dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc:
I have previously expressed my disagreement with the views of my good friends in the panel majority, see Doe v. Va. Dep’t of State Police, 713 F.3d 745, 763-74 (4th Cir.2013) (King, J., dissenting), and it is mostly for the reasons I detailed there that I dissent from the Court’s denial of en banc consideration. Nonetheless, I write again to emphasize that the majority’s decision sets our court of appeals apart from all others with respect to the authority afforded the federal district courts to hear and consider challenges to state statutes and regulations that may contravene the Constitution.
The majority has identified nothing remarkable about the particular procedures of which it insists Ms. Doe partake prior to filing suit. Indeed, it is largely the mundane nature of the remedies prescribed by the Commonwealth that threatens the upheaval of constitutional litigation there and in its sister states of the Fourth Circuit. There is simply no principled basis to distinguish the roadblocks Ms. Doe now faces from any others that might be erected in another case to defeat federal jurisdiction. Each state within our purview seeking to reduce the costs and expenses of federal litigation can now, by simply enacting a statute or promulgating a regulation, require that any cause of action cognizable pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 be first presented to a Board of Claims, interposing such myriad levels of administrative and judicial appeals as may be necessary to frustrate and defeat all but the most tenacious of claimants.
*214Of course, those sorts of maneuvers are strictly forbidden by Patsy v. Board of Regents of the State of Florida, 457 U.S. 496, 102 S.Ct. 2557, 73 L.Ed.2d 172 (1982), but that case now holds no sway in our Circuit, and I can only hope that the Supreme Court will grant review to reassert its clear precedent and save us from our own folly. Otherwise, I fear that litigants will suffer serious repercussions. Just recently, for example, we decided Woollard v. Gallagher, 712 F.3d 865 (4th Cir.2013), a § 1983 challenge to a Maryland handgun permit restriction alleged to have violated the Second Amendment. One of the plaintiffs was denied a permit, and, although it seems clear that he could have immediately sought federal relief, see Moore v. City of Asheville, 396 F.3d 385, 395 n. 4 (4th Cir.2005), he instead chose to pursue an administrative appeal to the state review board. Denied there, the plaintiff elected to forgo proceedings in the state courts in favor of the federal action. Such a choice is now foreclosed in the wake of the majority’s decision, which abridges our jurisdiction in a manner unforeseen by Congress and unsanctioned by the Supreme Court. Plainly, that is not how civil rights litigation is supposed to work.
Suppose the General Assembly had passed a different statute — or some agency of the executive had promulgated a regulation — barring access to public school property based on a person’s race or gender. Would the majority have insisted that Ms. Doe first plead her case before the school board prior to seeking intervention from the federal courts? Assuming that such a statute or regulation, as applied to Ms. Doe, were ab initio repugnant to the Constitution, the Commonwealth ought possess no prerogative to compel her, as a federal jurisdictional predicate, to resort to administrative or judicial remedies devised at the whim of its legislative or executive branches.
Section 1983 and Patsy are unquestionably the law of the land, but the opinions authored by the prevailing panel members have made a poor outcome worse by refusing to confront the Supreme Court’s binding precedent. Instead, my colleagues in the majority have inaptly analyzed this dispute as one involving constitutional standing, needlessly unsettling that doctrine as well. Ms. Doe’s is not a difficult case when properly viewed in the context of exhaustion, but, evidently, easy cases can make bad law too.*
*215That said, my position has not prevailed. So I can only sympathize with future panels of this Court, which will find it all but impossible to distinguish the majority’s decision as an outlier. There will come a day — sooner rather than later — when at last we perceive the need to overrule this panel precedent, but that day will have come too late for Ms. Doe and her children.
I would grant rehearing en banc. My good friend and colleague Judge Floyd joins in this dissenting opinion.
Judge Duncan insists that "the limited issue on which the majority actually ruled” was "the substantive due process injury Ms. Doe alleges aris[ing] from her desire to access school property anonymously.” Ante at 213. If the issue of Ms. Doe’s preferred anonymity is indeed the only one that the majority decided, then it needs to go back and finish the case. As I explained in detail in my dissent from the panel opinion, Ms. Doe challenged her reclassification as a sexually violent offender under the substantive due process component of the Fourteenth Amendment. See Doe, 713 F.3d at 763-64 (King, J., dissenting). The majority flatly acknowledged that to be so: "When it comes to her claims regarding her substantive due process, associational, and free exercise rights, she does not allege harm merely from being placed on the Registry, but rather from the consequences her categorization entails for her ability to access school and church property.” See id. at 754 (emphasis added).
In the face of the majority's offhand, unsupported supposition that Ms. Doe’s threshold claim had been abandoned, I demonstrated why it remained very much alive on appeal, see id. at 765-66 (King, J., dissenting). I was convinced that my rationale was irrefutable. Evidently it was too much so, in that the majority made not the slightest attempt to refute it. Somewhat ironically, I now stand accused of ignoring the majority’s discussion of Ms. Doe's anonymity claim. See ante at 213. I am constrained to plead not guilty by reason of irrelevancy, in that the majority had no occasion to decide how Ms. Doe could obtain a variance from the consequences of *215her reclassification until it actually addressed and determined whether the initial act of reclassification gave rise to a constitutional claim to begin with. It would certainly make our lives easier as judges if we were free to resolve only the easy issues in a case and disregard the hard ones, but, alas, we cannot do so and remain faithful to our constitutional charge to decide cases and controversies as they are presented to us. Judge Duncan’s concurrence does lend some insight as to how future panels may attempt to marginalize this precedent, but to say that Ms. Doe’s case is merely about whether and how she may be excepted under state law from the consequences of her reclassification requires one to swallow hard and refuse to accept at face value the facts even as the majority has described them.