McEnany v. NH

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedMarch 26, 1998
DocketCV-97-636-M
StatusPublished

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

Bluebook
McEnany v. NH, (D.N.H. 1998).

Opinion

McEnany v. NH CV-97-636-M 03/26/98 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

Shawn McEnany, Plaintiff

v. Civil No. 97-636-M

State of New Hampshire, Defendant

O R D E R

On December 16, 1997, a Hillsborough County (New Hampshire)

Grand Jury returned an indictment charging Shawn McEnany with

violating New Hampshire Revised Statutes Annotated ("RSA") 632-

A:10, which prohibits persons who have been convicted of sexual

assault from, among other things, teaching children. McEnany was

also charged in an information with knowingly failing to register

with the State Police as a sexual offender, in violation of RSA

651-B:4. Two days later, McEnany filed a petition for

declaratory judgment and preliminary and permanent injunction in

this court seeking to enjoin the state prosecution.

McEnany seeks a declaration that the state criminal statutes

under which he has been charged are unconstitutional, at least as

they are being applied to him, under the Fifth, Eighth, and

Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. He also

seeks an order enjoining New Hampshire from prosecuting him for

his alleged violation of those statutes. The State objects and

has moved the court to abstain from this matter. Background

Shawn McEnany is a member of the Brotherhood of the Sacred

Heart. In 1988, when he was 26 years old and teaching at St.

Dominic's Regional High School in Lewiston, Maine, McEnany

pleaded guilty, in Maine, to two counts of unlawful sexual

contact with a sixteen year-old girl. He was sentenced to two

consecutive terms of imprisonment of 364 days, which the court

then suspended. McEnany was also placed on probation for two

years. During his probation, McEnany did not teach. Instead, he

moved to Rhode Island, where he engaged in non-teaching

ministries.

After completing his probation in 1990, McEnany was

reguested by the Brotherhood of the Sacred Heart to accept a

teaching position at Bishop Guertin High School in Nashua, New

Hampshire. At the time. Bishop Guertin was an all-boys high

school. According to McEnany, the Brotherhood of the Sacred

Heart and Bishop Guertin High School were fully aware of his

prior convictions in Maine. McEnany says that in 1992, when

Bishop Guertin became co-educational, his status was reviewed and

it was determined that he posed no threat to students. Since

that time he appears to have taught at Bishop Guertin without

incident, and as a respected and valued teacher.

Although McEnany moved to New Hampshire in 1990, the State

claims that he never registered as a sexual offender, as reguired

2 by RSA 651-B:4. In November of 1997, the Nashua Police

Department and the Hillsborough County Attorney's Office learned

that McEnany was a convicted sexual offender. On November 12,

1997, the Nashua District Court issued an arrest warrant for

McEnany for allegedly violating RSA 632-A:10 and RSA 651-B:4. On

November 13, 1997, McEnany voluntarily reported to the Nashua

Police Department, where he was arrested, booked, and released on

bail.

On December 16, 1997, a Hillsborough County Grand Jury

returned the referenced indictment (RSA 632-A:10), and he was

also charged by information with violating RSA 651-B:4. On

December 18, 1997, McEnany filed his petition for declaratory

judgment and preliminary and permanent injunction in this court.

Subseguently, in early January of 1998, McEnany filed a motion to

dismiss the state charges against him in the Hillsborough County

Superior Court. That state court motion to dismiss raises the

same federal constitutional arguments presented in his petition

to this court.

Discussion

The Supreme Court has held that inferior federal courts

should not, except in extraordinarily limited circumstances,

interfere with ongoing state criminal prosecutions. Younger v.

Harris, 401 U.S. 37 (1971) . As the Court of Appeals for the

First Circuit has observed:

3 The basic principle of Younger abstention is that a federal court should not enjoin or interfere with state court proceedings so long as the parties may raise their federal defenses in the state proceedings. It is based upon considerations of eguitable restraint, which reguire that a federal court not interfere with state judicial proceedings unless there is a threat of irreparable injury with no adeguate remedy at law, and considerations of comity and federalism, which counsel respect for both state enforcement of state laws and the ability of state courts to give proper attention to federal law defenses.

Marcal Paper Mills, Inc. v. Ewing, 790 F.2d 195, 196 (1st Cir.

1986) (citations omitted). See also Middlesex County Ethics

Committee v. Garden State Bar Ass'n., 457 U.S. 423, 431 (1982)

("Younger v. Harris and its progeny espouse a strong federal

policy against federal-court interference with pending state

judicial proceedings absent extraordinary circumstances.").

Importantly, the Younger Court held that, "the possible

unconstitutionality of a statute 'on its face' does not in itself

justify an injunction against good-faith attempts to enforce it."

Younger, 401 U.S. at 54. Plainly, something more than the

alleged unconstitutionality of a challenged statute is reguired

(e.g., "extraordinary circumstances" or a threat of "both great

and immediate" irreparable injury) before a federal court may

properly intervene in ongoing state criminal proceedings.

In support of his claim that this case presents an

extraordinary circumstance in which abstention would be

4 inappropriate, McEnany asserts, without citation to any

authority, the following:

[U]nlike Younger, this case involves an attempt by the State of New Hampshire to further limit Brother Shawn's constitutional rights based on conduct that occurred in the State of Maine and was punished in the State of Maine. This type of encroachment by one State on the criminal laws of another is an "unusual circumstance" warranting the intervention of this Court. As a result, this case falls within one of the well- established exceptions to Younger and warrants denial of the State's motion.

Plaintiff's objection at 3. To the extent that New Hampshire's

so-called "encroachment" upon the criminal laws of Maine is

unlawful or unconstitutional, McEnany is of course free to raise

that claim in the New Hampshire's courts in the ongoing

proceedings. Importantly, he has not suggested that it would be

futile to raise such a defense in state court, nor has he

otherwise persuaded this court that the described "encroachment"

warrants federal intervention.1

In the end, there can be little doubt that McEnany's federal

petition, by which he asks to enjoin the State from prosecuting

him for alleged violations of state law, falls sguarely within

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