Al Haramain Islamic Foundation, Inc. et al v. United States Department of the Treasury et al
Filing
162
ORDER: Plaintiffs' Application for Fees Pursuant to EAJA 143 is granted in part and denied in part. MCASO is entitled to $16,868.31 in attorneys' fees and $360.38 in costs. Signed on 8/21/2013 by Judge Garr M. King. (pc)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF OREGON
PORTLAND DIVISION
AL HARAMAIN ISLAMIC
FOUNDATION, INC., AND
MULTICULTURAL ASSOCIATION OF
SOUTHERN OREGON,
Civil Case No. 3:07-CV-01155-KI
OPINION AND ORDER ON
PLAINTIFFS’APPLICATION FOR
FEES PURSUANT TO EAJA
Plaintiffs,
v.
UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF
THE TREASURY, JACOB LEW,
OFFICE OF FOREIGN ASSETS
CONTROL, ADAM J. SZUBIN, UNITED
STATES DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE,
AND ERIC H. HOLDER,
Defendants.
KING, Judge:
Plaintiffs Al Haramain Islamic Foundation, Inc., an Oregon corporation (“AHIFOregon”1), and Multicultural Association of Southern Oregon (“MCASO”) challenged AHIF1
I refer to plaintiff Al Haramain Islamic Foundation, Inc. as AHIF-Oregon throughout
(continued...)
Page 1 - OPINION AND ORDER ON APPLICATION FOR FEES
Oregon’s designation as a Specially Designated Global Terrorist (“SDGT”), and the associated
freezing of AHIF-Oregon’s assets, by bringing suit against the United States Department of the
Treasury, the Office of Foreign Assets Control (“OFAC”), the United States Department of
Justice, and individuals associated with those agencies.2
Now, at the conclusion of the case, I have pending before me plaintiffs’ Application for
Fees Pursuant to EAJA. As of their latest brief, plaintiffs seek $262,746.25 in attorneys’ fees and
$13,457.16 in expenses for four attorneys over more than six years of litigation.
BACKGROUND
As set out in more detail in previous opinions, defendant OFAC designated AHIF-Oregon
as an SDGT pursuant to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (“IEEPA”), 50
U.S.C. § 1701, and its associated executive order, Exec. Order No. 13,224, 66 Fed. Reg. 49,079
(Sept. 23, 2001) (“E.O. 13,224”). Al Haramain Islamic Found., Inc. v. U.S. Dep’t of the
Treasury, 585 F. Supp. 2d 1233 (D. Or. 2008) (“AHIF I”); Al Haramain Islamic Found., Inc. v.
U.S. Dep’t of the Treasury, Civil No. 07-1155-KI, 2009 WL 3756363 (D. Or. Nov. 5, 2009)
(“AHIF II”); Al Haramain Islamic Found., Inc. v. U.S. Dep’t of the Treasury, 686 F.3d 965 (9th
Cir. 2012) (“AHIF III”). I have summarized the outcome of plaintiffs’ ten claims in the
following four sections.
1
(...continued)
this opinion to distinguish it from the world-wide organization of the Al Haramain Islamic
Foundation headquartered in Saudi Arabia.
2
The Court substitutes Jacob Lew, Secretary of the Treasury, for former Treasury
Secretary Timothy Geithner.
Page 2 - OPINION AND ORDER ON APPLICATION FOR FEES
I.
Administrative Procedures Act and Due Process Claims
OFAC froze AHIF-Oregon’s assets and property on February 19, 2004, pending
investigation. It was not until February 6, 2008, when OFAC “redesignated” AHIF-Oregon as an
SDGT, that AHIF-Oregon received an explanation for OFAC’s actions. Although I held AHIFOregon’s redesignation was supported by substantial evidence, I found the government violated
AHIF-Oregon’s due process rights in delaying its notice to AHIF-Oregon about its reasons for
the designation and blocking order. This due process violation was harmless, however; I found
AHIF-Oregon could have done nothing to change the agency’s decision to designate it.
The Ninth Circuit affirmed, but added OFAC’s “failure to pursue potential mitigation
measures”–such as providing an unclassified summary of the classified information or allowing
AHIF-Oregon’s lawyer to view documents after obtaining a security clearance–“violated AHIFOregon’s due process rights.” AHIF III, 686 F.3d at 984. Nevertheless, the Ninth Circuit agreed
“the procedural due process violations related to AHIF-Oregon’s support of designated persons
was harmless. Even if AHIF-Oregon had enjoyed better access to classified information and
constitutionally adequate notice, we are confident that it would not have changed OFAC’s
ultimate designation determination.” Id. at 990. As a result, the Ninth Circuit affirmed my
dismissal of AHIF-Oregon’s due process claims, commenting that “no judicial relief is available
to AHIF-Oregon.” Id. at 1001.
II.
Fourth Amendment Claim
I dismissed AHIF-Oregon’s Fourth Amendment claim. The Ninth Circuit reversed my
ruling, finding the Fourth Amendment required OFAC to obtain a warrant to support a freeze of
AHIF-Oregon’s assets. AHIF III, 686 F.3d at 995.
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Specifically, the Ninth Circuit held:
In summary, no exception applies to OFAC’s warrantless seizure of AHIFOregon’s assets and the seizure is not justified under a “general reasonableness”
test. We therefore hold that OFAC violated AHIF-Oregon’s Fourth Amendment
right to be free of unreasonable seizures. Because the district court did not reach
the issue of remedy and because the parties did not brief that issue before us, we
remand to the district court to determine, in the first instance, what remedy, if any,
is available.
Id.
On remand, AHIF-Oregon conceded the Fourth Amendment violation was harmless error
because the Ninth Circuit simultaneously upheld its designation as an SDGT. AHIF-Oregon was
satisfied by the Ninth Circuit’s “effective grant of declaratory relief” through its ruling. Pls.’
Mem. re: Relief on Remand 9, ECF 132. Plaintiffs requested a judgment stating that defendants
violated AHIF-Oregon’s Fourth Amendment rights by blocking its assets indefinitely without
obtaining a warrant, but that the violation was harmless error. Defendants did not object to the
language proposed by plaintiffs, and I entered such a judgment.
III.
MCASO’s Claims
I held MCASO was entitled to judgment as to the vagueness of the term “material
support” in the regulatory scheme. AHIF I, 585 F. Supp. 2d at 1269. Accordingly, I issued a
declaratory judgment to MCASO as to a portion of Count X that the term “material support” is
vague as it appears in E.O. 13,224, and its implementing regulations, in violation of the Fifth
Amendment. Judgment, ECF 120. Defendants did not appeal the judgment. I dismissed the
remainder of MCASO’s First Amendment claim.
Plaintiffs appealed my dismissal of MCASO’s First Amendment claim and the Ninth
Circuit reversed. The court described and distinguished the Supreme Court’s decision in Holder
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v. Humanitarian Law Project, 130 S. Ct. 2705 (2010), concluding OFAC’s “content-based
prohibitions on speech” violated MCASO’s First Amendment right to engage in the “pure-speech
activities proposed by MCASO.” AHIF III, 686 F.3d at 1001.
On remand, the parties stipulated to the following judgment:
Judgment is hereby entered for Plaintiff Multicultural Association of Southern
Oregon (MCASO) on its First Amendment challenge to the content-based
prohibitions in Section 2(a) of Executive Order 13224. MCASO has a First
Amendment right to engage in the forms of coordinated advocacy with AHIFOregon that it identified in this litigation, including conducting joint press
conferences, issuing coordinated press releases, holding demonstrations,
contacting the government, and organizing public education activities in
conjunction with AHIF-Oregon, and Defendants are enjoined from enforcing
Section 2(a) against MCASO for engaging in those forms of coordinated
advocacy with AHIF-Oregon.
Judgment, ECF 142.
IV.
Remaining Claims
I dismissed the remainder of plaintiffs’ claims. They were: Count III (Fifth Amendment
and APA challenge to limitations on the use of AHIF-Oregon’s assets); Count IV (Fifth
Amendment challenge alleging interference with attorney-client communications); Count V
(First Amendment challenge to designation); Count VI (designation criteria, as applied to AHIFOregon, violated the First and Fifth Amendments); and Count VII (designation punished AHIFOregon for its associations in violation of the First and Fifth Amendments). These claims were
not the subject of appeal.
V.
Events Following the Ninth Circuit’s Mandate
The Ninth Circuit issued its mandate on March 6, 2012. AHIF-Oregon filed with OFAC
a new request for reconsideration of its designation on August 24, 2012. In its request, it
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identified several changed circumstances which it believes warrant reconsideration of its
designation as an SDGT.
The parties also undertook the court-ordered briefing on the issue remanded by the Ninth
Circuit, namely the remedy for the government’s violation of AHIF-Oregon’s Fourth
Amendment rights. In the midst of the briefing, AHIF-Oregon submitted a motion to file a
Rule 15(d) supplemental complaint alleging an ongoing due process violation. I denied that
motion and issued judgment for MCASO on its First Amendment claim, as set forth above, and a
judgment to AHIF-Oregon on its Fourth Amendment claim, also as set forth above, but
dismissed all remaining claims with prejudice. Al Haramain Islamic Found., Inc. v. U.S. Dep’t
of the Treasury, Civil No. 07-1155-KI, 2012 WL 6203136 (D. Or. Dec. 12, 2012).
LEGAL STANDARDS
The Equal Access to Justice Act (“EAJA”) provides that the court shall award attorney
fees and costs to a prevailing party in any civil action brought by or against the United States
“unless the court finds that the position of the United States was substantially justified or that
special circumstances make an award unjust.” 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A).
DISCUSSION
I.
AHIF’s Request for Attorneys’ Fees
To be a prevailing party, a plaintiff must “achieve a material alteration of the legal
relationship of the parties” and the “alteration must be judicially sanctioned.” Carbonell v.
I.N.S., 429 F.3d 894, 898 (9th Cir. 2005) (quoting Buckhannon Bd. & Care Home, Inc. v. W.
Virginia Dep’t of Health and Human Res., 532 U.S. 598, 604-05 (2001)).
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A quick look at plaintiffs’ Complaint reveals AHIF-Oregon is not a prevailing party. Out
of their ten requests for relief–the thrust of which sought to vacate the designation and prompt
the release of AHIF-Oregon’s funds–plaintiffs achieved only a declaration for MCASO ruling a
term vague and an injunction for MCASO allowing its coordinated advocacy efforts with AHIFOregon.
AHIF-Oregon points to the judgment on its Fourth Amendment claim as evidence of its
success in the litigation. Importantly, however, AHIF-Oregon brought the claim only as a means
of freeing its assets. Pls.’ Supplemental Mem. 24, ECF 103 (requesting the assets be unfrozen);
Pls.’ Supplemental Reply Br. 13, ECF 109 (“proper remedy . . . is . . . an order that the
unconstitutional designation and freeze be lifted, in order to restore the status quo”). When the
designation was upheld, and the asset block deemed supported by substantial evidence, AHIFOregon conceded the Fourth Amendment violation was harmless error and no further relief was
available. Accordingly, the judgment pronounced the violation harmless. As a result, AHIFOregon did not receive the benefit it sought in bringing its lawsuit. Klamath Siskiyou Wildlands
Ctr. v. U.S. Bureau of Land Mgmt., 589 F.3d 1027, 1030 (9th Cir. 2009) (“The material alteration
in the legal relationship of the parties must be relief that the would-be prevailing party
sought[.]”).
Even if judgment for AHIF-Oregon pronouncing a Fourth Amendment violation
constitutes sufficient equitable relief to support prevailing party status, such a declaration did not
“modify[] the defendant’s behavior in a way that directly benefits the plaintiff.” Fischer v. SJBP.D., Inc., 214 F.3d 1115, 1118 (9th Cir. 2000). The violation, although noted as such, did not
require OFAC to do anything with respect to the funds it blocked. AHIF-Oregon suggests now it
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“enjoys the protection of the Fourth Amendment vis-a-vis any action by OFAC to freeze assets”
and, if it is successful in its delisting petition, OFAC would have to obtain a warrant before
freezing its assets in the future. Pls.’ Reply Br. 4, ECF 151. However, to suggest OFAC would
delist AHIF-Oregon but turn around and refreeze assets later is too conjectural to support a
finding that the Fourth Amendment ruling altered the relationship between the parties in a way
that directly benefits AHIF-Oregon. Carbonell, 429 F.3d at 900 (require the government “to do
something directly benefitting the plaintiff[] that they otherwise would not have had to do”).
Additionally, I cannot accept AHIF-Oregon’s argument that it obtained relief on its Fifth
Amendment Due Process claim. “A favorable determination on a legal issue, even if it might
have put the handwriting on the wall, is not enough by itself. A ‘favorable judicial statement of
law’ . . . cannot substitute for a ‘form of judicial relief,’ such as declaratory judgment.” Citizens
for Better Forestry v. U.S. Dep’t of Agric., 567 F.3d 1128, 1133-34 (9th Cir. 2009). AHIFOregon obtained a favorable statement of law–OFAC violated its due process rights–but no
relief. See Klamath Siskiyou Wildlands Ctr., 589 F.3d at 1030 (“Whatever form it takes, the
‘material alteration’ must consist of actual relief, not merely a determination of legal merit.”). I
am also unpersuaded by AHIF-Oregon’s suggestion that its voluntarily submitted request for
reconsideration is the equivalent of a court-ordered remand, in which OFAC must now comply
with the due process requirements laid out in AHIF III. A court-ordered remand carries with it a
judicial imprimatur, which AHIF-Oregon’s voluntary request lacks. See Citizens for Better
Forestry, 567 F.3d at 1132 (must have “judicial imprimatur on the change” to qualify as
“prevailing party”).
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Finally, while MCASO prevailed on its claims, I reject AHIF-Oregon’s argument that
those claims involved the same facts and were so related to the failed claims as to warrant an
award for all of the requested attorneys’ fees. It is true plaintiffs may obtain attorneys’ fees for
“unsuccessful claims” if they involved a common core of facts as the successful claims. Hensley
v. Eckerhart, 461 U.S. 424, 434-35 (1983); Odima v. Westin Tucson Hotel, 53 F.3d 1484, 1499
(9th Cir. 1995) (noting “the test is whether relief sought on the unsuccessful claim is intended to
remedy a course of conduct entirely distinct and separate from the course of conduct that gave
rise to the injury upon which the relief granted is premised”). Here, MCASO challenged the
designation statute and regulations as vague and overbroad, and as restricting its ability to
advocate for and work with AHIF-Oregon in the designation challenge. MCASO’s successful
challenge, then, focused not on whether AHIF-Oregon’s designation was legal, but rather on
what speech MCASO could make on behalf of and with AHIF-Oregon despite the designation.
So, while plaintiffs are correct that MCASO would have benefitted from a finding setting
aside AHIF-Oregon’s designation, that is not the test. Instead, applying the test set out in Odima,
the relief AHIF-Oregon sought on its unsuccessful claims was intended to remedy a course of
conduct (the designation) separate from the course of conduct that gave rise to the successful
claim (designation law violated the Constitution). 53 F.3d at 1499. It was not AHIF-Oregon’s
designation that violated MCASO’s Constitutional rights. Since the successful claims are
unrelated to the failed claims, a full award of fees is not warranted.
I need not address AHIF-Oregon’s argument that the defendants’ positions were not
substantially justified. AHIF-Oregon is not entitled to attorneys’ fees or costs.
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II.
MCASO’s Request for Attorneys’ Fees
Because MCASO’s claims were so factually and legally separate from AHIF-Oregon’s,
and because MCASO was a prevailing party on its own claims, I believe it is appropriate to
consider whether fees are owed to MCASO under EAJA. The only question is whether the
government’s position was substantially justified.
The test for determining whether the government was substantially justified is whether its
position had a reasonable basis both in law and fact. Pierce v. Underwood, 487 U.S. 552, 565
(1988); Flores v. Shalala, 49 F.3d 562, 569-70 (9th Cir. 1995). Substantial justification means
justified to a degree that could satisfy a reasonable person. Bay Area Peace Navy v. United
States, 914 F.2d 1224, 1230 (9th Cir. 1990). The burden is on the government to prove
substantial justification. Flores, 49 F.3d at 569-70.
The government has not met its burden. I found the term “material support” in E.O.
13,224 to be vague; the government offered definitions for the term in its briefing that I
characterized as “confusing.” AHIF I, 585 F. Supp. 2d at 1269. Additionally, the Ninth Circuit
unanimously concluded the government failed to offer compelling reasons for restricting
MCASO’s First Amendment rights. In support of its conclusion, the court noted “little evidence
that the pure-speech activities proposed by MCASO on behalf of the domestic branch [of AHIF]
will aid the larger international organization’s sinister purposes[.]” AHIF III, 686 F.3d at 1001.
The government did not seek rehearing en banc or petition for certiorari on this claim. It agreed
to the injunction language proposed by plaintiffs.
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I have already concluded MCASO’s success was unrelated to AHIF-Oregon’s failed
claims. As a result, I do not grant the entire request. Frankly, even looking at the unredacted
billing statements submitted in camera, I could not calculate a considered discount as it is
impossible to determine how much each attorney spent on MCASO’s claims. At plaintiffs’
invitation, I have considered the number of pages covering MCASO’s successful claim–6 pages,
representing 6.42% of the case–to calculate a fee award that I think accurately reimburses
plaintiffs’ counsel for their time. Accordingly, based on the updated fee request, MCASO is
entitled to $16,868.31 in attorneys’ fees. As for costs, plaintiffs included their costs of appeal
when the Ninth Circuit explicitly ordered each party to bear their own costs of appeal.
Accordingly, subtracting costs of appeal from plaintiffs’ request, plaintiffs are entitled to 6.42%
of $5,613.38, resulting in an award of $360.38 in costs.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, plaintiffs’ Application for Fees Pursuant to EAJA [143] is
granted in part and denied in part. MCASO is entitled to $16,868.31 in attorneys’ fees and
$360.38 in costs.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
DATED this
21st
day of August, 2013.
/s/ Garr M. King
Garr M. King
United States District Judge
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