ORDER AND REASONS
Before the Court are Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss (Rec.Doc. 18) filed by Justices Jeffery P. Victory, Jeannette Theriot Knoll, Chet D. Traylor, Catherine D. “Kitty” Kimball, John L. Weimer, Ber-nette Joshua Johnson, in their official capacities as Justices of the Supreme Court of Louisiana, and Daniel A. Webb and Harry J. Philips, Jr., in their official capacities as Chairman and Vice-Chairman of *784 the Louisiana Committee on Bar Admissions, Plaintiffs’ Appeal of the Order of the Magistrate Judge Granting a Protective Order and Staying All Discovery (Rec.Doc. 25) and Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Rec.Doc. 12) filed by Karen Leclerc, Guillaume Jarry, Béa-trice Boulord, and Maureen Affleck.
Plaintiffs are non-immigrant aliens 1 residing in the United States pursuant to temporary visas. Plaintiffs have brought this suit challenging Louisiana Supreme Court Rule XVII, Section 3(B) which requires that every applicant to the Louisiana bar be a citizen or resident alien of the United States. They allege that Rule XVII, as currently interpreted by the Louisiana Supreme Court, is unconstitutional and/or preempted by federal law. Plaintiffs seek declaratory and injunctive relief as well as an award of costs and attorney’s fees. Defendants have moved to dismiss all claims arguing inter alia that the suit is barred by the Eleventh Amendment as well as the doctrines of judicial and legislative immunity. Defendants also argue that Plaintiffs fail to state a claim for relief under federal law.
I. Factual Background
Plaintiffs currently reside in the United States under temporary visas which provide a date certain when they must leave the United States. Leclerc, Jarry, and Boulord are French citizens admitted to the United States pursuant to J-l visas. Affleck is a Canadian citizen admitted to the United States pursuant to an L-2 visa. All plaintiffs are graduates of foreign law schools. Plaintiffs desire to submit applications to sit for the July 2003 bar examination and believe themselves to be qualified but for their status as non-resident aliens. 2
Affleck applied for an equivalency determination pursuant to Rule XVII, Section 6. 3 On November 15, 2002, the Bar Admissions administrator informed Affleck that an equivalency determination would not be forthcoming because Affleck was neither a U.S. citizen nor resident alien. Rec. Doc. 8, Exhibit 9. Affleck did not petition the Louisiana Supreme Court for a review of that denial pursuant to Section 9 of Rule XVII. 4 When this suit was filed, Leclerc, *785 Jarry, and Boulord had not yet applied for equivalency determinations. 5 Although untimely under the Louisiana rules, Le-clerc, Jarry, and Boulord submitted equivalency applications after Defendants argued (in their motion to dismiss) that Plaintiffs lacked standing to bring this suit. 6
On March 6, 2003, Plaintiffs Leclerc, Jarry, and Boulord filed their original complaint seeking declaratory relief and injunctive relief against Defendants as well as costs and attorney’s fees. Plaintiffs named as defendants six of the seven Louisiana Supreme Court Justices — Jeffery P. Victory, Jeannette Theriot Knoll, Chet D. Traylor, Catherine D. “Kitty” Kimball, John L. Weimer, and Bernette Joshua Johnson (“the Justices”), Daniel A. Webb, Chairman of the Louisiana Committee on Bar Admissions, and Harry J. Philips, Jr., Vice-Chairman of the Louisiana Committee on Bar Admissions (“the Bar Admissions Officials”) (collectively “Defendants”). All Defendants were sued in their official capacities only.
The Court held a status conference on March 20, 2003, and set deadlines for briefing on cross motions for summary judgment: Rec. Doc. 7. Plaintiff Affleck joined this suit via amended complaint on March 27, 2003. Defendants moved to stay all discovery pending a determination on their immunity defenses and on May 1, 2003, the magistrate judge granted a stay. Rec. Doc. 17. Plaintiffs’ appeal of that order is currently before the Court and is inextricably intertwined with the arguments raised in Defendants’ motion to dismiss.
Pursuant to the Court’s scheduling order, Plaintiffs filed their fully-briefed motion in support of declaratory relief 7 and Defendants filed their fully-briefed motion to dismiss. Both motions were set for hearing on May 21, 2003. On May 21, 2003, the Court held a status conference at Plaintiffs’ request and at Plaintiffs’ urging the motions were continued for hearing on June 4, 2003. The Court ordered supplemental briefing on Plaintiffs’ immigration status, and on June 25, 2003, the Court heard oral argument.
In their motion for summary judgment Plaintiffs pray for a judgment:
1. Declaring the unconstitutionality of Section 3(B) of Rule XVII of the Rules of the Louisiana Supreme Court as interpreted by that Court to deny bar admission to “non-resident aliens”;
2. Declaring that Section 3(B) of Rule XVII of the Rules of the Louisiana Supreme Court as interpreted by *786 that Court is preempted by the plenary power of the Federal Government to set immigration policy;
3. Declaring that the Louisiana Supreme Court and the Louisiana Committee on Bar Admissions may not constitutionally deny plaintiffs the opportunity to sit for the Louisiana state bar examination solely on account of the fact that they are not citizens or resident aliens and to permit them to submit an application package, including that for equivalency determination if one has not already been submitted, so as to permit them to sit for the Louisiana state bar examination in July of 2003, provided that they meet all other requirements of Rule XVII, as reasonably interpreted;
4. Awarding Plaintiffs reasonable costs and attorney’s fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988.
Defendants assert that Plaintiffs fail to present a justiciable case or controversy because their claims are not ripe for adjudication and because Plaintiffs lack standing. Defendants further argue that Plaintiffs’ claims are barred by the Eleventh Amendment and the doctrines of judicial immunity and/or legislative immunity. Finally, Defendants argue that Plaintiffs’ complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Alternatively, Defendants urge the Court to abstain from this matter. The Court addresses each argument in turn.
II. Defendants ’ Motion to Dismiss
A. Legal Standards
A litigant may object to a court’s lack of jurisdiction through a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(1) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Jurisdictional defects include immunity of the defendants in an action and the court’s consequent lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Bank One Texas v. United States,
B. Case or Controversy
Defendants assert that Plaintiffs rest their claims on factual assumptions and conjecture that do not present a “case” or “controversy” under Article III of the United States Constitution. Thus, Defendants assert that Plaintiffs’ claims are not ripe for adjudication and that Plaintiffs lack standing to pursue their asserted claims.
Defendants point out that Leclerc, Jarry and Boulord have taken none of the required steps in order to sit for the Louisiana bar exam. Thus, Leclerc, Jarry and Boulord have not been subject to any adverse action by Defendants on any basis including their alienage. Defendants point out that Leclerc, Jarry, and Boulord must obtain equivalency determinations for their foreign law school educations, and that an adverse determination on equivalency would moot any issue as to their residency status. Because Leclerc, Jarry, and Bou-lord have been subject to no adverse action, Defendants argue that they also lack standing to bring this suit because they seek redress for an injury that has not and may never occur.
Defendants concede that Affleck submitted a timely application for an equivalency determination and that her application was not considered due to her status as a non-resident alien. However, *787 Defendants contend that Affleck also has a ripeness/standing problem because she did not avail herself of the review procedures provided in Supreme Court Rule XVII, Section 9. 8 Defendants contend that at the conclusion of that appeal process, which all Plaintiffs would be required to complete, the Rooker-Feldman doctrine would then have deprived this Court of jurisdiction to consider Plaintiffs’ claims. 9
Although she did not avail herself of the review procedures provided in the Supreme Court rules, Affleck asserts that federal law does not require exhaustion of state remedies prior to bringing a claim alleging violations of federal law. Moreover, she asserts that any appeal would have been futile anyway. Given then that the bar committee has cited Affleck’s al-ienage as the basis for refusing to consider her equivalency application, Affleck asserts that she has a justiciable claim.
Leclerc, Jarry, and Boulord argue that Affleck’s situation demonstrates the futility of submitting an equivalency application, and therefore, excuses their failure to seek equivalency determinations. 10 Le-clerc, Jarry, and Boulord argue that concrete injury is surely imminent. 11
In reply, Defendants clarify that they aré not arguing that any type of administrative exhaustion applies to Plaintiffs’ constitutional claims. 12 Rather, Defendants argue that Plaintiffs must receive a definitive adverse action before they may complain of a constitutional violation. Until Plaintiffs pursue their applications through the review and appeal procedures *788 provided for in the Louisiana Supreme Court rules, no plaintiff has received a definitive adverse action for purposes of standing and ripeness.
Article III of the United States Constitution limits federal courts to the decision of “cases” and “controversies.”
Shields v. Norton,
Ripeness
A matter is ripe only where an “actual controversy” exists.
Shields,
The Court is not persuaded that Plaintiffs’ claims are not ripe for adjudication. Both parties agree that no further factual development is necessary in this litigation. The only issues now before the Court are strictly legal ones. Clearly, an actual controversy exists between the parties.
Further, this case does not involve the speculative and hypothetical type of injury at issue in those cases where plaintiffs challenge to a statute has been rejected as premature. For instance Defendants cite
National Park Hospitality Association v. Department of the Interior,
— U.S. —,
In contrast, the Louisiana Supreme Court has already applied Rule XVII in at least one particular instance in this litigation,
i.e.,
Affleck’s application. Her application for equivalency was denied solely due to her residency status. Based on the Louisiana Supreme Court’s decisions in
In re Bourke,
Standing
To satisfy the standing requirement, the plaintiff must have suffered an injury in fact.
Southern Christian Leadership Conf. v. Supreme Court of the State
*789
of Louisiana,
To establish standing to challenge an allegedly unconstitutional policy, as a general matter “a plaintiff must submit to the challenged policy.”
Ellison v. Connor,
In
Ellison,
the Fifth Circuit applied this “futility exception” to plaintiff landowners who sought to challenge the constitutionality of a Corps of Engineers permitting decision. Defendants argued that plaintiffs lacked standing because they had not actually applied for, and been refused, a permit. However, the Corps had previously advised plaintiffs via letter that it would not allow construction on plaintiffs’ land. The Fifth Circuit reversed the district court’s finding of no standing.
Based on the foregoing, the Court has no doubt that Affleck has standing to challenge Rule XVII. The Bar Committee informed Affleck that her equivalency application would not be considered due to her residency status. She therefore suffered a concrete injury as a result of Rule XVII. Based upon the prior decisions of the Louisiana Supreme Court denying the petitions of other non-immigrant aliens the Court concludes that any petition to the Louisiana Supreme Court would have been futile.
Leclerc,. Jarry, and Boulord present a far more difficult question because they took no steps in furtherance of submitting an application to sit for the bar exam prior to filing this lawsuit. Although they submitted equivalency applications after they filed this lawsuit, those applications appear to be untimely and therefore may be rejected by Defendants on grounds wholly unrelated to their residency status. However, without a doubt Defendants will eventually reject Leclerc, Jarry, and Bou-lord’s applications due to their residency status given the Supreme Court’s unequivocal position on the issue. The fact that Leclerc, Jarry, and Boulord will suffer injury due to Rule XVII is not conjectural or hypothetical. It just has yet to happen. Because their injury is certain to occur and imminent, the Court concludes that they too have standing to challenge Rule XVII. 14
*790 In sum, Defendants’ motion to dismiss based on Plaintiffs’ failure to establish a case or controversy is DENIED.
C. Eleventh Amendment Immunity
Defendants argue that the Eleventh Amendment bars Plaintiffs’ claims. Because all defendants are state officials sued in their official capacities, the state is the real party in interest. Therefore, Defendants argue, the Eleventh Amendment bars suit regardless of the relief sought.
Plaintiffs do not dispute that the Eleventh Amendment applies to the Justices as well as to the Bar Admissions Officials. Plaintiffs assert, however, that sovereign immunity does not bar the prospective declaratory relief Plaintiffs seek. Plaintiffs argue that any assertion that the Eleventh Amendment bars suit regardless of the type of relief sought is contrary to established United States Supreme Court jurisprudence.
The Eleventh Amendment provides:
The Judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State.
U.S. Const, amend. XI.
The Eleventh Amendment generally divests federal courts of jurisdiction to entertain suits directed against states.
Green v. State Bar of Texas,
The Eleventh Amendment may not be evaded by suing state officers in their official capacities because such an indirect pleading device remains in essence a claim against the state.
Id.
(citing
Stem v. Ahearn,
However, where state officials are sued in their official capacities, the doctrine of
Ex parte Young
may operate as an exception to the Eleventh Amendment.
Cox,
In this case Plaintiffs’ federal claims fall squarely within the Ex parte Young exception to Eleventh Amendment immunity. Plaintiffs have sued all defendants in their official capacities and seek only declaratory and prospective injunctive relief. Plaintiffs are not seeking monetary compensation for past wrongs. Therefore, Defendants are not entitled to dismissal of Plaintiffs’ federal claims based upon Eleventh Amendment immunity. However, to the extent Plaintiffs are attempting to assert any type of state law- claim, those state law claims are dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. 15
In sum, Defendants’ motion to dismiss based on Eleventh Amendment immunity is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART. The motion is GRANTED insofar as Plaintiffs are attempting to assert state law claims. The motion is DENIED as to Plaintiffs’ federal claims.
D. Absolute Immunity
1. Judicial Immunity
Defendants argue that judges are absolutely immune from suits based upon actions taken in their official judicial capacities. Further, Defendants point out that Congress enlarged judicial immunity via the Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1996 (“the FCIA”) which specifically amended 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
Plaintiffs dispute whether the actions complained of were taken in Defendants’ judicial capacities. Plaintiffs point out that their claims arise out of the way Defendants are enforcing an allegedly unconstitutional rule and therefore Defendants’ actions have been -taken in their enforcement capacities. Plaintiffs assert that the FCIA was not intended to erase the distinction previously made between actions taken in a judicial officer’s judicial capacity versus those taken in enforcement and administrative capacities. Plaintiffs also assert that judicial immunity does not apply to the declaratory relief Plaintiffs seek.
Plaintiffs distinguish their case from those upholding judicial immunity by pointing out that their case is one questioning the constitutionality of a bar admissions rule generally as opposed to an aggrieved individual. Plaintiffs remind the Court that their challenge to Rule XVII is a facial one so that they are not challenging the adjudication of an individual application, ie., action taken in the officer’s judicial capacity. As such, Plaintiffs argue that their claims are not barred by judicial immunity.
Three United States Supreme Court cases form an appropriate starting point for consideration of Defendants’ judicial immunity defense. In
Supreme Court of Virginia v. Consumers Union,
Four years later, in
Pulliam v. Allen,
Finally, in
Forrester v. White,
Consumers Union, Pulliam, and For-rester demonstrate that the question of judicial immunity in any given situation can only be answered with reference to the relief sought and the capacity in which the judge had acted. It is also clear that the Supreme Court in crafting judicial immunity over the years did not consider every act taken by a judge to be in his judicial capacity merely by virtue of the officer’s status as a judge.
If Consumer’s Union, Pulliam, and Forrester remain good law then Defendants’ judicial immunity argument is without merit. 16 However, in 1996 Congress enacted the Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1996 which amended 42 U.S.C. § 1983 to provide that “in any action *793 brought against a judicial officer for an act or omission taken in such officer’s judicial capacity, injunctive relief shall not be granted unless a declaratory decree was violated or declaratory relief wgs unavailable.” Pub.L. No. 104-317, 110 Stat. 3847 (Oct. 19, 1996) (emphasis added). The Senate report indicates that the amendment “restores the doctrine of judicial immunity to the status it occupied prior to [Pulliam ]” because Pulliam had departed from “400 years of common law tradition and weakened judicial immunity protections.” S. Rep. 104-366, at *36-*37, 1996 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4202, 4216-17.
Defendants can make no colorable argument that the FCIA did anything to alter the landscape with respect to declaratory relief. Declaratory relief against judges acting in their judicial capacities was well-established before the FCIA. The FCIA amendments continue to contemplate declaratory relief by making express reference to it as a first step before injunctive relief is permissible. Moreover, the FCIA does not purport to eliminate the clear distinctions among the various capacities in which judicial officers act. The Supreme Court’s jurisprudence had long been unequivocal in that the Court did not consider every act taken by a judicial officer to be a “judicial act” subject to judicial immunity. Therefore, Congress’s decision to preclude injunctive relief when the judge acts specifically in his “judicial capacity” can only mean that injunctive relief remains available when the judicial officer acts in other capacities. This Court cannot make law. Had Congress intended for the amendment to apply regardless of which capacity the judge was acting, Congress would have said so. Likewise, had Congress intended to erase the long accepted capacity distinctions recognized by the High Court it would have used appropriate language. 17 Instead, Congress specifically refers to acts taken in the judicial capacity. The Court is persuaded that the FCIA does not bar injunctive relief where a judicial officer acts in other capacities such as the enforcement capacity.
Defendants have argued strenuously that the FCIA protects them from injunc-tive relief because the acts of which Plaintiffs complain were performed in Defendants’ judicial capacities. The Court is not so persuaded given the unique role that the Louisiana Supreme Court occupies under the state constitution and given that Plaintiffs are making a facial challenge to Supreme Court Rule XVII.
The Louisiana Constitution gives Defendants the exclusive and plenary power to define and regulate all facets of the practice of law, including the admission of attorneys to the bar, the professional responsibility and conduct of lawyers, the discipline, suspension and disbarment of lawyers, and the client-attorney relationship.
Succession of Wallace,
Moreover, this conclusion is not at odds with the well-established principle that admission to a jurisdiction’s bar is “peculiarly a judicial function.”
McFarland v. Folsom,
In sum, Defendants’ motion to dismiss based on judicial immunity is DENIED.
2. Legislative Immunity
Defendants assert that they are entitled to absolute legislative immunity from any suit related to bar admissions rule-making. When the Justices and Bar Admissions Officials promulgate and implement bar admission rules they occupy the position of legislators.
In addition to Plaintiffs’ arguments already recited regarding immunity, Plaintiffs assert that immunity does not extend to protect rules that are unconstitutional. Thus, regardless of the capacity in which Defendants are acting, a person’s constitutional rights cannot be breached to prevent him/her from practicing law.
When exercising its sovereign rule-making authority, a state supreme court occupies the same position as that of the state legislature.
Lewis v. Louisiana State Bar Ass’n,
Plaintiffs are making a facial challenge to the constitutionality of Rule XVII. They seek to enjoin its enforcement. None of their claims are directed at Defendants’ role in having promulgated Rule XVII. Accordingly, legislative immunity is *795 inapplicable. Defendants’ motion to dismiss based on legislative immunity is DENIED.
E. Abstention
Defendants argue that the Court should exercise its discretion to abstain from this matter pursuant to
Burford, v. Sun Oil Co.,
In opposition, Plaintiffs argue that Bur-ford abstention is inappropriate because no difficult questions of state law are involved in this case. Rather, Plaintiffs challenge Section 3(B) of Rule XVII on inter alia federal constitutional grounds. Thus, there is no justification for this Court to abdicate its jurisdiction.
While federal courts have a strict duty to exercise jurisdiction that is conferred upon them by Congress, the duty is not absolute.
Quackenbush v. Allstate Insurance Co.,
[D]ifficult questions of state law bearing on policy problems of substantial public import whose importance transcends the result in the case then at bar or if its adjudication in a federal forum would be disruptive of state efforts to establish a coherent policy with respect to a matter of substantial public concern.
Quackenbush,
Without doubt this lawsuit involves questions of substantial state concern. There is no question that bar admission is distinctly a matter in which Louisiana has substantial interests. Unarguably, the Louisiana Supreme Court has unique knowledge and familiarity with the considerations at stake when licensing lawyers.
Notwithstanding, Plaintiffs’ claims do not involve the “difficult questions of state law” required for Burford abstention. Plaintiffs’ claims are based solely on federal law. The meaning of Supreme Court Rule XVII is not at issue in this suit. The only issue is whether that rule is in conflict with various federal laws. Thus, the threshold requirement for Burford abstention is not present in this case.
Furthermore, Defendants’ abstention argument is less persuasive given that many of Plaintiffs’ federal arguments have already been presented to and rejected by the Louisiana Supreme Court.
See In re Bourke,
For the foregoing reasons the Court declines to exercise its discretion to abstain from this matter.
*796 III. Plaintiffs’ Motion For Summary Judgment
Plaintiffs move for summary judgment on their claims for declaratory relief. They assert that all facts are contained in the pleadings and that none of the relevant facts are in dispute. Plaintiffs point out that because this action results from the unconstitutionality of Louisiana Supreme Court Rule XVII, Section 3(B), and the Rule’s blanket application to non-immigrant aliens, it is clear that no facts exist which could be contentious or that might affect the result of the action. Plaintiffs assert that the record indicates that the only genuine issue is one of constitutionality, and therefore, the case is ripe for summary adjudication. 19
A. Legal Standards
In determining whether a party is entitled to summary judgment, the court views the evidence in the light most favorable to the non-moving party.
Littlefield v. Forney Indep. School Dist.,
B. Constitutional Claims
Notwithstanding the plenary power of the state’s highest court to regulate the practice of law, a state cannot exclude a person from the practice of law for reasons that contravene the Due Process or Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment.
See Schware v. Board of Bar Examiners,
1. Due Process Claims
Plaintiffs assert that they were entitled to a hearing, the presentation of evidence to prove their allegations, and to the disclosure of whatever information and recommendations were presented to the Louisiana Supreme Court by the Louisiana State Bar Association Committee on Admissions. Plaintiffs assert that they were denied their due process rights when the Louisiana Supreme Court overruled its prior jurisprudence constante without giving Plaintiffs an opportunity to be heard.
Defendants argue that Plaintiffs do not state a claim for a procedural due process violation nor a substantive due process violation. Defendants point out that none of the Plaintiffs availed themselves of the state review procedures and therefore can claim no due process violation. Defen *797 dants argue that a substantive due process claim only protects “fundamental rights” and that there exists no fundamental or constitutional right of a non-lawyer to practice law.
The Court has reviewed the authorities cited by Plaintiffs in support of their contention that they were denied due process of law and concludes that Plaintiffs fail to state a claim for a due process violation. While
Willner v. Committee on Character & Fitness,
Likewise,
Schware v. Board of Bar Examiners,
In the instant case, Plaintiffs are mounting a facial challenge to Supreme Court Rule XVII. Schware does not provide Plaintiffs a cause of action for a substantive due process violation in conjunction with a facial challenge. Instead Schware would allow an applicant aggrieved of the state’s bar admission process to mount a due process challenge based upon his individual situation. If Plaintiffs had hoped to make such a claim then their appropriate course of action would have been to pursue the state procedures for appeal and then to seek certiorari in the United States Supreme Court as Schware had done. Even if Plaintiffs had done so, the Rooker-Feldman doctrine would have precluded such a substantive due process claim brought as an original action in this Court.
In sum, Plaintiffs’ complaint fails to state a claim for deprivation of due process. Accordingly, Defendants’ motion to dismiss is GRANTED with respect to Plaintiffs’ due process claims. 20
*798 2. Equal Protection Claim
Plaintiffs argue that Rule XVII, Section 3(B) violates the equal protection clause. Plaintiffs assert that alienage is a suspect classification which triggers strict scrutiny for purposes of an equal protection challenge. Plaintiffs assert that Defendants have given no justification for Rule XVII much less one that could withstand strict scrutiny. Plaintiffs further contend that even under a lower level of scrutiny, Rule XVII cannot withstand attack. Plaintiffs assert that an individual’s residency status is wholly unrelated to his or her character and therefore is not a permissible criterion for bar admission purposes. Plaintiffs assert that
In re Griffiths,
Citing
Southern Christian Leadership Conference v. Supreme Court of Louisiana,
Defendants argue that In re Griffiths is legally and factually dissimilar from this case and therefore does not support Plaintiffs’ claims. Defendants assert that Louisiana’s decision not to offer bar admission to those persons with truly temporary status, and who are therefore transient, falls within the valid and legitimate exercise of the State’s public safety and police power.
While there may be no constitutional right for admission to a state’s bar, admission policies and procedures cannot run afoul of the Equal Protection Clause.
See Schware v. Board of Bar Examiners,
Well-established principles of constitutional law hold that classifications upon a suspect class or classifications that affect fundamental rights are subject to strict scrutiny review.
Hatten v. Rains,
*799
However, classifications which operate upon a quasi-suspect class are accorded intermediate scrutiny, and must bear a significant relationship to an important state end.
Id.
(citing
Kirchberg v. Feenstra,
Hence, the threshold issue in any equal protection analysis is the level of scrutiny to be applied. The applicable level of scrutiny is of paramount importance to the parties because the level of scrutiny applied often serves as the bellwether of the statute’s validity. Naturally then, Plaintiffs herein are arguing for strict scrutiny and Defendants, while not specifically addressing the appropriate level of scrutiny, have implicitly argued for rational basis review. 21
Although the United States Supreme Court has repeatedly used strict scrutiny to invalidate state laws applying classifications based upon alienage, none of those cases involved temporary, non-resident aliens such as Plaintiffs herein.
22
Rather, in all cases where the Court applied strict scrutiny, the affected aliens were
permanent resident
aliens.
See, e.g., Bernal v. Fainter,
However, in his dissenting opinion, then Justice Rehnquist discussed how the fundamental differences between permanent resident aliens and non-resident aliens should preclude the Court’s ever applying strict scrutiny analysis where non-immigrants are involved.
Toll,
At oral argument, Plaintiffs’ counsel argued that strict scrutiny should be expanded to include temporary non-resident aliens because there are no reasonable differences between resident and non-resident aliens. Therefore, Plaintiffs argued, all lawful aliens should comprise a suspect class.
Perhaps all lawful aliens should comprise a suspect class. However, the current state of the law is that the United States Supreme Court has not yet treated non-immigrant aliens as a suspect class. In
Toll
the Court had the opportunity but chose, not to do so. Instead the Court decided the case on much narrower grounds. Since the U.S. Supreme Court chose not to expand strict scrutiny status to non-immigrant aliens, this Court finds no basis to do so. The Supreme Court reluctantly creates new suspect classes because each new expansion involves the invalidation of virtually every classification bearing upon the newly created suspect class.
See Massachusetts Bd. of Retirement v. Murgia,
Moreover, the Supreme Court’s rationale for applying strict scrutiny to resident aliens was largely based on the compelling similarities between permanent resident aliens and citizens.
See Griffiths,
The more difficult question is whether rational basis review should apply or perhaps some intermediate or heightened level of scrutiny that falls somewhere along the strict scrutiny/rational basis review extremes. The United States Supreme Court or even the Fifth Circuit might very well alight on some middle ground analysis given how solicitous the Supreme Court has been of protecting resident aliens. This Court, however, declines the invitation to create a new quasi-suspect class or foray into the “intermediate scrutiny thicket.” The Court therefore opts for rational basis review.
Defendants argue that Rule XVII, Section 3(B) passes rational basis review because the Louisiana Supreme Court has a legitimate interest in insuring that litigants in the state’s courts are represented not only by competent lawyers but by lawyers who are not subject to having their residency revoked on relatively short notice, or at best lawyers who are only in this country temporarily. Defendants point out not only the potential disruption to the courts’ dockets but also the prejudice that clients could suffer if a lawyer is forced to leave the country in the midst of litigation or perhaps even a trial. Surely, both parties are aware that litigation can span years and might often times last longer *801 than the time Congress would allow a temporary alien to remain in the United States. A Ghent’s representation is therefore subject to disruption for reasons completely beyond the lawyer’s control — reasons of which the client might very well be unaware when he retains counsel.
At oral argument, defense counsel pointed out the near impossibility of tracking down client files, evidence, etc. should a non-resident alien be forced to leave the United States on unfavorable and sudden terms. Counsel posited that the Louisiana Supreme Court would lack any type of disciplinary recourse against an alien lawyer once deported and outside of any state bar’s jurisdiction.
Unarguably, the Defendants’ proffered reasons do satisfy rational basis review. Rule XVII, Section 3(B) is clearly related to Defendants’ legitimate interest in insuring that litigants are represented by counsel who will be in this country when those litigants finally have their day in court. Consequently, Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment is DENIED on the equal protection claim.
C. Federal Preemption
Plaintiffs argue that Rule XVII is invalid because only the United States has the exclusive power to establish rules governing immigration, foreign policy, and the rights of non-citizens, and that this power is binding on the states by way of the Supremacy Clause.
The authority to control immigration, that is to admit or exclude aliens, is vested solely in the federal government.
Takahashi v. Fish & Game Comm’n,
However, every state enactment which in any way deals with aliens is not necessarily a regulation of immigration and thus per se pre-empted by federal law.
DeCanas v. Bica,
In
Toll,
the Supreme Court invalidated Maryland’s policy of denying non-immigrant aliens the ability to obtain “in-state” status for purposes of reduced tuition and fees.
Supreme Court Rule XVII, Section 3(B) has no arguable relevance or impact on who is admitted into the United States. Plaintiffs argue that the Rule is nevertheless a regulation of immigration because it regulates the conditions under which a legal entrant may remain in this country. Plaintiffs’ argument is unpersuasive because it requires a far broader interpretation of “conditions under which an [alien] may remain” that what the Supreme Court’s jurisprudence would allow. Under Plaintiffs’ argument, any state law that affected aliens would be a regulation of immigration. However, the United States Supreme Court expressly rejected that suggestion in DeCanas v. Bica, supra. A more likely reading of “conditions under which an [alien] may remain” would be one encompassing laws that affect an alien’s ability to remain in a specific jurisdiction. For instance, no state could enact a law requiring deportation based upon the alien’s conduct within the state. Such a law would clearly be one setting conditions under which an alien could remain in the jurisdiction, and such a law would surely be invalid. Rule XVII does not set conditions under which an alien may remain in this country or this state and it is therefore not a regulation of immigration subject to per se preemption.
Further, Plaintiffs cite no specific conflicts between Rule XVII and federal immigration law or Congressional policy. Toll and DeCanas demonstrate that Congress has not preempted the field of law applicable to aliens. Thus, absent a law being a regulation of immigration, a true conflict must exist between the challenged regulation and Congressional policy. At the very least, the challenged regulation must in some way frustrate Congress’s policy regarding aliens in order for preemption to apply. Looking to the types of visas pursuant to which Plaintiffs reside in the United States, the Court can discern no such tension between Rule XVII and federal immigration law.
Leclerc, Jarry, and Boulard entered and remain in the United States pursuant to J-1 visas, also known as exchange visas.
J-class aliens are those aliens
having a residence in a foreign country which he has no intention of abandoning who is a bona fide student, scholar, trainee, teacher, professor, research assistant, specialist, or leader in a field of specialized knowledge or skill, or other person of similar description, who is coming temporarily to the United States as a participant in a program designated by the Director of the United States Information Agency, for the purpose of teaching, instructing or lecturing, studying, observing, conducting research, consulting, demonstrating special skills, or receiving training....
8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(15)(J).
Affleck entered and remains in the United States pursuant to an L-2 visa. An L-2 visa is issued to the spouse of an L-l visa holder. Affleck’s spouse is an L-l class alien which is an alien
who, within 3 years preceding the time of his application for admission into the *803 United States, has been employed continuously for one year by a firm or corporation ... and who seeks to enter the United States temporarily in order to continue to render his services to the same employer ... in a capacity that is managerial, executive, or involves specialized knowledge....
8 U.S.C. § 1101(a)(15)(L).
J-visas and L-visas are therefore temporary by design. At oral argument counsel informed the Court that J-visas usually entail an eighteen month or so stay in the United States. Affleck has a temporary Employment Authorization Document (“EAD”) and has applied for a permanent one.
At oral argument, Plaintiffs argued that Rule XVII, Section 3(B) is inconsistent with the advantages Congress bestowed on them by virtue of their respective immigration visas. The Court disagrees given that the sole effect of Rule XVII upon Plaintiffs is that they cannot obtain licenses to practice law. Leclerc, Jarry, and Boulord can do everything enumerated in the definition of J-class aliens without a license to practice law. Moreover, the practice of law as a licensed attorney lacks congruency with the other teaching and research oriented aspects of J-classification. The inability to obtain a law license simply does not pose an obstacle to Plaintiffs’ ability to obtain any of the benefits and advantages associated with having a J-visa. Consequently, federal preemption does not apply.
Affleck’s situation presents a wholly un-eompelling argument given that she is in the United States pursuant to a spousal L-2 visa. Again, preemption is not applicable.
Takahashi v. Fish & Game Commission,
In contrast, Rule XVII does not affect aliens who permanently reside in the United States. Rather, Rule XVII affects temporary aliens who are not in this country to pursue long term, life sustaining employment. Plaintiffs are permitted to earn a living; however, they cannot represent litigants as licensed attorneys at law. The concerns at issue in Takahashi are simply not present in this case.
Accordingly, Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment is DENIED on the preemption issue.
*804 D. Affleck’s NAFTA Claim
Affleck asserts that she is in a special category of non-immigrant aliens in that she is a professional certified by a member of the North American Free Trade Agreement (“NAFTA”). Affleck, asserts that Article 1202 of NAFTA requires that “service providers” be treated in a manner “no less favorable” than the treatment of local service providers “in the same circumstances.” She asserts that Defendants’ actions are a clear breach of that mandate. She argues that the spirit of NAFTA clearly directs the destruction of barriers to attorneys working in member states. Therefore, under the Supremacy Clause, Louisiana cannot make laws contrary to NAFTA.
In opposition, Defendants argue that Af-fleck’s NAFTA claims are procedurally defective. NAFTA gives Affleck no private right of action against Defendants to force compliance with NAFTA. Defendants assert that NAFTA provides for enforcement by the Secretary of State and the Attorney General of the United States. Thus, Affleck lacks standing. Further, Af-fleck offers no support for her implicit assertion that NAFTA preempts the Eleventh Amendment or that NAFTA was meant to preempt well-established state authority over licensing of attorneys.
On December 17, 1992, the leaders of the United States, Mexico, and Canada completed and signed NAFTA.
Made in the USA Foundation v. United States of America,
Section 102 of the Implementation Act is entitled “Relationship of the Agreement to United States and State Law.” Section 102(b) (“Relationship of the Agreement to State law”), subpart (2) (“Legal Challenge”), provides:
No State law, or the application thereof, may be declared invalid as to any person or circumstance on the ground that the provision or application is inconsistent with the Agreement, except in an action brought by the United States for the purpose of declaring such law or application invalid.
19 U.S.C. § 3312(b)(2) (emphasis added).
Furthermore, subsection (c) (“Effect of the Agreement With Respect to Private Remedies”), provides:
No person other than the United States-
(1) shall have any cause of action or defense under—
(A) the Agreement or by virtue of Congressional approval thereof, or
H: H* H« ’ *
(2) may challenge, in any action brought under any provision of law, any action or inaction by ... any State ... on the ground that such action or inaction is inconsistent with the Agreement....
19 U.S.C. § 3312(c) (emphasis added).
In light of the foregoing provisions of the NAFTA Implementation Act, the Court concludes that Affleck lacks standing to challenge Rule XVII based upon any purported conflict with NAFTA. Affleck’s claim is an attempt to invalidate a state law due to its inconsistency with NAFTA. NAFTA’s enabling legislation expressly limits such a legal challenge to the United States. The enabling legislation compels the conclusion that Affleck lacks standing to challenge Rule XVII based upon any purported conflict with NAFTA. Defendants’ motion to dismiss is *805 GRANTED with respect to Affleck’s NAFTA claim.
Accordingly;
IT IS ORDERED that Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss (Rec.Doc. 18) should be and is hereby DENIED IN PART AND GRANTED IN PART as detailed in this Order and Reasons;
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Motion for Summary Judgment (Rec. Doc. 12) filed by plaintiffs Karen Leclerc, Guillaume Jarry, Beatrice Boulord, and Maureen Affleck, should be and is hereby DENIED and Plaintiffs’ complaint is DISMISSED WITH PREJUDICE;
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffs’ Appeal of the Order of the Magistrate Judge Granting a Protective Order and Staying All Discovery (Rec. Doc. 25) should be and is hereby DENIED AS MOOT.
Notes
. The terms non-resident alien and non-immigrant alien are used interchangeably throughout this opinion. Likewise, the terms resident alien and immigrant alien are also used interchangeably.
. Supreme Court Rule XVII Section 3(B) requires that every applicant for admission to the Louisiana Bar "[b]e a citizen of the United States or a
resident alien
thereof.” La. S.Ct. R. XVII, § 3(B) (emphasis added). The Louisiana Supreme Court had previously interpreted the term "resident alien” to include foreign nationals lawfully living within the United States. See,
e.g., In re Appert,
. Louisiana’s bar admission rules provide:
An applicant who has graduated from a law school that is not located in the United States or its territories must submit an application to the Committee for an equivalency determination. Such application shall be in addition to all other applications required by this rule.
La. S.Ct. R. XVII, § 6(A).
. The pertinent text of Section 9 of Rule XVII is located at note 7 infra.
Jarry did attempt to petition the Louisiana Supreme Court for permission to take the bar exam. However, he did so without completing any of the requisite steps to apply for admission through the Committee. The Court therefore rejected his petition as pre
*785
mature.
In re Royot,
.Leclerc, Jarry, and Boulord claim that they would have timely submitted equivalency applications but for the experiences of Nathalie Royot, Veronique Marty, and Cálme Moguen. Royot, Marty, and Moguen received favorable equivalency determinations but their applications to sit for the bar were denied due to their residency status. Royot, Marty, and Moguen sought. writs in the United States Supreme Court but their application was untimely. After this suit was filed and Defendants raised the case or controversy arguments, Leclerc, Jarry, and Boulord then filed applications for equivalency.
. Louisiana's bar admission rules require that equivalency applications for those applicants wishing to take the July 2003 bar exam were due no later than December 1, 2002. La. S.Ct. R. XVII, § 6(A).
. After Defendants questioned whether the Federal Courts Improvement Act of 1996, 110 Stat. 3847, 2853 (1996) (amending 42 U.S.C. § 1983), would permit injunctive relief against the state’s judicial officers, Plaintiffs moved to amend their complaint to drop the request for injunctive relief. Rec. Doc. 27. The Court denied the motion to amend for reasons unrelated to the request for injunctive relief.
. Rule XVII, Section 9, Denial of Eligibility; Appeals, provides:
Upon notice to the applicant by the Committee that an applicant has failed to fulfill one or more of the requirements of Sections 3 or 5, or upon notice to the applicant from the Committee that the equivalency panel has found that applicant’s legal education is not equivalent to that received by a graduate of a law school approved by the American Bar Association as required by Section 6, and that the Committee concurs in such finding, the applicant may appeal by petition directly to the Court.
(B) Procedure in Supreme Court. The Court may, in its discretion, without taking further evidence, affirm or reverse the Committee’s recommendation, remand to the Committee for further action as the Court instructs, or appoint a Commissioner to take evidence.
La. S.Ct. R. XVII, § 9.
. The
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine directs that federal district courts lack jurisdiction to entertain collateral attacks on state court judgments.
Liedtke v. State Bar of Texas,
. As discussed at note 3 supra, Jarry submitted a procedurally improper petition to the Louisiana Supreme Court.
. Plaintiffs' counsel informed the Court at the April 17, 2003, status conference that Le-clerc, Jarry, and Boulord had submitted equivalency applications after they filed suit.
. Indeed, it is well-established that administrative exhaustion does not apply to civil rights claims unless specifically mandated by Congress.
Porter v. Nussle,
. The injury must also be traceable to the defendant, and the injury must be redressible. Southern Christian Leadership Conf. v. Supreme Court of the State of Louisiana, 252 F.3d at 787. Those aspects of standing are not at issue in this case.
. The Court’s resolution of the standing issue naturally has no relevance whatsoever as to whether Defendants will ultimately grant Plaintiffs’ equivalency applications on the merits.
. Without citation of authority or explanation, Defendants concede that Plaintiffs Fourteenth Amendment claims are not barred by the Eleventh Amendment. Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss at 13 n. 6. For the reasons explained above, Defendants are correct. However, Fourteenth Amendment claims generally are subject to the Eleventh Amendment except where Congress expressly abrogates the state's immunity when legislating pursuant to its enforcement powers under the Fourteenth Amendment.
See Kimel v. Florida Bd. of Regents,
. Consumer’s Union is not inapplicable merely because that case dealt with provisions of the Virginia bar's code of ethics. Consumer’s Union is applicable because it dealt with a facial challenge to the code of ethics rather than the application of the code of ethics to an individual attorney in disciplinary proceedings.
. Interestingly, Defendants’ own invocation of legislative immunity belies any assertion that they believe that the FCIA erased the recognized distinctions between the various capacities in which judges act.
. Pulliam also held that Plaintiff could recover costs and attorney's fees in conjunction with obtaining injunctive relief against a judicial officer for acts taken in her judicial capacity. The FCIA amended 42 U.S.C. Section 1988(b) to reverse that aspect of Pulliam. Because the attorney's fees issue is wholly premature at this time, the Court expresses no opinion as to whether Plaintiffs could ultimately recover costs and attorney’s fees in this action.
. Defendants did not file a cross motion for summary judgment but filed a motion to dismiss instead. Defendants’ arguments in opposition are taken from their motion to dismiss which Defendants have also designated as their opposition to Plaintiffs' motion for summary judgment. Rec. Doc. 19.
. Plaintiffs’ various memoranda suggest that they were denied due process because the Louisiana Supreme Court reversed its prior stance on the residency issue without giving Plaintiffs an adequate explanation and prior notice of the court's intention. This contention is absurd.
Further, Plaintiffs complain that Defendants have never expressed publicly the reason for their change in policy regarding nonresident aliens. Rec. Doc. 12 at 9. It is clear from Plaintiffs’ original complaint in this Court as well as the
Royot, et al.
petition for certiorari filed with the United States Supreme Court that Plaintiffs believe that the Louisiana Supreme Court’s sudden reversal on the alien issue was prompted by the participation of foreign lawyers in Louisiana death penalty cases. Even though the Court finds this allegation highly speculative and questionable, as explained in
Southern Christian Leadership Conference,
unpopular motivations
*798
(even if substantiated) do not transform a challenged rule "into an unconstitutional state action.”
Finally, the Court fails to comprehend the relevance of other state bar admission rules to any of the legal issues in this case.
. Defendants assert that Rule XVII "falls within the valid and legitimate exercise of the State’s public safety and police powers.” Defendants' Motion to Dismiss at 17 n. 10. Such a justification is consistent with rational basis review. At oral argument, defense counsel confirmed Defendants’ position that rational basis review should apply.
. It is now widely accepted that federal laws creating classifications based upon alienage need only satisfy rational basis review.
Abreu
v.
Callahan,
. One commentator has suggested that the Court's choice of the preemption analysis in Toll was a product of the Court’s hesitation to apply strict scrutiny to categories of non-resident aliens. Linda S. Bosniak, Membership, Equality, & the Difference That Alienage Makes, 69 N.Y.U. L.Rev. 1047, 1149 n. 251 (1994). The district court in Toll had applied strict scrutiny.
. Even Justice Brennan, who authored the majority opinion in
Toll,
noted that "when Congress has done nothing more than permit a class of aliens to enter the country temporarily, the proper application of [the principles applicable to resident aliens] is likely to be a matter of some dispute.”
Toll,
. At oral argument, Affleck asserted that Takahashi was a non-immigrant alien. The case is silent as to Takahashi’s status but the Supreme Court mentioned in the opinion that Takahashi became a resident of California in 1907. The Takahashi decision was rendered in 1948. The Court seriously doubts that Takahashi was a non-immigrant alien.
. Takahashi was also decided against the backdrop of racial discrimination targeted at persons of Japanese ancestry during and after World War II.
