Fikre v. Federal Bureau of Investigation

CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedAugust 12, 2020
Docket3:13-cv-00899
StatusUnknown

This text of Fikre v. Federal Bureau of Investigation (Fikre v. Federal Bureau of Investigation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fikre v. Federal Bureau of Investigation, (D. Or. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON

YONAS FIKRE,

Plaintiff, Case No. 3:13-cv-00899-MO

v. OPINION AND ORDER CHRISTOPHER WRAY, Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (sued in his official capacity), et al.,

Defendants.

MOSMAN, J., This case comes before me on Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss [ECF 146] Plaintiff Yonas Fikre’s Seventh Amended Complaint [ECF 145]. Defendants move to dismiss Mr. Fikre’s latest complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction (due to lack of standing) and for failure to state a claim. While I find that Mr. Fikre has standing, I hold that his complaint fails to state a claim. Therefore, for the reasons explained below, I GRANT Defendants’ motion and I DISMISS this case with prejudice. BACKGROUND Mr. Fikre began this action when he filed his original complaint in this court on May 30, 2013. [ECF 1]. Then, as now, Mr. Fikre’s grievance centers around alleged injuries sustained as a result of the Government’s decision to list him in the Terrorism Screening Database (“TSDB”) and to place him on the No Fly List. The TSDB is the federal government’s integrated list of

known and suspected terrorists. Watchlisting Overview [ECF 130-1] at 1-2. The No Fly List is a subset of the TSDB that bars those listed on it from boarding flights on U.S. carriers or any flight that enters U.S. airspace. Id. at 2. Persons listed in the TSDB but not included on the No Fly List are generally permitted to travel by air, but may be subject to additional security screening. Id. Over the last seven years and in as many amended complaints, much has transpired in this case. The factual circumstances have changed, claims have fallen away, and theories have been rejected. The case has made its way from the District Court to the Ninth Circuit and back again. Here, now, Mr. Fikre has been given leave to file a Seventh Amended Complaint to advance one final remaining theory: that he has suffered a reputational injury in violation of his

Fifth Amendment right to due process. As will be described in more detail below, Mr. Fikre’s Seventh Amended Complaint contains new allegations which purport to accomplish this goal.1 But the complaint (and Mr. Fikre’s argument in response to Defendants’ present motion) also attempts to repackage old allegations—which formed the basis of claims and theories that have already been rejected by this court—into the remaining reputational injury theory. For the cold reader, it can be hard to distinguish ground that has already been decisively covered from the new, limited issues that are the principal concern here. With that challenge in mind, I provide an

1 While much of the previous litigation in this case has centered around Mr. Fikre’s status on the No Fly List, these new allegations post-date Mr. Fikre’s removal from the No Fly List and focus on his inclusion in the TSDB more generally, which allegedly continues. abbreviated procedural history of this case, beginning with the circumstances of Mr. Fikre’s successful appeal to the Ninth Circuit and the procedural and factual developments that have occurred since.2 I. Procedural History On November 29, 2015, Mr. Fikre filed his Fifth Amended Complaint [ECF 87] and

Defendants moved to dismiss [ECF 90]. In that complaint, Mr. Fikre asserted sixteen different claims for relief, on constitutional, statutory, and common law grounds. Fifth Am. Compl. [87] at 23-40. Among those many claims, Mr. Fikre alleged that the Government’s decision to place and retain him on the No Fly List violated his Fifth Amendment rights to substantive due process (claim one) and procedural due process (claim three) by infringing his liberty interest in international travel. Id. at 23-24. Additionally, as part of his procedural due process claim only, Mr. Fikre alleged that his placement on the No Fly List also infringed his protected liberty interest “in his reputation and in freedom from government-assigned stigmas.” Id. at 25. On May 9, 2016, before the District Court had ruled on Defendants’ motion to dismiss,

Defendants filed a notice with the court representing that Mr. Fikre had been removed from the No Fly List. Notice [ECF 98] at 1. As a result, the court granted Defendants’ motion and

2 For a comprehensive procedural history of the events that predate the filing of the Fifth Amended Complaint and the Ninth Circuit’s decision, see Judge Anna J. Brown’s Opinion and Order (“O&O”) [ECF 128] at 2-12. Judge Brown was the judge on this case until July 15, 2019. Notice [ECF 134]. dismissed Mr. Fikre’s due process claims as moot. Op. and Order (“O&O”) [ECF 105] at 19-27.3 Mr. Fikre appealed the dismissal of his due process claims. See O&O [128] at 11.4 On September 20, 2018, the Ninth Circuit issued an opinion in which it reversed the District Court’s holding that Mr. Fikre’s substantive and procedural due process claims were moot. Fikre v. FBI, 904 F.3d 1033, 1041 (9th Cir. 2018). Citing the voluntary cessation doctrine,

the Ninth Circuit held that the Government’s disclosure that Mr. Fikre was no longer on the No Fly List was insufficient, on its own, to ensure that the Government’s allegedly illegal conduct in placing and retaining Mr. Fikre on the No Fly List would not recur. Id. at 1037-41. Relevant for our purposes here, at the conclusion of its analysis the Ninth Circuit stated the following: Finally, in response to the government's assertion that no relief is available for Fikre’s claims, we note that Fikre’s removal from the No Fly List does not “completely and irrevocably eradicate[ ] the effects of the alleged violation[s]” . . . . Absent an acknowledgment by the government that its investigation revealed Fikre did not belong on the list, and that he will not be returned to the list based on the currently available evidence, Fikre remains, in his own words, “stigmatiz[ed] . . . as a known or suspected terrorist and as an individual who represents a threat of engaging in or conducting a violent act of terrorism and who is operationally capable of doing so.” Because acquaintances, business associates, and perhaps even family members are likely to persist in shunning or avoiding him

3 Judge Brown also dismissed with prejudice claim four (freedom of association claim alleging that Defendants attempted to coerce Mr. Fikre into becoming a government informant by offering to remove him from the No Fly List), claim twelve (Fourth Amendment claim alleging the Government impermissibly searched and seized Mr. Fikre’s private communications), claim thirteen (alleged violations of FISA), claim fourteen (alleged violations of the Stored Communications Act), claim fifteen (alleged violations of the Wiretap Act), and claim sixteen (alleged violations of Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 41(g)). O&O [105] at 27-29, 35, 42, 45-46. Claim two and claims five through eleven related exclusively to a subset of defendants who were sued in their individual capacities. Id. at 4 n.1. After Mr. Fikre filed a notice of non-objection to the dismissal of these defendants [ECF 106] the court dismissed them without prejudice. Order [ECF 107].

4 Mr. Fikre also appealed the dismissal of his Fourth Amendment claim (claim twelve), but the Ninth Circuit affirmed the dismissal of that claim. Fikre v. FBI, 904 F.3d 1033, 1036 n.2 (9th Cir. 2018). despite his renewed ability to travel, it is plain that vindication in this action would have actual and palpable consequences for Fikre.

Id. at 1040 (emphasis added) (citations omitted). The Ninth Circuit remanded the case for further proceedings, id. at 1041, and Mr. Fikre moved the District Court for leave to file a sixth amended complaint, [ECF 125]. The court granted Mr. Fikre’s motion to amend only in part. O&O [128] at 30.

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