MEMORANDUM and ORDER
On September 23, 2008, Anthony Jerome McKnight (“Plaintiff’), proceeding pro se, commenced this action against sixteen defendants involved in a protracted child custody dispute over Plaintiffs ten-year-old daughter, Elena. For sake of ease, the Court has grouped Defendants into six categories. First, the lead defendant, Dawn Marie Middleton, is the mother and current custodian of Elena. Second, the “Mayerson Defendants” are defendants Harold A. Mayerson, Sophie Jacobi and Mayerson, Stutman, Abramowitz, Royer L.L.P., who represented Dawn Middleton in the child custody dispute. Third, the “State Defendants” include defendants State of New York; County of Kings Family Court; the Honorable Paula J. Hepner, Family Court Judge; Robert Ratanski, Clerk of the Family Court; and other unknown employees of the Family Court. Fourth, the “CLC Defendants” constitute defendants Children’s Law Center, Carol Sherman, and Martha Schneiderman, who served as Elena’s court-appointed law guardians. Fifth, “Lauro and Montrose” consists of defendants Louis Lauro, Ph.D, and Eileen Montrose, L.C.S.W., who were a court-appointed evaluator and social worker, respectively. Sixth, “Middleton Relatives” encompass Ilona T. Middleton, Carl J. Middleton, and Kirsten L. Middleton, relatives of Dawn Middleton.
Plaintiffs First Amended Complaint, a model of prolixity at 130 pages, asserts seventy-two causes of action, including claims under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1982, 1983, 1985(3), 1986, and 1988, alleging vio *513 lations of the First, Fourth, Fifth, Eighth, Ninth, Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments; the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (“ADA”); and claims under state statutory and common law. Dawn Middleton, the Mayerson Defendants, the State Defendants, the CLC Defendants, and Lauro and Montrose moved to dismiss the Amended Complaint pursuant to Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 12(b)(6).
For the following reasons, the Court dismisses the Amended Complaint in its entirety against all Defendants.
BACKGROUND
This suit arises out of a County of Kings Family Court (“Family Court”) custody dispute between pro se Plaintiff and Dawn Middleton, regarding their daughter, Elena. This matter was transferred from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, where Plaintiff resides, to the Family Court where Dawn Middleton and Elena reside. During the pendency of this federal court litigation, the custody dispute remains ongoing in Family Court.
On September 23, 2008, Plaintiff filed his Complaint raising numerous claims against Defendants for violations of his constitutional and federal statutory rights as well as rights under state law in connection with the child custody proceedings. Plaintiff also sought injunctive relief holding various sections of the N.Y. Domestic Relations law unconstitutional. Plaintiffs complaint also named as plaintiffs “a Class of Pro Se Litigants Similarly Situated in the County of Kangs Family Court,” “a Class of African-American Fathers Similarly Situated in the County of Kings Family Court,” and a class of Plaintiffs “African-American Relatives Similarly Situated” (collectively, the “Class Plaintiffs”). On November 12, 2008, the Court directed Plaintiff to either retain counsel for the Class Plaintiffs or show cause why the Class Plaintiffs should not be dismissed from the action.
On January 8, 2009, Plaintiff filed an Amended Complaint. There, Plaintiff added two defendants to the State Defendants and raised several additional claims. Nevertheless, like the original complaint, Plaintiffs amended pleading purported to be brought on behalf of the Class Plaintiffs. Plaintiff failed to retain counsel for Class Plaintiffs or to show cause why the Class Plaintiffs should not be dismissed from the action. On February 11, 2009, the Court dismissed the Class Plaintiffs from the action and directed the Clerk to strike Class Plaintiffs from the caption. The Amended Complaint’s sixty-ninth cause of action for class certification was consequently dismissed as well.
In March 2009, the Court granted Dawn Middleton, the Mayerson Defendants, State Defendants, the CLC Defendants, and Lauro and Montrose leave to move to dismiss the Amended Complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). The Court now considers those motions.
DISCUSSION
I. Rule 12(b)(6) Standard of Review
Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provides for dismissal of a complaint that fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. “While a complaint attacked by a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss does not need detailed factual allegations, a plaintiffs obligation to provide the grounds of his entitlement to relief requires more than labels and conclusions, and a formulaic recitation of the elements of a cause of action will not do.”
Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
“A claim has facial plausibility when the plaintiff pleads factual content that allows the court to draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.”
Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
— U.S. -,
In applying the plausibility standard set forth in
Twombly
and
Iqbal,
a court “assume[s] the veracity” only of “well-pleaded factual allegations,” and draws all reasonable inferences from such allegations in the plaintiffs favor.
Argeropoulos v. Exide Technologies,
No. 08-CV-3760,
II. Rooker-Feldman Doctrine
Several Defendants argue that Plaintiffs action must be dismissed based on the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine. Indeed, “[wjhere a federal suit follows a state suit, the former may be prohibited by the so-called
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine in certain circumstances.”
Hoblock v. Albany County Bd. of Elections,
In the wake of Exxon Mobil, the Second Circuit revisited its prior precedents and limited the application of Rooker-Feldman to cases satisfying four “requirements”:
First, the federal-court plaintiff must have lost in state court. Second, the plaintiff must “complain [] of injuries caused by [a] state-court judgmentf.]” Third, the plaintiff must “invite district court review and rejection of [that] judgment [ ].” Fourth, the state-court judg *515 ment must have been “rendered before the district court proceedings commenced” — i.e., Rooker-Feldman has no application to federal-court suits proceeding in parallel with ongoing state-court litigation.
Hoblock,
Here, the
Rooker-Feldman
doctrine does not bar Plaintiffs claims because Plaintiff does not “invite district court review and rejection” of a state court judgment.
Id.
The doctrine only applies when “the requested federal court remedy of an alleged injury caused by a state court judgment would require overturning or modifying that state court judgment.”
McNamara v. Kaye,
No. 08-4561-cv,
Plaintiffs claims do not seek to undo any Family Court decisions. At the heart of Plaintiffs case is a January 23, 2008, Family Court order placing Elena in Dawn Middleton’s temporary custody, Am. Compl. ¶ 77;
see
Sanders Aff., Ex. G, “Temporary Order of Custody” (hereinafter, “Temp. Cust. Order”), and other Family Court orders and procedures. Plaintiff alleges that these decisions denied him “his constitutionally guaranteed rights of due process and equal protection.”
See, e.g.,
Am. Compl. ¶ 81. Yet, Plaintiff has carefully not requested that this Court disturb any of these Family Court rulings. He has not applied for a vacatur of the temporary custody order or the placement of the child in his temporary custody. Instead, Plaintiff only seeks specified monetary damages,
see id.
¶¶ 739-42, and injunctive relief holding that various sections and procedures of the N.Y. Dom. Rel. Law unconstitutional prospectively,
see id.
¶¶ 451-464, 728-29. Consequently, the Court follows the Second Circuit’s reasoning in
McNamara
and
Green
and finds that
Rooker-Feldman
does not apply to Plaintiffs claims that only seek monetary damages or prospective injunctive relief and do not seek to overturn a child custody award.
See also Pittman v. Cuyahoga County Dep’t of Children and Family Servs.,
No. 06-3312,
III. Domestic Relations Exception
Several Defendants also assert that this Court’s jurisdiction is barred by the domestic relations exception, which “divests the federal courts of power to issue divorce, alimony, and child custody decrees.”
Ankenbrandt v. Richards,
Under the domestic relations exception, “[fjederal courts have discretion to abstain from exercising jurisdiction over issues on the verge of being matrimonial in nature as long as full and fair adjudication is available in state courts.”
Fischer v. Clark,
No. 08-CV-3807,
The exception, however, is still “very narrow.”
Williams v. Lambert,
Nevertheless, the Second Circuit has recently departed from this general rule where the claims “begin and end in a domestic dispute.”
Schottel v. Kutyba,
No. 06-1577-cv, — Fed.Appx.-,-,
Here, Plaintiffs complaint sets forth seventy-two causes of action against the various defendants. These numerous claims can be grouped into fourteen general categories of claims:
(i) constitutional claims based on the Family Court proceedings and its award of temporary custody to Dawn *518 Middleton, (first through ninth, forty-seventh claims);
(ii) constitutional claims stemming from his federal court litigation, (tenth through fourteenth claims);
(iii) constitutional and state law claims regarding court-ordered limitations on his communications with Elena, (fifteenth and sixteenth claims);
(iv) constitutional and state law claims regarding the recording of his communications with Elena, (eighteenth, nineteenth, sixty-first, sixty-second, sixty-eighth claims);
(v) common law and state law claims regarding the custody agreement, (twentieth through twenty-eighth claims);
(vi) defamation claims against several defendants, (twenty-ninth through thirty-fourth claims);
(vii) tort and common law claims regarding the custody of Elena, (thirty-fifth through forty-sixth claims);
(viii) violations of various state wiretap laws, (forty-ninth through sixtieth claims);
(ix) constitutional claims for failure to supervise, (sixty-third through sixty-sixth claims);
(x) constitutional and federal statutory claims for enjoining the operation of N.Y. Dom. Rel. Law, (seventieth and seventy-first claims);
(xi) a claim under the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), (seventeenth claim);
(xii) a claim for invasion of privacy against defendant Lauro, (forty-eighth claim);
(xiii) a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress, (sixty-seventh claim); and
(xiv) a claim for enjoining Dawn Middleton from removing Elena from New York and the United States, (seventy-second claim).
a. Claims Subject to Federal Court Jurisdiction
This Court may assert jurisdiction over the (i) and (x) categories of claims dealing with the constitutionality of the Family Court’s custody order, Family Court proceedings, and the N.Y. Dom. Rel. Law. To the extent Plaintiff is challenging the constitutionality of state custody laws or proceedings, this Court may review those claims and order appropriate relief.
See Stanley v. Illinois,
In
Thomas,
the court confronted plaintiffs alleging,
inter alia,
§ 1983 claims of unconstitutional interference with familial relations and state and federal claims of disruption of the family.
[T]he adjudication of whether the state’s procedure used to separate a parent from a child complies with the constitutional due process requirement is squarely within this Court’s federal question jurisdiction and does not entail *519 any investigation by the federal court into the fitness of the parent to care for the child or the issuance of any decree that the parent must necessarily be reunited with the child; such an adjudication will entail at most a description of what process a state must follow in making determinations to deprive a parent of parental rights and custody of his or her child....
Id.
As stated above, Plaintiff only seeks monetary damages and prospective injunctive relief striking provisions of N.Y. Dom. Rel. Law. He does not seek the issuance or modification of the child custody decrees and, therefore, the domestic relations exception has no bearing on these claims.
See also Smith v. Oakland County Circuit Court,
The claims grouped in the (ii), (iv), (vi), (xiii), (ix), (xi), (xii), and (xiii) categories do not involve domestic relations issues or focus on Defendants’ actions independent and separate from the custody orders and hence do not implicate the domestic relations exceptions. While they all originate from the disputed custody proceedings, they are “distinct from the domestic relationship,”
Schottel,
— Fed.Appx. at-,
Accordingly, the domestic relations exception does not preclude this Court’s jurisdiction over the first through fourteenth, seventeenth through nineteenth, twenty-ninth through thirty-fourth, and forty-seventh through seventy-first claims.
b. Claims Divested of Federal Court Jurisdiction
The claims in the (iii), (v), (vii), and (xiv) categories are a different matter. It is difficult to see how they are distinct injuries from the Family Court’s custody orders in this ongoing custody dispute. In the (iii) category, Plaintiff claims injuries from the Family Court’s orders regulating his communications with Elena. To entertain jurisdiction over these claims would invite the Court to meddle in scheduling the appropriate time, place and manner of parental communications — an issue properly in the province of the state courts. In the (v) category of claims, Plaintiff alleges a breach of custody agreement between him and Dawn Middleton and interference with that custody agreement by various defendants. Again, while Plaintiff styles these claims as contract or tort claims, they are nothing more than challenges to Elena’s custody arrangements. Likewise, the (vii) category involves tort claims from Elena’s placement with Middleton and the Middleton Relatives, which directly challenges Elena’s custody award. Finally, under the (xiv) category, whether Dawn Middleton may travel outside of New York or the United States with Elena is a question best left for the family court to resolve.
No matter how artfully Plaintiff has pleaded these claims, they all “begin and end in a domestic dispute.”
Schottel,
■ — ■ Fed.Appx. at-,
Accordingly, the Court is divested of jurisdiction over the following claims and they are hereby dismissed: fifteenth, sixteenth, twentieth through twenty-eighth, thirty-fifth through forty-sixth, and seventy-second.
IV. Younger Abstention
Next, State Defendants argue that this Court should abstain from taking jurisdiction over this action pursuant to the abstention doctrine set forth in
Younger v. Harris,
The Second Circuit has held that “application of the
Younger
doctrine is inappropriate where the litigant seeks money damages for an alleged violation of § 1983[.]”
Morpurgo v. Inc. Vill. of Sag Harbor,
The Court holds that the
Younger
abstention conditions are met for Plaintiffs claims seeking injunctive relief. First, state court proceedings are still ongoing. The trial for Plaintiffs petition for custody and visitation has begun and is scheduled to continue over the next few months.
See
Docket entry # 133. Second, as stated above, the heart of this case is a child custody dispute, a matter rightfully reserved for state courts.
See, e.g., Puletti,
Accordingly, the Court abstains from considering the following claims: sixty-eighth, seventieth, seventy-first, and seventy-second and they are hereby dismissed.
V. State Defendants
State Defendants also argue that they are immune from Plaintiffs suit under sovereign immunity and absolute judicial immunity.
a. State of New York and County of Kings Family Court
It is clear that the State of New York and the County of Kings Family Court must be dismissed from this action based on Eleventh Amendment sovereign immunity. The Eleventh Amendment states: “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. “Although the Amendment, by its terms, bars only federal suits against state governments by citizens of another state or foreign country, it has been interpreted also to bar federal suits against state governments by a state’s own citizens ... as well as state court actions against state governments .... ”
Woods v. Rondout Valley Cent. Sch. Dist. Bd. of Educ.,
In this case, Plaintiff is a citizen of another state and there is no suggestion of state acquiescence to this suit. Accordingly, he is explicitly barred by the Eleventh Amendment from bringing suit in this Court against the State of New York and state officials acting in their official capacities. Furthermore, the New York State Unified Court System is entitled to sovereign immunity as an “arm of the State.”
See Gollomp v. Spitzer,
Plaintiff attempts to escape this bar by citing the ADA’s abrogation of state
*522
immunity.
See
42 U.S.C. § 12202. Plaintiffs ADA claim against State Defendants must fall under Title II of the ADA, which forbids discrimination against persons with disabilities in public services, programs, and activities.
See Tennessee v. Lane,
Since
Lane,
courts have disagreed on the conditions required to abrogate sovereign immunity under Title II.
See Press v. S.U.N.Y. at Stony Brook,
Plaintiff fails to establish abrogation under either test. Plaintiff appears to allege ADA violations based on mental disability or drug addiction. Nevertheless, Plaintiff does not allege that State Defendants violated his right of access to courts based on his alleged disability. Instead, Plaintiff only claims that a July 3, 2008 Family Court’s order is “unconstitutional because it infringes upon McKnight’s right to prompt medical treatment and recovery implied or guaranteed under ... the ADA[J” Am. Compl. ¶297. He further asseverates that the State Defendants violated his ADA rights by “claiming that [he] suffers from an undiagnosable mental illness, disease or defect.” Id. ¶ 520. Plaintiff also avers that Judge Hepner ordered him to provide proof of his successful drug rehabilitation and “subscribe^] to the Other Defendants labeling McKnight as ‘crazy,’ ‘complexly mentally ill,’ and ‘bizarre.’ ” PL Br. Opp. State Def. 17. He claims that such descriptions “are coded words commonly used to wrongfully suggest continuing drug addiction, which violate the ADA.” Id. While confusing and barely coherent, none of these allegations are sufficient to abrogate the State’s sovereign immunity under Title II of the ADA. Plaintiff does not claim a deprivation of a fundamental right nor has Plaintiff alleged that State Defendants were motivated by discriminatory animus or ill will based on his alleged disability.
Finally, Plaintiff also argues that State Defendants’ sovereign immunity may be abrogated by Title VI of the Civil Rights Acts of 1964. Title VI covers only those claims of discriminatory conduct where “federal funding is given to a non-federal entity which, in turn, provides financial assistance to the ultimate beneficiary.” Koum
antaros v. City Univ. of New York,
No. 03 CIV 10170,
Accordingly, the State of New York, all state officials in their official capacities, and the County of Kings Family Court are hereby dismissed as parties to this action. Furthermore, Plaintiffs sixty-third and sixty-fourth claims against the County of Kings Family Court and the State of New York for failure to properly supervise are also dismissed.
b. Judge Hepner’s Absolute Immunity
Judge Hepner of the Family Court is likewise dismissed from this case in her individual capacity. It is well settled that judges generally have absolute immunity from suits for money damages for their judicial actions.
Bliven v. Hunt,
Plaintiff first contends that Judge Hepner acted in the complete absence of all jurisdiction by issuing “wiretap orders.” Plaintiff contends that a “child custody case is not a criminal case and [Plaintiff] has not engaged in any of the enumerated criminal offenses for which wiretaps can be issued.” PL’s State Def. Mem. Opp. 6.
A judge will be denied immunity for damages where she (i) acts in the clear absence of all jurisdiction and (ii) knew or must have known that she was acting in such a manner.
Tucker v. Outwater,
Where there is clearly no jurisdiction over the subject-matter any authority exercised is a usurped authority, and for the exercise of such authority, when the want of jurisdiction is known to the judge, no excuse is permissible. But where jurisdiction over the subject-matter is invested by law in the judge, or in the court which [s] he holds, the manner and extent in which the jurisdiction shall be exercised are generally as much questions for h[er] determination as any other questions involved in the case, although upon the correctness of h[er] determination in these particulars the validity of h[er] judgments may depend.
Stump,
Second, Plaintiff contends that Judge Hepner’s rulings are based upon racial and gender considerations and are in retaliation for Plaintiffs filing of lawsuit against the court and others. Nevertheless, “even allegations of bad faith or malice cannot overcome judicial immunity.”
Bliven,
Third, Plaintiff contends that he may circumvent judicial immunity by seeking injunctive relief and attacking the constitutionality of N.Y. Dom. Rel. Law pursuant to
Ex Parte Young,
As Judge Hepner is immune from this suit in her official and individual capacities based on sovereign and judicial immunity, she is dismissed as a party to this case. Furthermore, for the same reasons, absolute judicial immunity applies to “John Doe” as “Court Deputy or Court Crier” and “John Doe” is dismissed from this case.
c. Clerk of the Court’s Judicial Immunity
The Court extends absolute judicial immunity to the defendant Robert Ratanski, the Clerk of the Court for the Family Court. Judicial immunity may extend to persons other than a judge “who perform functions closely associated with the judicial process.”
Cleavinger v.
Sax
ner,
On the other hand, even for administrative functions, absolute judicial immunity protects court clerks in the performance of tasks “which are judicial in nature and an integral part of the judicial process.”
Rodriguez v. Weprin,
In this case, Plaintiff contends that the Clerk of the Court failed to “process” three of his motions which resulted in the loss of parental, constitutional, civil and other rights. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 56-58, 72-74, 292-93. Specifically, Plaintiff alleges that after he mailed a motion on November 7, 2007 to defendant Ratanski, Ratanski and others never processed the motion and the Family Court never granted him a hearing on the motion. Id. ¶ 57. He also alleges that on January 9, 2008, he mailed another motion addressed to *526 Ratanski, which Plaintiff contends requires the clerk to issue an order directing the respondent in the case to appear within three . days. Id. ¶¶ 72-73. He claims that Ratanski and others never processed the motion and never issued an order directing defendant Middleton to appear in court. Id. ¶ 74. Lastly, Plaintiff avers that he personally hand-delivered a motion on July 3, 2008 and Ratanski and others “refused to process” the filing. Id. ¶¶ 292-93.
The Court is satisfied that the court clerk’s acts here enjoy the protection of absolute immunity. Plaintiff seeks to sue the Family Court clerk for failing to (1) process motions, (2) grant a hearing on a motion, and (3) issue an order directing a party to appear. While Plaintiff fails to state why the clerk did not process his motions, the Family Court is entitled to establish its procedures and requirements for filing a motion and Plaintiff has failed to plead that his motion complied with those requirements. Furthermore, the act of issuing an order compelling another party to appear is at the heart of the judicial function. Thus, these acts are discretionary actions of a judicial character or are actions made pursuant to established court practices. Indeed, the “Clerk’s Office activities of filing and docketing legal documents” are an “integral part of the judicial process” and are entitled to absolute immunity.
Pikulin v. Gonzales,
No. 07-Civ.-412,
Here, the public interest in protecting “the entire judicial process from vexatious lawsuits brought by disappointed litigants” is called into question by Plaintiffs suit against Ratanski,
Antoine,
VI. Lauro and Montrose Defendants’ Quasi-Judicial Immunity
Lauro and Montrose are also immune from this suit based on the doctrine of quasi-judicial immunity. “A private actor may be afforded the absolute immunity ordinarily accorded judges acting within the scope of their jurisdictions if his role is functionally comparable to that of a judge, ... or if the private actor’s acts are integrally related to an ongoing judicial proceeding.”
Mitchell v. Fishbein,
In the category of private actor’s acts integrally related to ongoing judicial proceedings, absolute immunity may attach to non-judicial officers and employees where the individual serves as an “arm of the court,”
Scotto v. Almenas,
Here, Montrose is a licensed clinical social worker appointed by the Family Court to .conduct therapeutic supervised visitations in Plaintiffs child custody dispute. Am. Compl. ¶ 20. Montrose attempted to arrange visits with the parties, including contacting Plaintiff and Elena, before meeting resistance from Plaintiff and terminating the court-ordered visitations.
See id.
¶¶ 105, 112-14. Lauro, Ph.D, is a licensed psychotherapist appointed by the Family Court to evaluate the parties in the child custody dispute.
Id.
¶ 21. Plaintiff asserts that Montrose and Lauro violated his constitutional rights based on their court-appointed roles. Under these pleaded facts, Lauro and Mont-rose’s acts are “integrally related to the judicial process,”
Mitchell,
As court-appointed forensic evaluators and social workers, Lauro and Montrose acted as “arms of the court” at the court’s initiative. In
Hughes v. Long,
the Third Circuit held that court-appointed evaluators in a child custody proceeding enjoyed judicial immunity from federal civil rights liability as “a non judicial person who fulfills a quasi-judicial role at the court’s request.”
Lauro performed similar functions, including,
inter alia,
interviewing and consulting with Dawn Middleton, Elena and others, and making reports and recommendations to the Family Court. Mont-rose had more limited contact with the Family Court proceedings since Plaintiff refused to engage in the therapeutic supervised visits, but her role was also to interview and consult with the parties and others, conduct supervised interactions between the parties, and provide a written report to the Family Court.
See
Rubin Aff., Ex. A, Order For Supervised Therapeutic Visits (Feb. 14, 2008). Moreover, like the custody evaluators in
Hughes,
Montrose and Lauro did not initiate the child custody proceedings but were drawn
*528
in the dispute by the appointment of the Family Court.
Hughes,
The concerns animating the doctrine of quasi-judicial immunity are no more apparent than in this case. On February 18, 2009, Lauro filed a motion in the Family Court seeking to be relieved of his assignment as the independent, neutral forensic evaluator based upon his discomfort at having been named a defendant in this case.
See In the Matter of Lauro,
VII. CLC Defendants’ Absolute Immunity
Quasi-judicial immunity also protects the CLC Defendants from suit. Carol Sherman and Martha Schneiderman served as Elena’s “court-appointed family court counsel,” Am. Compl. ¶¶ 17-18, or law guardians, see N.Y. Fam. Ct. Act §§ 241, 249. CLC employs both attorneys and “oversaw and approved of all the ... acts of Sherman and Schneiderman.” Am. Compl. ¶ 19. Plaintiff complains that CLC Defendants have represented, and continue to represent his daughter in the Family Court over his objection. In the course of CLC Defendants’ representation of Elena, they have interviewed the parties, including Plaintiff, Dawn Middleton and Elena, reviewed motions and exhibits, filed motions on behalf of the child, and provided recommendations and findings to the Family Court. See, e.g., CLC Defs. Ex. E.
The Second Circuit recently applied the common law quasi-judicial immunity to preclude § 1983 liability of a law guardian and her director in a litigant’s action arising out of family court proceedings.
Yapi v. Kondratyeva,
Here, in advocating on behalf of the best interests of Plaintiffs young child, including investigating and interviewing the parties and making recommendations to the court, CLC Defendants provided a crucial service to the Family Court. They gave the Family Court a neutral, unbiased and independent voice for Elena, who is too young to speak for herself. Thus, CLC Defendants are entitled to absolute quasi-judicial immunity and they are hereby dismissed from this case. Plaintiffs sixty-sixth cause of action against CLC Defendants is also dismissed.
VIII. Mayerson Defendants
The Court next evaluates Plaintiffs federal claims against the remaining Defendants. Plaintiff generally asserts that defendants Harold Mayerson, Sophie Jacobi, and Mayerson, Stutman, Abramowitz, Royer L.L.P., have conspired with co-defendant Dawn Middleton to deprive Plaintiff of his rights to custody, visitation and communication with his child. The Mayer-son Defendants served as counsel to Dawn Middleton in the Family Court proceedings. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 14-16, 51. Plaintiffs' first through nineteenth causes of action, as well as his forty-seventh and sixty-first are brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1982, 1983, 1985(3), 1986, and 1988, alleging violations of the First, Fourth, Fifth, Eighth, Ninth, Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments. The Court liberally construes Plaintiffs Complaint in reviewing these claims.
a. 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 & 1982
Section 1981 prohibits race-based discrimination in the creation and enforcement of contracts.
DeLong v. Soufiane,
No. 05-CV-5529,
*530
The events of intentional and purposeful discrimination, as well as the racial animus constituting the motivating factor for defendants’ actions, must be specifically pleaded in the complaint.
Id., see also Sanders v. Grenadier Realty, Inc.,
No. 08 Civ. 3920,
Plaintiffs complaint is devoid of sufficient factual allegations to support plausible claims under §§ 1981 and 1982. Plaintiff has failed to plead any non-speculative facts supporting an inference of racial animus, let alone intentional discrimination, on the part of the Mayerson Defendants. A representative illustration of Plaintiffs wholly conclusory allegations against Mayerson Defendants includes that “Defendants, Middleton, Mayerson, Jacobi, Mayerson, et al., Sherman, Children’s’ [sic] Law Center, et al. have, maliciously and indifferently to the truth, in the furtherance of their racist and defamatory conspiracy, repeatedly parroted Montrose’s racist and defaming lies in order to unlawfully acquire and have unlawfully acquired relief from the Brooklyn family Court....” Am. Compl. ¶ 116. Although replete with formulaic recitations of legal elements, it is bereft of any specific acts of discrimination undertaken by any of the Mayerson Defendants.
Moreover, the Complaint does not show how the Mayerson Defendants infringed his contractual or other rights protected by the two statutes. From the face of the Complaint, the Mayerson Defendants did nothing more than represent Dawn Middleton in the Family Court proceedings. While the statutes protect access to courts to adjudicate
contractual rights, see Patterson v. McLean Credit Union,
Accordingly, the Complaint has failed to allege a plausible § 1981 or § 1982 violation by the Mayerson Defendants and those claims are dismissed against them.
b. 42 U.S.C. § 1983
Section § 1983 protects against the deprivation of constitutional rights by state actors.
Assoko v. City of New York,
Plaintiffs § 1983 claim appears to allege that the Mayerson attorneys acted under color of state law by conspiring with the Family Court to deprive Plaintiff of his constitutional rights. Once again, Plaintiff asserts no factual basis for his conclusory conspiracy claim. Aside from bald assertions and conclusory allegations of a “conspiracy” among all the Defendants to deprive him of constitutional rights,
see, e.g.,
PI. Opp. Br. Mayerson 7 n. 17, the Court could only unearth one specific allegation supporting the purported agreement between the Mayerson Defendants and the Family Court.
See
Am. Compl. ¶ 445 (“On or about December 10, 2008, McKnight discovered that The Brooklyn Family Court had engaged in
ex parte
communications with Jacobi for the sole purpose of denying McKnight due process and equal protection.”). Yet, this falls far short of pleading a “close nexus” or “joint engagement” to sustain a § 1983 claim. Indeed, Plaintiffs allegations of connection between the state court and the Mayerson Defendants is even more attenuated than in
Norley v. HSBC Bank USA,
No. 03 Civ. 2318,
c. 42 U.S.C. §§ 1985(3) & 1986
Section 1985 permits the recovery of damages against persons who conspire to violate a plaintiffs civil rights.
DeLong,
Once again, applying the same analysis as the § 1983 claim, Plaintiffs Complaint only provides conclusory, vague, or general allegations of conspiracy between the Mayerson Defendants and the other defendants to deprive him the equal protection of the law.
See Sommer v. Dixon,
*532 d. Other Federal Laws
To the extent Plaintiff asserts claims against the Mayerson Defendants under other federal law, these claims must fail. Should Plaintiff seek to bring a cause of action under the Parental Kidnaping Prevention Act (“PKPA”) against Mayerson or other Defendants,
see
Am. Compl. ¶ 470, no private right of action exists under this statute.
Fischer v. Clark,
No. 08-CV-3807,
IX. Dawn Middleton
The Court now turns to Dawn Middleton’s motion to dismiss. Proceeding pro se, Middleton requested permission from this Court to join in the motions made by the other represented Defendants and to raise several additional issues. The Court granted Dawn Middleton’s application and considers Plaintiffs claims in light of Middleton’s submissions and the submissions of other Defendants. In essence, Plaintiff asserts that Middleton conspired with the other Defendants to deprive him of his constitutional rights in connection with the custody of their child, Elena. Similar to Mayerson Defendants, Plaintiffs first through nineteenth causes of action, as well as his forty-seventh and sixty-first, against Middleton are brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981, 1982, 1983, 1985(3), 1986, and 1988, alleging violations of the First, Fourth, Fifth, Eighth, Ninth, Thirteenth and Fourteenth Amendments.
In this case, Plaintiffs Complaint fails to sufficiently plead factual allegations supporting that Middleton was motivated by racial animus or interfered with his contractual or other rights necessary sustain § 1981 and § 1982 claims. While Plaintiff repeatedly labels Middleton “racist,” name-calling alone is not enough to make a plausible civil rights claim. Nothing in the Complaint indicates that Middleton Was motivated by anything other than the desire to reach finality in her custody dispute with Plaintiff.
Next, Plaintiff has not alleged that Middleton has a “close nexus” or “joint engagement” with a state actor to maintain a § 1983 action.
See Bhatia,
Once again, Plaintiffs Complaint only provides conclusory, vague, or general allegations of conspiracy between Middleton and the other defendants to deprive him the equal protection of the law and it does not plausibly suggest that Middleton was motivated by racial or class-based animus. This is not enough to sustain § 1985 or § 1986 claims. For the same reasons as the Mayerson Defendants, the Court dismisses any further federal claims against *533 Dawn Middleton. Accordingly, all federal claims against Dawn Middleton are hereby dismissed.
X. Middleton Relatives
The Middleton Relatives, namely Illona Middleton, Carl Middleton, and Kirsten Middleton, have not entered an appearance in this matter nor have they joined in the motions to dismiss the Amended Complaint. Nevertheless, this Court may
sua sponte
consider dismissal with respect to the Middleton Relatives if the issues are substantially the same as those concerning the other Defendants and if Plaintiff had notice and full opportunity to make his claims against the Defendants.
See Odyssey Re (London) Ltd. v. Stirling Cooke Brown Holdings Ltd.,
In this case, Illona, Carl and Kirsten are relatives of Dawn Middleton. Plaintiff mainly asserts state law claims against the Middleton relatives. Yet, Plaintiffs Complaint fails to state federal claims upon which relief may be granted against the Middleton Relatives for the same reasons that federal claims against Dawn Middleton are dismissed. The Middleton Relatives’ involvement in the child custody dispute is even more tangential than Dawn Middleton’s and Plaintiffs Complaint fails to allege any racial animus, conspiracy, or close nexus or joint engagement with a state actor on the part of the Middleton Relatives. Since federal claims against Middleton Relatives are- identical to the claims against Dawn Middleton, Plaintiff had an adequate opportunity to make his case against them.
Although pro se plaintiffs are generally allowed to re-plead, sua sponte dismissal is appropriate and necessary here because (1) Plaintiffs claims lack an arguable basis in law and fact; (2) Plaintiff was unable .to articulate actionable conduct in his amended complaint after receiving the defendant’s initial motions pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6); (3) Plaintiffs claims against the Middleton Relatives, at best, are similar to claims against Dawn Middleton, which the Court has ruled as implausible; and (4) the issues of frivolity and implausibility have been presented by some of the other moving . Defendants. Accordingly, the Court dismisses all federal claims against the Middleton relatives with prejudice. 6
XI. Plaintiffs State Law Claims
Plaintiffs remaining causes of action are pendent state law claims. Under 28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3) a district court, in its discretion, may “decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over state law claims if it has dismissed all federal claims.”
Tops Mkts., Inc. v. Quality
*534
Mkts., Inc.,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, all federal claims against all Defendants are dismissed with prejudice. As this Court declines to exercise jurisdiction over Plaintiffs remaining state law claims, all state law claims are dismissed without prejudice. Plaintiffs complaint is hereby dismissed in its entirety and the Clerk of the Court is directed to close this case.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Two of Plaintiff's claims require closer analysis. Plaintiff's sixty-eighth cause of action requests this Court to "enjoin the unlawful search and seizure of McKnight's oral, wire and electronic communications.” The Court believes that the origin of this cause of action is a series of Family Court orders directing that court-ordered communications between Plaintiff and Elena be recorded. For example, a May 6, 2008 Family Court order mandates that-the "telephone calls [between Plaintiff and Elena] shall be recorded to assure that the content of the conversations are appropriate and may be discontinued if the content is not.” See Sanders Aff., Ex. J "May 6, 2008 Order.” A similar order dated September 23, 2008, appears in record, directing that "tele- ■ phone calls shall continue to be recorded.” Plaintiff further alleges that "[o]n July 3, 2008, over McKnight’s objections, the Brooklyn Family Court Ordered Defendant Middleton, a non-party to the telephone conversation between Elena and McKnight to unlawfully intercept and record those oral, wire and electronic communications.” Am. Compl. ¶ 203. Thus, as relief, Plaintiff states that he "is entitled to have Defendants enjoined from unlawfully intercepting, recording and disclosing his oral, wire and electronic communications.” Id. % 725.
At first blush, this claim for relief may run afoul of
Rooker-Feldman
since it seems to directly contradict a Family Court order. Nevertheless,
Rooker-Feldman
only applies to state-court judgment "rendered before the district court proceedings commenced.”
Hoblock,
Plaintiff's seventy-second cause of action requests that defendant Dawn Middleton be permanently enjoined from removing Elena from New York and the United States. See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 730-34. The Court is not aware of any Family Court order permitting Dawn Middleton to remove Elena from New York or the United States rendered before September 23, 2008. Thus, if the Court were to grant this request for relief, it would not entail undoing any state-court decision.
. While
Schottel
involved a diversity case, the Court sees no reason why its rationale should not apply to federal question cases as found in
Fischer,
. The Court has already ruled that the domestic relations exceptions precludes our jurisdiction over Plaintiff's seventy-second claim for relief — whether Dawn Middleton may be enjoined from removing Elena from New York and the United States. Nevertheless, the Court reviews this claim under Younger as an alternate basis for dismissal.
. Although not contained in the Complaint, the Court takes judicial notice of this fact.
See Piccolo v. N.Y. City Campaign Fin. Bd.,
No. 05-CV-7040,
. Plaintiff argues that Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 may deprive Lauro, Mont-rose and other defendants of their quasi-judicial or judicial immunity. Such an argument is meritless. Title VI may abrogate
sovereign
immunity for certain state actors that receive certain federal funding. "Nevertheless, not all immunities are created equally.”
United States v. Bond,
No. 09-CV-1824,
. Plaintiff failed to provide "proof of service” to the Middleton Relatives to the Court as required by Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Rule 4(1). Thus, the Court cannot verify that the Middleton Relatives have been property served. Plaintiffs, in general, are given wide leeway to amend proof of service.
Nolan v. City of Yonkers,
