John Doe v. Snyder et al
Filing
121
OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING IN PART Plaintiffs' 99 Motion for Judgment; GRANTING IN PART Plaintiffs' 107 Motion for Judgment and DENYING Defendants' 113 Motion to Clarify Judgment. Signed by District Judge Robert H. Cleland. (LWag)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
SOUTHERN DIVISION
JOHN DOE, et al.,
Plaintiffs,
v.
Case No. 16-13137
RICHARD SNYDER, et al.,
Defendants.
/
OPINION AND ORDER GRANTING IN PART PLAINTIFFS’ “MOTION FOR
JUDGMENT” AND PLAINTIFFS’ “AMENDED MOTION FOR JUDGMENT” AND
DENYING DEFENDANTS “MOTION TO CLARIFY INJUNCTION”
Plaintiffs bring constitutional challenges to Michigan’s Sex Offender Registration
Act (“SORA”) on behalf of a certified class comprised of multiple subclasses. On
February 14, 2020, this court entered an opinion invalidating portions of Michigan’s
SORA statute as a result of various constitutional violations. (ECF No. 84.) Due to the
emerging Coronavirus pandemic (“COVID-19”), in April 2020 the court entered an
“Interim Order Delaying Entry of Final Judgment” that preliminarily enjoined the
reporting requirements of Michigan’s sex offender registry. (ECF No. 91.) Pending
before the court are Plaintiffs’ two motions requesting the entry of a final judgment in the
case. 1 (ECF Nos. 99, 107.) Defendants have also filed a competing motion requesting
the entry of an order “clarifying” and extending the interim injunction already in place.
(ECF No. 113.) The motions have been fully briefed, and the court concludes that a
Plaintiffs filed an amended motion requesting the entry of a final judgment in
January 2021 because parts of its original motion for judgment (ECF No. 99), were
mooted by the passage of Michigan’s Public Act 295 (“new SORA”).
1
hearing is not necessary. See E.D. Mich. LR 7.1(f)(2). For the reasons explained
below, the court will grant Plaintiffs’ motions, in part, and deny Defendants’ motion.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Procedural History
This case has a long and complex procedural history which the court
summarizes below. After a previous constitutional challenge to SORA resulted in parts
of the statute being declared unconstitutional, Does #1-5 v. Snyder, 834 F.3d 696, 706
(6th Cir. 2016) (“Does I”), Plaintiffs brought the present class action again challenging
the constitutionality of parts of the SORA statute. John Doe et al. v. Snyder, No. 1613137 (E.D. Mich.) (“Does II”).
The Does II second amended complaint contains four counts:
(1) a due process challenge based on vagueness to the following
provisions SORA:
(a) the prohibition on working within a student safety zone, Mich.
Comp. Laws. §§ 28.733–734;
(b) the prohibition on loitering within a student safety zone, Mich.
Comp. Laws. §§ 28.733–734;
(c) the prohibition on residing within a student safety zone, Mich.
Comp. Laws. §§ 28.733, 28.735;
(d) the requirement to report “[a]ll telephone numbers . . . routinely
used by the individual, Mich. Comp. Laws. § 28.727(1)(h);
(e) the requirement to report “[a]ll electronic mail addresses and
instant message addresses . . . routinely used by the individual,”
Mich. Comp. Laws. § 28.727(1)(l); and
(f) the requirement to report “[t]he license plate number, registration
number, and description of any motor vehicle, aircraft, or vessel . . .
regularly operated by the individual,” Mich. Comp. Laws. §
2
28.727(1)(j).
(2) a due process challenge based on SORA’s imposition of a strict liability
scheme for violations of the act;
(3) a First Amendment challenge based on:
(a) the requirement “to report in person and notify the registering
authority . . . immediately after . . . [t]he individual . . . establishes
any electronic mail or instant message address, or any other
designations used in internet communications or postings,” Mich.
Comp. Laws. § 28.725(1)(f); and
(b) the retroactive incorporation of the lifetime registration’s
requirement to report “[a]ll electronic mail addresses and instant
message addresses assigned to the individual . . . and all login
names or other identifiers used by the individual when using any
electronic mail address or instant messaging system,” Mich. Comp.
Laws. § 28.727(1)(i); and
(4) an ex post facto challenge based on Defendants’ continued
enforcement of the 2006 and 2011 amendments.
(ECF No. 34, PageID.384-87.)
The certified class in Does II includes three distinct classes. Plaintiffs
define the primary class as all people who are or will be subject to registration
under SORA. The primary class seeks relief on Count I (vagueness); Count II
(strict liability) and Count III (First Amendment). (EFC No. 46, PageID.693.) The
subclasses seek relief on Count IV (ex post facto) and are defined as follows:
(1) The “pre-2006 ex post facto subclass” is defined as members of the
primary class who committed their offense or offenses requiring
registration before January 1, 2006, and who have committed no
registerable offense since.
(2) The “2006-2011 ex post facto subclass” is defined as members of the
primary class who committed their offense or offenses requiring
registration on or after January 1, 2006, but before April 12, 2011, and
who have committed no registerable offense since.
3
(Id.)
On February 14, 2021, the court granted Plaintiffs’ motion for partial
summary judgment in Does II. (ECF No. 84.) The court first held that the 2011
amendments to SORA constituted an ex-post-facto punishment that “cannot be
severed from the statute” so “SORA in toto cannot be applied to any members of
the ex post facto subclasses” who were convicted before enactment of the 2011
amendment. (Id., PageID.1797.) The court also found several other SORA
provisions were unconstitutional as to the primary class—sex-offenders who
were convicted after enactment of the 2011 amendment. (Id., PageID.1802.)
Specifically, the court held:
Consistent with the court’s reasoning and findings in Does I, the following
provisions for SORA will be declared unconstitutional as to all registrants:
(a) Provisions Void for Vagueness:
(1) the prohibition on working within a student safety zone, Mich.
Comp. Laws. §§ 28.733–734;
(2) the prohibition on loitering within a student safety zone, Mich.
Comp. Laws. §§ 28.733–734;
(3) the prohibition on residing within a student safety zone, Mich.
Comp. Laws. §§ 28.733, 28.735;
(4) the requirement to report “[a]ll telephone numbers . . . routinely
used by the individual,” Mich. Comp. Laws. § 28.727(1)(h);
(5) the requirement to report “[t]he license plate number,
registration number, and description of any motor vehicle, aircraft,
or vessel . . . regularly operated by the individual,” Mich. Comp.
Laws. § 28.727(1)(j).
(b) Provisions Void for Strict Liability:
4
(1) under the Due Process Clause of the U.S. Constitution, SORA
must be interpreted as incorporating a knowledge requirement.
(c) Provisions Void under the First Amendment:
(1) the requirement “to report in person and notify the registering
authority . . . immediately after . . . [t]he individual . . . establishes
any electronic mail or instant message address, or any other
designations used in internet communications or postings,” Mich.
Comp. Laws. § 28.725(1)(f);
(2) the requirement to report “[a]ll telephone numbers . . . routinely
used by the individual,” Mich. Comp. Laws. § 28.727(1)(h);
(3) the requirement to report “[a]ll electronic mail addresses and
instant message addresses . . . routinely used by the individual,
Mich. Comp. Laws. § 28.727(1)(l);
(4) the retroactive incorporation of the lifetime registration’s
requirement to report “[a]ll electronic mail addresses and instant
message addresses assigned to the individual . . . and all login
names or other identifiers used by the individual when using any
electronic mail address or instant messaging system,” Mich.
Comp. Laws. § 28.727(1)(i).
(Id., PageID.1802-03.) And the court found that the Michigan State Police SOR Unit
should be required to provide “notice of the relief granted in [the court’s] order to all
SORA registrants, law enforcement officials, and prosecuting attorneys.” (Id.,
PageID.1803-04.)
In order to effectuate its decision, the court ordered “that Plaintiffs submit a joint,
proposed form of judgment encapsulating these rulings by March 13, 2020.” (Id.,
PageID.1808.) The parties were unable to carry out this directive, however, before
COVID-19 shut down much of the state only a few weeks after the opinion was issued;
making it “effectively impossible [to enter] a final order providing complete relief.” (ECF
No. 91, PageID.1847.) As a temporary solution to address the uncertainty created by
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the court’s ruling, in April 2020, the court entered an “Interim Order Delaying Entry of
Final Judgment, Preliminarily Enjoining Reporting Requirements, and Directing
Publication.” (ECF No. 91.)
The interim order suspended in-person reporting requirements for all sex
offenders in the primary class during the state of emergency because the “COVID-19
pandemic makes in-person compliance with SORA effectively impossible.” (Id.,
PageID.1849.) And it suspended “enforce[ment of] registration, verification, school
zone, and fee violations of SORA that occurred or may occur from February 14, 2020,
until the current crisis has ended, and thereafter until registrants are notified of what
duties they have under SORA going forward.” (Id., PageID.1850.)
While the interim order remained in place, on December 31, 2020, the Michigan
Legislature passed Public Act 295 (“new SORA”) which adopted numerous
amendments to Michigan’s SORA statute designed to address the constitutional
infirmities that this court found in the registry. (ECF No. 113, PageID.2294.) The new
SORA became effective March 24, 2021, and all parties acknowledge that the new
SORA removes or modifies all provisions that this court found to be unconstitutional in
its February 14, 2021 opinion in Does II. (See Id., PageID.2295-99; ECF No. 107,
PageID.2144.) While Plaintiffs comment that the new SORA also contains
unconstitutional provisions and that “in some respects [the change] makes the law even
more punitive and unclear,” they concede that challenges to the new version will need
to be addressed in a subsequent and separate lawsuit, and contend that the court
should still enter a final judgment in this case. (ECF No. 107, PageID.2144-45.)
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Defendants, however, continue to argue that the court should not enter a final judgment
in the case until a related lawsuit that is currently pending before the Michigan Supreme
Court is decided. (See ECF 110.)
B. Related Michigan Supreme Court Case
Defendants’ briefs point to and rely upon an appeal in a criminal case now before
the Michigan Supreme Court, People v. Betts, No. 14-8981 (Mich.). Betts involves a
criminal defendant who challenges his conviction of failing to register under SORA.
Defendant/Appellant Betts was convicted in 1994 for the crime subjecting him to SORA
registration. (ECF No. 84, PageID.1784 n.2.) The Michigan Supreme Court granted
leave to appeal and issued a briefing order directing the parties to address the following
issues:
(1) whether the requirements of the Sex Offenders Registration Act
(SORA), MCL 28.721 et seq., taken as a whole, amount to “punishment”
for purposes of the Ex Post Facto Clauses of the Michigan and United
States Constitutions;
(2) if SORA, as a whole, constitutes punishment, whether it became
punitive only upon the enactment of a certain provision or group of
provisions added after the initial version of SORA was enacted;
(3) if SORA only became punitive after a particular enactment, whether a
resulting ex post facto violation would be remedied by applying the version
of SORA in effect before it transformed into a punishment or whether a
different remedy applies;
(4) if one or more discrete provisions of SORA, or groups of provisions,
are found to be ex post facto punishments, whether the remaining
provisions can be given effect retroactively without applying the ex post
facto provisions;
(5) what consequences would arise if the remaining provisions could not
be given retroactive effect; and
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(6) whether the answers to these questions require the reversal of the
defendant’s conviction pursuant to MCL 28.729 for failure to register under
SORA.
(ECF No. 66-2, PageID.979–80.) The Betts court has still not reached a decision
in the case, and in February 2021, the state filed a supplemental brief. (See ECF
No. 110-1.) The brief requests that the court also decide if the new version of
SORA, that became effective in March 2021, should be applied retroactively to
the conduct of registrants that occurred before the statute’s enactment.
II. ENTRY OF A FINAL JUDGMENT
A. Mootness
Now that the Legislature has amended Michigan’s sex offender registry to
remove the provisions found unconstitutional in Does I and Does II, the parties first
contest whether the entry of a final judgment is necessary or if the case is now moot.
“[A] case is moot, [when the court] lack[s] jurisdiction to proceed. Ramsek v.
Beshear, 989 F.3d 494, 499 (6th Cir. 2021) (citing Ohio v. EPA, 969 F.3d 306, 308 (6th
Cir. 2020) (“[U]nder Article III, the ‘federal courts are without power to decide questions
that cannot affect the rights of litigants in the case before them.’”)) (quotations omitted).
“To assess whether a case is moot, [the court must] ask ‘whether the relief sought
would, if granted, make a difference to the legal interests of the parties.’” Id. (citing
McPherson v. Mich. High Sch. Athletic Ass'n, Inc., 119 F.3d 453, 458 (6th Cir. 1997) (en
banc)).
The parties essentially agree that the question of mootness turns on whether the
new SORA statute applies retroactively to conduct that occurred before the statute’s
8
enactment. To make their arguments, the parties rely on two separate principles of
Michigan law that deal with the retroactive application of statutes after they are modified
by the Legislature.
The first principle is that changes to a statute, by default, operate prospectively.
People v. Russo, 439 Mich. 584, 594, 487 N.W.2d 698, 702 (1992) (“The general rule of
statutory construction in Michigan is that a new or amended statute applies
prospectively unless the Legislature has expressly or impliedly indicated its intention to
give it retrospective effect.”) Due to this prospective orientation, the legislature has
enacted what is referred to as the “general savings clause” which provides that “the
repeal of any statute or part thereof shall not have the effect to release or relinquish any
penalty, forfeiture, or liability incurred under such statute. . . unless the repealing act
shall so expressly provide.” Mich. Comp. Laws Ann. § 8.4a (emphasis added). For all
practical purposes, this means that an individual can be held criminally liable for past
violations of a repealed/amended statute. 2
The second Michigan retroactivity doctrine at issue is the concept of
amelioration. The seminal Michigan case on the concept of amelioration is a plurality
opinion in People v. Schultz, 435 Mich. 517, 520, 460 N.W.2d 505, 506 (1990). In
Schultz, a defendant was convicted of possession of a large quantity of cocaine. Id. at
Plaintiffs’ briefing succinctly summarizes how this “savings clause” was enacted
to prevent a situation where the modification of a statute would mean that a past
criminal violation would go unpunished because the enactment of the new statute
repealed an old statute but the new statute, for ex-post facto reasons, could not be
applied retroactively. (See ECF No. 112, PageID.2248 (citing People v. Lowell, 230
N.W. 202, 203-04 (Mich. 1930).)
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2
507. And he was “sentenced to twenty to thirty years imprisonment” as the statute
required “a mandatory twenty-year minimum term of imprisonment.” Id. However, while
defendant’s conviction was on appeal, a new statute “reduced the mandatory minimum
term of imprisonment from twenty years to ten.” Id. While the prosecution argued “that
both the action to enforce criminal liability and the terms of punishment authorized in the
statutes prior to amendment remain in effect by operation of the general saving statute,
M.C.L. § 8.4a,” the Michigan Supreme Court held that section 8.4a “does indicate that
conduct remains subject to punishment” but it “does not” apply “where an amendatory
act mitigates the authorized terms of punishment but continues to proscribe the same
conduct.” Id. at 509-10 (emphasis added).
The ameliorative effect clearly applies when “a new, identical statute” is passed
that simply reduces the minimum sentence; however, the Michigan Court of Appeals
has found a legislative act that makes further modifications to a criminal statute cannot
be interpreted as to have retroactive effect without creating potential ex post facto
constitutional violations. See People v. Doxey, 263 Mich. App. 115, 120, 687 N.W.2d
360, 363-64 (2004) (finding that the amelioration principle did not apply to a statute that
“not only amelioratively amended the sentencing provision of the statute, but also
changed the breakdown of the prohibited conduct contained in the statute, including the
addition of a new crime of delivery of over 100 grams”)
Applying these principles, Defendants argue that the changes to SORA
regulations contained in the new statute should “apply retroactively.” (ECF No. 110,
PageID.2174.) Defendants reason that “[i]f the full measure of the reporting obligations
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and student safety zone restrictions under Michigan’s Sex Offenders Registration Act
constitute punishment, then the Legislature’s act in reducing some of these duties—
e.g., allowing for a method of reporting other than in-person for certain minor changes
and eliminating the student safety zones in total—is ameliorative and operates
retroactively for pending cases.” (Id.) To support their theory, Defendants argue that
while the “unrevised SORA constitute[d] [a] punishment,” the “revised SORA is now. . .
fully regulatory and non-punitive so it can be applied retroactively without raising new
ex-post facto constitutional concerns.” (Id., PageID.2180-82 (“[T]he Legislature has
pruned [the] punitive elements” of the old SORA “leaving again a true regulatory
scheme”).) Defendants contend that registrants who violated provisions of the old
SORA, which this court previously found unconstitutional, could not be prosecuted
going forward for such violations due to the new SORA’s retroactive nature. And
thereby has the case become moot. (Id., PageID.2185 (“‘[T]he [new SORA] irrevocably
eradicated the effects of the alleged [constitutional] violation,’ there is no controversy left
for the court to decide”).)
Plaintiffs reject this analysis. They contend that “[u]nder clear state statutory and
case law, criminal liability is governed by the law in effect when the offense occurs.
Moreover, the ‘amelioration’ doctrine does not apply because the punishment for SORA
violations is unchanged, and because any ‘amelioration’ in SORA 2021 goes to
punishment for the underlying sex offense, not for alleged violations of SORA itself.”
(ECF No. 112, PageID.2253-54.) Plaintiffs contend that the present case “is not moot
because anyone who committed a SORA compliance offense before March 24, 2021
11
can still be prosecuted under the old SORA, and will remain liable until [Michigan’s] sixyear statute of limitations runs.” (Id., PageID.2254.) Therefore, it argues that the entry of
a final judgment is required to prevent such prosecutions going forward.
After review of the relevant case law, the court is inclined to adopt Plaintiffs’
much simpler approach. First, it is undisputed that Public Act 295 of 2020, which
enacted the new version of SORA, does not expressly state that it should be applied
retroactively, so the court is left to glean any such intent from the nature of the statutory
provisions. See Schultz, 460 N.W.2d at 512. While Defendants present an interesting
argument for why the court should consider the new SORA to be only an ameliorative
regulatory statute, at the same time they argue that the statute eliminates provisions of
the sex-offender registry the court has already found to be unconstitutional under the
ex-post facto clause. (See ECF No. 110, PageID.2182 (“[T]he unrevised SORA is a
regulatory scheme with some elements that have made it [a criminal] punitive [law]. . .
the Legislature has pruned those punitive elements. . . leaving again a true regulatory
scheme”).) By Defendants’ own admission, this would be a novel application of the
concept of amelioration under Michigan law. (See id.) Michigan law does not allow
Defendants to have it both ways.
Put simply, the present situation is much closer to Doxey then Schultz. The new
SORA is not “a new, identical statute” that merely changes the punishment for a specific
offense, see Doxey, 687 N.W.2d at 363, instead it eliminated entire provisions, like the
school safety zone requirement that the court found to be criminal in nature.
Furthermore, just as in Doxey, Defendants’ interpretation would raise new ex post facto
12
concerns because the new SORA also modified at least some reporting requirements.
See id. at 364. (See ECF No. 112, PageID.2256 (citing M.C.L. § 28.727(1)(h); §
28.722(g)) (highlighting that the new SORA broadens what telephone numbers and
internet identifiers must be reported by registrants).) Michigan precedent finds that—
absent an express declaration of retroactive intent by the Legislature—when one
interpretation raises significant ex post facto concerns, the court should hew to an
interpretation that does not raise such concerns. Id. Consequently, the court concludes
that the new version of SORA applies only to registrants’ conduct on or after March 24,
2021.
B. Preclusive Effects of the Final Judgment
In the alternative, Defendants argue that the court should not rule on the new
SORA’s retroactivity—or should at least hold off on such a ruling—because the
Michigan Supreme Court could decide the same issue. People v. Betts, No. 14-8981
(Mich.) (ECF No. 110, PageID.2188-92.) The court is not convinced, as a matter of law
or as a practical matter, that further delay is justified.
The retroactive application of the new SORA statute was not among the six
questions the Supreme Court stated it would consider when, in June 2019, it granted
leave to appeal in the Betts case. (ECF No. 66-2, PageID.979-80.) Defendants,
however, did raise the issue in a supplemental brief it filed in Betts in February 2021, so
the Court could potentially weigh in. (See ECF No. 110-1.)
This court’s previous ruling on the question of certification, involving a slightly
different retroactivity question, in its February 2020 opinion rejects many of the same
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arguments that Defendants now raise. (See No. 84.) As the court pointed out, “the
issues in Betts are not identical to the remaining questions of law in this case.” (Id.,
PageID.1791.) And the Betts court may not even decide all the questions before it in
Betts. (See id.) This court does not view the application of either Section 8.4a or the
state’s amelioration doctrine to be an unsettled area of Michigan law, even if
Defendants’ own arguments on the topic appear novel. So, there is no unsettled
question of law that alone justifies continued delay in the resolution of a case that has
already resulted in over nine years of combined litigation. Furthermore, it is important to
remember that Michigan Supreme Court is under no obligation to hear the case at all. In
light of this court’s February 2020 ruling and enactment of the new SORA, it is possible
that the Court could now simply vacate its order, reject the appeal, and reach no
decision on the matter.
From a practical perspective, a Michigan Supreme Court ruling on whether the
new SORA can be applied retroactively is unlikely to have any impact if issued after this
court enters a final judgment. If the Betts court reaches the question of retroactivity and
concurs in this court’s holding—that the new version of SORA should not be applied
retroactively to conduct that occurred before March 24, 2021—then nothing changes
because this court has already found the disputed provisions of the old SORA statute to
be unconstitutional on Federal grounds. If the Betts court reaches the question and
concludes the opposite—holding that the new SORA applied retroactively and
ameliorated SORA’s old, unconstitutional provisions—then Defendants still cannot be
charged for violations of the disputed provisions of the old SORA. (See ECF No. 110,
14
PageID.2181 (Defendants charting the “timing of offense” and the “applicable version of
SORA”).) So, as a practical matter, nothing would change for the class members. 3 If, on
the other hand, this court waited for the Michigan Supreme Court to issue a ruling, the
class members could be left with the current confusion while awaiting a Michigan
Supreme Court decision that may never come. For all these reasons, the court
concludes that a further delay in the entry of a final judgment is inappropriate.
III. CONTENTS OF FINAL JUDGMENT
The parties also continue to disagree on the contents of the final judgment. The
issues have been fully briefed, and the court will now address the most pressing
disputes. 4
A. Incorporation of the Interim Order
The parties’ positions regarding the incorporation of the interim order—whereby
the court suspended the entry of only the final judgment—have evolved over multiple
rounds of briefing. Plaintiffs initially proposed that the text of the final judgment should
contain a paragraph “incorporat[ing] this Court’s interim order barring enforcement of
registration, verification, school zone, and fee violations of [old] SORA that occurred
[after] February 14, 2020.” (ECF No. 99, PageID.1891.) The Plaintiffs contended that
incorporation would serve two purposes, (1) it would clarify “that the final order
As this court has previously noted, if the Michigan Supreme Courts’ ruling “runs
somehow contrary to this court’s determination, this court can modify its judgment to
conform to Betts” though Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b). (ECF No. 84,
PageID.1792 n.6.)
4
Given the parties’ joint representations in a recent telephonic status conference,
the court is confident that the parties can work together to resolve any remaining issues
regarding the contents of the final judgment not directly addressed by this opinion.
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3
supersedes the interim order,” and (2) the proposed language would require that
registrants could not be prosecuted for any violations of SORA until “they received
notice” of the court’s ruling. (Id.)
Following the enactment of the new SORA, which became effective on March 24,
2021, Plaintiffs concede that the interim order does not prevent the enforcement of the
new SORA statute effective March 24, 2021. (See ECF No. 115, PageID.2328.) And
they concede that COVID-19 no longer impedes registrants’ ability to “fulfill their SORA
duties.” (Id., PageID.2334.) Plaintiffs now propose that the final judgment should include
language expressly incorporating the court’s interim order to ensure that registrants will
not be prosecuted for violations that occurred while the interim order was in effect. (Id.,
PageID.2338-39.)
Defendants agree that the registrants should be informed that the interim order
“has no bearing on the amended SORA” and therefore “does not impinge on the ability
of the State Defendants to enforce the 2021 SORA for conduct that occurs on or after
March 24, 2021.” (ECF No. 117, PageID.2352.) Defendants opposed the entry of final
judgment—as discussed at length in Section II— so they propose that the court should
instead amend the existing interim order to “clarify that the April 6, 2020 interim
injunction does not bar the State Defendants from enforcing the [new] SORA.” (ECF No.
113, PageID.2288.)
Because the court has already decided to enter a final judgment, it finds no need
for a separate order “clarifying” the interim order. Further, the court finds that the
express incorporation of the interim order into the final judgment will simplify the
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situation going forward for both registrants and law enforcement. The final order will
provide a single document defining what violations of the old SORA can be prosecuted
in the future. Such finality is clearly needed as it appears some registrants and law
enforcement agencies apparently do not understand the full effect of the interim order.
(See, e.g., ECF Nos. 112-2, 112-3, 112-4, PageID.2274-82 (Attorneys Mannikko, Ryan,
and White attesting that some law enforcement agencies have continued to charge
registrants for SORA violations that occurred in 2020 while the interim order was in
effect).)
B. Disclosure of Class Information
Due to the extraordinary procedural posture of this class action, no complete
class list has ever been provided to Plaintiffs’ counsel. (ECF No. 99, PageID.1892.)
Both sides agree that a class list should be provided, but a dispute remains over what
should be included. (ECF No. 107, PageID.2151.) Plaintiffs argue that in order to fulfill
their duties as class counsel, they should be given complete personal information for all
class members—regardless of whether the individual is listed in Michigan’s publicly
accessible sex offender database—and class counsel additionally requests they be
provided contact information (phone number and primary email address) for all class
members even though such information is not contained in the publicly accessible
database. (See ECF No. 99, PageID.1865-96; ECF No. 103, PageID.2083.) Class
counsel argues that access to this information is needed so they can efficiently respond
to the inevitable flood of inquiries from individual class members regarding their
registration status after the final judgment is entered. (Id.)
17
Defendants argue, however, that the confidentiality requirements in Michigan
statute prevent them from providing such a complete list. (ECF No. 101, PageID.194755.) While Defendants have agreed to provide addressees, basic demographic and
offense information contained in Michigan’s public sex offender registry (PSOR),
Defendants argue they “are not authorized to disclose information regarding non-public
offenders, i.e., any offender or offender information not authorized for disclosure in the
PSOR under [Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.728(2)].” (Id., PageID.1950.) These include
“individuals registered solely because they were subject to an order in a juvenile matter
in another state or country.” (Id. (citing Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.728(4)).) Further,
Defendants contend that they are barred from disclosing phone numbers and primary
email address for all class members, even those listed in the PSOR because “[n]onpublic information in the law enforcement database is confidential and is not open to
inspection except for law enforcement purposes.” (Id., PageID.1951 (citing Mich. Comp.
Laws § 28.730).) Defendants also cite “the Criminal Justice Information Systems Policy
Council Act” and argue this statute bars such a disclosure by government officials. (Id.
(citing Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.214).)
In response, Plaintiffs argue that the “[t]he statutes [Defendants] rely upon. . .
provide no succor for [Defendants] claim” that “they are legally barred from providing
any non-public information.” (ECF No. 103, PageID.2084.) In support of their view,
Plaintiffs rely on Dupuie-Jarbo v. Twenty-Eighth Dist. Ct., a previous decision by this
court interpreting MCL § 28.214, and People v. Malkowski, a Michigan Supreme Court
ruling, which found that another Michigan statute’s confidentiality provision allowed the
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disclosure of presentence reports to defense counsel. (Id., PageID.2084-85 (citing No.
10-10548, 2010 WL 2813343, at *2 (E.D. Mich. July 14, 2010) (Cleland, J.); 188 N.W.2d
559, 560 n.1 (Mich. 1971).)
The court finds that Plaintiffs’ view more accurately reflects Michigan’s law
governing such disclosures. Because the court finds that the statutes cited by
Defendants do not bar the court from requiring such a disclosure to class counsel,
Defendants must provide information on class members not in the PSOR database and
additional contact information for all class members. 5
First, the Sixth Circuit has held that “[t]he Federal Rules expressly authorize
discovery ‘[i]n aid of [a] judgment’” including “broad. . . postjudgment discovery” to
monitor “compliance with the court's judgment and award of injunctive relief.” See
United States v. Conces, 507 F.3d 1028, 1039-40 (6th Cir. 2007). So, as a general
matter, this court has authority to require that Defendants produce information narrowly
tailored to the enforcement of its judgment. See id. The court finds that a limited
disclosure of personal information identifying class members is necessary to ensure that
the court’s award of injunctive relief is properly enforced for all members of the certified
class.
In Dupue-Jarbo this court considered a Michigan District Court’s argument that it
should not have to disclose information “from criminal justice information systems” as
part of a wrongful termination lawsuit filed against it in federal court “because it would
The parties should include a deadline by which Defendants must turn over a
complete class list within the proposed final judgment.
19
5
be a state crime to produce” the information under Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.214. 2010
WL 2813343, at *2. This court flatly rejected such an interpretation of the statute. Id.
Because the disclosure of such information was relevant to ongoing discovery under the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the court found that “Defendants’ production of the
criminal history reports would be ‘authorized by . . . rule’ and it would not be a crime
under Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.214 [(5)] for Defendants to produce them.” Id. This
interpretation informs the present dispute. Since the court has authority to—and will
require—the disclosure of such requested class information through its post-judgment
authority under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the disclosure cannot be
considered a criminal violation of Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.214.
The closer question is whether the SORA statute itself allows the disclosure of
the requested information. SORA provides that “a registration or report is confidential
and information from that registration or report shall not be open to inspection except for
law enforcement purposes. . . all included materials and information are exempt from
disclosure under. . . the freedom of information act.” Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.730. The
statute also states that “[e]xcept as provided in this act, an individual other than the
registrant who knows of a registration or report under this act and who divulges, uses,
or publishes nonpublic information concerning the registration or report in violation of
this act is guilty of a misdemeanor.” Id. The statute does not explicitly contemplate the
disclosure of a registrant’s information to his own attorney.
Plaintiffs correctly observe that the Michigan Supreme court has dealt with an
analogous question before in Malkowski. 385 Mich. 244, 246, 188 N.W.2d 559, 560
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(1971). The Malkowski court noted that the language of the then-applicable statute
governing the disclosure of presentence reports “provide[ed] that reports of
investigations by probation officers are declared to be privileged or confidential
communications not open to public inspection.” Id. at 560 n.1 (quotation omitted).
Because the statute stated that its intent was to protect “the relation of confidence
between the probation officer and probationer or defendant under investigation,” the
court held that “[i]n view of the legislative intent, this provision should not be construed
to deny access by either a defendant or his attorney to presentence reports.” Id.
Therefore, the court found that the state was also required to provide attorneys access
to the presentence reports. Id.
The general rule that can be drawn from Malkowski is that, absent explicit
language to the contrary, the court should presume that reports available to an
individual directly can also be provided to his counsel even when the public at large is
barred from accessing such information. See id. When viewed in toto, one of the
purposes of Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.730 is the protection of a registrant’s privacy. The
court simply does not believe that Defendants’ reading of the statute in the present
case—which would bar the disclosure of any non-public registration information to a
registrant’s counsel—conforms with a statute which plainly contemplates registrants
having access to the information for their own purposes. 6
To be sure, the disclosure of class list information to class counsel can sometimes
raise unique privacy concerns, especially at the pre-certification stage. See, e.g., Martin
v. Sysco Corp., No. 116CV00990DADSAB, 2017 WL 4517819, at *3-4 (E.D. Cal. Oct.
10, 2017) (limiting the scope of disclosures to class counsel at the pre-certification stage
to protect to preserve class member’s privacy). Such concerns are reduced after a class
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6
To summarize, the court finds that neither of the statutes cited by Defendants
actually prevent them from disclosing to class counsel non-public registrant information
for registrants who are already members of the certified class. While Defendants are
free to put reasonable conditions on any disclosures to ensure that the information is
not inadvertently released to others or used for any purpose other than the assistance
of class members, the final order will require Defendants to provide the identifying
information that Plaintiffs request.
IV. CONCLUSION
For over nine years, the parties have been engaged in litigation over the
unconstitutional provisions of Michigan’s sex offender registry. It is past time for this
litigation to come to an end. The court has determined that the possibility of future
prosecutions for violations of the old SORA statute require the entry of a final judgment
even though the judgment will not affect the enforcement of the new SORA statute
enacted in March of 2021. And, the court has determined that the best, and most
efficient, course is for a final judgment to be entered in the present litigation. The court
also finds that it is appropriate to include the interim order in the final judgment for the
sake of clarity and that Defendants must provide Plaintiffs with a complete class list for
the purpose of post-judgment monitoring. Accordingly,
IT IS ORDERED that Plaintiffs’ “Motion for Judgment” (ECF No. 99) is
GRANTED IN PART.
has already been certified. And, in any event, Defendants’ argument against disclosure
does not raise this issue.
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IT IS ORDERED that Plaintiffs’ “Amended Motion for Judgment” (ECF No. 107) is
GRANTED IN PART.
IT IS ORDERED that Defendants’ “Motion to Clarify Injunction” (ECF No. 107) is
DENIED.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the parties in the next 21 days must meet and
confer on the contents of the final judgment. Plaintiffs must submit a joint, proposed
form of judgment encapsulating these rulings by July 12, 2021.
Dated: June 21, 2021
s/Robert H. Cleland
/
ROBERT H. CLELAND
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
I hereby certify that a copy of the foregoing document was mailed to counsel of record
on this date, June 21, 2021, by electronic and/or ordinary mail.
s/Lisa Wagner
Case Manager and Deputy Clerk
(810) 292-6522
S:\Cleland\Cleland\AAB\Opinions and Orders\Civil\16-13137.DOESII.granting.judgment.AAB.RHC.2.docx
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