MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
BACKGROUND
The Alzona Evangelical Lutheran Church, Camelback United Presbyterian Church, Southside United Presbyterian Church, Sunrise United Presbyterian Church, and two national parent denominations, the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) and American Lutheran Church (“Churches”), brought this action against the United States, Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”), and the United States Department of Justice claiming constitutional violations arising from INS undercover operations.
In 1984, the INS hired undercover informants to investigate possible unlawful ac
*1508
tivities within the Sanctuary Movement.
1
The INS covert operations included undercover informants present at church sponsored activities and regular worship services. On at least one occasion, the informant (Mr. Jesus Cruz) taped a worship service which consisted of prayer, hymns, and Bible readings. This undercover operation was made public during the criminal prosecution of several Sanctuary Movement members.
United States v. Aguilar,
In 1986, plaintiffs filed this lawsuit claiming the free exercise clause of the first amendment of the United States Constitution had been violated, as well as their first amendment rights of free speech, belief, and association. The Churches also claimed violations of their fourth amendment rights alleging the infiltration of the church services was done without a warrant and in the absence of probable cause to believe that unlawful conduct was taking place. Plaintiffs sought declaratory and injunctive relief, and nominal damages against the individual INS agents involved.
The district court granted the government’s Motion to Dismiss, concluding that the Churches lacked standing to bring the first amendment claim, and that plaintiffs failed to state a claim under the fourth amendment. The district court also ruled that the Churches were barred from recovering monetary damages against the individual INS officers based on the doctrine of qualified immunity, and that sovereign immunity prevented any relief against the United States, INS, and the Department of Justice.
Plaintiffs appealed to the Ninth Circuit.
The Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.) v. United States,
On remand, Churches have filed a Motion for Partial Summary Judgment seeking declaratory relief against the government on the first amendment claim. Plaintiffs seek such relief arguing declaratory relief is appropriate in that it will settle the relationship between the churches and the government, and will also give Church members relief from the insecurity and uncertainty which has resulted from this controversy.
PRELIMINARY DETERMINATIONS
Although the Ninth Circuit held “that the injuries alleged in the complaint are an adequate foundation for standing” to pursue injunctive relief,
Church,
A. Motion for Partial Summary Judgment
As to the motion for partial summary judgment, defendants argue plaintiffs’ motion is not supported by the record. Further, defendants note that plaintiffs bear the burden of proof on these issues at trial.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477
U.S. 317, 323,
Summary judgment should not be predicated upon papers which do not satisfy Rule 56(c) compliance.
United States v. Dibble,
In this instance, plaintiffs filed a summary judgment motion relying on an unverified amended complaint, the statement of facts as required by Local Rule 11(1), four declarations (three by pastors of the various churches, and in one case a church elder), and trial testimony from an earlier criminal trial.
United States v. Aguilar,
From the admissible documents, the court finds and concludes that plaintiffs have carried their burden of production under the Celotex standard. From the declarations and previous trial testimony, plaintiffs have demonstrated Mr. Cruz was present at various church sponsored activities on different days and that tape recordings of at least one religious service were made. Plaintiffs also established Mr. Cruz was used by the INS during Operation Sojourner to covertly investigate the Sanctuary Movement. Such investigations took place on the grounds and property of the churches, and also within the churches themselves.
Therefore, plaintiffs have placed sufficient facts before the court to satisfy their burden of production and to warrant review of the summary judgment motion itself.
B. Standing to Sue
The concept of standing relates to the nature and sufficiency of. a litigant’s concern with the subject matter of the action. In
Warth v. Seldin,
There are three elements or requirements of standing. The plaintiff must show: 1) an actual or threatened injury; 2) which is fairly traceable to the defendants alleged, illegal activity; and 3) which is likely to be redressed by the requested relief.
Valley Forge Christian College v. Americans for Separation of Church and State,
The plaintiffs have alleged more than a mere chilling of their first amendment rights. Plaintiffs have alleged a decrease in religious participation and attendance at church services, a suspension of Bible study classes, and the diversion of pastoral time and energy to manage the distrust, fear, and uncertainty of anxious church members. See Declarations of James A. Oines, Pastor of Alzona Evangelical Lutheran Church, Susan E. Parrott, Clerk of the Session of Southside Presbyterian Church, Q. Gerald Roseberry, Pastor of the Camelback United Presbyterian Church, and Eugene D. Lefebvre Pastor of Sunrise United Presbyterian Church. These declarations state more than a “subjective chill” under the first amendment, they established a cognizable injury “likely to be redressed by a favorable decision.”
Meese v. Keene,
C. Mootness
The Ninth Circuit expressed concern that the issues presented may be moot and remanded the case for such a determination because the appellate panel was “ill-equipped to decide”
Church,
“A moot action is one where the issues are no longer live or the parties lack a legally cognizable interest in the outcome.”
Sample v. Johnson,
Based on a review of the relevant facts in this case, the court concludes the case is not moot because the government asserts it has the right, assuming it complies with the fourth amendment, to conduct covert investigations of criminal activity within churches. Because the government has taken a position that it can continue to pursue criminal investigations in this manner, plaintiffs have no guarantee the government conduct will not reoccur causing further injury.
2
As for the pro
*1511
spective nature of any such relief, as long as the court can grant
any
effective relief, the case is not moot.
Northwest Environmental,
D. Declaratory Relief
Declaratory relief is fundamentally different from other types of relief, and may be appropriate even when an injunction is not. Fed.R.Civ.P. 57;
Olagues v. Russoniello,
28 U.S.C. § 2201 provides that in an actual controversy within its jurisdiction, and upon the filing of an appropriate pleading, the court may declare the rights and other legal relations between interested parties. Any judgment entered as such shall be final and reviewable. 28 U.S.C. § 2201. As plaintiffs have established the requisite elements of standing, the court concludes the injury could re-occur, and the case is not moot, it is appropriate to entertain the merits of the partial summary judgment motion.
DISCUSSION
Churches seek a declaration from this court that the government has violated their first amendment rights of free-exercise of religion by sending undercover informants into church services and church-sponsored activities. The Churches argue that covert government surveillance of worship services without probable cause to believe a crime is being committed violates the free exercise clause of the first amendment.
Although the Churches argue they are seeking relief under the first amendment and request that this court divorce the analysis between the first and fourth Amendments, framing the issue in this manner necessitates a discussion of the protections afforded by the fourth amendment to the Constitution. It is difficult to discuss the merits of an action involving covert government surveillance alleged to have been predicated upon less than probable cause without implicating the fourth amendment. The first amendment protects people and interests against intrusion or infringement. It is not generally a limitation on the government in the same manner or to the same degree that the fourth amendment operates to limit actions of government officials or agents. When the focus of a discussion becomes whether to limit the government’s authority to conduct criminal investigations, the fourth amendment is triggered more directly than the first amendment simply because the fourth amendment offers greater and more profound protection. This interplay between the first and fourth Amendments is critical because the Churches seek relief under the first amendment, inviting this court to rule that the first amendment affords them protection which is greater than or different from the protection offered by the fourth amendment. Moreover, even though some courts have been able to divorce a discus *1512 sion of the first and fourth amendments, 4 the court cannot do so in this instance. In the case at bar, defendants are relying on the fourth amendment as a defense to conduct that plaintiffs claim impinged upon their first amendment rights. And while the government seeks to justify its investigatory methods of the Sanctuary Movement as purely a matter of fourth amendment jurisprudence, this argument also misses the point. The court must analyze the issues raised under both the first and fourth amendments because both are germane.
A. The Fourth Amendment
The fourth amendment to the Constitution protects people from unreasonable searches and seizures of their persons and things. It provides, “[t]he right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated....” U.S. Const, amend. IV. It is well settled that the fourth amendment protects an individual’s reasonable expectation of privacy.
Katz v. United States,
The fourth amendment protections of reasonable expectations of privacy, are of course, not absolute. The Supreme Court has continually permitted “consensual recording of conversations without warrants.”
Aguilar,
Hoffa
and
White
are particularly relevant to the case at bar. In
Hoffa,
the court held that the fourth amendment does not “protect[] a wrongdoer’s misplaced belief that a person to whom he voluntarily confides his wrongdoing will not reveal it.”
Hoffa,
In
White,
the Court upheld the denial of a motion to suppress monitored conversations of drug transactions between a government informer and the defendant. Reviewing
Hoffa,
the Court declared that “however strongly a defendant may trust an apparent colleague, his expectations in this respect are not protected by the fourth [if] the colleague is a government agent....”
White,
1 These cases support the theory that “a person has no legitimate expectation of privacy in information he voluntarily turns over to third parties.”
Smith v. Maryland,
The
Aguilar
court reviewed the record on appeal and these Supreme Court cases, and concluded that “[g]iven this unwaiver-ing line of precedent, it is clear that appellants’ [Churches] arguments that they had a legitimate expectation of privacy
against state scrutiny
is inimical to established fourth amendment doctrine.”
Aguilar,
Although the fourth amendment is implicated in this factual situation, both Supreme Court and Ninth Circuit precedent is plain and uncontroverted: the fourth amendment does not apply to provide the Churches with protection which will limit the activities of the government in entering and conducting investigatory operations because such activity is not a search under the authority of the courts. As the government’s activity does not constitute a search, any relief which may be offered to the Churches must come from the first amendment.
B. The First Amendment
The first amendment to the constitution provides in part that “Congress shall make no law ... prohibiting the free exercise [of religion].” U.S. Const, amend. I. The government may only impinge upon “religious liberty by showing that the challenged conduct is the least restrictive means of achieving a compelling state interest.”
Thomas v. Review Bd. of Indiana Employment Sec.,
In order to determine whether plaintiffs’ free exercise rights were violated, the court must examine the challenged conduct and the relevant facts in light of a two-part test. First, the court must evaluate and balance the individual interest against the state interest at issue. The second prong of the test requires the court to review the government’s conduct to ensure that the least restrictive means available were employed to achieve the legitimate interest of the government. This ensures that the government interest is narrowly tailored to the government conduct.
Shelton v. Tucker,
1. Compelling State Interest
Plaintiffs assert the government cannot demonstrate a compelling government interest which permitted the intrusion into the church services. Plaintiffs argue under
Sherbert,
the government cannot establish a “grave abuse” which indicates that a paramount interest exists.
Sherbert v. Verner,
Therefore, the government had a compelling state interest, based on boarder security and national sovereignty to conduct an investigation into the alleged unlawful activities of the Sanctuary Movement.
2. Least Restrictive Means
Even though the court has concluded the state interest in national sovereignty and the prohibition against illegal aliens entering this country is substantial, “that purpose cannot be pursued by means that broadly stifle fundamental personal liberties when the end can be more narrowly achieved. The breadth of legislative abridgement must be viewed in the light of less drastic means for achieving the same basic purpose.”
Shelton v. Tucker,
In Shelton, the Supreme Court struck down an Arkansas statute requiring teachers to list any associational ties and financial support of organizations or groups to which the applicant belonged. The Court recognized the state had an interest in investigating and ensuring teacher competence, but the statute went far beyond its legitimate purpose because the information was not kept confidential, and many of the associational ties required to be listed had no bearing on professional or occupational competence. Although the state had a compelling interest in its educational system and the employees of that system, it did not devise a legislative scheme narrow enough to achieve those ends without overburdening constitutional rights.
In
Callahan,
the court reversed a grant of summary judgment for the government in an action in which the plaintiff argued that requiring social security numbers pri- or to receiving welfare benefits violated religious beliefs. The court stated the social security number regulations promoted a compelling state interest, but on the facts, the court could not conclude that requiring compliance with the social security numbering system was the least restrictive means of achieving the desired administrative result.
See also Gordon v. State of Idaho,
In
City of Watseka v. Illinois Public Action Council,
*1515 Plaintiffs argue the least restrictive means available to the government was not the undercover infiltration of churches where informants surreptitiously tape-recorded religious services. Plaintiffs suggest the government could have “tailed” particular suspects, used trained law enforcement personnel to conduct witness interviews, or issued grand jury subpoenas to conduct investigation of the Sanctuary Movement.
Defendants strenuously object to plaintiffs characterization of the least restrictive means. The government argues plaintiffs overlook the nature of the investigatory activity and its purposes, i.e., to identify criminal activity and its participants, and to gain sufficient information to secure criminal convictions. The government further argues the methods which plaintiffs would have the government employ would hold the government’s criminal surveillance operations hostage if potential subjects in the criminal investigation chose religious or political meetings as a venue to engage in illegal activity.
8
In essence, the government argues it can not effectively carry out its prosecutorial functions in such situations by tailing suspects, questioning witnesses, and using grand jury subpoenas. The
Aguilar
court noted “[a] search warrant requirement for undercover government agents to investigate an organization concededly engaging in protected first amendment activities indeed would prohibit law enforcement officials from using an indispensable method of criminal investigation appropriate in any other circumstances.”
Aguilar,
The government maintains techniques to investigate suspected criminal activity are simply not the methods suggested by plaintiffs. The government cannot effectively gather the quality or quantity of evidence necessary, or validate evidence received by such tactics.
Applied to the Watseka test, the government has demonstrated a significant and intimate relationship between the conduct in which it engaged and the government interest sought to be achieved.
The government, however, does not have unfettered discretion to conduct investigations and law enforcement activities. The first amendment limits the government’s ability and authority to engage in these activities when groups are engaged in protected first amendment activities. There are “two limitations on the government’s use of undercover informers to infiltrate an organization engaging in protected first amendment activities. First, the government’s investigation must be conducted in good faith; i.e., not for the purpose of abridging first amendment freedoms.”
Aguilar,
In view of the forgoing,
IT IS ORDERED granting in part and denying in part plaintiff Churches’ Motion for Partial Summary Judgment by declaring the rights of the parties involved as follows:
*1516 Plaintiffs, in the free exercise of their constitutionally protected religious activities, are protected against governmental intrusion in the absence of a good faith purpose for the subject investigation. The government is constitutionally precluded from unbridled and inappropriate covert activity which has as its purpose or objective the abridgment of the first amendment freedoms of those involved. Additionally, the participants involved in such investigation must adhere scrupulously to the scope and extent of the invitation to participate that may have been extended or offered to them.
This declaration of first amendment principles does not embrace a requirement for prior review or approval of any such activity on behalf of the investigating agency or governmental office. A warrant is unnecessary in situations where an undercover government agent is invited to participate in suspected criminal activities, although such activities may occur while an organization is “concededly engaging in protected first amendment activities” as such a requirement would “prohibit law enforcement officials from using an indispensable method of criminal investigation appropriate in any other circumstances.”
Aguilar,
Notes
. The Sanctuary Movement is a loose association of religious activists, both clergy and lay people, aiding refugees from Central and South America by bringing them into this country.
. The government stipulated that these types of activities could re-occur. Although the November 14, 1989, stipulation can not create jurisdiction as a matter of law, the parties can create a *1511 factual setting which states the events alleged in the complaint could result again and which compels this court to conclude the case is not moot.
. Notwithstanding the distinctions set forth above, it should be noted that “the practical effect of [injunctive and declaratory] relief will be virtually identical.”
Doran v. Salem Inn, Inc.,
. See
United States v. Citizens State Bank
.
See also, Forster v. County of Santa Barbara,
. Plaintiffs’ argue
Aguilar
(the criminal case which exposed the existence of the tape recordings) is not controlling on the court in this instance because: 1)
Aguilar
was a criminal case and a motion to suppress evidence does not preclude the filing of a subsequent civil suit,
Church of Scientology of California v. Linberg,
*1514 Plaintiffs’ reliance on Church of Scientology is tenuous for this proposition. The Church of Scientology case held only that an adverse decision in a pre-indictment motion to return church property and a denial of a motion to suppress, did not have collateral estoppel effect in the bringing of a subsequent civil action. Id. at 954, 960. The issue here is not one of inability to file a subsequent suit because issues of fact or law were actually litigated and determined by final judgment, but the precedential value and controlling authority of a previous court decision. The Ninth Circuit opinion is on point, and the standard of conduct and the interests under the first and fourth amendments are the same for both Aguilar and the present case. The distinction to be drawn between the civil and criminal contexts is the relief sought, which for purposes of determining the compelling state interest, is not relevant here.
. The Ninth Circuit adopted the
Watseka
approach in
Project 80’s, Inc. v. City of Pocatello,
. Plaintiffs offer unsatisfactory alternatives to the investigatory measures, asking this court to effectively rule that otherwise prohibited conduct is free from governmental regulation if it is accompanied by religious conviction. Yet "[t]he sounder approach, and the approach in accordance with the vast majority of our precedents,”
Employment Div. Dept. Of Human Res. v. Smith,
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