Rosenblum v. John Does 1-10

CourtDistrict Court, D. Oregon
DecidedJuly 24, 2020
Docket3:20-cv-01161
StatusUnknown

This text of Rosenblum v. John Does 1-10 (Rosenblum v. John Does 1-10) 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
Rosenblum v. John Does 1-10, (D. Or. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON

PORTLAND DIVISION

ELLEN ROSENBLUM,

Plaintiff, Case No. 3:20-cv-01161-MO v. OPINION AND ORDER JOHN DOES 1-10; UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND SECURITY; UNITED STATES CUSTOMS AND BORDER PROTECTION SERVICE; UNITED STATES MARSHALS SERVICE; and FEDERAL PROTECTIVE SERVICE,

Defendants.

MOSMAN, J., In the wake of the tragic killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis, international protests have demanded fundamental changes to our criminal justice system, particularly to police culture and tactics. These important protests have, in Portland, centered on a four-block area that includes the U.S. Courthouse, known as the Mark O. Hatfield Courthouse. By virtue of it being a federal building, the law enforcement personnel involved are federal agents. One of the most difficult tasks for law enforcement in a free country like ours is to support robust protests while still maintaining order through lawful methods. This is even more challenging when the subject of the protests concerns police tactics. It is not unusual, following major protests, for some of the people involved to allege that the police crossed a line—a constitutional line—in the course of their interactions. It is also common for these interactions to result in lawsuits, with protesters contending the police violated their First and Fourth Amendment rights and seeking redress by money damages and injunctive relief. There is a well- established body of law paving the way for such lawsuits to move forward in federal court.

This is not such a lawsuit. It is a very different case, a highly unusual one with a particular set of rules. In the first place, although it involves allegations of harm done to protesters by law enforcement, no protester is a plaintiff here. Instead, it is brought by the State of Oregon under a rarely used doctrine called parens patriae. In the second place, it is not seeking redress for any harm that has been done to protesters. Instead, it seeks an injunction against future conduct, which is also an extraordinary form of relief. Under the governing law for such cases, the State of Oregon must make a very particularized showing in order to have standing to bring a parens patriae lawsuit, a task made even more challenging by the nature of the remedy it seeks. Because it has failed to do so—most fundamentally, because it has not

shown it is vindicating an interest that is specific to the state itself—I find the State of Oregon lacks standing here and therefore deny its request for a temporary restraining order. I do so without reaching the merits of the underlying claims. BACKGROUND For about eight weeks, these protests against police brutality and systemic racism have been a nightly occurrence in the area of the Multnomah County Justice Center (which includes the local jail) and the Hatfield Courthouse. At the beginning of July, Acting Secretary of the Department of Homeland Security Chad Wolf announced that his agency would deploy special units of officers to protect federal property. Pl.’s Mot. [ECF 5] at 3. Reports from Portland media documented federal officers engaging with protesters at the Hatfield Courthouse as early as July 1. Id. Within less than two weeks, reports surfaced that federal officers were “grabbing protesters, pulling them off the sidewalks of downtown, and shoving them into unmarked vehicles.” Id. The State filed this lawsuit on July 17, seeking to enjoin federal officers from continuing in that practice. Compl. [ECF 1]. The State filed this motion on July 20, with oral

argument on July 22. Min. of Proceedings [ECF 17]. I will refer to the alleged interactions between police and protesters as “seizures” for purposes of this opinion because, while it is unclear whether they constitute arrests, detentions, or something else, they are seizures for purposes of the Fourth Amendment. The State argues that the alleged seizures are unlawful for several reasons: (1) they violate the Fourth Amendment rights of the individuals being seized, (2) they violate those persons’ Fifth Amendment due process rights1, (3) they violate the First Amendment rights of individuals who wish to protest but are discouraged from doing so because they fear being seized, and (4) they constitute a public nuisance. Compl. [1] at 5-8. The State does not further its

public nuisance argument in its motion for a restraining order, so I will not consider it in the analysis below. In the motion before me, the State is seeking a temporary restraining order that would impose three remedies: (1) a requirement that officers identify themselves and their agency before arresting or detaining any person; (2) a requirement that officers explain to any person being seized that he or she is being arrested or detained; and (3) an enjoinder against arrests that lack probable cause. Compl. [1] at 9. The state lists other remedies in its complaint, but as

1 While the State alleges Fourth and Fifth Amendment violations separately, it acknowledged that these two claims play out identically for purposes of this motion. I therefore address the Fifth Amendment claims congruently with the Fourth Amendment. established at oral argument, these are the only remedies at issue in this motion. Id.; Draft Tr. at 53-54. Before I begin my analysis of whether the state should receive its requested restraining order, I will resolve preliminary legal questions that underpin the analysis below. First, while the complaint paints a picture of numerous protesters being seized from the

streets of Portland by unidentified agents, the State’s evidence in its brief and at the hearing consists of just two examples.2 First, it presents two declarations from an individual who claims he was detained by federal officers without probable cause. Pettibone Decl. [ECF 1-1]; Second Pettibone Decl. [ECF 7]. There is no video of this arrest and no evidence relating to its legality other than Mr. Pettibone’s sworn statements. Defendants have not refuted the State’s allegation that Mr. Pettibone’s seizure lacked probable cause. I therefore assume, only for purposes of this opinion, that this seizure was unlawful and constituted a violation of Mr. Pettibone’s rights under the Fourth and Fifth Amendments. As its second example, the State has offered a video, which it states has been circulated

heavily online, and which appears to show an individual being seized without any verbal explanation from officers. Potter Decl. [ECF 6] ¶ 6 (citing Senator Jeff Merkley (@SenJeffMerkley), Twitter (Jul. 16, 2020, 12:53 PM)3. The video shows the seizure but does not show any context for what preceded it. It therefore does not speak to probable cause one way or another because it is equally plausible that the individual was an innocent bystander or that he had committed some criminal act just before officers seized him. There is simply no way to

2 The State initially included a third example, but it withdrew that video because it recorded events that occurred in San Diego. Not. of Withdrawal [ECF 12].

3 Senator Merkley’s tweet of the video can be located at: https://twitter.com/SenJeffMerkley/status/1283852273089683464 know on the record before me, and I am not permitted to assume one way or the other. It is not, for purposes of this opinion, evidence of an arrest that lacked probable cause. The State argues that, regardless of whether the officers had probable cause for the arrest, the lack of verbal identification from the federal officers renders the seizure unreasonable for purposes of the Fourth Amendment. Pl.’s Mot. [5] at 16-17.4 Defendants argue that the officers

were otherwise identifiable, given their official uniforms and insignia, and that no verbal identification was required. Def.’s Resp. [ECF 15] at 15-16.

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