UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
SOUTHERN POVERTY LAW CENTER,
Plaintiff,
v.
Civil Action No. 18-760 (CKK)
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HOMELAND
SECURITY, et al.,
Defendants.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
(June 2, 2022)
This case concerns detained immigrants’ access to legal counsel and conditions of
confinement at to four Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”) detention facilities: LaSalle
ICE Processing Center in Jena, Louisiana (“LaSalle”); Pine Prairie ICE Processing Center in Pine
Prairie, Louisiana (“Pine Prairie); Irwin County Detention Center in Ocilla, Georgia (“Irwin”); 1
and Stewart Detention Center in Lumpkin, Georgia (“Stewart”) (collectively, “the Facilities”).
Pl.’s Second Am. Compl., ECF No. 70, ¶ 13. Plaintiff Southern Poverty Law Center (“SPLC”) is
1
Because, as the parties agree, Irwin has since been closed, all legal and factual issues related to
Irwin are now moot. Although the Court finds this part of Plaintiff’s operative complaint moot, it
does not dismiss any portion of the complaint as a result. There appears to be some disagreement
among the federal courts as to whether Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12 permits a district
court to dismiss a portion of a claim (i.e., a theory of liability) or rather whether Rule 12 permits
only dismissal of a claim in toto. A number of district courts have taken the former position.
See, e.g., FTC v. Nudge, LLC, 430 F. Supp. 3d 1230, 1246 n.121 (D. Utah 2019); Charles v.
Front Royal Volunteer Fire and Rescue Dep’t, Inc., 21 F. Supp. 3d 620, 629 (W.D. Va. 2014).
One judge of this court recently concurred. FTC v. Facebook, Inc., --- F. Supp. 3d ---, 2022 WL
103308, at *17 (D.D.C. Jan. 11, 2022) (JEB). On the other hand, the United States Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has appeared to endorse, but not hold, that a court
may partially dismiss a claim for relief. See generally Covad Commc’ns Co. v. Bell Atl. Corp.,
398 F.3d 666 (2005) (concluding that certain theories of liability should be dismissed for failure
to state a claim). In an abundance of caution, the Court shall follow the more conservative
approach here.
1
an organization that provides representation for detained persons at these four Facilities. Plaintiff’s
operative complaint alleges that Plaintiff provides detained individuals legal services in connection
with bond, parole, and removal proceedings. Id. ¶¶ 100-01, 318.
Plaintiff alleges that their clients’ conditions of confinement violate the Fifth Amendment
and the Administrative Procedures Act, 5 U.S.C. §§ 551 et seq (“APA”). Specifically, Plaintiffs
claim that their clients’ conditions of confinement violate the Fifth Amendment’s substantive due
process guarantees of: (1) access to courts; (2) access to counsel; (3) a full and fair hearing; and
(4) to be free of punitive conditions while in civil detention.
Before the Court is Defendants’ [133] Renewed Motion to Partially Dismiss the Second
Amended Complaint Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(h)(3) for Lack of Subject
Matter Jurisdiction. Therein, Defendants ask the Court to dismiss Plaintiff’s Fifth Amendment
claims because they “arise from” removal proceedings, and the Court lacks jurisdiction to review
such claims pursuant to 8 U.S.C. § 1252(b)(9). Additionally, Defendants request dismissal of
Plaintiff’s APA claim because it does not challenge a final agency action as required by 5 U.S.C.
§ 702. Because Plaintiff’s access-to-courts claim and full-and-fair hearing claim involve bond
proceedings––in which an alien may petition for release from civil detention––these claims survive
dismissal. Plaintiff’s access-to-counsel Fifth Amendment claim must be dismissed for lack of
jurisdiction because, as presently pled, it is predicated only on removal proceedings. Plaintiff’s
APA claim survives dismissal, however, because Defendants point to no statute otherwise
stripping the Court of general federal question jurisdiction applicable to APA claims. Finally, for
the reasons already discussed in SPLC v. DHS, 2020 WL 3265533, at *14-17 (D.D.C. June 17,
2020), Plaintiff’s punitive-conditions claim also survives dismissal. Accordingly, and upon
2
consideration of the briefing, 2 the relevant authorities, and the entire record, the Court GRANTS
IN PART AND DENIES IN PART Defendants’ [133] Renewed Motion to Partially Dismiss the
Second Amended Complaint Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(h)(3) for Lack of
Subject Matter Jurisdiction.
I. BACKGROUND
Among other things, Plaintiff Southern Poverty Law Center provides free legal services to
immigrants, including those civilly detained by ICE. See SPLC, 2020 WL 3265533, at *8. This
action concerns the work of its constituent organization, the Southeast Immigrant Freedom
Initiative (“SIFI”), and the legal services it provides to detainees at the Facilities. Id. SIFI, whether
through attorneys employed through SPLC or through volunteer attorneys, “travel to the
[Facilities] for week-long rotations in order to meet with potential clients, gather evidence, draft
legal documents, and assist clients in obtaining release on bond or parole.” Compl. ¶ 100.
Additionally, SIFI provides “effective and ethical removal defense to all detained clients.” Id. ¶
101 (emphasis added). Broadly, Plaintiff alleges that ICE maintains conditions of confinement
2
The Court’s consideration has focused on the following:
• Plaintiff’s Second Amended Complaint, ECF No. 70 (“Compl.”);
• Defendants’ Renewed Motion to Partially Dismiss the Second Amended Complaint
Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(h)(3) for Lack of Subject-Matter
Jurisdiction, ECF No. 133 (“Mot.”);
• Plaintiff’s Response to Defendants’ Renewed Motion to Partially Dismiss the Second
Amended Complaint Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(h)(3), ECF No. 136
(“Opp.”);
• Defendants’ Reply in Support of their Motion to Partially Dismiss the Second Amended
Complaint Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(h)(3) for Lack of Subject Matter
Jurisdiction, ECF No. 138 (“Repl.”);
• Defendants’ Supplemental Brief in Support of Defendants’ Renewed Motion to Partially
Dismiss the Second Amended Complaint, ECF No. 175 (“Supp. Br.”); and
• Plaintiff’s Response to Defendants’ Supplemental Brief in Support of Renewed Motion to
Partially Dismiss, ECF No. 178 (“Supp. Opp.”).
In an exercise of its discretion, the Court finds that holding oral argument would not be of
assistance in rendering a decision. See LCvR 7(f).
3
across all Facilities that unconstitutionally impede SIFI and SPLC clients from accessing their SIFI
and/or SPLC counsel. Id. ¶ 118. Based on these factual allegations, Plaintiff advances six claims
for relief: (1) denial of access to courts in violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth
Amendment; (2) denial of the right to counsel in violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fifth
Amendment; (3) denial of the right to a full and fair hearing in violation of the Due Process Clause
of the Fifth Amendment; (4) punitive conditions of confinement in violation of the Due Process
Clause of the Fifth Amendment; (5) on behalf of Plaintiff itself, breach of the Free Speech Clause
of the First Amendment; and (6) arbitrary and capricious conduct in violation of the APA.
On May 7, 2020, Plaintiff filed a Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order, asking that
the Court (1) preliminarily grant the relief sought in the operative complaint and (2) order
Defendants to implement certain hygienic protocols in light of the COVID-19 pandemic. The
Court granted that motion in part on June 17, 2020, and entered a preliminary injunction ordering
Defendants, among other things, to provide more and better means for detainees to communicate
with counsel. SPLC, 2020 WL 3265533, at *1. In so doing, the Court found that Plaintiffs were
likely to succeed on the merits of their claim that ICE’s conditions of confinement across the four
Facilities were punitive in violation of substantive due process guaranteed by the Fifth
Amendment. Id. at *18. The Court did not consider the merits of any other claim. See id. at *16.
In order to reach the merits of the punitive-conditions claim, however, the Court resolved a number
of jurisdictional issues. First, the Court found that Plaintiff had third-party standing to bring claims
on behalf of its clients, insofar as injury to its clients thwarted Plaintiff’s institutional purpose to
represent its clients. Id. at *14. Second, the Court concluded that a Fifth Amendment claim
predicated on punitive detention did not pose “questions of law [or] fact . . . arising from any action
taken or proceeding brought to remove an alien from the United States.” Id. at *16 (quoting 8
4
U.S.C. § 1252(b)(9)). As such, the Court had subject matter jurisdiction to hear such a claim.
Since the Court’s order granting preliminary relief, the procedural posture of this case grew
substantially more complicated. On July 14, 2020, Defendants moved to dismiss the remainder of
Plaintiff’s operative complaint for lack of jurisdiction, ECF No. 133, and the parties completed
briefing on Plaintiff’s [116] motion to compel discovery. In the meantime, the parties continued
to litigate certain discovery disputes that the Court referred to Magistrate Judge Robin M.
Meriweather for resolution on April 7, 2020. See ECF No. 102. On August 7, 2020, a little less
than two months after the Court entered its preliminary injunction, Plaintiff filed its [139] Motion
to Enforce the Court’s June 17, 2020 Order Granting Injunctive Relief. These motions remained
pending before the Court when the parties jointly moved on March 17, 2021 for an order referring
the case for mediation and staying all proceedings pending mediation. ECF No. 161. The Court
granted that motion the same day, and the parties proceeded to mediation before Judge
Meriweather. ECF No. 162. On August 2, 2021, the parties informed the Court that mediation
had failed, ECF No. 171, and the Court ordered the parties to file supplemental briefing updating
the pending motion to enforce, partial motion to dismiss, and motion to compel, ECF No. 173. All
three motions remain pending before the Court (and this Memorandum Opinion resolves the partial
motion to dismiss). On January 13, 2022, Defendants added a fourth motion to the mix, moving
to stay discovery. ECF No. 183.
On September 17, 2021, the parties completed their supplemental briefing, and the parties
lengthened the record substantially as to the pending motion to enforce the preliminary injunction.
The Court concluded that it could not resolve the plethora of lengthy, dueling declarations on the
motion to enforce and appointed a special monitor on April 14, 2022 to visit the Facilities and
prepare a factual report as to the conditions at those facilities. ECF No. 191. The Special
5
Monitor’s work remains ongoing as of the date of this Memorandum Opinion.
With this procedural background in mind, the Court now turns to the resolution of
Defendants’ [133] Renewed Motion to Partially Dismiss the Second Amended Complaint Pursuant
to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(h)(3) for Lack of Subject Matter Jurisdiction.
II. LEGAL STANDARD
Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(h)(3), if the Court “determines at any
time that it lacks subject matter jurisdiction,” it “must dismiss the action.” A Rule 12(h)(3)
motion is subject to the same standards as a Rule 12(b)(1) motion to dismiss for lack of
jurisdiction. Murray v. Amalgamated Trans. Union, 206 F. Supp. 3d 202, 207 (D.D.C. 2016).
To survive a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1), plaintiff bears the burden of
establishing that the court has subject matter jurisdiction over its claim. See Moms Against
Mercury v. FDA, 483 F.3d 824, 828 (D.C. Cir. 2007). In determining whether there is
jurisdiction, the Court may “consider the complaint supplemented by undisputed facts evidenced
in the record, or the complaint supplemented by undisputed facts plus the court’s resolution of
disputed facts.” Coal. for Underground Expansion v. Mineta, 333 F.3d 193, 198 (D.C. Cir.
2003) (citations omitted). “Although a court must accept as true all factual allegations contained
in the complaint when reviewing a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(1),” the factual
allegations in the complaint “will bear closer scrutiny in resolving a 12(b)(1) motion than in
resolving a 12(b)(6) motion for failure to state a claim.” Wright v. Foreign Serv. Grievance Bd.,
503 F. Supp. 2d 163, 170 (D.D.C. 2007) (citations omitted). Although the Court must construe
the complaint liberally, it may not “draw argumentative inferences in favor” of Plaintiff.
Yamaha Motor Corp. v. United States, 779 F. Supp. 610, 611 (D.D.C. 1991) (citing Norton v.
Larney, 266 U.S. 511 (1925)).
6
IV. DISCUSSION
Defendants move to dismiss all but Plaintiff’s First Amendment claim on two limited
bases: (1) the Court lacks jurisdiction to hear Plaintiff’s Fifth Amendment claims because
Congress has statutorily provided that only the federal Courts of Appeals may hear such claims
after administrative review, and (2) the Court lacks jurisdiction to hear Plaintiff’s APA claim
because there is no final agency action to review. For example, Defendants do not argue that
Plaintiff fails to state a claim or Plaintiff lacks standing. As such, before the Court are two
tailored questions: (1) whether, as a matter of pleading and statutory interpretation, Plaintiff’s
claims qualify as claims “arising from” removal proceedings that the federal district courts lack
jurisdiction to hear, and (2) whether Plaintiff’s purported failure to plead a final agency action
strips the Court of jurisdiction over Plaintiff’s APA claim.
As to the former, the Court repeats its prior holding that claims of punitive detention do
not “arise from” removal proceedings. The Court further holds that due process claims
predicated on proceedings other than removal––here, bond proceedings––do not “arise from”
removal proceedings either. As to the latter, the Court holds that Defendants have failed to
articulate any reason why the Court does not have general federal question jurisdiction over
Plaintiff’s APA claim. Accordingly, the Court dismisses Plaintiff’s access-to-counsel claim
because, as pled, it alleges interference only with Plaintiff’s representation of their clients in
removal proceedings. Because Plaintiff’s access-to-courts Fifth Amendment claim and full-and-
fair-hearing Fifth Amendment claim also allege constructive denial of access to bond
proceedings in addition to removal proceedings, these claims survive, but only as to bond
proceedings. Finally, whatever issues Plaintiff’s APA claim may have on the merits, the Court
holds that it has jurisdiction to consider the claim on the merits.
7
A. Fifth Amendment Claims
As the Court previously explained in its Memorandum Opinion granting preliminary relief
on Plaintiff’s punitive-conditions claim, the Immigration and Nationality Act (“INA”) provides
that “a petition for review filed with an appropriate court of appeals” is “the sole and exclusive
means for judicial review of an order of removal.” 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(5). It also channels
“[j]udicial review of all questions of law and fact, including interpretation and application of
constitutional and statutory provisions, arising from any action taken or proceeding brought to
remove an alien from the United States” into “judicial review of a final order” of removal. Id.
§ 1252(b)(9) (emphasis added). Section 1252(b)(9) is an “unmistakable ‘zipper’ clause,” Reno v.
Am.-Arab Anti-Discrimination Comm., 525 U.S. 471, 483 (1999), that has been recognized as
“breathtaking” in its reach, Aguilar v. ICE, 510 F.3d 1, 9 (1st Cir. 2007). It “therefore swallows
up virtually all claims that are tied to removal proceedings.” J.E.F.M. v. Lynch, 837 F.3d 1026,
1031 (9th Cir. 2016).
Of course, not all claims that can by advanced by an ICE detainee “arise from” removal
proceedings. Jennings v. Rodriguez, 138 S. Ct. 830, 840 (2018) (plurality op.) (Alito, J.). As
Justice Samuel A. Alito explains, writing for the plurality, only three categories of challenges
“arise from” removal proceedings: (1) “review of an order of removal,” (2) a challenge to “the
decision to detain them in the first place or to seek removal,” and (3) a challenge to “any part of
the process by which their removability will be determined.” Id. at 841. As to these categories,
the Supreme Court has cautioned that “capacious phrases like ‘arising from’” should not be subject
to “‘uncritical literalism’ leading to results that ‘no sensible person could have intended.’” Id. at
840 (collecting cases). Accordingly, the plurality offered some examples of claims that do not
“arise from” removal proceedings: claims of “allegedly inhumane conditions of confinement,”
8
state-law tort claims “against a guard or fellow detainee,” or unconstitutionally prolonged
detention. Id. Therefore, the plurality held that constitutional claims involving bond proceedings
do not “arise from” removal proceedings, even though those bond proceedings would not have
been initiated but for the commencement of removal proceedings. See id. at 842. 3
Although the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit (“D.C.
Circuit”) has yet to address Jennings, at least three other Courts of Appeals have addressed this
issue––the breadth of the “zipper clause”––at length. The Ninth Circuit asks whether the
detainee’s claim is “independent of or collateral to the removal process.” J.E.F.M. v. Lynch, 837
F.3d 1026, 1032 (9th Cir. 2016). 4 The Third Circuit on the other hand, applies a slightly different
test. As it explained in E.O.H.C. v. Sec’y United States Dep’t of Homeland Sec., 950 F.3d 177
(2020):
We distill a simple principle from Jennings . . . We must ask: If not now, when? If
the answer would otherwise be never, then § 1252(b)(9) poses no jurisdictional bar.
In other words, it does not strip jurisdiction when aliens seek relief that courts
cannot meaningfully provide alongside review of a final order of removal.
Id. at 185–86. The First Circuit applies a test quite similar to the Third Circuit’s. In addition to
3
This discussion takes place in Part II of the opinion, which was joined by Chief Justice John
Roberts and Justice Anthony Kennedy. As the dissent takes an even narrower view of the “zipper
clause,” a majority of the Supreme Court would hold that, at most, the “zipper clause” spans only
the plurality’s three categories of claims. See 138 S. Ct. at 874 (Breyer, J., dissenting).
4
The court in Arroyo v. DHS, 2019 WL 2912848 (C.D. Cal. June 20, 2019) articulated a slightly
different theory applying J.E.F.M.. The Arroyo court distinguished J.E.FM. on the facts, arguing
that the court in J.E.F.M. lacked jurisdiction over an access-to-counsel claim because the
plaintiffs had yet to be represented in any proceeding, whereas the Arroyo court had jurisdiction
over access-to-counsel claims were already represented by the time the complaint was filed. Id.
at *13. In making this distinction, Arroyo employed an “accrual” theory of 1252(b)(9)
jurisdiction: where a right-to-counsel claim “accrues” prior to the institution of a Fifth
Amendment action, the Court has jurisdiction. Id. at *14. As the Court further explains below,
the Court concludes that this accrual theory is similarly divorced from statutory text and
troublingly denies judicial review to Fifth Amendment claims predicated on lack of access to
counsel for a non-removal proceeding based on a mere temporal distinction.
9
asking, like the Ninth Circuit, whether the claim is “independent of, or wholly collateral to, the
removal process,” the First Circuit asks further whether a claim can be “raised efficaciously within
the administrative proceedings delineated by the INA.” Aguilar v. ICE, 510 F.3d 1, 11 (1st Cir.
2007) (emphasis added). For the purposes of resolving the instant Motion, the Court concludes
that the Ninth Circuit’s more constrained approach will be applied.
First, the Court agrees with the First Circuit that “[d]elineating the precise ambit of section
1252(b)(9) calls for an exercise in statutory construction.” Aguilar, 510 F.3d at 8. The Court
disagrees, however, that the plain meaning of the statutory text requires the Court to further
determine whether a claim is “efficaciously” raised in a certain forum. The first two definitions
of “arise” in Black’s Law Dictionary are instructive here: “(1) to originate; to stem (from) . . . (2)
[t]o result (from).” “Arise,” Black’s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019). Similarly, Merriam Webster
defines “arise,” in relevant part, as “to originate from a source.” “Arise,” Merriam-Webster
Dictionary (11th ed. 2020). The statutory text, by its clear meaning, imposes no requirement that
a claim be more suitable in one forum than another. Rather, it merely requires that the claim “arise
from,” i.e., “originate from,” removal proceedings.
That said, whether an immigration judge can grant the requisite relief to resolve the claim
may be indicative of whether a claim is, in fact, collateral to the removal. For example, as the
Court concluded previously, that immigration judges are “powerless to remedy” punitive
conditions of confinement is additional reason to conclude that a punitive-conditions claim is
collateral to removal proceedings. SPLC, 2020 WL 3265533, at *16 (citing Executive Office for
Immigration Review, Immigration Court Practice Manual at 125 (rev’d June 10, 2013)
(“Immigration Judges have no jurisdiction over . . . the conditions in [a] detention facility.”); see
also Torres v. DHS, 411 F. Supp. 3d 1036, 1049 (C.D. Cal. 2019). Relying in part on the fact that
10
the powers of immigration judges are limited, the Court concluded that Plaintiff’s claim that
“conditions imposed as a result of the limitations and restrictions adopted due to COVID-19 are
punitive” is not a claim arising from removal proceedings. SPLC, 2020 WL 3265533, at *17.
The level and quality of relief an immigration judge may fashion to address a particular
claim, however, is not determinative of whether such a claim arises from removal proceedings.
As the Court explained, the key reason why a punitive-conditions claim––which the Court then
termed a “conditions of confinement claim”––does not arise from removal proceedings is because
such a claim does not “challenge ‘any part of the process by which [Plaintiff’s clients’]
removability will be determined.’” Id. at *16 (quoting Jennings, 138 S. Ct. at 840 (plurality op.)).
In other words, whether conditions of confinement themselves are unconstitutionally punitive has
nothing to do with proceedings of any kind, because none of the analysis rests of the conditions’
impact on such proceedings. See id.; see also Castillo v. Barr, 449 F. Supp. 3d 915, 922 (C.D.
Cal. 2020).
As the Court observed in a footnote in its last opinion on the subject, right-to-counsel Fifth
Amendment claims present a closer question. Some courts have found that such claims, when they
allege interference with a pre-existing attorney–client relationship, are collateral and thus not
barred. See, e.g., Torres 411 F. Supp. 3d at 1048 (“Plaintiffs’ INA and procedural due process
claims do not hinge on events at any particular removal proceeding. . . . Plaintiffs’ claims are based
on a right protecting the attorney–client relationship from undue burden or interference.”); Arroyo,
2019 WL 2912848, at *13 (“But for purposes of the jurisdictional inquiry, it is enough that
represented Immigrant Plaintiffs assert harm which accrues at the moment of geographic
separation, rather than in reference to the fairness of their underlying removal proceedings. . . .
Accordingly, the Court finds represented Immigrant Plaintiffs allege an injury to their established
11
counsel relationship that is independent of and collateral to their removal proceedings.”);
Innovation Law Lab v. Nielsen, 342 F. Supp. 3d 1067, 1078 (D. Or. 2018) (“As with the legal
question regarding an alien’s indefinite detention in Jennings, the legal questions regarding
detainees’ access to their retained counsel in this case are ‘too remote’ from removal proceedings
to fall within the scope of § 1252(b)(9) or (g).”).
Other courts have found that such claims are barred on the general theory that the right to
counsel is too closely bound up in the removal proceeding and related processes. See, e.g., Aguilar,
510 F.3d at 13 (finding barred plaintiffs’ “claim that their detention and subsequent transfer by the
government infringed their rights to counsel by barring their access to lawyers, interfering with
preexisting attorney–client relationships, and making it difficult to secure counsel of their
choosing”); Nat’l Immigration Project of Nat’l Lawyers Guild v. Executive Office of Immigration
Review, 456 F. Supp. 3d 16 (D.D.C. 2020) (finding barred plaintiffs’ “access-to-counsel and due
process claims” because they arose “from the course of removal hearings”); Avilez v. Barr, No.
19-CV-08296-CRB, 2020 WL 570987, at *2 (N.D. Cal. Feb. 5, 2020) (finding barred claim that
plaintiff’s “transfer to [another facility] violate[d] her Fifth Amendment right to counsel”); Alvarez
v. Sessions, 338 F. Supp. 3d 1042, 1048 (N.D. Cal. 2018) (finding barred claims alleging
“disruption to an established representation relationship”).
A close reading of the Jennings plurality and the statutory language at issue shows that the
key question is the proceedings at issue. The Jennings plurality explained that, for jurisdictional
purposes, there is an important difference between bond proceedings and removal proceedings.
At issue in Jennings was whether the INA provides for periodic bond hearings as a matter of
statutory construction. 138 S. Ct. at 836. In order to reach that question, the Court first had to
determine whether legal questions posed by bond proceedings “arose from” removal proceedings
12
for the purposes of section 1252(b)(9). Id. at 839-40. As previously explained, the plurality
concluded that a legal question regarding the legal sufficiency of bond proceedings did not “arise
from” removal proceedings because, in posing such a question, the detainee respondents did not
ask for judicial review of any part of their removal proceedings. See id. at 840. The Court distills
from the plurality decision a simple principle in this case: on the one hand, where a Fifth
Amendment claim centers on the process due in removal proceedings, it is barred; where a Fifth
Amendment claim centers on the process due in any other proceedings, on the other hand, it is not
barred.
A number of other courts have taken a similar approach. Nat’l Immigration Project is
particularly instructive. There, several detainees and legal services organizations challenged the
same kinds of conditions of confinement as raised in this case, alleging that those conditions of
confinement violated, among other things, the Fifth Amendment’s guarantee of access to counsel
as to removal proceedings. 456 F. Supp. 3d at 24. As the court there explained, even though the
plaintiffs characterized their access-to-counsel claim as centering on conditions of confinement,
“[w]hether there has been a violation of any immigration petitioner’s right to counsel will depend
on the specific facts that arise from [their] removal proceedings.” Id. at 29 (citing J.E.F.M., 867
F.3d at 1035)). In other words, to determine whether Defendants in fact violated Plaintiff’s client’s
right to access to counsel for the purposes of removal proceedings by setting certain conditions of
confinement, the Court must look to the effects on the representation in the removal proceedings
themselves. See id. Although Plaintiffs couch all their Fifth Amendment claims as “conditions
of confinement” claims, these claims in fact revolve entirely around the conditions’ effects on Fifth
Amendment rights as to removal proceedings. See Carranza v. ICE, 2021 WL 1840418, at *5
(D.N.M. May 7, 2021) (Sweaza, M.J.). As a matter of statutory interpretation, such claims are
13
barred because they arise from the removal proceedings themselves.
Plaintiff protests such a finding as illogical because, as the Court has previously noted,
immigration judges are powerless to remedy conditions of confinement at detention centers. Opp.
at 10. As an initial matter, whether an immigration judge can fashion an effective remedy has
nothing to do with the statutory text, the lodestar of the Court’s analysis. See Aguilar, 510 F.3d at
10. Even if true, immigration judges do have the power to fashion other effective relief. For
example, “immigration judges can and do control removal proceedings by allowing parties
additional time to discuss matters with counsel and evidence.” Carranza, 2021 WL 1840418, at
*5. Although immigration judges lack the power to provide the relief Plaintiff seeks here, it is
incorrect to suggest that they lack any power to remedy a Fifth Amendment right-to-counsel or
access-to-courts violation. Again, however, the powers of immigration judges are, at most,
probative of whether a claim is barred under section 1252(b)(9). The statutory provision asks the
Court not to determine what relief can be afforded in each forum, but rather whether the claim as
pled arises from a removal proceeding.
This is not to say that section 1252(b)(9) bars review of all access-to-counsel (or access-
to-courts) claims. Although the Court disagrees with Arroyo’s “accrual” theory of jurisdiction,
the Arroyo court was quite right to note that some plaintiffs “were likely not included within this
jurisdictional bar” where their Fifth Amendment claims were predicated on, for example, “an up-
coming bond hearing.” 2019 WL 2912848, at *16. The Nat’l Immigration Project court agreed,
concluding that the plaintiffs’ access-to-counsel claims were barred because none of them arose,
for example, “out of bond determinations” but rather, as pled, solely removal proceedings. 456 F.
Supp. 3d at 30 (emphasis added). Indeed, focusing on the proceeding itself is the most natural
extension of the Jennings plurality which concluded that a challenge to prolonged detention
14
without a bond hearing did not fall within section 1252(b)(9). 138 S. Ct. at 841 & n.3.
Defendants’ argument that the Court should read 1252(b)(9) to sweep even broader––
swallowing up all Fifth Amendment claims by immigrant detainees––is unavailing. As the First
Circuit explained, had Congress intended the “zipper clause” to sweep as broadly as Defendants
would prefer, Congress could have easily used different language, e.g. “related to” or “because
of.” See Aguilar, 510 F.3d at 10; see also McNary v. Haitian Refugee Ctr., Inc., 498 U.S. 479,
496 (1991) (implying Congress could have used broader language had it wanted to set a broader
jurisdictional bar). Congress did not do so. Defendants’ position also stands in stark contrast to
the Jennings broader plurality’s supposition that challenges to non-removal proceedings are not
included within the “zipper clause.”
Defendants’ reading of 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(2)(B)(ii) fails for similar reasons. Pursuant to
that provision, “no court shall have the jurisdiction to review . . . any other decision or action of
the Attorney General or the Secretary of Homeland Security” including, pursuant to 8 U.S.C. §
1226(a), discretionary bond determinations. Yet, as the Jennings plurality explains, Fifth
Amendment claims such as Plaintiff’s do not challenge a detention decision itself. See 138 S. Ct.
at 841. If Plaintiff is not challenging individual bond proceedings as unconstitutional under the
Fifth Amendment (i.e., as applied), it is making a facial challenge to the statutory scheme
permitting detention to the extent that the statutory scheme permits Defendants’ alleged conduct,
which would not be barred. See id. As a general matter, the Court is unconvinced that Fifth
Amendment claims predicated on conditions of confinement that unconstitutionally affect bond
proceedings are statutorily barred in light of the precedent examined. See also Arroyo, 2019 WL
2912848, at *16; Nat’l Immigration Project, 456 F. Supp. 3d at 30 (implying that right-to-counsel
claim would not be barred if it was connected to bond proceedings).
15
As such, to determine whether Plaintiff’s claims are statutorily barred, the Court must turn
to how Plaintiff has pled each claim.
First, Plaintiff pleads in its first claim, a Fifth Amendment access-to-courts claim, that
“Plaintiff’s clients require meaningful access to Plaintiff in order to seek release on both bond and
parole and to defend themselves against removal from the United States.” Compl. ¶ 318. Plaintiff
continues to argue that the conditions of confinement at the Facilities “unjustifiably obstruct the
availability of meaningful legal professional representation for SPLC’s clients and impede upon
other aspects of their right of access to the courts at facilities across the Southeast.” Id. ¶ 319. Read
together, Plaintiff claims that the conditions of confinement at the Facilities unconstitutionally
limit their clients’ access to bond proceedings. Therefore, Plaintiff’s first claim does not “arise
from” removal proceedings because it centers on, in part, representation in bond proceedings. This
first claim thereby survives dismissal, although the Court will not entertain any argument moving
forward that the alleged conditions of confinement unconstitutionally interfere with detainees’
access to removal proceedings. 5
Second, Plaintiff pleads in its second claim, a Fifth Amendment right-to-counsel claim,
that “Plaintiff’s clients have retained Plaintiff to represent them in removal proceedings” and the
alleged conditions of confinement “have created substantial barriers to Plaintiff’s efforts to provide
effective and ethical representation to their clients.” Compl. ¶¶ 326-27. In this claim, Plaintiff
does not plead that the alleged conditions of confinement impede representation in connection with
a proceeding other than removal proceedings. Because right-to-counsel claims are barred where
they are predicated only on removal proceedings, this claim must be dismissed.
5
Per the Court’s discussion in footnote 1, supra, the Court will not dismiss this portion of this
claim, nor will it dismiss a portion of any other claim. See FTC v. Facebook, Inc., --- F. Supp.
3d ---, 2022 WL 103308, at *17 (D.D.C. Jan. 11, 2022) (JEB).
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Third, Plaintiff pleads in its third claim, a Fifth Amendment full-and-fair-hearing claim,
that “Defendants’ conduct creates a substantial likelihood that Plaintiff’s clients’ rights to a full
and fair hearing will be violated because [they] severely restrict the ability of Plaintiff to
communicate with its clients and to conduct necessary legal work on their behalf in connection
with their removal proceedings.” Id. ¶ 331 (emphasis added). Plaintiff continues, however, that
the alleged conditions of confinement impact Plaintiff’s representation of their clients in “bond
and removal proceedings.” Id. ¶ 333 (emphasis added). This claim, therefore, is predicated in part
on bond proceedings. The claim thereby survives dismissal only as to bond proceedings; the Court
will not entertain any argument moving forward that the alleged conditions of confinement
unconstitutionally interfere with detainees’ right to a full and fair hearing in removal proceedings.
Fourth and finally, Plaintiff’s fifth claim for relief, a Fifth Amendment punitive-conditions
claim, survives for the reasons stated in SPLC v. DHS, 2020 WL 3265533 (D.D.C. June 17, 2020)
and repeated above.
In sum, the Court holds in this section that the Court lacks jurisdiction over Plaintiff’s
second claim for relief but that it may exercise jurisdiction over Plaintiff’s first, third, and fifth
claims for relief in part.
B. APA Claim
Lastly, Defendants move to dismiss Plaintiff’s APA claim on jurisdictional grounds. As
pled, Plaintiff argues that Defendants’ failure to implement its Performance-Based National
Detention Standards governing external communication and visitation is arbitrary and/or
capricious in violation of 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). Compl. ¶¶ 350-53. Defendants seem to argue that
the Court lacks jurisdiction over such a claim because 8 U.S.C. § 1252(a)(5) makes removal
proceedings the “sole and exclusive means for judicial review of an order entered or issued under
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any provision of this chapter.” Repl. at 18. Yet Plaintiff’s APA claim does not challenge any
removal order; it only alleges that Defendant has failed to implement an agency policy and that
failure to implement that policy is a violation of the APA.
Perhaps cognizant of what Plaintiff actually pleads, Defendants devote the vast majority of
argument in support of dismissal on whether Plaintiffs have alleged a final agency action within
the meaning of the APA. See Mot. 30-37; Repl. 20-23. Such an argument, however, has nothing
to do with subject matter jurisdiction. The APA itself does not contain any jurisdictional grant.
Califano v. Sanders, 430 U.S. 99, 107 (1977); Oryszak v. Sullivan, 576 F.3d 522, 524-25 (D.C.
Cir. 2009). Therefore, any argument about the deficiency of an APA claim––particularly an
argument that a plaintiff has failed to identify a final agency action––is made on a motion to
dismiss for failure to state a claim, not a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. Trudeau v.
FTC, 456 F.3d 178, 187-88 (D.C. Cir. 2006). The present motion, of course, is solely to dismiss
for lack of jurisdiction, and Defendants cannot now move to dismiss the operative complaint
because they have already filed their answer thereto. Alemayehu v. Abere, 298 F. Supp. 3d 157,
163 (D.D.C. 2018). Although it remains within the Court’s discretion to convert the present
motion into a partial motion for judgment on the pleadings or for summary judgment, see Murphy
v. Dep’t of the Air Force, 326 F.R.D. 47, 48-50 (D.D.C. 2018) (KBJ), the Court shall not do so
given Defendants themselves insist that the Court should construe the present motion only as a
Rule 12(h)(3) motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, Repl. at 19. As Defendants have not
articulated any other reason why the Court lacks jurisdiction over Plaintiff’s APA claim, the claim
survives dismissal.
V. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Defendants’ [133] Renewed Motion to Partially Dismiss the
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Second Amended Complaint Pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(h)(3) for Lack of
Subject Matter Jurisdiction is GRANTED IN PART AND DENIED IN PART. An appropriate
Order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.
Date: June 2, 2022
/s/
COLLEEN KOLLAR-KOTELLY
United States District Judge
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