State of Washington et al v. United States of America et al
Filing
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MOTION to Expedite Discovery and Regular Staus Conferences, filed by Plaintiff State of Washington. Oral Argument Requested. (Attachments: #1 Appendix A, #2 Appendix B, #3SEALED Exhibit 1-33, #4 SEALED Exhibit 34-66, #5 Exhibit 67-99, #6 Proposed Order) Noting Date 7/13/2018, (Clinton, Laura) Modified on 7/17/2018 to seal due to names of minors, per phone call from counsel (PM).
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The Honorable Marsha J. Pechman
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UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
WESTERN DISTRICT OF WASHINGTON
AT SEATTLE
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STATE OF WASHINGTON, et al.,
Plaintiffs,
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v.
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA;
DONALD TRUMP, in his official capacity
as President of the United States of America,
et al.,
NO. 2:18-cv-00939-MJP
STATES’ MOTION FOR EXPEDITED
DISCOVERY AND REGULAR STATUS
CONFERENCES
NOTING DATE: JULY 13, 2018
ORAL ARGUMENT REQUESTED
Defendants.
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STATES’ MOTION FOR EXPEDITED
DISCOVERY
NO. 2:18-cv-00939
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ATTORNEY GENERAL OF WASHINGTON
800 Fifth Avenue. Suite 2000
Seattle, WA 98104-3188
(206) 464-7744
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I.
INTRODUCTION AND RELIEF REQUESTED
Seventeen states and the District of Columbia1 (collectively, the States) filed this lawsuit
to protect themselves and their residents from the Trump Administration’s policy of forcibly
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separating families who enter the country along its Southwestern border and related illegal
practices. Among other relief, the States seek an order that 1) enjoins the federal government
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from refusing to process asylum seekers who arrive at Southwestern border ports of entry;
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2) declares family separation for deterrence illegal; 3) requires prompt family reunification for
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those already separated; 4) prevents immigration officials from predicating familial reunification
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on the withdrawal of asylum claims, acquiescence to removal, payment of the costs of
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reunification, or other conditions unrelated to the safety of the child; and 5) confirms that the
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indefinite detention of families by the federal government is illegal.
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Most Plaintiff States know that separated parents 2 or children 3 have been relocated within
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their borders—but several States have been unable to speak with them. 4 The States have
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Specifically, the States of Washington, California, Maryland, Oregon, New Mexico, New
Jersey, New York, Iowa, Illinois, Minnesota, Rhode Island, Vermont, North Carolina, and Delaware; the
Commonwealths of Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Virginia; and the District of Columbia.
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As of the date of this motion, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is detaining
separated parents in Plaintiff States Washington, Oregon, California, New Jersey, Maryland, and New
Mexico. Complaint ¶¶ 300-03, 307, 312-13, 319, 336, 315-16; Decls. of Blumenauer ¶ 6 (Ex. 25); Jayapal
¶¶ 8, 10 (Ex.26); Perhot ¶ 9 (Ex. 27); Ruppersberger ¶ 11 (Ex. 35). Other Plaintiff States have or anticipate
receiving separated parents released from DHS facilities. E.g., Decls. of W.R. ¶ 38 (Ex. 21); RobertsHenry ¶ 11 (Ex. 24); Serrano ¶ 15 (Ex. 36).
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As of June 25, 2018, the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) admits it has placed over 500
separated children in at least nine Plaintiff States. See Clinton Ex. D. In addition to those states that
Defendants acknowledge have received traumatized children, the Plaintiff States of Massachusetts,
Minnesota, and the District of Columbia have confirmed that they, too, have received separated children.
Compl. ¶¶ 306, 323-35, 341; Decl. of Perhot ¶¶ 10-11 (Ex. 27).
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The facilities in Oregon and California have not provided access to speak with individuals
detained there. See Austria Decl. ¶¶ 3-10 (Ex. 37); Compl. ¶¶ 312; cf. Clinton Decl. Ex. E.
STATES’ MOTION FOR EXPEDITED
DISCOVERY
NO. 2:18-cv-00939
1
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF WASHINGTON
800 Fifth Avenue. Suite 2000
Seattle, WA 98104-3188
(206) 464-7744
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repeatedly demanded basic information about their well-being, but were answered with silence.
Clinton Decl. Exs. A, B, C. These families are among the primary witnesses to the Defendants’
misconduct. They also are largely at the Defendants’ mercy, as they can move detainees without
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notice, a practice that the States have already encountered. Poletti Decl. ¶¶ 34-38 (Ex. 2).
Hours after the States filed this lawsuit, the District Court for the Southern District of
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California issued a preliminary injunction on behalf of a national class of parents, ordering the
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federal government to promote family contact and setting deadlines for family reunification.
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Ms. L v. U.S. Immigration & Customs Enf’t, No. 18CV0428 DMS (MDD), 2018 WL 3129486
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(S.D. Cal. June 26, 2018) (Ms. L Order). While the States agree that emergency relief for these
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families is necessary, the Ms. L Order further increases the risk that Defendants will move
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parents and children before their testimony can be taken. Moreover, the States have claims and
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interests that extend beyond the relief granted by the Ms. L Order. 5 It does not address
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Defendants’ refusal to accept asylum seekers at Southwestern ports of entry, the conditions that
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they are attaching to reunification (e.g., withdrawal of asylum claims or payment of travel costs
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for ORR employees and separated children to be reunited with the parent), or their alternative
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proposals to indefinitely detain families at unlicensed locations or summarily deport them.
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Pursuant to Local Rules 7(d)(2), 16 and 26(d)(1), the States seek expedited discovery to
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obtain and preserve evidence concerning the government’s family separation policy and its
related practices. 6 See Appendix A (detailing specific topics for discovery). This relief is
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The broad and varied harms that the family separation policy inflicts on the States and their
residents are documented through the exhibits to the Complaint, as well as the 99 declarations filed
concurrently herewith. An index of those declarations is provided as Appendix B to this Motion.
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The States note this Motion as a Second Friday motion pursuant to LCR 7(d)(2)(A) because it
requests relief from the standard case scheduling deadlines provided by FRCP 16(b)(2) and LCR 16.
STATES’ MOTION FOR EXPEDITED
DISCOVERY
NO. 2:18-cv-00939
2
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF WASHINGTON
800 Fifth Avenue. Suite 2000
Seattle, WA 98104-3188
(206) 464-7744
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necessary because Defendants exercise control over the primary witnesses to their misconduct,
they constantly change position, and they have already caused deep and enduring harm. The
States have attempted to confer with Defendants but have been unable to reach agreement. 7
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II.
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PERTINENT FACTS
This spring, Defendants implemented a long-threatened policy of forcibly separating
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parents from their children when they enter our country through the Southwestern border, a
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policy expressly intended to terrify families and deter future immigrants from entering the United
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States. See, e.g., Compl. ¶¶ 53, 55, 65, 67, 119. At the same time, Defendants have accelerated
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their practice of turning away asylum seekers, including families with small children, who
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present themselves at Southwestern ports of entry—a practice that encourages unlawful entry
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and thus artificially increases such violations. Id. ¶ 58; see also Decls. of Mensing ¶ 4(c)
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(Ex. 22); Levy ¶¶ 20-38, 43-45 (Ex. 1); Ramos ¶¶ 59-60 (Ex. 3). Recent reports confirm that
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Defendants are now using separated children to coerce parents to withdraw asylum claims or
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agree to deportation in order to expedite reunification. Id. ¶¶ 100-102 (Exs. 37-38); see also
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Decls. of Blumenauer ¶ 23 (Ex. 25); Griffith ¶ 12 (Ex. 29) (concern re long separation). Despite
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the Ms. L Order requiring them to reunify families, Defendants are conditioning reunification on
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onerous logistical and financial terms (such as the payment of travel costs for the child and
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government escorts) many parents cannot hope to satisfy. Decls. of Levy ¶¶ 46-51(Ex.1); Ramos
¶ 62 (Ex. 3); Greenberg (Ex. 43). 8
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See Certificate of Compliance (C. Melody), ¶¶ 1-3 & Ex. 1, filed herewith.
See also Decls. of Mensing ¶ 7d (Ex. 22); Serrano ¶¶ 9-14 (Ex. 36); W.R. ¶¶ 41-51 (Ex. 21);
Caceres ¶¶ 13-14, 17-18 (Ex. 4); Greenberg ¶ 13 (Ex. 43); Gonzalez-Garcia ¶¶ 25-30 (Ex. 6); Jose
Francisco ¶ 7 (Ex. 39); Fanjoy (Ex. 40); Roberts Henry ¶ 10 (Ex. 24).
STATES’ MOTION FOR EXPEDITED
DISCOVERY
NO. 2:18-cv-00939
3
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF WASHINGTON
800 Fifth Avenue. Suite 2000
Seattle, WA 98104-3188
(206) 464-7744
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Unless required to protect a child’s safety, forced separation is known to cause immediate
and extreme psychological harm to both children and their parents, and the resulting cognitive
and emotional damage can be permanent. Compl. Exs. 43, 79-86.9 The longer the separation
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lasts, the worse the damage will be. Brown Decl. ¶ 19 (Ex. 57). To date, Defendants admit that
they have forcibly separated over 2,500 children from their parents, with over 2,000 still
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detained. See Compl. ¶¶ 70-71; Clinton Decl. Ex. F. Many professionals who have interviewed
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or worked with the separated parents and children in recent weeks have witnessed the impacts
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firsthand, and the States’ interviews of detainees in their jurisdictions confirm extensive harms,
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especially where parents and children have not been allowed to contact each other. 10 These
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interviews also reflect the deplorable conditions of detention, including “iceboxes;” cages; lack
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of food, clean water, and sanitation; deprivation of comfort for small children; and threats that
children will be jailed or permanently kept from their families. 11 The dozens of personal
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Decls. of Brown ¶¶ 19-23, 28-32 (Ex. 57); Houshyar ¶¶ 4, 6-10, 13-15 (Ex. 51); Torlakson ¶ 14
(Ex. 68); Escudero ¶ 8-10 (Ex. 60); Sheppard ¶¶ 7-8 (Ex. 52); Alvarez ¶¶ 3-11 (Ex. 53); Borque ¶ 7-9, 14
(Ex. 73); Korte ¶ 8 (Ex. 75); Zucker ¶ 34-50 (Ex. 79); Bradbury ¶¶ 7-13 (Ex. 60); Aronson ¶¶ 5, 11 (Ex.
41); Gallegos ¶¶ 5-7(Ex. 54); Castillo ¶ 5-7 (Ex.55); Martinez (Ex. 56).
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Decls. of Caceres (Ex. 4); Tapia (Ex. 5); Gonzalez-Garcia (Ex. 6); Oliva & Jimenez (Ex. 7);
CCB (Ex. 8); G. Doe (Ex. 9); L. Doe (Ex. 10); Paz Rodriguez (Ex. 11); Arriaga-Pineda (Ex. 12); Garcia
Castillo (Ex. 13); Aguirre Vega (Ex. 14); Monroy-Guerra de Tesucum (Ex. 15); Dubon Mejia (Ex. 16);
Batres (Ex. 17); Sanchez Rodriguez (Ex. 18); Flores-Oliva (Ex. 19); Padilla-Orellana (Ex. 20); W.R. (Ex.
21); see also Decls. of Poletti (Ex. 2); Mensing (Ex. 22); Langarica (Ex. 23); Roberts Henry (Ex. 24);
Blumenauer (Ex. 25); Jayapal (Ex. 26); Perhot (Ex. 27); Griffith (Ex. 29); Mostofi (Ex. 30); Gilmore (Ex.
31); D. Beyer (Ex. 32); Bellor (Ex. 33); Podkul (Ex. 34); Ruppersberger (Ex. 35); and Decls. of Jose
Francisco (Ex. 39); Fanjoy (Ex. 40); Serrano (Ex. 36).
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Decls. of Poletti (Ex. 2); Houshyar ¶¶ 5, 11-12 (Ex. 51); Roberts Henry Ex. 2 (Ex. 24); Aguirre
Vega (Ex. 14); Paz Rodriguez (Ex. 11); Arriaga-Pineda ¶ 2 (Ex. 12); Dubon Mejia (Ex. 16); Batres ¶¶ 1,
3, 6 (Ex. 17); Monroy-Guerra ¶¶ 5-7, 11 (Ex. 15); Sanchez Rodriguez ¶¶ 4,9, 12 (Ex. 18); Flores-Oliva ¶
2-4 (Ex. 19); Padilla-Orellana ¶¶ 4-5, 9-15 (Ex. 20); Gonzalez-Garcia ¶ 10 (Ex. 6); Oliva & Jimemez ¶¶
7-11, 17-23 (Ex. 7); W. R. ¶¶ 19-22, 27, 29, 33 (Ex.21); Ruppersberger ¶ 7 (Ex. 35); L. Doe ¶ 8 (Ex. 10);
G. Doe ¶ 9 (Ex. 9); Blumenauer ¶¶ 12, 18-19 (Ex. 25); Jayapal ¶¶ 17-19 (Ex. 26); CCB ¶ 2, 4-5 (Ex. 8);
see also Leckman (Ex. 50).
STATES’ MOTION FOR EXPEDITED
DISCOVERY
NO. 2:18-cv-00939
4
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF WASHINGTON
800 Fifth Avenue. Suite 2000
Seattle, WA 98104-3188
(206) 464-7744
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accounts that the States have already obtained confirm the terror that this policy has inflicted on
innocent children and their desperate parents.
Defendants’ policies are causing fear and
disruption in the States’ immigrant communities, both because they target Latino populations
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and because they harken back to some of the most destructive chapters in our history. 12 The
ineffective policy has been condemned nearly universally. Compl. Exs. 77-87; Decl. of Wong
(Ex. 42).
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On June 20, 2018, President Trump signed an Executive Order (EO) purporting to
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suspend family separation. Compl. Ex. 24. But the EO does not actually require an end to family
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separation, and in fact, it makes family unity contingent on the “availability of appropriations”
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and exemptions from the requirements of the “Flores Settlement,” a 1997 agreement that
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protects immigrant youth from indefinite detention. Compl. Ex. 30. Further, the EO appears
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limited to those families who do not seek to stay in the United States. The EO does not moot
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any of the States’ claims:
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appropriate federal facilities exist and are available, or that the creation of new family internment
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facilities is feasible or legal. Clinton Decl. Ex. G; Compl. Ex. 34.
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there is no indication that funding will be appropriated, that
Indeed, Defendants admit that “it is not possible for the U.S. government to detain
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families together during the pendency of their immigration proceedings” without modifying the
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provisions in the Flores Settlement that require expeditious release of detained minors and use
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of non-secure facilities licensed by the state. Compl. Ex. 31 at 3. While Defendants seek to
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eliminate these protections for children and remove their facilities from outside scrutiny (id. at
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Decls. of Roche (Ex. 58); Matos (Ex. 62); Torrijos (Ex. 63); Briggs (Ex. 48); Jones (Ex. 49)
Kimoto (Ex. 45); Banko (Ex. 46); Margles (Ex. 47).
STATES’ MOTION FOR EXPEDITED
DISCOVERY
NO. 2:18-cv-00939
5
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF WASHINGTON
800 Fifth Avenue. Suite 2000
Seattle, WA 98104-3188
(206) 464-7744
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19), the Flores court has already rejected similar attempts. 13 Further, DHS has explained that
reunification efforts are only for “adults who are subject to removal” to reunite families solely
“for the purposes of removal,” i.e., not those seeking to remain in the country. Compl. 1. Ex. 35.
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Defendants acknowledge that they intend to switch to a policy of indefinite family
detention or, alternatively, to resume family separations in the near future because of the
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constraints provided by Flores and limited federal resources. For example, CBP Commissioner
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Kevin McAleenan recently announced that he is unable to refer parents for prosecution without
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separating them from their children due to lack of resources, but that situation is reportedly
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temporary. Clinton Decl. Ex. H. White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders has
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emphasized that the EO purporting to halt family separations “is a temporary solution. This isn’t
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going to last . . . This will only last a short amount of time, because we’re going to run out of
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space, we’re going to run out of resources to keep people together.” Secretary Sanders reiterated:
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“We’re not changing the policy. We’re simply out of resources.” Clinton Decl. Ex. I.
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Meanwhile, President Trump recently proposed simply deporting immigrants without
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any legal process. Clinton Decl. Ex. J; Compl. Ex. 41. And Attorney General Sessions continues
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to publicly adhere to the “zero-tolerance” directive requiring criminal prosecution of all migrants
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who cross the Southwestern border outside a port of entry. Clinton Decl. Ex. H.
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The government’s argument that the Flores Settlement Agreement’s licensure requirement
does not apply to ICE family residential facilities (see Compl. Ex. 31 at 4) is a direct attack on the States’
sovereign interest in licensing, inspecting, and monitoring all out-of-home care providers (i.e., providers
who care for children away from their parents), including federally funded ones. To ensure that all
facilities where children are placed out of the care of their parents meet minimum safety standards, the
States have comprehensive laws and regulations that require, inter alia, current licensing, periodic
monitoring, meetings with staff and children, background checks, facility safety standards, and provision
of necessary and appropriate care to the children. Decls. of Reeves (Ex. 66); Chen (Ex. 65); Culley
(Ex. 61); Ford (Ex. 28); Guinn (Ex. 64); Velez (Ex. 38).
STATES’ MOTION FOR EXPEDITED
DISCOVERY
NO. 2:18-cv-00939
6
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF WASHINGTON
800 Fifth Avenue. Suite 2000
Seattle, WA 98104-3188
(206) 464-7744
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The federal government has ignored the States’ repeated requests for information about
separated families. For example, on June 7, 2018 and again on June 18, 2018, Washington State
Governor Jay Inslee and Attorney General Bob Ferguson requested information about separated
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children and parents; plans and timing for release or reunification; pending asylum claims; and
their access to legal information and attorneys. Id. Exs. A & B. Similarly, on June 19, 2018,
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21 states and the District of Columbia sent a letter expressing concern about Defendants’ family
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separation policy. Id. Ex. C. Federal lawmakers have sent similar letters. Id. Exs. K, L, M;
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Compl. Exs. 7, 45. These requests were ignored.
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The States have also attempted to interview potential witnesses over whom Defendants
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have custody and control and the federal government has delayed or obstructed some of those
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efforts. 14 As a result, the States are forced to rely in part on media reports about the government’s
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shifting conduct, as well as vacillating public statements from the Administration. 15 Indeed, in
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granting preliminary relief, the Ms. L. Court expressed dismay that the government had not
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adequately tracked separated children and their parents, facilitated communication between
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them, or planned for reunification, noting that it accounted for property better than it accounted
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for the children it had taken from their parents. Ms. L, 2018 WL 3129486 *7.
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Meanwhile, the States and their residents continue to suffer harm from family separation
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and related practices—including the severe harms described above—even after the issuance of
the preliminary injunction. For example, reports are emerging that some separated parents who
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Poletti Decl. ¶ 34-38 (Ex. 2); see also Austria Decl. ¶¶ 3-10 (Ex. 37); Compl. ¶ 312.
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For example, the description of a father detained at the Sheridan Prison in Oregon who was
separated from his 15-day-old child (Compl. ¶ 307) was taken from published news sources —not the
Mexican Consulate. See http://katu.com/news/local/vigil-scheduled-outside-sheridan-prison-for-123undocumented-immigrants-detained-by-ice. Plaintiffs are informed that the infant is with his mother.
STATES’ MOTION FOR EXPEDITED
DISCOVERY
NO. 2:18-cv-00939
7
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF WASHINGTON
800 Fifth Avenue. Suite 2000
Seattle, WA 98104-3188
(206) 464-7744
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hoped to be quickly reunited with their children are being told that they must first complete a
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host of burdensome paperwork never intended for this purpose, 16 or worse, voluntarily agree to
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deportation, effectively placing enormous pressure on parents to abandon asylum claims and
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withdraw their children’s claims in order to be reunited. Compl. Exs. 36-38. The Policy also
continues to adversely affect the States’ sovereign, quasi-sovereign and proprietary interests.
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Through their application for relief from the protections of the Flores Settlement, Defendants
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seek to invade the States’ right to regulate the facilities where children are being housed,
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undermining the protections intended to ensure humane and safe treatment for children. 17
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Defendants’ conduct forces the States to expend resources to remediate the harms inflicted by
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the Policy, many of which are likely to be permanent. State programs, including child welfare
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services, social and health services, courts, and public schools, are all experiencing fiscal impacts
due to family separation that will only increase. Id. § K. 18
III.
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AUTHORITY AND ARGUMENT
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This Court has discretion under Rule 26(d) to allow the States to take the expedited
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discovery and to order the weekly status conferences they request. Courts typically require
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“good cause” to deviate from the standard pretrial schedule, a standard easily satisfied here.
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Greenberg Decl. (Ex. 43); Levy Decl. ¶¶ 46-51 (Ex.1).
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Decls. of Reeves (Ex. 66); Chen (Ex.65); Culley (Ex. 61); Ford (Ex. 28); Guinn (Ex. 64); Velez
(Ex. 38).
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Decls. of Torlakson (Ex. 68); Cantwell (Ex. 69); Lee (Ex. 70); Ruiz (Ex. 71); Escudero (Ex.
60); Manning (Ex.72); Bourque (Ex. 73); Tahiliani (Ex. 74); Perhot (Ex. 27); Korte (Ex. 75); Possin (Ex.
76); Zimmerman (Ex. 77); Zucker (Ex. 79); Cechnicki (Ex. 80); Bradbury (Ex. 60); Katz (Ex. 81); Guinn
(Ex. 64); Aronson (Ex. 41); Mostofi (Ex.30); Velez (Ex. 38); Gilmore (Ex. 31); Allen (Ex. 82); Nazarov
(Ex. 83); Bates (Ex. 84); Gonzalez (Ex. 85); Lane (Ex. 86); Bouchey (Ex. 87); Schatz (Ex. 88); Schilling
(Ex. 89); Allison (Ex. 90); Fourre (Ex. 91); Happold (Ex. 92); Meierbachtol (Ex. 93); Yanagida (Ex. 94);
Curtatone & Skipper (Ex. 67); Weiss (Ex. 96); Lennox (Ex. 44); Perry-Manning (Ex. 97); C. Beyer (Ex.
78); Sinski (Ex. 98); Aranowski (95); Peterson (Ex. 99).
STATES’ MOTION FOR EXPEDITED
DISCOVERY
NO. 2:18-cv-00939
8
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF WASHINGTON
800 Fifth Avenue. Suite 2000
Seattle, WA 98104-3188
(206) 464-7744
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Music Grp. Macao Commercial Offshore Ltd. v. John Does I-IX, 2014 WL 11010724, at *1
(W.D. Wash. 2014) (collecting cases). A request for expedited discovery is evaluated in light of
“the reasonableness of the request in light of all the surrounding circumstances.” Semitool, Inc.
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v. Tokyo Electron Am. Inc., 208 F.R.D. 273, 275 (N.D. Cal. 2002) (internal quotations and
emphasis removed); Am. LegalNet, Inc. v. Davis, 673 F. Supp. 2d 1063, 1067 (C.D. Cal. 2009).
“ ‘Good cause may be found where the need for expedited discovery, in consideration of
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the administration of justice, outweighs the prejudice to the responding party.’ ”
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Countrywide Fin. Corp. Derivative Litig., 542 F. Supp. 2d 1160, 1179 (C.D. Cal. 2008) (quoting
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In re
Semitool, 208 F.R.D. at 276). Need outweighs potential prejudice in cases where physical
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evidence may be moved or difficult to track with the passage of time, thereby disadvantaging
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one or more parties to the litigation. Cf. Pod-Ners, LLC v. N. Feed & Bean of Lucerne Liab.
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Co., 204 F.R.D. 675, 676 (D. Colo. 2002) (anticipated movement of field beans made ordinary
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discovery “unusually difficult or impossible.”). Indeed, if a party’s movement of beans is
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sufficient for expedited discovery, surely the movement of human beings must be. Cf. id. at 676.
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Here, numerous factors support the States’ request. Expedited discovery is needed to
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enable the States to obtain evidence and testimony from people over whom the Defendants have
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control, to determine the extent of the harm inflicted on State programs and residents, and to
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evaluate the need for interim emergency relief. The States also need to obtain discovery related
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to the claims they assert that are not addressed by the Ms. L Order: that detained parents and
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children are or have been subject to inhumane conditions of confinement; that Defendants are
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improperly refusing to accept applications for asylum at ports of entry; that Defendants are
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conditioning family reunification on an agreement to abandon an asylum claim or to waive other
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STATES’ MOTION FOR EXPEDITED
DISCOVERY
NO. 2:18-cv-00939
9
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF WASHINGTON
800 Fifth Avenue. Suite 2000
Seattle, WA 98104-3188
(206) 464-7744
1
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relief available under the INA; and that Defendants are preparing to house children in unlicensed
facilities to evade State standards. Compl. at 119-120.
As noted, Defendants have sole control over key witnesses and evidence, including the
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separated children and parents located in the Plaintiff States, but they cannot be relied upon to
accurately track the location of either. See Ms. L. 2018 WL 3129486 *7. Access to these
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potential witnesses and information about them is critical. 19 Moreover, many of the key
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witnesses will likely be moved in the coming days and weeks with no assurances as to their well-
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being or whereabouts, and continued chaos is inevitable. Id. at 9 (the government does not have
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“any affirmative reunification procedure for [separated] parents and children”). 20 Nor have the
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States delayed their requests: literally hundreds of government officials have previously
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requested similar information to no avail. Defendants have been on notice of these requests for
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weeks. Clinton Decl. Exs. A, B, C, K, L, M; Compl. Exs. 7, 45. While the States have tried to
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obtain evidence from these witnesses, they have been frustrated in these efforts. See Decl. of
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Poletti ¶¶ 34-38 (Ex. 2); Austria ¶¶ 3-10 (Ex. 37); Compl. ¶ 312; cf. Clinton Ex. E.
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Moreover, the scope of the States’ requests is appropriate in relation to their purpose and
the interests at stake. While the government publically asserts that it has rescinded, at least
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temporarily, its family separation policy, whether the rescission of an unconstitutional policy is
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Decls. of Paz Rodriguez (Ex. 11); Arriaga-Pineda (Ex. 12); Garcia Castillo (Ex. 13); Aguirre
Vega (Ex. 14); Monroy-Guerra (Ex. 15); Dubon Mejia (Ex. 16); Batres (Ex. 17); Sanchez Rodriguez (Ex.
18); Flores-Oliva (Ex.19); Roberts Henry, Ex. 2 (Ex. 24); Padilla-Orellana (Ex. 20); Caceras (Ex. 4);
Gonzalez-Garcia (Ex. 6); Oliva and Jimenez (Ex. 7); W.R. (Ex. 21); L. Doe (Ex. 10); G. Doe (Ex. 9);
CCB (Ex. 8).
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For example, the Texas Civil Rights Project claims that, for the more than 300 parents it
represents, it has located only two children. Clinton Decl. Ex. N; see also Clinton Decl. Ex O (report of
child walking away from ORR shelter).
STATES’ MOTION FOR EXPEDITED
DISCOVERY
NO. 2:18-cv-00939
10
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF WASHINGTON
800 Fifth Avenue. Suite 2000
Seattle, WA 98104-3188
(206) 464-7744
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really a sham has been the proper subject of expedited discovery in at least one case. See Citizens
for Quality Educ. San Diego v. San Diego Unified Sch. Dist., No. 17-CV-1054-BAS-JMA, 2018
WL 1150836, at *2-4 (S.D. Cal. Mar. 5, 2018). Likewise, discovery directed to the Defendants’
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recently announced strategies of indefinite family detention—or wholesale deportation without
any legal process—are necessary to both support the States’ claims and to enable them to seek
7
appropriate emergency relief if warranted.
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government took the position before the Flores court that the Ms. L Order exempts them from
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legal restrictions on indefinite detention. See Flores, et al. v. Sessions, et al., Case No.
10
For example, on Friday, June 30, 2018, the
CV 85-4544-DMG (C.D. Cal.), Dkt. 447; Clinton Decl. Ex. P.
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Under the circumstances presented here, “the administration of justice[ ] outweighs the
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prejudice to the responding party.”
See In re Countrywide, 542 F. Supp. 2d at 1179
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(quoting Semitool 208 F.R.D. at 276). The expedited discovery requested is a limited subset of
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what the States would pursue in discovery regardless. The only burden is that Defendants must
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respond sooner, which is trivial compared to the immediate and real harms family separation and
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related policies are causing. Further, the Defendants have already been ordered by a federal
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court to reunify the separated children and parents. This will require the government to locate,
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identify, and maintain information about all of the separated children and parents; providing this
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information to the States adds very little additional burden.
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Further, any burden to the Defendants also is mitigated by the request for regular
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conferences with the Court. Defendants can raise any unforeseen challenge that the requests
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pose during these status conferences—allowing Defendants to seek immediate relief if the
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parties are unable to resolve a dispute.
Finally, any logistical difficulty is a “chaotic
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STATES’ MOTION FOR EXPEDITED
DISCOVERY
NO. 2:18-cv-00939
11
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF WASHINGTON
800 Fifth Avenue. Suite 2000
Seattle, WA 98104-3188
(206) 464-7744
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circumstance of the Government’s own making.” See Ms. L. 2018 WL 3129486 *11. Whatever
burden expedited discovery may pose pales in comparison to the States’ needs and the
administration of justice. All relevant factors weigh in favor of the States’ requests.
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IV.
CONCLUSION
The States respectfully request that the Court grant the relief requested.
DATED this 2nd day of July, 2018.
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ROBERT W. FERGUSON
Attorney General
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/s/ Laura K. Clinton
LAURA K. CLINTON, WSBA #29846
Assistant Attorney General
REBECCA GLASGOW, WSBA #32886
Deputy Attorney General
COLLEEN M. MELODY, WSBA #42275
Division Chief, Civil Rights Unit
NOAH G. PURCELL, WSBA #43492
Solicitor General
MEGAN D. LIN, WSBA #53716
Assistant Attorney General
Attorneys for Plaintiff State of Washington
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STATES’ MOTION FOR EXPEDITED
DISCOVERY
NO. 2:18-cv-00939
12
ATTORNEY GENERAL OF WASHINGTON
800 Fifth Avenue. Suite 2000
Seattle, WA 98104-3188
(206) 464-7744
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