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S. Ct. Calls for Response in NRA v. Vullo
This is the case I wrote about in March, and again last week, when I noted the amicus briefs from state attorneys general, from the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, and from two financial and business law scholars. I also noted last week that the New York state government defendants didn't file a response to the petition.
Today, the Supreme Court called for a response; this doesn't guarantee that the Court will agree to hear the case, but it does suggest some interest on the part of at least one Justice. It also gives an extra 30 days for any other people or groups to file amicus briefs in support of the petition: "An amicus curiae brief submitted in support of a petitioner … before the Court's consideration of a petition for a writ of certiorari" may be "filed within 30 days after … a response is called for by the Court." It will be interesting to see whether any other amicus briefs come in. And it will of course also be interesting to see what the state argues in opposing the petition, and whether there will be amicus briefs filed in support of the state.
Here again is the Introduction from the cert. petition:
The Second Circuit's opinion below gives state officials free rein to financially blacklist their political opponents—from gun-rights groups, to abortion-rights groups, to environmentalist groups, and beyond. It lets state officials "threaten[ ] regulated institutions with costly investigations, increased regulatory scrutiny and penalties should they fail to discontinue their arrangements with" a controversial speaker, on the ground that disfavored political speech poses a regulable "reputational risk."
It also permits selective investigations and penalties targeting business arrangements with disfavored speakers, even where the regulator premises its hostility explicitly on an entity's political speech and treats leniently, or exempts, identical transactions with customers who lack controversial views. In sum, it lets government officials, acting with undisguised political animus, transmute "general backlash" against controversial advocacy into a justification for crackdowns on advocates (and firms who serve them), eviscerating free speech rights.
Reaching this result, the Second Circuit disregards basic pleading standards and undermines fundamental First Amendment freedoms. It also departs from this Court's precedent in Bantam Books, Inc. v. Sullivan and from the Seventh Circuit's precedent in Backpage.com, LLC v. Dart.
This case arises from a series of actions—including press releases, official regulatory guidance, and contemporaneous investigations and penalties—issued by or on behalf of New York's powerful Department of Financial Services ("DFS") against financial institutions doing business with the NRA. Among other things, the Complaint states that Superintendent Maria Vullo: (1) warned regulated institutions that doing business with Second Amendment advocacy groups posed "reputational risk" of concern to DFS; (2) secretly offered leniency to insurers for unrelated infractions if they dropped the NRA; and (3) extracted highly-publicized and over-reaching consent orders, and multi-million dollar penalties, from firms that formerly served the NRA. Citing private telephone calls, internal insurer documents, and statements by an anonymous banking executive to industry press, the Complaint alleges that numerous financial institutions perceived Vullo's actions as threatening and, therefore, ceased business arrangements with the NRA or refused new ones.
The NRA brought First Amendment claims against Vullo and Governor Andrew Cuomo in their official and individual capacities. The individual-capacity claims against Vullo, which were the subject of the Second Circuit's decision, withstood two motions to dismiss. But when Vullo appealed the District Court's refusal to grant her qualified immunity at the pleading stage, the Second Circuit held that the NRA's allegations fail to state a First Amendment claim at all.
In effect, the Second Circuit holds that a government official must explicitly threaten adverse consequences for disfavored speech—and must do so in the absence of any contemporaneous assertion of a regulatory interest—for a First Amendment retaliation claim to arise. The Second Circuit's opinion thereby creates a circuit split with the Seventh Circuit's decision in Backpage.com, which held that a government official violated the First Amendment in circumstances closely comparable to these.
In addition, the Second Circuit refuses to accept the Complaint's allegation that Vullo clearly and unambiguously threatened insurers in private meetings, and selectively parses Vullo's official communications to disregard key passages and deny NRA the favorable inferences to which it is entitled on a motion to dismiss. The Second Circuit's decision thus defies this Court's command that, in evaluating qualified immunity, "courts must take care not to define a case's 'context' in a manner that imports genuinely disputed factual propositions."
The Second Circuit denudes Vullo's regulatory guidance of the "context" that made it ominous, while importing favorable "context" to frame Vullo's contemporaneous, selective targeting of NRA business associates as benign. "The 'context' here," the Circuit opines, "was an investigation, commenced months before the meetings, that was triggered by a referral from the DA's Office." The Circuit ignores boasts by Vullo's boss, Governor Cuomo, that her regulatory actions were "forcing the NRA into financial jeopardy." And the Second Circuit's suggestion that Vullo had non-retaliatory motives for investigating the insurance policies at issue is rebutted by the facts pleaded in the Complaint.
The Second Circuit goes on to suggest that even if Vullo did make threats, such threats were justified by the "general backlash" against the NRA "and businesses associated with them" which "was intense after the Parkland shooting." Indeed, this backlash "continues today," with many people "speaking out" against the NRA's gun rights advocacy. Such "backlash" against a speaker's viewpoint, the Second Circuit opines, "likely" has financial consequences that would justify financial blacklisting of that speaker for its controversial advocacy.
In support, the Second Circuit cites a "diversity, equity, and inclusion" consultant who charges companies for "consulting packages" to implement "corporate social responsibility" programs, as well as a "survey" commissioned by a marketing company that "strives to insert the brand's social mission and innovations into mainstream conversations through traditional and social media." The reliance on such sources underscores the unsoundness of the opinion below.
This Court has not hesitated to summarily overturn circuit court decisions, like the Second Circuit's, that disregard the applicable pleading standard in determining qualified immunity. Here, the Second Circuit makes the same error as the lower courts in Lombardo v. City of St. Louis, Missouri, 141 S. Ct. 2239 (2021) (per curiam), Sause v. Bauer, 138 S. Ct. 2561 (2018) (per curiam), and Tolan v. Cotton, 572 U.S. 650 (2014) (per curiam). In all three, this Court summarily reversed because the circuit courts refused to accept well-pleaded facts and draw reasonable inferences in favor of the non-moving party in determining qualified immunity.
The public importance of this case cannot be overstated. A regulatory regime—even a facially content-neutral one—that "inhibit[s] protected freedoms of expression and association" violates the First Amendment. See NAACP v. Button, 371 U.S. 415, 437-38 (1963); NAACP v. Alabama ex rel. Patterson, 357 U.S. 449, 460-62 (1958). An overt campaign by state officials to wield regulatory power against a disfavored civil rights organization—here the NRA—precisely because of its disfavored speech at least as clearly merits this Court's attention and reversal.
Reversal is urgent because the Second Circuit's opinion threatens basic First Amendment rights at a time when the First Amendment is under widespread attack. As the American Civil Liberties Union ("ACLU") has warned, "If the NRA's allegations were deemed insufficient to survive the motion to dismiss, it would set a dangerous precedent for advocacy groups across the political spectrum."
(Note: William Brewer, Sarah Rogers & Noah Peters of Brewer Attorneys & Counselors and I are the counsel on the petition.)
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“And the Second Circuit's suggestion that Vullo had non-retaliatory motives for investigating the insurance policies at issue is rebutted by the facts pleaded in the Complaint.“
How can she initiate retaliatory investigations before the guidance letter issues?
Which guidance letter? Whether a given investigation is retaliation for protected speech is a question that depends on that speech and the motive for the investigation. If the investigation is supposedly justified by a not-yet-issued guidance letter, then the investigation looks even more arbitrary and capricious than it would with a clear basis in published guidance.
Again, the guidance letter NRA is complaining about was written in the aftermath of an event that had not even transpired at the time that the investigations of the insurers was opened. How can they be retaliating for non-conformity to guidance that has not even been issued or contemplated?
The NRA is not alleging retaliation "for non-conformity to guidance", but for "disfavored speech".
I am responding to the portion of the introduction that I quoted above… the whole paragraph, really.
What they are effectively saying is the combination of:
a) mean tweets by cuomo b) guidance from NYS regulator (nothing mandated, suggests companies review their own policies, no consequences for blowing it off) c) preexisting (by MONTHS if not years) investigation of completely unrelated insurance law violations
While individually potentially acceptable (there is a lot a whining about other peoples settlement talks), together All add up to unconstitutionally coercive conduct. If that’s true then frankly there isn’t much a public servant could say that wouldn’t be coercive. I suspect that rather is the point, as least as far as guns are concerned.
How this regime that NRA and Eugene desire would play out in other areas is anyone’s guess. We just went through a presidency with a guy who popularized the style of mean tweets and veiled threats… all of a sudden many things could be unduly coercive. I suspect ultimately guns and 2A advocacy orgs will be a special case, as I have said before.
They point to a lot more threads of evidence than just those three things, but please, continue to bury your head in the sand. That seems to be a very common leftist tactic.
"If that’s true then frankly there isn’t much a public servant could say that wouldn’t be coercive."
Surely, "Is your customer engaged in a lawful activity? If the answer is yes, we've got nothing more to discuss." is something the public servant could say, that wouldn't be coercive.
Why shouldn't the public servant say exactly that?
“The First Amendment does not forbid her from speaking about her preferred course of action; rather, it gives her the freedom to advocate for it. Id. Indeed, both parties here agree that Vullo was entitled to advocate for her polit- ical views – to condemn gun violence and to urge DFS- regulated entities to consider what they could do to re- duce both gun violence and the reputational risks of doing business with gun promotion groups.“
Appendix, p. 24.
There is a long bunch of cites before this— including to summum and the confederate license plate case.
Yes, and then she went beyond speech that is protected by the First Amendment when she threatened and then punished those companies because they did not do what she wanted, and bribed them to do what she wanted (as a way to punish the NRA).
“Punished”
Punished by opening an investigation months before parkland even took place?
I didn't ask if the public servant could get away with saying more than that. I know damned well regulators routinely get away with being abusive.
I asked WHY the public servant shouldn't say that. Normatively, isn't that exactly what the upright, honest public regulator should say? "I'm not here to police your politics. Whether you're complying with the law is the beginning and end of my responsibility here."
Shouldn't they, in an ideal world, say that? And saying it wouldn't be coercive, now, would it? So you're wrong that there's nothing they could say that wouldn't be coercive.
It's just that the regulator here wanted to be coercive.
I also thought the reference to the DEI consultant was cute but maybe a little too red meat? Surely “reputational risk” is a legitimate concern in this day and age? I mean, look at bud light!
"Surely “reputational risk” is a legitimate concern in this day and age? I mean, look at bud light!"
I think that perhaps regulators ought to steer clear of some reputational risks. If a bank is willing to give an account to the NRA or ACLU or Southern Poverty Law Center or what have you, or Anheuser-Busch wants to showcase trans issues or whatever, I think regulators ought to be silent. It's too fraught with 1A dangers.
Companies do dumb things: the Edsel, New Coke, ad infinitum. Stopping those mistakes isn't what regulators are for.
“regulators ought to be silent“
I agree with you that this is the goal here.
“Companies do dumb things: the Edsel, New Coke, ad infinitum. Stopping those mistakes isn’t what regulators are for.”
How about dumb things like not keeping enough money on hand to cover deposits? Or sending out dangerously defective products?
"How about dumb things like not keeping enough money on hand to cover deposits?"
Could you flesh out what 1A concerns you see with requirements for reserves? Those seem pretty viewpoint neutral to me.
“Companies do dumb things: the Edsel, New Coke, ad infinitum. Stopping those mistakes isn’t what regulators are for.”
Stopping companies from making dumb mistakes is definitely part of why we have regulations.
Are you saying regulators shouldn’t stop companies from making crappy products that nobody wanted to buy? That, I agree with.
It’s besides the point: even EV and the NRA don’t directly dispute that reputational risk is a legitimate matter of concern and within the purview of Vullo’s authority.
No, stopping companies from making harmful mistakes is definitely part of why we have regulations. Companies are allowed to do dumb things.
I think regulators ought to completely steer clear of "reputational risk". Utterly and completely.
The whole concept is unavoidably subjective. It isn't just that it's possible to apply it in a biased way, it largely exists to be applied in a biased way.
The regulator faces an issue, like gun control, or abortion, where the country is split down the middle, and is empowered to punish serving one side of the split, and bless serving the other side.
Regulators should stick to objective legal criteria, and leave it at that. And should be punished severely for stepping even one inch beyond that line.
What is the punishment here as it relates to reputational risk?
You did notice that it's right at the top of the page in a blockquote, right?
The process is the punishment. Do business with perfectly legal organizations the regulator dislikes, and you'll be met with, "costly investigations, increased regulatory scrutiny and penalties should they fail to discontinue their arrangements with" a controversial speaker, on the ground that disfavored political speech poses a regulable "reputational risk.""
"Reputational risk" is an illegitimate concept for a government regulator to act on. An investor? Sure, an investor is free to deploy a Ouija board, too, or just refuse to invest because they don't like CEOs who part their hair on the wrong side.
But a government regulator needs to be basing their actions on something objective with a lawful basis. And, definitionally, "Your reputation with me will suffer if you do business with organizations that I dislike." is not an objective, lawful basis for regulatory intervention.
““Reputational risk” is an illegitimate concept for a government regulator to act on.”
That is a view that is not shared by either of the parties to this case. This has been another episode of “The constitution according to Mr. Brett”
Did I say it was a constitutional issue? There's lots of crap the government shouldn't do that the Constitution is silent on, especially in regards to state government.
“Shouldn’t do”
Ok, but now we’re just talking policy
Yeah, so?
As a matter of policy, regulators should be prohibited from acting on anything but objective violations of the law.
If the Court decides that abusing 'reputational risk' to force compliance with the regulator's own ideological preferences is a constitutional violate, I won't complain, to be sure.
“acting on anything but objective violations of the law”
What was acted on here other than objective violations of the law?
Yeah, I'm guessing that when a beefy Italian gent drops by your store and expresses concern that you don't have enough fire insurance, you think he's really concerned about your wellbeing, too. I'd say don't pretend to be so gullible, but you seem pretty determined.
re: " Surely “reputational risk” is a legitimate concern in this day and age?"
It is a legitimate concern of business owners. It is emphatically not a legitimate concern of government regulators.
Again: the parties do not agree with you
You know, I'm reading the cert. petition right now, and it's not at all clear to me that both the parties disagree with me. Seems to me that the NRA might agree.
The second circuit characterized the parties as being in agreement on that point, as I quoted above. EV doesn’t dispute it directly, he just does a drive by making a snide comment about DEI.
Plus think about it— it’s crucial to EV’s argument that this IS within her purview— that’s what makes this “threat” credible and coercive.
"The second circuit characterized the parties as being in agreement on that point"
And the NRA is appealing from the second circuit! Does that indicate to you that they agree with everything the second circuit did?
They are not challenging that part of the ruling! I don’t know what else to tell you. They are accepting this point for the purposes of this cert petition. As I said- it’s actually part of Eugene’s argument that it IS within her authority. Do you understand how appeals work? Never mind, don’t say anything— the answer is evident.
Do you understand that "not challenging" and "agreeing" are different things?
Naturally they don't want to have to establish that 'reputational risk' as such is categorically an illegitimate basis for regulation, just to win a case where the alleged 'reputational risk' is nothing but a pretext for acting on personal animus. They're trying to win the immediate case, not transform the entire regulatory environment!
That doesn't mean they agree with reputational risk regulation. It just means that they're not challenging the whole concept.
But what does that have to do with that cert petition? Maybe some of these lawyers think the entire administrative state should be abolished (in fact I wouldn’t be surprised by that)? So what? What in the flying F does their personal views on issues THAT ARE NOT BEING APPEALED have to do with anything? What are you even trying to say here?
Eugene explicitly argues that this is within her authority for the purposes of this case. If you are saying he might hold personal views outside of this case that are different, frankly that is not particularly interesting or insightful.
Baloney. The fact that a party does not attack a specific position is no indication that they agree with that position. The 2nd Circuit's conclusory remarks are no indication either. You did notice that the 2nd Circuit's decision is what's being appealed, right?
just read section I(A)(1) in the cert petition.
They are not making any kind of argument that this is outside of her purview. And even if they were arguing that, Wouldn’t it be a state law claim? She’s a state regulator operating under New York State law.
It’s helpful to EVs argument that this is actually within her purview— it’s one of the ways he is drawing a distinction from the sheriff in the 7th circuit case
“And, definitionally, “Your reputation with me will suffer if you do business with organizations that I dislike.” is not an objective, lawful basis for regulatory intervention.”
Huh? Reputational risk means the business’ relationship with the public, not with the regulator herself. And again, what is the intervention?
In this case, it was the business's reputation with the regulator that was at stake.
"reputation WITH ME..."
Anyone who thinks the state's position is okay, either legally or ethically, is a disingenuous political hack.
If a right wing administration was threatening businesses that catered to abortionists or homosexuals, you'd be throwing a tantrum.
Disney, for example?
Carry on, bigoted clingers.
Florida isn't threatening to get their banking licenses pulled. they just are revoking their undeserved privileges that they get over other private businesses.
Thanks for admitting though that Disney is catering to homosexuals and groomers like yourself.