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The Firearms Policy Coalition Offers a Simple Way to Resolve the Texas SB 8 Case
The Firearms Policy Coalition amicus brief offers a simple and effective way to neuter the threat to judicial review posed by SB 8.

The Supreme Court is about to hear Whole Woman's Health v. Jackson, one of two cases filed against Texas' SB 8 anti-abortion law that are currently before the justices. The case focuses on the procedural issue of whether abortion providers and others can challenge the law in federal court, given that all enforcement is delegated to private "bounty hunter" litigants, who stand to get awards of $10,000 or more if they prevail. Current Supreme Court precedent usually requires plaintiffs filing a pre-enforcement lawsuit against a state government for violating constitutional rights to target a specific set of officials who can be enjoined by the court. In this case, it initially appears there are no such potential defendants, because no state official is allowed to enforce the law.
For reasons I summarized in an earlier post about the SB 8 litigation, if this subterfuge is allowed to stand, it would create a road map for avoiding judicial review for other state violations of constitutional rights. Simply confine enforcement to private litigants, and you're good to go!
Fortunately, an amicus brief filed by the Firearms Policy Coalition (which got involved because of the potential threat to Second Amendment rights), offers a simple way to resolve the problem (see also Jonathan Adler's post about the brief):
Laws that deter or chill the exercise of constitutional rights violate those rights. Such deterrence or chill constitutes a present harm for which litigants can seek present redress without having to absorb the tremendous costs and risks of putting their heads on the proverbial chopping block by violating those laws and hoping for eventual vindication. Even where the risk derives from prospective litigation initiated by private parties invoking state law, such risks are still the product of state action in adopting and implementing the law. Whether the relevant state actors are the "deputized" potential plaintiffs and/or the court officials and jurists that wield the power of government at every stage of the litigation process, the chilling of protected conduct is the consequence of invoking state power to such ends, wholly apart from the outcome in any particular case. Indeed, the Texas law is designed precisely to have that effect, biasing the playing field in a manner that likely violates due process, the right to petition, and various other provisions of the Constitution wholly apart from its restriction on abortion. In such circumstances, there should be no serious barrier to enjoining any and all state actors or agents who facilitate or play a role in such a farce.
For purposes of dealing with laws like SB 8, state courts and private litigants "deputized" to enforce the law can be considered state actors, and therefore subject to injunction. State courts are no less bound by the federal Constitution than other state government employees, and should be no less subject to injunction when they violate constitutional rights - or threaten to do so.
I would go a step further than the FPC brief and suggest that, when faced with something like SB 8, a federal court should simply be able to enjoin the state government as a whole, rather than focus on a specific set of officials (or "deputized" private litigants). As explained in my previous post on SB 8:
Even if we do not know which individuals, if any, plan to enforce an unconstitutional law, or have the authority to do so, a court should be able to issue a general injunction precluding enforcement of that law by anyone who might otherwise be in a position to undertake that task.
If it turns out that no one is willing or able to enforce it, then the injunction will be unnecessary, but also won't do any harm; it would, in that scenario, forbid something no one was going to do anyway. But such a general injunction could play a valuable role in forestalling violations of constitutional rights in situations where it is difficult to predict in advance who the violators will be.
The FPC brief highlights a reason why this approach is consistent with the text of the Fourteenth Amendment. It follows logically from the text of the Privileges or Immunities Clause:
[T]he Fourteenth Amendment would seem to supersede any previous potential state sovereign immunity as against violations of the federal Constitution. Looking at the Privileges or Immunities Clause, for example, a State may not "make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United
States." U.S. CONST., amend. XIV.
Notice that the text forbids "making" laws that abridge privileges or immunities of citizens, as well as "enforcing" them. The entity that makes the laws is the state legislature, and this provision opens the door to injunctions that do whatever is necessary to render any such unconstitutional enactments null and void. As the FPC brief points out, many conservatives, including Supreme Court justices Thomas and Gorsuch have long argued that the Privileges or Immunities Clause is the right vehicle for "incorporating" the Bill of Rights against the states. And other rights protected by the Fourteenth Amendment (including any constitutional right to abortion) also surely qualify as privileges or immunities for enforcement purposes.
The most obvious criticism of this approach is that it would open up states to a variety of potentially frivolous lawsuits. Perhaps so. But federal courts have a variety of tools for swiftly disposing of frivolous suits, including using Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), which allows dismissal of a complaint for "failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted." Judges don't need to tolerate assaults on judicial SB 8 in order to prevent frivolous litigation.
The FPC brief is also notable for its succinct and powerful summary of why preenforcement challenges to laws violating constitutional rights are so important (see pp. 4-10 of the brief). As it points out (pp. 9-10), SB 8's structure may make it even more of a menace than other laws intended to "chill" the exercise of a constitutional right.
In my previous post on this case, I emphasized that my critique of SB 8 is not about the issue of whether Roe v. Wade should be overruled or limited, or whether there is a genuine constitutional right to abortion. Rather, my concern is preventing SB 8 from creating a dangerous road map for undermining judicial protection of a wide range of constitutional rights:
My strategy would not preclude the Supreme Court (or other courts) from simply ruling against abortion rights (or other constitutional rights claims) on the merits. If the Court wants to overrule Roe v. Wade because a majority of justices think it's a terrible decision, they can still do so. The same goes for Citizens United, decisions protecting gun rights, and so on. The purpose of my proposal is not to freeze any particular precedent in place, but to forestall the use of private enforcement mechanisms as a tool for evading judicial review of laws that threaten constitutional rights, and in the process creating dangerous "chilling effects."
That's a goal worth pursuing regardless of what you think of Roe v. Wade and abortion rights. Even if you welcome Texas' circumvention of Roe, you might not be so happy to see the same tools used to threaten constitutional rights you care about more.
UPDATE: I should note this approach will not resolve the companion case of United States v. Texas, which addresses the question of whether the federal government is allowed to file a lawsuit challenging SB 8. But that case becomes far less important if the Whole Woman's Health case is resolved in the way described above. Whether the federal government can file preenforcement lawsuits in such cases matters less if there are a wide range of private parties who can do so.
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I gotta question. Part of the problem with SB8 is that it explicitly removes state judges, prosecutors, etc from the playing field, leaving no state official at risk from being prosecuted to stop enforcement of the law. But what about attacking the supply end of this food chain, the legislators who passed, and the governor who signed, this law which practically everybody admits is unconstitutional.
Can legislators and a governor ever be sued, or enjoined, or somehow get in legal trouble for passing blatantly unconstitutional legislation? (IANAL!)
Suppose legislators passed, and the governor signed, a law seceding from the Union, or purporting to nullify the Fourth Amendment, or some equally unlikely law of whatever poison gets your dander up, and included the same SB8 provisions to shield state actors from any enforcement action. Could they be sued, enjoined, etc for passing such a blatantly unconstitutional law?
"Can legislators and a governor ever be sued, or enjoined, or somehow get in legal trouble for passing blatantly unconstitutional legislation? (IANAL!)"
Based on all the laws infringing on the right to keep and bear arms, I would say no.
They aren't as blatant as my examples, which is why I chose such blatant examples.
DC v Heller was a great example.
No, SCOTUS has no power to prevent any State Legislature from passing any law any more than it can delete a law from the books.
And, btw, "practically everybody" does NOT "admit" that SB8 is unconstitutional.
At least some of the legislators who voted for it said they knew it was unconstitutional. The law itself makes provisions for if/when it does become constitutional. And of course this is the practical definition: whatever SCOTUS says, not what anyone else thinks the constitution says.
I didn't ask if SCOTUS could prevent a legislator from passing the bill. I asked if they could enjoin them etc. I know there is a difference.
That makes one of us.
Pardon me if I can't take your claim about what some rando legislator supposedly said seriously without a link. Anyway, there are no doubt some dumbass legislators who didn't quite grasp what was going on, but in fact SB8 takes some pains to be compatable with the Casey interpretation of the Constitution as long as it remains good law.
No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States
According to current doctrine, as I understand it, all that means is that if they do purport to make such a law, it's null and void, not that they can't go through the motions.
Just like the 1st amendment says "Congress shall make no law", but the court don't interpret that as meaning that Congress can't draft, vote on, and have signed by Presidents 'laws' that are covered by that prohibition. They interpret it as meaning those 'laws' aren't really laws, are devoid of legal force.
Only the honest folks claim that SB8 is unconstitutional. Not everyone denies reality.
Can you identify a single merits decision upholding the constitutionality of a so-called "fetal heartbeat" law?
How would you know anything about something so foreign to you as "honest folks"?
What previous "fetal heartbeat" laws do you have in mind?
I don't see why an injunction is even necessary if the Court were to rule that the Texas law violates Due Process or the 14th Amendment. Lower Court judges are bound by the constitution, and the Supreme Court says what the constitution means. Therefore, if the Court says that the Texas law (or more generally, laws containing the features of the Texas law) violate the Due Process Clause (or any other portion of the constitution), then lower court judges are effectively "enjoined" from enforcing said laws.
This is essentially what the Court did in Shelley v. Kraemer (1948). Look-up cases citing Shelley, sort by oldest to newest, and you'll find lower court judges refusing to uphold restrictive covenants on the grounds that such agreements were prohibited by the 14th Amendment (which they were bound to faithfully follow), as interpreted by the Supreme Court. The Constitution is itself an "injunction" on every judge, and if the Court says x is in violation of Clause y, then judges are "enjoined" from ruling otherwise.
There's a massive amount of caselaw that exists between 1789 and 1980 and it's a shame that a large segment of the legal community cannot be bothered to read it.
SB8 doesn't violate Due Process or the 14th Amendment, and that ought to be a problem. Maybe it isn't, but that's not a good thing.
SB8 will in a few months be applicable against Casey-unprotected abortions, btw.
when faced with something like SB 8, a federal court should simply be able to enjoin the state government as a whole, rather than focus on a specific set of officials (or "deputized" private litigants)
Would not this principle also naturally apply to bills-in-progress just as much as enacted Bills ? Thus a federal court should enjoin the state government as a whole - thus including the State legislature - from even enacting a constitutionally offensive Bill. Or if the courts miss their opportunity with the legislature, they could enjoin the Governor from signing it.
Indeed why would this principle stop at State level ? If Congress should contemplate passing an unconstitutional Bill, would not any federal District Court judge in the land, have the right, even duty, to enjoin Congress from passing it, or the President from signing it ?
And what about Treaties ? It would surely be wrong to permit the President to sign any unconstitutional treaties, or the Senate to ratify them. Injunctions all round, I would think.
Sounds good. More people might better notice the need to rein in the kritarchy.
"Laws that deter or chill the exercise of constitutional rights violate those rights."
Nope. A law that deters abortions by threatening abortionists with consequences for performing abortions conditional on SCOTUS deciding that the Constitution does not protect those abortions does not in fact violate any rights. The abortionists are free to act on their conviction that they have the right to perform abortions, and will suffer no substantial harm if they are right.
I will add that they are already subject to CRIMINAL prosecution for any abortions that are ruled unprotected by SCOTUS under TX cruiminal statutes, subject to modification of any existing injunctions to bring them in accord with new SCOTUS rulings, if necessary, and statutes of limitation (which might be modified). SB8 is only a REMINDER of this.
Disaffected, delusional, half-educated clingers who offer numerous unqualified declarations are among my favorite culture war casualties.
Still making shit up?
You're a fucking liar, still.
All have agreed that killing the unborn is murder.
All that is happening is negotiating, at what point its OK.
States legislatures have successfully regulated abortions down to 1st trimester.
States legislature have successfully regulated abortions up to the babies head in the birth canal.
Federal legislature could have settled abortion, taken their power back from judges, but they are lazy, and enjoy hiding behind the skirts of judges.
Florida has the decided advantage of exercising the will of the people through legislation, and not unenlected, unaccountable, blacked robbed Oracles. As per the 10th amendment.
Main issue with this is that abortion isn't a constitutional right.
The law can't be properly litigated without a case. And you can't have a case if there is an injunction against hearing a case.
And if you DID have an injunction, and the law were later upheld, then the law has a retroactive provision.
So all these essays seem to really miss the point. It's the only example I can think of where the state legislators seem to be smarter than the pundits.
I have to agree. It's clear from all of this that the state wants to have their day in court. Either the courts allow this to go on, minimizing abortions, or this entire method of private party enforcement becomes thrown out, which undermines multiple laws that Democrats have used for years. I have become more suspicious over time is the true purpose of the bill, to force the left to sacrifice private enforcement of environmental law by eternal lawsuits in order to keep the sacred cow of abortion.
I would point out that if the government can sue non-entities such as cars and cash, see United States v. $124,700 in U.S. Currency and United States of America v. One 2003 Mercedes Benz CL500, I really don't see the problem in being forced to find a "state actor" in this case. When a law such as S.B.8 is in the cross hairs and is no less a non-entity than dollar bills or a car I don't see any reason why US v. Texas S.B.8 would cause any problem. Then again, IANAL so the contrivances used to sue non-entities doesn't make sense to me but I don't see why they should be limiting in this case.