MEMORANDUM OPINION
This case involves an attack on a recently enacted curfew law by Defendant City of Charlottesville, Virginia; the court has been asked to issue preliminary injunctive relief against the curfew law pursuant to Fed. R.Civ. P. 65(a). After holding a hearing on the matter and considering the parties’ oral arguments, memoranda, and evidentiary exhibits, the court concludes that it must presently decline to enjoin the law’s operation.
In dealing with any preliminary injunction request, the court is acutely aware of the potential for mischief in acting on such a request. The guiding principles are perhaps best expressed by a case from the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals where Judge Wilkinson stated: “[Gjranting a preliminary injunction requires that a district court, acting on an incomplete record, order a party to act, or refrain from acting, in a certain way. ‘[T]he danger of a mistake’ in this setting ‘is substantial.’”
Hughes Network Systems v. InterDigital Communications Carp.,
‘Where serious issues are before the court, it is a sound idea to maintain the
status quo ante
litem....”
Feller v. Brock,
It is important to note with clarity that the observations and conclusions stated herein are based on an incomplete record and cannot represent any final decision on any one of the claims. The court will expatiate on the law involved in these various issues, but does so with the clear recognition that a full evidentiary basis may change entirely the view of the court as to any one of these issues. It is to be hoped that some or all of the observations in this opinion will give guidance to counsel in developing that full evidentiary record. Again, the court cautions that the observations concerning plaintiffs’ claims are made on the basis of that incomplete record about which Judge Wilkinson warned.
I. THE CURFEW LAW
Plaintiffs, represented by the American Civil Liberties Union (“ACLU”), are juveniles and their parents 1 who request preliminary injunctive relief from Section 17-7 of Chapter 17 of the Charlottesville City Code, which enacts the curfew law (effective March 1,1997). The purpose of the law is to
(I) promote the general welfare and protect the general public through the reduction of juvenile violence and сrime within the City; (ii) promote the safety and well- *538 being of the City’s youngest citizens, ... whose inexperience renders them particularly vulnerable to becoming participants in unlawful activities, particularly unlawful drug activities, and to being victimized by older perpetrators of crime; and (in) foster and strengthen parental responsibility for children.
See Introduction to § 17-7.
The law, applicable to children under the age of seventeen, sets a curfew of 12:01 a.m. to 5:00 a.m. on Mondays through Fridays and 1:00 a.m. to 5:00 a.m. on Saturdays and Sundays. During these hours, children are not permitted “to remain in or upon any Public Place within the City, to remain in any motor vehicle operating or parked therein or thereon, or to remain in or upon the premises of any Establishment within the City ...” Id. § 17-7(b). Parents are prohibited from aiding violations of the law. Id. § 17-7(c). Eight exceptions are provided. Minors are not bound by the curfew when: (1) they are accompanied by parents; (2) they are out because of an emergency; (3) they are engaged in employment activity, leaving from such activity, or going to such activity; (4) they are directly outside of their residences where their parents reside; (5) they are attending activities supervised by an adult and sponsored by a school, religious orgаnization, civic organization, public agency, or a similar organization; (6) they are on an errand on behalf of their parents and have an appropriate authorizing note; (7) they are engaging-in interstate travel; or (8) they are exercising rights under the First Amendment, such as free exercise of religion, speech, or assembly. Id. § 17-7(b)(l)-(8). A minor who violates the curfew law but who has never before received a warning will receive only a warning from an enforcing police officer. Id. § 17-7(g)(l)(A)(l). However, a minor who has previously received a warning will be charged with violating the curfew law and will be issued a summons to appear in court for the violation: Id. § 17-7(g)(l)(A)(2). The law directs the arresting officer to release the child into the custody of a parent as soon as is practicable or to place the child into a temporary care facility, so that a parent can retrieve the child. Id. § 17-7(g)(1)(B).
II. SUMMARY OF PLAINTIFFS’ ARGUMENTS AGAINST THE CURFEW LAW
Plaintiffs argue that the curfew law infringes upon various rights guaranteed them under the United States Constitution, such as freedom of movement and freedom from undue government interference in child-rearing, both of which derive from the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment; 2 rights guaranteed under the First Amendment; 3 the Fourth Amendment; 4 and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourtеenth Amendment. 5 Further, plaintiffs contend the curfew law is void for vagueness because its defenses (or exceptions) give insufficient guidance to plaintiffs and enforcement officials as to which activities are exempt from the curfew law.
The following are activities of which the juvenile plaintiffs claim they will be deprived during curfew hours: (1) going to City Council meetings; (2) attending concerts and movies (such as Star Wars and The English Patient); (3) socializing with friends at coffee houses and dance parties (“raves”); (4) participating in band or theater activities; (5) *539 eating; and (6) swimming and ice skating. Although plaintiffs speculate that other activities, such as late-night church and Alcoholics Anonymous meetings are threatened by the curfew law, none of the plaintiffs claim to be late-night church goers or recovering alcoholics.
III. STANDARD GOVERNING PRELIMINARY INJUNCTIONS
The following articulation of the law on preliminary injunctions is taken, virtually verbatim, from this court’s opinion in
Betts v. Rector & Visitors of the University of Virginia,
A. LIKELIHOOD OF SUCCESS ON THE MERITS
Because the merits of plaintiffs’ case will, in large part, determine where the remaining Blackwelder factors lie, the court will first address the likelihood that plaintiffs will succeed on their claims.
Most of the challenges to curfew laws have taken place at the state level. However, two recent important decisions discussing the constitutionality of curfew laws come from federal courts-one from the district court in the District of Columbia,
Hutchins v. District of Columbia,
1. STANDARD OF REVIEW FOR CONSTITUTIONAL CHALLENGE
Most laws passed by Congress are reviewed under the “rational basis” test, also known as the “roll-over-and-play-dead” test, because so long as the challenged legislation “bear[s] some rational relationship to legitimate state purposes,” and there is some reasonable bаsis for the classification, courts will uphold the legislation.
San Antonio Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Rodriguez,
To the extent that the constitutional rights of children — and not adults — are implicated by a given law, the above analysis does not necessarily govern. This is because constitutional protections accorded children and adults have never been co-extensive.
See Vernonia Sch. Dist. 47J v. Acton,
would mean that a state could impose no greater limitation upon child labor than adult labor. Or, if an adult were free to enter dance halls, saloons, and disreputable places generally, in order to discharge his conceived religious duty to admonish or dissuade persons from frequenting such places, so would be a child with similar convictions or objectives, if not alone then in the parent’s company, against the state’s command.
Id.
Although Supreme Court precedent makes clear that children and adults may be treated differently under the Constitution, the doctrinal implications of this difference remain unsettled.
See Hutchins,
After examining these various methods, the court concludes that the most sensible approach, and one most closely aligned with the Supreme Court’s reasoning, is simply to accord the state more regulatory latitude in governing children in certain circumstances. When the
Bellotti
factors (the minor’s vulnerability, inexperience in decisionmaking, or need for parental guidance) cut in favor of increased state oversight, the state’s burden of proof should be somewhere below that required by strict scrutiny review (i.e., a showing that the challenged law is narrowly tailored to a compelling state interest). Lowering the standard of review — rather than denying the existence of a bare right — conforms to the Supreme Court’s general equal protection analysis as well as the Court’s statements regarding state regulation of minors. The Supreme Court generally seems to presume that the guarantees of the Bill of Rights may be invoked by all people; this presumption accords with the constitutional text, which does not restrict its protections to isolated groups of individuals. Yet the presumption of equal treatment under the Constitution is somewhat diluted by the sliding scale of scrutiny employed by the Supreme Court, depending on the characteristics of the individual seeking constitutional protection. For instance, race-based classifications face the toughest battle (strict scrutiny); distinctions based on gender are examined somewhat less closely (intermediate scrutiny); and laws that benefit one age group over another receive little serious attention.
See
Laurence H. Tribe, American Constitutional Law §§ 16-1 to 16-25 (2d ed.1988). The Supreme Court has given some indication that laws impinging on constitutional rights of minors should be analyzed in a similar fashion. In
Bellotti,
the Court remarked that “although children are protected by the same constitutional guarantees ... the State is entitled to adjust its legal system to account for children’s vulnerability.”
a. THE BELLOTTI FACTORS APPLY HERE
Plaintiffs, supported by the district court in the District of Columbia, which applied strict scrutiny review,
see Hutchins,
In addition to the first Bellotti factor, the second Bellotti factor-children’s inability to make critical decisions in an informed matter-also justifies imposition of a lower burden of proof upon the government. The court cannot accept plaintiffs’ argument that leaving their homes after curfew hours does not qualify as a critical decision within the meaning of Bellotti. Of course, on an isolated night, a decision to go out after curfew hours may not be a critical decision, but rather one of minimal importance; but that decision, made night after night, might have an adverse effect on a child’s life. Without the curfew, children may well choose to roam the City streets nightly, thus endangering their lives (or the lives of others), exposing themselves to insidious blandishments, and losing sleep to the detriment of their scholarly studies. Given these possible consequences, the court believes the decision to leave one’s doorstep, seemingly superficial, may actually be crucially important.
Finally, the importance of the parental role in child-rearing, the third
Bellotti
factor provides yet another reason for the court to review the curfew law with more leniency. Plaintiffs view the curfew as an unwelcome intrusion into the relationship between parent and child and, consequently, urge that, if anything, the third
Bellotti
factor cuts against employing anything but strict scrutiny review. Unfortunately, the court believes that plaintiffs take too rosy a view of the parent-child relationship in America today. The court agrees with Charlottesville’s legislative body (which represents the City’s citizens) that the curfew supplies parents with a tool to reinforce their authority.
See Maricopa County,
2. FREEDOM OF MOVEMENT
Freedom of movement, “basic in our scheme of values,”
Kent v. Dulles,
a. COMPELLING INTEREST
Protecting the safety and well-being of children and reducing juvenile crime are unquestionably compelling state interests.
7
See e.g., Qutb,
b. NARROW TAILORING
The court does not anticipate that the necessary connection between these compelling state interests and the means chosen by the curfew law will be revealed as too attenuated; based on the information before it, the curfew law employs the least restrictive means available.
The Fifth Circuit in
Qutb
concluded that the “distinction based upon age furthers the[ ] objectives [of juvenile crime reduction and juvenile victimization].”
Juvenile crime increases proportionally with age between ten years old and sixteen years old ... In 1989, Dallas recorded 5,160 juvenile arrests, while in 1990 there were 5,425 juvenile arrests. In 1990 there were forty murders, ninety-one sex offenses, 233 robberies, and 230 aggravated assaults committed by juveniles. From January 1991 through April 1991, juvenilеs were arrested for twenty-one murders, thirty sex offenses, 128 robberies, 107 aggravated assaults, and 1,042 crimes against property. [Murders and rapes are most likely to occur at night in public places, and one-third of robberies occur on streets and highways.]
Id.
Responding to the plaintiffs complaints that these statistics were insufficient for their failure to document a nocturnal juvenile crime problem or to show the curfew’s effectiveness, the Fifth Circuit stated as follows.
We will not ... insist upon detailed studies of the precise severity, nature, and characteristics of the juvenile crime problem in analyzing whether the [curfew law] meets constitutional muster when it is conceded that the juvenile crime problem in Dallas constitutes a compelling state interest. In this same vein, the plaintiff[’]s arguments that the city has not produced proof of the effectiveness of the ordinance in addressing the juvenile crime problem are unavail *544 ing; indeed, such ‘proof can hardly amount to more than mere speculation. Federal courts have always been reluctant to question the potential effectiveness of legislative remedies designed to address societal problems. As [has been] held in other contexts, [courts] ‘do not demand of legislatures scientifically certain criteria of legislation.’
Id.
at 493 n. 7 (quoting
Ginsberg,
In addition to determining that the requisite nexus between purpose and classification had been established, Qutb concluded that the state had employed the least restrictive methods to achieve its goal, largely because of the exceptions carved out of the law (identical to those provided by the curfew law challenged here).
i. EVIDENTIARY NEXUS
The only difference between our case and Qutb lies in the data; obviously, the statistics considered by the legislature in Dallas are not identical to the materials reviewed by the City of Charlottesville government. Charlottesville’s legislative body, before enacting the Curfew Law, held several public hearings and heard arguments and opinions from parents, children, police officers, prosecutors, and other citizens. The City’s Police Chief voiced approval for a curfew, because, based on his experience, he believed the curfew would make the City safer. The Chiefs fellow officers concurred. Other Charlottesville residents chimed in, describing late-night disturbances by unruly youth. A principal and school counselor attested that unauthorized nightly wanderings diminished the capacity of children’s ability to learn. 8 Finally, a college professor and consultant who is an expert on curfews offered nationwide statistics to back up the City.
Dr. William J. Ruefle provided the following information. Juvenile arrests for serious violent crime increased by 30% between 1986 and 1995; juvenile arrests for property crimes increased by 11%; and juvenile arrests for all other crimes increased by 111%. In 1995, 2.75 million juveniles were arrested. Experts expect such arrests to increase in the future, based on current demographic trends. These national trends hold true for Virginia, where juveniles commit serious violent crimes at a higher rate than adults. Juveniles are also at great risk of being crime victims. Curfews have become a popular and commonly-used tool to battle against such grim statistics by restraining children and placing responsibility on parents; the curfew law in Charlottesville appears to be among the most modest and lenient of the myriad curfew laws implemented nationwide. See Affidavit of Dr. William J. Ruefle, Exhibit C-8 of Defendant’s Opposition Brief During the hearing held before the court, Dr. Ruefle confirmed that the trends in Charlottesville mirror the nationwide trends; according to Dr. Ruefle, Charlottesville’s juvenile crime rate, as well as that in Virginia and in the nation, is on the rise.
Charlottesvillе’s Commonwealth Attorney, Mr. Chapman, reinforced Dr. Ruefle’s testimony, explaining that his own experience had taught him that juvenile crime was on the rise in Charlottesville. He provided statistics of juvenile delinquency eases (dating from 1991 to 1996) to back up his assertions. Further, Mr. Chapman testified that even if many crimes take place during the day, the most serious crimes (for instance, ones involving violence and drugs) occur during night time hours.
The information provided by the City thus far adequately demonstrates a nexus between the City’s goal-juvenile protection and juvenile crime reduction — and the classification — children under the age of seventeen. In arguing to the contrary, plaintiffs wish to impose improperly stringent standards upon the City. For instance, plaintiffs urge that the City’s interests (protection of juveniles and juvenile crime reduction) will not be advanced by the curfew law because there is no evidence that most crimes (by juveniles) are committed at night. But, as discussed *545 above, Mr. Chapman testified that most serious crimes occur at night. Moreover, any person who has lived in the United States and has occasionally read newspapers understands the dangers of night life in all too many of American cities.
In the same vein, as plaintiffs must realize, neither the court nor the City could accept plaintiffs’ suggestion that a curfew law with the requisite nexus would apply only to males, would include all ages up to thirty, and would apply between the hours of 7:00 p.m. to 7:00 a.m.
See
Plaintiffs’ Memorandum at 21 n. 4. Not only do plaintiffs concede — in the same breath that they suggest this alternative-that their version of the “ideal” curfew law would be unconstitutional, but they also take the extreme position that the
more
intrusive law which would include
adults
would be sufficiently tailored to the goal of preventing harm to and by
juveniles.
Although less extreme, plaintiffs criticism of the law for excluding seventeen year olds— who commit a substantial portion of juvenile offenses-must be rejected. The City made a legislative judgment that the costs of imposing a curfew on seventeen year olds would outweigh any consequent benefits of including them within the curfew.
Cf. Bykofsky,
Relatedly, plaintiffs’ attack upon the statistical information and testimonial evidence offered by the City is unlikely to be fatal to the curfew law. Plaintiffs complain that seventeen year olds are not governed by the curfew law even though they are included in the statistical grouping relied upon by the City. At the hearing, Mr. Chapman indicated that the inclusion of seventeen year olds did not distort the statistics. Next, plaintiffs point out that the statistics relied upon are national, and not specific to the City of Charlottesville. Again, testimony by Dr. Ruefle and Mr. Chapman dilutes the strength of this argument, as both testified that the national statistics accurately reflect Charlottesville’s crime problem. Finally, plaintiffs argue that the City’s statistics documenting the number of nightly arrests are unhelpful; the number of nightly arrests, so the argument runs, says little of how many crimes are committed at night, because crimes and arrests are not synonymous. This argument is unpersuasive; there may not necessarily be a perfect overlap between crimes and arrests, but one can safely assume that one follows the other in the usual case. Furthermore plaintiffs ignore the testimonial evidence which belies any claim that nightly crime is not a major problem in Charlottesville; there is no constitutional requirement that statistics be adduced to demonstrate a dose nexus between ends and means, and the City’s citizens testimony cannot be excluded from the calculus.
More fundamentally, the Supreme Court has rejected the notion that legislatures must produce scientifically exact support for their factual conclusions, and the Fifth Circuit in
Qutb
squarely held that even strict scrutiny analysis does not demand such precision.
See Qutb,
At this stage the court feels it is appropriate to comment upon the analysis in
Hutch-ins.
As mentioned above, the district court in
Hutchins
decided that the
Bellow
factors did not dictate different treatment of children and adults in the context of a curfew law and applied strict scrutiny review to the law. The district court purported to distinguish its ease from
Qutb
(which also applied strict scrutiny review) because of the statistics adduced by the District of Columbia. With all due respect, the court has trouble seeing any dispositive distinction between the statistics upon which Dallas relied and those upon which the District of Columbia. Not surprisingly, the statistics submitted by the
*546
District of Columbia were imperfect: for instance, they did not indicate which percentage of crimes were committed during night hours, and they included eighteen year olds in their calculations. But such deficiencies, in this court’s view, are not of constitutional significance, particularly when the District of Columbia offered the district court a wide array of data from various different sources to support a sadly uncontrovertible fact: the crime rate by juveniles in the District of Columbia is staggering by any definition.
Cf. Renton v. Playtime Theatres, Inc.,
ii. LEAST RESTRICTIVE MEANS
Largely for the same reasons as those given in Qutb, the court holds that the least restrictive means were likely used to advance the City’s goal. First, the curfew law affects conduct during only four or five hours each night. Second, the curfew law attempts, as best it can without gutting the law, to accommodate the needs of its youth and their parents. 9 Employment, religious, school, civic, and like activities are essentially exempted. Emergencies and even late-night errands are permitted. Interstate travel and the First Amendment, by the terms of the curfew law, are beyond the scope of the law. And, if a parent wishes — for any reason at all — to venture outside with his or her child after 12:01 a.m. or 1:00 a.m. (as the case may be), the parent may do so; if the child desires a breath of fresh air or has an urge to star-gaze, he or she may do so, with or without the parent, so long as the child remains on a sidewalk adjoining his or her residence. 10
in. SUMMARY
Because the court has found that the curfew law probably will survive strict scrutiny review vis-a-vis the plaintiffs’ fundamental right of free movement challenge, the court holds that plaintiffs have not raised serious and substantial questions on the merits of this claim and likely will not prevail on the merits as to this claim.
3. PARENTING RIGHTS
The Constitution protects parents against “undue, adverse interference by the State” in child-rearing.
Bellotti,
The eurfew law harbors no grand scheme to supplant parental authority or governance of children; its ambitions are far more modest. Under its framework parents retain discretion in the majority of cases. As the Fifth Circuit in
Qutb
pointed out, parents can accompany their children outside for whatever reason they wish, and their children are generally permitted to engage in church, school, civic, and like activities. Further, jobs, emergencies, and parental errands qualify as exemptions to the eurfew law. Children may exercise their First Amendment rights and may not be prohibited from engaging in interstate travel. The only thing that parents cannot do is authorize their children to go outside when none of these exceptions apply. Such circumstances, undoubtedly, will be rather limited.
See Qutb,
In such circumstances where a parent, but for the eurfew law, would permit his or her child to attend an all-night “rave” party or to slip out for an unchaperoned midnight soda, no doubt that parent’s “right” is restricted. But the restriction is minimal and not one of constitutional significance. This should become particularly apparent when one considers the gravity of the countervailing government interest: preventing children below the age of seventeen from wandering the streets late at night, where they might become victims or perpetrators of crime. 12 The court in Bykofsky aptly stated the implications of this analysis.
Mindful of the fact that the parent’s right of control is a qualified right and that the [curfew law] furthers several important governmental interests, including those of keeping juveniles from roaming the streets without adult supervision during the nighttime hours and imposing a duty on parents to know the whereabouts and activities of their children at night, it is clear that the [curfew law] fosters in a constitutional manner the welfare of both minors and the general community. The parents’ constitutionally protected interest with respect to the upbringing of their children, upon which the [curfew law] infringes only minimally, is outweighed by [Charlottesville’s] interest in protecting immature minors and in controlling and preventing nocturnal juvenile mischief and crime.
Id. at 1264.
Based on the foregoing analysis, the court concludes that plaintiffs havе not raised serious or substantial questions on the merits of their claim that the rights of parents are unconstitutionally infringed by the curfew law.
*548 4. FIRST AMENDMENT AND VAGUENESS
a. FIRST AMENDMENT
The curfew law specifically exempts First Amendment activities from its reach. It provides that if minors are engaged in First Amendment activities, “such as free exercise of religion, freedom of speech and the right of assembly,” § 17-7(b)(8), they are not subject to the strictures of the curfew law. This same exception is the one upon which the Fifth Circuit placed such heavy reliance in sustaining the Dallas curfew law. In
Qutb
the Fifth Circuit referred to the First Amendment exception as the “[m]ost notable” aspect of Dallas’s curfew law. Another district court, rejecting a First Amendment challenge to a curfew law, found such a claim “without merit” because of a “bona fide [exception for the] exercise of [f]irst [A]mendment rights,” an exception in all pertinent respects identical to the one adopted by Charlottesville.
Bykofsky,
b. VAGUENESS
Plaintiffs argue, however, that the First Amendment exception contained in the curfew law is void for vagueness.
13
This argument is unlikely to prevail.
14
When statutory language is so vague that people of ordinary intelligence “must guess at its meaning and differ as to its application,” the law violates fundamental guarantees of due process, “to wit, providing fair warning and notice of what is prohibited ... so that one may act accordingly.”
Bykofsky,
Even if a particular legislative enactment is vague, an individual whose conduct is clearly forbidden or permitted by the enactment cannot proceed on a vagueness challenge; only when a statute is vague as to conduct in which an individual claims to engage may he or she raise a vagueness claim.
Parker v. Levy,
*549 i. VAGUENESS AND THE FIRST AMENDMENT EXCEPTION
Most of the activities of which plaintiffs claim they are deprived by the ordinance — snacking, swimming, and ice skating and attending concerts, movies, and parties— clearly do not implicate the First Amendment. As the Supreme Court observed in
Dallas v. Stanglin,
Even an individual unfamiliar with the Supreme Court’s Stanglin opinion could not reasonably believe that swimming, ice skating, drinking soda, or attending a “rave” party falls within the scope of the First Amendment. As to these plaintiffs, therefore, the curfew law’s First Amendment exception is not vague. Concededly, plaintiffs also occasionally аttend City Counsel meetings during curfew hours and participate in theatrical performances, also past curfew hours. These types of activities, particularly the former, are closer to the kinds of freedoms protected by the First Amendment. But plaintiffs need not rely upon the First Amendment exception to engage in such conduct; the curfew law provides an exception for activities sponsored by public or civic organizations. 15
ii. CIVIC ORGANIZATION EXCEPTION
This brings the court to plaintiffs’ assault upon the definition “civic,” which plaintiffs also decry as unduly vague. Plaintiffs represent that they cannot know whether, for instance, participation in a community theater group qualifies. Although plaintiffs cite a Supreme Court case that found the term to be vague,
see Hynes v. Mayor of Borough of Oradell,
*550 The words surrounding the term “civic” in Charlottesville’s curfew law, the law’s other provisions, and the general thrust of the curfew law cannot be disregarded, for they inform our analysis as to which organizations qualify as civic. In its context, the court believes that the word civic is not unconstitutionally vague as to the conduct in which plaintiffs engage. The curfew law, quite clearly, does not intend to inhibit activities which take place in the presence of an adult for the betterment of children. Henсe, any affiliation with a school, religious organization, or public agency will save an activity scheduled during curfew hours (so long as an adult is present). See § 17-7(b)(5). It is assumed, and reasonably so, that even late at night such activities pose minimal danger to children, and, at the same time, help create well-rounded children. The curfew law aims to draw a line between late-night congregations at bars and gatherings that involve entertainment with more expressive components. Of course, the law cannot do so with the elegance of a mathematical equation unless it excludes otherwise eligible organizations. Hence, instead of drawing a clear, bright line that would have given more certainty-but would have excluded “deserving” activities — the City chose to rely upon terminology that offers more flexibility to children. After providing examples of organizations that qualify — schools, religious organizations, public agencies — the curfew law included within the scope of the permissible activities those sponsored by “like” organizations and civic organizations. Reference to the dictionary reinforces the import of the preceding discussion. Civic is defined, inter alia, as something that “contributes] to general welfare and the betterment of life for the citizenry of a community or enhancement of its facilities, [especially activity] devoted to improving ... recreation.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary (Unabridged) 412 (1961). Although on the margins, individuals of ordinary intelligence may differ as to what qualifies under this definition, the term “civic” in the context of the curfew law is sufficiently understandable in the normal ease (for instance, participation in theater) so as to survive a constitutional challenge based on vagueness.
iii. EMERGENCY EXCEPTION
Plaintiffs’ final claim of vagueness is of little weight. If accepted by a court of law, it would be plainly scary, for most statutes would be invalidated and legislatures would be forced to start authoring encyclopedic laws. Somehow, plaintiffs find vagueness in the term “emergency,” defined as a situation “requiring immediate action to safeguard life, limb or property,” including “fires, natural disasters, automobile accidents, or other similar circumstances.” § 17-7(a). In their memorandum, plaintiffs query, does this include a run to the convenience store for a band-aid? Plaintiffs’ Memorandum at 28. The court can only assume plaintiffs are, in this context, being facetious.
Based on the above discussion, the court concludes that plaintiffs’ challеnge to the curfew law based on vagueness will likely fail.
5. FOURTH AMENDMENT
Although the court in
Waters,
The plaintiffs challenge on Fourth Amendment grounds those provisions of the [curfew law] which permit the arrest and detention of juveniles if they are unable to document: (1) that they are properly on the street during the curfew period, or (2) that they are older than [17] years of age. The plaintiffs contend that the [curfew law], by permitting such arrests and detentions, “repeals pro tanto the Fourth Amendment’s protection of [juveniles], for ordinarily the police cannot constitutionally demand, on pain of arrest and detention, that a person whose behavior is in no way suspicious stop and provide identification.” The plaintiffs argue that the Act “authorizes massive and utterly groundless seizures of young adults ...” The [e]ourt disagrees. The plaintiffs’ argument reflects, in essence, an attempt to find in the *551 Fourth Amendment an absolute right to be free from searches and seizures, a right that cannot be limited by the government’s power to criminalize certain forms of behavior. The [c]ourt finds no such absolute right in the Fourth Amendment. Instead, as the very language of the Fourth Amendment provides, a right to be free from such intrusions exists only so long as there is not probable cause to believe that an offense has been committed. Here, the [City] has attempted to criminalize the public presence of juveniles during the curfew hours____ The proscriptions of the [curfew law] ... provide ... valid substantive references for determining the presence or absence of probable cause in a given case. Although the purported crime is utterly simple — nocturnal, public youth-that simplicity causes the type of proof required to justify a search or seizure to be similarly uncomplex. Thus, were a police officer to reasonably conclude that an individual looked “young” — that he or she looked like a minor — the officer would have “probable cause” to believe that the individual was engaged in an illegal act, i.e., being on the streets during the curfew period. If the individual could not prove that he or she was over [17], or that he or she fell within one of the [curfew law’s] other exceptions, the officer would be entitled to place the individual under arrest. So long as the officer could reasonably have believed that the individual looked “young,” the search, seizure or arrest would take place on the basis of probable cause and no Fourth Amendment violation would occur.
Id. at 1137-38 (footnotes omitted).
With Judge Richey the court concludes that a curfew law, simply because it prohibits unauthorized public presence on the streets by minors does not, on its face, violate the Fourth Amendment.
6. EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE
The principle of equal protection demands (with deceptive simplicity) that all persons who are similarly situated be treated alike.
City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., Inc.,
Minors and adults differ in significant respects, and our laws frequently deny to one group what they give freely to the other. That the line is drawn to exclude seventeen year olds gives the court no pause; the legislature must choose some cut off point, and it is certainly not arbitrary to conclude that seventeen year olds, in the context of a curfew law, are more like adults than like minors. Such inquiry, in any event, is properly left in the legislative realm. Also relegated to elected officials is the question whether the means chosen are the best way to advance their chosen ends, so long as the ends are legitimate, and the means reasonably advance those ends. The ends of the curfew law — to decrease juvenile crime and protect children-clearly and indisputably are legitimate. The means chosen by the City of Charlottesville — limiting the instances in which minors may roam the streets — reasonably advance the purpose of the curfew law.
This conclusion puts an end to the court’s examination of the curfew law on equal protection grounds.
B. IRREPARABLE INJURY TO PLAINTIFFS, HARM TO DEFENDANT, AND THE PUBLIC INTEREST
Given the court’s conclusion that plaintiffs hаve not raised serious and substantial questions on their claims (and are unlikely to prevail on the merits of their claims), the *552 court need not consider the remaining Black-welder factors (irreparable injury, harm to defendant, and the public interest), because preliminary injunctive relief is only appropriate when, at the very least, there has been a showing that the merits of the claims raised ultimately have some serious chance of success. Nevertheless, the court will consider these factors, which only reinforce its conclusion that preliminary injunctive relief should not issue.
1. IRREPARABLE INJURY TO PLAINTIFFS
The curfew law does not directly regulate speech, but rather is aimed at conduct only. It is a content-neutral time, place, and manner restriction. This point is bolstered by plaintiffs’ affidavits, none of which contain any allegation that their rights to free speech are being abridged. That minors cannot attend “rave” parties, ice skate, or drink soda during four or five hours each night cannot qualify as irreparable injury, even if it is a nuisance for a minor to confine such socializing to earlier hours. That the parents of minors cannot permit their children to engage in such activities without their supervision likewise does not qualify as irreparable injury. Accordingly, the court finds that рlaintiffs will suffer no irreparable injury if the curfew law is not enjoined from operation.
2. HARM TO DEFENDANT
The City of Charlottesville presented testimonial evidence that it would be harmed if the court were to halt enforcement of the curfew law. Mr. Chapman explained that children and parents in Charlottesville have begun to accept the curfew law, and a sudden reversal of the law would result in a loss in momentum and would send an undesirable message to children — that roaming the streets at night is not only appropriate, but also a “right.” More concretely, a child could suffer bodily injury or inflict such injury on another as a direct result of a suspension of the curfew law. Of course, even one incident of violence suffered by an innocent human being constitutes tremendous harm to that individual and society at large. Therefore, the court finds that defendant would likely be harmed were the court to grant plaintiffs’ motion for preliminary injunctive relief.
3. PUBLIC INTEREST
The public interest cuts in favor of the City. Nationally and in the Metro area, the number of juveniles charged with violent crimes, aggravated assaults, gun offenses, rape, sex offenses, larceny, auto theft, and drug-related crimes, is staggering by all accounts; nor do juveniles, who are also victims оf such crimes, escape unscathed. See Pierre Thomas & John Fountain, Drug Arrests of Juveniles Rise Sharply; Local, National Trend Contrasts to Decrease in Overall Crime Rate, Wash. Post, Dec. 26,1996, at Al; Kathryn Wexler, Juvenile Arrests Are on the Rise, Wash. Post, June 20, 1996, at Ml; Pierre Thomas, Arrests Soar for Violent Crime by Juveniles, Wash. Post, Sept. 8, 1995, at Al; Eric L. Wee, Violent Crime Continues to Increase Among Youths, Wash. Post, Mar. 30,1995, at VI; Nancy Lewis, Court Cases Reveal Arms Buildup Among D.C. Youths, Wash. Post, Jan. 1,1995, at Al; Cindy Loose & Pierre Thomas, ‘Crisis of Violence’ Becoming Menace to Childhood, Wash. Post, Jan. 2, 1994, at Al; DeNeen L. Brown, Sex Offenses by Juveniles Rise in Area, Wash. Post, Mar. 9, 1992, at Dl. One would be quixotic to believe that a curfew law alone could reverse these frightening trends or cure the ills that cause them. But it may contribute in some manner, however small, and the judiciary has a responsibility not to tie the hands of our local governments unless very good cause supports such interference. Moreover, it appears that curfew laws have done some good. See Professor Dan M. Kahan, Curfews Free Juveniles, Wash. Post, Nov. 14, 1996, at A21 (criticizing Hutchins and citing drops in crime in cities that have adopted curfews). Dan M. Kahan, a professor of constitutional and criminal law at the University of Chicago, points out the irony in challenges such as that brought by plaintiffs: apparently, there is evidence that “70 percent of [black] teenagers in the District [of Columbia] support[ ] a nighttime curfew[, and i]nner-city parents-on whose behalf the ACLU often purports to speak when it at *553 tacks curfews — are frequently among the strongest supporters of these laws.” Id.
Meanwhile, the court has found that the First Amendment and other precious constitutional freedoms guaranteed our citizens are probably not implicatеd by the curfew law. Aside from all the reasons the court has already listed to support this conclusion, stark reality cannot be ignored. Children under the age of seventeen generally do not wish to escape their homes after midnight to go to church (which the curfew law permits) or to attend a political rally (which the curfew law also permits).
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Instead, plaintiffs likely view as a burden the need to return early from a movie or a social event; the court agrees that the curfew law may be a nuisance, particularly to well-adjusted children who are careful and have no intention of committing crime. But, as Justice Holmes reminded us, most laws prohibit conduct in which men wish to engage.
See Adkins v. Children’s Hosp.,
All these reasons lead the court to conclude that plaintiffs’ request for a preliminary injunction must be denied.
An appropriate Order shall this day issue.
Notes
. Among the plaintiffs are children below the age of seventeen, an eighteen year old, and their parents. Throughout its opinion, the court will not distinguish between these different groups expressly, because thе context will make apparent which group's rights are at issue.
. The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment provides that no person shall be deprived of "life, liberty, or property, without due process of the law." U.S. Const, amend. IV.
. The First Amendment prohibits Congress from making any "law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof, or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances.” U.S. Const, amend I. The First Amendment was made applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment; the same is true of the Fourth Amendment. See Laurence H. Tribe, American Constitutional Law § 11-2 (2d ed. 1988).
. The Fourth Amendment guards against "unreasonable searches and seizures” and warrants not based on "probable cause.” U.S. Const, amend. IV.
. The Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause states that no person shall be denied "equal protection of the laws.” U.S. Const, amend. IV.
. A lower level of scrutiny, intermediate scrutiny, is applied to certain classifications, for instance ones based on sex.
See, e.g., Michael M. v. Superior Court,
. The curfew law also lists as one of its objectives the solidificatiоn of the parent/child relationship. The court need not decide whether this is a significant or compelling state interest (though, if it had to decide, the court would answer in the affirmative), because juvenile crime reduction and protection so obviously are significant and compelling state interests.
. Plaintiffs object to the affidavits of educators that so state because, plaintiffs contend, their attestations do not appear to be based upon personal knowledge. The court, however, is confident that experienced and concerned educators have taken the time to learn the causes for students’ poorer performances and are familiar with their students' extra-curricular activities.
. The court discusses below plaintiffs' objections (on vagueness grounds) to the exceptions.
. Plaintiffs contend that they cannot take advantage of these many exceptions because they fear police officers; but this argument suffers from an unacceptable and unsupported assumption that police officers will overstep their proper authority. There is no evidence that police officers will not properly enforce thе curfew law, and the court surely will not assume this to be true absent veiy strong evidence so indicating.
. Along these lines, the court would be interested to learn whether any churches or synagogues operate during curfew hours and, if so, how often this occurs. Similarly, it would be interesting to tally the frequency of political rallies or gatherings that take place after midnight or 1:00 a.m.
. Contrary to plaintiffs’ suggestion, the City of Charlottesville is not necessarily operating under any insulting assumption that children below the age of seventeen are all driven by ill-will or bad motives and that their parents have abdicated parental responsibility. Rather, the City is confronted by a growing crime problem that many citizens simply do not know how to resolve.
. Plaintiffs also invoke the overbreadth doctrine to challenge the curfew law. The overbreadth doctrine is a "device ... [which] evolved in order to permit one properly charged under a statute to raise the First Amendment rights of others, not charged, whose associational or expressive rights might be chilled by enforcement of overly broad legislation."
Waters v. Barry,
. The court notes that plaintiffs' reliance on
CISPES v. FBI,
. The exception requires adult supervision, which the court assumes to be present in theater rehearsals and City Council meetings.
. By no means does the court suggest that First Amendment protection extends only to political rallies and attendance at church.
