussed [the bingo Rules] with [third parties, including VictoryLand’s agents and Mr. Gray Sr.] in accomplishing what [he] had asked [Mr. Gray Jr.] to do.” (Warren Dep. 170, 177-78, 219.) Sheriff Warren testified that Mr. Gray Jr. could consult others during the rule-drafting process because he trusted Mr. Gray Jr. “to act in the best interest of the citizens of Macon County [and] in [Sheriff Warren’s] best interest.” (Warren Dep. 162.) Sheriff Warren also testified that, during the drafting process and at the time of his deposition, he did not know to whom Mr. Gray Jr. spoke or from whom he received input during the drafting process. (Warren Dep. 178-79.)
Within days of the passage of Amendment No. 744, Mr. McGregor contacted Sheriff Warren to request a meeting. (Warren Dep. 81.) Sheriff Warren and Mr. McGregor scheduled the meeting to be held on or about November 11, 2003. (Warren Dep. 78; Warren Answer to 6th Am. Compl. ¶33 (Doc. #358).) Sheriff Warren believed that the purpose of the meeting would be to discuss gaming, and he invited his attorney, Mr. Gray Jr., to attend. (Warren Dep. 81-84; Gray Jr. Dep. 99-100.) Mr. Gray Jr., Sheriff Warren and Mr. McGregor met at the law offices of the Gray Law Firm. (Warren Dep. 80-81, 86-87; Gray Jr. Dep. 98-100; McGregor Answer to 6th Am. Compl. ¶ 33 (Doc. # 356); Warren Answer to 6th Am. Compl. ¶ 94.) The meeting lasted about twenty minutes. (Gray Jr. Dep. 104.) The “gist” of what Mr. McGregor conveyed during that meeting was that he had “an interest in gaming” (Warren Dep. 91, 95) and, in particular, “in bingo in Macon County,” given that the referendum had passed (Gray Jr. Dep. 104).
Another topic discussed among Mr. McGregor, Mr. Gray Jr. and Sheriff Warren was the fact that Amendment No. 744 “didn’t give a lot of guidance” concerning the promulgation of the rules for which Sheriff Warren was responsible. (Gray Jr. Dep. 104-05.) Mr. McGregor informed Sheriff Warren that he (Mr. McGregor) “knew of a lawyer ... who would get in touch with [Mr. Gray Jr.] and render any kind of support” needed. (Gray Jr. Dep. 105.) That lawyer was John Bolton (Gray Jr. Dep. 96, 105), 20 and Mr. Gray Jr. left that meeting with the distinct “feeling” that Mr. Bolton would be contacting him. (Mr. Gray Jr. Dep. 105.) That intuition proved correct. Beginning with this November 11 meeting between the regulator (Sheriff Warren) and the soon-to-be regulated (VictoryLand/Mr. McGregor), Sheriff Warren, through his counsel Mr. Gray Jr., involved VictoryLand or its counsel in every phase of the drafting process, until the Original Rules were adopted on December 5, 2003.
As promised, Mr. Bolton contacted Mr. Gray Jr. “within two weeks of the referendum passing.” (Gray Jr. Dep. 96-97; Bolton Dep. 39-40 (Ex. 11 to Doc. #443 & Ex. B to Doc. #446).) Mr. Bolton testified that, during his initial conversation with Mr. Gray Jr., he does not “recall” telling Mr. Gray Jr. that he represented Mr. McGregor. Mr. Bolton, however, “understood” that Mr. Gray Jr. represented Sheriff Warren. “I believe he understood that I represented [VictoryLand]. I can’t tell you ... that I recall ... specifically telling Mr. Gray [Jr.] that or him specifically telling me who he represented.” (Bolton Dep. 54.) Similarly, Mr. Gray Jr. “understood” that Mr. Bolton’s client was either VictoryLand or Mr. McGregor. *1095 (Gray Jr. Dep. 118; see also Gray Jr. Dep. 105.)
During that initial conversation, Mr. Gray Jr. told Mr. Bolton that he planned to issue bingo regulations; that he had obtained a copy of the Montgomery County bingo regulations and planned to use them as a model; that he planned to impose some financial or other standards for bingo operators; and that he was considering imposing either a square footage requirement or an investment requirement for bingo operators in Macon County. (Bolton Dep. 42-43.) Mr. Bolton offered his assistance in drafting the Rules. (Bolton Dep. 51-53.) He told Mr. Gray Jr. that he “had worked on a case involving the Montgomery County regulations” and “offered to take a first cut at a draft of the regulations” using the Montgomery County Rules as a “model.” (Bolton Dep. 52-53, 63, 80.) Mr. Gray Jr. accepted Mr. Bolton’s offer, and within approximately one week, Mr. Bolton submitted a draft set of rules to Mr. Gray Jr. (Bolton Dep. 53, 63, 72, 85, 119; Draft Rules, MCGP(JMB) 002188 (Ex. 5 to Doc. #445).) For this work and all related work on the Macon County bingo Rules, Mr. Bolton was paid by VictoryLand. (Bolton Dep. 26.)
Following the initial submission of draft rules, there were several communications between Mr. Gray Jr. and Mr. Bolton, and the two exchanged by email annotated drafts of Mr. Bolton’s initial draft of rules. 21 (Bolton Dep. 78-79, 85-88; McGregor Answer to 6th Am. Compl. ¶ 36 (Doc. # 356).) On November 26, 2003, an email was sent from Mr. Bolton’s assistant to Mr. Gray Jr. and others, with the message, “Please see attached. Macon Co. Bingo Regulations.” (Emails, FGJ0226-227 (Ex. 5 to Doc. # 445).) Mr. Bolton, Mr. Gray Jr., George David Johnston (“Johnston”), 22 Sheriff Warren and Mr. McGregor met at the Gray Law Firm sometime before Thanksgiving 2003. (Bolton Dep. 90; Johnston Dep. 21 (Ex. 15 to Doc. # 443; Ex. H to Doc. # 446).) During the meeting, which lasted fifteen to twenty minutes, the parties discussed the then-current draft of the Rules. (Bolton Dep. 95-97; Johnston Dep. 22-24.) They did not discuss potential conflicts of interest. 23 (Gray Jr. Dep. 110-11; Bolton Dep. 110.) *1096 Mr. Gray Jr. “did not think there was any conflict” concerning his representation of Sheriff Warren related to drafting bingo Rules while the Gray Law Firm and Mr. Gray Sr. continued to represent Victory-Land on non-bingo matters, and while Mr. Gray Sr. maintained a minority shareholder interest in VictoryLand. (Gray Jr. Dep. 87-88; see also Warren Dep. 28-29.) In short, Mr. Gray Jr. did not perceive, anticipate or consider any conflicts regarding his representation of Sheriff Warren. (Gray Jr. Dep. 87-88, 177.) Mr. Gray Jr. already represented Sheriff Warren on other matters when he was retained with respect to the Rules. (Gray Jr. Dep. 86.) The Gray Law Firm does not have a written process for checking conflicts. (Gray Jr. Dep. 39-41; Gray Sr. Dep. 207-08.) It does, however, check for conflicts. (Gray Jr. Dep. 40.)
Moreover, Sheriff Warren was aware of the Gray Law Firm’s ties to and representation of VictoryLand. (Warren Dep. 179-80.) Sheriff Warren also knew that Mr. Gray Sr. had an “affiliation with” Victory-Land, but he did not know the “extent” of that affiliation. (Warren Dep. 179-80.) Additionally, Mr. Gray Sr. testified that Sheriff Warren was “fully aware” not only that the Gray Law Firm represented VictoryLand, but also that Mr. Gray Sr. was a shareholder in VictoryLand. (Gray Sr. Dep. 92-93, 97, 99,104-05,110.)
Mr. Gray Jr., Sheriff Warren, Mr. McGregor and Mr. Bolton reconvened at a later date, but this time in Mr. McGregor’s office in Montgomery, Alabama. 24 (Bolton Dep. 121-22.) They discussed bingo “regulations in general” at that meeting. (Bolton Dep. 125.)
On December 3, 2003, Mr. Bolton’s assistant sent an email to Mr. Gray Jr., with a message, “Please see attached. Macon Co. Bingo Regulations.” (Email, FGJ0231; MCGP(JMB)002201-2213 (Ex. 5 to Doc. #445).) On December 5, 2003, Mr. Gray Jr. sent an email to Linda Pittman (Mr. McGregor’s secretary, see McGregor Dep. 323), Mr. Johnston and Beth Herrington (Mr. Johnston’s assistant) and attached a revised draft of the bingo rules. (Email, MCGP(GDJ)0020992111 (Ex. 5 to Doc. # 445).) Mr. Gray Jr. asked the recipients to “[c]all upon review.” (Email, FGJ0226 (Ex. 5 to Doc. # 445).) In the email, Mr. Gray Jr. noted that his “client” (Sheriff Warren) had not reviewed the attached draft. (Email, FGJ0226 (Ex. 5 to Doc. # 445).) Mr. Gray Jr. emailed two more drafts on the same day to the same VictoryLand recipients, the last with the notation, “This is the draft that is currently being reviewed. READ CAREFULLY.” (Email, MCGP(GDJ)002126-2146 (Ex. 5 to Doc. # 445).)
Mr. Gray Jr. and Sheriff Warren reviewed the Original Rules together, maybe not “every word,” but “every section.” (Warren Dep. 196.) During the editing process, Sheriff Warren made some changes to the draft rules. (Gray Jr. Dep. 123-24, 128-29, 138-39, 207-10; Bolton Dep. 86-88, 107, 141-43.) No evidence, however, has been cited as to what those changes were. (Bolton Dep. 106-08 (testifying that edits were made to his proposals, but that he (Mr. Bolton) did not have a record of those edits).) According to Mr. Bolton, Sheriff Warren also “intended to have an investment requirement ... [, and Mr. Bolton] drafted some proposed language.” (Bolton Dep. 100.) Sheriff Warren, however, testified as follows:
And the rules and what Mr. Gray [Jr.] and I came up with was what I wanted. I used my discretion on the information *1097 that he brought to me. I exercised what judgment I could, given my knowledge of this issue, which was — which I used as best I could and the rules and regulations that I came up with, I approved and intended that they govern this activity.
(Warren Dep. 159-60.) Sheriff Warren also testified that “[w]hat Mr. Gray [Jr.] came up with, we discussed. I used my discretion. I approved what I wanted to approve and the rules that are adopted are the rules that were adopted by the Macon County sheriff.” (Warren Dep. 157.)
Sheriff Warren signed the Original Rules on December 5, 2003. 25 (Gray Jr. Dep. 127-28.) They were adopted without public hearing, comment or other public notice or involvement. As of December 5, 2003, “VictoryLand met the requirements set forth in the [Original Rules]” and “was the only qualified location in Macon County.” (Warren Dep. 146^17; Original Rules § l(j) (defining “qualified location”).)
On December 16, 2003, Mr. McGregor signed a sworn Operator’s Certificate. The Operator’s Certificate contained information relevant to Mr. McGregor’s position that VictoryLand was a “qualified location” within the meaning of the Original Rules. (Operator’s Certificate (Ex. 10 to Doc. # 445); Warren Aff. ¶ 11 (Ex. 38 to Doc. # 441).) On December 18, 2003, Sheriff Warren issued VictoryLand a Class B “Bingo Operator’s License.” 26 (Victory-Land Bingo Operator’s License (Ex. 12 to Doc. #445).) By the end of December 2003, VictoryLand had gross receipts from electronic bingo of $586,867, with gross profits of $408,481. (VictoryLand’s Independent Auditor’s Report; VictoryLand’s 2d Suppl. Resp. to Lucky Palace Interrog. No. 9.)
2. First Amended Rules (June 2004)
On June 2, 2004, approximately six months after adopting the Original Rules, Sheriff Warren amended them, again without public notice, comment or input. 27 *1098 (Warren Dep. 147; 1 st Am. Rules.) VictoryLand’s attorneys were involved again in the rule-making process. Proposals for the amendments originated from Mr. Bolton by email. (Gray Jr. Dep. 179; Email, MCGP(JMB)002214-29 (Ex. 6 to Doc. # 445).) Mr. Gray Jr. made handwritten notes on the draft that Mr. Bolton emailed him. (Draft 1 st Am. Rules (Ex. 6 to Doc. # 445, FGS0054-64); Gray Jr. Dep. 185-90.) On June 2, 2004, Mr. Gray Jr. faxed a copy of the First Amended Rules to Mr. McGregor, Mr. Bolton and Mr. Johnston. (Fax Transmission Cover Sheet and attachment (Ex. 15 to Doc. # 445).)
The First Amended Rules implemented amendments that (1) clarified that a nonprofit organization must be “active and in good standing,” § 1(d); (2) increased the capital investment requirement of a qualified location from $5 million to $15 million, § l(j); (3) required that “[n]o Class B Licensee shall be authorized to operate bingo at any qualified location, as defined herein, unless a minimum of fifteen (15) applicants shall first obtain Class B Licenses for such location,” § 2; (4) increased the Operator’s License Fee from $40,000 to $250,000, § 4(a); (5) increased the single prize limitation from $1 million to $20 million, § 9(f); and (6) added a provision regarding transportation of bingo equipment, § 15. The First Amended Rules also contained a Commentary, setting forth reasons for the amendments. For example, the Commentary set forth the following reason for § l(j)’s amendment for raising the capital investment requirement:
The capital investment amount required for a “qualified location” for the holder of a Class B License is hereby increased to $15,000,000 and limited to actual cost in order to require any qualified location to prove a significant investment and financial commitment to Macon County prior to becoming a “qualified location.” Further, the capital investment requirement is restricted to actual cost, not based on any valuation, in order to avoid potential dispute or abuse based on any real estate appraisal submitted with an application.
(1st Am. Rules, Commentary, § l(j).) The Commentary also provided that § 2, imposing a fifteen-license Class B Bingo License minimum, was added
to maximize economic benefits to numerous nonprofit organizations in Macon County and to further avoid the potential abuse of a third party individual or business entity from using one nonprofit organization (or a minimal number) as a “front” to operate bingo games under a Class B License.... By requiring at least fifteen (15) nonprofit organizations to obtain Class B Licenses prior to authorizing such a bingo operation at a qualified location, assurance is provided that a large representative group of charities is afforded the opportunity to obtain the economic benefits associated with a Class B License.
(1st Am. Rules, Commentary, § 2.)
3. Second Amended Rules (January 2005)
On December 1, 2004, Alabama Attorney General Troy King concluded a six-month long review of gambling in Alabama and published a news release containing his “findings” from that review. Those findings defined requirements for legal bingo video machines. (King Press Release, Dec. 1, 2004 (Ex. 42 to Doc. #441).) Sheriff Warren testified that, based on those findings, he instructed Mr. Gray Jr. *1099 to draft the Second Amended Rules. (Warren Dep. 182.) Continuing a familiar pattern, Mr. Bolton sent Mr. Gray Jr. a draft of the Second Amended Rules, with proposed amendments. (Mr. Gray Jr. Dep. 179-81; Bolton Dep. 201-02.) On January 6, 2005, Sheriff Warren signed the Second Amended Rules, with an effective date of January 1, 2005. (Warren Dep. 147; 2d Am. Rules.) According to Defendants, the Second Amended Rules were published in The Tuskegee News on December 30, 2004. (Doc. # 440, at 16 (citing Ex. 161). 28 )
Of primary relevance, the Second Amended Rules capped the total number of Class B Bingo Licenses available in Macon County at sixty, as set out in § 2:
No Class B Licensee shall be authorized to operate bingo at any qualified location, as defined herein, unless a minimum of fifteen (15) applicants shall first obtain Class B Licenses for such location.....At no time shall there be issued and outstanding more than sixty (60) Class B Licenses for the operation of bingo in Macon County.
(2d Am. Rules § 2.) Mr. Gray Jr. communicated to Mr. Bolton the idea of a limit on the number of charities that could participate in electronic bingo. (Bolton Dep. 202-03.) Sheriff Warren limited that number to sixty. (Warren Dep. 150.) The Second Amended Rules also modified § 4 to permit Class B Bingo Licenses to be valid for five years, rather than one year. (2d Am. Rules § 4.) The Commentary to the Second Amended Rules provided, in part:
The Attorney General for the State of Alabama has recently conducted an exhaustive investigation and review of gaming activities in the State of Alabama, including but not limited to, bingo games conducted in Macon County, Alabama, pursuant to Amendment No. 744 of the Constitution of Alabama. In response to the Attorney General’s recent findings and pronouncements, the First Amended and Restated Rules and Regulations For the Licensing and Operation of Bingo Games in Macon County (the “Macon County Bingo Regulations”) are hereby amended and restated to comport and comply with the Attorney General’s definition of bingo games and policy to limit Class B bingo gaming activities in Macon County, Alabama, at a reasonable level whereby the Sheriff can more adequately and effectively regulate and enforce the proper conduct of such bingo games. Accordingly, the following changes have been made to the Macon County Bingo Regulations.
Section 2: A new sentence has been added to the end of Section 2 to limit the number of Class B Licenses that may be issued in order to follow the policy of the Attorney General to limit Class B bingo gaming activities in Macon County, Alabama, and to allow the Sheriff to more effectively regulate and enforce the proper conduct of such bingo games.
(2d Am. Rules, Commentary.)
Sheriff Warren testified that “[t]he attorney general never publicly stated that he wanted to limit gaming in Macon County.” (Warren Dep. 269.) Sheriff Warren said, however, that his rule limiting the number of Class B Bingo Licenses to sixty “was simply stating what [he] honestly believed the spirit of the attorney general’s language meant to [him]” and that “anybody who knows Mr. King knows his opposition to gaming in the state of Alabama.” (Warren Dep. 270.)
Sheriff Warren also testified that the monetary requirement for a “qualified lo *1100 cation” was included to keep “fly by nighters” from Macon County. (Warren Dep. 139, 150-51.) He wanted to ensure that a “substantial investment” was made to attract only “serious” investors. (Warren Dep. 139.) He said that when he wrote the Rules, he had “no desire or plans that VictoryLand be the only qualified location in Macon County.” (Warren Dep. 149.) VictoryLand, however, “met the requirements set forth in the [Original Rules].” (Warren Dep. 146.) And each time the Rules were amended, VictoryLand “was the only qualified location in Macon County.” (Warren Dep. 147.)
4. VictoryLand’s Electronic Bingo Licenses
On December 8, 2003, three days after the promulgation of the Original Rules, VictoryLand presented Sheriff Warren with applications from twelve Macon County charity organizations that had contracted with VictoryLand for the operation of electronic bingo. 29 (Twelve VictoryLand Charity Applications (Ex. 8 to Doc. # 445).) There is evidence suggesting that at least some of the applications of the initial twelve VictoryLand charities did not contain all the required information, such as “[a] certified copy of the charter, certificate of incorporation, by-laws, or other evidence of legal existence of the organization,” and tax exemption documentation. (Original Rules § 4(c)(2) & (3); Ex. 8 to Doc. #445; Deputy Tommy Miller Dep. 50-51 (Ex. J to Doc. # 446 & Ex. 13 to Doc. #461); Warren Dep. 332.) On December 16, 2003, Mr. McGregor signed an “Operator’s Certificate.” The Operator’s Certificate was submitted to Sheriff Warren with the Tuskegee-Macon County YMCA’s Class B Bingo License materials “as evidence that VictoryLand met the requirements of a qualified location.” (Operator’s Certificate (Ex. 10 to Doc. # 445); McGregor Aff., MCGP00001-03; Warren Aff. ¶ 11.)
On December 17, 2003, Sheriff Warren issued Class B Bingo Licenses to the twelve charity-applicants for the operation of electronic bingo at VictoryLand. (Class B Bingo Licenses (Ex. 11 to Doc. #445); Ex. C to Warren Aff.)
On December 18, 2003, Sheriff Warren issued VictoryLand a Class B “Bingo Operator’s License.” (VictoryLand Operator’s License (Ex. 12 to Doc. # 445).) Sheriff Warren did not conduct a “formal investigation of VictoryLand” prior to declaring it a “qualified location,” but he “made inquiries” that “satisfied” him of VictoryLand’s “standing.” (Warren Dep. 189.) Also, Sheriff Warren’s deputy, Tommy Miller (“Deputy Miller”), did not speak to Mr. McGregor about the Operator’s Certificate or inspect VictoryLand to ensure that the statements in that certificate were correct. (Miller Dep. 68-69.) Also in December 2003, VictoryLand opened its *1101 electronic bingo operations with 303 electronic bingo machines. (McGregor Aff. ¶ 20.) Over the next six months Victory-Land increased the number of electronic bingo machines, and by June 1, 2004, VictoryLand had 928 machines. (McGregor Aff. ¶ 21.) The number of machines continued to increase, and as of September 2009, VictoryLand had approximately 6,400 electronic bingo machines in operation. (McGregor Aff. ¶ 23.)
VictoryLand also gradually increased the number of its contracts with Class B Bingo License holders. Between January 1, 2004, and June 1, 2004, while the Original Rules remained in effect, seventeen additional applications were submitted from VictoryLand charities to Sheriff Warren for Class B Bingo Licenses and were granted. These applicants also had contracted to conduct electronic bingo at VictoryLand, bringing the total number of VictoryLand’s Class B Bingo Licenses to twenty-nine. Thereafter, on June 2, 2004, the First Amended Rules went into effect. Between June 2, 2004, and December 31, 2004, Sheriff Warren granted ten more Class B Bingo Licenses to charity organizations contracting with VictoryLand. 30 (Warren Aff. ¶ 17.) Hence, as of December 31, 2004, thirty-nine charities had obtained Class B Bingo Licenses, and all thirty-nine of those charities had entered into contracts with VictoryLand for the operation of electronic bingo.
On January 1, 2005, the Second Amended Rules went into effect. Also, by that date, VictoryLand had negotiated contracts with an additional twenty charities, although those twenty charities had not yet submitted applications to Sheriff Warren for Class B Bingo Licenses. On February 7, 2005, fourteen of those additional twenty charities received Class B Bingo Licenses from Sheriff Warren, bringing VictoryLand’s total number of licensed charities to fifty-three. Pursuant to the Second Amended Rules, as of February 7, 2005, no other entity could be a “qualified location” for the holder of a Class B Bingo License and conduct electronic bingo in Macon County. (Warren Dep. 128-29, 115-17.) This was because the Second Amended Rules required that a “qualified location” have a minimum of fifteen Class B Bingo Licenses, but at the same time prohibited the issuance of more than sixty Class B Bingo Licenses in Macon County.
Six more VictoryLand charities obtained their Class B Bingo Licenses between April 29, 2005 and June 14, 2005; hence, as of June 14, 2005, VictoryLand was operating electronic bingo on behalf of fifty-nine licensed charities. (Warren Aff. ¶ 26; Ex. C to Warren Aff.) By March 20, 2006, VictoryLand had secured all sixty Class B Bingo Licenses. (VictoryLand Charities 2006 Class B Bingo Licenses (Ex. 31 to Doc. # 446); Ex. C to Warren Aff.; McGregor Answer to 6th Am. Compl. ¶ 74.) There is no evidence that Sheriff Warren refused a Class B Bingo License to any VictoryLand charity.
The following chart summarizes the timeline for the issuance of Class B Bingo Licenses for VictoryLand charities, measured against the effective dates of the Rules:
Dates
Number of Class B Bingo
Number of Class B Bingo
*1102 [[Image here]]
5. VictoryLand’s and the Charities’ Income
VictoryLand’s annual gross receipts and annual gross profits from electronic bingo for the years 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008 reflect steady and substantial increases, as set out in the chart below. (VictoryLand’s Independent Auditor’s Report (Ex. 30 to Doc. # 446); VictoryLand’s 2d Suppl. Resp. to Lucky Palace Interrog. No. 9 (Doc. # 521).) Since the inception of electronic bingo at VictoryLand, Mr. Gray Sr.’s income derived from his minority ownership interest in Victory-Land also has increased substantially.
Combined, the charities contracting with VictoryLand received the following payments from VictoryLand in the years 2004-2008: 2004 ($546,350); 2005 ($978,-250); 2006 ($797,650); 2007 ($797,650); and 2008 ($1,300,026). (VictoryLand Charity Payouts (Ex. 28 to Doc. #446).) In 2008, VictoryLand and its charities entered into new lease agreements under which the charities received $3,751.50 as a Bingo Session Charity Fee. 31
VictoryLand’s Gross Receipts from
VictoryLand’s Gross Profits 32
Total Payments from VictoryLand
*1103 _Electronic Bingo_from Electronic Bingo_to its Charities
2002 33 _
2003_$ 586,867_$ 408,481_
2004_$ 64,070,688_$ 49,902,963_$ 546,350_
2005_$112,693,949_$ 89,148,794_$ 978,250_
2006_$139,853,391_$110,936,378_$ 797,650_
2007_$157,498,710_$126,706,748_$ 797,650_
2008_$162,571,464_$125,860,684 (estimated)_$1,300,026_
6. Lucky Palace’s Pursuit of Class B Bingo Operations in Macon County
The preceding recital of facts has little contextual meaning absent the overlay of Lucky Palace’s timeline. In early 2003, Paul Bracy, Lucky Palace’s president, “became interested” in operating electronic bingo in Macon County. (Bracy Dep. 59-60 (Ex. 12 to Doc. # 443 & Ex. C to Doc. #446).) Lucky Palace was incorporated on February 17, 2004, for the purpose of developing an electronic bingo establishment in Macon County. (Bracy Letter (Ex. 562 to Doc. #440); Lucky Palace Articles of Incorporation (Ex. 702 to Doc. # 441).) Mr. Bracy and his associates met with Sheriff Warren and Deputy Miller in the sheriffs office sometime in the spring of 2004, which was prior to any amendments to the Original Rules. (Dwight Washington Dep. 24-25 (Ex. N to Doc. # 446).) At that meeting, Sheriff Warren assured Mr. Bracy that there would be no problem with another entity obtaining an Operator’s License, so long as it “follow[ed] the rules and regulations.” (Washington Dep. 26.)
On June 11, 2004, unaware that on June 2 Sheriff Warren had amended the Original Rules, Mr. Bracy notified Sheriff Warren by letter that Lucky Palace still intended to establish an electronic bingo facility in Macon County and explained the steps Lucky Palace had taken toward the attainment of that goal. In the closing paragraph, Mr. Bracy said,
Given that [Lucky Palace] intends to meet or exceed all of the requirements set forth in the Rules and Regulations issued by the Sheriff of Macon County, Alabama, is there any reason for [Lucky Palace] to expect that a license will not be granted? [Lucky Palace] is very willing to meet with you or your representative(s) if there is something that may have been overlooked.... If [Lucky Palace] has not heard from your office or representative by June 21, 2004[,] we will assume that a license will be granted.
(June 11, 2004 Letter (Ex. 16 to Doc. # 445, PTF00563).)
On June 15, 2004, Mr. Bracy sent another letter to Sheriff Warren, expressing his “surprise[]” to read the First Amended Rules in The Tuskegee News, dated June 10, 2004. (June 15, 2004 Letter (Ex. 16 to Doc. #445, PTF00564-565).) Mr. Bracy sought “clarification of the impact of the new requirements on [Lucky Palace’s] planned development.” (June 15, 2004 Letter (Ex. 16 to Doc. #445, PTF00564565).) In the closing paragraph, Mr. Bracy said, “We are prepared to continue moving ahead with our project as scheduled ... governed under” the Original Rules. (June 15, 2004 Letter (Ex. 16 to Doc. # 445, PTF00565).)
On July 21, 2004, Mr. Bracy and Sheriff Warren met in Sheriff Warren’s office to discuss Lucky Palace’s plans. On July 30, 2004, Mr. Bracy sent Sheriff Warren a letter and, per a phone conversation earli *1104 er that day, sought a signed statement from Sheriff Warren that the First Amended Rules would not be amended again and that there would be “no delays or problems in obtaining the license for a ‘Class B’ qualified location, for the operation of electronic bingo in Macon County, Alabama.” (July 30, 2004 Letter & Proposed Statement (Ex. 16 to Doc. # 445, PTF00566, PTF00609, PTF00567); Warren Dep. 230-31.) Sheriff Warren did not sign this statement. (Warren Answer to 6th Am. Compl. ¶ 64 (Doc. # 358); Warren Dep. 229-30.) However, on August 5, 2004, Sheriff Warren sent Mr. Bracy a letter stating that, while he “reserve[d] the right to amend the regulations as necessary,” he did “not foresee any need for any substantive changes in the foreseeable future.” (Aug. 5, 2004 Letter (Ex. 16 to Doc. # 445, PTF00609).) On August 17, 2004, Mr. Bracy responded to Sheriff Warren’s August 5 letter, thanking him for his “prompt response.” (Aug. 17, 2004 Letter (Ex. 16 to Doc. # 445, PTF00568).)
On September 25, 2004, the Montgomery Advertiser published an article about Lucky Palace’s efforts to open an electronic bingo facility in Macon County. (Jannell McGrew, Die Cast for New Bingo Facility, Montgomery Advertiser, Sept. 25, 2004 (Ex. 17 to Doc. #445).) That article paraphrases Mr. McGregor as saying that “he was not concerned about competition from the new facility” and includes a direct quote from Mr. McGregor that “ ‘competition doesn’t concern me at all.’ ” (Ex. 17.) Mr. McGregor testified that he first learned of Lucky Palace’s efforts to become a qualified location for electronic bingo from an article in the Montgomery Advertiser (McGregor Dep. 327), but he did not give the date of the article from which he acquired this knowledge.
By November 10, 2004, Lucky Palace had secured contracts with more than fifteen local charities (including the fifteen Plaintiff Charities). (Lucky Palace/Charity Contracts (Ex. 18 to Doc. # 445).) Under those contracts, the charities that affiliated with Lucky Palace would be entitled to a semiannual payment of $21,000 each. (Lucky Palace/Charity Contracts § 5.) Although the Rules do not contain provisions requiring or permitting preapproval, Lucky Palace attempted to secure preapproval of its planned facility by submitting an application for an electronic bingo Operator’s License on November 10, 2004. (Warren Dep. 111-12; Nov. 10, 2004 Application (Ex. 16 to Doc. # 445, PTF00572575).)
On January 14, 2005, when VietoryLand was operating electronic bingo for thirty-nine charities under the Second Amended Rules, and more than sixty days after he (Sheriff Warren) had received Lucky Palace’s application, Sheriff Warren returned Lucky Palace’s November 10, 2004 application for an electronic bingo Operator’s License. (Warren Dep. 272-73; Bracy Dep. 193-201; Envelopes (Ex. 23 to Doc. # 446).) On the envelope returning the application, Mary Davis, Sheriff Warren’s administrative assistant, handwrote the following: “Return,” “Not Approved,” “Building not completed,” “Building must qualify.” (Envelopes (Ex. 23 to Doc. #446); Warren Dep. 125-28, 261; Bracy Dep. 199-200.) Lucky Palace received the returned Operator’s License application on January 19, 2005. (Envelopes (Ex. 23); Bracy Dep. 197-201.)
It was Sheriff Warren’s intent “that a building be present to inspect before a license was issued.” (Warren Dep. 133-34, 144.) Sheriff Warren testified, ‘You know ... every store I’ve seen open, before they get a license, there was a store there for somebody to inspect; every — every restaurant that I know of had to have a building to inspect before they were licensed.... I don’t think that expecting someone to have *1105 a building there before they get a license is asking too much.” (Warren Dep. 134; see also Warren Dep. 144 (“My intention was to provide rules that would govern bingo. And in my opinion, before I approved a qualified location, there would have to be a building there for me to approve.”).) Hence, the sole reason Sheriff Warren has refused to issue Lucky Palace an Operator’s License is because it does not have a “qualified location.” (Warren Dep. 111-13; Warren Dep. 113 (When asked if there was “[a]ny other reason[]” Lucky Palace could not get a license, Sheriff Warren responded, “At this time, there aren’t ... any other reasons.”).)
On July 25, 2005, when VictoryLand was operating electronic bingo on behalf of fifty-nine charities, thereby foreclosing another entity from conducting electronic bingo operations in Macon County, Lucky Palace attempted to deliver twenty-two applications for Class B Bingo Licenses, along with checks for the licensing fees, to Sheriff Warren. 34 (July 25, 2005 Letter & 22 Checks, at PTF00578-PTF00584 (Ex. 16 to Doc. # 445).) On that same date, Mr. Bracy also sent Sheriff Warren a letter providing information about Lucky Palace that Mr. Bracy believed satisfied the Second Amended Rules pertaining to a “qualified location.” (July 25, 2005 Letter, PTF00578-PTF00584 (Ex. 16 to Doc. # 445).) Sheriff Warren’s office refused to accept Lucky Palace’s charity applications and returned them immediately. (Bracy Dep. 205-06.) Sheriff Warren’s assistant, Ms. Davis, told Mr. Bracy that the charity license applications were “premature” because the applicants “did not have a building,” ie., did not have a “qualified location” at which to conduct electronic bingo. (Bracy Dep. 206.) No mention was made of the dispositive fact that VictoryLand had sewn up all but one of the available licenses. The denial was not appealed by the Plaintiff Charities, as permitted by § 14 of the Rules. 35 (Bracy Dep. 201.)
By March 20, 2006, VictoryLand had secured all sixty Class B Bingo Licenses. (VictoryLand Charities 2006 Class B Bingo Licenses (Ex. 31 to Doc. # 446); Ex. C to Warren Aff.; McGregor Answer to 6th Am. Compl. ¶ 74.) Plaintiffs attempted to rectify their perceived injury through political means. Those means included selecting and funding a candidate to run against Sheriff Warren- — -a candidate who was supportive of Lucky Palace’s project and who was committed to expanding gaming in Macon County. (Windom Dep. 345 *1106 (Ex. 1 to Doc. # 443).) Those efforts, however, did not achieve their desired result, as in the primary election in June 2006, the voters of Macon County overwhelmingly reelected Sheriff Warren over the candidate supported by Plaintiffs. (Windom Dep. 182.)
7. This Lawsuit (December 2006)
On December 18, 2006, seventeen nonprofit organizations — which had contracted with Lucky Palace to conduct electronic bingo at a facility to be constructed and operated by Lucky Palace and which had applied with Sheriff Warren for, but had not been issued, Class B Bingo Licenses— filed this lawsuit against Sheriff Warren in his official capacity. (Compl. ¶¶ 4-20, 31-32 (Doc. # 1).) Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand were added as defendants in the Amended Complaint, filed March 12, 2007. (Am. Compl. (Doc. # 24).) Thereafter, four of the original Plaintiffs — NCO Nile Club, Notasulga High School PTSA, Sojourner Truth Chapter # 265, and Tuskegee National Alumni Association — were dismissed without prejudice upon Plaintiffs’ motions. (Docs.# 123, 127, 180, 182, 196, 200.) Lucky Palace was brought in as a plaintiff by the Third Amended Complaint, filed on June 29, 2007. (3d Am. Compl. (Doc. # 67).) Greater White Church and RG Apartments were added as plaintiffs in the Fifth Amended Complaint, filed May 13, 2008. (5th Am. Compl. (Doc. # 185).)
Presently, Plaintiffs are Lucky Palace and fifteen nonprofit organizations that have contracted with Lucky Palace for the operation of electronic bingo in Macon County. Defendants are Sheriff Warren, sued in his official capacity, and Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand.
The claims have evolved through a series of amendments to the complaint. The Sixth Amended Complaint is the operative complaint. Plaintiffs contend that “VictoryLand and [Mr.] McGregor, through the unlawful influence [of Mr. Gray Jr.], caused [Sheriff] Warren to arbitrarily promulgate unreasonable rules and regulations for the operation of bingo in Macon County that allowed only one entity — VictoryLand — to operate electronic bingo games.” (6th Am. Compl. ¶ 3.) Plaintiffs further allege that, although Mr. Gray Jr. is a private attorney, he acted as a “public servant” when advising Sheriff Warren concerning the promulgation and amendment of the Rules governing electronic bingo in Macon County. (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 2, 86,115.)
The Original Rules, First Amended Rules and Second Amended Rules were promulgated by Sheriff Warren, with the assistance of his counsel, Mr. Gray Jr., and Mr. McGregor’s and VictoryLand’s counsel, Mr. Bolton and Mr. Johnston. (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 58, 68; Warren Dep. 69-70.) It is alleged that the amendments were implemented to prevent competition with VictoryLand. The First Amended Rules added a provision that “[n]o Class B Licensee shall be authorized to operate bingo at any qualified location ... unless a minimum of fifteen (15) applicants shall first obtain a Class B License for such location.” (1st Am. Rules § 2; 6th Am. Compl. ¶ 60.) The Second Amended Rules included a new provision that “[a]t no time shall there be issued and outstanding more than sixty (60) Class B Licenses for the operation of bingo in Macon County.” (2d Am. Rules § 2; 6th Am. Compl. ¶ 69.) This provision was added at the point in time when more than forty-five Class B Bingo Licenses “had been, or soon would be, issued to nonprofit organizations with contractual ties to ... VictoryLand.” (6th Am. Compl. ¶ 70; see also Warren Dep. 115-17, 128-29 (confirming that by February 7, 2005, VictoryLand’s total number of licensed charities was fifty-three); Ex. C to Warren Aff.) The sixty-license maximum combined *1107 with the fifteen-license minimum, in effect, “foreclosed the operation of [electronic] bingo games in Macon County at any location other than VictoryLand.” (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 70,112.)
The Sixth Amended Complaint contains six counts. The first two counts allege RICO violations. Count I alleges that Defendants violated 18 U.S.C. § 1962(c) by conducting and participating in the conduct of an enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity. (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 150-55.) The racketeering activity includes acts of bribery chargeable under state law (Ala.Code § 13A-10~61(a)) and acts indictable under 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 (wire fraud) and 1343 (mail fraud). (Sixth Am. Compl. ¶¶ 88-135.) Plaintiffs allege that Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand bribed Mr. Gray Jr. for favorable Rules, and that those alleged bribes took the form of legal fees and retainer payments made to the Gray Law Firm, and shareholder dividends paid to Mr. Gray Sr. based upon his minority ownership interest in VictoryLand. (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 88, 89, 92, 95, 104, 106, 108, 110, 113.) The RICO mail and wire fraud claim is premised on the theory that, with regard to the promulgation of the Rules, Defendants, the Gray Law Firm, Mr. Gray Sr. and Mr. Gray Jr. engaged and participated in three schemes or artifices: The citizens of Macon County allegedly were defrauded of the honest services of Mr. Gray Jr. and Sheriff Warren, and Sheriff Warren allegedly was defrauded of the honest services of Mr. Gray Jr., see §§ 1341, 1343, 1346. (6th Am. Compl. ¶ 120.) The details of these alleged schemes or artifices will be discussed later in this opinion.
Count II alleges a RICO conspiracy under § 1962(d), based upon racketeering activities of bribery, mail fraud, and wire fraud. All Defendants are named in this count. (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 156-60.)
Count III, a Fourteenth Amendment equal protection claim brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleges that Sheriff Warren denied Plaintiffs equal protection of the laws by effectively denying Lucky Palace the right to operate a “qualified location” for the conduct of electronic bingo and the Plaintiff Charities’ the rights to obtain Class B Bingo Licenses, as allowed by Amendment No. 744. (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 161-68.) Count IV alleges a § 1983 conspiracy against all Defendants to deprive Plaintiffs of equal protection. (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 169-75.) Counts V and VI allege state-law tortious interference claims against Mr. McGregor and Victory-Land. (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 176-88.)
Plaintiffs seek injunctive relief against Sheriff Warren, requiring him to “issue Class B Bingo Licenses to each of the [Plaintiff] Charities,” to “issue a Class B Bingo Operator’s License to Lucky Palace,” to “suspend the Fifteen License Minimum and the Sixty License Maximum,” and to “allow the [Plaintiff] Charities to operate any and all games of bingo at the Lucky Palace location.” (6th Am. Compl. 54.) No damages are sought against Sheriff Warren. (6th Am. Compl. 54 n. 3.) As to Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand, Plaintiffs ask for “damages in an amount to be proven at trial, treble damages and punitive damages.” (6th Am. Compl. 54.) Plaintiffs also seek costs, including attorney’s fees, and “such further and additional relief as the Court deems just and appropriate.” (6th Am. Compl. 54.)
8. Third Amended Rules (December 2008)
On December 15, 2008, after this lawsuit was filed, Sheriff Warren adopted the Third Amended Rules. The Third Amended Rules are identical to the Second Amended Rules with two exceptions: They increase the Operator’s License fee from *1108 $250,000 to $500,000 per year, and they increase the charity licensing fees from $1000 to $3000 per year. As set out in the commentary to the Third Amended Rules,
The revisions are necessary due to the increased litigation over charity bingo in Macon County. When the Sheriff, in his official capacity, is named in a lawsuit he has no other source of income to pay for his defense other than monies generated through bingo licensing fees. The fees associated with Class B Bingo Licenses and the Operator’s Licenses Fee were initially meant to be divided and used for protecting the citizens of Macon County at bingo-related functions, to support administrative activities associated with the regulation of bingo operations, and to provide for litigation defense. The substantial increase in litigation threatens to hinder the Sheriffs ability to provide for administrative oversight of bingo regulations and the necessary protection of citizens at bingo-related functions. Therefore, an increase in Class B Bingo License fees and the Operator’s License Fee is necessary.
(3d Am. Rules, Commentary.) The discussion now turns to the analysis of the three sets of legal claims — RICO, constitutional and state law — in that order.
V. DISCUSSION
A. RICO (Counts I and II)
RICO violations are alleged against VictoryLand, Mr. McGregor and Sheriff Warren in Counts I and II of the Sixth Amended Complaint. (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 150-60.) Count I alleges that Defendants violated § 1962(c), by conducting and participating in the conduct of an enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity. (6th Am. CompLIffl 150-55.) The racketeering activity includes acts of bribery chargeable under state law and acts indictable under §§ 1341 (wire fraud) and 1343 (mail fraud). (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 83-135.) Count II alleges a RICO conspiracy claim under § 1962(d), based upon predicate acts of bribery and honest services mail and wire fraud, involving all Defendants. (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 156-60.)
Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand move for summary judgment on the § 1962(c) substantive RICO claim in Count I and the § 1962(d) conspiracy claim in Count II. (Doc. # 421.) Sheriff Warren also moves for summary judgment on the RICO claims “to the extent that any claims exist or are perceived to be alleged against [him] under RICO.” (Doc. #424, at 39.) Plaintiffs filed a cross-motion for partial summary judgment on the RICO claims in Counts I and II that are based upon predicate acts of honest services mail and wire fraud against Mr. McGregor and Victory-Land. Because Plaintiffs contend that there are “disputed questions of fact” regarding Sheriff Warren’s knowing participation in the enterprise, they have not moved for summary judgment on the RICO claims brought against Sheriff Warren. (Doc. #445, at 19 n. 7.) Nor have Plaintiffs pressed for summary judgment on the substantive and conspiratorial claims of racketeering in Counts I and II, which are based upon predicate acts of bribery. (Doc. # 445, at 20 n. 8.)
1. § 1962(c) — Count I
It is illegal “for any person employed by or associated with any enterprise engaged in, or the activities of which affect, interstate or foreign commerce, to conduct or participate, directly or indirectly, in the conduct of such enterprise’s affairs through a pattern of racketeering activity.” § 1962(c). A § 1962(c) violation requires proof of “(1) conduct (2) of an enterprise (3) through a pattern (4) of racketeering activity.”
Williams v. Mohawk Indus., Inc.,
In civil cases, ... RICO plaintiffs must also satisfy the requirements of 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c). Section 1964(c) states that “[a]ny person injured in his business or property by reason of’ RICO’s substantive provisions has the right to “recover threefold the damages he sustains .... ” 18 U.S.C. § 1964(c). Thus, under § 1964(c), civil RICO claimants, such as the plaintiffs here, must show (1) the requisite injury to “business or property,” and (2) that such injury was “by reason of’ the substantive RICO violation.
Id. at 1282-83.
The third and fourth
Williams
elements requiring proof of a pattern of racketeering activity are the subject of Defendants’ summary judgment motions. A pattern of racketeering activity requires at least two acts of racketeering.
36
Williams,
a. Bribery: Alabama Code § 13A-10-61(a)
“Racketeering activity” is broadly defined and includes “any act or threat involving ... bribery ... which is chargeable under State law and punishable by imprisonment for more than one year.” § 1961(1)(A). Plaintiffs contend that the racketeering activity of Defendants 37 includes an ongoing pattern of bribery, in violation of § 13A-10-61(a) of the Alabama Code. A person commits felony bribery under Alabama law if:
(1) He offers, confers or agrees to confer any thing of value upon a public servant with the intent that the public servant’s vote, opinion, judgment, exercise of discretion or other action in his official capacity will thereby be corruptly influenced; or
(2) While a public servant, he solicits, accepts or agrees to accept any pecuniary benefit upon an agreement or understanding that his vote, opinion, judgment, exercise of discretion or other action as a public servant will thereby be corruptly influenced.
§ 13A-10-61(a).
i. Nature of the Theory
Plaintiffs allege specific violations of § 13A-10-61(a)(l) and (a)(2). First, concerning (a)(1), Plaintiffs contend that Mr. Gray Jr., in his capacity as Sheriff Warren’s legal advisor, was a public servant (6th Am. Compl. ¶ 86), and that Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand conferred and offered to confer things of value on Mr. Gray Jr. with the intent that Mr. Gray Jr.’s “actions in advising and consulting with [Sheriff] Warren in the promulgation of, and subsequent amendments to, the rules and regulations for the operation of *1110 bingo in Macon County would be corruptly influenced.” (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 88, 92.) Those things of value to Mr. Gray Jr. allegedly came in the form of legal fees and retainer payments made to the Gray Law Firm, and shareholder dividend payments made to his father, Mr. Gray Sr.
Second, Plaintiffs allege as predicate acts violations of § 13A-10-61(a)(2). They contend that Mr. Gray Jr. “has violated” § 13A-10-61(a)(2) because he “solicited, accepted, and/or agreed to accept pecuniary benefits from [Mr.] McGregor and VictoryLand upon an agreement or understanding that, [Mr.] Gray Jr.’s opinion, judgment, exercise of discretion, or other actions in promulgating and amending rules and regulations for the operation of bingo in Macon County would be corruptly influenced.” (6th Am. Compl. ¶ 89.) Absent any distinction made by Plaintiffs, it is presumed that the “things of value” allegedly bestowed upon Mr. Gray Jr. also comprise the “pecuniary benefits” allegedly accepted by Mr. Gray Jr., as required by § 13A — 10—61(a)(1) and (a)(2). (See, e.g., Doc. # 464, at 28 (arguing that Defendants conferred three “ ‘things of value’ upon [Mr.] Gray Jr. (and [that Mr.] Gray Jr. subsequently accepted them”)).)
ii. Grounds for Summary Judgment
Defendants argue that they are entitled to summary judgment on Plaintiffs’ RICO bribery theory on essentially four grounds. The first two arguments rely on Mr. McGregor’s and Mr. Gray Jr.’s affidavits, as well as on the Plaintiff Charities’ Rule 30(b)(6) deposition testimony, for the contention that there is no evidence that § 13A-10-61(a) has been violated. As the third ground, Defendants argue that there is no evidence that the payments to the Gray Law Firm and/or Mr. Gray Sr. of retainers, legal fees, and shareholder dividends are either “things of value” bestowed upon Mr. Gray Jr. with the intent to corruptly influence him or “pecuniary benefits” accepted by Mr. Gray Jr. with an understanding that his actions would be corruptly influenced. Fourth and finally, Defendants argue that there are no evidentiary facts to support Plaintiffs’ allegation that Mr. Gray Jr. is a “public servant,” within the meaning of § 13A-10-61(a). Plaintiffs assert that they have produced sufficient evidence to create a genuine issue of material fact regarding this RICO claim.
Because Defendants’ third ground is dis-positive, it is unnecessary to address the other grounds. More elaboration on the arguments surrounding the third ground is contained in the next subsection, followed by a discussion of the relevant law and its application to the facts of this case,
iii. Thing of Value, Pecuniary Benefit and Corrupt Influence
Defendants argue that the legal fees and quarterly retainers Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand paid to the Gray Law Firm and the shareholder dividends paid to Mr. Gray Sr. based upon his ownership interest in VictoryLand do not qualify as “things of value” conferred upon Mr. Gray Jr. with the intent to corruptly influence his actions regarding the formulation of bingo Rules, and were not “pecuniary benefits” accepted by Mr. Gray Jr. with the understanding that his actions would be corruptly influenced, within the meaning of § 13A-10-61(a). (Doc. #440, at 81-84.) For one, Defendants argue that “[t]hese payments ... are all inherently and presumptively lawful activities” (Doc. #475, at 17; see also Doc. # 440, at 83), and commenced more than two decades prior to the onset of electronic bingo in Macon County and the alleged bribery scheme. For another, they argue that the potential value (or benefit) to Mr. Gray Jr. is too speculative and remote because it would require Mr. Gray Jr. to believe that the payments would cause “his father’s law firm [to] profit and his father’s estate [to] *1111 increase,” so that “when his father eventually died, [Mr.] Gray Jr. might stand to share in the inheritance of that estate.” (Doc. #475, at 19.) Defendants expound upon their argument in a 282-word sentence:
Plaintiffs’ argument requires Defendants to have predicted twenty years before it happened that a constitutional amendment would authorize electronic bingo to be played in Macon County, that the amendment would permit third parties to run bingo games for charities, that it would authorize Sheriff Warren to promulgate the rules and regulations for electronic bingo, that Sheriff Warren would ask Mr. Gray Jr. to assist him in preparing the rules, that VictoryLand would already have a facility suitable for electronic bingo operations at the time the bingo amendment was passed, and that electronic bingo would be profit able — and then, based upon that prophecy, VictoryLand and Mr. McGregor entered into an agreement with Gray Jr. in 1983 (five years before he was even licensed to practice law in Alabama and twenty-four years before he would become a partner in his father’s law firm), under which VictoryLand would patiently make shareholder payments to Gray [Jr.’s] father and make retainer and legal fee payments to the Gray Law Firm for more than twenty years in the hope that once the predicted events came to pass, Gray Jr. would be able to prevent anyone but VictoryLand’s lawyers from having any input into the drafting of the rules that would be promulgated by Sheriff Warren in order to ensure that Lucky Palace could not comply with the rules so that VictoryLand could be the only operator of electronic bingo games in Macon County, and that Gray Jr. would agree to the scheme so that his father’s law firm could profit and his father’s estate would increase and, as a result, when his father eventually died, Gray Jr. might stand to share in the inheritance of that estate.
(Doc. # 475, at 19 (internal record citations omitted).)
Plaintiffs, however, assert that beginning in January 2003 38 these payments— legal fees and retainer payments to the Gray Law Firm, and shareholder dividends to Mr. Gray Sr. — were transformed into offerings of “things of value” upon Mr. Gray Jr. with the intent to corruptly influence him with respect to the promulgation and amendment of the Rules governing electronic bingo in Macon County, and that Mr. Gray Jr. accepted these “pecuniary benefits” with the understanding that his work on the Rules would be corruptly influenced. As set out in the margin, Plaintiffs give three reasons why each of these payments should be viewed as valuable to Mr. Gray Jr. 39 Plaintiffs further *1112 argue that they have adduced ample circumstantial evidence that Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand “intended to corruptly influence the rule[-]drafting process and that [Mr.] Gray Jr. was aware of those intentions,” and that this evidence satisfies the intent element of their bribery claims. (Doc. # 464, at 33.)
iv. Alabama Bribery Law
The overarching issue is whether these payments- — -retainer payments and legal fees to the Gray Law Firm, and dividend payments to Mr. Gray Sr. — were “things of value” conferred upon Mr. Gray Jr. with the intent to corruptly influence his actions in the rule-drafting process and were “pecuniary benefits” accepted by Mr. Gray Jr. with the understanding that his actions would be corruptly influenced regarding his role in the formulation of the bingo Rules. Before analyzing the parties’ competing positions on this issue, the parameters of the law must be established.
Pursuant to § 13A-10-60(a)(2), a public servant’s acceptance of a “pecuniary benefit” with the understanding that his judgment will be corruptly influenced is a felony. A “[pecuniary benefit” is defined as a “[b]enefit in the form of money, property, commercial interests or anything else the primary significance of which is economic gain.” § 13A-10-60(b)(2). Section 13A-10 — 61(a)(1), in turn, prohibits the offering, conferring, or agreeing to confer any “thing of value” to corruptly influence a public servant’s exercise of judgment. The phrase “thing of value” is not defined by statute.
Two decisions relied upon Plaintiffs (Doc. # 440, at 81-84), however, illustrate that Alabama courts have broadly interpreted a “thing of value.”
See Caruthers v. State,
Hammond
held that whether a specified thing has value under Alabama’s bribery statute requires a subjective examination: “[T]he requirement of value is satisfied if the thing has sufficient value in the mind of the person concerned so that his actions are influenced.”
Id.
at 288-89 (citation and internal quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, it is not a prerequisite that the “thing of value” have “pecuniary or intrinsic value.”
Id.
at 289. “Thing of value” also includes “value in the sense of a personal advantage of some sort to be derived by the recipient.”
Id.-, see also McDonald v. State, 57
Ala.App. 529,
in
Camthers,
cited in
Hammond,
the defendant was convicted of offering a bribe to a juror to “chop cotton a week” in return for an acquittal, in violation of a prior version of Alabama’s bribery statute.
Plaintiffs also contend that
United States v. Gorman,
In addition to reviewing the cases relied upon by the parties, the court has reviewed cases cited in the annotations to § 13A-10-61.
41
In
Williams v. State,
Moreover, in
Ex parte Montgomery,
*1115
Additionally, the following cases demonstrate the type of conduct found prohibitive under former versions of Alabama’s bribery statutes.
See United States v. Chatham,
v. Application
It is clear from the foregoing cases that a “thing of value,” in part because it takes into account subjective viewpoints, encompasses a wide variety of things from money and property (such as cars) to services (such as labor and sex) and other acts (removal of vending machines). Legal fees, retainer payments, and shareholder dividends are no doubt pecuniary in nature. There does not appear to be a serious dispute that, excised from the statute and standing alone, any “thing of value” and “pecuniary benefit” include the monetary payments at issue in this case. Rather, the more salient dispute centers on whether the legal fees, retainer payments, and shareholder dividends (1) were conferred upon Mr. Gray Jr. 43 (2) with the *1116 intent to corruptly influence his role in the rule-drafting process, see § 13A-10-61(a)(1), and similarly whether (1) Mr. Gray Jr. accepted the pecuniary benefits (2) based upon an understanding that his role in the rule-drafting process would be corruptly influenced, see § 13A-10-61(a)(2).
In each of the Alabama decisions cited, there was evidence that the alleged bribe was conferred directly upon the bribee with the intent to corruptly influence the bribee’s actions. Of course, whether there was an intent to corruptly influence (or an agreement to be corruptly influenced) can be proven by not only direct, but also circumstantial, evidence.
See generally Jackson v. State,
Although not cited by either party,
United States v. Biaggi,
In
O’Keefe,
two city officials, who also were partners in a private consulting business, were convicted by a jury for demanding a $32,500 monetary payment in exchange for their votes on city resolutions, in violation of the Hobbs Act.
See
Biaggi’s discussion of dual purpose payments and O’Keefe’s analysis of the absence of an evidentiary link connecting the monetary payment to an illegal purpose illustrate why the same conclusion reached in O’Keefe is mandated in this case. Moreover, there are notable factual distinctions between this case and the Alabama bribery cases that further highlight the failings in the evidentiary record on the issue of bribery.
The first consideration is the purpose of the retainers, legal fees, and shareholder dividends. It is significant what Plaintiffs have not argued: that the payments are devoid of any valid purpose whatsoever. Plaintiffs do not dispute, and evidence supports, that for almost a quarter of a century — decades before the inception of electronic bingo in Macon County — Mr. Gray Sr. and the Gray Law Firm have been employed as legal counsel by Mr. McGregor and/or VictoryLand, VictoryLand has paid the Gray Law Firm quarterly retainer fees, and Mr. Gray Sr. has received dividend payments as a VictoryLand minority shareholder based upon an invariant percentage of ownership. (Doc. # 440; Doc. # 475, at 17.) In fact, it is not argued that, prior to January 2003, any of the payments at issue were bribes 45 ; those payments thus are not alleged to be things of value or pecuniary benefits, within the parameters of § 13A-10-61(a). Hence, there is no argument of a bribery connection between Mr. Gray Sr.’s original purchase of VictoryLand stock in 1983, or the onset in 1983 of the legal relationship between Mr. McGregor/VictoryLand and the Gray Law Firm, and Mr. Gray Jr.’s involvement in the formulation of bingo Rules, some twenty years later. Nor is there any evidence or argument that the Grays foresaw or anticipated the high profitability of electronic bingo, which has exponentially increased the share of profits *1118 payable on Mr. Gray Sr.’s minority interest in VictoryLand. While Plaintiffs point out that the timing of the repayment of the overdue retainer payments coincided with the onset of electronic bingo at Victory-Land, they have not argued or pointed to any evidence suggesting that the past-due retainer payments were not at that time legally owing and due. 46 Plaintiffs also have not contended that the anticipated future retainer payments would differ in kind or amount from those paid since 1984, or would not be supported by any valuable and legal consideration. Moreover, Plaintiffs have not argued that there is anything illegal about the method by which Mr. Gray Sr.’s dividend payments from VictoryLand has been calculated, ie., based upon his unchanging percentage of ownership, or that Mr. Gray Sr.’s dividend payments at any time have not been received in proportion to his shareholding.
Similarly, Plaintiffs have not argued or cited evidence that there was an expectation that future legal fees would not be incurred legitimately for services actually performed by the Gray Law Firm or that future legal fees would exceed the value of legal services rendered by the law firm, or would be based upon fraudulent billing. Moreover, no contention has been advanced that the Gray Law Firm’s simultaneous acceptance of legal fees and retainers is unlawful.
See, e.g., Biaggi
In short, it is uncontroverted that the payments prior to January 2003 were lawful. Plaintiffs also have not contended that the lawful components of those payments wholly ceased in January 2003. The alleged payments thus differ markedly from those in the Alabama cases cited above where a payment was made or promised to a public official who obviously had no colorable or lawful claim to any of it. In
Fuller
and
Pope,
for example, the cash payments clearly were not offered to law enforcement officials in exchange for lawful services.
See, e.g., Fuller,
Biaggi teaches that the existence of a valid purpose for payment does not necessarily mean that the alleged bribee is home free, as a payment can constitute a bribe when lawful and unlawful (ie., bribery) purposes for the payment coincide. But, here, evidence of any unlawfulness is glaringly absent. Plaintiffs posit that there is ample evidence that Mr. McGregor’s and VictoryLand’s agents had a hand in drafting the Rules, which at every angle and amendment clearly favored Victory-Land. But, even accepting Plaintiffs’ argument as true — ie., that Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand “intended to corruptly influence the ruledrafting process and that *1119 [Mr.] Gray Jr. was aware of those intentions” (Doc. # 464, at 33) — there is no evidence, direct or circumstantial, that the payments were tainted with an intent to corruptly influence Mr. Gray Jr. There is, similar to the scenario in O’Keefe, evidence of payments (retainers, legal fees, and shareholder dividends) and Rules favorable to VictoryLand, but what is lacking is any evidence that lawful services were not performed for the legal fees, that the retainers were unlawful, that the fees were excessive, or that Mr. Gray Sr. was not legitimately entitled to the dividends based upon his ownership interest in Victory-Land. In other words, there is no evidence from which to infer that all of a sudden in 2003, Mr. McGregor turned these payments — legal fees and retainer payments to the Gray Law Firm, and shareholder dividends to Mr. Gray Sr.— into offerings of “things of value” upon Mr. Gray Jr. with the intent to corruptly influence him with respect to the promulgation and amendment of the Rules governing electronic bingo in Macon County, or that Mr. Gray Jr. accepted these “pecuniary benefits” with the understanding that his work on the Rules would be corruptly influenced.
Indeed, the evidence tends in the opposite direction. In spite of the birth of bingo, the retainer has remained unchanged, Mr. Gray Sr.’s ownership percentage has held steady (though the returns have increased astronomically), and Mr. Gray Jr. started the bingo project with no VictoryLand stock and continues in that poor state. On this record, to infer a bribery nexus between the Rules and the payments requires speculation far too excessive to overcome summary judgment.
See Chapman v. Am. Cyanamid Co.,
It should also be noted here that discovery has been liberally permitted in this case. {See, e.g., Mem. Op. & Order, at 21 (Doc. # 144) (“Because the case is moving forward on all claims, the parties can expect full discovery.”).) This is why earlier in the litigation, this court reasoned that prior to full discovery, it could not assume either that Mr. Gray Jr. did or did not accept pecuniary benefits, within the meaning of § 13A-10-61(a), but at the same time it could not “ignore the allegations that he did receive pecuniary benefits.” (Doc. # 252, at 27.) Discovery was permitted to ferret out “whether Mr. Gray Jr. did receive pecuniary benefits — evidence the existence or nonexistence of which is unknown to this court.” (Doc. # 252, at 28.) Despite the expansion in scope, discovery has not uncovered any significantly probative evidence that permits the RICO bribery theory to survive summary judgment. Accordingly, Defendants are entitled to summary judgment on Plaintiffs’ RICO bribery claim,
b. Honest Services Mail and Wire Fraud: § 1962(c)
i. Nature of the Theory
In Count I, Plaintiffs bring a RICO claim against Mr. McGregor, VictoryLand and Sheriff Warren for a violation of § 1962(c), based on predicate acts of honest services mail and wire fraud, which, pursuant to § 1964(c), would entitle them to recover treble damages. Plaintiffs allege that the predicate acts of mail and wire fraud defrauded the citizens of Macon County of the honest services of Mr. Gray Jr. and Sheriff Warren, and defrauded Sheriff Warren of the honest services of Mr. Gray Jr., see §§ 1341, 1343, 1346. (6th Am. Compl. ¶ 120.) Hence, there are three alleged schemes to defraud.
*1120 First, Plaintiffs allege that Defendants engaged in a scheme or artifice to deprive the public of Sheriff Warren’s honest services by ensuring that the Rules were promulgated for the benefit of Victory-Land, and not the public. Specifically, Plaintiffs claim that Sheriff Warren “turn[ed] a blind eye” to the conflicts of interest created by Mr. Gray Jr.’s and Mr. McGregor’s involvement in the rule-drafting process. (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 120-26.) Second, Plaintiffs allege that Defendants engaged in a scheme or artifice to deprive the public of Mr. Gray Jr.’s honest services following the ratification of Amendment No. 744. (6th Am. Compl. ¶ 129.) Plaintiffs allege that Mr. Gray Jr. drafted the Rules to further his own personal interests, that those personal interests created conflicts of interest that Mr. Gray Jr. did not disclose to the public, and that the Gray Law Firm and Mr. Gray Sr. failed to prevent the conflicts of interest. (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 128-30.) Third, Plaintiffs aver that Defendants engaged in a scheme or artifice to deprive Sheriff Warren of the honest services of Mr. Gray Jr., who did not fully disclose the conflicts of interest to Sheriff Warren or advise Sheriff Warren that VietoryLand’s agents drafted the Rules. 47 (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 120,131.)
Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand allegedly participated in these three schemes to defraud in two principal ways. First, they directed their attorneys Mr. Bolton and Mr. Johnston to draft Rules (and amendments thereto), highly favorable to VictoryLand and prohibitively exclusionary to competitors, for Sheriff Warren’s promulgation. Second, they bestowed benefits (retainer payments and legal fees) on the Gray Law Firm and Mr. Gray Sr. so that Mr. Gray Jr. would advise Sheriff Warren to enact the Rules drafted by Victory-Land’s agents. (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 123, 129, 132.) It further is alleged that Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand used the mails and interstate wires in furtherance of the schemes to defraud, namely, by exchanging with Mr. Gray Jr. proposed Rules governing bingo by email and facsimile, and mailing numerous checks over a five-year period to the Gray Law Firm and/or Mr. Gray Jr. (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 134-35.) Plaintiffs also contend that Sheriff Warren used the mails on at least two occasions, sending letters to Mr. Bracy and returning Lucky Palace’s application for an Operator’s License. (Doc. # 465, at 23.)
Plaintiffs contend that Defendants’ honest services mail and wire fraud has resulted in Rules that favor VictoryLand, but that have prevented Plaintiffs from obtaining the necessary licenses for operating and conducting electronic bingo in Macon County. As a result, Plaintiffs allege that Lucky Palace has been injured in the form of lost profits and that the Plaintiff Charities have suffered injuries based upon the semi-annual contractual payments of $21,000 they would have received from Lucky Palace had it received a license to operate electronic bingo in Macon County. (Doc. #445, at 37-38; 6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 143,145-46.)
ii. Initial Observation: Skilling
RICO “takes aim at ‘racketeering activity,’ which it defines as ... any act ‘indictable’ under numerous specific federal criminal provisions, including mail and wire fraud.”
Sedima, S.P.R.L. v. Imrex Co.,
This term, § 1346 was under scrutiny in three cases pending before the United States Supreme Court. In
Skilling v. United States,
— U.S. —,
The Supreme Court did not invalidate § 1346, but rather held that it “encompasses] only bribery and kickback schemes,” thereby saving the statute from a due process void-for-vagueness challenge.
Id.
at 2933. In reaching its holding, the Court examined the origin of the honest services doctrine, in particular, Congress’ enactment of § 1346 in response to the Court’s decision in
McNally v. United States,
[T]here is no doubt that Congress intended § 1346 to reach at least bribes and kickbacks. Reading the statute to proscribe a wider range of offensive conduct, we acknowledge, would raise the due process concerns underlying the vagueness doctrine. To preserve the statute without transgressing constitutional limitations, we now hold that § 1346 criminalizes only the bribe-and-kickback core of the pre-McNally case law.
Id. at 2931. Under this limiting construction of § 1346, “Skilling did not commit honest-services fraud.” Id. at 2934. The government had not alleged that Skilling “solicited or accepted side payments from a third party in exchange for making the [charged] misrepresentations,” and, thus, he did not conspire to commit honest services fraud. 48 Id.
*1122 The Supreme Court also rejected the government’s argument that § 1346 should proscribe “undisclosed self-dealing by a public official or private employee — ie., the taking of official action by the employee that furthers his own undisclosed financial interests while purporting to act in the interest of those to whom he owes a fiduciary duty.” Id. at 2932 (internal quotation marks omitted). “In light of the relative infrequency of conflict-of-interest prosecutions in comparison to bribery and kickback charges, and the intercircuit inconsistencies they produced, ... a reasonable limiting construction of § 1346 must exclude this amorphous category of cases.” Id. at 2932.
The issue is the effect Skilling’s holding has on Plaintiffs’ RICO honest services mail and wire fraud claim. The answer is that Skilling, in large part, dooms the claim. Plaintiffs’ three § 1346 theories, as discussed, focus primarily on honest services fraud by means of self-dealing and undisclosed conflicts of interests resulting in personal gain to VictoryLand and Mr. McGregor (in the form of favorable electronic bingo Rules). These theories fall squarely within the category of cases rejected by the Skilling Court as coming within § 1346’s confines.
Confusingly, however, Plaintiffs also allude to honest services fraud predicated on VictoryLand’s and Mr. McGregor’s alleged bribery of Mr. Gray Jr., a purported public official. While bribery of a public official fits within the scope of § 1346, as narrowed by Skilling, the theory nonetheless fails for the reasons discussed in the preceding section. It is not necessary to analyze further Skilling’s impact on Plaintiffs’ theories, the impact of which has not been briefed, because there is another reason in the civil RICO context, which has been fully briefed, why the honest services mail and wire fraud theory cannot survive summary judgment. The summary judgment briefing, which preceded Skilling, focused on § 1964(c)’s proximate cause requirement (a requirement in civil, not criminal, RICO cases), and as explained below, evidence of proximate cause is lacking. In other words, assuming arguendo that some part of Plaintiffs’ RICO honest services mail and wire fraud claim survives Skilling, Defendants nonetheless are entitled to summary judgment because Plaintiffs’ injuries were not proximately caused by the RICO violation,
iii. Grounds for Summary Judgment
In addition to satisfying the four elements of § 1962(c),
Williams,
Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand raise two main challenges to Plaintiffs’ RICO honest services mail and wire fraud claim. 49 First, they argue that Plaintiffs lack RICO standing, as required by § 1964(c), because they have failed to show both (1) an injury to “business or property” and (2) that such injury was “by reason of’ the substantive RICO violation. Sec *1123 ond, as to § 1962(c)’s four elements, they contend that Plaintiffs’ honest services mail and wire fraud claim fails on the first element: “[N]one of the conduct that Plaintiffs have imputed to Defendants, even if it were true, constitutes the deprivation of honest services by mail or wire fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1346.” 50 (Doc. #440, at 92-93.) The latter argument implicates Skilling, and the negative effect of Skilling on Plaintiffs’ honest services mail and wire fraud theory is addressed above. Alternatively, Defendants are entitled to prevail at summary judgment on one of their standing arguments, as discussed below.
iv. § 1964(c): RICO Standing
Based upon the summary judgment standard, there is sufficient evidence of harm to Plaintiffs’ business or property. There, however, is insufficient evidence that Plaintiffs’ alleged injuries were proximately caused by the RICO violation, as required by § 1964(c)’s “by reason of’ language. Accordingly, as explained below, Plaintiffs do not have RICO statutory standing to bring an honest services mail and wire fraud claim.
a. Injury to Business or Property
The terms “ ‘business or property’ are ... words of limitation.”
Grogan v. Platt,
Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand contend that the alleged deprivation of Sheriff Warren’s and the Macon County citizens’ right to honest services is not an injury to business or property because the “direct injury” resulting from honest services fraud is “a deprivation of an intangible right, rather than an injury to business or property.” (Doc. # 475, at 32.) In other words, they assert that any alleged § 1346 scheme to defraud “could at most only deprive Plaintiffs of an intangible right to honest services, which is not a sufficiently particularized and concrete loss to business or property to confer standing.” (Doc. # 459, at 22-23.) Plaintiffs, however, contend that their compensable injuries are their lost profits, not the deprivation of honest services. 52 (Doc. # 445, at *1124 37-38.) Having examined the cases relied upon by Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand in light of the arguments presented, the court finds that they are mistaken as to the nature of the injuries alleged. 53
In
Doe v. Roe,
Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand hone in on footnote five of the
Doe
opinion. In that footnote, the Seventh Circuit noted that, although the plaintiffs “claim sounding in the loss of honest services might satisfy” the mail and wire fraud statutes to the extent that the alleged violations occurred after § 1346’s effective date
(i.e.,
November 18, 1988), and consequently “could serve as the predicate racketeering acts, they could not be a direct basis for civil RICO liability since § 1964(c)’s requirement of injury to property would still not be met.”
Doe,
Similarly, in
Marina Point Development Associates v. United States,
The remainder of the cases relied upon by Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand stand for essentially the same principle,
i.e.,
that a § 1964(c)
injury
cannot take the form of an alleged deprivation of honest services.
See Ove v. Gwinn,
*1125
It is true that the alleged
predicate acts
here sound in a loss of honest services, but Plaintiffs do not claim, as did the plaintiffs in
Doe
and the other cases cited above, that the loss of honest services is the § 1964(c)
injury.
To the contrary, Plaintiffs claim that they sustained economic business and/or property injuries in the form of lost profits and contractual payments when they were unable to obtain the necessary licenses from Sheriff Warren to operate and conduct electronic bingo in Macon County. The court, thus, finds that Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand have not demonstrated that the dictum in footnote five of the
Doe
opinion applies in this case because Plaintiffs do not allege that the loss of honest services is the “direct basis for civil RICO liability.”
Doe,
Moreover, as Plaintiffs point out (Doc. # 464, at 52), the Eleventh Circuit has held that lost profits can constitute an “injury to business or property” flowing from a violation of § 1962(c).
See Maiz v. Virani,
b. Proximate Cause
Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand also assert that Plaintiffs cannot show that the lost profits and contractual payments they claim that they would have received had they obtained licenses from Sheriff Warren to operate and conduct electronic bingo in Macon County were proximately caused by the alleged RICO violations. They argue that Plaintiffs’ claimed injuries of lost profits and contractual payments are not the “direct result of the alleged conduct constituting the RICO violation.” (Doc. # 459, at 26, 29; Doc. # 440, at 102-04; Doc. #475, at 46.) Instead, relying upon
Anza v. Ideal Steel Supply Corp.,
Section 1964(c)’s “by reason of’ language embodies a proximate cause requirement. “[A] plaintiff may sue under § 1964(c) only if the alleged RICO violation was the proximate cause of the plaintiffs injury.”
55
Anza,
“When a court evaluates a RICO claim for proximate causation, the central question it must ask is whether the alleged violation led directly to the plaintiffs injuries.”
Anza,
In
Anza,
the plaintiff and the defendant were competitor companies, both offering steel products and related services in the same geographical area.
56
Relying principally upon
Holmes,
the
Anza
Court concluded that the plaintiff lacked statutory standing under § 1964(c) and, thus, could not maintain its § 1962(c) claim.
See Anza,
The Supreme Court concluded that the “proper referent of the proximate-cause analysis [was] an alleged practice of conducting [the defendant’s] business through a pattern of
defrauding the State.” Anza,
The Court explained that two of the “motivating principle^]” for requiring proximate causation under § 1964(c), as set out in
Holmes,
further illustrated why the plaintiffs injury was not the “direct result” of a RICO violation.
Anza,
Applying the first principle, the
Anza
Court observed that the plaintiff categorized its “injury” as “its own loss of sales resulting from [the defendant’s] decreased prices for cash-paying customers.”
The Supreme Court also found § 1964(e)’s proximate cause requirement lacking in its recent decision in
Hemi Group, LLC v. City of New York,
— U.S. —,
Here, the conduct directly responsible for the City’s harm was the customers’ failure to pay their taxes. And the conduct constituting the alleged fraud was Hemi’s failure to file Jenkins Act reports. Thus, as in Anza, the conduct directly causing the harm was distinct from the conduct giving rise to the fraud.
Id.
at 990 (citing
Anza,
Turning back to this case, Plaintiffs formulate the proximate cause analysis as follows: Sheriff Warren’s refusal to consider and grant licenses to Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities, “which arose from the rules and regulations produced by Defendants’ racketeering activities, has been and continues to be the direct and proximate cause of an injury to Lucky Palace’s business” (in the form of lost profits), and to the Plaintiff Charities’ “business and property” (in the form of lost semi-annual contractual payments from Lucky Palace). (Doc. # 445, at 37.) This formulation is devoid of analysis; it is but a mere legal conclusion, and it is incorrect.
The analysis appropriately begins by identifying the predicate acts.
See Anza,
Plaintiffs’ theory is that Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand harmed Plaintiffs by participating in schemes to defraud the citizens of Macon County and Sheriff Warren of their intangible right to receive honest services (by clandestinely drafting proposed Rules for Sheriff Warren’s promulgation and by bribing Mr. Gray Jr. to advise Sheriff Warren to adopt those Rules). Furthermore, as to Sheriff Warren, the theory is that he harmed Plaintiffs by remaining willfully blind to the conflicts of interest created by Mr. Gray Jr.’s and Mr. McGregor’s involvement in the rule-drafting process. The product of those dishonest services (Rules governing electronic bingo in Macon County) allowed Sheriff Warren to reject Plaintiffs’ applications for licenses to conduct and operate electronic bingo. (Doc. # 445, at 37; 6th Am. Compl. ¶ 145);
accord Anza,
First, the citizens of Macon County allegedly have been defrauded, and those citizens deprived of the honest services of Sheriff Warren and Mr. Gray Jr. The citizens are the ones who Plaintiffs assert have lost the benefits associated with a competitive market, including higher quality products and services, lower prices, increased jobs and services, and additional infrastructure. (Doc. # 445, at 33.) Indeed, Plaintiffs make a point of particularizing the harms to the citizens of Macon County, to include: (1) “reduced competition and thus reduced checks on price and controls on quality,” which among other things allows VictoryLand to “increase charges to its patrons”; (2) “the loss of additional jobs and additional infrastructure {e.g., sewers) that would have been provided by Lucky Palace had Victory-Land not secured a monopoly”; and (3) “limit[ed] governmental revenues, which, in turn, limit the provision of services to the citizens of Macon County.” (Doc. # 445, at 33; Michael A. Williams, Ph.D. ¶¶ 45-57.) As to these contentions, “[t]he proper referent of the proximate-cause analysis” is an alleged practice of providing dishonest services through a pattern of defrauding the citizens of Macon County.
Second, with respect to Sheriff Warren (as the victim), he was allegedly defrauded of the honest services of his lawyer, Mr. Gray Jr. As to this contention, the proper referent of the proximate-cause analysis is an alleged practice of providing dishonest services through a pattern of defrauding Sheriff Warren. The direct victim here is Sheriff Warren. Plaintiffs nonetheless contend that they have been “directly in
*1130
jured by ... Defendants’ interference in the attorney-client relationship between [Mr.] Gray Jr. and Sheriff Warren.” (Doc. # 464, at 49-50.) Namely, “[b]y depriving Sheriff Warren of the honest services of [Mr.] Gray Jr.,” Plaintiffs contend that “Defendants secured a monopoly on electronic bingo in Macon County,” thereby preventing Plaintiffs “from participating in the market for electronic bingo.” (Doc. #464, at 50.) Plaintiffs cite
Bridge v. Phoenix Bond & Indem. Co.,
In
Bridge,
regular bidders at the county’s auctions of tax liens sued competitors, alleging that the competitors engaged in mail fraud by submitting false affidavits that they had complied with the “single, simultaneous bidder rule.”
To be sure,
Bridge
rejected the argument that a plaintiff who brings a mail fraud claim
must
demonstrate that it relied on the defendant’s misrepresentations to establish § 1964(c)’s proximate cause requirement.
Id. Bridge,
however, did not disturb
Anza’s
and
Holmes’s
holdings that the alleged violation must be both the “but for” and the proximate cause of the injury to demonstrate that the injury was “by reason of’ a RICO violation.
Id.
at 2141-42. Rather, in
Bridge,
the Supreme Court picked up where
Anza
left off. The
Anza
Court had declined to address the defendants’ alternative argument that a RICO claim predicated on mail or wire fraud requires proof that the plaintiff relied on the defendant’s misrepresentations.
See
*1131
Moreover, in
Bridge,
proximate cause was neither in doubt nor at issue; it was undisputed that the plaintiff, a competitor, was the “primary and intended victim[ ] of the scheme to defraud.”
Here, the cause of Plaintiffs’ asserted harms
(i.e.,
lost sales and contractual payments) is a series of actions (being denied electronic bingo licenses) that are “entirely distinct” from the alleged RICO violation (defrauding the citizens of Macon County and Sheriff Warren of honest services).
Anza,
Anza
commands this finding, notwithstanding Plaintiffs’ assertions that the ulterior goal of Defendants was to give VictoryLand exclusive control over electronic bingo operations in Macon County and to prevent Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities from competing with it in the electronic bingo business. Plaintiffs’ assertions comport with the court of appeals’ holding in
Anza,
but that holding was overturned.
See
Also, particularly apropos here is the
Anza
Court’s admonition that a direct causal nexus between the RICO violation and a plaintiffs injuries “has particular resonance when applied to claims brought by economic competitors, which, if left unchecked, could blur the line between RICO and the antitrust laws.”
On a similar line of argument, Plaintiffs argue that, as a “foreseeable ... consequence” of the schemes to defraud, they “were prevented from participating in the market for electronic bingo.” (Doc. # 464, at 59.) However, the Supreme Court in Hemi Group soundly rejected foreseeability as the governing standard:
The dissent would have RICO’s proximate cause requirement turn on foreseeability, rather than on the existence of a sufficiently “direct relationship” between the fraud and the harm. It would find that the City has satisfied that requirement because “the harm is foreseeable; it is a consequence that Hemi intended, indeed desired; and it falls well within the set of risks that Congress sought to prevent.” Post, at 997-998 (opinion of BREYER, J.). If this line of reasoning sounds familiar, it should. It is precisely the argument lodged against the majority opinion in Anza. There, the dissent criticized the majority’s view for “permit[ting] a defendant to evade liability for harms that are not only foreseeable, but the intended consequences of the defendant’s unlawful behavior.”547 U.S. at 470 ,126 S.Ct. 1991 ... (THOMAS, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). But the dissent there did not carry the day, and no one has asked us to revisit Anza.
With that said, the court is mindful of Plaintiffs’ asserted injuries, just as the Court in
Anza
acknowledged the plaintiffs asserted harms.
See
Plaintiffs insist that they did enough to warrant at least an assurance from Sheriff Warren that, if construction of Lucky Palace commenced, he would grant Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities the required Operator’s License and Class B Bingo Licenses. (Doc. # 464, at 41.) Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand take issue with that assertion, contending, among other things, that “there are a plethora of reasons why the Lucky Palace facility was never constructed, why electronic bingo was never played at that conceptual facility, and why the Plaintiff [Charities] never received any fees from this hoped-for electronic bingo operation — reasons that are completely unrelated to the alleged RICO violations.” (Doc. #475, at 46-47; Doc. # 440, at 102-03; Doc. # 459, at 28.)
The problem with Plaintiffs’ position is that they have not explained why the steps they took — purchasing real estate, hiring an engineer, etc. — would have qualified them for licenses to operate electronic bingo in Macon County under a set of rules and regulations that had not been allegedly tainted by the schemes to defraud. As has been noted, while Amendment No. 744 commands the sheriff of Macon County to oversee compliance with six listed criteria and requires him to promulgate rules and regulations for the licensing and operation of bingo games in Macon County, it provides virtually no guidance as to what those rules and regulations should or must contain. The constitutional amendment itself obviously leaves the sheriff with sub *1134 stantial discretion in determining the substance of rules and regulations. It simply is too difficult to envision all of the potential formulations of the rules and regulations that could exist absent the alleged fraud, and to determine whether under those infinite possibilities Plaintiffs could have satisfied all of the requirements to operate and conduct electronic bingo in Macon County. The determination could never be made without a substantial measure of guesswork. 61
In sum, Plaintiffs have not shown that their injuries were proximately caused by the schemes to defraud. Accordingly, all Defendants are entitled to summary judgment on Plaintiffs’ RICO honest services mail and wire fraud claim.
2. § 1962(d) — Count II
“Section 1962(d) of the RICO statutes makes it illegal for anyone to conspire to violate one of the substantive provisions of RICO, including § 1962(c).”
Am. Dental Ass’n,
B. Equal Protection (Counts III and IV)
Counts III and IV of the Sixth Amended Complaint allege infringements of Plaintiffs’ right to equal protection under the Fourteenth Amendment, as enforced by § 1983. Count III is against Sheriff Warren in his official capacity. Plaintiffs raise facial, disparate impact and as applied equal protection challenges to the Second Amended Rules. (Doc. # 445, at 44-50.) Count IV alleges that Sheriff Warren and Mr. McGregor, individually and as an agent for VictoryLand, engaged in a § 1983 conspiracy to deprive Plaintiffs of equal protection. It is alleged that they
*1135 agreed or had an understanding— reached by, through, and with the assistance and influence of Fred Gray, Fred Gray Jr., and the Gray Law Firm — that Defendant Warren would issue rules and regulations for the licensing and operation of bingo in Macon County that would (1) deprive any nonprofit organization, other than a nonprofit organization associated with VietoryLand, of the ability to obtain a license for the conduct of electronic bingo in Macon County and (2) deprive any organization, other than VietoryLand, of the ability to obtain an operator’s license for the conduct of bingo in Macon County. Accordingly, Defendants McGregor and VietoryLand were jointly engaged with Defendant Warren, a state official, in the deprivation of the Plaintiffs’ equal protection rights.
(6th Am. Compl. ¶ 170.)
The Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause provides that no state shall “deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.” U.S. Const, amend. XIV. The mandate of the Equal Protection Clause essentially is “that all persons similarly situated should be treated alike.”
Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr.,
Plaintiffs cite
E & T Realty v. Strickland,
Defendants move for summary judgment on Counts III and IV. Sheriff War *1136 ren asserts that Plaintiffs have not demonstrated a violation of the Equal Protection Clause, and that, therefore, Counts III and IV fail. (Doc. #424, at 41-45.) Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand, named only in Count IV, argue that Plaintiffs’ § 1983 conspiracy claim falters because “Plaintiffs as a matter of law cannot show that there was a violation of their federal rights.” (Doc. # 440, at 139.) Because Defendants challenge the viability of the substantive equal protection claim on essentially the same grounds, their arguments apply to both Counts III and IV and will be addressed together.
1. Vice Activities
The Supreme Court has placed gambling in the same category as other “products or activities deemed harmful, such as cigarettes, alcoholic beverages, and prostitution.”
Posadas de P.R. Assocs. v. Tourism Co. of P.R.,
Because gambling “falls into a category of ‘vice’ activity,” it “e[an] be, and frequently has been, banned altogether.”
United States v. Edge Broad. Co.,
Moreover, it is well established that “[t]he regulation of gambling devices is within the police power of the State.”
Opinion of the Justices,
Sheriff Warren has the authority to implement rules for the regulation of bingo games in Macon County. Amendment No. 744 grants him that authority.
See
Ala. Const.1901 amend. No. 744 (“The sheriff shall promulgate rules and regulations for the licensing and operation of bingo games within the county.”). Sheriff Warren also has regulatory authority pursuant to his “police powers.”
Opinion of the Justices,
2. Facial Challenges to the Second Amended Rules (The First Category)
Plaintiffs’ equal protection claim includes facial challenges to two provisions of the Second Amended Rules. The first relates to the Operator’s License that Lucky Palace wants; the second to Class B Bingo Licenses that the Plaintiff Charities want. First, Plaintiffs assert that there is no rational basis for the requirement in the Second Amended Rules that a “ ‘qualified location’ be in existence” for inspection and approval by Sheriff Warren “before an operator’s license would issue” (the “existing facility requirement”). 62 (Doc. # 445, at 44-46.) Second, Plaintiffs argue that the Second Amended Rules are facially invalid because the interplay between the requirement that no Class B Bingo Licensee “shall be authorized to operate bingo at any qualified location ... unless a minimum of fifteen (15) applicants shall first obtain Class B [Bingo] Licenses” and the requirement that no more than sixty Class B Bingo Licenses shall be issued for the operation of bingo in Macon County (together the “numerical licensing requirements”) give VietoryLand a monopoly on electronic bingo in Macon County. (Doc. # 445, at 46-50.)
a. Rational Basis Review
Plaintiffs concede, and this court previously has found, that the Rules and Regulations do not treat entities differently on the basis of race or another suspect classification, and that because those Rules govern a gambling activity, they do not impinge on fundamental rights.
(See
Mem. Op.
&
Order, at 20 (Doc. # 144).) Accordingly, Plaintiffs’ facial equal pro
*1138
tection claim is subject to rational basis review. “If a law treats individuals differently on the basis of race or another suspect classification, or if the law impinges on a fundamental right, it is subject to strict scrutiny.”
Leib v. Hillsborough County Pub. Transp. Comm’n, 558
F.3d 1301, 1306 (11th Cir.2009);
see also Craigmiles v.
Giles,
The rational basis “standard of review is a paradigm of judicial restraint!,]”
F.C.C. v. Beach Commc’ns., Inc.,
The rational basis test asks, first, “whether the government has the power or authority to regulate the particular area in question” and, second, “whether there is a rational relationship between the government’s objective and the means it has chosen to achieve it.”
Leib, 558
F.3d at 1306. That Sheriff Warren had such authority is not disputed. In
Haves v. City of Miami,
A governmental purpose must be “legitimate,” but it need not have been the actual purpose.
Haves,
Indeed, it is well established that the “Equal Protection Clause does not require government decisionmakers to articulate any reason for them actions.”
Haves,
Whether there is a rational basis that “further[s] the hypothesized [governmental] purpose” also is not dependent upon “whether that basis was actually considered by the legislative body,” but instead focuses upon the existence of “a conceivably rational basis.”
Id.
(citation and internal quotation marks omitted);
see also U.S. R.R. Ret. Bd. v. Fritz,
In other words, if there are “plausible reasons” for the government’s action, the court’s “inquiry is at an end.”
Beach,
Rational basis review strictly limits the function of the court. The court cannot (1) strike down a regulation if a “conceivably rational basis” exists for the enacting governmental officials to believe that the regulation would further the hypothesized purpose,
Haves,
*1140
With that said, rational basis scrutiny, while very deferential, is not “ ‘toothless.’ ”
Deen,
Finally, whether there is a rational basis for a government regulation is a question of law to be determined by the court.
See Greenbriar,
b. Existing Facility Requirement
The “qualified location” provision found in the Second Amended Rules, which the parties refer to as the “existing facility” requirement,
63
is the subject of the first equal protection challenge. Plaintiffs contend that the classification and different treatment of entities without existing facilities is not rationally related to any legitimate governmental purpose.
64
*1141
Defendants, however, assert that the existing facility requirement is “rationally related to the legitimate governmental interest of economic development,” as it ensures a “significant investment in and commitment to the economic development of Macon County.”
65
(Doc. # 440, at 132, 133-34; Doc. # 459, at 74; Doc. # 475, at 53.) Plaintiffs do not dispute that “[p]romoting economic development is a traditional and long-accepted function of government.”
Kelo v. City of New London, Conn.,
Defendants say that the requirement that a proposed electronic bingo facility exist for inspection prior to licensing “is rationally related to other legitimate government interests, including ... protecting the safety and well being of the citizens of Macon County,” and that Sheriff Warren’s ability “to protect the safety and welfare of the citizens of Macon County ... is served by requiring that a facility exist that can be inspected prior to the issuance of a license.” (Doc. # 459, at 76; see also Doc. #440, at 134-36; Warren Dep. 134 (“I don’t think expecting someone to have a building there before [he] get[s] a license is asking too much.”).) Sheriff Warren also points out that the requirement of an existing facility further serves to limit electronic bingo in his regulatory territory of Macon County, and that “limiting ... a vice activity such as gambling is a plausible” and recognized legitimate reason for government regulation. (Doc. #458, at 28.)
*1142 Plaintiffs have not contested the legitimacy of a governmental interest in the protection of the public’s safety and welfare. Instead, Plaintiffs argue that requiring an existing facility as a requirement for licensing is arbitrary and not rationally related to this proposed legitimate governmental interest. (Doc. #464, at 57.)
Thus, the arguments having been sifted, the issue is whether there is a rational relationship between a public safety goal and the Second Amended Rules’ requirement that a $15 million facility must be erected prior to inspection and Operator’s License approval. 67
Sheriff Warren is the chief law enforcement official responsible for the safety of patrons at facilities where electronic bingo is conducted. The Rules and Regulations pertaining to the sheriffs inspection address matters concerning the physical structure of the building potentially affecting the safety and welfare of the public. These include public liability insurance, liquor liability insurance, “adequate” parking (patron safety), onsite security (protection of patrons from criminal activity), onsite first aid personnel (protection of patrons’ health and general welfare), compliance with the Americans with Disabilities Act, and the requirement that all applicable building code requirements are met. (2d Am. Rules § 1(f) & (j).) The safety and welfare of the citizens of Macon County, thus, is furthered, perhaps imperfectly, by requiring that a facility exist that can be inspected prior to the issuance of an Operator’s License.
Plaintiffs are correct that Lucky Palace (or any entity without an existing facility) must make tremendous expenditures to build a facility, and that it certainly would be good business practice to obtain preconstruction approval, or some sort of intermediate assurance, prior to building a $15 million facility.
68
There may be other ways, or intermediate steps, to obtain a license that do not require the raising of a physical structure, but “rational-basis review does not give courts the option to speculate as to whether some other scheme could have better regulated the evils in question.”
Powers,
The thrust of Plaintiffs’ argument against a rational basis finding is that there are “no firm legal standards for licensing under the existing-faeility requirement” and that, therefore, requiring that a facility be constructed for inspection prior to its approval as a “qualified location” is not rationally related to the legitimate governmental interest of public safety. (Doc. # 464, at 57-58.) Plaintiffs give five reasons why the court should find that the existing facility requirement amounts to a standardless scheme of unbridled discretion: (1) the definition of “qualified location” includes only “vague requirements”; (2) there are no standards governing Sheriff Warren’s inspection and approval; (3) the amendments to the Rules, which occurred over a thirteen-month period, made it “impossible for a potential entrant to know whether the standards governing his entry at the time construction commenced would be the same at the time construction was completed”; (4) Sheriff Warren was “unreliable” because he amended the First Amended Rules five months after he represented to Lucky Palace that he foresaw no further changes to the Rules; and (5) “most importantly,” Sheriff Warren had “unfettered discretion” because he testified that he had “the option of denying” an application for a license even if the applicant met all of the requirements set out in the Rules. 70 (Doc. # 464, at 58-59.)
For their argument that the existing facility requirement contains “no firm legal standards” (Doc. # 445, at 45; Doc. # 464, at 59), Plaintiffs rely upon
Browning-Ferris Industries of Alabama, Inc. v. Pegues,
Plaintiffs’ argument relies exclusively on
Brouming-Ferris’s
discussion of a due process, not an equal protection, claim.
See
Plaintiffs have not brought a Fourteenth Amendment
due process
claim challenging the Rules or Amendment No. 744 as being standardless or void for vagueness. To the extent that Plaintiffs seek to invoke the Due Process Clause, that theory is absent in all versions of the complaint, including the most recent one.
73
Cf. Gilmour v. Gates, McDonald & Co.,
ment in a brief opposing summary judgment.”). This new unpled theory will not be considered at this late stage of the game. (See 2d Am. Scheduling Order ¶ 4 (Doc. # 341) (establishing June 2, 2009, as the deadline for amending the pleadings).)
Other than
Browning-Ferns,
Plaintiffs rely upon
Hornsby,
but
Hornsby
only further demonstrates that Plaintiffs’ argument is grounded in the wrong provision of the Fourteenth Amendment. An argument was made in
Hornsby
pertaining to the alleged unbridled discretion exercised by the licensing authority in denying a liquor permit, but the Fifth Circuit’s discussion at that point was centered on a denial of due process.
See
This brings the analysis back to the fact that the key portions of Browning-Ferris and Hornsby upon which Plaintiffs rely relate to due process, not equal protection, challenges. No other decision has been cited by Plaintiffs in support of their argument. Plaintiffs have relied on the Due Process Clause (the square peg), but attempt to prevail in this action on a claim invoking the Equal Protection Clause (the round hole). In sum, Plaintiffs have not met their burden of establishing that the existing facility requirement is not rationally related to the legitimate governmental interest of public safety and welfare,
c. Numerical Licensing Requirements
Plaintiffs’ second facial challenge is to the numerical licensing requirements that allegedly give VictoryLand a monopoly on electronic bingo in Macon County without any rational basis. This challenge directly implicates the Class B Bingo Licenses of the Plaintiff Charities and indirectly Lucky Palace’s proposed Operator’s License. Plaintiffs’ argument is as follows: The Second Amended Rules, which were effective January 1, 2005, provide that the owner of a “qualified location” cannot operate electronic bingo unless it is affiliated with at least fifteen Class B Bingo License holders. The Second Amended Rules simultaneously cap the number of Class B Bingo Licenses at sixty. On July 25, 2005, which was approximately six months after the effective date of the Second Amended Rules, Plaintiffs “attempted to submit their application for Class B licenses.” (Doc. # 445, at 46.) On that date, however, there were fifty-nine Class B Bingo Licenses issued and under contract with VictoryLand, thereby making it impossible under the Second Amended Rules “for any ‘qualified location’ other than VictoryLand to conduct electronic bingo in Macon County.” (Doc. # 445, at 46.) Plaintiffs frame the issue as “whether the classification drawn by the Second Amended Rules' — which allows electronic bingo to be conducted only at Victory-Land — is rationally related to a legitimate state interest.” (Doc. # 445, at 47.)
Plaintiffs argue that their burden of negating every conceivable rational basis easily is met based upon Sheriff Warren’s “mind.” (Doc. # 445, at 48.) Sheriff Warren testified that he did not intend for the Rules and Regulations to create a monopoly, and that “a monopoly protects no one.” (Doc. #445, at 48 (citing Warren Dep. 306-07).) Because Sheriff Warren’s testimony establishes that “no governmental purpose for creating a monopoly could conceivably have been the policy or purpose of Sheriff Warren,” Plaintiffs argue that they have met their burden. (Doc. # 445, at 49 (citing
Univ. of Ala. v. Garrett,
Plaintiffs rely on three faulty assumptions: first, that the Second Amended Rules on their face give VictoryLand the exclusive right to conduct electronic bingo in Macon County; second, that delving into Sheriff Warren’s motives is a proper endeavor under rational basis review; and third, that a regulation’s effect of creating a monopoly is the sine qua non of “irrational” under the Equal Protection Clause.
As to the first assumption, while it is true that there is nothing in the Second Amended Rules that forecloses all sixty Class B Bingo License holders from contracting with a single electronic bingo operator, the minimum and maximum licensing requirements, on their face, permit up to four electronic bingo casinos to operate in Macon County at one time. That is, under the Second Amended Rules, it is plausible that a “qualified location” owner could limit its contracts with Class B Bingo License holders to fifteen, the minimum number required for the operation of electronic bingo at any one qualified location. Plaintiffs have not complained that the operation of electronic bingo at four (or even two or three) facilities would be unconstitutional, only that a “monopoly” of one is unconstitutional. Hence, under Plaintiffs’ definition of “monopoly,” the Second Amended Rules are not facially invalid because there is a conceivable set of circumstances by which more than one facility could operate electronic bingo in Macon County.
Turning to Plaintiffs’ second assumption, as previously explained, rational basis review does not permit an examination of Sheriff Warren’s motives for adding the fifteen-license minimum in the First Amended Rules and then less than seven months later, again amending the Rules to add a countywide sixty-license cap.
See Haves,
This brings the court to Plaintiffs’ third assumption that economic regulations creating monopolies are
per se
unconstitutional under the Equal Protection Clause. While it may seem counterintuitive, there
*1147
are, as Defendants point out (Doc. #440, at 131-32), numerous cases in which no equal protection violation under rational basis review has been found, even when the effect of the regulation was to create a “monopoly.”
See, e.g., City of New Orleans,
Turning to proper rational basis review, it must be determined first, whether there is a legitimate governmental purpose that Sheriff Warren could have been pursuing when he implemented the numerical licensing requirements, which had the effect of limiting the number of electronic bingo facilities that can operate in Macon County. If there is a legitimate governmental purpose, the second inquiry is whether a rational basis exists for Sheriff Warren to have believed that the numerical licensing requirements would further the hypothesized purpose.
See Haves,
Gaming restrictions on the number and location of gaming facilities have been found rationally related to a variety of legitimate governmental purposes. The following cases are illustrative. In
Artichoke Joe’s,
a California law that gave tribes an undisputed “monopoly” on Class III casino-style gambling on tribal lands was “reasonably designed to defend against the criminal infiltration of gaming operations” and furthered the legitimate governmental purpose of “ensuring that such gaming activities are free from criminal and other undesirable elements.”
In
Helton v. Hunt,
In
Rodriguez,
an equal protection challenge was lodged against the constitutionality of a Florida statute that provided that “in no event shall any jai alai fronton be licensed to operate within twenty miles of a fronton already licensed.”
In
Landers v. Eastern Racing Association,
*1149 The foregoing cases reveal that on their face, Sheriff Warren’s numerical licensing requirements easily pass rational basis scrutiny. The fifteen-license minimum and sixty-license maximum work together to restrict the number of electronic bingo gaming facilities in Macon County to a maximum of four. The power to restrict the number of gaming facilities, as illustrated above, is a valid exercise of Sheriff Warren’s police regulatory powers of a vice activity, here, electronic bingo.
Moreover, the Commentary to the Second Amended Rules provides that the sixty-license maximum was imposed to limit electronic bingo activities in Macon County so as to allow the sheriff to “more effectively regulate and enforce proper conduct of such bingo games.” There is ample authority from which to conclude that gambling carries with it heightened law enforcement needs, including the potential for “criminal infiltration of gaming operations,”
Artichoke Joe’s,
Having found a plausible legitimate governmental purpose, the court must next determine whether the numerical licensing requirements are rationally related to that legitimate governmental purpose. Obviously, the fewer electronic bingo facilities, the easier it is for the sheriff to ensure compliance with the Rules (a duty with which the sheriff was specifically charged by Amendment No. 744), and to otherwise provide patrol supervision at and near the establishments themselves. Sheriff Warren also could have believed that fewer facilities would allow him to better allocate police resources, permit a greater concentration of law enforcement presence and patrol, or simplify the efforts the sheriff must take to regulate and enforce proper conduct of the electronic bingo games. And Sheriff Warren could have believed that a limitation on the number of electronic bingo halls would correspondingly reduce the risk of crime. Accordingly, restricting the number of electronic bingo facilities that can operate in Macon County furthers the legitimate governmental interest of facilitating law enforcement patrol and control of electronic bingo for the safety and welfare of the public.
Moreover, while social costs associated with gambling and its effect on moral conscience are publicly debated, Sheriff Warren also could have believed that a legitimate purpose for regulatory restrictions on gambling was the alleviation of the social costs associated with it. In general terms, the non-benign effects of the gambling business have been recognized by the courts.
See Posadas,
Furthermore, based upon the authority of
City of New Orleans, Pacific States Box & Basket Co., Artichoke Joe’s
and
Rodriguez,
discussed above, the fact that all of the available licenses under the Second Amended Rules have been issued to charities that have contracted with VictoryLand for the operation of electronic bingo, thereby giving VictoryLand a monopoly in this gaming industry, does not facially invalidate the rules.
See, e.g., City of New Orleans,
In another effort to invalidate the numerical licensing requirements, Plaintiffs rely upon the Sixth Circuit’s pronouncement in
Craigmiles
that “protecting a discrete interest group from economic competition is not a legitimate governmental purpose,”
Here, however, the court is not faced with deciding whether a monopolistic purpose is a legitimate governmental purpose under rational basis review because there are plausible legitimate interests for the Second Amended Rules’ numerical licensing requirements that have nothing to do with economic protectionism. As discussed, there is a conceivable rational basis for the numerical licensing requirements that is steeped in ensuring efficacious law enforcement and regulatory control for the safety and welfare of the public. The public safety/welfare rationale is amply supported by the case law and the record in this case, and thus, it cannot be said that this rationale stinks like a “ ‘five-week-old, unrefrigerated dead fish.’ ” Id. at 225 (citation omitted). Other plausible bases have been demonstrated as well.
In sum, the Second Amended Rules’ numerical licensing requirements pass muster under rational basis review. Because there are “plausible reasons” for the Second Amended Rules’ numerical licensing requirements, the court’s facial challenge “inquiry is at an end.”
Beach,
d. Plaintiffs’ Arguments Against Rational Basis Review
As pertains to their facial challenge, Plaintiffs make a final argument that *1151 needs to be addressed. Notwithstanding the absence of an infringement upon a suspect classification or fundamental right, Plaintiffs argue that “there is reason to infer antipathy or undue favoritism” on the part of Sheriff Warren and that, therefore, the court should depart from “traditional” rational basis review (Doc. #445, at 50; Doc. # 464, at 65), in favor of a standard of review that examines Sheriff Warren’s “intentions and motivations” in promulgating the Rules (Doc. # 464, at 64 n. 29). Plaintiffs contend that antipathy on Sheriff Warren’s part should be inferred from the alleged “conflicts of interest” and “undue influence” exhibited by Mr. McGregor’s and VictoryLand’s involvement in the rule-making process. (Doc. # 445, at 51; Doc. # 464, at 65.) At the very least, Plaintiffs suggest that any proffered justifications for the challenged portions of the Second Amended Rules are too “attenuated” and, thus, irrational. (Doc. # 445, at 50-51.)
In support of their arguments, Plaintiffs rely upon
Vance,
Defendants, on the other hand, contend that Plaintiffs are “attempt[ing] to bootstrap some form of heightened review by arguing that animus or antipathy renders the rational basis inquiry inapplicable” (Doc. # 475, at 51 n. 8), and that the cases relied upon by Plaintiffs are distinguishable. They contend
Romer
is unparalleled on its facts (Doc. # 475, at 61) and “does not stand for the wholesale proposition that alleging animus renders the rational basis inapplicable as Plaintiffs would have this court believe.” (Doc. #475, at 62; Doc. # 459, at 83-86.) However, Plaintiffs rely on equal protection language in
Vance
that “[t]he Constitution presumes that,
absent some reason to infer antipathy,
even improvident decisions will eventually be rectified by the democratic process and that judicial intervention is generally unwarranted no matter how unwisely we may think a political branch has acted.”
In
Romer,
the Supreme Court used the rational basis test to invalidate a provision of the Colorado state constitution (“Amendment 2”) that repealed existing laws and policies protecting homosexuals from discrimination, and forbade “reinstatement of these laws and policies.”
In
Cleburne,
the Court held that the City of Cleburne’s zoning ordinance that required a “special use permit” for the operation of a group home for mentally disabled persons, but did not require a special use permit for other similar kinds of group homes, violated the Equal Protection Clause as applied to the plaintiff group home.
See
Romer
and
Cleburne
are distinguishable because in those cases the regulations were not supported by
any
legitimate governmental interest, while here the challenged sections of the Second Amended Rules are.
75
As explained
supra,
the existing facility requirement is rationally related to public safety and welfare interests, and the numerical licensing requirements are rationally related to legitimate law enforcement purposes. Hence, it cannot be said, as in
Romer
and
Cleburne,
that the only conceivable purpose of the Second Amended Rules is “a bare ... desire to harm” VictoryLand’s perceived competitors.
76
Powers,
*1153
Moreover, as to Plaintiffs’ reliance on
Vance’s
“antipathy” language, whether there was evidence of antipathy was not at issue in
Vance,
and Plaintiffs have not cited any cases explaining what constitutes evidence from which antipathy can be inferred or what standard applies when evidence of antipathy is present. The Supreme Court has talked about “antipathy” in the context of heightened scrutiny for suspect and quasi-suspect groups. In
Personnel Administrator of Massachusetts v. Feeney,
Here, neither suspect nor quasi-suspect classifications are at issue; antipathy, therefore, cannot be presumed. And, as in Deen, there is nothing on the face of the Rules that evinces any animus toward Plaintiffs specifically, or anticipated competitors of VictoryLand generally. In fact, as discussed above, the Second Amended Rules, on their face, do not foreclose competition by allowing at the outer limit four electronic bingo facilities in Macon County. Furthermore, Plaintiffs have not cited any case, and none has been found, that a regulator’s alleged “undue favoritism” (Doc. #445, at 50) for a local business (here allegedly VictoryLand) is evidence from which antipathy against a perceived competitor can be inferred within the meaning of Vance.
Based upon the foregoing, Plaintiffs’ arguments fail to persuade that anything other than rational basis review applies to their facial equal protection claims.
3. Disparate Impact (Second Category)
As an alternative equal protection theory, Plaintiffs argue that, “[e]ven if the
*1154
challenged provisions of the Second Amended Rules were facially neutral, they still violate equal protection because, as the result of purposeful discrimination, they have had a disparate impact” on Plaintiffs because “electronic bingo has been — and can be — licensed only at VictoryLand.” (Doc. # 445, at 52-53);
see E & T Realty,
The cases cited by Plaintiffs involved laws that, although neutral on their face, had a “disparate impact upon a group that has historically been the victim of discrimination.”
Feeney,
No case has been cited holding in effect that businesses competing for electronic bingo licenses constitute a group that “has historically been the victim of discrimination.”
Feeney,
In one such case cited by Plaintiffs,
Williams v. Illinois,
Accordingly, Plaintiffs’ equal protection theory that the Second Amended Rules, although neutral on their face, had a disparate impact on VictoryLand’s electronic bingo competitors, is not legally cognizable. Summary judgment, therefore, is due to be entered in favor of Defendants on this claim. 78
4. Unequal Administration of a Facially Neutral Statute (Third Category)
Finally, the Plaintiff Charities
79
argue that, “[e]ven if the Second Amended Rules were facially neutral, they have been unequally administered.” (Doc. # 445, at 54 (citing
E & T Realty,
a. Nature of the Theory
The Plaintiff Charities’ theory is as follows. On July 25, 2005, Lucky Palace attempted to deliver twenty-two charity applications for Class B Bingo Licenses *1156 (not for an Operator’s License), along with checks for the application fees, to Sheriff Warren. 80 (July 25, 2005 Letter & 22 Checks, at PTF00578-PTF00584 (Ex. 16 to Doc. # 445).) Sheriff Warren’s office, however, refused to accept any of the applications on the articulated basis that Lucky Palace “did not have a building,” ie., did not have a “qualified location” at which to conduct electronic bingo. (Bracy Dep. 206.) The Plaintiff Charities argue that the Second Amended Rules do not make the issuance of a Class B Bingo License contingent upon there being in existence a “qualified location” and that, therefore, Sheriff Warren’s departure from the Rules can only indicate purposeful discrimination. (Doc. # 445, at 54.)
The Plaintiff Charities further contend that they are similarly situated to Victory-Land’s charities, and that Sheriff Warren treated them differently from Victory-Land’s charities when he “created” a new unwritten reason to reject the Plaintiff Charities’ applications. (Doc. # 471, at 18-19.) “By refusing to even consider the applications of the Plaintiff Charities based on a nonexistent requirement,” Sheriff Warren acted arbitrarily and irrationally, and denied them equal protection of the law. (Doc. # 445, at 55; see also Doc. # 471, at 19.) This equal protection claim is the subject of cross-motions for summary judgment.
b. Analysis
In
E & T Realty,
the Eleventh Circuit held that a claim that a defendant has unequally administered a facially neutral statute cannot be proved “merely by showing an arbitrary and irrational difference between the results of two particular applications of a facially neutral statute.”
i. Intentional Discrimination
(a) E & T Realty and Olech
The parties agree that “intentional or purposeful discrimination,” the standard enunciated in
E & T Realty,
is an element of the Plaintiff Charities’ equal protection claim. (Doc. # 445, at 55; Doc. # 459, at 96.) Some initial observations about this element are appropriate. Additionally, although
Village of Willowbrook v. Olech,
E & T Realty
imposes a requirement of intentional or purposeful discrimination where the claim is that a defendant is unequally administering a facially neutral statute.
In
Olech,
decided thirteen years after
E & T Realty,
the Supreme Court “first expressly recognized” the “class of one” equal protection claim.
Griffin Indus., Inc. v. Irvin,
The
Olech
Court observed that there was long-standing precedent that the Equal Protection Clause protected individuals from “intentional and arbitrary discrimination, whether occasioned by express terms of a statute or by its improper execution through duly constituted agents.”
Based upon
Olech,
a plaintiff can successfully bring a class
of one
equal protection claim by showing that (1) the defendant intentionally treated him differently from others similarly situated, and (2) there was no rational basis for the difference in treatment (or, in other words that the differential treatment was “irrational and wholly arbitrary”).
Neither party has cited cases discussing the impact, if any, of
Olech
on
E & T
*1158
Realty’s
“purposeful discrimination” requirement. In
Campbell v. Rainbow City, Alabama,
the Eleventh Circuit explained that in
E & T Realty,
it had “recognized any individual’s right to be free from intentional discrimination at the hands of government officials.”
The
Campbell
court, however, suggested that the
Olech
“class of one” equal protection claim was of a slightly different species. The
Campbell
court observed that the plaintiffs’ claim before it, as well as the lower court’s jury instruction, “seem[ed] to mirror a newer trend in equal protection law, ... ‘a class of one claim’ without a necessary showing of ill will or
discriminatory purpose.”
Based upon the foregoing, the difference between intentional (“intentionally treated differently,” as used in Olech) and purposeful or intentional discrimination (as used in E & T Realty) has not been fully developed. It may be that the terms are substantially synonymous, but Olech did not elaborate upon what is required to demonstrate intentional conduct. 85 Nor, *1159 as indicated in Campbell, has it been decided in this circuit whether a plaintiff is required to prove “ill will” to prevail on an Olech “class of one” claim. The parties have not briefed these finer points, instead relying on the parameters set out in E & T Realty. The court, thus, shall do the same, at least for now. For the reasons to follow, the court finds that there are genuine issues for trial on the issue of purposeful or intentional discrimination.
(b) Analysis
In
E & T Realty,
the Eleventh Circuit explained that evidence of “[m]ere error or mistake in judgment when applying a facially neutral statute” is insufficient to show intentional discrimination.
The Village of Arlington Heights factors, cited with approval in E & T Realty, provide a helpful framework for analyzing Sheriff Warren’s intent. The Plaintiff Charities argue that the events leading up to the promulgation of the Second Amended Rules, the disparate impact caused by the Rules, and Sheriff Warren’s deviation from those Rules raise an inference of purposeful or intentional discrimination. (Doc. #445, at 52-53, 55.) Defendants, however, argue that there is not a “shred” of evidence of purposeful or intentional discrimination. (Doc. # 459, 92-94, 96.)
First, with regard to the historical background of the challenged decision, the Plaintiff Charities argue that the sequence of events, beginning with the promulgation of the Original Rules, is circumstantial evidence from which it can be inferred that Sheriff Warren’s ultimate refusal to grant the Plaintiff Charities’ applications for Class B Bingo Licenses was the result of intentional discrimination. In particular, they argue that Sheriff Warren promulgated the Original Rules so that only Victory-Land would meet the requirements for a “qualified location” and thwarted Lucky Palace’s attempts to conform to those Rules by continually amending them so as to “create greater barriers to entry.” *1160 (Doc. #455, at 53.) The timing of the action of Sheriff Warren circumstantially supports the Plaintiff Charities’ theory visa-vis when he learned of Lucky Palace’s interest in electronic bingo.
Moreover, there is testimony from Sheriff Warren that, on December 5, 2003, the effective date of the Original Rules, VictoryLand met the requirements for a qualified location and “was the only qualified location in Macon County.” (Warren Dep. 146-47.) It also is undisputed that Sheriff Warren declared VictoryLand a “qualified location” each time that definition was amended, and that the First Amended Rules raised the ante for any entity (other than VictoryLand) to satisfy the requirements for a “qualified location” by increasing the capital investment requirement from $5 million to $15 million and by requiring a qualified location to amass a minimum of fifteen Class B License holders before electronic bingo operations could commence. Moreover, the short amount of time that it took VictoryLand to acquire fifty-nine licenses after the Second Amended Rules went into effect adds to the equation of intentional discrimination in that it establishes, albeit circumstantially, a temporal connection between the actions of Sheriff Warren and those of the other Defendants. Taken together, the historical factors weigh in favor of the Plaintiff Charities. 87
Second, turning to departures from normal procedures, the Plaintiff Charities argue that Sheriff Warren deviated from the requirements of the Second Amended Rules by requiring them to have a “qualified location,” meaning an existing facility inspected and approved by Sheriff Warren, as a condition for obtaining a Class B Bingo License. (See Doc. # 445, at 54-55.) As discussed in the next subsection, it is not clear that one of the Second Amended Rules’ criteria for obtaining a Class B Bingo License is the existence of a “qualified location” and, thus, whether Sheriff Warren refused to consider the Plaintiff Charities’ applications based upon their failure to satisfy an unwritten requirement. From this evidence, an argument can be made that Sheriff Warren departed from his own written Rules in refusing to *1161 consider the Plaintiff Charities’ applications.
Moreover, there is evidence of a deep and continuing involvement of Victory-Land’s attorneys in the drafting process of the Rules. This cozy relationship between VictoryLand (the regulated) and Sheriff Warren (the regulator) raises questions of material fact as to whether normal, proper procedures were used for drafting the Rules. Sheriff Warren’s retention of unbridled standardless discretion to amend the Rules — as to timing and content — also strikes the court as at least unusual in a public regulatory sense. Considered in light of potential conflicts of interest among Defendants and their agents discussed elsewhere in this opinion, Sheriff Warren’s discretion to amend the Rules at will, without clear standards, without notice, and without public input is circumstantially suspect. The second factor also weighs in favor of the Plaintiff Charities.
Third, the Plaintiff Charities point to the impact the Second Amended Rules had on them. They have presented evidence that, on January 1, 2005, the effective date of the Second Amended Rules that capped the total number of Class B Bingo Licenses available in Macon County at sixty, thirty-nine Class B Bingo License holders were operating electronic bingo at Victory-Land (Ex. 11 to Doc. # 446), and that by February 7, 2005, fourteen additional charities obtained Class B Bingo Licenses for the operation of electronic bingo at VictoryLand (Ex. 20 to Doc. # 446). Hence, as of February 7, 2005, fifty-three Class B Bingo License holders were operating electronic bingo at VictoryLand. Considering that the Second Amended Rules required a “qualified location” to have a minimum of fifteen Class B Bingo Licenses and also included an overall sixty-license cap, VictoryLand sewed up the Macon County market on electronic bingo in a little more than a month after the effective date of the Second Amended Rules. Based upon these circumstances, the Plaintiff Charities have presented sufficient evidence from which a reasonable jury could infer a disparate impact in that VictoryLand is licensed to operate electronic bingo in Macon County to the exclusion of the rest of the world.
Defendants, on the other hand, point to Sheriff Warren’s testimony that he “had no intent for VictoryLand to be the only gaming facility in Macon County.” (Doc. # 459, at 94.) Defendants also argue that the evidence does not show that “Sheriff Warren intentionally ‘selected a course of action’ to discriminate against Plaintiffs to purposefully forestall their efforts to build a gaming facility in Macon County.” (Doc. # 459, at 94.) Sheriff Warren’s testimony obviously is relevant, but not the last word, on the issue of purposeful discrimination. Discriminatory motives are elusive, and subject to proof by circumstantial evidence. The timing and content of the Rule changes, the resulting actions of Victory-Land and impact on the Plaintiff Charities, the arguably pretextual nature of Sheriff Warren’s explanation for denying the Class B Bingo Licenses, and the arguably unrelenting influence of VictoryLand lawyers in the drafting process of the Rules and two of the amendments, when viewed in the light most favorable to the Plaintiff Charities, is circumstantial evidence contradicting Sheriff Warren’s words. This evidence establishes a material factual dispute regarding purposeful discrimination.
In sum, based upon the evidence pertaining to the historical background of the promulgation and amendments to the Rules, the substantive departures from normal procedures, and the disparate impact the Rules had on the Plaintiff Charitie's, a serious question has been raised as to intentional discrimination underlying the decision to refuse to consider the Plaintiff Charities’ applications for Class B *1162 Bingo Licenses so as to create a jury issue on this element of their as applied equal protection claim. The evidence entitles neither party to summary judgment on the question of whether Sheriff Warren intentionally discriminated against the Plaintiff Charities in denying their Class B Bingo License applications. 88
ii. Similarly Situated
To avoid summary judgment, it is not enough for the Plaintiff Charities to establish a genuine issue of material fact that purposeful discrimination occurred. The Plaintiff Charities must also establish a question of material fact as to their being similarly situated to VictoryLand’s charities.
Because “[different treatment of dissimilarly situated persons does not violate the equal protection clause,” a plaintiff in an “unequally administered” claim must show a similarly situated comparator.
E & T Realty,
The Eleventh Circuit has distinguished “complex, multi-factored government decisionmaking processes,”
Griffin Indus.,
The parties’ arguments with respect to the similarly situated requirement have different focuses. For the reasons to follow, neither focus is well taken. Because these are competing motions for summary judgment, the court necessarily applies the appropriate assumptions to each side of the contest. Ultimately, it is obvious that genuine issues of material fact exist, and that summary judgment is inappropriate for either party on the similarly situated question.
Defendants argue that because Lucky Palace, the entity with which the Plaintiff Charities had contracted, did not have a “qualified location” in Macon County for the operation of electronic bingo, the Plaintiff Charities are not similarly situated to VictoryLand’s charities, which had a “qualified location” for the operation of electronic bingo (ie., VictoryLand). (Doc. # 459, at 91-92; Doc. # 458, at 27.) Defendants contend that “to obtain a Class B Bingo [Ljicense (which covers electronic bingo), an organization could only conduct bingo games at a ‘qualified location’ in Macon County.” (Doc. # 459, at 91.)
The Plaintiff Charities, however, argue that the Second Amended Rules do not make the issuance of a Class B Bingo License, as opposed to an Operator’s License, contingent upon there being in existence a “qualified location.” (Doc. # 445, at 54.) In other words, Plaintiffs’ position is that, under the Second Amended Rules, *1164 “an applicant for a Class B License could receive such a license even if the location at which the licensee sought to conduct electronic bingo were not yet qualified.” (Doc. #445, at 54; see also Doc. #471 (“[T]he Plaintiff Charities should have been able to secure licenses ... regardless of whether Plaintiff Lucky Palace’s location was complete. Indeed, that is precisely how the rules were drafted.”); Doc. # 465, at 21 n. 11 (“[A] qualified location [under the Second Amended Rules] was a prerequisite for the operation of electronic bingo but was not required for the issuance of [a] Class B license.”).)
In support of their position that a “qualified location” (¿e., an existing facility inspected and approved by the sheriff) is a prerequisite to securing a Class B Bingo License, Defendants rely upon the definition in the Second Amended Rules of “Class B Bingo License” (§ 1(h)), which provides: “ ‘Class B Bingo License’ shall mean a license issued to an applicant who desires to operate any and all games of bingo as defined hereinabove, at a qualified location.” 91 They point out that a “qualified location,” as defined in § l(j), is a “location ... which has been inspected and approved by the Sheriff for the conduct of bingo games.” (Doc. # 459, at 91.)
The Plaintiff Charities, however, cite other parts of the Second Amended Rules for their position that the phrase “desires to operate ... bingo ... at a qualified location” does not mean that the existence of a “qualified location” must precede the issuance of a Class B Bingo License. This position finds support in § 4(c) of the Second Amended Rules, which sets forth seven categories of “information” that must be “fully provide[d]” to the sheriff before a Class B Bingo License will be issued. That “information” pertains to the applicant’s date of incorporation, certificate of incorporation, tax exempt status, officers and directors, any sureties, and the “exact physical location at which the applicant will conduct the bingo games.” (Doc. # 424, at 6 (emphasis added).) The Plaintiff Charities point out that only the “exact physical location” relates to the electronic bingo premises, but that there is nothing in the Rules indicating that “exact physical location” is synonymous with “qualified location.” (Doc. # 445, at 54.) The Plaintiff Charities also emphasize that the definition of “qualified location” in § l(j) of the Second Amended Rules refers to the submission of “satisfactory evidence” that the “location” has in place specified requirements “at all times that any bingo games are being conducted or operated.” (Doc. # 445, at 54.) Based upon that language, the Plaintiff Charities argue that a “qualified location” need only exist “when bingo games are being ‘conducted or operated,’ not when an applicant [for a Class B Bingo License] is applying.” (Doc. # 445, at 54.)
Finally, the Plaintiff Charities cite § 2 of the Second Amended Rules with the now familiar language that “[n]o Class B Licensee shall be authorized to operate bingo at any qualified location, as defined herein, unless a minimum of fifteen (15) applicants shall first obtain Class B licenses for such location.” (Doc. #445, at 54 (emphasis added).) This section “implies that a charity can become a licensee before fifteen licenses are issued for a particular location, even though the licensee could not conduct bingo before fifteen licenses had been issued.” 92 (Doc. # 445, at 55.)
*1165 Ultimately, four considerations resolve the issue in favor of allowing a jury to decide the similarly situated issue. First, as the parties’ divergent arguments reveal, the Second Amended Rules do not clearly require the existence of a qualified location before the issuance of a Class B Bingo License. Second, the Rules define “qualified location” as being “for the holder of a Class B Bingo Licensee.” (2d Am. Rules § l(j) (emphasis added).) Using “holder” rather than “applicant for a Class B Bingo License” clearly signals that the Class B Bingo License would have already been issued. That is the only way one becomes a license holder. Third, taking the words at face value and in context, a reasonable reading of the Second Amended Rules giving effect to all the requirements is that Class B Bingo Licenses may be issued before a qualified location exists, by the applicant expressing a “desire[]” to conduct electronic bingo in the future at a qualified location, § 1(h), 93 as described in the application by exact physical location. Fourth, this reading is reasonable in the overall regulatory scheme. It allows, in an incremental fashion, charities to get their Class B Bingo Licenses so that an operator has some assurance that, upon completion and inspection of a multi-million dollar qualified location, it will be able to obtain an Operator’s License. (Plaintiffs acknowledge that a qualified location is required under the Rules for the issuance of an Operator’s License.) Taking all the above factors into consideration, and in the absence of other arguments by Defendants, there is sufficient evidence for a jury to conclude that the Plaintiff Charities are similarly situated to VictoryLand’s charities, ie., that because the Rules do not require an existing location prior to the issuance of a Class B Bingo License to a charity, Lucky Palace’s charities are in all material respects similarly situated to VictoryLand’s charities.
Neither party has cited any case law or suggested another method for resolving the exact requirements of the Second Amended Rules in this area. The evidence establishes a material issue of fact as to whether Sheriff Warren misapplied his own rules. On this record and briefing, this issue is best left for evidentiary development at trial, with the issue of whether the parties are similarly situated being ultimately decided by the jury. Defendants’ motion on this issue is due to be denied.
This brings the discussion to the Plaintiff Charities’ summary judgment motion, with their specific contentions on the similarly situated element of their as applied equal protection claim. The contentions lack a meaningful analysis of what is required to demonstrate the requisite degree of similarity between the Plaintiff Charities and the VictoryLand charities. The Plaintiff Charities liken themselves to those licensed charities which have contracted with VictoryLand for the operation of electronic bingo. The Plaintiff Charities assert that they
[are] similarly situated to VictoryLand’s charities in seeking to affiliate with a licensed electronic bingo operator in Macon County. Both sets of charities prepared and submitted applications to Sheriff Warren. Both sets of charities were seeking to benefit from Amendment 744 and the start of electronic bingo [in] Macon County.
(Doc. # 445, at 42 (internal citation omitted).)
*1166
It can be assumed for purposes of this analysis, and no doubt it is true, that both groups were equally eager to profit from electronic bingo in Macon County and that, with one exception,
94
both groups applied to Sheriff Warren for Class B Bingo Licenses. Defendants, however, are correct that this comparison speaks too broadly. (Doc. # 459, at 89.) In particular, it is the absence of a meaningful discussion of evidence showing whether the individual applicants complied with (or arguably complied with) the written requirements of the Second Amended Rules that leaves a void in the Plaintiff Charities’ similarly situated analysis. It may be that the Plaintiff Charities are arguing that they were denied Class B Bingo Licenses, notwithstanding that their applications fully complied with the Second Amended Rules. Or it may be that they are arguing that, even if their applications were deficient, VictoryLand’s charities, which have secured Class B Bingo Licenses, also clearly did not meet the requirements of Sheriff Warren’s Rules.
95
But the Plaintiff Charities have not analyzed the evidence and, thus, have not laid out an evidentiary foundation as to how their applications stand up against those submitted by the Victory-Land charities.
96
The Plaintiff Charities,
*1167
not the court, should make the argument.
See Resolution Trust Corp. v. Dunmar Corp.,
At the very least, the briefs establish that there are genuine issues of material fact surrounding both the Plaintiff Charities’ and the VietoryLand charities’ compliance with the governing Rules for the issuance of Class B Bingo Licenses. These factual rifts exemplify why summary judgment is inappropriate for any party on the similarly situated component of the equal protection claim.
c. Conclusion
Careful review of the law and the facts reveals that there remain genuine issues of material fact as to the Plaintiff Charities’ as applied equal protection claim predicated on a theory that Sheriff Warren unequally administered the faeially-neutral Second Amended Rules. Summary judgment on this claim, therefore, is not appropriate for either party, and will be denied.
5. § 1983 Conspiracy to Deny Equal Protection
In Count IV, Plaintiffs bring a § 1983 conspiracy claim against all Defendants arising out of the substantive claim that Plaintiffs were denied their rights to equal protection of the law. (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 169-75.) A § 1983 conspiracy claim requires proof of “(1) a violation of the plaintiffs federal rights and (2) an agreement among the defendants to violate those rights.”
Newsome v. Lee County, Ala.,
a. Defendants’ Summary Judgment Motion
Mr. McGregor and VietoryLand rest their summary judgment motion on Plaintiffs’ purported failure to “show that there was a violation of their federal rights.” (Doc. #440, at 139.) Hence, they assert that “there is no need to address whether there was an agreement among the Defendants to violate [] Plaintiffs^] equal protection rights.” (Doc. # 440, at 139 (emphasis omitted).) Sheriff Warren’s motion also focuses only on the underlying equal protection claim, with no discussion of the second element of a § 1983 conspiracy claim. (Doc. # 424, at 41-45.)
Because none of Lucky Palace’s § 1983 substantive equal protection claims survives summary judgment, Lucky Palace’s § 1983 conspiracy claim necessarily fails altogether on the first element. The Plaintiff Charities’ § 1983 equal protection conspiracy claim fails on the first element as to all but one equal protection theory. As discussed, there exist rational bases for the Second Amended Rules’ existing facility requirement and numerical licensing requirements. Additionally, the Plaintiff Charities’ equal protection theory alleging that the Second Amended Rules, although facially neutral, had a disparate impact on *1168 them fails as a matter of law. A § 1983 conspiracy claim, thus, cannot rest on these alleged substantive equal protection theories, and Defendants are entitled to summary judgment. However, as detailed in the previous subsection, there is a substantive equal protection claim proceeding to trial — the Plaintiff Charities’ claim that Sheriff Warren unequally administered the facially neutral Second Amended Rules in refusing to grant the Plaintiff Charities Class B Bingo Licenses. Because Defendants have not devoted any substantive discussion to the second § 1983 conspiracy element, this element remains unchallenged by Defendants. Having failed to demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact as to both elements of the Plaintiff Charities’ § 1983 conspiracy claim predicated upon Sheriff Warren’s refusal to consider the Plaintiff Charities’ Class B Bingo License applications, Defendants are not entitled to summary judgment.
b. Plaintiffs’ Summary Judgment Motion
Plaintiffs also have moved for summary judgment on their § 1983 conspiracy claim. (Doc. # 445, at 56-58.) None of Lucky Palace’s § 1983 substantive equal protection claims survived summary judgment; obviously, then Lucky Palace is not entitled to summary judgment. Moreover, as discussed above, a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether Sheriff Warren unequally applied the facially neutral Second Amended Rules in refusing to consider the Plaintiff Charities Class B Bingo License applications, meaning that the first element of the § 1983 conspiracy claim must be resolved by the jury. Accordingly, the Plaintiff Charities are not entitled to summary judgment on their § 1983 equal protection conspiracy claim predicated on this theory.
C. Issues Particular to Sheriff Warren’s Summary Judgment Motion
Sheriff Warren raises a number of threshold defenses to all claims. For purposes of this discussion, it is helpful to reiterate that Sheriff Warren is sued for injunctive relief only in his official capacity as the sheriff of Macon County. (6th Am. Compl., at 1, 54.)
1. Absolute Legislative Immunity
Sheriff Warren asserts that he is entitled to absolute legislative immunity on Plaintiffs’ § 1983 equal protection claims because those claims relate to his promulgation of Rules governing electronic bingo in Macon County. (Doc. #424, at 25; Doc. #474 at 10.) He argues that drafting regulations is a traditionally legislative function. (Doc. #424, at 26.) Plaintiffs, on the other hand, argue that, even if Sheriff Warren was acting in a legislative capacity when he promulgated the Rules, he is not shielded by legislative immunity for § 1983 equal protection claims challenging his administration or enforcement of those Rules. (Doc. # 465, at 5.) Because the surviving equal protection claim involves only Sheriff Warren’s administrative or enforcement acts, Sheriff Warren is not entitled to legislative immunity for these acts. 97
*1169
Absolute legislative immunity “was not abrogated by § 1983, and it applies with equal force to suits seeking damages and those seeking declaratory or injunctive relief.”
Scott v. Taylor,
Legislative immunity, although broad, is restrained by the obvious requirement that the act in question must be legislative. “A legislative act involves policy-making rather than mere administrative application of existing policies.”
Crymes v. DeKalb County, Ga.,
Moreover, the Supreme Court has recognized that an official may be entitled to absolute immunity for some, but not all, of his functions. Hence, when an official exercises multiple functions, those functions must be examined separately to determine the applicability of legislative immunity. For example, in
Consumers Union,
the United States Supreme Court held that the Supreme Court of Virginia acted in a legislative capacity in promulgating its state code of professional responsibility, and in that capacity, the supreme court and its chief justice were entitled to legislative immunity on the § 1983 claims.
See
To begin with, it is clear from the foregoing authorities that the fact that Sheriff Warren is an executive, not a legislative, officer of the state of Alabama does not forestall the application of legislative immunity.
See Ex parte Shelley,
Nos. 1080588, 1080863, — So.3d -, -,
2. Qualified Immunity
Sheriff Warren asserts that qualified immunity insulates him from liability “from all claims.” (Doc. # 424, at 27-30.) Qualified immunity, however, is inapplicable because Sheriff Warren is sued only in his official capacity. An official “sued in his official capacity ... is not, of course, entitled to ... the individual capacity defense of qualified immunity.”
Bruce v. Beary,
3. Article III Standing
Sheriff Warren also argues that Plaintiffs lack Article III standing because their claims cannot be redressed. 98 For the reasons to follow, the court disagrees.
The requirement of Article III standing is both a constitutional limitation on federal court jurisdiction and a prudential limitation on its exercise.
See Lujan v. Defenders of Wildlife,
Sheriff Warren’s motion focuses on the third element. Sheriff Warren argues that Plaintiffs’ claims are not redressable because Lucky Palace does not “have a qualified location as required by the Rules within which to operate electronic bingo and [the] Plaintiff Charities that have contracted with Lucky Palace do not have a qualified location within which to participate in electronic bingo.” (Doc. # 424, at 37-38.) Hence, Sheriff Warren argues that the injury — that Plaintiffs cannot conduct electronic bingo in Macon County — is not redressable because Plaintiffs fail to meet the “qualified location” requirement of the Second Amended Rules and that their license applications were legitimately refused on that ground. (Doc. # 424, at 37.)
In response, Plaintiffs do not dispute that Sheriff Warren interpreted and applied the Second Amended Rules “to require an existing facility prior to licensing” and that “none of the Plaintiffs had a qualified location at the time Sheriff Warren rejected the Plaintiff Charities’ applications for Class B Bingo Licenses.” (Doc. #465, at 15 (internal citation omitted)). Plaintiffs, however, argue that Sheriff Warren’s assertion that Plaintiffs’ injuries are not redressable is “erroneous.” (Doc. # 465, at 15.) Plaintiffs assert that “redressability only comes into play when — ignoring the challenged provisions — a plaintiff cannot otherwise satisfy the existing requirements.” (Doc. #465, at 16 (emphasis in original).) Here, Plaintiffs assert that the very requirement that they are challenging is the “soundness of the existing-facility requirement,” and that “Sheriff Warren has not identified any unchallenged provisions of the rules and regulations that the Plaintiffs fail to satisfy.” (Doc. #465, at 16.) Hence, Plaintiffs argue that “[irrespective of the ‘qualified location’ requirement, ... [they] have standing.” (Doc. # 465, at 16.)
Both parties argue that
KH Outdoor, L.L.C. v. Clay County, Fla.,
KH Outdoor works in Plaintiffs’ favor, at least as to eleven Plaintiffs. 99 As to these Plaintiff Charities, Sheriff Warren’s sole argument is that they lack standing because they do not have a qualified location at which to conduct electronic bingo and, therefore, fail to meet the require *1172 ments of the Second Amended Rules. (See Warren Dep. 273-75.) But, the qualified location requirement of the Second Amended Rules is at the core of Plaintiffs’ equal protection challenges, as discussed earlier in this opinion. Sheriff Warren does not argue that Plaintiffs have failed to satisfy other of the Second Amended Rules’ requirements. For that reason, KH Outdoor is distinguishable. Accordingly, Sheriff Warren’s motion for summary judgment challenging the foregoing eleven charities’ standing is due to be denied.
The same outcome is mandated, but for a different reason, as to four other Plaintiff Charities: (1) Milstead Community Center (“Milstead”); (2) Tubman Gardens; (3) Tuskegee Macon County Community Foundation (“TMCCF”), Inc.; and (4) RG Apartments. Sheriff Warren argues that these four Plaintiff Charities also fail to meet the requirements of the Second Amended Rules because they were not “active” in Macon County, as provided in § 1(d). (See, e.g., Doc. # 426, at 25; Doc. #428, at 25; Doc. #430, at 25; Doc. # 432, at 27.) Hence, Sheriff Warren argues that, irrespective of the qualified location requirement, he could have refused to give these Plaintiff Charities Class B Bingo Licenses. 100
Milstead, Tubman Gardens, TMCCF and RG Apartments do not dispute that in this action they have not challenged as unconstitutional the “active” requirement of § 1(d) of the Second Amended Rules; however, they contend that § 1(d) requires only that a nonprofit organization “be active at the time of issuance” of a license, and that on July 25, 2005, when their applications were submitted, they satisfied the “active” requirement. 101 (Doc. # 466, at 13-19.) Pursuant to § 1(d), as set out in the margin, a nonprofit organization must be active “for charitable, educational, or other lawful purposes,” and the commentary to the First Amended Rules further intimates that an active nonprofit organization must be one that provides “material charitable or educational benefits to Macon County.” In light of those parameters, the court has reviewed the evidence cited for and against a finding of activeness. It concludes that the nature, extent and time-frame of each of these four charities’ activities and the determination of whether these activities are “material,” are for charitable, educational or other lawful purposes, are beneficial to Macon County and make the charities “active” are questions of material fact properly for the jury. These factual disputes preclude a finding at this stage that Milstead, Tubman Gardens, TMCCF and RG Apartments lack standing to bring their claims. Sheriff *1173 Warren’s motion for summary judgment for lack of standing, therefore, is due to be denied.
4. Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies
Sheriff Warren contends that, because none of the Plaintiff Charities appealed his refusal to grant them Class B Bingo Licenses to the Macon County Commission or Macon County Circuit Court, pursuant to § 14 of the Second Amended Rules, 102 Plaintiffs’ claims are not “ripe for adjudication” for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. (Doc. #424, at 38; Doc. # 426, at 26; Doc. # 428, at 25; Doc. # 430, at 26; Doc. # 432, at 27.) In response, the Plaintiff Charities argue that § 1983 does not require exhaustion of administrative remedies, but even if it did, any appeal would have been futile. (Doc. # 466, at 11 & 12 n. 9.)
In
Beaulieu v. City of Alabaster,
5. Equal Protection Claims and Statute of Limitations: RG Apartments and Greater White Church
Sheriff Warren argues that because RG Apartments and Greater White Church were not added as Plaintiffs until the Fifth Amended Complaint, filed on May 13, 2008, their § 1983 equal protection substantive and conspiracy claims in Counts III and IV are barred by the applicable two-year statute of limitations. 103 (Doc. #434, at 17-19; Doc. #432, at 31-32.) RG Apartments and Greater White Church concede that they were added as Plaintiffs after the statute of limitations had lapsed on their § 1983 equal protection claims in Count III. 104 However, they contend that their claims “relate back” to the timely-filed original Complaint in accordance with Rule 15(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and, thus, are timely. As to Count IV, RG Apartments and Greater White Church assert that facts supporting the § 1983 conspiracy claim “did not come to light until, at the very earliest, Sheriff Warren’s August 15, *1174 2006, deposition” taken in a related case. (Doc. #466, at 6.) Therefore, they argue that their § 1983 conspiracy claims did not accrue until August 15, 2006, and thus were timely added in the May 2008 Fifth Amended Complaint. (Doc. # 466, at 6.)
a. Count III
The issue is whether the Fifth Amended Complaint adding RG Apartments and Greater White Church as Plaintiffs relates back to the original Complaint, pursuant to Rule 15(c), so as to render the § 1983 equal protection claims timely.
105
“Rule 15(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure governs when an amended pleading ‘relates back’ to the date of a timely filed original pleading and is thus itself timely even though it was filed outside an applicable statute of limitations.”
Krupski v. Costa Crociere S.p.A.,
— U.S. —,
*1175
RG Apartments and Greater White Church, therefore, must satisfy three relation back requirements: first, that their § 1983 equal protection claim arises out of the same conduct, transaction or occurrence as the claim in the original Complaint; second, that Sheriff Warren received notice sufficient to avoid prejudice of RG Apartments’ and Greater White Church’s action; and, third, that Sheriff Warren knew or should have known that he would have been called upon to defend RG Apartments’ and Greater White Church’s claims.
See Makro Capital of Am.,
Greater White Church acknowledges that Sheriff Warren “may not have received notice of [its] identity prior to the expiration of the statute of limitations” because it did not apply for a Class B Bingo License. (See Doc. # 466, at 9 n. 6.) Greater White Church, however, joins RG Apartments in arguing that Sheriff Warren was on notice that he may have to later defend against claims brought by any charity that had entered into a contract with Lucky Palace for the operation of electronic bingo and that, therefore, the notice element of relation back is satisfied. The court disagrees.
Williams v. United States,
Williams
opined that “notice is the critical element involved in Rule 15(c) determinations.”
In
Pappion v. Dow Chemical Co.,
Often, a defendant may have notice of the existence of a possible plaintiff or of a possible claim against it. When the applicable period of limitations passes, however, the purpose of the statute of limitations has been served, in that defendant no longer needs to retain evidence and witnesses that may be necessary for its defense, and can devote to more useful purposes the resources that it had been reserving for the defense of the possible claim. The policy for statutes of limitations would be circumvented if a plaintiff is allowed to amend his complaint and add a new plaintiff merely because the new plaintiffs claim arose from the same transaction or occurrence of the original claim and the defendant was aware that the new plaintiff existed.
Id. at 1581-82.
Unlike in Williams, no evidence has been cited that would have alerted Sheriff Warren that RG Apartments and Greater White Church would seek to join this litigation more than two years after its commencement. Nor has any evidence been cited indicating that Sheriff Warren understood when the original Complaint was filed that their claims were at issue. Unlike in Williams, there is no evidence that Greater White Church and RG Apartments were involved in this lawsuit, in any capacity, prior to the filing of the proposed Fifth Amended Complaint that added their claims or that they had a claim that was in effect being asserted by them. These two Plaintiff Charities are not mentioned in any of the complaints preceding the Fifth Amended Complaint. At best, RG Apartments (but not Greater White Church) has demonstrated that Sheriff Warren had notice of RG Apartments’ existence when its Class B Bingo License application was submitted, but even assuming that Sheriff Warren knew of RG Apartments’ existence, there is no evidence that he knew that it was part and parcel of this lawsuit. 107 Because RG Apartments and Greater White Church have not demonstrated that Sheriff Warren received notice under Rule 15(c)(l)(C)(i) sufficient to avert undue prejudice, their claims do not relate back to the filing of this lawsuit.
In sum, RG Apartments and Greater White Church concede that they joined this lawsuit after the two-year statute of limitations expired on their § 1983 equal protection claims. They have failed to create a genuine issue of material fact with respect to the second element of the relation back doctrine. Accordingly, Sheriff Warren’s motion for summary judgment raising the statute of limitations as a bar to RG Apartments’ and Greater White Church’s § 1983 equal protection claim in Count III is due to be granted.
b. Count IV
RG Apartments’ and Greater White Church’s § 1983 conspiracy claim hinges on the demonstration of an underlying actual denial of their equal protection rights. Because those underlying equal protection claims are barred by the statute of limitations, the § 1983 conspiracy claim fails as well.
See Grider,
*1177 D. State Law Claims Against Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand
Counts V and VI allege tort claims under Alabama law. Count V is a claim for tortious interference with contractual and business relations between Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities for the operation of electronic bingo in Macon County. Count VI is a claim for tortious interference with Plaintiffs’ prospective contractual and business relationships with patrons and customers of the anticipated Lucky Palace electronic bingo casino. These two counts are brought against Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand only, not against Sheriff Warren. 108 (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 180 n. 1, 186 n. 2.)
Tortious interference with a contractual relationship and tortious interference with a business relationship are “separate and distinct” torts.
White Sands Group, L.L.C. v. PRS II, LLC,
The elements of a cause of action for tortious interference with a business relationship, as recently clarified by the Supreme Court of Alabama, are: “(1) the existence of a protectible business relationship; (2) of which the defendant knew; (3) to which the defendant was a stranger; (4) with which the defendant intentionally interfered; and (5) damage.”
White Sands Group, L.L.C. v. PRS II, LLC,
*1178 1. Tortious Interference with Contractual or Business Relationships (Count V)
Plaintiffs bring a claim in Count V that Defendants intentionally interfered with the contractual and business relations between Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities by influencing and/or directing Sheriff Warren to promulgate unreasonable Rules for the operation of electronic bingo in Macon County, and that those Rules have rendered the contractual relationships impossible. (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 176-82.) Plaintiffs argue that there is no genuine issue of material fact as to each element of their claim, and that they are entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Defendants, however, contend that summary judgment is inappropriate for Plaintiffs, but appropriate for them, because Plaintiffs have not produced any evidence that Defendants knew of contracts between Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities (element two) or that they interfered with those contracts (element four). 112 For the reasons to follow, the court finds that genuine issues of material fact exist for trial on elements two and four of the White Sands II test and that, therefore, neither party is entitled to summary judgment on the tortious interference claim in Count V.
a. Knowledge (Element Two)
i. Plaintiffs’ Arguments
In support of their motion for summary judgment, Plaintiffs argue that by September 25, 2004, at the latest, Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand “had knowledge of the business relationship between Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities[,] and Lucky Palace’s intention to enter into the electronic bingo market in Macon County.” (Doc. # 445, at 59.) To demonstrate knowledge, Plaintiffs submit a newspaper article, titled “Die Cast for New Bingo Facility,” that appeared in the Montgomery Advertiser on September 25, 2004, and was written by Jannell McGrew. That article paraphrases Mr. McGregor as saying that “he was not concerned about competition from the new facility” and includes a direct quote from Mr. McGregor that “ ‘competition doesn’t concern me at all.’ ” (Jannell McGrew, Die Cast for New Bingo Facility, Montgomery Advertiser, Sept. 25, 2004 (Ex. 17 to Doc. # 445).)
Plaintiffs also point to deposition testimony from Mr. McGregor. Asked when he first learned that Lucky Palace was “seeking to be a qualified location for [electronic] bingo in Macon County,” Mr. McGregor responded, “The first time I recall that I learned that was in an article in the [.Montgomery Advertiser ].” (McGregor Dep. 327.) Neither the date of the article nor the date Mr. McGregor read the article is mentioned in this deposition excerpt. The newspaper article and the excerpt from Mr. McGregor’s deposition are the two evidentiary sources upon which Plaintiffs rely to show that Mr. McGregor had knowledge at the latest by September 25, 2004, 113 of a business relationship between Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities. 114
*1179 Finally, Plaintiffs argue that it can be inferred, based upon evidence of Mr. McGregor’s familiarity with the Rules’ contracting requirements, that Mr. McGregor was “aware that ... Lucky Palace had entered into — or planned to enter into— contracts with certain local nonprofit organizations” for the operation of electronic bingo in Macon County. (Doc. #464, at 15-16.) It is not required, according to Plaintiffs, to prove that Mr. McGregor “knew the exact identities of the nonprofit organizations” with which Lucky Palace had entered into contracts or business relations. (Doc. # 464, at 15.)
ii. Defendants’ Arguments
In support of their summary judgment motion, Defendants argue that there is undisputed testimony that neither Mr. McGregor nor VictoryLand had any knowledge “of the existence of ... contracts” between Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities. (Doc. # 459, at 105.) Defendants rely upon the deposition testi *1180 mony of the Plaintiff Charities’ representatives, each of whom testified that he or she had no knowledge of any evidence that either Mr. McGregor or VictoryLand was aware of any contractual relationships between Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities. (Doc. # 459, at 105; Doc. # 440, at 67-71.)
Furthermore, responding to Plaintiffs’ summary judgment motion, Defendants contend that the September 25, 2004 article does not constitute “undisputed evidence that Defendants were aware of the contracts that Lucky Palace had entered into with” the Plaintiff Charities. (Doc. # 459, at 104.) Defendants emphasize that the September 25, 2004 article “makes no mention of any nonprofit organization, whether any nonprofit organization had contracted with Lucky Palace as of that date, or the identity of any nonprofit organization associated with Lucky Palace.” (Doc. # 459, at 104.) Defendants also argue that at least ten of the Plaintiff Charities entered into contracts with Lucky Palace after the September 25, 2004 article was printed in the Montgomery Advertiser, and, thus, “the article could not possibly prove that Defendants had knowledge of those contracts.” (Doc. # 459, at 104 n. 55.)
iii. Analysis
The parties’ arguments bring to the forefront several issues. The first deals with the focus of the summary judgment briefs. Defendants’ arguments center on Mr. McGregor’s alleged absence of notice that Lucky Palace had entered into
contracts
with any of the Plaintiff Charities. The argument ignores well-established Alabama law that the intentional interference tort extends to business relations, as well as to contractual relations.
See White Sands I,
The second issue pertains to the specificity of knowledge a defendant must have of the business or contractual relationship.
Teitel v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
Spring Hill Lighting & Supply Co. v. Square D Co.,
On summary judgment, the defendants argued that there was no evidence that “they were aware of the business relation between Spring Hill and Smith Electric; rather, they s[aid] they simply knew that Siemens was applying for approval of its products as substitutes for the specified Square D products.” Id. at 1150. The Supreme Court of Alabama disagreed. It explained that there was evidence that the Docks Department’s project electrical engineer knew that a Siemens substation had been installed in a prior Docks Department pier project, and that Spring Hill had supplied the Siemens equipment. From that evidence, the court held that a reasonable jury could infer that the defendants knew that the proposed Siemens equipment would be supplied through Spring Hill and that, therefore, Spring Hill had created a genuine issue for trial on the question of knowledge. Id.
Based upon the foregoing authorities, any argument that Mr. McGregor had to know the identities of the specific charities that had entered into contracts or business *1182 dealings with Lucky Palace for the operation of electronic bingo in Macon County is rejected. Under Spring Hill and Teitel, it is sufficient if there are facts from which it can be inferred that Defendants knew that Lucky Palace was engaged in business relations with some third-party charities for the purpose of securing contracts for the operation of electronic bingo in Macon County, regardless of whether Defendants knew exactly which charities were involved in those relations. Such evidence exists in this record.
First, there is evidence that at the latest by September 25, 2004 (the publication date of the Montgomery Advertiser article in which Mr. McGregor is quoted), Mr. McGregor was aware that Lucky Palace sought to conduct electronic bingo in Macon County. The date Defendants acquired knowledge of those relations is important because Plaintiffs have alleged that Defendants knowingly and intentionally interfered with those relations by unjustifiedly influencing Sheriff Warren to promulgate Rules making it impossible for Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities to perform their contractual relationships. {See 6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 176-82.) Hence, evidence of knowledge by at least September 2004 would mean that Mr. McGregor learned of those relationships after the effective date of the First Amended Rules (June 2, 2004), but prior to the effective date of the Second Amended Rules (January 1, 2005).
Second, it may be true that there is no direct summary judgment evidence of Defendants’ knowledge. The Montgomery Advertiser article quoting Mr. McGregor is silent as to whether Lucky Palace had entered into contracts or business dealings with any of the Plaintiff Charities, and the Plaintiff Charities have no direct evidence that Defendants knew about their contracts with Lucky Palace. Defendants’ knowledge of the contractual or business relations, however, does not have to be proved by direct evidence; it can be inferred from circumstantial evidence. In this respect, all versions of the Rules, the earliest version of which was in effect in December 2003, explicitly required that a corporation, such as Lucky Palace, had to enter into contracts with nonprofit organizations to operate electronic bingo games on behalf of those nonprofit organizations. {See, e.g., 1st Am. Rules §§ 4(a) & 9(d).) There is evidence, as discussed in other parts of this opinion, that Defendants’ agents were involved in drafting the Original Rules, the First Amended Rules, and the Second Amended Rules. There also is evidence that Mr. McGregor himself was operating electronic bingo at VietoryLand on behalf of nonprofit organizations, pursuant to those Rules.
The court finds that this evidence is sufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact as to Mr. McGregor’s familiarity with the Rules and whether he was aware of business or contractual relations between Lucky Palace and nonprofit organizations, even if he did not know the names of those organizations. Summary judgment, therefore, is not appropriate for either party on the knowledge component of Plaintiffs’ claim for tortious interference with contractual and business relations. Furthermore, because a genuine issue of material fact exists as to at least one element of Count V, Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment on this claim is due to be denied, and it is unnecessary to address Plaintiffs’ arguments for summary judgment as to the other elements. Defendants’ summary judgment contentions as to the fourth element, however, still must be addressed, see supra note 112.
b. Intentional Interference (Element Four)
Under Alabama law, intentional interference encompasses purposeful inter
*1183
ference. “ ‘[IJntentional interference’ takes place when acts or omissions are purposely directed at the interference,
i.e.,
when the acts or omissions were designed to interfere in some way with a plaintiffs contract or business relationship.” Orrin K. Ames III,
Tortious Interference with Business Relationships: the Changing Contours of this Commercial Tort,
35 Cumb. Law Review 336 (2004-2005) (discussing Alabama law), cited with approval in
White Sands II,
As to this element, Defendants argue that there is no evidence that Mr. McGregor or VictoryLand “in any way interfered with those contracts” between Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities. (Doc. # 71.) Defendants’ initial argument relies upon an underlying assumption that there is no evidence, direct or circumstantial, that Defendants had knowledge of a contractual relationship between Lucky Palace and any of the Plaintiff Charities. That is, Defendants argue that the absence of evidence of knowledge is dispositive of whether Defendants intentionally interfered with those contracts. Because Defendants’ underlying assumption has been rejected, the argument Defendants extract from that premise also fails. The only other evidence Defendants offer of lack of interference is deposition testimony from the Plaintiff Charities’ representatives to the effect that they knew of no interference by Defendants with their contracts with Lucky Palace. (Doc. # 440, at 68-71; see, e.g., Austin Dep. 90 (Milstead’s representative responded “No,” when asked whether “VictoryLand ever d[id] anything to interfere with Milstead’s relationship with Lucky Palace in any way.”).)
Plaintiffs, however, respond that “Defendants intentionally kept their interference secret, and none of the Plaintiff Charities could be expected to know the full extent of the Defendants’ misconduct.” (Doc. # 464, at 16 n. 8.) But Plaintiffs have much stronger arguments. Plaintiffs also argue that evidence of Defendants’ involvement in drafting the Second Amended Rules, which capped the total number of Class B Bingo Licenses available in the county at sixty, is circumstantial evidence of intentional interference. (Doc. #464, at 17.) Finally, Plaintiffs rely upon
Ex parte Henderson,
There is evidence that Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand profited sizably from electronic bingo. The evidence establishes that, in December 2003, prior to substantial electronic bingo operations, Victory-Land’s gross electronic bingo profits were $408,481. In 2004, the first full year of electronic bingo operations at Victory-Land, VictoryLand’s gross profits from electronic bingo increased to $49,902,963. In 2008, VictoryLand’s estimated gross profits were $125,860,684.34, an increase in *1184 overall gross profits from electronic bingo operations of 152 percent from 2004 to 2008. (Ex. 30 to Doc. #446; see also Michael A. Williams, Ph.D. Decl. ¶ 34 (“Between 2004, when [VictoryLand’s] bingo gaming revenues were $49,902,963, and 2007, when bingo gaming revenues exceeded $ 126 million, the annual average growth rate was 36 percent.”).) A larger financial incentive to interfere with competition is difficult to imagine. It is notable also that those gross profits were reduced only marginally by the payments made to VictoryLand’s contracting charities. The annual combined total of payments made to the charities was $546,350 (2004); $978,250 (2005); $797,650 (2006); $797,650 (2007); and $1,300,026 (2008). Quantified into percentages, the payouts each year to the charities accounted for .50 to .80 of one percent of the total annual gross profits derived from electronic bingo. While it is recognized that there are operating and other costs associated with VictoryLand’s electronic bingo operations, the amount of the payouts VictoryLand made to its contracting charities is relevant and material when compared to what VictoryLand retained. The comparison provides an evidentiary glimpse of the overall profitability to VictoryLand and, thus, is relevant and material to the issue of economic motive. Moreover, the evidence, in its totality, provides an adequate basis from which a reasonable jury could infer a strong financial motive by Defendants to intentionally interfere with the contractual or business relations between Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities.
Plaintiffs also have compelling arguments arising out of circumstantial evidence of Defendants’ involvement in the rule-making process. First, there is evidence that “from day one” Mr. Bolton represented Mr. McGregor “concerning bingo in Macon County” (McGregor Dep. 194-95, 197, 206), and that beginning in November 2003, prior to the promulgation of the Original Rules, and continuing at least until January 2005, when the Second Amended Rules became effective, Defendants, through their agent Mr. Bolton, inserted themselves into the rule-drafting process. In particular, as to the Second Amended Rules, Plaintiffs have submitted testimony from Mr. Bolton that he sent Mr. Gray Jr. a draft of the Second Amended Rules, with suggested and proposed amendments. (Mr. Gray Jr. Dep. 179-81; Bolton Dep. 201-02.) Second, there is the timing of the Second Amended Rules: They were promulgated just barely three months after September 25, 2004, the date Mr. McGregor publically expressed knowledge of Lucky Palace’s intentions and, by inference, its business relations with nonprofit organizations.
Third, it is undisputed that the Second Amended Rules, effective January 6, 2005, contain an amendment that “[a]t no time shall there be issued and outstanding more than sixty (60) Class B Bingo Licenses for the operation of bingo in Macon County.” (2d Am. Rules § 2.) Furthermore, there is evidence that within a month of the promulgation of the Second Amended Rules, Sheriff Warren issued fourteen licenses to charities associated with VictoryLand, bringing VictoryLand’s total number of charities to at least fifty-three. (Ex. C to Warren Aff.; Ex. 20 to Doc. # 446.) Because the Second Amended Rules required that a “qualified location” have a minimum of fifteen Class B Bingo Licenses, while simultaneously capping the number of Class B Bingo Licenses available in the county at sixty, VictoryLand’s acquisition of fifty-three Class B Bingo Licenses had the effect of preventing Lucky Palace’s electronic bingo operations endeavor. In other words, there were no longer fifteen Class B Bingo Licenses available, the minimum required for the operation of electronic bingo at a qualified location.
*1185 Although some of the details remain murky as to which individual or individuals proposed and crafted the Rules’ amendments, and in particular the sixty-license cap, the court finds that evidence of the involvement of Defendants’ agent (Mr. Bolton) in submitting draft Second Amended Rules to Sheriff Warren’s attorney (Mr. Gray Jr.), combined with evidence of a substantial financial motive and the timing of the Rules, creates a genuine issue of material fact as to whether Defendants intentionally interfered with the contractual or business relations between Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities.
c. Summary
Accordingly, summary judgment is due to be denied on Plaintiffs’ claim in Count V for tortious interference with business or contractual relations between Lucky Palace and its charities.
2. Tortious Interference with Prospective Business Relationships (Count VI)
As grounds for Count VI, Plaintiffs argue that Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand tortiously interfered with prospective business relationships between them and prospective patrons and customers of a Lucky Palace electronic bingo facility based upon their “substantial influence over the process of drafting the rules and regulations ... to the point of absolutely blocking ... those anticipated business relationships.” (Doc. # 445, at 64; see also 6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 145-50.) The problems with Count VI, according to Defendants, are that Plaintiffs cannot establish element one (the existence of a protected business relationship) and that the Plaintiff Charities cannot demonstrate element five (damages) of White Sands II. Because the first ground is dispositive, the second need not be resolved.
Defendants argue that relationships between Plaintiffs and “future, theoretical, unidentified patrons and customers of a hoped-for business that do[ ] not yet exist” are not protectible business relationships, within the meaning of White Sands II. (Doc. # 459, at 107-08.) Plaintiffs, however, contend that Defendants’ interference with the underlying contractual and business relations between Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities has prevented them from forming relationships with patrons and customers of a Lucky Palace facility, and by implication that Defendants should not be allowed to profit from their own misconduct. (Doc. # 464, at 20.)
In
White Sands II,
discussing the first element of the tort of wrongful interference with a business relationship, the Supreme Court of Alabama reiterated that, “[i]n Alabama, ‘protection is appropriate against improper interference with reasonable expectancies of commercial relations even when an existing contract is lacking.”
Here, no potential customer has been identified, and it is undisputed that the relationships sought to be protected presently are nonexistent. Thus, the potential relationships here are unlike the one in
White Sands II,
where there was evidence that the plaintiffs and a third-party seller
*1186
were involved in “a late-stage negotiation process for the purchase of real estate.”
The specific tort addressed in that case was “wrongful interference with a business relationship,”
White Sands II,
*1187
Plaintiffs have not cited any Alabama case that has expanded the tort to include future relationships with nameless customers of an unformed, but anticipated, business. Plaintiffs rely upon
Utah Foam Products,
but it does not bolster their position. In that case, a roofing contractor (Polytec) brought a claim against a roofing products supplier (Utah Foam), alleging that Utah Foam intentionally interfered with Polytec’s business relationship with a third-party (Teledyne) for a construction contract to repair hurricane-damaged roofs on buildings owned by the city of Mobile.
See
Moreover, the
Utah Foam Products
opinion relied upon by Plaintiffs was but one of four decisions entered in that long-running litigation. In an earlier decision rendered in that litigation,
Polytec, Inc. v. Utah Foam Prods., Inc.,
Bush v. Goldman Sachs & Co.,
Although a serious question exists as to whether Alabama courts would recognize the general legal theory advanced in Count VI, it need not be decided whether there could ever exist a factual scenario in which Alabama courts would recognize a cause of action for tortious interference with nonexistent prospective customers of a prospective business. The reasoning is as follows. Here, the relationships between Plaintiffs and prospective customers are not only
*1188
once-removed from the actual and identifiable contractual and business dealings between Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities that form the basis of Count V, but those prospective business relations identified in Count VI actually are an extension of and interwoven with the underlying business and contractual relations between Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities. Plaintiffs’ reliance on
Utah Foam Products’
discussion of damages for a tortious interference with business relations claim further illustrates that Plaintiffs in actuality are seeking to recover in Count VI a potential element of damages in Count V,
ie.,
the loss of future profits from customer business.
118
See
3. Statute of Limitations
There is a final issue to be addressed. Defendants argue that the tortious interference claim in Count V is barred by the statute of limitations. There is no dispute that the statute of limitations for a tortious interference claim is two years under Alabama law. See Ala.Code § 6 — 2—38(¿); (Doc. # 440, at 61.)
“[T]he statute of limitations begins to run in favor of the party liable from the time the cause of action accrues.”
Chaney v. Ala Westr-AL, LLC,
[I]f the act complained of does not in and of itself constitute a legal injury on the date on which it was performed, the cause of action does not accrue on that date. It is only when the first legal injury occurs that the cause of action accrues and the limitations period begins to run.
Ex parte Floyd,
Moreover, the Supreme Court of Alabama has held that, “ ‘[w]hen a claim accrues, for statute-of-limitations purposes, is a question of law if the facts are undisputed and the evidence warrants but one conclusion.’ ”
Jim Walter Homes, Inc. v. Kendrick,
*1189 Defendants argue that Plaintiffs’ tortious interference claim in Count V accrued in mid-January 2005 when “Lucky Palace’s application for a bingo [0]pera-tor’s [L]icense was denied by Sheriff Warren ... on the basis that Lucky Palace did not have a qualified facility.” (Doc. # 440, at 59, 62; see also Doc. #440, at 64-65.) Defendants further contend that mid-January 2005 is the date that the Plaintiff Charities’ claims accrued “because the denial of Lucky Palace’s application [in January 2005] meant the [Plaintiff Charities] immediately lost any right they may have had to receive licensing fees pursuant to their contracts with Lucky Palace and, thus, [they] could have maintained an action at that time.” (Doc. #440, at 64 (emphasis omitted).) According to Defendants’ calculations, the tortious interference claims are time barred because they were not brought until June 2007, when the Third Amended Complaint was filed. 120 (Doc. #440, at 63.)
Plaintiffs do not dispute that Sheriff Warren denied Lucky Palace’s application for an Operator’s License in mid-January 2005. Rather, they contend that Defendants have “misapprehend[ed] the accrual date.” (Doc. # 464, at 6.) Plaintiffs assert that, because neither Amendment No. 744 nor the Rules provide for an “operator’s application,” its submission was “improper” and the return of the application by Sheriff Warren in January 2005 cannot trigger the running of the statute of limitations. (Doc. # 464, at 7, 9.) This is because, according to Plaintiffs, their injury was not “redressable” at that time, and a “redressable injury” is required before a plaintiff can maintain an action. (Doc. #464, at 8.) Instead, Plaintiffs point out that the Rules require nonprofit organizations to apply for Class B Bingo Licenses, and that their legal injury did not occur until July 25, 2005, when Sheriff Warren refused to accept the Plaintiff Charities’ applications for Class B Bingo Licenses. (Doc. # 464, at 6.) Only then were Plaintiffs “entitled to maintain a cause of action.” (Doc. # 464, at 9.) Because their tortious interference claims were brought within two years of that refusal, Plaintiffs argue that their claims are timely. (Doc. # 464, at 6.)
Having considered the arguments and the evidence, the court finds that the facts do not show, conclusively and without dispute, that Plaintiffs’ legal injury occurred in January 2005, as urged by Defendants. The tortious interference alleged by Plaintiffs is Mr. McGregor’s and VictoryLand’s influence and involvement in the promulgation of the Original Rules (effective December 2003), the First Amended Rules (effective June 2004), and the Third Amended Rules (effective January 2005). More specifically, Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand allegedly had a hand in ensuring that certain terms were included in the Rules to secure a “monopoly” for Victory-Land in electronic bingo operations in Macon County. However, as pointed out in other parts of this opinion, there is no mention of a procedure in the Rules for an owner to obtain an Operator’s License to operate electronic bingo on behalf of a nonprofit organization. The only reference in the Rules is to an “Operator’s License Fee” that must be paid by the owner of a Class B qualified location *1190 “[s]hould fifteen (15) or more Class B Bingo License holders contract” with the owner. (2d Am. Rules, § 4). If there is no term in the Second Amended Rules that relates to an Operator’s License application, then it is difficult to envision how the denial of an Operator’s License application has anything to do with Mr. McGregor’s and VictoryLand’s alleged interference such that Plaintiffs could have maintained their cause of action when the Operator’s License application was denied. On the other hand, the Rules specifically require a nonprofit organization desiring to obtain a Class B Bingo License to “make[ ] application to the Sheriff on forms prescribed by the Sheriff.” (2d Am. Rules § 4(a).) And, Plaintiffs have presented evidence that it was not until July 25, 2005, that the Plaintiff Charities’ forms were submitted to Sheriff Warren and denied. This is sufficient evidence from which a reasonable jury could conclude that the causes of action for tortious interference did not accrue until July 25, 2005, within the limitations period.
Accordingly, Defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the basis of the statute of limitations is due to be denied. 121 It will be for the jury to decide when the two-year statutory period of limitations accrued.
4. Summary
Summary judgment is due to be granted in favor of Defendants on the claim in Count VI for intentional interference with prospective business relations. However, Count V is appropriate for trial because genuine issues of material fact exist on the merits and as to the statute of limitations defense. Hence, the summary judgment motions filed by both parties on the claim for intentional interference with contractual and business relations in Count V will be denied.
VI. CONCLUSION
The end result is that Plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment will be denied in its entirety and that Defendants are entitled to summary judgment on some, but not all, of the six counts in the Sixth Amended Complaint. The RICO substantive and conspiracy claims in Counts I and II fail in their entirety against all Defendants. The RICO bribery theory in Count I fails because there is no evidence that in 2003, the retainer payments and legal fees that Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand have paid to the Gray Law Firm since 1983 and the shareholder dividends Mr. Gray Sr. has received since 1983 became “things of value” conferred upon Mr. Gray Jr. with the intent to corruptly influence his actions in the rule-drafting process. Nor is there evidence that they were “pecuniary benefits” accepted by Mr. Gray Jr. with the understanding that his actions would be corruptly influenced regarding his role in the formulation of the Rules. The RICO honest services mail and wire fraud theory in Count I fails because
Skilling
arguably defeats it, and because Plaintiffs do not have standing under § 1964(c); the cause of Plaintiffs’ asserted harms (ie., lost sales and contractual payments) is a series of actions (the denials of licenses) that are “entirely distinct” from the alleged RICO violation (defrauding the citizens of Macon County and Sheriff Warren of honest services).
Anza,
Because there is no evidence of a substantive RICO violation, the RICO con *1191 spiracy claim in Count II necessarily fails. Defendants, therefore, are entitled to summary judgment on Counts I and II.
The § 1983 equal protection claim in Count III against Sheriff Warren and the § 1983 equal protection conspiracy claim in Count TV against all Defendants are substantially narrowed. Plaintiffs’ equal protection facial challenges to the Second Amended Rules do not survive summary judgment: The existing facility requirement is rationally related to the legitimate governmental interest of public safety and welfare, and the numerical licensing requirements, which restrict the number of electronic bingo gaming facilities in Macon County, are rationally related to the legitimate governmental interests of ensuring efficacious law enforcement patrol and control of electronic bingo for the public’s safety and welfare. Likewise, Plaintiffs’ alternative equal protection theory — that the disparate impact of the facially neutral Second Amended Rules is the result of purposeful discrimination — does not survive summary judgment primarily because Plaintiffs do not fall into a class that historically has been the victim of discrimination.
One equal protection theory, brought by the Plaintiff Charities (not by Lucky Palace), however, survives summary judgment as to all but two of the Plaintiff Charities: the “as applied” claim that Sheriff Warren unequally administered the facially neutral Second Amended Rules. Material factual disputes abound as to this theory, and Sheriff Warren is not legislatively immune from this claim. However, the statute of limitations bars Greater White Church and RG Apartments, which were not added as Plaintiffs until the Fifth Amended Complaint, from pursuing this § 1983 equal protection theory, and they further fail to satisfy the requirements of the relation back doctrine. The § 1983 conspiracy claim in Count IV that has as its underpinnings the “as applied” equal protection theory also survives summary judgment. As to the state law claims, there are genuine issues of material fact precluding summary judgment on Count V, which alleges intentional interference with contractual or business relations; however, Defendants are entitled to summary judgment on the claim in Count VI for intentional interference with prospective business relations.
The following chart summarizes which claims and which parties did and did not survive Defendants’ summary judgment motions:
[[Image here]]
*1192 by Greater White Church and RG _Apartments._
§ 1983 Conspiracy to Deprive Plaintiffs of Equal Protection (Count IV)
Sheriff Warren
GRANTED as to the § 1983 conspiracy claim predicated on facial and disparate impact theories brought by all Plaintiffs; DENIED as to the § 1983 conspiracy claim predicated on the “as applied” theory brought by thirteen of the Plaintiff Charities, see supra note 122 ; GRANTED as to the § 1983 conspiracy claim predicated on the “as applied” theory brought by Greater White Church and RG Apartments.
Mr. McGregor
_VictoryLand
Intentional Interference with Contractual & Business Relations (Count V)
Mr. McGregor
DENIED
_VictoryLand_
Tortious Interference with Prospective Relations (Count VI)
Mr. McGregor
GRANTED
_VictoryLand_
VII. ORDER
For the foregoing reasons, it is ORDERED that
(1) Defendants Milton McGregor and VictoryLand’s motion for summary judgment (Doc. #421) is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part (Doc. # 421);
(2) Sheriff David Warren’s motions for summary judgment (Docs.# 423, 425, 427, 429, 431, 433) are GRANTED in part and DENIED in part; and
(3) Plaintiffs’ motion for partial summary judgment (Doc. # 445) is DENIED.
Notes
. David Warren is the sheriff of Macon County and has been for the past fifteen years.
. Plaintiffs do not, however, make claims for either procedural or substantive due process violations. Nor do they bring any challenge to Amendment No. 744 itself. Moreover, the legality of VictoryLand's electronic bingo operations is not at issue in this case.
. The multiple briefs filed in support of and in opposition to the summary judgment motions will be referred to by their document numbers.
. Section 284.01 provides, in pertinent part, that "[a]ny proposed constitutional amendment which affects or applies to only one county shall be adopted as a valid part of the constitution by a favorable vote of a majority of the qualified electors of the affected county who vote on the amendment.”
. Amendment No. 744, which does not mention electronic bingo, provides:
The operation of bingo games for prizes or money by nonprofit organizations for charitable, educational, or other lawful purposes shall be legal in Macon County. The sheriff shall promulgate rules and regulations for the licensing and operation of bingo games within the county. The sheriff shall insure compliance pursuant to any rule or regulation and the following requirements:
(1) No person under the age of 19 years shall be permitted to play any game or games of bingo, nor shall any person under the age of 19 years be permitted to conduct or assist in the operation of any game of bingo.
(2) No bingo license shall be issued to any nonprofit organization, unless the organization shall have been in existence for at least three years in the county immediately prior to the issuance of the permit or license.
(3) Bingo games may be operated on the premises owned or leased by the nonprofit organization operating the bingo game.
(4) A nonprofit organization may enter into a contract with any individual, firm,’ association, or corporation to have the individual or entity operate bingo games or concessions on behalf of the nonprofit organization. A nonprofit organization may pay consulting fees to any individual or entity for any services performed in relation to lire operation or conduct of a bingo game.
(5) A nonprofit organization may lend its name or allow its identity to be used by another person or entity in the operating or advertising of a bingo game in which the nonprofit organization is not directly and solely operating the bingo game.
(6) Prizes given by any nonprofit organization for the playing of bingo games shall not exceed the cash amount or gifts of equivalent value set by rule or regulation during any bingo session during any calendar week.
. Another constitutional amendment passed and adopted in 2003 is Amendment No. 743, which authorizes electronic marking machines in bingo games in Greene County, Alabama. Macon County is near the eastern border of Alabama, and Greene County is near the western border, roughly 160 miles apart.
. VictoryLand’s business transcends state lines, attracting patrons who have traveled from other states to play electronic bingo. (McGregor Dep. 338-39 (Ex. 3 to Doc. #443 & Ex. I to Doc. # 446); Doc. # 356 ¶ 140.) Moreover, VictoryLand’s advertisements reach beyond Alabama, and VictoryLand’s website can be accessed by persons outside of Alabama. (Doc. #356 ¶ 141; see, e.g., VictotyLand Website Printouts (Ex. 13 to Doc. # 445).)
. As represented by Mr. McGregor, the Alabama Legislature authorized a referendum on July 22, 1983, to permit parimutuel wagering *1091 in Macon County, and the resulting statute provided for only one greyhound racing facility in Macon County, with one license issued for the operation of the facility. (See McGregor Dep. 150, 306 ("The statute ... spelled out that there would be only one parimutuel facility in Macon County, one.”).) Mr. McGregor was the successful applicant. This was Mr. McGregor’s first involvement in the gaming industry. (McGregor Dep. 42.)
. The Rules use the terms "Class B License” and “Class B Bingo License” interchangeably.
. Mr. Gray Jr. later became a partner with an equity ownership, see infra note 19. (Gray Sr. Dep. 185.)
. Throughout this opinion, citations beginning with "FGJ,” "MCGP” and "PTF” are to the designations appearing on the exhibits submitted by the parties.
. Stanley Gray is Mr. Gray Jr.’s brother. (Gray Sr. Dep. 61-62.)
. From October 2004 through June 2005, while an associate, Mr. Gray Jr. worked more than 160 hours on a case for which Victory-Land paid the Gray Law Firm's bill. (Ex. 3 to Doc. # 445; Gray Jr. Dep. 296-301.)
. As explained in a separate Order entered contemporaneously herewith, certain documents exchanged during discovery and submitted by Plaintiffs during the summary judgment briefing period — including Mr. Gray Sr.'s Schedule K-l tax forms (reporting the amount of Mr. Gray Sr.'s income received from his shareholding in VictoryLand), the amount of Mr. Gray Sr.'s dividend payments from VictoryLand, and the percentage of Mr. Gray Sr.'s ownership interest in Victory-Land — are not subject to public disclosure. Having balanced the competing interests — in particular, the confidentiality historically given to tax returns, Mr. Gray Sr.'s status as a private individual and a non-party, the lack of materiality of this evidence to resolution of the summary judgment motions and the protected order's exception for material "essential to the prosecution” of claims (Doc. # 352, at 1-2), the court has found that the need for confidentiality outweighs the presumption of public access.
.Although the Gray Law Firm, Mr. Gray Sr. and Mr. Gray Jr. are not parties, they are implicated for alleged conflicts of interest arising in their representation of Defendants: Mr. Gray Jr. represented Sheriff Warren who regulated a business in which his father, Mr. Gray Sr., is a shareholder and for which Mr. Gray Sr. serves as legal counsel; Mr. Gray Sr. and Mr. Gray Jr. also are law partners and shareholders in the Gray Law Firm, not to mention father and son; both appeared for and represented Sheriff Warren in this case, but the day prior to Mr. Gray Jr.'s deposition, they filed a motion to withdraw from representation (Doc. #319, filed April 6, 2009), which was granted (Doc. # 320). Because of the complexity of the Grays’ relationships and the commonality of names, the reader should beware, and to reduce any confusion, they are referred to as "Mr. Gray Sr.” and "Mr. Gray Jr.”
. Throughout this opinion, the court refers to these rules as the “Original Rules,” “First Amended Rules,” "Second Amended Rules,” and "Third Amended Rules,” and collectively as "Rules,” or occasionally as "Rules and Regulations.” The focus in this litigation is on the Original Rules, First Amended Rules, and Second Amended Rules.
. Class A Bingo Licenses for the operation of paper bingo are not at issue in this case.
. The Rules use the term "nonprofit organizations.” The summary judgment briefs also refer to nonprofit organizations as “charities,” and the terms are used interchangeably in this opinion. There is some debate, discussed infra, as to whether certain of the Plaintiff Charities are nonprofit organizations as defined by the Rules. References herein to "nonprofit organizations” should not be interpreted as a finding one way or the other on that narrow issue.
.The Gray Law Firm became a professional corporation in 2007, and prior to that time, Mr. Gray Jr. did not have an equity ownership in the firm or participate in any profits from the firm. (Gray Sr. Dep. 184-86; Gray Jr. Dep. 241-43 (Ex. 13 to Doc. # 443 & Ex. G to Doc. # 446).)
. Mr. Bolton is attorney of record for Mr. McGregor in this litigation. Also, Mr. Bolton "has represented [Mr. McGregor] from day one concerning bingo in Macon County.” (McGregor Dep. 194-95.)
. Mr. Bolton testified:
My recollection is he [Mr. Gray Jr.] either edited the first draft and sent it back or commented on it or something like that. I can't recall whether he did red lines, so to speak, or handwritten notations on it. He may have just communicated in some way comments or changes to that very first draft.
What I recall is he [Mr. Gray Jr.] sent comments back, and there could have been — I just don't recall the form that it took, whether they were something that I received by telephone, by e-mail or by fax.
(Bolton Dep. 87.)
. Mr. Johnston has been employed as Mr. McGregor’s tax attorney for “many years,” and also is a shareholder in VictoryLand. (McGregor Dep. 15, 87-88.) Mr. Gray Jr. understood that Mr. Johnston represented either VictoryLand or Mr. McGregor. (Gray Jr. Dep. 133-34.) Mr. Gray Jr., however, testified that he was not aware that Mr. Johnston was a shareholder in VictoryLand. (Gray Jr. Dep. 133.)
.The "conflict” question, asked of Mr. Gray Jr. at his deposition, was whether during the meeting "anyone ever sa[id], T don't know if this is going to be a problem with the [Gray Law Firm] representing [Sheriff Warren] and this firm also representing] VictoryLand ... on other matters and one of the firm's partners is a shareholder of VictoryLand.” (Gray Jr. Dep. 110.) At his deposition, Mr. Bolton was asked whether anyone expressed a "concern” regarding the fact that the "licensing authority, [Sheriff] Warren, and his attorney, [Mr.] Gray, Jr., were meeting with the only likely licensing applicant for electronic bingo before any rules had been adopted, that being [Mr.] McGregor with his two lawyers, you and David Johnston.” (Bolton Dep. 110.) Mr. Bolton answered, "No.” (Bolton Dep. 110.)
. There is conflicting testimony as to whether Mr. Johnston attended this meeting. (Compare Bolton Dep. 122 with Johnston Dep. 31-32.) Mr. Johnston, however, does not dispute that the meeting occurred. (Johnston Dep. 31-32.)
.The Montgomeiy County Rules allegedly used as a model are relevant, according to Plaintiffs, for their dissimilarities to the Macon County Rules. Significantly, the Montgomery County Rules govern only paper bingo, not electronic bingo. (Bolton Dep. 57-58.) Some of the other differences arguably can be attributed to the distinctions between the constitutional amendments that authorized bingo in Montgomery and Macon counties. For example, unlike Amendment No. 744 for Macon County, the Montgomery County constitutional amendment does not authorize a licensee to contract with or pay consulting fees to a third party operator to operate bingo games on its behalf. See Ala. Const.1901 amend. 413, Act. No. 82-299 (1982). Accordingly, the Montgomery County Rules contain language prohibiting certain payments and consulting fees to third parties, and otherwise limit the use of bingo proceeds.
Another distinguishing factor between the Original Rules and the Montgomeiy County Rules is that Sheriff Warren's Original Rules contain a section permitting "Amendments,” while the Montgomery County Rules do not. (See Original Rules § 16 ("The Sheriff reserves the right to amend these Regulations from time to time as necessary, but no amendment shall be effective unless in writing and signed by the Sheriff.”).) Also, the Montgomeiy County Rules contain no restrictions concerning the value of the building at which bingo may be conducted, while the Original Rules required for the operation of electronic bingo a minimum purchase price of $5 million for the “land, building and other capital improvements (before depreciation).” (Original Rules l(j).)
. Throughout the summary judgment materials, there are repeated references to an “Operator's License.” There is not, however, an application process in the Rules for an Operator’s License. Rather, § 4(a) of the Rules simply provides for payment of an "Operator’s License Fee” once the requisite number of Class B Bingo License holders have contracted with the owner of a Class B qualified location.
. The First Amended Rules were publicly disclosed on June 10, 2004, in The Tuskegee News, a weekly print publication, eight days *1098 after the Rules’ effective date of June 2, 2004. (Warren Dep. 276; Warren Answer to 6th Am. Compl. ¶ 60.)
. Exhibit 161 does not support the fact for which it is cited.
. Three of these organizations — Aid to Inmate Mothers, Inc., Tuskegee-Macon County YMCA, and Tuskegee Human and Civil Rights Multicultural Center (“Center”) — had ties to the players in this case. At the time application was made, Pebblin Warren, who is Sheriff Warren’s wife, was the director of Aid to Inmate Mothers. (Ex. 8 to Doc. # 445, at Warren D0317-325; Warren Dep. 287-89.) Walter E. McGowan, a shareholder in the Gray Law Firm, and Willie R. Whitehead, an officer of VictoryLand, were directors of the Tuskegee-Macon County YMCA. (Tuskegee-Macon County YMCA Application for Bingo License (Ex. 8 to Doc. # 445); Warren Dep. 239-40; Gray Jr. Dep. 19; McGregor Dep. 133.) Mr. Gray Sr.’s daughter, Deborah Gray, was the director of the Center, and a member of the Board. Mr. Gray Sr. was an officer and one of the founders of the Center, and in 2003, Mr. McGregor "probably” was a member of the Center’s board of directors. (Ex. 8 at Warren D0334; Warren Dep. 100-04; Gray Sr. Aff. 2); Deborah Gray Dep. 13-14, 18 (Ex. E to Doc. #446); Original Rules § 4(c)(4).) Mr. Gray Jr. also was a member of the board. (Deborah Gray Dep. 18; Thomas L. Coley Jr. Dep. 22 (Ex. D to Doc. # 446).)
. On December 31, 2004, Sheriff Warren also issued renewal licenses, as provided in § 4(a), to thirty-nine Class B Bingo License holders. (Warren Aff. ¶ 18.)
. These agreements provided: "The Operator [VictoryLand] shall pay to the Licensee within Fourteen (14) calendar days following the end of the applicable calendar month an amount equal to (x) the Bingo Session Charity Fee, multiplied by (y) the number of Bingo Sessions conducted by the Operator on behalf of the Licensee for the given calendar month.” (See, e.g., VictoryLand's Bingo Operations & Lease Agreement § 5 (Ex. 26 to Doc. # 446).) Plaintiffs have presented evidence from which they extrapolate that VictoryLand conducted roughly seven sessions of electronic bingo in 2008 per charity. (VictoryLand Bingo Payment Schedule (Ex. 29 to Doc. # 446).) No objection to this evidence and extrapolation, other than relevancy, has been interposed by Defendants. (Pis.' Statement of Undisputed Facts ¶ J31 (App. to Doc. # 445); VictoryLand & McGregor’s Resp. to Pis.' Statement of Undisputed Facts ¶ J31(Doc. # 460).)
. Gross profits are calculated after deducting operating expenses and the payments that go directly to machine vendors. Gross receipts do not take into account these deductions.
. Spaces are left blank principally because disclosures were not required for these years.
. The applications are not included as part of this exhibit. Copies of the individual checks, however, are included and contain notations in the "Remitter” field as to the charity on whose behalf the check was submitted. There are checks for each Plaintiff Charity, but one — Greater White Church. Plaintiffs have conceded that Greater White Church "did not submit an application for a Class B License to Sheriff Warren, and [that it] was not listed as one of Lucky Palace’s 'Contracted Non-Profit Organizations’ in documents produced to Sheriff Warren on July 17, 2005.” (Doc. # 466, at 9 n. 6.)
. Section 14 provides that
[a]ny nonprofit organization whose application for a license hereunder shall be denied by the Sheriff pursuant to these Regulations shall have the right to appeal such denial to the Macon County Commission and to the Circuit Court of Macon County in the same manner as an appeal of revocation of a license issued hereunder may be appealed pursuant hereto provided, however, that such organization shall not operate any bingo game until such application shall have been granted, and a license issued, pursuant to any order of the said Commission or Court.
(2d Am. Rules § 14.) Not mentioned is an appeal from the denial of an “Operator’s License,” and for good reason: There is no direct provision for an Operator’s License, so there can be no appeal from the refusal to issue such.
. “An act of racketeering is commonly referred to as a predicate act.”
Williams,
. In Count I, there are multiple RICO theories. Sheriff Warren questions whether he is a Defendant as to the RICO bribery theory. (Doc. # 424, at 39.) Plaintiffs say that he is (Doc. # 465, at 22), but Sheriff Warren’s involvement in a RICO bribery enterprise is not clear from the Sixth Amended Complaint (6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 83-116). This issue need not be decided. VictoiyLand’s and Mr. McGregor's arguments apply equally to Sheriff Warren, to the extent that he is being sued on this theory. In fact, Sheriff Warren's connection to the alleged RICO bribery scheme is even more tenuous. Accordingly, the findings herein apply also to the RICO bribery claims against Sheriff Warren, and in this section, references to "Defendants” include Sheriff Warren, Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand.
. The January 2003 date is gleaned from the complaint. (See, e.g., 6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 88, 89, 92.) Plaintiffs’ summary judgment briefs do not refer to January 2003, as the onset of the alleged bribery, but rather suggest that the onset of the bribery occurred between November 4, 2003, when the voters passed Amendment No. 744, and the time leading up the promulgation of the Original Rules, which was December 5, 2003. (See, e.g., Doc. # 464, at 30-32.)
. First, Plaintiffs assert that by using his position as Sheriff Warren’s attorney to draft Rules favoring VictoryLand, Mr. Gray Jr. gave VictoryLand a financial “pump” so as to ensure that “a stream of revenue” in the form of continued legal fees from VictoryLand and Mr. McGregor to Mr. Gray Jr.’s law firm. (Doc. # 464, at 29.) Plaintiffs argue that this anticipated continual stream of revenue was a “thing of value” in Mr. Gray Jr.'s mind. (Doc. # 464, at 30.)
Second, Plaintiffs assert that VictoryLand's satisfaction of past-due retainer payments, and the prospect of continued timely retainer payments to the Gray Law Firm were “things of value” to Mr. Gray Jr., which have only been possible because of the profits raked in from VictoryLand's electronic bingo opera *1112 tions. (Doc. # 464, at 30.) Plaintiffs assert that these things — the expectation of future legal fees from VictoryLand to the Gray Law Firm, the prospect of future retainer payments from VictoryLand to the Gray Law Firm, and VictoryLand’s satisfaction of overdue retainer payments to the Gray Law Firm — had value to Mr. Gray Jr. because as an associate of the firm, Mr. Gray Jr.’s "livelihood depended on the firm's success, and his salary and bonuses were based on the firm’s productivity.” (Doc. # 464, at 28-30.) Thus, according to Plaintiffs, the Gray Law Firm and hence Mr. Gray Jr. "were clearly dependent on VictoryLand and [Mr.] McGregor for continued legal fees.” (Doc. # 464, at 29.)
Third, Plaintiffs point out that increases in VictoiyLand’s revenues resulted in increases in the amount of Mr. Gray Sr.’s shareholder dividend payments, and argue that these increased payments, as well as the expectation of increased future payments, were "things of value” to Mr. Gray Jr. (Doc. #464, at 31.) They argue that "[a]ny increase in Victory-Land’s revenues would allow VictoryLand to continue as a viable business and result in a direct increase in [Mr.] Gray Sr.’s dividend payments” (Doc. #464, at 31), and that it should be inferred that the "unprecedented increases in [Mr. Gray Sr.’s] shareholder dividends after electronic bingo started at VictoryLand” were "things of value” in the mind of Mr. Gray Jr. for purposes of Alabama’s bribery statute. (Doc. # 464, at 32.)
. Section 201(g) provided that ''[w]hoever, being a public official, ... otherwise than as provided by law for the proper discharge of official duty, directly or indirectly asks, demands, exacts, solicits, seeks, accepts, receives, or agrees to receive anything of value for himself for or because of any official act performed or to be performed by him [shall be guilty of an offense].”
. Most of the cited decisions in the annotations involved interpretations of prior versions of Alabama’s bribery statute. Those decisions nonetheless are instructive on how Alabama courts construe the state's bribery statute.
.
Ex parte Montgomery
involved review of the Board of Commissioners of the Alabama State Bar’s decision to suspend the petitioner-attorney from the practice of law for two years, based in part upon a finding that the attorney’s conduct amounted to the offense of bribery under Alabama law.
. On one hand, it cannot be ignored that Mr. Gray Jr. — the alleged bribee — was not the direct recipient of any of these alleged unlawful payments. The Gray Law Firm received the legal fees and retainer payments, and Mr. Gray Jr.’s father was the shareholder who received dividend payments from Victory-Land. The facts, thus, stand in direct contrast to each of the Alabama decisions cited herein. In those cases, the individual who accepted the bribe or the individual who was offered a bribe was to be directly benefitted. In
Hammond,
the PSC president expected that a direct benefit — monetary kickbacks from the third party vendor — would flow to him from the removal of the vending machines from the telephone company plant.
See
On the other hand, as Plaintiffs point out, other circuits interpreting different bribery laws have concluded that payments to family members can amount to bribes, and so they can. In
United States v. Frega,
.
Gorman,
relied upon by Plaintiffs,
see
. It is not disputed that VictoryLand is a lucrative client of the Gray Law Firm. (Gray Sr. Dep. 53-54, 58-59.) Over the past two decades, the Gray Law Firm has billed and received payments from VictoryLand for specified legal representation of VictoryLand in litigation and other matters. (Ex. 4 to Doc. # 445; Gray Sr. Dep. 47; McGregor Dep. 77, 84.) Mr. Gray Sr. has represented VictoiyLand on non-bingo legal matters continuously since that date. (Gray Sr. Aff. 1-2; McGregor Dep. 198.)
. In close temporal proximity to when the Original Rules were passed, VictoryLand paid the Gray Law Firm four payments "to catch up on past quarterly payments.” (Doc. # 460 ¶ B26.) Sr. Aff. 1-2; McGregor Dep.
. Peculiarly, Sheriff Warren is both a victim and a defendant on this theory in the RICO count.
. The court remanded the question of whether the error was harmless in light of other theories that could have supported Skilling’s conspiracy conviction.
Skilling,
. Again, Mr. McGregor's and VictoryLand’s arguments apply equally to Sheriff Warren. Accordingly, the findings herein also are dis-positive as to the RICO honest services mail and wire fraud claim against Sheriff Warren.
. Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand argue that it "is unnecessary to determine whether Plaintiffs have established the final three elements of a RICO violation." (Doc. # 440, at 93.) They, thus, have not moved for summary judgment on these three elements.
. In
Grogan,
the Eleventh Circuit affirmed the dismissal of § 1964(c) personal injury and wrongful death actions brought by FBI agents who had been injured (and the estates of FBI agents who had been killed) in a shoot-out with criminals. The court explained: "In our view, the ordinary meaning of the phrase ‘injured in his business or property' excludes personal injuries, including the pecuniary losses therefrom.”
.In their brief, Plaintiffs also mention that Lucky Palace has suffered injuries in the form of “the diminished value of [its] investments.” (Doc. # 445, at 38.) Plaintiffs, however, as noted by Defendants (Doc. # 459, at 30 n. 14), have not pointed to evidence of Lucky Pal *1124 ace’s investments or provided an explanation of what those investments encompass or how the investments have diminished. Given this absence of evidence or argument, to the extent that Plaintiffs are seeking to recover for Lucky Palace’s alleged diminished value in investments, summary judgment is due to be granted in Defendants' favor.
. Those cases are:
Ove v. Gwinn,
. After the
Marina Point
court issued its opinion, the principal Ninth Circuit decisions upon which the
Marina Point
court relied—
Guerrero v. Gates,
.
Holmes
is the seminal case on § 1964(c)’s proximate cause requirement.
See Anza,
. After summary judgment briefing closed in this case, the Supreme Court issued
Hemi Group, LLC v. City of New
York, — U.S. —,
. That there was a "lack of any appreciable risk of duplicative recoveries,”
i.e.,
the third motivating principle recognized in
Holmes,
did not alter the court's holding.
Anza,
. Another notable point made in
Bridge
was that the absence of first-party reliance “may in some cases tend to show that an injury was not sufficiently direct to satisfy § 1964(c)'s proximate-cause requirement.’’
The same arguably could be said here as to the RICO theory that Sheriff Warren was deprived of the honest services of Mr. Gray Jr. when Mr. Gray Jr. failed to fully disclose to Sheriff Warren (i.e., suppressed) that Victory-Land’s agents drafted the Rules and that various representational conflicts of interest exist *1131 ed. Plaintiffs have not argued that they relied upon Mr. Gray Jr.’s alleged suppressions, but, at the same time, they have not argued that anyone relied upon those suppressions. They have not contended, for instance, that Sheriff Warren acted in reliance on his attorney's suppressions, and on this record, such an argument would be difficult to make. To explain, when the different pieces of the litigation puzzle are put together, part of Plaintiffs' RICO theory against Sheriff Warren (as the defendant) is that he defrauded the public by "intentionally turning a blind eye to the presence of any conflicts of interest in the promulgation and amendment of [the Rules],” and by issuing Rules that benefitted the private interests of Mr. McGregor and Victory-Land, rather than the interests of the public. (See, e.g., 6th Am. Compl. ¶ 122; see also Doc. # 465, at 22 n. 12 ("It is unclear from the record whether [Sheriff Warren] was willfully ignorant or fully aware of the activities of the Enterprise.”).) This theory appears directly at odds with Plaintiffs' theory that Sheriff Warren (as the victim) suffered innocently when Mr. Gray Jr. failed to disclose that there were conflicts of interest and that Victory-Land's agents drafted the Rules. Although first-party reliance is not required to prove § 1964(c) proximate case, the teachings of the Bridge Court indicate that absence of reliance by any party weighs against a finding of proximate cause. Such may be the case here.
. To recap, this is because the Second Amended Rules added a requirement that a *1133 qualified location must have a minimum of fifteen charity licenses {i.e., Class B Bingo Licenses), but at the same time prohibited the issuance of more than sixty charity licenses countywide. By March 20, 2006, Victory-Land had secured all sixty charity licenses. (2006 VictoryLand Charity Licenses (Ex. 31 to Doc. # 446); McGregor’s Answer to 6th Am. Compl. ¶ 74.)
.
James Cape & Sons Co. v. PCC Construction,
Relying largely on Anza, the Seventh Circuit held that § 1964(c)’s proximate cause requirement precluded recovery because it "could never be certain whether [the plaintiff] would have won any of the contracts that were the subject of the conspiracy ‘for any number of reasons unconnected to the asserted pattern of fraud.’ ”
Id.
at 403 (quoting
Anza,
. It, therefore, is unnecessary to delve deeper into Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand’s argument that calculating lost profits, the amount of which Plaintiffs admit is disputed (Doc. # 445, at 38 n. 14), would be too speculative, as they are mere expectancy damages. Additionally, Plaintiffs have not explained why the citizens of Macon County and Sheriff Warren, the ones who allegedly were directly deprived of specified honest services, could not effectively vindicate their interests.
See Anza,
. The arguments presume that approval as a "qualified location” would result in the issuance of an Operator’s License. See supra note 26.
. It provides:
“Qualified location” for the holder of a Class B Bingo License shall mean a location, as defined above, which has been inspected and approved by the Sheriff for the conduct of bingo games and other lawful activities and for which the license applicant shall submit satisfactory evidence that the location has in place the following at all times that any bingo games are being conducted or operated; (i) public liability insurance in an amount not less than $5,000,000; (ii) if liquor is served, liquor liability insurance in the amount of not less than $1,000,000; (iii) adequate parking for patrons and employees; (iv) onsite security as prescribed by the Sheriff; (v) onsite first aid personnel as prescribed by the Sheriff; (vi) cash or surety bond in an amount not less than $1,000,000; (vii) such accounting procedures, controls and security monitoring as necessary to preserve and promote the integrity of the operation of bingo games and to ensure the protection of the charitable license holder and its patrons; (viii) satisfactory evidence that the owner or owners of the location paid at least $15,000,000 for the land, building and other capital improvements (before depreciation) comprising said location; (ix) satisfactory evidence that the location is fully compliant with the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”); and (x) satisfactory evidence that the owner or owners of such location have been residents of the State of Alabama for at least three (3) years or, if the owner is a partnership, association, corporation, limited liability company, or other business entity, satisfactory evidence that those partners, members, or stockholders of such entity that own collectively at least two-thirds (2/3) of the voting rights and equity interests of such entity, are individuals that have been residents of the State of Alabama for at least three (3) years.
(2d Am. Rules § l(j).)
. As a threshold matter, legislation that does not classify individuals or entities for different treatment does not violate' the Equal Protection Clause.
See United States v. Pitts,
. Under rational basis review, Defendants have no burden to make any particularized justification to support the Rules. In this case, however, Defendants assert that they offer this basis to demonstrate that Plaintiffs cannot meet their heavy burden of disproving every conceivable rational basis for the existing facility requirement. (Doc. # 459, at 75 n. 38.) Defendants also point out that Sheriff Warren, as the enacting government official, actually considered this basis. In this respect, they point to the commentary to the First Amended Rules, which increased the capital investment amount required for a "qualified location” from $5 million to $15 million, and Sheriff Warren’s deposition testimony. (See Doc. # 459, at 75 (citing 1st Am. Rules, which provide that the capital investment requirement was increased from $5 million to $15 million to ensure that “a significant investment and financial commitment to Macon County prior to becoming a 'qualified location' ”); Warren Dep. 139 (testifying that he "was trying to make sure that whoever did this
[i.e.,
conducted electronic bingo], [made] a substantial investment in the county and ... w[as] serious about doing it”). Defendants again correctly assert that the constitutional analysis would be unaffected, even if this reason had not been articulated by Sheriff Warren. This is because the "proper inquiry is concerned with the existence of a conceivably rational basis, not whether that basis was actually considered by the legislative body.”
Haves,
. See supra note 26.
. Later, Plaintiffs argue that the requirement of an existing facility (inspected and approved by the sheriff as a qualified location) for the issuance of a Class B Bingo License is an oral change to the Second Amended Rules — that the existing facility requirement for a Class B Bingo License is not facially in the Rules, but was added to avoid issuance of Class B Bingo Licenses to the Plaintiff Charities. There is no argument, indeed Plaintiffs concede, that for purposes of the present analysis, the Second Amended Rules require an existing facility (that has been inspected and approved by Sheriff Warren as a qualified location) before an Operator’s License will be issued.
. Plaintiffs argue that, unlike liquor license ordinances that provide extensive intermediate procedures for obtaining a liquor license, including the preconstruction review of plans by city departments and agencies and the ability to correct any deficiencies with those plans prior to construction, Sheriff Warren has no incremental building standards governing the electronic bingo licensing procedures. (Doc. # 464, at 59.)
.Additionally, that public safety is not an articulated goal in the commentary to the Rules does not prevent it from qualifying as a conceivably rational basis for the existing facility requirement.
See Haves,
.Defendants, on the other hand, point out that Sheriff Warren also testified that any applicant that fully meets the requirements of the Rules regarding bingo would be approved. (Warren Dep. 107; Warren Answer to 6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 41, 57.)
. In
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. It is true that
Browning-Ferris
made a passing reference to "equal protection” in its
*1144
due process analysis.
See
Thus, it is unnecessary to decide whether the existing facility requirement passes muster under the Due Process Clause. It is notable that the legislation at issue in
Browning-Ferris
did not fail under the Due Process Clause because there were "no firm legal standards" for obtaining legislative approval, the standard proposed by Plaintiffs (Doc. # 445, at 45), but rather because the legislation was "completely] absen[t] of standards,” contained "no guidelines,” and "providefd] no clue for determining the basis on which a license would be granted.”
Browning-Ferns,
Plaintiffs also assert that, like the legislature in
Browning-Ferris,
Sheriff Warren had "unfettered” discretion to grant or deny a license, but again there is precedent that the Equal Protection Clause is not the proper vehicle through which to bring such a claim. In
Leib,
observing the plaintiff's "failfure] to articulate the precise nature of [his] claim,” the Eleventh Circuit explained that the plaintiff's "chief argument in support of the unbridled discretion claim is that the 'purpose of the underlying statute’ standard is too nebulous for people of ordinary intelligence to comply with — which ... is the gravamen of a
void-for-vagueness claim.’’
. The court expresses no opinion on whether a due process claim would have merit. The absence of that claim is merely noted.
. Given that courts have placed liquor and gambling in the same "vice” category, decisions interpreting liquor regulations also provide meaningful comparisons. Restrictions on the number of liquor licenses in a geographical area have been found not to violate equal protection in a number of cases. In
Simms v. Farris,
. Additionally, at least two circuits — the Tenth and Sixth — have held
Romer
and
Cleburne
inapplicable to economic regulation, such as that in this case. In
Kleinsmith v. Shurtleff,
. Case law suggests that where there is a conceivable rational basis, a court need not look any further in rejecting an equal protection challenge, even if there is commingling with an improper purpose.
See TJniv. of Ala.,
. Plaintiffs also observe that
E & T Realty
did “not make a reference to any requirement that the 'purposeful discrimination' have a disparate impact on
a protected class.’’
(Doc. # 445, at 52 (emphasis added) (citing
E & T Realty,
. Defendants argue that there is no equal protection disparate impact claim in the Sixth Amended Complaint. (Doc. #475, at 63.) The court is inclined to agree. The allegations in the Sixth Amended Complaint never refer to "disparate impact” or similar language, or otherwise allude to this theory.
(See
6th Am. Compl. ¶¶ 161-68.) There is only a general reference to "intentional ... discrimination” (6th Am. Compl. ¶ 166), but more would seem to be required by
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
. Lucky Palace is not included as a plaintiff in this theory. (See Doc. # 445, at 54-56.)
. Lucky Palace had secured contracts with more than fifteen nonprofit organizations much earlier, by November 10, 2004. (Lucky Palace/Charity Contracts (Ex. 18 to Doc. # 445).)
. Although referred to as a “class of one” claim, "the number of individuals in a class is immaterial for equal protection analysis.”
Olech,
. For example, in the Sixth Circuit and Seventh Circuit, "animus or ill will” requires proof that "the challenged government actions were motivated by personal malice unrelated to the defendant’s official duties.”
Klimik v. Kent County Sheriff's Dep’t,
. In
Campbell,
the equal protection claim failed for lack of evidence of a similarly situated comparator.
See
. The reference to "class of one” would appear to be to
Olech,
given an earlier reference to that decision.
See Young Apartments,
.See Hilton v. City of Wheeling,
. In
E & T Realty,
the court noted, for example, that "purposeful discrimination can be indirectly proven by a 'stark' pattern of adverse impact on a particular group,” and directed the district court on remand to decide "whether such a stark pattern exists.”
. There arguably is substantial circumstantial evidence that Sheriff Warren's reason for refusing to consider the Class B Bingo License applications of the Plaintiff Charities was pretextual. It is undisputed that on July 25, 2005, VictoryLand was already operating electronic bingo on behalf of fifty-nine charities, thereby foreclosing another entity from conducting electronic bingo operations in Macon County, given the Second Amended Rules' countywide sixty-license cap. Hence, even if at that point Lucky Palace had owned a Class B "qualified location," it would have been impossible for Lucky Palace to have secured at least fifteen Class B Bingo Licenses, as required under the Second Amended Rules for the operation of electronic bingo at a "qualified location.” It also is undisputed that, after the Plaintiff Charities' Class B Bingo License applications were returned, all sixty of the available Class B Bingo Licenses ultimately were issued to charity applicants associated with VictoryLand.
Relatedly, the Plaintiff Charities also argue that there is nothing in the Second Amended Rules that conditions the issuance of a Class B Bingo License upon there being fifteen Class B Bingo Licenses available. It is unclear whether the Plaintiff Charities are asserting an independent theory that Sheriff Warren violated his own Rules by returning the Plaintiff Charities’ applications when not all of the sixty Class B Bingo Licenses had been issued. (See Doc. # 465, at 25 n. 14.) Because the Plaintiff Charities have not pointed to any evidence, and Defendants have not argued, that the applications were refused because there were no longer fifteen Class B Bingo Licenses available, the court finds that it is unnecessary to the outcome of the present cross-motions to address this potential argument. Indeed, the only reason Sheriff Warren gave for rejecting the applications was the absence of an existing facility — not that there was only one Class B Bingo License unsnared by VictoryLand.
. Defendants’ other argument is unpersuasive. Defendants argue that the Sixth Amended Complaint does not contain a "class of one” claim at all. (Doc. # 475, at 63-64.) It is true that the pleadings do not use the words "class of one,” but Defendants have pointed to no authority that requires that precise phrasing. The Sixth Amended Complaint contains allegations that the Plaintiff Charities were "intentionally treated ... differently from their similarly situated counterparts,” that the "different treatment” amounted to "intentional and arbitrary discrimination,” and lacked a “rational basis,” in violation of the Equal Protection Clause. (6th Am. Compl. ¶ 166.) These are the hallmark allegations of a class of one equal protection claim.
See Olech,
Finally, Defendants argue that Lucky Palace’s § 1983 equal protection claims are barred by the applicable statute of limitations. (Doc. # 440, at 140-43.) Because Lucky Palace’s equal protection claims do not survive Defendants’ motions for summary judgment on the merits, it is not necessary to address this argument.
. Also, in
Griffin Industries,
the Eleventh Circuit could envision “no reason that a
*1163
plaintiff in a ‘class of one' case should be subjected to a more lenient ‘similarly situated' requirement than [it] ha[s] imposed in other contexts.”
. No argument has been advanced that the Second Amended Rules involve the type of multidimensional, extended decisionmaking process, identified in Griffin Industries, for which it is especially difficult to prove a similarly situated comparator. The facts and arguments here suggest, at least at this juncture, a scenario more similar to E & T Realty.
. This definition is the same in the Original Rules and their amendments.
. Defendants may be correct that it would be impractical to issue a Class B Bingo License to an applicant who at the time of application lacked a "qualified location” at which to commence electronic bingo operations. But, the issue would appear to be instead whether this practicality has been incorporated into the Second Amended Rules.
. The verb "desires,” inserted in the definition of a Class B Bingo License, § 1(h), could, under a reasonable interpretation, mean that the license applicant merely has to harbor hope or an intention that one day it will have a "qualified location” at which to conduct electronic bingo.
. Plaintiffs' factual statement, above, is incorrect in one respect. Plaintiffs have conceded that Greater White Church did not submit an application for a Class B Bingo License to Sheriff Warren. (Doc. # 466, at 9 n. 6.) This alone would appear to render Greater White Church dissimilarly situated to VictoryLand's charities. However, as discussed later in this opinion, Greater White Church’s (as well as RG Apartments’) § 1983 equal protection claim is barred by the applicable two-year statute of limitations and, thus, fails for that independent reason.
. The latter theory, implicating selective enforcement, would find support in
E & T Realty.
In
E & T Realty,
the county had imposed a moratorium on connections to the sewer system, but there was an exception permitting connections that would not use more water than the "most recent former use.”
See
.The closest the Plaintiff Charities come to putting at issue the caliber of the VictoryLand charities' applications and Sheriff Warren’s selective enforcement of the Rules is in a footnote in which they mention that “[m]any of the charities associated with VictoryLand did not qualify under the rules and regulations yet were improperly issued bingo licenses.” (Doc. #445, at 42 n. 16.) But, the footnote ends there, without further discussion. While it includes a bare citation to certain paragraphs of a separately filed, but challenged, “statement of undisputed facts,” these "facts” undermine, rather than support, the entry of summary judgment in the Plaintiff Charities’ favor.
Moreover, arguments set out in other parts of the parties’ briefs further intimate that the question of qualifications is best resolved by the jury. For example, Sheriff Warren has argued (in the section of his brief devoted to challenging standing) that at least four of the Plaintiff Charities — Milstead Community Center, RG Apartments, Tubman Gardens and Tuskegee Macon County Community Foundation, Inc. — failed to meet the requirements of the Rules to obtain Class B Bingo Licenses because they were not "active” in Macon County during the relevant time or were not a qualifying “tax exempt” organization. {See, *1167 e.g., Doc. # 426, at 25; Doc. # 428, at 25; Doc. # 430, at 25; Doc. # 432, at 27.) But, the relevance of Sheriff Warren’s argument to the “class of one” claim, if any, has not been addressed, and no evidence has been cited in the parties’ “class of one” discussion that Sheriff Warren articulated these alleged deficiencies when he turned down these charities'
. The substantive rulings in this case have considerably narrowed the discussion for purposes of determining Sheriff Warren’s entitlement to legislative immunity. For example, it is unnecessary to address Plaintiffs' contention that the RICO claims “are not properly subject to any legislative immunity defense” (Doc. # 465, at 4 n. 2), as the RICO claims have been disposed of on the merits. It also is contested, but need not be decided, whether Sheriff Warren is immune for acts pertaining to his promulgation of the Rules and the amendments; as discussed, the remaining equal protection claim involves only Sheriff Warren's enforcement acts.
. Lucky Palace's equal protection claims fail, not because of a lack of standing as raised by Sheriff Warren, but on the merits as discussed above. However, because Article III standing is "a threshold jurisdictional question” that is "independent of the merits of a party's claims,”
DiMaio v. Democratic Nat’l Comm.,
. Those Plaintiffs are: (1) Beulah Missionary Baptist Church; (2) E.D. Nixon Apartments, Inc.; (3) McRae Prostate Cancer Awareness Foundation; (4) New Elam Missionary Baptist Church, (5) Shorter Community Development, Inc.; (6) Shorter Lodge # 533; (7) Shorter Volunteer Fire Department; (8) Sweet Gum AME Zion Church; (9) Tabernacle Baptist Church; (10) Greater White Church; and (11) Lucky Palace. The remaining charities are in the dock on other issues, discussed infra.
. Section 1(d) of the Second Amended Rules provides: “ 'Nonprofit organization' shall mean a bona fide organization that is active and in good standing for charitable, educational, or other lawful purposes which operates without profit to its members and/or which has been classified by the Internal Revenue Service as a tax exempt organization.” (2d Am. Rules § 1(d) (emphasis added).) The requirement that a nonprofit organization be "active” was added in the First Amended Rules, effective June 2, 2004. As indicated in the Commentary to the First Amended Rules, the definition of “nonprofit organization” was
amended to add the phrase "that is active and in good standing” in order to protect the truly viable charities in Macon County, Alabama, from a nonprofit organization that does not provide material charitable or educational benefits to Macon County and/or is an otherwise dormant, inactive nonprofit organization used primarily as a subterfuge to obtain a bingo license to operate games of bingo either directly or by contract with a third party individual or business entity.
(1st Am. Rules, Commentary.)
. The Second Amended Rules went into effect on January 1, 2005.
.Section 14 provides
Any nonprofit organization whose application for a license hereunder shall be denied by the Sheriff pursuant to these Regulations shall have the right to appeal such denial to the Macon County Commission and to the Circuit Court of Macon County in the same manner as an appeal of a revocation of a license issued hereunder may be appealed pursuant hereto provided, however, that such organization shall not operate any bingo game until such application shall have been granted, and a license issued, pursuant to any order of the said Commission or Court.
(2d Am. Rules § 14.)
. The parties agree that the statute of limitations for a § 1983 claim arising out of events occurring in Alabama is two years.
See Baker v. Birmingham Bd. of Educ.,
. Based upon this concession, it is unnecessary to choose between the parties’ conflicting accrual dates.
. Although not addressed by the parties, the assignment of burdens should be noted. Sheriff Warren bears the initial summary judgment burden of demonstrating the applicability of the affirmative defense of statute of limitations.
See Johnson v. Bd. of Regents of Univ. of Ga.,
. Although Rule 15(c) "technically references amendments that change the parties against whom claims are asserted,” the Eleventh Circuit has "applied it to situations in which new plaintiffs were added.”
Makro Capital of Am.,
. As discussed, not even notice of that type has been shown or argued as to Greater White Church, which did not submit a Class B Bingo License application to Sheriff Warren.
. In this section, references to “Defendants” are to Mr. McGregor and VictoryLand.
.
White Sands II
was decided on September 4, 2009, two weeks prior to the date the parties in this case filed their summary judgment motions.
White Sands II
further elucidates the principles guiding a claim for tortious interference with business relations. It cleared up a perceived ambiguity in prior Alabama law by holding that absence of justification is not part of a plaintiff's
prima facie
case for a claim of intentional interference with business relationships, but rather that justification is an affirmative defense.
White Sands II,
. The parties do not argue that the claims bear any other distinguishing elements, and Alabama decisions that have addressed both claims generally define the first element as the only non-parallel element. Indeed, a contract is certainly a "protectible business relationship” so that it would be reasonable to say that interference with a contract is a subset of interference with a protectible business relationship.
.
White Sands II
overruled
Gross
to the extent that it required a plaintiff to prove absence of justification as an element of the
prima facie
case,
see supra
note 109.
See White Sands II,
. To prevail on their motion for summary judgment, Plaintiffs must show that there is no genuine issue of material fact as to all elements of their claims. By contrast, Defendants can prevail by showing that there is no genuine issue of material fact as to any element of a claim.
. The inference to be drawn from the deposition testimony is that Mr. McGregor learned of Lucky Palace’s endeavors by reading a newspaper publication issued some time prior to his statement being quoted in the September 25, 2004 article.
.Newspaper articles generally are considered hearsay under Rule 801(c) when offered for the truth of the matter asserted. See
United States v. Baker, 432
F.3d 1189, 1211 (11th Cir.2005) ("The Miami Herald articles are ... inadmissible hearsay, as they are relevant primarily to establish the truth of their contents — the identity of the gunmen.”). Indeed, statements in newspapers often present hear
*1179
say within hearsay problems.
Id.
at 1211 n. 23 (“[T]he articles are likely a reporter’s account of what eyewitnesses reported; in other words, double hearsay forbidden by Rule 805.”). And, “[t]he general rule is that inadmissible hearsay 'cannot be considered on a motion for summary judgment.' ”
Macuba v. Deboer,
Macuba
would appear to prohibit introduction of Mr. McGregor's statements in the form of a newspaper article, but here, Defendants have not objected to the newspaper article or its statements on hearsay grounds, and there is authority that their failure to object amounts to a waiver of any hearsay objection to the statements’ consideration at the summary judgment stage.
See BGHA, LLC v. City of Universal City, Tex.,
It also is notable that Defendants do not argue that the newspaper article contains an inaccurate report of what Mr. McGregor told the reporter or that the reporter had a motive to lie. Mr. McGregor's challenge to the article is not to its truth or authenticity, but instead that the statements attributed to him in that article are insufficient to create an inference of knowledge that he knew about contracts between Lucky Palace and any nonprofit organization. (See Doc. # 459, at 104.) Based upon this posture, the court has considered the statements in the newspaper article in ruling on the summary judgment motions for the purpose of pinpointing a date when Mr. McGregor learned of Lucky Palace’s plans to enter the Macon County electronic bingo market.
. It appears that some, but not all, of the Plaintiff Charities had entered into contracts with Lucky Palace by September 25, 2004, but that by January 19, 2005, Lucky Palace had secured contracts with all fifteen of the Plaintiff Charities. (See Doc. # 440, at 62 n. 17 (listing dates of the contracts between Lucky Palace and the Plaintiff Charities).)
. As noted above,
White Sands II
quotes the Restatement (Second) of Torts for the proposition that “ '[i]t is not necessary that the
prospective relations
be expected to be reduced to a formal, binding contract.’ ”
White Sands II,
The expression, prospective contractual relation, is not used in this Section in a strict, technical sense. It is not necessary that the prospective relation be expected to be reduced to a formal, binding contract. It may include prospective quasi-contractual or other restitutionary rights or even the voluntary conferring of commercial benefits in recognition of a moral obligation.
Restatement § 766B cmt. c (emphasis added).
. At the motion to dismiss stage in this case,
Ex parte Alabama Department of Transportation
was distinguished on a different
ground
— i.e., that there was not a market for the gravel product at issue in that case, but that Plaintiffs' complaint alleged a healthy market for electronic bingo in Macon County, and, thus, arguably an expectancy that if there were a Lucky Palace casino, customers would patronize that business. (Doc. # 144, at 24.) The viability of the cause of action itself, however, was not directly under attack. There also was no factual development. Further consideration of Alabama law leads to the conclusion, as discussed
infra,
that on the evidentiary record, Plaintiffs are not entitled to recover on their claim for tortious interference with prospective business relations. Additionally, in
Tom’s Foods, Inc. v. Carn,
. The court’s observation should not be interpreted as a finding one way or the other as to whether such damages are, in fact, recoverable on this record. Damages on Count V have not been briefed. At trial, Plaintiffs will bear the burden of proving damages on Count V. Further briefing on recoverable damages also may be required.
. Defendants argue that because the Plaintiff Charities’ contracts with Lucky Palace provided for fixed semi-annual payments that are "not tied to a percentage of receipts or profits of Lucky Palace's prospective bingo operations,” the Plaintiff Charities have "no prospective relationships with patrons and guests [that] could have proximately resulted in pecuniary loss.” (Doc. #475, at 15; Doc. #440, at 75.) Hence, Defendants argue that the Plaintiff Charities cannot prove proximate damages on Count VI. In light of the findings above, the court need not, and declines to, address this contention.
. June 29, 2007, is the date the Third Amended Complaint was filed; however, on June 7, 2007, Plaintiffs filed a motion for leave to file the Third Amended Complaint to add the tortious interference claims. Plaintiffs argue that the date the motion to amend was filed, rather than the date leave to amend was granted, is the pertinent date for purposes of analyzing the statute of limitations defense. (Doc. # 464, at 7 n. 3.) Because the result would be the same regardless of which date in June 2007 is used, this argument need not be addressed.
. In their summary judgment reply brief, Defendants provide an alternative accrual date. (Doc. # 475, at 8.) This argument, however, will not be addressed because it was raised for the first time in the reply brief, and Plaintiffs have not had an opportunity to respond to the argument.
. Hope for Families & Community Services, Inc.; Beulah Missionary Baptist Church; E.D. Nixon Apartments, Inc.; McRae Prostate Cancer Awareness Foundation; Milstead Community Center, Inc.; New Elam Missionary Baptist Church; Shorter Community Development, Inc.; Shorter Lodge # 533; Shorter Volunteer Fire Department; Sweet Gum AME Zion Church; Tabernacle Baptist Church; Tubman Gardens, Inc.; and Tuskegee Macon County Community Foundation, Inc.
