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In the
United States Court of Appeals
For the Eleventh Circuit
____________________
No. 20-14846
____________________
DEBORAH LAUFER,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
versus
ARPAN LLC,
d.b.a. Americas Best Value Inn,
Defendant-Appellee.
____________________
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Northern District of Florida
D.C. Docket No. 1:19-cv-00200-AW-GRJ
____________________
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2 Order of the Court 20-14846
Before WILLIAM PRYOR, Chief Judge, WILSON, JORDAN,
ROSENBAUM, JILL PRYOR, NEWSOM, BRANCH, GRANT, LUCK, LAGOA,
and BRASHER, Circuit Judges.
BY THE COURT:
A petition for rehearing having been filed and a member of
this Court in active service having requested a poll on whether this
case should be reheard by the Court sitting en banc, and a majority
of the judges in active service on this Court having voted against
granting rehearing en banc, it is ORDERED that this case will not
be reheard en banc. Notwithstanding this order, the panel’s stay of
the issuance of the mandate pending a decision by the Supreme
Court in Acheson Hotels, LLC v. Laufer, No. 22-429, remains in
place.
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20-14846 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., Respecting the Denial 1
WILLIAM PRYOR, Chief Judge, respecting the denial of rehearing
en banc:
This appeal does not exist in a vacuum. Over the past few
years, plaintiff Deborah Laufer has filed hundreds of actions across
the country with materially identical facts and issues, several of
which have reached our sister circuit courts. See, e.g., Laufer v.
Acheson Hotels, LLC, 50 F.4th 259 (1st Cir. 2022); Laufer v. Na-
randa Hotels, LLC, 60 F.4th 156 (4th Cir. 2023); Laufer v. Mann
Hosp., L.L.C., 996 F.3d 269 (5th Cir. 2021); Laufer v. Looper, 22
F.4th 871 (10th Cir. 2022). The standing analyses in these circuit
court decisions have diverged widely. Catherine Cole, Note, A
Standoff: Havens Realty v. Coleman Tester Standing and TransUn-
ion v. Ramirez in the Circuit Courts, 45 HARV. J.L. & PUB. POL’Y
1033, 1035–42 (2022) (explaining the circuit split on this issue). But
recently, the Supreme Court heralded an end to the split when it
granted a petition for a writ of certiorari in one case. See Acheson
Hotels, LLC v. Laufer, -- S. Ct. -- (Mar. 27, 2023) (No. 22-429). Alt-
hough I agree with my dissenting colleague that the panel likely
erred in deciding that Laufer has standing to maintain this action, I
see no point in rehearing this appeal en banc now that the Supreme
Court has granted review of the same issue. Id.
The Supreme Court will surely address the issues identified
by my dissenting colleague, including not only whether Laufer had
standing based on an informational injury but also whether she had
standing based on a stigmatic injury. The hotel corporation argued
against both theories of injury in its petition to the Supreme Court,
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2 WILLIAM PRYOR, C.J., Respecting the Denial 20-14846
Petition for a Writ of Certiorari, Acheson Hotels, -- S.Ct. -- (No. 22-
429), and Laufer argued in favor of both theories in her response,
Brief in Opposition, Acheson Hotels, -- S.Ct. -- (No. 22-429); see also
Grant Dissenting Op. at 6 n.3. To conclude that Laufer lacks stand-
ing—the broad question on which the Supreme Court granted re-
view—the Supreme Court would have to consider both theories of
injury. See Question Presented, Acheson Hotels, -- S.Ct. -- (No. 22-
429) (“Does a self-appointed Americans with Disabilities Act
‘tester’ have Article III standing . . . ?”). If the Supreme Court deter-
mines that Laufer could not bring a suit in federal court based on
an informational injury, it will also have to consider whether she
could do so based on a stigmatic injury, and vice versa.
After the Supreme Court granted certiorari in Acheson Ho-
tels, the panel stayed the issuance of the mandate in this appeal. I
would expect future panels of our Court to stay any appeal that
presents the same issue, pending the decision of the Supreme Court
in Acheson Hotels. District court judges presented with cases that
turn on this threshold issue of justiciability are free to follow our
lead and grant a stay too. In situations like this one, we inferior-
court judges sometimes judge best by judging least.
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20-14846 NEWSOM, J., Concurring 1
NEWSOM, Circuit Judge, concurring in the denial of rehearing en
banc:
I offer the following as a brief (p)response to Judge Grant’s
characteristically thoughtful opinion dissenting from the order
denying rehearing en banc.
I
First, a point of raging agreement: Judge Grant and I share
a pretty profound skepticism of what I’ve called Deborah Laufer’s
“litigation program.” Laufer v. Arpan LLC, 29 F.4th 1268, 1290
(11th Cir. 2022) (Newsom, J., concurring). Laufer is indeed, as
Judge Grant notes, a “serial plaintiff.” Grant Dissental at 1. And
Laufer—a disability-rights advocate and self-proclaimed “tester”—
is most definitely acting like a “roving attorney[] general.” Id. at 5.
In fact, I’ll see Judge Grant’s report that Laufer “has brought hun-
dreds of nearly identical suits across the country,” id. at 8, and raise
her: As I explained in my panel-stage concurring opinion, Laufer
and two other plaintiffs—all conspicuously represented by the
same lawyers—have filed more than 1000 website-related ADA
suits against hotels during the last few years. See Laufer, 29 F.4th
at 1290, 1295 (Newsom, J., concurring). The whole thing stinks to
high heaven, and Judge Grant and I agree that Laufer’s aggressive
litigation tactics transgress constitutional limitations. The lone dif-
ference is that Judge Grant grounds her position in Article III,
whereas I contend (for reasons I’ve explained at length and won’t
rehash here) that Laufer’s proactive exercise of enforcement discre-
tion—selecting her targets, willingly suffering the necessary injury,
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2 NEWSOM, J., Concurring 20-14846
and then suing—“constitute[s] an impermissible exercise of ‘exec-
utive Power’ in violation of Article II.” See Laufer, 29 F.4th at 1284
(Newsom, J., concurring); see also id. at 1288–97 (unpacking that
conclusion).
II
Now, very briefly, what I take to be the nub of our Article
III disagreement: It’s absolutely true, as Judge Grant says, that a
“stigmatic” injury “accords a basis for standing only to ‘those per-
sons who are personally denied equal treatment’ by the challenged
discriminatory conduct.” Grant Dissental at 3 (quoting Allen v.
Wright, 468 U.S. 737, 755 (1984) (quoting Heckler v. Matthews, 465
U.S. 728, 740 (1984))). Accordingly, as Judge Grant correctly ob-
serves, Laufer’s standing to sue will ultimately turn on whether she
personally “experienced . . . discrimination” when she interacted
with the Value Inn’s website, which didn’t advertise the hotel’s
rooms’ accessibility-related features in the way that she contends
the ADA’s implementing regulations require—or whether, instead,
she merely “witnessed” discrimination being perpetrated against
others. Id. at 1. Judge Grant insists that Laufer couldn’t have per-
sonally experienced any discrimination or suffered any stigmatic
harm because, as all here agree, she never intended to stay at the
Value Inn. Id. at 3–4, 8.
I understand Judge Grant to be making either (or both) of
two slightly different objections. First, although the Value Inn’s
website might discriminate against other disabled internet users—
namely, bona fide would-be tourists looking to book rooms—
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20-14846 NEWSOM, J., Concurring 3
Laufer herself couldn’t have personally experienced that discrimi-
nation because she had no intention to travel. And second, what-
ever it was that Laufer experienced, it wasn’t “discrimination” be-
cause real discrimination occurs on the ground, not at a computer
terminal.
To those eminently intuitive points, I’ll offer brief responses:
To the first, it seems to me that if would-be travelers personally
experience discrimination on the Value Inn’s website, then Laufer
must as well—because she and they have the exact same experi-
ence. The hotel displays the very same content to them on the
very same webpage, and they view and interact with that content
in the very same way. The only thing that distinguishes Laufer is
her motivation—her tester status—which, as Judge Grant
acknowledges, doesn’t (under current law) independently deprive
her of Article III standing. See Grant Dissental at 7–8.
To the second point—that Laufer didn’t experience any real
discrimination while sitting at her computer—I’d add only that we
shouldn’t conflate the ultimate merits (or demerits) of Laufer’s law-
suit with her standing to bring it. We may well doubt that Laufer’s
ADA claim can go the distance. We might think, as Judge Grant
seems to, that the website-based “discrimination” that Laufer al-
leges simply isn’t actionable under the ADA.1 Speaking for myself,
1Or, perhaps, that 28 C.F.R. § 36.302(e)(1)(ii)—the regulation that requires
hotel websites to provide sufficiently detailed description of rooms’ accessible
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4 NEWSOM, J., Concurring 20-14846
I’m not at all sure that Judge Grant is wrong about that. But—and
to me it’s a pretty big but—our suspicion of Laufer’s merits argu-
ment shouldn’t taint our standing analysis. See, e.g., Culverhouse
v. Paulson & Co., 813 F.3d 991, 994 (11th Cir. 2016) (“[I]n reviewing
the standing question, the court must be careful not to decide the
questions on the merits for or against the plaintiff, and must there-
fore assume that on the merits the plaintiffs would be successful in
their claims.”) (alteration in original). And I’m just not convinced
that Article III itself distinguishes between online and in-person
“discrimination.”2 Rather, it seems to me that whether the ADA
features—doesn’t create substantive rights, or even that the ADA’s private
cause of action doesn’t extend to the statute’s implementing regulations.
2 To be clear, the fact that the discrimination Laufer alleged didn’t occur in
person, but rather occurred online—in the experience that she had on the ho-
tel’s website—distinguishes this case from Judge Grant’s hypothetical about
Googling photos of a grocery store. See Grant Dissental at 7 n.5. Laufer’s
complaint doesn’t focus on any ADA violations that might (or might not) be
occurring on the ground at the Value Inn, or even any allegations that the
hotel’s website depicted brick-and-mortar violations. If that’s all Laufer’s com-
plaint alleged, then I would agree that she lacked standing because unlike the
website, which she visited and experienced firsthand, she hasn’t visited or ex-
perienced the Value Inn itself and has no present plan to do so. What the panel
concluded Laufer had standing to pursue was her complaint’s explicit claim
that the website itself discriminates by making it harder for disabled users to
identify and book accessible rooms online. See Laufer, 29 F.4th at 1271 (quot-
ing Laufer’s complaint for the proposition that she “allege[d] that she has suf-
fered and continues to suffer ‘frustration and humiliation as the result of dis-
criminatory conditions present’ on the website, and that the site contributed
to her ‘sense of isolation and segregation’”); see also, e.g., Doc. 3 ¶ 18 (“By
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20-14846 NEWSOM, J., Concurring 5
prohibits the sort of thing that Laufer has alleged—whatever it
was—is a question that should be addressed under Rule 12(b)(6) or
at summary judgment, not under Rule 12(b)(1).
III
I’ll close with a coda of sorts: Recent events have vindicated
our decision not to rehear this case en banc. Since the voting
closed, the Supreme Court agreed to consider another of Deborah
Laufer’s (many) cases, which arises out of the First Circuit and pre-
sents closely related standing issues. See Acheson Hotels, LLC v.
Laufer, No. 22-429, 2023 WL 2634524 (Mem.); see also Pryor State-
ment at 1–2. As I said in my panel-stage concurrence, the Supreme
Court’s “stigmatic”- and “informational”-injury precedents—
Heckler and Allen, as well as Havens Realty Corp. v. Coleman, 455
U.S. 363 (1982)—present “[l]ots of questions . . . and not many an-
swers.” Laufer, 29 F.4th at 1287 (Newsom, J., concurring). The
law in those areas, I continued, will likely “remain deeply unsettled
until the Supreme Court steps in to provide additional guidance.”
Id. Happily, the Court has now “step[ped] in”—those of us in mid-
dle management eagerly await its “guidance.”
encountering the discriminatory conditions at Defendant’s website . . . .”); id.
(“Because this online reservation system discriminates against Plaintiff . . . .”).
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20-14846 GRANT, J., Dissenting 1
GRANT, Circuit Judge, joined by BRANCH, LUCK, and LAGOA, Cir-
cuit Judges, dissenting from the denial of rehearing en banc:
The panel opinion in this case concludes that serial plaintiff
Deborah Laufer has Article III standing under a theory of “stig-
matic injury” because she felt “frustration and humiliation” and a
“sense of isolation and segregation” when she saw that a hotel—
one that she admittedly did not intend to visit—was not complying
with ADA regulations on its website. Laufer v. Arpan LLC, 29
F.4th 1268, 1270–71, 1274–75 (11th Cir. 2022). That holding is
straightforwardly precluded by the Supreme Court’s decision in Al-
len v. Wright, which disallowed stigmatic injury claims for those
who had witnessed, rather than experienced, discrimination. 468
U.S. 737, 746, 755–56 (1984). I do not ordinarily write when this
Court denies rehearing en banc. But I do so here to highlight both
the doctrinal problems with the panel’s holding and the practical
impact of that holding on the thousands of hotels across this Circuit
now subject to Laufer’s suits under this new theory of standing. I
respectfully dissent from this Court’s decision to deny rehearing en
banc.1
1 The opinion “respecting the denial of rehearing en banc” is correct that this
appeal does not exist in a vacuum. Nor, I will add, does this denial of rehearing
en banc. Lest there be any confusion, this Court voted to deny rehearing en
banc before the Supreme Court granted certiorari in Acheson Hotels v. Lau-
fer, No. 22-429, 2023 WL 2634524 (Mem.), and before the panel stayed the
issuance of the mandate in this case. In any event, I continue to believe that
this Court should consider this case en banc and reject the stigmatic injury
theory adopted in the panel opinion. Though I hope that the Supreme Court
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2 GRANT, J., Dissenting 20-14846
* * *
The central question in this case is whether Deborah Laufer
has Article III standing to file suit. She alleges that a hotel harmed
her when she saw that its website lacked accessibility information
required by Americans with Disabilities Act regulations. Laufer ar-
gued that this caused a so-called “informational injury”—she says
she was injured when the hotel did not provide accessibility infor-
mation about its rooms, even though she had no intention of stay-
ing there and even though she had no other personal need for the
information. But the panel here took a different approach. Seeing
that Laufer had alleged “frustration and humiliation,” the panel
will address the problem of stigmatic injury in Acheson Hotels, I am not so
bold as to presume that it will do so. See, e.g., Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 578 U.S.
330, 342–43 (2016) (remanding to the Ninth Circuit without taking a position
on whether that Court’s ultimate conclusion that the plaintiff had adequately
alleged injury in fact was correct). After all, the First Circuit declined to ad-
dress stigmatic injury in its own decision. Laufer v. Acheson Hotels, LLC, 50
F.4th 259, 275 (1st Cir. 2022). But regardless of what the Supreme Court
chooses to do, we certainly could take responsibility for getting it right our-
selves in the meantime—particularly since we are the only Circuit that has
decided the question on this basis. We also could have granted en banc review
and then stayed the case so that we could course correct if the Supreme Court
chose not to address stigmatic injury. But given that we have chosen as a
Court to do neither, and mindful of the numerous instances in which mem-
bers of the Supreme Court have expressed the value of hearing multiple per-
spectives on difficult issues as cases percolate through the federal courts, I
hope that this opinion—and its dialogue with my valued colleagues on an im-
portant issue of standing—contributes helpfully to the development of the
law.
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20-14846 GRANT, J., Dissenting 3
held, after seeking supplemental briefing, that she had suffered an
emotional injury from illegal discrimination, one that rose to the
level of a “concrete stigmatic injury.” Laufer, 29 F.4th at 1274–75.
That conclusion—adopted by none of the other courts of ap-
peals considering Laufer’s functionally identical lawsuits—runs
headlong into well-established limitations on stigmatic injury. In
Allen v. Wright, the Supreme Court explained that while stigmatic
harm “is sufficient in some circumstances to support standing,” it
“accords a basis for standing only to ‘those persons who are per-
sonally denied equal treatment’ by the challenged discriminatory
conduct.” 468 U.S. at 755 (quoting Heckler v. Mathews, 465 U.S.
728, 740 (1984)); see also, e.g., Moose Lodge No. 107 v. Irvis, 407
U.S. 163, 166–67 (1972). To be sure, the panel’s opinion recites this
essential limitation—but it ultimately ignores it. Laufer, 29 F.4th
at 1274 n.4. The panel entirely fails to consider whether Laufer
herself faced discrimination. Instead, it simply assumes—without
analysis—that Laufer “suffered illegal discrimination.” Id. at 1274.
And “because her emotional injury is her emotional injury,” the
panel concludes that Laufer’s stigmatic injury is also particularized.
Id. at 1274–75.
That cannot be right. Laufer, sitting at her computer in Flor-
ida, visits the websites of hotels across the United States looking for
evidence of ADA regulatory violations—and then sues when she
finds it. But her lawsuits have nothing to do with anything other
than her web browsing. Here, for example, the district court con-
cluded that Laufer “never intended to visit” the hotel and had “no
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4 GRANT, J., Dissenting 20-14846
personal need for the information missing from the websites.” Id.
at 1271 n.1. Laufer does not dispute these facts (indeed, she admits
them), and her complaint states only that she “visited the websites
for the purpose of reviewing and assessing the accessible features.”
With these allegations, Laufer cannot show that she was
“personally denied equal treatment” by the hotel’s allegedly dis-
criminatory conduct.2 Allen, 468 U.S. at 755 (quotation omitted).
At most, she observed that other disabled people may be hindered
by the hotel’s alleged regulatory violations if they try to book a
room. But identifying a problem that might affect a third party is
not the same thing as a personal denial of equal treatment. Even
so, at least according to the panel’s decision, Laufer has standing so
long as she can show that she feels frustration by proxy from a po-
tential lack of accommodation for other guests.3 See Laufer, 29
F.4th at 1274–75.
2 Judge Newsom says that Laufer and a would-be traveler have the exact same
experience on the website—and thus both would have standing. Newsom
Concurrence at 3. But remember, the panel’s opinion does not rely on infor-
mational injury at all, so stigma cannot be a downstream effect of a denial of
information. On its own, stigmatic injury “requires identification of some con-
crete interest with respect to which” the plaintiff is “personally subject to dis-
criminatory treatment.” Allen, 468 U.S. at 757 n.22. A would-be traveler could
satisfy this requirement because his or her concrete interest in staying at the
hotel is being personally subjected to discrimination. Laufer cannot—she has
disclaimed any interest at all in staying at the hotel.
3 In this way, it is almost as if the panel granted standing to Laufer based only
on her status as an “offended observer.” While that theory may be recognized
in this Circuit in a narrow set of establishment clause cases, its constitutional
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20-14846 GRANT, J., Dissenting 5
The Supreme Court has rejected this discrimination-at-a-dis-
tance approach, and so should we. As an Article III court, we have
the “power to redress harms that defendants cause plaintiffs, not a
freewheeling power to hold defendants accountable for legal in-
fractions.” TransUnion LLC v. Ramirez, 141 S. Ct. 2190, 2205
(2021) (quoting Casillas v. Madison Ave. Assocs., Inc., 926 F.3d 329,
332 (7th Cir. 2019) (Barrett, J.)). But the panel’s opinion transforms
Laufer (along with other would-be plaintiffs who are sure to fol-
low) into roving attorneys general from the comfort of their own
homes. This brings Allen’s warning to life: If this type of “abstract
stigmatic injury were cognizable,” the Supreme Court said, “stand-
ing would extend nationwide to all members” of a particular group,
no matter how remote their connection to the facts on the ground.
Allen, 468 U.S. at 755–56; see also TransUnion, 141 S. Ct. at 2205–
06.
“Constitutional limits on the role of the federal courts pre-
clude such a transformation”—but it is becoming a reality in this
legitimacy is up for debate. See Kondrat’yev v. City of Pensacola, 949 F.3d
1319, 1324 (11th Cir. 2020); Am. Legion v. Am. Humanist Ass’n, 139 S. Ct.
2067, 2098 (2019) (Gorsuch, J., concurring in the judgment) (explaining that
the “‘offended observer’ theory of standing has no basis in law”); City of Ocala
v. Rojas, 143 S. Ct. 764, 766–68 (Thomas, J., dissenting from denial of certio-
rari) (expressing “serious doubts” about the constitutional legitimacy of of-
fended observer standing); Kondrat’yev, 949 F.3d at 1335–37 (Newsom, J.,
concurring) (noting that “offended observer” standing is “plain wrong” (quo-
tation omitted)); cf. In re Navy Chaplaincy, 534 F.3d 756, 763 (D.C. Cir. 2008)
(Kavanaugh, J.) (“As the Supreme Court has often stated, mere personal of-
fense to government action does not give rise to standing to sue.”).
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6 GRANT, J., Dissenting 20-14846
Circuit. Allen, 468 U.S. at 756. In fact, new lawsuits from new
plaintiffs have already been filed based on this expansive stigmatic-
injury-by-association approach. See, e.g., Lugo v. Island Harbor
Beach Club, LLC, No. 22-cv-66, 2022 WL 1773973, *2 (M.D. Fla.
June 1, 2022) (“Lugo fashioned his pleading to fall in line with Lau-
fer.”). As Laufer herself put it in a recent Tenth Circuit brief, “Stig-
matic Injury Completely Changes The Analysis.” Appellant’s
Opening Brief at 11, Laufer v. Red Door 88, LLC, Nos. 22-1055, 22-
1106, 2022 WL 2183350 (10th Cir. June 8, 2022).4 Indeed it does.
Endorsing a theory of stigmatic injury here performs an end-run
around Article III standing limitations, allowing plaintiffs to google
their way to lawsuits that are totally unrelated to the suffering of
actual harm.5
Any suggestion that rejecting Laufer’s new theory threatens
tester standing reveals a misunderstanding of both Laufer’s claim
4 Laufer, unsurprisingly, is also adjusting her own litigation strategy in re-
sponse to our Court’s decision. Before, Laufer submitted carbon copy briefs
that did not advance a theory of stigmatic injury in the different circuits. See,
e.g., Brief of Appellant, Laufer v. Naranda Hotels, LLC, 60 F.4th 156 (4th Cir.
2023) (No. 20-2348), 2021 WL 960904; Brief of Appellant, Laufer v. Acheson
Hotels, LLC, 50 F.4th 259 (1st Cir. 2022) (No. 21-1410), 2021 WL 3030390. And
as the panel admits, her briefing to this Circuit did not argue that she alleged
stigmatic injury. See Laufer, 29 F.4th at 1274 n.5. But that changed after our
decision.
5 To take one example, if Laufer has standing here, she would also have stand-
ing if she identified a potential physical access problem by reviewing online
photos of a grocery store that she never intended to visit, and then alleged
emotional injury based on her feelings of stigma. Remarkable.
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20-14846 GRANT, J., Dissenting 7
and tester standing itself. To start, tester standing is about motiva-
tion, not injury, and the Supreme Court has never said that tester
status offers an exception to Article III’s standing requirements.
See Havens Realty Corp. v. Coleman, 455 U.S. 363, 374–75 (1982)
(plaintiffs who were given truthful information did not suffer an
injury). Nor have we. See Houston v. Marod Supermarkets, Inc.,
733 F.3d 1323, 1328–29 (11th Cir. 2013) (tester plaintiff must satisfy
all three requirements for Article III standing). And for good rea-
son—these requirements are an “irreducible constitutional mini-
mum.” Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 578 U.S. 330, 338 (2016) (quotation
omitted). We should be especially alert to these requirements in
tester cases, which present a special risk that the judicial power will
be invoked by “‘concerned bystanders,’ who will use it simply as a
‘vehicle for the vindication of value interests.’” Diamond v.
Charles, 476 U.S. 54, 62 (1986) (quoting United States v. SCRAP,
412 U.S. 669, 687 (1973)).
That’s why, in successful tester cases, the plaintiffs have
shown that they personally suffered discrimination or other
harm—even if that harm was invited. See Havens Realty, 455 U.S.
at 368 (denied truthful housing information after personally apply-
ing for housing); Pierson v. Ray, 386 U.S. 547, 549, 552 (1967) (ar-
rested for using segregated facilities); Evers v. Dwyer, 358 U.S. 202,
203–204 (1958) (prohibited from sitting in the front of a public bus);
Fed. Election Comm’n v. Cruz, 142 S. Ct. 1638, 1646–47 (2022) (re-
stricted from using post-election campaign funds to pay back can-
didate’s personal loan to campaign); Houston, 733 F.3d at 1326
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8 GRANT, J., Dissenting 20-14846
(prevented from accessing supermarket due to lack of physical ac-
commodation). None of these cases found injury based on an ob-
servation that some other person may experience discrimination
some other time.
Laufer is different. Unlike those plaintiffs, she has not per-
sonally experienced any harm at all, at least under the standing the-
ory adopted by the panel. Instead, she has noticed that other peo-
ple might not have the information they need to seek a room.
Whatever emotional distress that may cause her (time after time,
for hotel after hotel), it is not a concrete and particularized injury.
Laufer has brought hundreds of nearly identical suits across
the country—no matter how remote her connection to the tar-
geted hotels. And the circuits are divided over whether she has
alleged standing under her “informational injury” rationale. Com-
pare Laufer v. Acheson Hotels, LLC, 50 F.4th 259, 263 (1st Cir.
2022), and Laufer v. Naranda Hotels, LLC, 60 F.4th 156, 162 (4th
Cir. 2023), with Laufer v. Ganesha Hosp. LLC, No. 21-995, 2022
WL 2444747, at *2 (2d Cir. July 5,2022), and Laufer v. Mann Hosp.,
L.L.C., 996 F.3d 269, 273 (5th Cir. 2021), and Laufer v. Looper, 22
F.4th 871, 877–81 (10th Cir. 2022); see also Laufer, 29 F.4th at 1276
(Jordan, J., concurring). That split reflects uncertainties in the Su-
preme Court’s standing jurisprudence that merit serious consider-
ation.6 Indeed, the Supreme Court has agreed to consider the First
6 Havens Realty, for example, may be in tension with TransUnion’s suggestion
that an informational injury is cognizable only when the plaintiff identifies
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20-14846 GRANT, J., Dissenting 9
Circuit’s conclusion that Laufer had standing to bring a similar law-
suit because of an informational injury. Acheson Hotels, LLC v.
Laufer, No. 22-429, 2023 WL 2634524 (Mem.). But whatever ques-
tions may exist about informational injury, the answer here is clear:
concluding that a plaintiff can establish a concrete and personalized
injury by noting accessibility problems that other people may suf-
fer goes far beyond both the limits of the Constitution and the hold-
ing of Allen v. Wright. In holding to the contrary, this Circuit
stands alone. I respectfully dissent from the decision not to rehear
this case en banc.
“downstream consequences” from failing to receive the required information.
TransUnion, 141 S. Ct. at 2214 (quoting Trichell v. Midland Credit Mgmt.,
Inc., 964 F.3d 990, 1004 (11th Cir. 2020)); see Havens Realty, 455 U.S. at 374.