MEMORANDUM
Plaintiff Aaron Ross (“Plaintiff’ or “Ross”) has brought this action against Baltimore City Police Officer Wayne Early (“Officer Early”), as well as the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore (“the City”); Baltimore City Police Department (“BPD”); George Nilson, City Solicitor; Elena DiPietro, Chief Solicitor for the City; Linda Barclay, former Chief Solicitor for the City; and Frederick H. Bealefeld, III, Commissioner of BPD (collectively, excluding Officer Early, “the City Defendants”). Plaintiff alleges, among other things, violations of his federal constitutional rights to assembly and free speech and to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures. Pending before the court is Defendants’ Joint Motion for Summary Judgment and Plaintiffs Counter-motion for Summary Judgment. 1 I held a hearing on these Motions on October 1, 2010. I will now deny all Motions.
I.
In March of each year, since at least 2003, the City has leased First Mariner *316 Arena (“the Arena”) to Feld Entertainment for performances of the Ringling Brothers Barnum and Bailey Circus (“the Circus”). These performances attract large crowds. Between seven thousand and ten thousand patrons attend weekday shows, which begin at 7:30 p.m. (Joint Mot. Summ. J. (“Joint Mot.”), Ex. 1 Affidavit of Linda C. Barclay (“Barclay Aff.”) f 18; Joint Mot., Ex. 4 Mayor and City Council of Baltimore’s Answers to Interrogatories (“City’s Answers to Interrogs.”), no. 3.) Many patrons begin queuing on the sidewalk around the Arena at 6:00 p.m. in anticipation of the doors opening at 6:30 p.m. (Barclay Aff. ¶ 20; Joint Mot., Ex. 3 Deposition of Linda C. Barclay, Esquire (“Defs.’ Barclay Dep.”) 62:9-15.) Due to the location of the Arena, this area also experiences heavy pedestrian and automotive traffic before each performance as a result of the afternoon rush hour. One particular source of congestion is the approximately fifty Mass Transit Administration (MTA) buses that stop outside the Arena between 6:30 and 7:30 p.m. on weekdays. (Barclay Aff. ¶ 10; City’s Answers to Interrogs., no. 3.) Additionally, these performances gave rise to protests and demonstrations by animal welfare activists who oppose the Circus, including Ross. Defendant Wayne Early, an officer with the Baltimore City Police Department, was present at these protests during the relevant years not only as a police officer, but also because a company that he co-owns, E & W Security, contracted with Feld Entertainment to provide security for the Circus. (Pl.’s Opp. Mot. Summ. J. and Counter-mot. Summ. J. (“Pl.’s Opp.”), Ex. 25 Deposition of Wayne Early (“Pl.’s Early Dep.”) 49:13-52:2.)
Prior to 2004, the City did not have a policy or protocol restricting the conduct of these demonstrators, 2 and the City’s adoption of the protocol at issue here was a response to events that occurred during the 2003 protests. (Barclay Aff. ¶ 4.) On March 12, 2003, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) requested a permit to park a truck next to the Arena prior to that night’s Circus performance. (Id. at ¶¶ 6-7.) Defendant Linda Barclay, then Chief of the Legal Counsel Division in the City’s Law Department, determined that the City should issue the permit. After viewing the site, she selected a location for the truck she believed would not interfere with traffic patterns, including the three bus stops in front of the Arena. (Id. at ¶¶ 8-9; Joint Mot., Ex. 5 George Win-field Mar. 11, 2003 Email; Joint Mot., Ex. 6 Linda Barclay Mar. 2003 Email.) Defendant Barclay’s belief was incorrect. The truck’s position obstructed the flow of traffic, and MTA buses began to double park, causing passengers to enter the road to reach their buses. Only after MTA police and Lieutenant Bailey of the BPD Central District reported to the scene were the police able to unravel the morass. (Barclay Aff. ¶¶ 10-13; City’s Answers to Interrogs., no. 3.)
The Defendants assert that the demonstrators on the sidewalk also disrupted pedestrian traffic. The City and its employees, however, have not articulated specific problems caused by these demonstrators beyond their mere presence in the area. (See Defs.’ Barclay Dep. 94:6-10 (reporting only that the demonstrators were “mingling with the large crowds”).) In 2003, City officials discussed, but rejected, possible restrictions on sidewalk demonstrators beyond those imposed by gen *317 erally applicable criminal law. Peter Saar, then acting Chief Legal Counsel for BPD, advised Officer Early on March 13, 2003, that demonstrators could approach and offer literature to people throughout the entire sidewalk surrounding the Arena, and police should intervene only if there was a criminal violation or the demonstrators engaged in behavior akin to aggressive panhandling. (Pl.’s Opp., Ex. 23 Email Chain with Linda Barclay, Ernest Crofoot, and Peter Saar.)
Although the evidence indicates the pri- or year’s problems arose primarily as a result of the placement of the PETA truck and there was no subsequent request for a truck permit, in 2004, Defendant Barclay issued a written protocol regarding the location of sidewalk demonstrators prior to Circus performances (“the Protocol” 3 ). (Joint Mot., Ex. 8 2004 Linda Barclay Protocol Email (“2004 Protocol”).) In 2004, the Protocol imposed the following restrictions:
1. On the east side of the Arena, demonstrators were required to stand on the sidewalk along Hopkins Place. (2004 Protocol; see also Joint Mot., Exs. 9a & 9b Photographs of Hopkins Place Sidewalk in front of Arena’s Main Entrance.)
2. On the north side of the Arena, demonstrators were permitted only within a fourteen foot-wide area of sidewalk adjoining the street (“the designated area”), which was demarcated by a brick border, and demonstrators could not enter the fifteen feet of sidewalk closest to the Arena. (2004 Protocol; see also Joint Mot., Ex. 10 Photograph of West Baltimore Street next to Arena; Pl.’s Opp., Ex. 10 Affidavit of Sean R. Day, at ¶ 2 (providing measurements).) Plaintiffs arrest occurred in this area.
3. On the west side of the Arena, demonstrators were not allowed to protest due to the narrow sidewalk. (2004 Protocol.)
In subsequent years, the City continued to use the Protocol, which Defendant Barclay and her successor, Defendant DiPietro, reissued by email. The only change in the Protocol involved the sidewalk on the west side of the Arena. After 2004, the Protocol permitted demonstrators on the sidewalk at the corner of Howard Street and Baltimore Street and in the middle of the block south of the Howard Street entrance to the Arena. (Barclay Aff. ¶¶ 25-26; Joint Mot., Ex.
Defendant Barclay states that the Protocol applied to “[a]ny demonstrators that *318 were desiring to exercise their First Amendment rights during the period of the circus.” (Pl.’s Opp., Ex. 24 Deposition of Linda C. Barclay, Esquire (“Pl.’s Barclay Dep.”) 135:7-9.) There is, however, conflicting evidence on the record about whether the Protocol was in fact generally applicable. The Defendants submitted an affidavit by Mark Tognocchi, event manager of the Arena, who attests that on the day Plaintiff was arrested in 2009, he instructed religious demonstrators to remain within the designated area, 4 and, on other occasions, he had applied the Protocol to individuals who were not animal welfare demonstrators. (Joint Mot., Ex. 14 Affidavit of Mark Tognocchi (“Tognocchi Aff.”) ¶¶ 4-10.) Plaintiff, however, has submitted affidavits of past demonstrators stating they witnessed the police allow leafleters and vendors to remain outside of the designated area while applying the Protocol to those demonstrating against the Circus. (Pl.’s Opp., Ex. 11 Affidavit of Robin Helfritch (“Helfritch Aff.”) ¶¶ 2-8; Pl.’s Opp., Ex. 26 Affidavit of Erin Marcus (“Marcus Aff.”) ¶¶ 6-9.) In addition, Officer Early stated that he knew that the Protocol applied to Ross “[b]ecause [he was] actually protesting against the treatment of animals” (Pl.’s Early Dep. 28:5-6), and the 2009 email disseminating the Protocol described it as applying to “Circus Protesters.” (2009 Protocol.)
Plaintiff Aaron Ross was arrested in both 2008 and 2009 for failing to obey a lawful order because he refused to comply with Officer Early’s orders that he return to the designated area. On March 12, 2008, Ross was distributing leaflets on the sidewalk on the north side of the Arena outside of the designated area. After Ross refused to comply with Officer Early’s repeated requests to stand behind the brick border in the designated area, Officer Early placed him under arrest. On March 25, 2009, Officer Early again arrested Ross for failure to obey a lawful order when Ross refused to cease distributing leaflets outside of the designated area north of the Arena. (Joint Mot., Ex. 2 Deposition of Wayne Early (“Defs.’ Early Dep.”) 9:18-12:19, 37:18-41:3.) Both arrests were captured on video by other demonstrators. (Pl.’s Opp., Ex. 12 Video of 2008 Arrest (“2008 Arrest Video”); PL’s Opp., Ex. 15 Video of 2009 Arrest (“2009 Arrest Video”).) At the time of the 2009 arrest, Officer Early was wearing a shirt containing a pro-deer hunting slogan, “Will Hunt 4 Bucks.” (Pl.’s Opp., Ex. 13, Affidavit of Aaron Ross (“Ross Aff.”) ¶ 9.) Plaintiff reports that, after this arrest, Officer Early took him to a police station rather than Central Booking, refused to permit him to use the restroom, threatened to have him held for thirty days, and abandoned him at the station. (Id. at ¶¶ 11-13.)
Plaintiff has asserted claims falling into two categories: (1) common law and constitutional torts against Officer Early, 5 and *319 (2) claims pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the City Defendants for violating of Plaintiff s rights under the First and Fourth Amendments. 6
II.
Summary judgment is appropriate under Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure when there is no genuine issue as to any material fact, and the moving party is plainly entitled to judgment in its favor as a matter of law. In
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
the Supreme Court of the United States explained that in considering a motion for summary judgment, “the judge’s function is not himself to weigh the evidence and determine the truth of the matter but to determine whether there is a genuine issue for trial.”
On the present record and on the claims being asserted by Plaintiff, three possible outcomes could occur. First, as discussed in section III, infra, it might be found that the policy adopted by the City is facially unconstitutional. Second, as discussed in section IV, infra, it might be found that the policy adopted by the City is constitutional but that the policy was unconstitutionally applied by the BPD and Officer Early. Third, as discussed in section V, infra, it might be found that the policy adopted by the City is constitutional and was constitutionally applied. Which of these outcomes happens turns on factual determinations that must be made by the jury.
III.
Plaintiff argues the Protocol is facially unconstitutional under the First Amendment, while Defendants contend it withstands constitutional scrutiny as a reasonable time, place, and manner restriction. In evaluating Plaintiffs’ First Amendment claim, the court must first determine whether Plaintiff has engaged in protected speech.
Goulart v. Meadows,
This case involves speech at the core of First Amendment protection. “Leafletting and commenting on matters of public concern are classic forms of speech that lie at the heart of the First Amendment, and speech in public areas is at its most protected on public sidewalks, a
*320
prototypical example of a traditional public forum.”
Schenck v. Pro-Choice Network of W. N.Y.,
I conclude as a matter of law that the Protocol is a content-neutral restriction, serves a significant government interest, and permits sufficient alternative channels for communication. I further conclude, however, that there is a genuine dispute of fact regarding the tailoring of the Protocol.
A. Content Neutrality
The scrutiny that a court must apply to a restriction on speech depends upon whether it is content neutral, content based, or viewpoint based. A content-neutral time, place, and manner restriction will be upheld if it is “narrowly tailored to serve a significant government interest ... and leave[s] open ample alternative channels of communication.”
Perry Educ. Ass’n v. Perry Local Educators’ Ass’n,
“[T]he government’s purpose” is the “threshold consideration” in determining whether a restriction is content neutral or content based.
Madsen v. Women’s Health Ctr., Inc.,
A regulation does not become content or viewpoint based merely because the government, in promulgating it, was motivated to respond to the conduct of one ideological group.
Hill v. Colorado,
Here, the Protocol is content neutral. Although Defendant Barclay was responding to the prior conduct of animal welfare demonstrators at the time she created the Protocol and she intended the Protocol to affect these demonstrators’ conduct, this does not render the law content based. Rather, the focus must be on the government’s purpose in promulgating the Protocol, and the evidence on the record demonstrates that the Protocol’s purpose was to confront the undesirable secondary effects of the protests — namely, traffic and pedestrian congestion. Defendant Barclay’s testimony establishes that she drafted the Protocol in response to the traffic problems that occurred during the 2003 protest and police complaints of pedestrian-flow issues around the Arena. Plaintiff has failed to present any evidence to counter this conclusion. The “Circus Protesters” subject line in emails transmitting the Protocol does not show it is content or viewpoint based. Even if the Protocol applies only to those protesting the Circus, it remains content-neutral rule so long as it was intended to combat only the secondary effects of the protest. 8
*322 B. Significant Government Interest
It is well established that governments have a significant interest in preserving freedom of movement on public streets and sidewalks.
See Heffron,
In light of this precedent, I conclude the City, in creating the Protocol, acted to further a significant government interest.
C. Alternative Channels of Communication
To be reasonable, a time, place, and manner restriction must permit ample alternative channels of communication.
Ward,
Here, although the Protocol forecloses the demonstrators’ ideal means of communication, it provides ample alternative channels of communication. Plaintiff and other animal welfare activists prefer to move among the pedestrians on the sidewalk to distribute literature. Nevertheless, the parameters established by the Protocol do not bar “the more general dissemination” of their message. Plaintiff can convey his views on the Circus by providing literature to those pedestrians who pass through or near the designated area or by holding signs, chanting, and engaging in other protest activities. Unre *323 stricted leafleting does not gain special constitutional protection simply because it is Plaintiffs preferred means of communication.
D. Narrow Tailoring
There remains for consideration the fourth factor set forth in Ward v. Rock Against Racism: whether the Protocol is narrowly tailored to implement the government’s legitimate interest in preventing traffic and pedestrian congestion. For reasons I will next explain, as to this factor, I find that there is a genuine issue of material fact.
In deciding the “narrowly tailored” issue, the Supreme Court has drawn a distinction between ordinances generally imposing time, place, and manner restrictions on protected speech and injunctions whose purpose is to restrict the exercise of the free speech rights of a particular group.
Compare Ward,
I recognize, of course, that the Protocol is not a court issued injunction but a policy adopted by the City Law Department. That fact, however, is not dispositive. Although the Fourth Circuit has not addressed the issue of Madsen’s applicability to restrictions other than injunctions, the Second and Third Circuits have extended the
Madsen
standard to other non-statutory restrictions because these restrictions possess characteristics that the Supreme Court identified as warranting heightened scrutiny for injunctions.
McTernan v. City of York,
In
Madsen,
the Supreme Court identified several characteristics of injunctions that give rise to the need for heightened scrutiny. “First, injunctions do not emanate from deliberative, democratic decisionmaking processes,” but rather “ ‘are remedies imposed for violations (or threatened violations) of a legislative or judicial decree.’ ”
9
McTernan,
Here, the record demonstrates that the Protocol poses many of the risks presented by an injunction. The Protocol was not created through a formal legislative or regulatory decisionmaking process. In fact, the City Defendants, in their motions to dismiss, seized on the informality of the process leading to the promulgation of the Protocol to argue that it should not be treated as a municipal policy under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
(See
City Defs.’ Mot. Dismiss; BPD Defs.’ Mot. Dismiss.) The Protocol appears to have been crafted instead as a response to the disruption that occurred during the 2003 protest. Because it was created to respond to a specific problem — a truck that blocked bus lanes, preventing the uninterrupted flow of traffic — the creation of a more precise policy, addressing only demonstrators’ vehicles, would be possible. Additionally, as with the police directive at issue in
McTernan,
the Protocol “presents] potentially greater opportunities for arbitrary enforcement than injunctions” because it was not a published rule that members of the public could reference in order to conform their behavior to the law.
See McTernan,
All of this said, and imperfect though the Protocol may have been, Plaintiffs facial challenge fails if the Protocol is deemed to be the equivalent of a generally applicable ordinance rather than an injunction. As previously stated, that question turns upon the determination, to be made by the jury, whether the Protocol was targeted only against circus and animal welfare demonstrators.
IV.
In addition to bringing a facial challenge, Plaintiff contends that the Protocol is unconstitutional as applied. The same legal standard analysis applies to facial and as-applied challenges to time, place and manner restrictions.
See Independence News v. City of Charlotte,
A facially constitutional time, place, or manner restriction will be unconstitutional as applied where the restriction is content neutral on its face but has been applied in a viewpoint- or content-specific manner.
Cf. Menotti,
Thus, I will deny summary judgment as to the as-applied challenge so that a fact-finder may determine whether the Protocol, even if constitutional on its face, was discriminatorily enforced.
V.
It follows from what I have said that Plaintiffs summary judgment motion must also be denied. It is for the jury to determine whether the Protocol was facially unconstitutional because it was targeted solely against circus and animal welfare *327 protestors or, if not, whether it was discriminatorily enforced. If the jury’s answers to both of these questions are “no,” all of the Defendants are entitled to judgment in their favor.
MEMORANDUM
This case arises from Plaintiffs arrest, on two occasions, for engaging in demonstrations opposing the circus on the sidewalk outside of the First Mariner Arena (“the Arena”). Plaintiff has challenged a protocol, created by members of the Baltimore Police Department and City Solicitor’s office, which required demonstrators to remain within a designated area around the Arena, as violative of the First Amendment on its face and as applied. On December 8, 2010, I issued an Opinion denying Defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Defendants now move for reconsideration of this decision and for qualified immunity as to Defendants sued in their individual capacities. The Motion for Reconsideration will be denied, but the Motion for Qualified Immunity will be granted except as to Defendant Wayne Early (“Officer Early”).
I.
I described the factual background of this action in detail in my December 8th Opinion, so I will provide only a brief recitation of the relevant facts here. After a 2008 incident in which a truck used by animal-welfare protesters caused a vehicular traffic problem endangering drivers and pedestrians, a member of the City Solicitor’s office, at the request of BPD officers, drafted a protocol restricting demonstrators to certain areas of the sidewalk surrounding the Arena. Although there was no subsequent request to use a truck during the demonstrations and the protocol did not address vehicles, the protocol was disseminated by the City Solicitor’s Office and implemented during all circus performances at the Arena in subsequent years. I concluded in my prior Opinion that there was a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the protocol was generally applicable — applying equally to all persons engaged in demonstrations during the relevant times — or was applicable only to circus or animal-welfare demonstrators. Defendants have presented no new evidence that would lead me to depart from this conclusion. 1
Defendants sought summary judgment on the ground that the protocol constituted a reasonable time, place, and manner restriction, and therefore was not facially unconstitutional. Although I found that the protocol was content-neutral, served a significant government interest, and provided sufficient alternative avenues of communication, I declined to grant summary judgment because I could not determine whether the protocol was narrowly tailored.
See Ward v. Rock Against Racism,
II.
Defendants first seek reconsideration of my decision that, in the event the protocol is found not to be generally applicable, the heightened standard for tailoring should apply. I decline to do so. Although — as I acknowledged in my prior Opinion — the Fourth Circuit has not ruled that the heightened standard should be applied restrictions other than injunctions, the Third and Second Circuit decisions provide persuasive authority. Based on the reasoning in these cases, I believe that heightened scrutiny should apply where there is a content-neutral but not generally applicable restriction
2
that has not been promulgated through formal regulatory or legislative processes.
See McTernan v. City of York,
The cases cited by the Defendants do not convince me that the Fourth Circuit has rejected this approach. With respect to claims that a police directive violated the First Amendment,
Swagler v. Neighoff,
No. 09-1737,
Defendants may seek appellate review of my decision, and the Fourth Circuit may ultimately reach a different conclusion than that I have reached here. 4 However, the cases cited by Defendants — as well as others I have reviewed — do not demonstrate that the extension of Madsen’s heightened standard beyond injunctions is improper under current Fourth Circuit precedent, and I have found the decisions of the Second and Third Circuits to be well reasoned.
III.
Defendants also argue that the protocol burdens no more speech than necessary, satisfying the heightened standard for tailoring, and they urge me to reconsider my conclusion that the protocol is unconstitutional if this standard applies. Defendants are correct that injunctions may address imminent violations of the law, as well as problems that have occurred in the past.
See Madsen,
IV.
Defendants assert that they are entitled to qualified immunity as to the claims against them in their individual capacities. I have already rejected Officer Early’s motion for qualified immunity, and Defendants present no argument as to why I should reconsider this determination. Accordingly, the Motion is denied as to Officer Early. I find, however, that the remaining defendants are entitled to immunity from suit in their individual capacities.
Qualified immunity shields government officials performing discretionary functions from civil damages so long as “their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
A right is clearly established if “it would be clear to a reasonable officer that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he confronted.”
Saucier v. Katz,
For the foregoing reasons, Defendants’ Motion for Reconsideration will be denied and their Motion for Qualified Immunity will be granted as to Defendants Nilson, DiPietro, Barclay, and Bealefeld.
ORDER
For the reasons stated in the accompanying Memorandum, it is, this 25th day of February 2011
ORDERED that
*331 1. Defendants’ Motion for Qualified Immunity and for Reconsideration (no. 48) is granted in part and denied in part;
2. Judgment is entered in favor of Defendants and against Plaintiff as to Counts IV and X of the Second Amended Complaint.
Notes
. Officer Early has also filed a motion for summary judgment as to state law claims asserted against him by Plaintiff. The issues raised by that motion are different from the federal constitutional issue I directed the parties brief. Therefore Early’s Motion for Summary Judgment will be denied without prejudice to file renewed.
. For brevity, I use the term "demonstrators” to refer to both those engaged in protest activities, such as chanting and picketing, and those engaged in leafleting, but I note that these are distinct expressive activities.
. In their motions to dismiss, the City Defendants contended this protocol constituted only “legal advice,” rather than municipal policy, so they could not be held liable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. (See Defs. Mayor and City Council of Baltimore, George Nilson, Linda Barclay, and Elena DiPietro's Mot. Dismiss (“City Defs.’ Mot. Dismiss”); Defs. Baltimore Police Department and Police Commissioner Frederick Bealefeld's Consolidated Mot. Dismiss ("BPD Defs.’ Mot. Dismiss”).) The court denied the motions without prejudice. Defendants incorporate these arguments by reference. They have not presented facts that would lead me to conclude they were only providing legal advice, and their argument that the Protocol did not constitute municipal policy remains unconvincing. In fact, Defendant Barclay repeatedly referred to the protocol as a "policy” during her deposition. (See, e.g., Pl.'s Opp., Ex. 24 Deposition of Linda C. Barclay, Esquire 20:21, 23:12, 24:14, 131:10— 20.) Accordingly, I will not grant summary judgment for the City Defendants on these grounds.
. Video of Plaintiff’s arrest captures this event and sheds light on its context.
See Scott v. Harris,
. The state law claims against Officer Early include: (1) false arrest for the 2008 arrest (Count I); (2) violation of Md. Const., Declaration of Rights, Art. 26 for the 2008 arrest (Count II); (3) false arrest for the 2009 arrest (Count VI); (4) false imprisonment for the *319 detention following the 2009 arrest (Count VII); and (5) violation of Md. Const., Declaration of Rights, Art. 26 for the 2009 arrest (Count VIII). As indicated in footnote 1, I am denying a motion for summary judgment filed by Officer Early as to these claims without prejudice to the file the motion by renewal.
. These include a claim against Defendants Bealefeld, Nilson, and Barclay for the 2008 arrest (Count IV) and against these Defendants, as well as Defendant DiPietro, for the 2009 arrest (Count X). The City and BPD are sued for the 2008 arrest (Count V) and the 2008 arrest (Count XI).
. In order for a restriction that applies only to speech containing a certain type of content to be considered content neutral, the targeted secondary effects must be specific to speech with that content. In
City of Cincinnati v. Discovery Network, Inc.,
. Any contention by Plaintiff that Officer Early's financial relationship with the Circus motivated him to seek the Protocol to suppress the demonstrators’ message is pure conjecture. The only evidence of animus held by Defendant Barclay towards animal welfare activists is an email in which she recalls "that stupid truck,” referencing the PETA truck from the 2003 protest. (2007 Barclay Email Chain.) Even this, when viewed in context, does not render the Protocol content based. The truck caused severe traffic and safety problems because it prevented buses from stopping at their typical stops, and Defendant Barclay believed that the police held her responsible for these problems. (Barclay Aff. ¶ 14.) Mrs. Barclay, therefore, was reacting to the secondary effects of the protest, specifically traffic congestion, rather than the content of the speech. The only evidence of disagreement with content of the animal welfare demonstrators' speech is the shirt that Officer Early wore during Plaintiffs 2009 ar *322 rest, which expressed the officer’s appreciation of deer hunting. The fact that a single officer held a view contrary to the demonstrators does not prove that the City was motivated by disagreement with animal welfare ideology in creating the Protocol.
. Injunctions are not promulgated through democratic processes, but this is not to say that courts are not deliberative when determining whether an injunction should issue. In fact, the procedures imposed by the judicial system may result in greater consideration of an injunction’s impact on First Amendment rights than may occur through legislative processes. Instead, the primary source of concern is that an injunction is targeted at a specific group, so it should be " 'no more burdensome ... than necessary.’ "
Madsen,
. The Defendants interpret Plaintiff’s as-applied challenge as a challenge to the government’s interest in pedestrian safety and convenience because Ross claims he was not personally impeding pedestrians at the time of his arrest. The Defendants therefore assert that the government need not establish that the particular plaintiff threatened public safety or previously engaged in violence in order to implement a policy to protect public safety. This is undoubtedly correct.
See Greene,
. Officer Early contends that he is entitled to qualified immunity as to the federal constitutional claims asserted against him. Qualified immunity shields government officials performing discretionary functions from liability so long as "their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known."
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Here, it is well established that a content-neutral policy cannot be discriminatorily enforced.
See, e.g., Cox,
. Defendants contend that I must decide as a matter of law whether the protocol was generally applicable. Whether a time, place, or manner restriction is reasonable is a question of law to be decided by the court, but this may require that a factfinder first decide relevant questions of fact. The scope of the protocol presents such a factual issue.
. Defendants contend that the court cannot and should not inquire into the motives of law and policymakers because an illicit motive cannot render unconstitutional an otherwise constitutional law. I need not consider whether an inquiry into motive is appropriate, however, because whether or not members of the BPD or City Solicitor’s office acted with animus does not affect the proper standard for tailoring. Nor is the disparate impact of the protocol relevant because, as I stated in the original opinion, a reasonable time, place, and manner restriction is not rendered facially unconstitutional because it disproportionately affects one ideological group. The proper inquiry is simply whether the protocol, as written, applied to all persons engaged in leafleting and other demonstration-related conduct or applied only to circus and animal-welfare demonstrators.
. Defendants argue that application of the heightened standard to the protocol would violate separation of powers principles because only the judiciary may issue injunctions, suggesting that by applying this standard I am authorizing executive officials to issue injunctions. My opinion, however, does not hold that the protocol is actually an injunction. Rather, I find that, to the extent a restriction on speech possesses characteristics similar to an injunction, the heightened standard articulated in Madsen should apply.
. Conceivably, the Fourth Circuit might rule that even if I erred in holding that a heightened scrutiny test should be applied in defining the constitutionality of the protocol in the event that the protocol is found to have been directed to circus demonstrators, it still might rule in favor of Plaintiff. I concluded in my prior Opinion that where, as here, only a particular group had caused problems in the past, a restriction affecting only this group may be content neutral because it would be justified on a basis other than the content of that group’s speech.
See Ross v. Early,
