Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-ca2-13-00999/USCOURTS-ca2-13-00999-0/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 440
Nature of Suit: Other Civil Rights
Cause of Action: 

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13‐981 (L)

Turkmen, et al. v. Hasty, et al.

1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT

3

4

5 August Term, 2013

6

7 (Argued: May 1, 2014          Decided: June 17, 2015)

8

9 Docket Nos. 13‐981, 13‐999, 13‐1002, 13‐1003, 13‐1662

10

11

12 IBRAHIM TURKMEN, AKHIL SACHDEVA, AHMER IQBAL ABBASI,  

13 ANSER MEHMOOD, BENAMAR BENATTA, AHMED KHALIFA,  

14 SAEED HAMMOUDA, PURNA BAJRACHARYA, on behalf of themselves and

15 all others similarly situated,

16    

17 Plaintiffs‐Appellees‐Cross‐Appellants,   

18        

19 ‐v.‐ 

20

21 DENNIS HASTY, former Warden of the Metropolitan Detention Center,

22 MICHAEL ZENK, former Warden of the Metropolitan Detention Center,

23 JAMES SHERMAN, former Metropolitan Detention Center Associate  

24 Warden for Custody,

25

26          Defendants‐Appellants,

27

28 JOHN ASHCROFT, former Attorney General of the United States,  

29 ROBERT MUELLER, former Director, Federal Bureau of Investigation,

30 JAMES W. ZIGLAR, former Commissioner, Immigration and  

31 Naturalization Service,

32

33                             Defendants‐Cross‐Appellees,

34

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1 SALVATORE LOPRESTI, former Metropolitan Detention Center Captain,  

2 JOSEPH CUCITI, former Metropolitan Detention Center Lieutenant,

3

        Defendants.

* 4

5

6

7 Before:              

8 POOLER, RAGGI, AND WESLEY, Circuit Judges.

9

10

11 Appeal from a January 15, 2013 Memorandum and Order of the United States

12 District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Gleeson, J.) granting in part

13 and denying in part Defendants’ motions to dismiss.  Cross‐appeal from an April

14 10, 2013 Judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of

15 New York (Gleeson, J.), which was entered pursuant to Rule 54(b) of the Federal

16 Rules of Civil Procedure on April 11, 2013, granting certain Defendants’ motions

17 to dismiss.  We AFFIRM in part and REVERSE in part.  Judge Raggi concurs in

18 part in the judgment and dissents in part in a separate opinion.

19

20 RACHEL A. MEEROPOL, Center for Constitutional Rights,

21 New York, NY (Michael Winger, Sunita Patel, Baher A.

22 Azmy, Center for Constitutional Rights, New York, NY;

23 Nancy L. Kestenbaum, Jennifer L. Robbins, Joanne Sum‐

24 Ping, Covington & Burling LLP, New York, NY, on the

25 brief), for Plaintiffs‐Appellees‐Cross‐Appellants.

26

27 HUGH D. SANDLER, Crowell & Moring LLP, New York,

28 NY (Shari Ross Lahlou, Crowell & Moring LLP,

29 Washington, D.C., on the brief), for Defendant‐Appellant

30 Dennis Hasty.

31

32 JOSHUA C. KLEIN (Allan N. Taffet, Kirk L. Brett, Megan

33 E. Uhle, on the brief), Duval & Stachenfeld LLP, New

34 York, NY, for Defendant‐Appellant Michael Zenk.

                                                            

* The Clerk of the Court is directed to amend the caption as set forth above.

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1

2 JEFFREY A. LAMKEN, MoloLamken LLP, Washington,

3 D.C. (Martin V. Totaro, MoloLamken LLP, Washington,

4 D.C.; Debra L. Roth, Julia H. Perkins, Shaw, Bransford

5 & Roth P.C., Washington, D.C., on the brief), for

6 Defendant‐Appellant James Sherman.

7

8 H. THOMAS BYRON III, Appellate Attorney, Civil

9 Division (Stuart F. Delery, Assistant Attorney General,

10 Ronald C. Machen Jr., United States Attorney, Dana

11 Boente, United States Attorney, Barbara L. Herwig,

12 Appellate Attorney, Civil Division, on the brief), U.S.

13 Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., for Defendants‐

14 Cross‐Appellees John Ashcroft and Robert Mueller.

15

16 WILLIAM ALDEN MCDANIEL, JR., Ballard Spahr LLP,

17 Baltimore, MD, for Defendant‐Cross‐Appellee James W.

18 Ziglar.

19

20 Trina Realmuto, National Immigration Project of the

21 National Lawyers Guild, Boston, MA; Mary Kenney,

22 American Immigration Council, Washington, D.C.,

23 amici curiae in support of Plaintiffs‐Appellees‐Cross‐

24 Appellants.

25

26

27 POOLER AND WESLEY, Circuit Judges:

28 On September 11, 2001, “19 Arab Muslim hijackers who counted

29 themselves members in good standing of al Qaeda” hijacked four airplanes and

30 killed over 3,000 people on American soil.  Ashcroft v. Iqbal (Iqbal), 556 U.S. 662,

31 682 (2009).  This case raises a difficult and delicate set of legal issues concerning

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1 individuals who were caught up in the post‐9/11 investigation even though they

2 were unquestionably never involved in terrorist activity.  Plaintiffs are eight

male, “out‐of‐status” aliens 3 1 who were arrested on immigration charges and

4 detained following the 9/11 attacks.  Plaintiffs were held at the Metropolitan

5 Detention Center (the “MDC”) in Brooklyn, New York, or the Passaic County Jail

6 (“Passaic”) in Paterson, New Jersey; their individual detentions generally ranged

7 from approximately three to eight months.

8 The operative complaint, a putative class action, asserts various claims

9 against former Attorney General John Ashcroft; former Director of the Federal

10 Bureau of Investigation (the “FBI”) Robert Mueller; former Commissioner of the

11 Immigration and Naturalization Service (the “INS”) James Ziglar; former MDC

12 Warden Dennis Hasty; former MDC Warden Michael Zenk; and former MDC

Associate Warden James Sherman.2 13   All claims arise out of allegedly

                                                            

1 We use the term “out‐of‐status” alien to mean one who has either (1) entered the

United States illegally and is deportable if apprehended, or (2) entered the United States

legally but who has fallen “out of status” by violating the rules or guidelines for his

nonimmigrant status (often by overstaying his visa) in the United States and is

deportable.

2 For ease of reference, we refer to Ashcroft, Mueller, and Ziglar collectively as the

“Department of Justice (‘DOJ’) Defendants,” and Hasty, Sherman, and Zenk collectively

as the “MDC Defendants.”  The operative complaint also alleges claims against MDC

officials Joseph Cuciti and Salvatore Lopresti.  Cuciti did not appeal the district court’s

decision, and Lopresti filed a notice of appeal but did not timely pay the filing fee or file

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1 discriminatory and punitive treatment Plaintiffs suffered while confined at the

2 MDC or Passaic.

3 BACKGROUND

I. Procedural History3 4

5 Plaintiffs initiated this action over thirteen years ago on April 17, 2002.  

6 Over the following two and one‐half years, Plaintiffs amended their complaint

7 three times.  In June 2006, following a series of motions to dismiss, the district

8 court dismissed Plaintiffs’ unlawful‐length‐of‐detention claims but permitted to

9 proceed, inter alia, the substantive due process and equal protection claims

10 challenging the conditions of confinement at the MDC.  See Turkmen v. Ashcroft

11 (Turkmen I), No. 02 CV 2307(JG), 2006 WL 1662663, at *33–36, 40–41 (E.D.N.Y.

12 June 14, 2006), affʹd in part, vacated in part, Turkmen v. Ashcroft (Turkmen II), 589

13 F.3d 542 (2d Cir. 2009) (per curiam), remanded to Turkmen III, 915 F. Supp. 2d at

14 314.  Plaintiffs and Defendants appealed various aspects of that ruling.

15 Two significant events occurred while the appeal was pending.  First, six

16 of the original eight named Plaintiffs at that time withdrew or settled their claims

                                                                                                                                                                                               

a brief.  Lopresti’s appeal was dismissed pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate

Procedure 31(c).  Thus, we do not address the claims against Cuciti and Lopresti.

3 For a more comprehensive review of this case’s procedural history, see Turkmen v.

Ashcroft (Turkmen III), 915 F. Supp. 2d 314, 331−33 (E.D.N.Y. 2013).

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1 against the government.  See Turkmen II, 589 F.3d at 544 n.1, 545.  This left only

2 Ibrahim Turkmen and Akhil Sachdeva, both of whom were detained at Passaic,

3 as opposed to the MDC.  Second, the Supreme Court issued Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 662,

4 which altered the pleading regime governing Plaintiffs’ claims.  In light of these

5 events and the remaining Plaintiffs’ stated desire to replead claims unique to the

6 settling Plaintiffs, this Court affirmed the dismissal of the length of detention

7 claims but vacated and remanded with respect to the conditions of confinement

8 claims.  See Turkmen II, 589 F.3d at 546−47, 549−50.

9 On remand, the district court permitted Plaintiffs to amend their complaint

10 and granted leave for six additional Plaintiffs, all of whom had been held at the

11 MDC, to intervene.  The eight current named Plaintiffs are of Middle Eastern,

12 North African, or South Asian origin; six of them are Muslim, one is Hindu, and

13 one is Buddhist.  The Fourth Amended Complaint (the “Complaint”), the

14 operative complaint in this case, restates Plaintiffs’ putative class claims on

15 behalf of the “9/11 detainees,” a class of similarly situated non‐citizens who are

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1 Arab or Muslim, or were perceived by Defendants as Arab or Muslim, and were

arrested and detained in response to the 9/11 attacks.4 2

3 The Complaint dramatically winnowed the relevant claims and

4 defendants; it alleges seven claims against eight defendants.  The first six claims,

5 all brought pursuant to Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal Bureau of

6 Narcotics, 403 U.S. 388 (1971), are: (1) a conditions of confinement claim under the

7 Due Process Clause; (2) an equal protection claim alleging that Defendants

8 subjected Plaintiffs to the challenged conditions because of their, or their

9 perceived, race, religion, ethnicity, and/or national origin; (3) a claim arising

10 under the Free Exercise Clause; (4) and (5) two claims generally alleging

11 interference with counsel; and (6) a claim under the Fourth and Fifth

12 Amendments alleging unreasonable and punitive strip searches.  The seventh

13 and final claim alleges a conspiracy under 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3).  The DOJ and

14 MDC Defendants moved to dismiss the Complaint for failure to state a claim, on

                                                            

4 Benamar Benatta was originally detained by Canadian authorities on September 5,

2001, after crossing the Canadian border with false documentation.  Following the

September 11 attacks, Benatta was transported back to the United States and detained in

the challenged conditions of confinement and pursuant to the post‐9/11 investigation;

therefore, we call him a “9/11 detainee.”

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1 qualified immunity grounds, and, in some instances, based on a theory that

2 Bivens relief did not extend to the claim at issue.

3 II. The OIG Reports

4 Plaintiffs supplemented the factual allegations in their amended

5 complaints with information gleaned from two reports by the Office of the

6 Inspector General of the United States Department of Justice (the “OIG  

reports”)5 7 that documented the federal law enforcement response to 9/11 and

8 conditions at the MDC and Passaic.

9 The OIG reports, which the Complaint “incorporate[s] by reference except

10 where contradicted by the allegations of [the Complaint],” Compl. ¶ 3 n.1, see also

id. ¶ 5 n.2, play a significant role in this case.6 11   Primarily, the OIG reports provide

                                                            

5 There are two OIG reports.  The first OIG report, published in June 2003, covers

multiple aspects of law enforcement’s response to 9/11.  See U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Office

of the Inspector General, The September 11 Detainees: A Review of the Treatment of

Aliens Held on Immigration Charges in Connection with the Investigation of the

September 11 Attacks (April 2003) (the “OIG Report”), available at

http://www.justice.gov/oig/special/0306/full.pdf.  The second OIG report, published in

December 2003, focuses on abuses at the MDC.  See U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Office of the

Inspector General, Supplemental Report on September 11 Detainees’ Allegations of

Abuse at the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn, New York (Dec. 2003) (the

“Supplemental OIG Report”), available at

http://www.justice.gov/oig/special/0312/final.pdf.

6 Various Defendants challenge the district court’s decision to consider the OIG reports

to the extent that they are not contradicted by the Complaint.  Defendants are correct

that a complaint “include[s] any written instrument attached to it as an exhibit or any

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1 invaluable context for the unprecedented challenges following 9/11 and the

2 various strategies federal agencies employed to confront these challenges.  The

3 reports help orient our analysis of the Complaint.

III. Plaintiffs’ Allegations7 4

5 In the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks, the FBI and other agencies within the

6 DOJ immediately initiated an immense investigation aimed at identifying the

7 9/11 perpetrators and preventing any further attacks.  See OIG Report at 1, 11−12.  

8 PENTTBOM, the Pentagon/Twin Towers Bombings investigation, was initially

9 run out of the FBI’s field offices, but shortly thereafter, Mueller ordered that

10 management of the investigation be switched to the FBI’s Strategic Information

                                                                                                                                                                                               

statements or documents incorporated in it by reference.”  Cortec Indus., Inc. v. Sum

Holding L.P., 949 F.2d 42, 47 (2d Cir. 1991); accord DiFolco v. MSNBC Cable L.L.C., 622

F.3d 104, 111 (2d Cir. 2010).  But their objection misses the point.  The district court

accurately explained that at the pleading stage, although we must consider the words

on the page (that is, we cannot disregard the fact that the OIG reports make particular

findings), we need not consider the truth of those words to the extent disputed by

Plaintiffs.  See Turkmen III, 915 F. Supp. 2d at 342 n.14 (citing DiFolco, 622 F.3d at 111).

Even were we to view the OIG reports as fully incorporated, reliance on any assertion

of fact requires a credibility assessment that we are fundamentally unsuited to

undertake at the Rule 12(b)(6) stage.  And although the OIG reports cannot

determinatively prove or disprove Plaintiffs’ allegations, they remain relevant to our

analysis because they supplement our understanding of the law enforcement response

to 9/11.

7 The allegations set forth herein are drawn from the Complaint and those portions of

the OIG reports incorporated by reference.  See supra note 6.  We presume the veracity

of Plaintiffs’ well‐pleaded allegations.  Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 679.

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1 and Operations Center (the “SIOC”) at FBI Headquarters in Washington, D.C.  

2 Mueller personally directed PENTTBOM from the SIOC and remained in daily

3 contact with FBI field offices.

4 In conjunction with PENTTBOM, the Deputy Attorney General’s Office

5 (the “DAG’s Office”) established the SIOC Working Group to coordinate “efforts

6 among the various components within the [DOJ] that had an investigative

interest in[,] or responsibility for[,] the September 11 detainees.”  Id. at 15.8 7   The

8 SIOC Working Group included representatives from, among other agencies, the

9 FBI, the INS, and the DAG’s Office.  This group met daily—if not multiple times

10 in a single day—in the months following 9/11; its duties included “coordinat[ing]

11 information and evidence sharing among the FBI, INS, and U.S. Attorneys’

12 offices” and “ensur[ing] that aliens detained as part of the PENTTBOM

13 investigation would not be released until they were cleared by the FBI of

14 involvement with the September 11 attacks or terrorism in general.”  Id.

15 Given that the 9/11 hijackers were all foreign nationals, the DOJ response

16 carried a major immigration law component.  See id. at 12.  Ashcroft and Mueller

17 developed “a policy whereby any Muslim or Arab man encountered during the

                                                            

8 The SIOC Working Group acquired this name because its initial meetings occurred at

the FBI’s SIOC.

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1 investigation of a tip received in the 9/11 terrorism investigation . . . and

2 discovered to be a non‐citizen who had violated the terms of his visa, was

3 arrested.”  Compl. ¶ 1; see also id. ¶¶ 39–49.  Ashcroft also created the related

4 “hold‐until‐cleared” policy, which mandated that individuals arrested in the

5 wake of 9/11 not be released from “custody until [FBI Headquarters]

6 affirmatively cleared them of terrorist ties.”  Id. ¶ 2; see also OIG Report at 38–39.

7 Within a week of 9/11, the FBI had received approximately 96,000 tips from

8 civilians across the country.  These tips varied significantly in quality and

reliability.9 9   “Mueller [nonetheless] ordered that every one of these tips be

10 investigated, even if they were implausible on their face.”  Compl. ¶ 40.  

11 Ultimately, 762 detainees were placed on the INS Custody List (the “INS List”)

12 that then made them subject to Ashcroft’s hold‐until‐cleared policy.

13 In the months following 9/11, the DOJ Defendants “received detailed daily

14 reports of the arrests and detentions.”  Id. ¶ 47.  Ashcroft and Mueller also “met

                                                            

9 For instance, Turkmen came to the FBI’s attention when his landlord called the FBI’s

9/11 hotline and reported “that she rented an apartment in her home to several Middle

Eastern men, and she ‘would feel awful if her tenants were involved in terrorism and

she didn’t call.’”  Compl. ¶ 251.  “The FBI knew that her only basis for suspecting these

men was that they were Middle Eastern; indeed, she reported that they were good

tenants, and paid their rent on time.”  Id.  Another alien was arrested after the FBI

received a tip that stated that the small grocery store where he worked was overstaffed,

thus arousing the tipster’s suspicions about the “Middle Eastern men” that worked

there.  OIG Report at 17.  

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1 regularly with a small group of government officials in Washington, D.C., and

2 mapped out ways to exert maximum pressure on the individuals arrested in

connection with the terrorism investigation.”  Id. ¶ 61.10 3   This small group

4 “discussed and decided upon a strategy to restrict the 9/11 detainees’ ability to

5 contact the outside world and delay their immigration hearings.  The group also

6 decided to spread the word among law enforcement personnel that the 9/11

7 detainees were suspected terrorists[] . . . and that they needed to be encouraged

8 in any way possible to cooperate.”  Id.

9 Plaintiffs, with the exception of Turkmen and Sachdeva, were held at the

10 MDC.  Under MDC confinement policy, the 9/11 detainees placed in the MDC

11 were held in the MDC’s Administrative Maximum Special Housing Unit (the

12 “ADMAX SHU”)—“a particularly restrictive type of SHU not found in most

13 [Bureau of Prisons (‘BOP’)] facilities because the normal SHU is usually sufficient

                                                            

10 It is unclear whether this “small group” refers to the SIOC Working Group or a

distinct group involving Ashcroft, Mueller, and other senior Washington, D.C., officials.  

One possibility is that Plaintiffs are referring to the small group that consisted of

Ashcroft, Mueller, Michael Chertoff, who was then Assistant Attorney General of the

Criminal Division, and the Deputy Attorney General.  See OIG Report at 13.  According

to Chertoff, this group discussed the DOJ’s post‐9/11 law enforcement strategy and

policies.  Given the makeup of this group and the SIOC Working Group, it is reasonable

to infer that information flowed between them; for instance, Chertoff’s deputy, Alice

Fisher, was placed in charge of immigration issues for the Criminal Division and

personally established the SIOC Working Group.

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1 for correcting inmate misbehavior and addressing security concerns.”  Id. ¶ 76.  

2 The confinement policy was created by the MDC Defendants “in consultation

3 with the FBI.”  Id. ¶ 65.

4 Conditions in the ADMAX SHU were severe and began to receive media

5 attention soon after detentions began.  See OIG Report at 2, 5.  Detainees were:

6 “placed in tiny cells for over 23 hours a day,” Compl. ¶ 5; “strip‐searched every

7 time they were removed from or returned to their cell[s], . . . even when they had

8 no conceivable opportunity to obtain contraband,” id. ¶ 112; provided with

9 “meager and barely edible” food, id. ¶ 128; denied sleep by “bright lights” that

10 were left on in their cells for 24 hours a day, id. ¶ 119, and, “[o]n some occasions,

11 correctional officers walked by every 20 minutes throughout the night, kicked

12 the doors to wake up the detainees, and yelled” highly degrading and offensive

13 comments, id. ¶ 120; constructively denied recreation and exposed to the

14 elements, see id. ¶¶ 122−23; “denied access to basic hygiene items like toilet

15 paper, soap, towels, toothpaste, [and] eating utensils,” id. ¶ 130; and prohibited

16 from moving around the unit, using the telephone freely, using the commissary,

17 or accessing MDC handbooks, which explained how to file complaints about

18 mistreatment, see id. ¶¶ 76, 83, 129, 140.

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1 MDC staff also subjected the 9/11 detainees to frequent physical and verbal

2 abuse.  The abuse included slamming the 9/11 detainees into walls; bending or

3 twisting their arms, hands, wrists, and fingers; lifting them off the ground by

4 their arms; pulling on their arms and handcuffs; stepping on their leg restraints;

5 restraining them with handcuffs and/or shackles even while in their cells; and

6 handling them in other rough and inappropriate ways.  See id. ¶ 105; see also

7 Supplemental OIG Report at 8–28.  MDC staff also referred to the 9/11 detainees

8 as “‘terrorists,’ and other offensive names; threaten[ed] them with violence;

9 curs[ed] at them; insult[ed] their religion; and ma[de] humiliating sexual

10 comments during strip‐searches.”  Compl. ¶ 109.  Specifically, Plaintiffs and

11 putative class members at the MDC were referred to by staff as “camel[s],”  

12 “fucking Muslims,” and “Arabic asshole[s],” id. ¶¶ 110, 147, 218.

13 The MDC Plaintiffs did not receive copies of the Koran for weeks or

14 months after requesting them, and one Plaintiff never received a copy, “pursuant

15 to a written MDC policy . . . that prohibited the 9/11 detainees from keeping

16 anything, including a Koran, in their cell[s].”  Id. ¶ 132.  The MDC Plaintiffs were

17 also “denied the Halal food required by their Muslim faith.”  Id. ¶ 133.  And

18 “MDC staff frequently interrupted Plaintiffs’ and class members’ prayers,”

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1 including “by banging on cell doors,” yelling derogatory comments, and

2 mocking the detainees while they prayed.  Id. ¶ 136.

3 The named MDC Plaintiffs’ individual experiences—several of which are

4 highlighted below—add further texture to their collective allegations concerning

5 the arrest and confinement of the 9/11 detainees.

6 A. Anser Mehmood

7 Mehmood, a citizen of Pakistan and devout Muslim, entered the United

8 States on a business visa in 1989 with his wife, Uzma, and their three children.  

9 After his visa expired, Mehmood remained in the country and started a trucking

10 business that provided enough earnings to purchase a home in New Jersey and

11 to send funds to his family in Pakistan.  In 2000, while living in New Jersey, he

12 and Uzma had their fourth child.  In May 2001, Uzma’s brother—a United States

13 citizen—submitted an immigration petition for the entire family.

14 On the morning of October 3, 2001, Mehmood was asleep with Uzma and

15 their one‐year‐old son when FBI and INS agents knocked on his door.  The

16 agents searched Mehmood’s home and asked whether he “was involved with a

17 jihad.”  Id. ¶ 157.  Mehmood admitted that he had overstayed his visa.  The FBI

18 informed Mehmood that they were not interested in him; they had come to arrest

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1 his wife Uzma, whose name the FBI had encountered when investigating

2 Plaintiff Ahmer Abbasi, her brother.  Mehmood convinced the FBI to arrest him

3 instead of Uzma because their son was still breastfeeding.  “The Agent told

4 Mehmood that they had no choice but to arrest one of the parents, but that

5 Mehmood faced a minor immigration violation only, and he would be out on

6 bail within days.”  Id. ¶ 159.

7 Upon his arrival at the MDC, Mehmood “was dragged from the van by

8 several large correctional officers, who threw him into several walls on his way

9 into the facility.”  Id. ¶ 162.  “His left hand was broken during this incident” and

10 “[t]he guards threatened to kill him if he asked any questions.”  Id.  His

11 experience in the ADMAX SHU tracked that of other 9/11 detainees.  For

12 instance, “[w]henever Mehmood was removed from his cell, he was placed in

13 handcuffs, chains, and shackles.  Four or more MDC staff members typically

14 escorted him to his destination, frequently inflicting unnecessary pain along the

15 way, for example, by banging him into the wall, dragging him, carrying him, and

16 stepping on his shackles and pushing his face into the wall.”  Id. ¶ 166.  Neither

17 the FBI nor INS interviewed Mehmood following his arrest.  Mehmood was not

18 released from the ADMAX SHU until February 6, 2002.

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1 B. Ahmed Khalifa

2 Khalifa, who had completed five years toward a medical degree at the

3 University of Alexandria in Egypt, came to the United States on a student visa in

4 July 2001.  He came to the FBI’s attention after the FBI received a tip that “several

5 Arabs who lived at Khalifa’s address were renting a post‐office box, and possibly

6 sending out large quantities of money.”  Id. ¶ 195.  On September 30, 2001, FBI,

7 INS, and officers from the New York City Police Department came to the

8 apartment Khalifa shared with several Egyptian friends.  The officers searched

9 his wallet and apparently became “very interested in a list of phone numbers of

10 friends in Egypt.”  Id. ¶ 196.  After searching the apartment, the agents asked

11 Khalifa for his passport and “if he had anything to do with September 11.”  Id.

12 ¶ 197.  One FBI agent told Khalifa that they were only interested in three of his

13 roommates, but another agent said they also needed Khalifa, whom they arrested

14 for “working without authorization.”  Id.

15 On October 1, 2001, after briefly stopping at a local INS detention facility to

16 complete paperwork, Khalifa and his roommates were transported to the MDC.  

17 When he arrived at the MDC, Khalifa “was slammed into the wall, pushed and

18 kicked by MDC officers and placed into a wet cell, with a mattress on the floor.”  

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1 Id. ¶ 201.  “[His] wrists were cut and bruised from his handcuffs, and he was

2 worried about other detainees, whom he heard gasping and moaning through

3 the walls of his cell.”  Id.

4 FBI and INS agents interviewed Khalifa on October 7, 2001.  One of the

5 agents apologized to Khalifa after noticing the bruises on his wrists.  When

6 Khalifa stated that MDC guards were abusing him, the agents “stated it was

7 because he was Muslim.”  Id. ¶ 202.  In notes from the interview, the agents did

8 not question Khalifa’s credibility, and noted no suspicion of ties to terrorism or

9 interest in him in connection with PENTTBOM.

10 Following the interview, MDC guards strip searched Khalifa and “laughed

11 when they made him bend over and spread his buttocks.”  Id. ¶ 203.  Khalifa

12 complains of the conditions associated with detention in the ADMAX SHU,

13 including arbitrary and abusive strip searches, sleep deprivation, constructive

14 denial of recreational activities and hygiene items, and deprivation of food and

15 medical attention.

16 By November 5, 2001, the New York FBI field office affirmatively cleared

17 Khalifa of any ties to terrorism and sent his name to FBI Headquarters for final

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1 clearance.  Khalifa was not officially cleared until December 19, 2001.  He

2 remained confined in the ADMAX SHU until mid‐January 2002.

3 C. Purna Raj Bajracharya

4 Bajracharya is neither Muslim nor Arab.  He is a Buddhist and native of

5 Nepal who entered the United States on a three‐month business visa in 1996.  

6 After overstaying his visa, Bajracharya remained in Queens, New York, for five

7 years, working various odd jobs to send money home to his wife and sons in

8 Nepal.  Having planned to return home in the fall or winter of 2001, Bajracharya

9 used a video camera to capture the streets he had come to know in New York.  

10 He came to the FBI’s attention on October 25, 2001, when a Queens County

11 District Attorney’s Office employee “observed an ‘[A]rab male’ videotaping

12 outside a Queens[] office building that contained the Queens County District

13 Attorney[’s] Office and a New York FBI office.”  Id. ¶ 230.  When approached by

14 investigators from the District Attorney’s Office, Bajracharya tried to explain that

15 he was a tourist.  The investigators took him inside the building and interrogated

16 him for five hours.  FBI and INS agents arrived at some point during the

17 interrogation.  Bajracharya subsequently took the agents to his apartment;

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1 provided them with his identification documents, which established his country

2 of origin; and admitted to overstaying his visa.

3 Apparently due to the videotaping, Bajracharya was designated as being

4 of “special interest” to the FBI and on October 27, 2001, he was transported to the

5 MDC.  Id. ¶¶ 233−34.  On October 30, 2001, the FBI agent assigned to

6 Bajracharya’s case, along with other law enforcement personnel, interviewed him

7 with the aid of an interpreter.  During the interview, “Bajracharya was asked

8 whether he was Muslim or knew any Muslims.”  Id. ¶ 235.  Bajracharya

9 explained that he was not Muslim and knew no Muslims.  The FBI agent’s notes

10 from the interview do not question Bajracharya’s credibility or express any

11 suspicion of ties to terrorism.  Two days later, the same agent affirmatively

12 cleared Bajracharya of any link to terrorism.  By November 5, 2001, the New

13 York FBI field office completed its investigation and forwarded Bajracharya’s

14 case to FBI Headquarters for final clearance.  Documents at FBI Headquarters

15 note that the FBI had no interest in Bajracharya by mid‐November 2001.  

16 Nonetheless, he was not released from the ADMAX SHU until January 13, 2002.  

17 The FBI agent assigned to Bajracharya’s case did not understand why

18 Bajracharya remained in the ADMAX SHU throughout this period; the agent

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21

1 eventually called the Legal Aid Society and advised an attorney that Bajracharya

2 needed legal representation.

3 Bajracharya, who is 5’3” and weighed about 130 pounds at the time of his

4 arrest, complains of the same conditions common to the other MDC Plaintiffs.  

5 For instance, he could not sleep due to the light in his cell, and when he was

6 removed from his cell, he would be placed in handcuffs, chains, and shackles

7 and escorted by four or more MDC staff members.  Bajracharya became so

8 traumatized by his experience in the ADMAX SHU that he wept constantly.  

9 When an attorney requested that the MDC transfer Bajracharya to general

10 population, an MDC “doctor responded that Bajracharya was crying too much,

11 and would cause a riot.”  Id. ¶ 241.

12 IV. The New York List and the “Of Interest” Designation

13 As originally articulated by Ashcroft, following 9/11, the DOJ sought to

14 prevent future terrorism by arresting and detaining those people who “have

15 been identified as persons who participate in, or lend support to, terrorist

16 activities.”  OIG Report at 12 (internal quotation marks omitted).  To that end,

17 Michael Pearson, who was then INS Executive Associate Commissioner for Field

18 Operations, issued a series of Operational Orders, which addressed the

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22

1 responsibilities of INS agents operating with the FBI to investigate leads on

2 illegal aliens.  A September 22, 2001 order instructed agents to “exercise sound

3 judgment” and to limit arrests to those aliens in whom the FBI had an “interest”

4 and discouraged arrest in cases that were “clearly of no interest in furthering the

5 investigation of the terrorist attacks of September 11th.”  Id. at 45 (internal

6 quotation marks omitted).  The “of interest” designation by an FBI agent had

7 significant implications for a detainee.  “Of interest” detainees were placed on

8 the INS List, subject to the hold‐until‐cleared policy, and required FBI clearance

9 of any connection to terrorism before they could be released or removed from the

10 United States.  Detainees who were not designated “of interest” to the FBI’s

11 PENTTBOM investigation were not placed on the INS List, did not require

12 clearance by the FBI, and could be processed according to normal INS

13 procedures.  Id. at 40.

14 The arrest and detention mandate was not uniformly implemented

15 throughout the country.  Specifically, the New York FBI investigated all

16 PENTTBOM leads without vetting the initial tip and designated as “of interest”

17 “anyone picked up on a PENTTBOM lead . . . regardless of the strength of the

18 evidence or the origin of the lead.”  Id. at 41; see also Compl. ¶¶ 43–45.  For

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1 instance, days after 9/11, New York City police stopped three Middle Eastern

2 men in Manhattan on a traffic violation and found plans to a public school in the

3 car.  The next day, their employer confirmed that the men had the plans because

4 they were performing construction work on the school.  Nonetheless, the men

5 were arrested and detained.  See OIG Report at 42.  In another instance, a Middle

6 Eastern man was arrested for illegally crossing into the United States from

7 Canada over a week before 9/11.  After the attacks, the man was placed on New

8 York’s “‘special interest’ list even though a document in his file, dated September

9 26, 2001, stated that FBI New York had no knowledge of the basis for his

10 detention.”  Id. at 64 (internal quotation marks omitted).

11 In many cases, the New York FBI did not even attempt to determine

12 whether the alien was linked to terrorism, see id. at 14, 16, 41−42, 47, and it “never

13 labeled a detainee ‘no interest’ until after the clearance process was complete,” id.

14 at 18 (emphasis added).  Thus, aliens encountered and arrested pursuant to a

15 PENTTBOM lead in New York were designated “of interest” (or special interest)

16 and held until the local field office confirmed they had no ties to terrorism.  Id. at

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14; see also id. at 53.11 1   The result was that the MDC Plaintiffs and others similarly

2 situated in New York were held at the MDC ADMAX SHU as if they met the

3 national “of interest” designation.  These practices—specifically the absolute lack

of triage—appear to have been unique to New York.  See id. at 47, 56.12 4

5 At some point in October 2001, INS representatives to the SIOC Working

6 Group learned that the New York FBI was maintaining a separate list (the “New

7 York List”) of detainees who had not been included in the national INS List.  One

8 explanation for maintaining a separate New York List was that the New York FBI

9 could not determine if the detainees had any connection with terrorist activity.  

10 Id. at 54.

11 After INS Headquarters learned of the separate New York List, small

12 groups of senior officials from the DAG’s Office, the FBI, and the INS convened

13 on at least two occasions in October and November 2001 to suggest how to deal

14 with the two separate lists of detainees.  In discussing how to address the New

                                                            

11 The OIG Report indicates that 491 of the 762 detainees were arrested in New York.  

OIG Report at 21−22.  However, the OIG Report does not identify how many New York

arrests were the result of the New York FBI’s efforts.

12 The OIG Report posits that the New York response differed from the rest of the

nation, at least in part, as a result of the New York FBI and U.S. Attorney’s Office’s long

tradition of independence from their headquarters in Washington, D.C.  See OIG Report

at 54.

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25

1 York List, “officials at the INS, FBI, and [DOJ] raised concerns about, among

2 other things, whether the aliens [on the New York List] had any nexus to

3 terrorism.”  Id. at 53.  Nonetheless, this list was merged with the INS List due to

4 the concern that absent further investigation, “the FBI could unwittingly permit a

5 dangerous individual to leave the United States.”  Id.  The decision to merge the

6 lists ensured that some of the individuals on the New York List would remain

7 detained in the challenged conditions of confinement as if there were some

8 suspicion that those individuals were tied to terrorism, even though no such

9 suspicion existed.

10 V. The Issues on Appeal

11 In a January 15, 2013 Memorandum and Order, the district court granted

12 in part and denied in part Defendants’ motions to dismiss the Complaint.  The

13 district court dismissed all claims against the DOJ Defendants.  As to the MDC

14 Defendants, the district court denied their motions to dismiss Plaintiffs’

15 substantive due process conditions of confinement claim (Claim 1); equal

16 protection conditions of confinement claim (Claim 2); free exercise claim (Claim

17 3); unreasonable strip search claim (Claim 6); and conspiracy claim under 42

18 U.S.C. § 1985(3) (Claim 7).  See Turkmen III, 915 F. Supp. 2d at 324.  The MDC

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1 Defendants appealed, and Plaintiffs cross‐appealed the dismissal of the claims

2 against the DOJ Defendants based on a judgment that was entered pursuant to

Rule 54(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.13 3

DISCUSSION14 4

5 I. Pleading Standard

6 To satisfy Iqbal’s plausibility standard, Plaintiffs must “plead[] factual

7 content that allows the court to draw the reasonable inference that the defendant

8 is liable for the misconduct alleged.”  556 U.S. at 678.  Although plausibility is not

9 a “probability requirement,” Plaintiffs must allege facts that permit “more than a

10 sheer possibility that a defendant has acted unlawfully.”  Id. (internal quotation

11 marks omitted).  Factual allegations that are “merely consistent with” unlawful

12 conduct do not create a reasonable inference of liability.  Id.

13 Moreover, “[t]hreadbare recitals of the elements of a cause of action,

14 supported by mere conclusory statements, do not suffice.”  Id.  Well‐pleaded

15 factual allegations, in contrast, should be presumed true, and we must determine

                                                            

13 Plaintiffs have not appealed the district court’s dismissal of their interference with

counsel claims (Claims 4 and 5).

14 We review the district court’s determination of Defendants’ Rule 12(b)(6) motions to

dismiss de novo.  See Papelino v. Albany Coll. of Pharmacy of Union Univ., 633 F.3d 81, 88

(2d Cir. 2011).

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1 “whether they plausibly give rise to an entitlement to relief.”  Id. at 679.  

2 Ultimately, every plausibility determination is a “context‐specific task that

3 requires the reviewing court to draw on its judicial experience and common

4 sense.”  Id.

5 With the exception of the Section 1985 conspiracy claim, all of Plaintiffs’

6 claims allege constitutional violations based on injuries first recognized by the

7 Supreme Court in Bivens, 403 U.S. at 388.  During the course of this litigation, the

8 Supreme Court made it clear in Iqbal that a federal tortfeasor’s Bivens liability

9 cannot be premised on vicarious liability.  556 U.S. at 676.  Thus, Plaintiffs must

10 plausibly plead that each Defendant, “through the official’s own individual

11 actions,” violated Plaintiffs’ constitutional rights.  Id. In other words, Bivens

12 relief is available only against federal officials who are personally liable for the

13 alleged constitutional tort.  Id. at 676−77.  Iqbal precludes relying on a

14 supervisor’s mere knowledge of a subordinate’s mental state (i.e., discriminatory

15 or punitive intent) to infer that the supervisor shared that intent.  Id. at 677.

16 Knowing that a subordinate engaged in a rogue discriminatory or punitive act is

17 not enough.  But that is not to say that where the supervisor condones or ratifies

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1 a subordinate’s discriminatory or punitive actions the supervisor is free of

2 Bivens’s reach.  See id. at 683.

3 II. Availability of a Bivens Remedy for Plaintiffs’ Claims

4 Unlike the MDC Defendants, none of the DOJ Defendants challenge the

5 existence of a Bivens remedy in their briefs to this Court.  While the DOJ

6 Defendants did raise this issue below, and are represented by able counsel on

7 appeal, they have chosen to not offer that argument now as a further defense of

8 their victory in the district court.  However, as the reader will later discover, our

9 dissenting colleague makes much of this defense, raising it as her main objection

10 to our resolution of the appeal.  Given the MDC Defendants’ arguments, as well

11 as the dissent’s decision to press the issue, legitimately noting that a district

12 court’s judgment can be affirmed on any ground supported by the record,

13 Dissenting Op., post at 7 n.4 (citing Lotes Co. v. Hon Hai Precision Indus. Co., 753

14 F.3d 395, 413 (2d Cir. 2014)), we think it appropriate to explain our conclusion

15 that a Bivens remedy is available for the MDC Plaintiffs’ punitive conditions of

16 confinement and strip search claims against both the DOJ and the MDC

17 Defendants.

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1 In Bivens, 403 U.S. at 388, the Supreme Court “recognized for the first time

2 an implied private action for damages against federal officers alleged to have

3 violated a citizen’s constitutional rights.”  Corr. Servs. Corp. v. Malesko, 534 U.S.

4 61, 66 (2001).  “The purpose of Bivens is to deter individual federal officers from

5 committing constitutional violations.”  Id. at 70.  Because a Bivens claim has

6 judicial parentage, “the Supreme Court has warned that the Bivens remedy is an

7 extraordinary thing that should rarely if ever be applied in new contexts.”  Arar

8 v. Ashcroft, 585 F.3d 559, 571 (2d Cir. 2009) (en banc) (internal quotation marks

9 omitted).  Thus, a Bivens remedy is not available for all who allege injury from a

10 federal officer’s violation of their constitutional rights.

11 In Arar, we outlined a two‐step process for determining whether a Bivens

12 remedy is available.  First, the court must determine whether the underlying

13 claims extend Bivens into a “new context.”  Id. at 572.  If, and only if, the answer

14 to this first step is yes, the court must then consider (a) “whether there is an

15 alternative remedial scheme available to the plaintiff,” and, even if there is not,

16 (b) “whether special factors counsel hesitation in creating a Bivens remedy.”  Id.

17 (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted).  As Arar noted, case law

18 provides limited guidance regarding how to determine whether a claim presents

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1 a new context for Bivens purposes.  Thus, “[w]e construe[d] the word ‘context’ as

2 it is commonly used in law: to reflect a potentially recurring scenario that has

3 similar legal and factual components.”  Id.

4 Determining the “context” of a claim can be tricky.  The MDC Defendants

5 contend that the context of Plaintiffs’ claims is the nation’s “response to an

6 unprecedented terrorist attack.”  Sherman Br. 45.  The DOJ Defendants made a

7 similar argument before the district court in an earlier round of this litigation.  

8 See Turkmen I, 2006 WL 1662663, at *30.  The MDC Defendants, and the dissent

9 on behalf of the DOJ Defendants, contend that Arar supports this view.  But if

10 that were the case, then why did Arar take pains to note that the “context” of

11 Arar’s claims was not the nation’s continuing response to terrorism, but the acts

12 of federal officials in carrying out Arar’s extraordinary rendition?  585 F.3d at

13 572.  We looked to both the rights injured and the mechanism of the injury to

14 determine the context of Arar’s claims.  In rejecting the availability of a Bivens

15 remedy, we focused on the mechanism of his injury: extraordinary rendition—“a

16 distinct phenomenon in international law”—and determined this presented a

17 new context for Bivens‐based claims. Id.  Only upon concluding that

18 extraordinary rendition presented a new context did we examine the policy

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1 concerns and competing remedial measures available to Arar.  In our view,

2 setting the context of the Bivens claims here as the national response in the wake

3 of 9/11 conflates the two‐step process dictated by this Court in Arar.  The reasons

4 why Plaintiffs were held at the MDC as if they were suspected of terrorism do

5 not present the “context” of their confinement—just as the reason for Arar’s

6 extraordinary rendition did not present the context of his claim.  Without doubt,

7 9/11 presented unrivaled challenges and severe exigencies—but that does not

8 change the “context” of Plaintiffs’ claims.  “[M]ost of the rights that the

9 Plaintiff[s] contend[] were violated do not vary with surrounding circumstances,

10 such as the right not to be subjected to needlessly harsh conditions of

11 confinement, the right to be free from the use of excessive force, and the right not

12 to be subjected to ethnic or religious discrimination.  The strength of our system

13 of constitutional rights derives from the steadfast protection of those rights in

14 both normal and unusual times.”  Iqbal v. Hasty (Hasty), 490 F.3d 143, 159 (2d Cir.

15 2007), rev’d on other grounds sub nom. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662.

16 Thus, we think it plain that the MDC Plaintiffs’ conditions of confinement

17 claims are set in the following context: federal detainee Plaintiffs, housed in a

18 federal facility, allege that individual federal officers subjected them to punitive

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1 conditions.  This context takes account of both the rights injured (here,

substantive due process and equal protection rights)15 2 and the mechanism of

3 injury (punitive conditions without sufficient cause).  The claim—that individual

4 officers violated detainees’ constitutional rights by subjecting them to harsh

5 treatment with impermissible intent or without sufficient cause—stands firmly

6 within a familiar Bivens context.  Both the Supreme Court and this Circuit have

7 recognized a Bivens remedy for constitutional challenges to conditions of

8 confinement.  In Carlson v. Green, 446 U.S. 14, 17–20 (1980), the Supreme Court

9 recognized an implied remedy for the plaintiff’s claim alleging an Eighth

10 Amendment violation for prisoner mistreatment.  Furthermore, in Malesko, in

11 refusing to extend a Bivens remedy to claims against private corporations

12 housing federal detainees, the Supreme Court observed in dicta that, while no

                                                            

15 The rights‐injured component of Plaintiffs’ claims fall within a recognized Bivens

context.  This Circuit has presumed the availability of a Bivens remedy for substantive

due process claims in several cases.  See Arar, 585 F.3d at 598 (Sack, J., dissenting) (citing

cases).  In addition, the Supreme Court has acknowledged the availability of “a Bivens

action to redress a violation of the equal protection component of the Due Process

Clause of the Fifth Amendment.” Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 675 (citing Davis v. Passman, 442 U.S.

228 (1979)).  And while it is true that the Supreme Court has subsequently declined to

extend Davis to other employment discrimination claims, such as in Chappell v. Wallace,

462 U.S. 296, 300–04 (1983), the Court’s analysis was focused on the special nature of the

employer‐employee relationship in the military—or, in other words, the mechanism of

injury.  Here, where the mechanism of injury is also familiar, a Bivens remedy is plainly

available.

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1 claim was available against the private corporation, a federal prisoner would have

2 a remedy against federal officials for constitutional claims.  534 U.S. at 72.  “If a

3 federal prisoner in a BOP facility alleges a constitutional deprivation, he may

4 bring a Bivens claim against the offending individual officer, subject to the

5 defense of qualified immunity.”  Id.  The Court went on to recognize that the

6 “prisoner may not bring a Bivens claim against the officer’s employer, the United

7 States, or the BOP.”  Id.  The MDC Plaintiffs’ claims here plainly follow Malesko’s

8 guidance: the claims are raised against the individual officers, both at the DOJ

9 and the MDC, who were responsible for subjecting the Plaintiffs to punitive

10 conditions of confinement.

11 The Second Circuit has also recognized the availability of Bivens relief for

12 federal prisoners housed in federal facilities bringing claims against individual

13 federal officers.  In Thomas v. Ashcroft, 470 F.3d 491, 497 (2d Cir. 2006), this Court

14 reversed the district court’s dismissal of the prisoner plaintiff’s Bivens claim for

15 violation of his due process rights against supervisory prison officials.  See also

16 Tellier v. Fields, 280 F.3d 69, 80–83 (2d Cir. 2000) (recognizing a Bivens remedy for

17 a claim of deprivation of procedural due process brought by a federal prisoner

18 against federal prison officials).  Furthermore, in Hasty, where we considered

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34

1 claims nearly identical to those at issue in this case, we “did not so much as hint

2 either that a Bivens remedy was unavailable or that its availability would

3 constitute an unwarranted extension of the Bivens doctrine.”  Arar, 585 F.3d at

4 597 (Sack, J., dissenting) (discussing Hasty, 490 F.3d at 177–78).

5 Our sister circuits have also permitted Bivens claims for unconstitutional

6 conditions of confinement.  In Cale v. Johnson, 861 F.2d 943, 947 (6th Cir. 1988),

7 abrogated on other grounds by Thaddeus–X v. Blatter, 175 F.3d 378 (6th Cir. 1999) (en

8 banc), the Sixth Circuit held that “federal courts have the jurisdictional authority

9 to entertain a Bivens action brought by a federal prisoner, alleging violations of

10 his right to substantive due process.”  The Third Circuit has also permitted a

11 federal inmate to bring a civil rights action against prison officials.  See Bistrian v.

12 Levi, 696 F.3d 352, 372–75 (3d Cir. 2012) (assuming availability of a Bivens remedy

13 for plaintiff’s Fifth Amendment substantive due process and other constitutional

14 claims challenging his conditions of confinement).

15 Notwithstanding the persuasive precedent suggesting the availability of a

16 Bivens remedy for the MDC Plaintiffs’ conditions of confinement claims, the

17 MDC Defendants, and our dissenting colleague, argue that the MDC Plaintiffs’

18 claims present a new Bivens context because the Plaintiffs are illegal aliens.  But

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1 because the MDC Plaintiffs’ right to be free from punitive conditions of

2 confinement is coextensive with that of a citizen, their unlawful presence in the

3 United States at the time of the challenged confinement does not place their

4 standard mistreatment claim into a new context.  Indeed, the Fifth Circuit has

5 recognized a Bivens claim raised by a Mexican national for violations of her

6 Fourth and Fifth Amendment rights to be free from false imprisonment and the

7 use of excessive force by law enforcement personnel.  See Martinez‐Aguero v.

8 Gonzalez, 459 F.3d 618, 625 (5th Cir. 2006).  The Ninth Circuit has also recognized

9 a Bivens claim for due process violations that occurred during an illegal alien

10 plaintiff’s detention.  See Papa v. United States, 281 F.3d 1004, 1010–11 (9th Cir.

2002).16 11   Thus, we conclude that a Bivens remedy is available for the Plaintiffs’

12 substantive due process and equal protection conditions of confinement claims.

13 Our understanding of Bivens and this Court’s decision in Arar do not

14 however suggest the availability of a Bivens remedy for the Plaintiffs’ free

15 exercise claim.  That claim—that Defendants deliberately interfered with

                                                            

16 We note that the Ninth Circuit has declined to provide illegal aliens with an implied

Bivens remedy for unlawful detention during deportation proceedings.  Mirmehdi v.

United States, 689 F.3d 975, 981–83 (9th Cir. 2012).  Of course, that decision is plainly

inapposite here where the MDC Plaintiffs do not challenge the fact that they were

detained, but rather the conditions in which they were detained.

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1 Plaintiffs’ religious practices by: (1) denying them timely access to copies of the

2 Koran; (2) denying them Halal food; and (3) failing to stop MDC staff from

3 interfering with Plaintiffs’ prayers—does not fall within a familiar Bivens context.  

4 Here, it is the right injured—Plaintiffs’ free exercise right—and not the

5 mechanism of injury that places Plaintiffs’ claims in a new Bivens context.  

6 Indeed, the Supreme Court has “not found an implied damages remedy under

7 the Free Exercise Clause” and has “declined to extend Bivens to a claim sounding

8 in the First Amendment.”  Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 675 (citing Bush v. Lucas, 462 U.S. 367

9 (1983)).  Accordingly, we agree with the MDC Defendants that Plaintiffs’ free

10 exercise claim should have been dismissed.

11 But the MDC Plaintiffs’ claim that they were subjected to unlawful strip

12 searches falls within an established Bivens context: federal detainee plaintiffs,

13 housed in a federal facility, allege that individual federal officers subjected them

14 to unreasonable searches in violation of the Fourth Amendment.  The MDC

15 Defendants fail to persuasively explain why recognizing the MDC Plaintiffs’

16 unlawful strip search claim would extend Bivens to a new context.  Indeed, the

17 right violated certainly falls within a recognized Bivens context: the Fourth

18 Amendment is at the core of the Bivens jurisprudence, as Bivens itself concerned a

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1 Fourth Amendment claim.  In Bivens, the plaintiff brought a Fourth Amendment

2 claim for the defendants’ use of unreasonable force without probable cause,

3 resulting in the plaintiff’s unlawful arrest.  403 U.S. at 389–90; see also Groh v.

4 Ramirez, 540 U.S. 551, 555 (2004) (recognizing the availability of a Bivens remedy

5 for a Fourth Amendment claim of an unreasonable search, as a result of a facially

6 invalid warrant).  This Circuit has also permitted Bivens relief for Fourth

7 Amendment claims involving unreasonable searches.  See, e.g., Castro v. United

8 States, 34 F.3d 106, 107 (2d Cir. 1994).  And the mechanism of the violation—here,

9 an unreasonable search performed by a prison official—has also been recognized

10 by this Circuit.  Indeed, in Arar, we stated that “[i]n the small number of contexts

11 in which courts have implied a Bivens remedy, it has often been easy to identify

12 both the line between constitutional and unconstitutional conduct, and the

13 alternative course which officers should have pursued. . . . [T]he immigration

14 officer who subjected an alien to multiple strip searches without cause should

15 have left the alien in his clothes.”  585 F.3d at 580; see also Hasty, 490 F.3d at 170–

16 73 (assuming the existence of a Bivens remedy to challenge strip searches under

17 the Fourth Amendment).

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1 Accordingly, we conclude that a Bivens remedy is available for Plaintiffs’

2 conditions of confinement claims, under both the Due Process and Equal

3 Protection Clauses of the Fifth Amendment, and Fourth Amendment

unreasonable and punitive strip searches claim.17 4   However, Plaintiffs’ free

5 exercise claim would require extending Bivens to a new context, a move we

6 decline to make absent guidance from the Supreme Court.

7 III. Claim 1:   Substantive Due Process Conditions of Confinement

8 The MDC Plaintiffs allege that the harsh conditions of confinement in the

9 MDC violated their Fifth Amendment substantive due process rights and that all

Defendants are liable for this harm.18 10   Plaintiffs present distinct theories of

11 liability as to the DOJ and MDC Defendants.

12 A. Applicable Legal Standard

13 The Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause forbids subjecting pretrial

14 detainees to punitive restrictions or conditions.  See Bell v. Wolfish (Wolfish), 441

                                                            

17 Because we conclude that Plaintiffs’ substantive due process, equal protection, and

unreasonable punitive strip searches claims do not extend Bivens to a new context, we

need not address “whether there is an alternative remedial scheme available to the

plaintiff” or “whether special factors counsel hesitation in creating a Bivens remedy.”  

Arar, 585 F.3d at 572 (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted).

18 Turkmen and Sachdeva, the Passaic Plaintiffs, do not bring a substantive due process

conditions of confinement claim or unreasonable strip search claim (Claims 1 and 6).

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U.S. 520, 535 & n.16 (1979).19 1   Plaintiffs must plausibly plead that Defendants, (1)

2 with punitive intent, (2) personally engaged in conduct that caused the

3 challenged conditions of confinement.  See id. at 538; see also Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 676–

4 77.  Absent “an expressed intent to punish,” Wolfish, 441 U.S. at 538, we may only

5 infer that Defendants acted with punitive intent if the challenged conditions

6 were “not reasonably related to a legitimate goal—if [they were] arbitrary or

7 purposeless,” id. at 539.

8 B. The DOJ Defendants

9 While the DOJ Defendants do not raise a no‐Bivens‐claim defense, they do

10 forcefully contest liability here with powerful post‐Iqbal assertions that “the

11 former Attorney General and FBI Director did not themselves require or specify

12 any of the particular conditions set forth in the complaint.  And they cannot be

13 held liable on what amounts to a theory of respondeat superior for the actions of

14 others who may have imposed those conditions.”  Ashcroft & Mueller Br. 10.  

15 They contend that because the former Attorney General’s initial detention order

16 was constitutional, having been approved by the Supreme Court in Iqbal, the DOJ

                                                            

19 The parties have not argued for a different standard in this appeal.  Accordingly, we

do not address whether the rights of civil immigration detainees should be governed by

a standard that is even more protective than the standard that applies to pretrial

criminal detainees.

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1 Defendants were “entitled to presume that the facially constitutional policy

2 would in turn be implemented lawfully . . . .”  Id. at 9.  We agree . . . to a point.

3 The MDC Plaintiffs concede that the DOJ Defendants did not create the

4 particular conditions in question.  See Turkmen III, 915 F. Supp. 2d at 326 n.4; see

5 also OIG Report at 19, 112−13 (reporting that, at least initially, BOP officials

6 determined the conditions under which detainees would be held, without

7 direction from the FBI or elsewhere).  The MDC Plaintiffs similarly fail to plead

8 that Ashcroft’s initial arrest and detention mandate required subordinates to

9 apply excessively restrictive conditions to civil detainees against whom the

10 government lacked individualized suspicion of terrorism.  Given the mandate’s

11 facial validity, the DOJ Defendants had a right to presume that subordinates

12 would carry it out in a constitutional manner.  See Al‐Jundi v. Estate of Rockefeller,

13 885 F.2d 1060, 1065−66 (2d Cir. 1989).  But that is not the end of the matter.

14 The MDC Plaintiffs plausibly plead that the DOJ Defendants were aware

15 that illegal aliens were being detained in punitive conditions of confinement in

16 New York and further knew that there was no suggestion that those detainees

17 were tied to terrorism except for the fact that they were, or were perceived to be,

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41

Arab or Muslim.20 1   The MDC Plaintiffs further allege that while knowing these

2 facts, the DOJ Defendants were responsible for a decision to merge the New York

3 List with the national INS List, which contained the names of detainees whose

4 detention was dependent not only on their illegal immigrant status and their

5 perceived Arab or Muslim affiliation, but also a suspicion that they were

6 connected to terrorist activities.  The merger ensured that the MDC Plaintiffs

7 would continue to be confined in punitive conditions.  This is sufficient to plead

a Fifth Amendment substantive due process violation.21 8   Given the lack of

                                                            

20 The dissent counters that “[t]his is not apparent in the record,” citing Plaintiff

Bajracharya’s videotaping of a building in Queens as evidence of that Plaintiff’s possible

tie to terrorism.  Dissenting Op., post at 43 n.28.  The dissent makes no mention, of

course, of Plaintiff Khalifa, who was told that the FBI was only interested in his

roommates, but who was arrested and then detained in the ADMAX SHU anyway,

Compl. ¶ 197; or of Plaintiff Mehmood, who was arrested and detained in the ADMAX

SHU in place of his wife, in whom the FBI had apparently expressed interest, but who

was still breastfeeding their son, id. ¶ 159.  The dissent further claims that detainees

were not sent to the ADMAX SHU based on their perceived race or religion, but—as the

OIG Report states—based on whether they were designated of “high interest” to the

PENTTBOM investigation.  Dissenting Op., post at 44 n.28 (citing OIG Report at 18, 111).  

But, as the dissent concedes, id., Plaintiffs’ well‐pleaded Complaint specifically

contradicts this point: the MDC Plaintiffs were detained in the ADMAX SHU “even

though they had not been classified ‘high interest,’” Compl. ¶ 4.  

21 We acknowledge, as the dissent points out, that the MDC Plaintiffs did not advance

the “lists‐merger theory” before this Court or the district court.  Dissenting Op., post at

43 n.28.  Rather, they structured the Complaint to challenge Ashcroft’s arrest and

detention mandate as initially formulated and generally applied.  In examining the

Complaint’s sufficiency, we have been clear that the pleadings are inadequate to

challenge the validity of the policy ab initio, but do state a claim with regard to the

merger decision, an event that Plaintiffs explicitly reference in the Complaint.  See

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1 individualized suspicion, the decision to merge the lists was not “reasonably

2 related to a legitimate goal.”  See Wolfish, 441 U.S. at 539.  The only reason why

3 the MDC Plaintiffs were held as if they were suspected of terrorism was because

4 they were, or appeared to be, Arab or Muslim.  We conclude that this plausibly

5 pleads punitive intent.  Id.

6 1. Punitive Conditions of Confinement

7 Contrary to the district court’s conclusion that Plaintiffs failed to “allege

8 that the DOJ [D]efendants were even aware of [the] conditions,” Turkmen III, 915

9 F. Supp. 2d at 340, the Complaint and the OIG Report each contain allegations of

10 the DOJ Defendants’ knowledge of the challenged conditions.  Plaintiffs allege,

11 inter alia, that Mueller ran the 9/11 investigation out of FBI Headquarters; and

12 that “Ashcroft, Mueller[,] and Ziglar received detailed daily reports of the arrests

13 and detentions,” Compl. ¶ 47; see also id. ¶¶ 63−65.

14 The OIG Report makes plain the plausibility of Plaintiffs’ allegations.  The

15 “[DOJ] was aware of the BOP’s decision to house the September 11 detainees in

16 high‐security sections in various BOP facilities.”  OIG Report at 19.  The Deputy

17 Chief of Staff to Ashcroft told the OIG that an allegation of mistreatment was

                                                                                                                                                                                               

Compl. ¶ 47; Pls.’ Br. 38.  Sufficiency analysis requires a careful parsing of the

Complaint and that is all that has occurred here.

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1 called to the Attorney General’s attention.  Id. at 20.  And BOP Director Kathy

2 Hawk Sawyer stated that in the weeks following 9/11, the Deputy Attorney

3 General’s Chief of Staff and the Principal Associate Deputy Attorney General

4 “called her . . . with concerns about detainees’ ability to communicate both with

5 those outside the facility and with other inmates,” id. at 112, which she said

6 confirmed for her that the decision to house detainees in the restrictive

7 conditions of the ADMAX SHU was appropriate, id. at 112–113.  This supports

8 the reasonable inference that not only was Ashcroft’s office aware of some of the

9 conditions imposed, but affirmatively supported them.  See also id. at 113 (DOJ

officials told Sawyer to “take [BOP] policies to their legal limit”).22 10   Furthermore,

11 the OIG Report also makes clear that conditions in the ADMAX SHU began to

                                                            

22 The dissent attempts to minimize the force of these comments, claiming that

communications about a condition of confinement that was lifted before the merger

decision cannot support an inference as to what the DOJ Defendants knew about the

conditions in the ADMAX SHU.  Dissenting Op., post at 56–57.  Simply put, we

disagree.  The fact remains that a condition of confinement, less severe and abusive than

the conditions at issue here, garnered the attention of senior officials; it stands to reason

that conditions that kept detainees in their cells for twenty‐three hours a day, denied

them sleep by bright lights, and involved excessive strip searches and physical abuse,

would have come to the DOJ Defendants’ attention.

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receive media attention soon after detentions began, see id. at 2, 5;23 1 thus, it seems

2 implausible that the public’s concerns did not reach the DOJ Defendants’ desks.

3 Of course, we cannot say for certain that daily reports given to Ashcroft

4 and Mueller detailed the conditions at the ADMAX SHU or that the daily

5 meetings of the SIOC Working Group (containing representatives from each of

6 the DOJ Defendants’ offices) discussed those conditions.  But on review of a

7 motion to dismiss, Plaintiffs need not prove their allegations; they must plausibly

8 plead them.  At a minimum, a steady stream of information regarding the

9 challenged conditions flowed between the BOP and senior DOJ officials.  Given

10 the MDC Plaintiffs’ allegations, the media coverage of conditions at the MDC,

11 and the DOJ Defendants’ announced central roles in PENTTBOM, it seems to us

12 plausible that information concerning conditions at the MDC, which held eighty‐

four of the 9/11 detainees, reached the DOJ Defendants.24 13

                                                            

23 See, e.g., Neil A. Lewis, A Nation Challenged: The Detainees; Detentions After Attacks Pass

1,000, U.S. Says, N.Y. TIMES, Oct. 30, 2001, available at

http://www.nytimes.com/2001/10/30/us/a‐nation‐challenged‐the‐detainees‐detentions‐

after‐attacks‐pass‐1000‐us‐says.html (citing “common news reports of abuse involv[ing]

mistreatment of prisoners of Middle Eastern background at jails”).

24 Furthermore, the OIG reports were issued pursuant to the Office of the Inspector

General’s responsibilities under the USA PATRIOT Act, which was enacted on October

26, 2001.  See OIG Report at 3 n.6.  The PATRIOT Act, Section 1001, reads: “The

Inspector General of the Department of Justice shall designate one official who shall—

(1) review information and receive complaints alleging abuses of civil rights and civil

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1 2. Lack of Individualized Suspicion

2 The MDC Plaintiffs also plausibly plead that the DOJ Defendants were

3 aware that the FBI had not developed any connection between some of the

4 detainees and terrorist activities.  The Complaint and OIG Report both make

5 clear that the New York FBI arrested all “out‐of‐status” aliens encountered—

6 even coincidentally—in the course of investigating a PENTTBOM lead.  OIG

7 Report at 41–42, 69–70.  These arrestees were “deemed ‘of interest’ for purposes

8 of the ‘hold until cleared’ policy, regardless of the strength of the evidence or the

9 origin of the lead.”  Id. at 41.  Those deemed of “high interest” were sent to the

10 MDC’s ADMAX SHU, id. at 111, but “there was little consistency or precision to

the process that resulted in detainees being labeled ‘high interest,’” id. at 158.25 11

                                                                                                                                                                                               

liberties by employees and officials of the Department of Justice.”  PATRIOT Act, Pub.

L. No. 107‐56, § 1001, 115 Stat. 272 (2001).  “On October 30, 2001, the OIG reviewed a

newspaper article in which a September 11 detainee alleged he was physically abused

when he arrived at the MDC on October 4, 2001.  Based on the allegations in the article,

the OIG’s Investigations Division initiated an investigation into the matter.”  OIG

Report at 144.  It seems to us most plausible that if the OIG—who is “under the

authority, direction, and control of the Attorney General with respect to audits or

investigations,” 5 U.S.C. App. 3 § 8E(a)(1)—was aware of the challenged conditions at

the MDC, the DOJ Defendants were as well.

25 Even some detainees who were not labeled “high interest” were nonetheless sent to

the MDC’s ADMAX SHU.  For example, “Abbasi, Bajracharya, Mehmood, and Khalifa[]

were placed in the ADMAX SHU even though they had not been classified ‘high

interest’ and despite the absence of any information indicating they were dangerous or

involved in terrorism, or any other legitimate reason for such treatment.”  Compl. ¶ 4.

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46

1 Even if the DOJ Defendants were not initially aware of this practice, the

2 Complaint and OIG reports support the reasonable inference that Ashcroft and

3 Mueller learned of it within weeks of 9/11.  The Complaint clearly alleges that the

4 DOJ Defendants agreed that individuals for whom the FBI could only articulate

5 an immigration law violation as a reason for detention—and for whom the FBI

6 had not developed any reliable tie to terrorism—would continue to be treated as

7 if the FBI had reason to believe the detainees had ties to terrorist activity.  Compl.

8 ¶ 67.  Plaintiffs point to the detailed daily reports that the DOJ Defendants

9 received regarding arrests and detentions and allege that the DOJ Defendants

10 “were aware that the FBI had no information tying Plaintiffs and class members

11 to terrorism prior to treating them as ‘of interest’ to the PENTTBOM

12 investigation.”  Id. ¶ 47.  Indeed, they claim that Ashcroft, in particular, “insisted

13 on regular, detailed reporting on arrests”; they allege that he received a daily

14 “Attorney General’s Report” on persons arrested.  Id. ¶ 63.  They further allege

15 that it was Ziglar who was ultimately responsible for providing much of this

16 information—which he gleaned from his twice daily briefings with his staff

17 regarding the 9/11 detentions—to Ashcroft, indicating that he too was aware of

18 the lack of individualized suspicion.  Id. ¶ 64.

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1 Once again, the OIG reports also support the MDC Plaintiffs’ allegation

2 that the DOJ Defendants became aware of the lack of individualized suspicion

3 for some detainees held in the challenged conditions of confinement.  The OIG

4 Report states that “[a] variety of INS, FBI, and [DOJ] officials who worked on

5 the[] September 11 detainee cases told the OIG that it soon became evident that

6 many of the people arrested during the PENTTBOM investigation might not

7 have a nexus to terrorism.”  OIG Report at 45.  Other DOJ officials also stated

8 that it “soon became clear” that only some of the detainees were of “genuine

9 investigative interest”—as opposed to aliens identified by the FBI as “of interest”

10 for whom the FBI had no suspicion of a connection to the attacks or terrorism in

11 general.  Id. at 47.

12 The OIG Report supports the reasonable inference that this information,

13 known by other DOJ officials, came to the attention of the DOJ Defendants.  In

14 particular, the OIG Report specifies that Ashcroft and Mueller were involved in a

15 “‘continuous meeting’ for the first few months” after 9/11, at which “the issue of

16 holding aliens until they were cleared was discussed.”  Id. at 39–40.  

17 Furthermore, the OIG Report makes clear that the SIOC Working Group,

18 containing representatives from the offices of each of the DOJ Defendants, was

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1 aware of the lack of evidence tying detainees to terrorism.  Id. at 53–57.  As we

2 have already noted, the OIG Report details how at some point in October 2001,

3 the SIOC Working Group learned about the New York List and that “officials at

4 the INS, FBI, and [DOJ] raised concerns about, among other things, whether the

5 aliens had any nexus to terrorism.”  Id. at 53.  Clearly this created a major

6 problem for the DOJ.  The existence of the New York List suddenly presented the

7 possibility of more than doubling the number of detainees subject to the hold‐

until‐cleared policy.26 8   It seems quite plausible that DOJ officials would confer

9 with the Attorney General and the Director of the FBI (it was, after all, his agents

10 who were arresting out‐of‐status Arab and Muslim aliens and holding them as if

11 they were “of interest” without any suspicion of terrorist connections) about the

12 problem of the New York List and the hundreds of detainees picked up in

13 contravention of Ashcroft’s stated policy.  Indeed, it seems to us implausible they

14 did not.  Finally, the OIG Report once again makes clear that media reports

15 regarding allegations of mistreatment of detainees alleged that detainees

                                                            

26  In October and November of 2001, the New York List contained approximately 300

detainees while the INS List for the rest of the nation contained only 200 detainees.  OIG

Report at 54.

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49

1 remained in detention even though they had no involvement in terrorism.  Id. at

2 2, 5.

3 3. The Decision to Merge the Lists

4 Plaintiffs plausibly plead that, despite the DOJ Defendants’ knowledge of

5 the conditions at the ADMAX SHU and the lack of any form of verified suspicion

6 for a large number of those detainees on the New York List, Ashcroft approved,

7 or at least endorsed, a decision to merge the New York List.  The MDC Plaintiffs

8 contend that he did so notwithstanding vocal opposition from various internal

9 sources.  The Complaint clearly alleges that “[a]gainst significant internal

10 criticism from INS agents and other federal employees involved in the sweeps,

11 Ashcroft ordered that, despite a complete lack of any information or a statement

12 of FBI interest, all such Plaintiffs and class members [on the New York List] be

13 detained until cleared and otherwise treated as ‘of interest.’”  Compl. ¶ 47.  By

14 taking this action, Ashcroft ensured that some of the individuals on the New

15 York List would be placed in, or remain detained in, the challenged conditions of

16 confinement.

17 Our dissenting colleague levels a concern as to the import of the merger of

18 the lists and counters that nothing in the OIG reports confirms Ashcroft’s

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50

1 personal knowledge of the correlation between the merger of the lists and the

2 lack of individualized suspicion as to the MDC Plaintiffs.  The dissent contends

3 that, because Plaintiffs’ allegations are not based on personal knowledge, there is

4 no factual basis in the record for them.  Dissenting Op., post at 45.  True enough

5 that Ashcroft did not acknowledge that he was aware of the merger of the lists

6 and its implication for the MDC Plaintiffs, nor did he take responsibility for it.  

7 But then again a review of the OIG Report gives no indication that anybody

8 asked him.

9 The absence of an inquiry to the former Attorney General is not a criticism

10 of the Office of the Inspector General’s methods, but a simple recognition of a

11 fact that points out a key difference between our view of the OIG reports and

12 that of the dissent.  For us, the OIG reports provide context for the allegations of

13 the Complaint.  See supra note 6.  However, it would be a mistake to think of the

14 OIG reports as a repository of all relevant facts of that troubled time; but that is

15 exactly what the dissent seems inclined to do.  The dissent measures plausibility

16 by the absence or presence of fact‐findings in the OIG reports.  Thus, for the

17 dissent, the fact that the Attorney General may not have been questioned is

18 confirmation that he knew nothing.  The reports make no such assertion.

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1 It may be that following discovery it will be clear that Ashcroft was not

2 responsible for the merger decision (nor was Mueller or Ziglar), but that is not

3 the question at the pleading stage.  The question is whether the MDC Plaintiffs

4 plausibly plead that Ashcroft was responsible.  Given the importance of the

5 merger and its implications for how his lawful original order was being carried

6 out, we think the MDC Plaintiffs plausibly allege that he was.

7 Indeed, the OIG Report supports the MDC Plaintiffs’ allegation that

8 Ashcroft was responsible for the merger decision.  An incident at one of the New

9 York List meetings provides additional context that supports that allegation.  At

10 the November 2, 2001 meeting, the group discussed the necessity of CIA checks,

11 often a prerequisite to a 9/11 detainee’s release from detention.  OIG Report at 55.  

12 In response, Stuart Levey, the Associate Deputy Attorney General responsible for

13 oversight of immigration issues, stated that he had to “check” before

14 communicating a decision on whether “any detainees could be released without

15 the CIA check.”  Id. at 56.  This response could reasonably indicate (a) a lack of

16 authority to respond to the question, or (b) that Levey wanted to consider other

17 views before making the decision.  Because either is plausible, it is irrelevant that

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1 only inference (a) supports the conclusion that Levey could not answer the

question on his own and had to take it to more senior officials.27 2

3 Furthermore, in late November 2001, when the INS Chief of Staff

4 approached Levey about the CIA check policy, Levey said that he “did not feel

5 comfortable making the decision about [the] request to change the CIA check

6 policy without additional input.”  Id. at 62.  It seems to us that if Levey was not

7 comfortable changing the CIA check policy without input from more senior

8 officials, he certainly would not have been comfortable making the decision on

9 his own to double the number of detainees subject to that policy in the first

instance.28 10

                                                            

27 The OIG Report states that Levey specifically consulted David Laufman, the Deputy

Attorney General’s Chief of Staff.  OIG Report at 62.  The dissent takes this as definitive

proof that Ashcroft was not consulted on this, or the merger, decision.  Dissenting Op.,

post at 47–49.  The dissent mischaracterizes our reference to the CIA checks decision.  

We do not contend that Levey consulted Ashcroft about that decision, nor do we need

to.  In our view, the fact that Levey spoke to Laufman about that decision is not the end

of the matter; indeed, the only relevance of the CIA checks decision, period, is that

Levey was not capable of making it on his own, suggesting that he also would not be

able to make the list‐merger decision on his own.

28 Indeed, Ziglar told the OIG that he contacted Ashcroft’s office on November 7, 2001,

to discuss concerns about the process of clearing names from the INS Custody List,

especially the impact that merging the lists would have on that process and said that

“based on these and other contacts with senior Department officials, he believed the

Department was fully aware” of the INS’s concerns.  OIG Report at 66–67.  This also

suggests that Levey had communicated those concerns to Ashcroft, who nonetheless

made the decision to merge the lists.

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1 The dissent argues that the OIG Report forecloses the plausibility of the

2 allegation that Levey brought the list‐merger decision to Ashcroft because

3 “Levey made the lists‐merger decision ‘[a]t the conclusion of the [November 2]

4 meeting’ at which the subject was first raised to him.”  Dissenting Op., post at 49

5 (quoting OIG Report at 56).  But the OIG Report does not indicate that the merger

6 issue was first raised to Levey at the November 2 meeting.  Rather, the OIG

7 Report makes clear that the issue of the New York List was discovered in

October 2001,29 8 and that the decision to merge the lists was communicated at the

9 November 2 meeting.  Thus, surely it is plausible that Levey consulted with more

senior officials, including Ashcroft, prior to that meeting.30 10   Of course, discovery

11 may show that Levey was solely responsible for the decision.  But, again, the

                                                            

29 While the dissent’s observation that Levey did not attend the October 22, 2001

meeting during which the “problems presented by the New York List” were discussed

is accurate, it is also irrelevant.  See Dissenting Op., post at 49–50 (quoting OIG Report at

55).  We do not contend that Levey learned about the New York List at the October 22

meeting, but simply that he learned about it before the November 2 meeting, giving him

time to consult with more senior officials, including Ashcroft, before communicating a

decision at that November meeting.  Indeed, one would think that Levey would not

attend the November 2 meeting without knowing its agenda.

30 The dissent challenges the sufficiency of Plaintiffs’ allegations and our reading of

them as “wholly speculative.”  Dissenting Op., post at 48.  Of course, Plaintiffs have no

way of knowing what Levey and Ashcroft discussed; nor do we.  Iqbal does not require

as much, but rather “sufficient factual matter, accepted as true” to allow the court to

draw the reasonable inference that Ashcroft was ultimately responsible for the decision.  

556 U.S. at 678.  We believe that Plaintiffs have met this burden.

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1 question is whether Plaintiffs’ allegations support the inference that the decision

2 was Ashcroft’s; they do.

3 The MDC Plaintiffs’ allegations against Mueller and Ziglar are also

4 sufficient.  The Complaint alleges, inter alia, that Ashcroft made the decision to

5 merge the lists in spite of the lack of individualized suspicion linking the MDC

6 Plaintiffs to terrorism and that “Mueller and Ziglar were fully informed of this

7 decision, and complied with it.”  Compl. ¶ 47; see also id. ¶¶ 55−57, 67.  Mueller

8 and Ziglar are not exculpated from this claim merely because Plaintiffs allege

9 that they complied with, as opposed to ordered, the list merger.  Plaintiffs

10 plausibly plead that both were aware that the separate list contained detainees

11 for whom the FBI had asserted no interest and that subjecting them to the

12 challenged conditions would be facially unreasonable.  Even if an official is not

13 the source of a challenged policy, that official can be held personally liable for

14 constitutional violations stemming from the execution of his superior’s orders if

15 those orders are facially invalid or clearly illegal.  See, e.g., Varrone v. Bilotti, 123

16 F.3d 75, 81 (2d Cir. 1997) (granting defendants qualified immunity where there

17 was “no claim that the order was facially invalid or obviously illegal”).  In this

18 instance, Plaintiffs plausibly allege that Ashcroft’s decision was facially invalid; it

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1 would be unreasonable for Mueller and Ziglar to conclude that holding ordinary

2 civil detainees under the most restrictive conditions of confinement available was

3 lawful.

4 4. Punitive Intent

5 The MDC Plaintiffs must show not only that the DOJ Defendants knew of

6 and approved continued use of the ADMAX SHU, but also that they did so with

7 punitive intent—that they endorsed the use of those conditions with an intent to

8 punish the MDC Plaintiffs.  Federal courts have long recognized that punitive

9 intent is not often admitted.  The Supreme Court has noted that it can be inferred

10 if the conditions of confinement are “not reasonably related to a legitimate goal.”  

11 Wolfish, 441 U.S. at 539.  If the conditions under which one is held have no

12 reasonable connection to a legitimate goal of the state, then one logical

13 assumption is that they are imposed for no other purpose than to punish.  See id.

14 The DOJ Defendants argue that even if they knew of the plight of the MDC

15 Plaintiffs, the decision to continue their confinement at the MDC under

16 exceptionally harsh conditions was motivated by national security concerns—a

17 legitimate worry during the days following the 9/11 attacks—and not some

18 animus directed at the MDC Plaintiffs.  They seem to imply that once “national

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1 security” concerns become a reason for holding someone, there is no need to

2 show a connection between those concerns and the captive other than that the

3 captive shares common traits of the terrorist: illegal immigrant status and a

4 perceived Arab or Muslim affiliation.  Indeed, our dissenting colleague asserts

5 that because the MDC Plaintiffs were, or appeared to be, members of the

6 group—Arab or Muslim males—that was targeted for recruitment by al Qaeda

7 that they could be held in the ADMAX SHU without any reasonable suspicion of

8 terrorist activity.  Dissenting Op., post at 64–65, 76–77.  Under this view, the MDC

9 Plaintiffs were not held with punitive intent because there was no way to know

10 that they were not involved in terrorist activities.  Simply being in the United

11 States illegally and being, or appearing to be, Arab or Muslim was enough to

12 justify detention in the most restrictive conditions of confinement available.  

13 Indeed, Levey admitted that the decision to merge the lists, ensuring that some

14 of the 9/11 detainees would be subject to the challenged harsh conditions of

15 confinement, was made because he “wanted to err on the side of caution so that a

16 terrorist would not be released by mistake.”  OIG Report at 56.

17 This argument rests on the assumption that if an individual was an out‐of‐

18 status Arab or Muslim, and someone called the FBI for even the most absurd

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1 reason, that individual was considered a possible threat to national security.  It

2 presumes, in essence, that all out‐of‐status Arabs or Muslims were potential

3 terrorists until proven otherwise.  It is built on a perception of a race and faith

4 that has no basis in fact.  There was no legitimate governmental purpose in

5 holding someone in the most restrictive conditions of confinement available

6 simply because he happened to be—or, worse yet, appeared to be—Arab or

7 Muslim.

8 To be clear, it is “no surprise”—nor is it constitutionally problematic—that

9 the enforcement of our immigration laws in the wake of 9/11 had a “disparate,

10 incidental impact on Arab Muslims.”  Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 682.  And we do not

11 contend that Supreme Court, or our own, precedent requires individualized

12 suspicion to subject detainees to generally restrictive conditions of confinement;

13 restriction is an incident of detention.  Rather, we simply acknowledge that “if a

14 restriction or condition is not reasonably related to a legitimate goal—if it is

15 arbitrary or purposeless—a court permissibly may infer that the purpose of the

16 governmental action is punishment that may not constitutionally be inflicted

17 upon detainees qua detainees.”  Wolfish, 441 U.S. at 539.  We believe, then, that

18 the challenged conditions—keeping detainees in their cells for twenty‐three

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58

1 hours a day, constructively denying them recreation and exposing them to the

2 elements, strip searching them whenever they were removed from or returned to

3 their cells, denying them sleep by bright lights—were not reasonably related to a

4 legitimate goal, but rather were punitive and unconstitutional.

5 While national security concerns could justify detaining those individuals

6 with suspected ties to terrorism in these challenged conditions for the litany of

7 reasons articulated by the dissent, see Dissenting Op., post at 67–68, those

8 concerns do not justify detaining individuals solely on the basis of an

9 immigration violation and their perceived race or religion in those same

10 conditions.  Individualized suspicion is required here because, absent some

11 indication that the detainees had a tie to terrorism, the restrictions or conditions

of the ADMAX SHU were “arbitrary or purposeless.”  Wolfish, 441 U.S. at 539.31 12

                                                            

31 The dissent cites several cases that it claims demonstrate that individualized suspicion

is not required for imposing restrictive conditions of confinement.  Dissenting Op., post

at 62–63.  We do not disagree: individualized suspicion is not required to impose

conditions that are reasonably related to a legitimate governmental objective.  Wolfish,

441 U.S. at 539.  Thus, in each of the cases cited by the dissent, rather than announce

that individualized suspicion was not required, the Supreme Court determined that the

restrictions at issue in each of those cases were related to the legitimate goal of prison

security and, therefore, were not punitive.  Thus, the cases cited by the dissent do not

change our conclusion here, where the challenged conditions—the most restrictive

available and imposed on detainees qua detainees—are not reasonably related to either

the goal of prison security, or national security.

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1 Indeed, in Wolfish, the Supreme Court acknowledged that “loading a

2 detainee with chains and shackles and throwing him in a dungeon may ensure

3 his [detention] and preserve the security of the institution.  But it would be

4 difficult to conceive of a situation where conditions so harsh, employed to

5 achieve objectives that could be accomplished in so many alternative and less

6 harsh methods, would not support a conclusion that the purpose for which they

7 were imposed was to punish.”  Id. at 539 n.20.  That is the situation before us.  

8 Clearly detention conditions less restrictive than the ADMAX SHU were feasible

9 for the MDC Plaintiffs, given that the detainees held in the Passaic facility “were

10 not held in isolation or otherwise placed in restrictive confinement.”  Compl.

11 ¶ 66.  Placing the MDC Plaintiffs in chains and shackles and throwing them in

12 the ADMAX SHU ensured that they posed no threat in the aftermath of 9/11; but

13 we can reach no conclusion other than that the DOJ Defendants’ decision to do so

14 was made with punitive intent.

15 In view of the foregoing, we hold that the MDC Plaintiffs fail to plausibly

16 plead a substantive due process claim against the DOJ Defendants coextensive

17 with the entire post‐9/11 investigation and reaching back to the time of Plaintiffs’

18 initial detention.  Nonetheless, Plaintiffs’ well‐pleaded allegations, in conjunction

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1 with the OIG Report’s documentation of events such as the New York List

2 controversy, render plausible the claim that by the beginning of November 2001,

3 Ashcroft knew of, and approved, the MDC Plaintiffs’ confinement under severe

4 conditions, and that Mueller and Ziglar complied with Ashcroft’s order

5 notwithstanding their knowledge that the government had no evidence linking

6 the MDC Plaintiffs to terrorist activity.  Discovery may ultimately prove

7 otherwise, but for present purposes, the MDC Plaintiffs’ substantive due process

8 claim—with the exception of the temporal limitation noted above—may proceed

9 against the DOJ Defendants.

10 5. Qualified Immunity

11 A defendant is entitled to qualified immunity if he can establish (1) that

12 the complaint fails to plausibly plead that the defendant personally violated the

13 plaintiff’s constitutional rights, or (2) that the right was not clearly established at

14 the time in question.  See Pearson v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 223, 232 (2009); Varrone, 123

15 F.3d at 78 (noting that the qualified immunity inquiry turns, generally, on the

16 objective legal reasonableness of a defendant’s actions).

17 For the reasons stated above, the MDC Plaintiffs plausibly plead that the

18 DOJ Defendants violated their substantive due process rights.  With regard to the

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1 second prong of this inquiry, the law regarding the punishment of pretrial

2 detainees was clearly established in the fall of 2001.  As discussed, Wolfish made

3 clear that a particular condition or restriction of pretrial detention not reasonably

4 related to a legitimate governmental objective is punishment in violation of the

5 constitutional rights of detainees.  See 441 U.S. at 535−39 & n.20.  And in Hasty,

6 this Court denied qualified immunity with respect to a materially identical

7 conditions claim against Hasty.  490 F.3d at 168−69.  We explained that “[t]he

8 right of pretrial detainees to be free from punitive restraints was clearly

9 established at the time of the events in question, and no reasonable officer could

10 have thought that he could punish a pretrial detainee by subjecting him to the

11 practices and conditions alleged by the Plaintiff.”  Id. at 169.

12 Hasty further rejected the argument that the post‐9/11 context warranted

13 qualified immunity even if it was otherwise unavailable.  Id. at 159−60, 169.  

14 Recognizing the “gravity of the situation” that 9/11 presented, we explained that

15 qualified immunity remained inappropriate because a pretrial detainee’s right to

16 be free from punishment does not vary with the surrounding circumstances.  Id.

17 at 159.  Nothing has undermined the logic or precedential authority of our

18 qualified immunity holding in Hasty.  We therefore conclude that the DOJ

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1 Defendants are not entitled to qualified immunity on the MDC Plaintiffs’

2 conditions of confinement claim.

3 C. The MDC Defendants

4 In his opinion below, Judge Gleeson divided the MDC Plaintiffs’

5 conditions of confinement claim against the MDC Defendants into two

6 categories: “official conditions” allegations and “unofficial abuse” allegations.  

7 The “official conditions” allegations concern express confinement policies that

8 the MDC Defendants approved and implemented; the “unofficial abuse”

9 allegations concern the physical and verbal abuse that the MDC Defendants

10 employed or permitted their subordinates to employ.  We find this taxonomy

helpful in analyzing the conditions claim against Hasty, Sherman, and Zenk.32 11

12 1. Official Conditions

13 The MDC Plaintiffs generally allege that the “official conditions” to which

14 the MDC Defendants subjected them constituted punishment.  We do not

15 address whether Plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged an express intent to punish,

16 but rather analyze whether they have plausibly pleaded that (1) the MDC

                                                            

32 Plaintiffs’ allegations against Zenk do not extend to the “unofficial abuse” nor to any

harm arising from the “official conditions” that occurred prior to April 22, 2002, the

date he became MDC Warden.

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1 Defendants caused them to suffer the challenged conditions, and that (2) the

2 challenged conditions were “not reasonably related to a legitimate goal,” which

3 allows us to infer punitive intent, Wolfish, 441 U.S. at 539.

4 The MDC Plaintiffs plausibly plead that Hasty and Sherman are personally

5 responsible for and caused the MDC Plaintiffs to suffer the challenged

6 conditions.  The Complaint contains allegations that Hasty ordered the creation

7 of the ADMAX SHU and directed two of his subordinates to design “extremely

8 restrictive conditions of confinement.”  Compl. ¶¶ 24, 75; see also id. ¶ 76

9 (describing the extreme conditions in the ADMAX SHU).  According to the

10 Complaint, those conditions were then approved and implemented by Hasty and

11 Sherman.  Id. ¶ 75.

12 The OIG reports support these allegations.  While the decision to impose

13 highly restrictive conditions was made at BOP headquarters, OIG Report at 19,

14 MDC officials created the particular conditions imposed, id. at 124–25.  The

15 reports specify that MDC officials modified one wing of the preexisting SHU to

16 accommodate the detainees and that the ADMAX SHU was “designed to confine

17 the detainees in the most restrictive and secure conditions permitted by BOP

18 policy.”  Supplemental OIG Report at 2–3.  As Warden and Associate Warden of

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1 the MDC, Hasty and Sherman had the responsibility to carry out these tasks.  But

2 that alone would not sustain liability for either.

3 However, the MDC Plaintiffs also plausibly plead that Hasty and Sherman

4 subjected them to the challenged conditions with punitive intent because the

5 conditions were “not reasonably related to a legitimate goal.”  Wolfish, 441 U.S. at

6 539.  Specifically, the MDC Plaintiffs allege that Hasty and Sherman imposed

7 these harsh conditions despite the fact that they “were aware that the FBI had not

8 developed any information to tie the MDC Plaintiffs [and other detainees] they

9 placed in the ADMAX SHU to terrorism.”  Compl. ¶ 69.  As discussed above

10 with respect to the DOJ Defendants, individualized suspicion was not required

11 to subject detainees to the restrictive conditions of confinement inherent in any

12 detention.  But the challenged conditions were not simply restrictive; they were

13 punitive: there is no legitimate governmental purpose in holding someone as if

14 he were a terrorist simply because he happens to be, or appears to be, Arab or

15 Muslim.

16 The MDC Defendants, and our dissenting colleague, note that BOP

17 Headquarters ordered that the detainees “be placed in the highest level of

18 restrictive detention” and, thus, argue that we cannot infer punitive intent from

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1 the MDC Defendants’ compliance with that order.  See Dissenting Op., post at 70

2 n.40, 71 (quoting OIG Report at 112).  They further claim that because the FBI had

3 designated the individuals held in the ADMAX SHU as “of interest,” the MDC

4 Defendants are absolved from liability.  See, e.g., Hasty Br. 17, 25–26.

5 But even if Hasty and Sherman initially believed that they would be

6 housing only those detainees who were suspected of ties to terrorism, the

7 Complaint contains sufficient factual allegations that the MDC Defendants

8 eventually knew that the FBI lacked any individualized suspicion for many of

9 the detainees that were sent to the ADMAX SHU.  Plaintiffs allege that Hasty

10 and Sherman received regular written updates explaining why each detainee had

11 been arrested and including “all evidence relevant to the danger he might pose”

12 to the MDC, and that these updates often lacked any indication of a suspicion of

a tie to terrorism.  Compl. ¶ 69.33 13   They further explain that “[t]he exact language

14 of these updates was repeated weekly, indicating the continued lack of any

                                                            

33 For example, the MDC Defendants were informed that Plaintiff Abbasi was

“‘encountered’ by INS pursuant to an FBI lead; that he used a fraudulent passport to

enter the U.S. to seek asylum, and later destroyed that passport; that he requested and

was denied various forms of immigration relief; that he obtained and used a fraudulent

advance parole letter to enter the country, and that he was thus inadmissible.  The

update included no statement of FBI interest in Abbasi.”  Compl. ¶ 72.

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1 information tying [Plaintiffs] to terrorism, or tending to show that any of them

2 might pose a danger.”  Id. ¶ 73.

3 The MDC Plaintiffs relatedly allege that Hasty and Sherman knew that

4 BOP regulations require individualized assessments for detainees placed in the

5 SHU for more than seven days, yet ordered the MDC Plaintiffs’ continued

6 detention in the ADMAX SHU without performing these assessments, and Hasty

7 “ordered [his] subordinates to ignore BOP regulations regarding detention

8 conditions.”  Id. ¶ 68; see also id. ¶¶ 73–74.

9 The MDC Plaintiffs further allege that Hasty and Sherman approved a

10 document that falsely stated that “executive staff at MDC had classified the

11 ‘suspected terrorists’ as ‘High Security’ based on an individualized assessment of

12 their ‘precipitating offense, past terrorist behavior, and inability to adapt to

13 incarceration.’”  Id. ¶ 74.  In addition, the MDC Plaintiffs allege that Hasty and

14 Sherman continued to detain them in the ADMAX SHU even after affirmatively

15 learning that the FBI lacked individualized evidence linking Plaintiffs to

16 terrorism.  See id. ¶¶ 69−71, 74.  These allegations are buttressed by Plaintiffs’

17 assertions that they remained confined in the ADMAX SHU even after receiving

18 final clearance from the New York FBI field office and FBI Headquarters.  For

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1 instance, the Complaint alleges that Benamar Benatta was cleared on November

2 14, 2001, that this information was available to the MDC, and that Benatta

3 nonetheless remained in the ADMAX SHU until April 30, 2002.  See id. ¶ 188.

4 The OIG Report directly supports these allegations; as stated by one BOP

5 official, all 9/11 detainees at the MDC were placed in the ADMAX SHU and

6 subjected to the official conditions because, at least initially, “the BOP did not

7 really know whom the detainees were.”  OIG Report at 19; see also Compl. ¶ 4;

8 OIG Report at 112, 126.  Specific factual allegations that Hasty and Sherman

9 failed to assess whether the restrictive conditions were appropriate for

10 individual 9/11 detainees buttress the MDC Plaintiffs’ claim that the challenged

11 conditions were not reasonably related to a legitimate goal, and that Hasty and

12 Sherman were personally responsible for the treatment.

13 We recognize that the MDC Defendants may have been in a difficult

14 position when they received detainees without accompanying information

15 regarding those individuals.  Record proof may eventually establish that the

16 MDC Plaintiffs’ claim is limited to the period of time that Hasty and Sherman

17 knew that the MDC Plaintiffs were being held without suspicion of ties to

18 terrorism.  But we cannot conclude, at least at the motion to dismiss stage, that it

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1 was reasonable to take a default position of imposing the most restrictive form of

2 detention available when one lacks individualized evidence that the detainee

3 poses a danger to the institution or the nation.  Accordingly, we conclude that

4 the MDC Plaintiffs plausibly plead a substantive due process claim against Hasty

5 and Sherman as to the official conditions.

6 The Complaint does not, however, permit an inference of personal liability

7 as to Zenk, who did not become MDC Warden until April 22, 2002, when only

8 two Plaintiffs remained in the ADMAX SHU.  Fundamentally, the allegations

9 that personally identify Zenk are too general and conclusory to support

10 Plaintiffs’ claim.  We therefore dismiss the MDC Plaintiffs’ substantive due

11 process claim against Zenk.

12 2. Unofficial Abuse

13 The district court properly viewed the MDC Plaintiffs’ “unofficial abuse”

14 allegations under the deliberate indifference standard commonly applied in the

15 Eighth Amendment prisoner‐mistreatment context.  See Turkmen III, 915 F. Supp.

2d at 341 & n.13.34 16   Given the nature of the MDC Plaintiffs’ “unofficial abuse”

                                                            

34 The deliberate indifference standard would clearly apply if the MDC Plaintiffs had

been prisoners entitled to the Eighth Amendment’s protection against cruel and

unusual punishment.  See Walker v. Schult, 717 F.3d 119, 125 (2d Cir. 2013).  Because a

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1 allegations, premising liability on Hasty and Sherman’s deliberate indifference is

2 consistent with Iqbal’s holding that Bivens defendants are liable only if, through

3 their own actions, they satisfy each element of the underlying constitutional tort.  

4 See 556 U.S. at 676.

5 Prior to Iqbal, this Court recognized claims against a supervisory defendant

6 so long as the defendant was personally involved with the alleged constitutional

7 violation.  In Colon v. Coughlin, 58 F.3d 865, 873 (2d Cir. 1995), this Court

8 identified five ways in which a plaintiff may establish a defendant’s personal

9 involvement.  One is through a defendant’s “deliberate indifference.”  Id.  As the

10 district court explained, the fact that a particular type of conduct constitutes

11 “personal involvement” under Colon does not inherently preclude the conduct

12 from also supporting a theory of direct liability.  Turkmen III, 915 F. Supp. 2d at

13 335–36.  For instance, plausibly pleading that a defendant “participated directly

14 in the alleged constitutional violation”—one form of personal involvement

                                                                                                                                                                                               

pretrial detainee’s rights are at least as robust as those of a sentenced prisoner, we have

applied the Eighth Amendment deliberate indifference test to pretrial detainees

bringing claims under the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.  See, e.g., Cuoco

v. Moritsugu, 222 F.3d 99, 106 (2d Cir. 2000).  We do not address whether civil

immigration detainees should be governed by an even more protective standard than

pretrial criminal detainees.

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1 enumerated in Colon, 58 F.3d at 873—could establish direct, as opposed to

2 vicarious, liability.  The proper inquiry is not the name we bestow on a particular

3 theory or standard, but rather whether that standard—be it deliberate

4 indifference, punitive intent, or discriminatory intent—reflects the elements of

5 the underlying constitutional tort.  See Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 676 (“The factors

6 necessary to establish a Bivens violation will vary with the constitutional

7 provision at issue.”).

8 Our conclusion is consistent with Iqbal, this Court’s prior rulings, see

9 Walker, 717 F.3d at 125, and the weight of Circuit precedent.  For instance, in Starr

10 v. Baca, 652 F.3d 1202, 1206–07 (9th Cir. 2011), the Ninth Circuit determined that

11 Iqbal does not preclude Bivens claims premised on deliberate indifference when

12 the underlying constitutional violation requires no more than deliberate

13 indifference.  See also Dodds v. Richardson, 614 F.3d 1185, 1204–05 (10th Cir. 2010);

14 Sandra T.E. v. Grindle, 599 F.3d 583, 590–91 (7th Cir. 2010); Sanchez v. Pereira–

15 Castillo, 590 F.3d 31, 49 (1st Cir. 2009).

16 The MDC Plaintiffs’ “unofficial abuse” claim therefore survives so long as

17 Plaintiffs plausibly plead that the conditions were sufficiently serious, and Hasty

18 and Sherman “kn[e]w of, and disregard[ed], an excessive risk to inmate health or

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1 safety.” Walker, 717 F.3d at 125 (internal quotation marks omitted); accord Cuoco,

2 222 F.3d at 107.  The MDC Plaintiffs clearly meet this standard with respect to

3 Hasty.  Simply stated, their factual allegations permit the inference that he knew

4 that MDC staff subjected the MDC Plaintiffs to the “unofficial abuses” and

5 permitted—if not facilitated—the continuation of these abuses.  See Compl.

6 ¶¶ 24, 77–78, 107, 109−10.

7 For example, the Complaint contains allegations that Hasty avoided

8 evidence of detainee abuse by “neglecting to make rounds on the ADMAX

9 [SHU] unit,” as was required of him by BOP policy.  Id. ¶ 24.  The MDC Plaintiffs

10 also allege that Hasty was nonetheless made aware of the abuse “through inmate

11 complaints, staff complaints, hunger strikes, and suicide attempts.”  Id.; see also

12 id. ¶¶ 77–78 (detailing how Hasty made it difficult for detainees to file

13 complaints and ignored the evidence when they did, and how staff officials who

14 complained were called “snitches” and were threatened).  Indeed, complaints

15 about abuse of 9/11 detainees were pervasive enough to cause the BOP to

16 videotape all detainee movements and resulted in the investigations later

17 detailed in the OIG reports.  Id. ¶ 107.  The MDC Plaintiffs also complain that

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1 Hasty encouraged his subordinates’ harsh treatment of the detainees by himself

2 referring to the detainees as terrorists.  Id. ¶¶ 77, 109.

3 The allegations against Sherman, because they are more general and

4 conclusory in nature, are more tenuous.  For instance, Plaintiffs allege principally

5 that Sherman “allowed his subordinates to abuse MDC Plaintiffs and class

6 members with impunity.  Sherman made rounds on the ADMAX SHU and was

7 aware of conditions there.”  Id. ¶ 26.  These allegations lack a specific factual

8 basis to support a claim that Sherman was aware of the particular abuses at

9 issue.  Therefore, we hold that the MDC Plaintiffs fail to plausibly plead an

unofficial conditions claim as to Sherman.35 10

11 3. Qualified Immunity

12 The MDC Defendants claim that qualified immunity is appropriate

13 because they were merely following the orders of BOP superiors, “with the input

14 and guidance of the FBI and INS.”  See, e.g., Hasty Br. 33.  Specifically, Hasty

15 claims that the “BOP, INS, and FBI officials ordered [him] to place ‘high interest’

16 9/11 detainees in the ADMAX SHU, and directed that they be subject to the

17 ‘tightest’ security possible.”  Id.  He further argues that “[t]he sole basis for the

                                                            

35 The MDC Plaintiffs nonetheless maintain a substantive due process claim against

Sherman as to the official conditions, as discussed supra.

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1 detainees’ confinement in the ADMAX SHU—the FBI’s investigative interest—

2 was outside the scope of MDC officials’ discretion.”  Id. at 35.  By extension, he

3 claims that it was reasonable to detain the MDC Plaintiffs and other “high

4 interest” 9/11 detainees in the ADMAX SHU.

5 These arguments fail.  First, as with the DOJ Defendants, our qualified

6 immunity analysis in Hasty applies with equal force to the MDC Plaintiffs’

7 conditions claim against Hasty and Sherman in this case.  See Hasty, 490 F.3d at

8 168–69.  In 2001, it was clearly established that punitive conditions of

9 confinement, like those involved here, could not be imposed on pretrial

10 detainees such as the MDC Plaintiffs.  As discussed above with respect to the

11 DOJ Defendants, Wolfish made clear that a condition of pretrial detention not

12 reasonably related to a legitimate governmental objective is punishment in

13 violation of the constitutional rights of detainees.  See 441 U.S. at 535–39 & n.20;

14 Hasty, 490 F.3d at 169.  Furthermore, given the nearly identical claims and

15 circumstances in Hasty and this case, we see no reason to depart from our prior

16 determination that Hasty was not entitled to qualified immunity.

17 Nor is Hasty entitled to qualified immunity with regard to the unofficial

18 conditions claim.  As discussed, the MDC Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged that

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1 Hasty personally violated their constitutional rights by knowing of, and

2 disregarding, an excessive risk to their health or safety.  The right of the MDC

3 Plaintiffs to be free from such unofficial abuse was clearly established at the time

4 of the events in question.  See, e.g., DeShaney v. Winnebago Cnty. Dep’t of Soc.

5 Servs., 489 U.S. 189, 200 (1989) (“[W]hen the State by the affirmative exercise of its

6 power so restrains an individual’s liberty that it renders him unable to care for

7 himself, and at the same time fails to provide for his basic human needs—e.g.,

8 food, clothing, shelter, medical care, and reasonable safety—it transgresses the

9 substantive limits on state action set by . . . the Due Process Clause.”); see also

10 Walker, 717 F.3d at 125, 130; Cuoco, 222 F.3d at 106.

11 Plaintiffs’ allegations, the OIG Report, and the MDC Defendants’

12 arguments confirm that Hasty and Sherman housed 9/11 detainees for extended

13 periods of time in highly restrictive conditions without ever obtaining

14 individualized information that would warrant this treatment.  Because

15 Plaintiffs’ allegations support an inference of punitive intent, and it would be

16 inappropriate to wrestle with competing factual accounts at this stage of the

17 litigation, we hold that a reasonable officer in the MDC Defendants’ position

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1 would have concluded that this treatment was not reasonably related to a

2 legitimate goal.

3 IV. Claim 2: Equal Protection − Conditions of Confinement

4 Plaintiffs next assert a claim that Defendants subjected them to the harsh

5 conditions of confinement detailed above based on their race, ethnicity, religion,

6 and/or national origin, in violation of the equal protection guarantee of the Fifth

Amendment.36 7

8 A. Applicable Legal Standard

9 To state an equal protection violation under the Fifth Amendment, “the

10 plaintiff must plead and prove that the defendant acted with discriminatory

11 purpose.”  Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 676.  “[P]urposeful discrimination requires more than

12 intent as volition or intent as awareness of consequences.”  Id. (internal quotation

13 marks omitted).  “It instead involves a decisionmaker’s undertaking a course of

14 action because of, not merely in spite of, [the action’s] adverse effects upon an

15 identifiable group.”  Id. at 676–77 (alteration in original) (internal quotation

16 marks omitted).

                                                            

36 All Plaintiffs assert an equal protection claim against the DOJ Defendants.  Abbasi,

Khalifa, Mehmood, and Bajracharya do not assert this claim against Zenk, and

Sachdeva and Turkmen do not make this claim against any of the MDC Defendants.

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1 A plaintiff can show intentional discrimination by: (1) “point[ing] to a law

2 or policy that expressly classifies persons on the basis of” a suspect classification;

3 (2) “identify[ing] a facially neutral law or policy that has been applied in an

4 intentionally discriminatory manner[;]” or (3) “alleg[ing] that a facially neutral

5 statute or policy has an adverse effect and that it was motivated by

6 discriminatory animus.”  Brown v. City of Oneonta, N.Y., 221 F.3d 329, 337 (2d Cir.

7 2000) (internal quotation marks omitted).

8 The district court characterized Plaintiffs’ equal protection claim as falling

9 within the first category—that is, a claim that Defendants subjected Plaintiffs to

10 the challenged conditions of confinement pursuant to a policy that expressly

11 classified Plaintiffs on the basis of their race, ethnicity, religion, and/or national

12 origin.  Given our reading of Plaintiffs’ allegations and arguments on appeal, we

13 will not analyze this claim, particularly as it relates to the MDC Defendants,

14 under the first equal protection theory alone.

15 B. The DOJ Defendants

16 The district court concluded that Plaintiffs failed to state an equal

17 protection claim against the DOJ Defendants, but “f[ou]nd the issue to be a close

18 one.”  Turkmen III, 915 F. Supp. 2d at 345.  In view of our analysis of Plaintiffs’

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1 substantive due process claim against the DOJ Defendants, and particularly these

2 Defendants’ roles with respect to the merger of the New York List, we hold that

3 the MDC Plaintiffs have adequately alleged an equal protection claim against

4 Ashcroft, Mueller, and Ziglar.

5 Plaintiffs’ well‐pleaded allegations and the OIG Report give rise to the

6 following reasonable inferences, which render plausible the MDC Plaintiffs’

7 equal protection claim against the DOJ Defendants: (1) the New York FBI field

8 office discriminatorily targeted individuals in the 9/11 investigation not based on

9 individualized suspicion, but rather based on race, ethnicity, religion, and/or

10 national origin, and those individuals were then placed on the New York List;

11 (2) the DOJ Defendants knew about the discriminatory manner in which the New

12 York FBI field office placed individuals on the New York List; and (3) the DOJ

13 Defendants condoned the New York FBI’s discrimination by merging the New

14 York List with the INS List, thereby ensuring that some of the individuals on the

15 New York List would be subjected to the challenged conditions of confinement.

16 Plaintiffs allege that the New York FBI field office targeted individuals in

17 the PENTTBOM investigation and placed them on the New York List based on

18 race, ethnicity, religion, and/or national origin.  “[T]he head of the New York FBI

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1 field office stated that an individual’s Arab appearance and status as a Muslim

2 were factors to consider in the investigation.”  Compl. ¶ 42.  Even more telling, a

3 supervisor in the same local FBI office, “who oversaw the clearance process[,]

4 stated that a tip about Russian tourists filming the Midtown tunnel was

5 ‘obviously’ of no interest, but that the same tip about Egyptians was of interest.”  

6 Id.  Individuals who were arrested by the New York FBI and INS in connection

7 with a PENTTBOM lead were automatically treated as “of interest,” OIG Report

8 at 40–41, and were placed on the New York List, see id. at 53.

9 This discriminatory approach, focusing on “an individual’s Arab

10 appearance,” Compl. ¶ 42, is consistent with what is alleged to have occurred in

11 Bajracharya’s case.  Bajracharya, who as noted, is a Buddhist and native of Nepal,

12 came to the FBI’s attention when an employee from the Queens County District

13 Attorney’s Office “observed an ‘[A]rab male’ videotaping outside a Queens[]

14 office building that contained the Queens County District Attorney[’s] Office and

15 a New York FBI office.”  Id. ¶ 230.  Investigators from the District Attorney’s

16 Office questioned Bajracharya about “why he was taking pictures,” and

17 Bajracharya “tried to explain that he was a tourist.”  Id.  He was arrested after

18 acknowledging he overstayed his visa and was detained in the ADMAX SHU.  

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1 Given the Complaint’s allegations regarding the New York FBI’s tactics, it is

2 reasonable to infer that officials in the New York FBI targeted certain individuals,

3 including Plaintiffs, for investigation, arrest, and placement on the New York

4 List simply because they were, or appeared to be, Arab or Muslim, and not

5 because of any suspicion regarding a link to terrorism.

6 As we conclude above with respect to the substantive due process claim,

7 the DOJ Defendants were informed of the problems presented by the New York

8 List.  As noted, the OIG Report reveals that by October 2001 the SIOC Working

9 Group learned about the New York List and that “officials at the INS, FBI, and

10 [DOJ] raised concerns about, among other things, whether the aliens had any

11 nexus to terrorism.”  OIG Report at 53.  Plaintiffs allege that a high‐ranking DOJ

12 official noted that individuals were detained “without any attempt” to determine

13 if they were of “actual interest,” and that the official “was concerned early in the

14 investigation that detainees were being held simply on the basis of their

15 ethnicity.”  Compl. ¶ 45.  The DOJ Defendants were unlikely to have remained

16 unaware of these concerns, as they “received detailed daily reports of the arrests

17 and detentions,” id. ¶ 47, see also id. ¶¶ 63–64, and Mueller “was in daily contact

18 with the FBI field offices regarding the status of individual clearances,” id. ¶ 57.  

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1 In light of these allegations, we can reasonably infer that these Defendants were

2 aware that the New York FBI field office was placing individuals on the New

3 York List not because of any suspected ties to terrorism but rather because they

4 were, or were perceived to be, Arab or Muslim.

5 While the DOJ Defendants’ mere knowledge of this discriminatory action

6 by the New York FBI field office would be insufficient to allow for the reasonable

7 inference that these Defendants possessed the discriminatory purpose required

8 to state an equal protection claim, Plaintiffs’ allegations are not limited to the

9 DOJ Defendants’ knowledge alone.  Rather, as we discuss in detail in the

10 substantive due process analysis above, Plaintiffs plausibly plead that Ashcroft

11 made the decision to merge the New York List with the national INS List,

12 ensuring that some of the individuals on the New York List would be placed in,

13 or remain detained in, the challenged conditions of confinement.  Plaintiffs

14 further allege that Mueller and Ziglar were aware that the New York List

15 contained detainees against whom the FBI had asserted no interest and that

16 subjecting them to the challenged conditions would be facially unreasonable.  In

17 ordering and complying with the merger of the New York List, the DOJ

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1 Defendants actively condoned the New York FBI field office’s discriminatory

2 formulation of that list.

3 The DOJ Defendants’ condonation of the New York FBI field office’s

4 purposeful discrimination allows us to reasonably infer at the motion to dismiss

5 stage that the DOJ Defendants themselves acted with discriminatory purpose.  

6 The Supreme Court in Iqbal stated that “discrete wrongs—for instance,

7 beatings—by lower level Government actors[] . . . if true, and if condoned by

8 [Ashcroft and Mueller], could be the basis for some inference of wrongful intent

9 on [Ashcroft and Mueller’s] part.”  556 U.S. at 683.  In a similar vein, we have

10 held, in a case involving an equal protection claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, that a

11 reasonable factfinder could conclude that the Commissioner of the Fire

12 Department of the City of New York intended to discriminate when he decided

13 to continue to use the results of employment examinations that he knew had a

14 disparate impact based on race.  See United States v. City of New York, 717 F.3d 72,

15 94 (2d Cir. 2013).  Here, it is reasonable to infer that Ashcroft, Mueller, and Ziglar

16 possessed the requisite discriminatory intent because they knew that the New

17 York List was formed in a discriminatory manner, and nevertheless condoned

18 that discrimination by ordering and complying with the merger of the lists,

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1 which ensured that the MDC Plaintiffs and other 9/11 detainees would be held in

2 the challenged conditions of confinement.

3 Contrary to the dissent’s contentions, see Dissenting Op., post at 76−78, this

4 case is distinguishable from Iqbal, where the Supreme Court concluded that the

5 plaintiff failed to state an equal protection claim.  In Iqbal, there were “more

6 likely explanations” for why the plaintiff was detained in harsh conditions other

7 than his race, religion, or national origin.  556 U.S. at 681.  Those more likely

8 explanations for the plaintiff’s treatment, according to the Supreme Court, were

9 that Ashcroft and Mueller supported “a legitimate policy . . . to arrest and detain

10 individuals because of their suspected link to the attacks,” which “produce[d] a

11 disparate, incidental impact on Arab Muslims, even though the purpose of the

12 policy was to target neither Arabs nor Muslims.”  Id. at 682 (emphasis added).  

13 The Supreme Court noted that “[o]n the facts respondent alleges the arrests Mueller

14 oversaw were likely lawful and justified by his nondiscriminatory intent to

15 detain aliens who were illegally present in the United States and who had potential

16 connections to those who committed terrorist acts.”  Id. (emphasis added); see also id.

17 at 683 (noting that all the allegations in Iqbal “suggest[ed] is that the Nation’s top

18 law enforcement officers . . . sought to keep suspected terrorists in the most secure

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1 conditions available until the suspects could be cleared of terrorist activity”

2 (emphasis added)).

3 In this case, unlike in Iqbal, it is not “more likely” that the MDC Plaintiffs

4 were detained in the challenged conditions because of their suspected ties to the

5 9/11 attacks.  Indeed, as discussed at length earlier, Plaintiffs have plausibly

6 alleged that they were detained without any suspicion of a link to terrorist

7 activity and that the DOJ Defendants knew that the government lacked

8 information tying Plaintiffs to terrorist activity, but decided to merge the lists

anyway.37 9   Thus, unlike in Iqbal, there was no legitimate reason to detain the

10 MDC Plaintiffs in the challenged conditions and, thus, no obvious, more likely

                                                            

37 Given the clear language used by the Supreme Court in Iqbal regarding the detainees’

connections to terrorism, 556 U.S. at 682−83, we understand the Iqbal Court to have

rejected as conclusory the allegation in the Iqbal complaint identified by the dissent,

which only pleads in the broadest terms that the Iqbal plaintiffs were confined without

“any individual determination” that such restrictions were “appropriate or should

continue.”  See Dissenting Op., post at 81−82 (quoting First Am. Compl. ¶ 97, App. to

Pet. for Cert. 173a, Ashcroft v. Iqbal, No. 07‐1015 (U.S. Feb. 6, 2008), available at

http://1.usa.gov/1CfHJQF).  Here, in contrast, the well‐pleaded allegations, as supported

by the OIG reports, allege that the DOJ Defendants made, and complied with, the

decision to merge the New York List with the national INS List, thereby ensuring that

the MDC Plaintiffs, and others, remained in the challenged conditions of confinement

despite the absence of any suspicion that they were tied to terrorism.  

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1 explanation for the DOJ Defendants’ actions with respect to the New York List

merger.38 2

3 The dissent also argues that we cannot plausibly infer the DOJ Defendants’

4 discriminatory intent from the merger decision because not all of the individuals

5 on the New York List were subjected to the same level of restrictive confinement.  

6 See Dissenting Op., post at 79−80.  But the fact that some individuals of the same

7 race, ethnicity, religion, and/or national origin as the MDC Plaintiffs were

8 restrained in the Passaic County Jail, as opposed to the ADMAX SHU, hardly

9 dooms the MDC Plaintiffs’ claim against the DOJ Defendants.  There is no

10 allegation that the DOJ Defendants were responsible for the assignment of

11 certain actual or perceived Arab and Muslim males to Passaic as opposed to the

12 more restrictive ADMAX SHU.  See OIG Report at 17–18, 126–27, 158 (noting that

13 assignment responsibility fell largely to the arresting FBI agent).  Rather,

14 Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged that the DOJ Defendants condoned and ratified

15 the New York FBI’s discrimination in identifying detainees by merging the New

                                                            

38 Furthermore, the fact that Plaintiffs plausibly plead that the DOJ Defendants merged

the New York List, and complied with the list merger, based on punitive intent (the

substantive due process claim) arguably suggests the plausibility of the MDC Plaintiffs’

allegations that the DOJ Defendants also possessed the discriminatory intent required

for an equal protection claim.  See supra Section III.B.

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1 York List with the INS List.  The DOJ Defendants, apparently deferring to others’

2 designation of detainees for particular facilities, thus ensured that some (and for

3 all they knew, all) of the individuals on the New York List would be subjected to

4 the challenged conditions of confinement solely on the basis of discriminatory

5 criteria.  The fact that some of these individuals were actually assigned to the less

restrictive Passaic facility is thus a red herring.39 6

7 Based on the foregoing, we conclude that the MDC Plaintiffs’ allegations

8 are sufficient to state an equal protection claim against Ashcroft, Mueller, and

9 Ziglar for their condonation of the New York FBI’s discriminatory formulation of

10 the New York List, which resulted in the MDC Plaintiffs being subjected to the

11 conditions of confinement challenged here.

                                                            

39 Moreover, to the extent this differential assignment of class members, again

apparently by agents of the New York FBI and not the DOJ Defendants, might be

relevant to Plaintiffs’ equal protection claim, because it could suggest that the New

York FBI was not actually discriminating, it is more appropriately considered at

summary judgment.  Indeed, the cases embraced by the dissent conclude that evidence

of differential treatment of members of the same class may weaken an inference of

discrimination at the summary judgment stage.  See O’Connor v. Consol. Coin Caterers Corp.,

517 U.S. 308, 309 (1996) (summary judgment); Fleming v. MaxMara USA, Inc., 371 F.

App’x 115, 116 (2d Cir. 2010) (summary order) (summary judgment); James v. N.Y.

Racing Ass’n, 233 F.3d 149, 151 (2d Cir. 2000) (summary judgment).  In light of the well‐

pleaded allegations regarding discrimination by the New York FBI, Plaintiffs have

hardly pleaded themselves out of court on this point.

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1 C. The MDC Defendants

2 We agree with the district court that the MDC Plaintiffs have stated a

3 plausible equal protection claim against Hasty and Sherman, although we base

4 our decision on somewhat different reasoning than that employed by the court

5 below.  However, we do not agree with the district court that the MDC Plaintiffs

6 have adequately alleged this claim against Zenk.

7 Our conclusion focuses on allegations of mendacity by Hasty and Sherman

8 regarding the basis for detaining the MDC Plaintiffs in the ADMAX SHU.  The

9 Complaint asserts that Hasty and Sherman “were aware that placing the 9/11

10 detainees in the ADMAX SHU unit without an individualized determination of

11 dangerousness or risk was unlawful.”  Compl. ¶ 74.  However, these Defendants

12 never actually undertook that “required individualized assessment.”  Id. ¶ 73.  

13 Nevertheless, Hasty and Sherman approved a document that “untruthfully

14 stated that the executive staff at [the] MDC had classified the ‘suspected

15 terrorists’ as ‘High Security’ based on an individualized assessment of their

16 ‘precipitating offense, past terrorist behavior, and inability to adapt to

17 incarceration.’”  Id. ¶ 74.  In fact, neither Hasty nor Sherman “saw or considered

18 information in any of these categories in deciding to place the 9/11 detainees in

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the ADMAX SHU.”  Id.; 40 1 see also id. ¶¶ 68–72 (Hasty and Sherman held the MDC

2 Plaintiffs in the ADMAX SHU knowing that they were not tied to terrorism and

3 without performing the required individualized assessment of whether Plaintiffs

4 posed a danger to the facility).

5 Based on the foregoing allegations of duplicity regarding the basis for

6 confining the 9/11 detainees, it is reasonable to infer that Hasty and Sherman

7 approved this false document to justify detaining actual or perceived Arabs and

8 Muslims in the harsh conditions of the ADMAX SHU based on discriminatory

9 intent.  Cf. Reeves v. Sanderson Plumbing Prods., Inc., 530 U.S. 133, 147 (2000) (in the

10 employment discrimination context, “the trier of fact can reasonably infer from

11 the falsity of the explanation that the employer is dissembling to cover up a

12 discriminatory purpose”); id. (an inference of discriminatory purpose based on

13 an employer’s false explanation “is consistent with the general principle of

14 evidence law that the factfinder is entitled to consider a party’s dishonesty about

15 a material fact as affirmative evidence of guilt” (internal quotation marks

                                                            

40 As previously noted, the term “9/11 detainees” is defined in the Complaint as non‐

citizens from the Middle East, South Asia, and elsewhere who are Arab or Muslim, or

were perceived to be Arab or Muslim.  Individuals with certain of these characteristics

who were arrested and detained in response to the 9/11 attacks constitute the putative

class in this case.

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1 omitted)); St. Mary’s Honor Ctr. v. Hicks, 509 U.S. 502, 511 (1993) (“disbelief of the

2 reasons put forward by the defendant (particularly if disbelief is accompanied by

3 a suspicion of mendacity) may . . . show intentional discrimination” in the

4 employment discrimination context).  

5 The dissent argues that we cannot infer discriminatory intent from the

6 MDC Defendants’ approval of this false document, concluding that the “more

7 likely” reason for this mendacity is these Defendants’ concern for national

8 security.  See Dissenting Op., post at 83−84.  Although recognizing that the MDC

9 Defendants might be faulted for approving a false document stating that each

10 detainee had been assessed as a “High Security” “suspected terrorist[],” our

11 dissenting colleague believes Hasty and Sherman’s actions are more likely

12 explained by reliance on the FBI’s designation of each MDC Plaintiff as a person

13 “of interest” or “of high interest” to the ongoing terrorism investigation.  Yet, the

14 allegations in the Complaint belie this alternative explanation for Hasty and

15 Sherman’s dishonesty.  Plaintiffs allege that the “MDC Defendants were aware

16 that the FBI had not developed any information” to tie the 9/11 detainees to

17 terrorism.  Compl. ¶ 69 (emphasis added).  Indeed, the MDC Defendants

18 received regular updates on the FBI’s investigation, including the dearth of

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1 evidence connecting the 9/11 detainees to terrorism.  Such briefing—placing

2 Hasty and Sherman on repeated notice of the lack of any specific information

3 justifying restrictive confinement in the ADMAX SHU—renders implausible the

4 innocent explanation for their mendacity.

5 As an additional matter, the fact that the false document that Hasty and

6 Sherman approved, on its face, applied to suspected terrorists and not just actual

7 or perceived Arabs and Muslims does not undermine the reasonableness of the

8 inference that these Defendants acted based on discriminatory intent.  Plaintiffs

9 allege that Hasty and Sherman approved the document even though they had

10 not performed the required individualized assessments and knew that keeping

11 “the 9/11 detainees” in the ADMAX SHU without those assessments was

12 unlawful.  Id. ¶¶ 73−74.  They further allege that, in approving the document,

13 Hasty and Sherman failed to consider the past offenses, past terrorist activity,

14 and inability to adapt to incarceration with respect to “the 9/11 detainees.”  Id.

15 ¶ 74.  Based on Plaintiffs’ allegations about how the false document related in

16 particular to the 9/11 detainees, a group the Complaint specifically defines on

17 racial, ethnic, and religious grounds, see id. ¶ 1, it is reasonable to infer, at least at

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1 the motion to dismiss stage, that Hasty and Sherman lied in order to conceal an

2 intent to discriminate on the basis of suspect classifications.

3 Further buttressing this inference, the Complaint asserts that MDC staff

4 used racially, ethnically, and religiously charged language to refer to the MDC

5 Plaintiffs.  See id. ¶ 109 (MDC staff referred to the MDC Plaintiffs as terrorists and

6 insulted their religion); id. ¶ 110 (Saeed Hammouda and others complained “that

7 MDC staff called them ‘camel[s]’”); id. ¶ 136 (MDC staff mocked Plaintiffs’

8 prayers and interrupted their praying by “screaming derogatory anti‐Muslim

9 comments”); id. ¶ 218 (during his transport and processing Hammouda was

10 called “Arabic asshole”).  These allegations are supported by the OIG reports.  

11 See OIG Report at 144 (noting allegations that MDC officers used racial slurs);

12 Supplemental OIG Report at 28–30 (concluding that some MDC staff verbally

13 abused detainees based on their Muslim faith, among other grounds).

14 The context in which the term “terrorist” was used at the MDC bolsters the

15 inference that the MDC Plaintiffs were believed to be terrorists simply because

16 they were, or were perceived to be, Arab or Muslim.  Significantly, the term

17 “terrorist” was not used in isolation.  Rather, MDC staff called the MDC

18 Plaintiffs “‘fucking Muslims’ and ‘terrorists,’” Compl. ¶ 147, as well as

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1 “‘terrorist’ and ‘Arabic asshole,’” id. ¶ 218; see also Supplemental OIG Report at

2 28 (noting that along with the term “terrorists,” MDC staff referred to detainees

3 as “fucking Muslims” and “bin Laden Junior” (internal quotation marks

4 omitted)).

5 While most of the aforementioned comments are not directly attributed to

6 Hasty, Sherman, or Zenk, Plaintiffs do allege that the use of racially, ethnically,

7 and religiously charged language was brought to the attention of the MDC

8 Defendants through detainee complaints and reports from MDC staff, among

9 other means.  Mere knowledge of the MDC staff’s discriminatory comments, of

10 course, is insufficient to infer shared discriminatory intent by Hasty, Sherman, or

11 Zenk.  See Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 676–77.  However, with respect to Hasty, Plaintiffs

12 allege more than mere awareness of the MDC staff’s discriminatory treatment of

13 the MDC Plaintiffs.  Plaintiffs claim that Hasty fostered the MDC staff’s use of

14 discriminatory language to refer to the MDC Plaintiffs by himself “referring to

15 the detainees as ‘terrorists,’” Compl. ¶ 77, see also id. ¶ 109, notwithstanding

16 Hasty’s knowledge that the MDC Plaintiffs lacked ties to terrorism.  Hasty’s

17 knowledge about the charged manner in which the term “terrorist” was used to

18 refer to the MDC Plaintiffs, and his personal use of the term in that context,

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1 renders even more plausible the conclusion that he approved the false document

2 justifying the MDC Plaintiffs’ detention in the ADMAX SHU based on

3 discriminatory animus.  Given the fact that the 9/11 hijackers were Arab

4 Muslims, and Hasty knew that there were no articulable ties between the MDC

5 Plaintiffs and terrorism, Plaintiffs plausibly plead that Hasty referred to the MDC

6 Plaintiffs as terrorists, and treated them as if they were, simply because they

7 were, or he believed them to be, Arab or Muslim.

8 In view of the foregoing, the MDC Plaintiffs have stated a plausible claim

9 that Hasty and Sherman detained them in the challenged conditions because of

10 their race, ethnicity, religion, and/or national origin.  These Defendants’ approval

11 of the false document, and Hasty’s use of charged language in the particular

12 context of the MDC Plaintiffs’ detention, support the reasonable inference that

13 Hasty and Sherman subjected the MDC Plaintiffs to harsh conditions of

14 confinement based on suspect classifications.

15 With respect to Zenk, the MDC Plaintiffs’ allegations are more limited and

16 fail to support the reasonable inference that he established or implemented the

17 alleged conditions of confinement based on animus that offends notions of equal

18 protection.

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1 D. Qualified Immunity

2 The DOJ Defendants, Hasty, and Sherman are not entitled to qualified

3 immunity on the MDC Plaintiffs’ equal protection claim.  With regard to the first

4 prong of this inquiry, whether the complaint plausibly pleads that a defendant

5 personally violated the plaintiff’s constitutional rights, for the reasons stated

6 above, the MDC Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged that Ashcroft, Mueller, Ziglar,

7 Hasty, and Sherman violated their rights under the equal protection guarantee.

8 With respect to the second prong of the inquiry, it was clearly established at

9 the time of Plaintiffs’ detention that it was illegal to hold individuals in harsh

10 conditions of confinement and otherwise target them for mistreatment because of

11 their race, ethnicity, religion, and/or national origin.  Plaintiffs’ right “not to be

12 subjected to ethnic or religious discrimination[] w[as] . . . clearly established prior

13 to 9/11, and . . . remained clearly established even in the aftermath of that horrific

14 event.”  Hasty, 490 F.3d at 160.  In Hasty, the plaintiff alleged “that he was

15 deemed to be ‘of high interest,’ and accordingly was kept in the ADMAX SHU

16 under harsh conditions, solely because of his race, ethnicity, and religion,” and

17 “that Defendants specifically targeted [him] for mistreatment because of [his]

18 race, religion, and national origin.”  Id. at 174 (alterations in original).  We

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1 concluded “that any reasonably competent officer would understand [those

2 alleged actions] to have been illegal under prior case law.”  Id. (internal quotation

3 marks omitted).  There is no reason that this analysis should not govern here.  

4 Although, as the dissent notes, see Dissenting Op., post at 62, Hasty employed a

5 more lenient pleading standard than what we now utilize in assessing factual

6 allegations, this hardly prevents us from relying on its conclusions as to whether

7 certain legal principles were clearly established at the time of Plaintiffs’

8 detention.  Accordingly, in view of the sufficiency of the MDC Plaintiffs’

9 allegations here, the DOJ Defendants, Hasty, and Sherman are not entitled to

10 qualified immunity on this claim.

11 We reverse the portion of the district court’s decision that dismissed the

12 MDC Plaintiffs’ equal protection claim against the DOJ Defendants, affirm the

13 district court’s denial of Hasty and Sherman’s motions to dismiss the MDC

14 Plaintiffs’ claim, and reverse the district court’s decision denying Zenk’s motion

15 to dismiss the equal protection claim.

16 Because the Passaic Plaintiffs were held in the general population and not

17 the ADMAX SHU, we agree with the district court that they have failed to

18 adequately plead that they were subjected to harsh conditions of confinement

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1 because of their race, ethnicity, religion, and/or national origin.  Thus, we affirm

2 the district court’s dismissal of the Passaic Plaintiffs’ equal protection claim.

3 V. Claim 6: Unreasonable and Punitive Strip Searches

4 The MDC Plaintiffs claim that they were subject to unreasonable and

5 punitive strip searches while detained at the MDC, in violation of the Fourth and

Fifth Amendments.41 6

7 A. Applicable Legal Standard

8 Determining the legal standard that applies to this claim turns on whether

9 the MDC Plaintiffs were held in a prison or a jail.  See Hasty, 490 F.3d at 172.  In

10 Hasty, we decided that the plaintiff, who was detained in the ADMAX SHU at

11 the MDC (like the MDC Plaintiffs here), should be treated in accordance with the

12 standard governing prisons.  See id.  Under that standard, a “regulation is valid if

13 it is reasonably related to legitimate penological interests.”  Turner v. Safley, 482

                                                            

41 Only the MDC Plaintiffs assert this claim, which is only raised against the MDC

Defendants.  Benatta and Hammouda alone assert this claim against Zenk.  To the

extent that the MDC Plaintiffs’ allegations regarding the strip searches are cognizable

under the Fifth Amendment, we factor these allegations into our analysis of the

substantive due process claim, which is discussed above.  See supra Section III.C.

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1 U.S. 78, 89 (1987).  Given that the parties here do not argue for a different

standard, we assume that the foregoing standard applies in this case.42 2

3 B. The MDC Defendants

4 The MDC Plaintiffs allege that Defendant Joseph Cuciti, a former lieutenant

5 at the MDC and not a party on appeal, was tasked with “developing the strip‐

6 search policy on the ADMAX [SHU].”  Compl. ¶ 111.  Plaintiffs further claim that

7 “Hasty ordered . . . Cuciti to design extremely restrictive conditions of

8 confinement.”  Id. ¶ 75.  The reasonable inference based on these allegations is

9 that Hasty ordered Cuciti to develop the strip‐search policy, which was “then

10 approved and implemented by Hasty and Sherman, and, later, by Zenk.”  Id.

11 Plaintiffs allege that the 9/11 detainees at the MDC were strip searched

12 upon arrival, and again after they had been escorted in shackles and under

13 continuous guard to the ADMAX SHU.  They were also strip searched every

14 time they were taken from or returned to their cells, including after non‐contact

                                                            

42 We note, however, that this standard governs prison regulations, see Turner, 482 U.S.

at 89, and that the application of this standard in Hasty may have been justified because

the plaintiff in that case faced criminal charges (apparently felonies), see 490 F.3d at 147–

48 & n.1, 162 n.8, 172.  In contrast, Plaintiffs here were almost exclusively charged with

civil immigration violations and were detained on that basis.  While it may be that a

different standard, one more favorable to detainees, should govern the constitutionality

of searches in the context of civil immigration detention, we leave that question for

another day.

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1 attorney visits, when “physical contact between parties was prevented by a clear

2 partition,” OIG Report at 123, and when being transferred from one cell to

3 another.  Benatta was strip searched on September 23, 24, and 26 of 2001, even

4 though he was not let out of his cell on any of those days.  Numerous strip

5 searches were documented in a “visual search log” that was created for review

6 by MDC management, including Hasty.  Compl. ¶ 114 (internal quotation marks

7 omitted).

8 Plaintiffs’ allegations regarding the strip searches are supported by the

9 Supplemental OIG Report, which concluded that MDC staff “inappropriately

10 used strip searches to intimidate and punish detainees.”  Supplemental OIG

11 Report at 35.  That report also “questioned the need for the number of strip

12 searches, such as after attorney and social visits in non‐contact rooms.”  Id.

13 The foregoing allegations, supported as they are by the Supplemental OIG

14 Report, are sufficient to establish at this stage of the litigation that Hasty and

15 Sherman were personally involved in creating and executing a strip‐search

16 policy that was not reasonably related to legitimate penological interests.  Hasty

17 ordered the policy, and both he and Sherman approved and implemented it.  

18 Under that policy, the MDC Plaintiffs were strip searched when there was no

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1 possibility that they could have obtained contraband.  Plaintiffs have alleged that

2 Hasty and Sherman were aware of these searches either based on the search log

3 that was created for review by MDC management, or because they were

involved in the implementation of the strip‐search policy.43 4   These allegations

5 give rise to a plausible Fourth Amendment claim against Hasty and Sherman.  

6 See Hasty, 490 F.3d at 172 (finding a plausible allegation of a Fourth Amendment

7 violation in the post‐9/11 context where the plaintiff alleged that he “was

8 routinely strip searched twice after returning from the medical clinic or court and

9 that, on one occasion, [he] was subjected to three serial strip and body‐cavity

10 searches in the same room”); Hodges v. Stanley, 712 F.2d 34, 35 (2d Cir. 1983)

11 (noting that because “there was no possibility that [the plaintiff] could have

12 obtained and concealed contraband[] . . . the second search appears to have been

unnecessary”).44 13

                                                            

43  To the extent the dissent believes that we premise Hasty and Sherman’s personal

involvement entirely on these Defendants’ alleged review of the visual search log, see

Dissenting Op., post at 90, that assertion is incorrect.  As discussed, Plaintiffs have

plausibly alleged that Hasty ordered the development of, and that he and Sherman

approved and implemented, the challenged strip‐search policy.  Plaintiffs’ allegations

regarding the visual search log only buttress the inference of Hasty’s personal

involvement.

44 Although the dissent correctly notes that Hodges was decided before the Supreme

Court’s opinion in Turner, see Dissenting Op., post at 88, we have ratified Hodges in

subsequent strip search case law.  See Hasty, 490 F.3d at 172; N.G. v. Connecticut, 382 F.3d

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1 With respect to Zenk, however, the MDC Plaintiffs fail to state a plausible

2 Fourth Amendment claim.  As noted earlier, Plaintiffs do not assert any claim

3 against Zenk for injuries they suffered prior to the date on which he became

4 Warden of the MDC, which was April 22, 2002.  Only two Plaintiffs, Benatta and

5 Hammouda, were still detained at the MDC as of that date.  These Plaintiffs have

6 not sufficiently alleged that they were unlawfully strip searched during the

7 period in which Zenk was Warden of the MDC.

8 C. Qualified Immunity

9 Hasty and Sherman are not entitled to qualified immunity on the MDC

10 Plaintiffs’ strip search claim.  With respect to the first prong of the qualified

11 immunity analysis, Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged that Hasty and Sherman

12 each violated the MDC Plaintiffs’ rights under the Fourth Amendment.  With

13 regard to the second prong of the inquiry, Plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment rights

14 were clearly established at the time of the searches at issue.  

                                                                                                                                                                                               

225, 233−34 (2d Cir. 2004).  Similarly, we reject the dissent’s attempt to confine Hodges to

its facts, only finding the absence of a legitimate penological purpose where the strip

searches are “immediately successive.”  Dissenting Op., post at 88 (emphasis added).  

Like previous panels, we read Hodges as holding that a search may be unnecessary and

purposeless where “there was no possibility that [the plaintiff] could have obtained and

concealed contraband.”  712 F.2d at 35; see also N.G., 382 F.3d at 233−34.  Here, consistent

with Hodges, Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged that they were strip searched when there

was no opportunity to acquire contraband, including in instances where they were

shackled and under escort, or were never permitted to leave their cells.

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1 In Hasty, we denied Hasty qualified immunity on the plaintiff’s Fourth

2 Amendment claim, stating that in the wake of 9/11 “it was clearly established

3 that even the standard most favorable to prison officials required that strip and

4 body‐cavity searches be rationally related to legitimate government purposes.”  

5 490 F.3d at 172; see also id. at 159–60 (the “right not to be needlessly harassed and

6 mistreated in the confines of a prison cell by repeated strip and body‐cavity

7 searches” was “clearly established prior to 9/11, and . . . remained clearly

8 established even in the aftermath of that horrific event”).  Because the MDC

9 Plaintiffs’ claim here is substantially the same as the Fourth Amendment claim at

10 issue in Hasty, we are bound by that decision and thus deny Hasty and Sherman

11 qualified immunity on the Fourth Amendment claim in this case.  

12 Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s denial of Hasty and Sherman’s

13 motions to dismiss the MDC Plaintiffs’ Fourth Amendment strip search claim,

14 and reverse the district court’s denial of Zenk’s motion to dismiss this claim.

15 VI. Claim 7: Conspiracy Under 42 U.S.C. § 1985

16 Plaintiffs’ final claim is that Defendants conspired to deprive them of their

17 rights in violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1985(3).

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1 A. Applicable Legal Standard  

2 A conspiracy claim under Section 1985(3) has four elements: “(1) a

3 conspiracy, (2) for the purpose of depriving any person or class of persons of the

4 equal protection of the laws or of equal privileges and immunities under the

5 laws, (3) an act in furtherance of the conspiracy, and (4) whereby a person is

6 injured in his person or property or deprived of a right or privilege of a citizen.”

Hasty, 490 F.3d at 176.45 7   In addition, this claim requires that “there must be some

8 racial, or perhaps otherwise class‐based, invidiously discriminatory animus

9 behind the conspirators’ action.”  Griffin v. Breckenridge, 403 U.S. 88, 102 (1971);

10 accord Reynolds v. Barrett, 685 F.3d 193, 201–02 (2d Cir. 2012).

11 B. The Sufficiency of the Allegations

12 In this case, the MDC Plaintiffs have sufficiently alleged that Ashcroft,

13 Mueller, and Ziglar met regularly and eventually agreed to subject the detainees

14 to the challenged conditions of confinement by merging, and complying with the

                                                            

45 Section 1985(3) of Title 42 of the United States Code provides, in pertinent part, that:  

If two or more persons in any State or Territory conspire . . . for the purpose of

depriving, either directly or indirectly, any person or class of persons of the equal

protection of the laws, or of equal privileges and immunities under the laws; . . .

if one or more persons engaged therein do, or cause to be done, any act in

furtherance of the object of such conspiracy, . . . the party so injured or deprived

may have an action for the recovery of damages occasioned by such injury or

deprivation, against any one or more of the conspirators.

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1 merger of, the New York List.  The MDC Plaintiffs have also plausibly alleged

2 that the DOJ Defendants’ actions with respect to the New York List merger were

3 based on the discriminatory animus required for a Section 1985(3) conspiracy

4 claim, as we conclude above in our analysis of the equal protection claim.  With

5 respect to Hasty and Sherman, their joint approval of the false document without

6 performing the requisite individualized assessment supports the reasonable

7 inference that these two Defendants came to an agreement to and did subject

8 Plaintiffs to harsh conditions of confinement based on the discriminatory animus

9 required by Section 1985(3).

10 Plaintiffs also allege an agreement, albeit not an explicit one, among the

11 DOJ Defendants and Hasty and Sherman to effectuate the harsh conditions of

12 confinement with discriminatory intent.  Such a tacit agreement can suffice

13 under Section 1985(3).  See Webb v. Goord, 340 F.3d 105, 110–11 (2d Cir. 2003).  The

14 Complaint asserts that the conditions of confinement at the MDC “were

15 formulated in consultation with the FBI.”  Compl. ¶ 65.  In addition, Hasty

16 ordered, and Hasty and Sherman approved and implemented, the conditions of

17 confinement “[t]o carry out Ashcroft, Mueller[,] and Ziglar’s unwritten policy to

18 subject the 9/11 detainees to harsh treatment.”  Id. ¶ 75; see also id. ¶ 68.  The

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1 foregoing allegations are sufficient to support the reasonable inference that the

2 DOJ Defendants, Hasty, and Sherman shared such a tacit understanding about

3 carrying out the unlawful conduct with respect to the MDC Plaintiffs’ detention.

4 Accordingly, the MDC Plaintiffs’ allegations state a plausible claim for a

5 Section 1985(3) conspiracy against Ashcroft, Mueller, Ziglar, Hasty, and

6 Sherman.

7 C. The Intracorporate Conspiracy Doctrine

8 The MDC Defendants argue that they are legally incapable of conspiring

9 with each other, and with the DOJ Defendants, because they are all part of the

10 same governmental entity—the DOJ.  In Girard v. 94th Street & Fifth Avenue Corp.,

11 530 F.2d 66, 70–72 (2d Cir. 1976), we recognized that the defendants—officers

12 and directors of a single corporation, and the corporation itself—could not

13 legally conspire with one another in violation of Section 1985(3).  We reached

14 that conclusion because the defendants formed a “single business entity with a

15 managerial policy implemented by the one governing board.”  Id. at 71.  Thus,

16 the defendants could not satisfy the statutory requirement of a conspiracy

17 between two or more persons.  Id.  We also noted, however, that where various

18 entities in a single institution have “disparate responsibilities and functions,” a

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1 conspiracy claim could lie because the actions of those entities would not be

2 “actions of only one policymaking body.”  Id.

3 Assuming that Defendants can ultimately invoke the intracorporate

4 conspiracy doctrine in this case, at this stage of the litigation, we cannot conclude

5 that Ashcroft, Mueller, Ziglar, Hasty, and Sherman acted as members of a single

6 policymaking entity for purposes of the MDC Plaintiffs’ Section 1985(3)

7 conspiracy claim.  According to the Complaint, the former Attorney General, the

8 former Director of the FBI, the former Commissioner of the INS, and the former

9 Warden and Associate Warden at the MDC had varied responsibilities and

10 functions that distinguish them from the single corporate entity in Girard.  

11 Although Hasty and Sherman may have acted, at least in part, to implement the

12 DOJ Defendants’ policy, it is also the case that Hasty and Sherman themselves

13 established policies at the MDC.  Thus, factual questions about how disparate or

14 distinct Defendants’ functions were, and how policy was created by the various

15 Defendants, preclude us from deciding as a matter of law that Defendants

resemble the single policymaking body of a corporation.46 16

                                                            

46 We note that the BOP and, therefore, the MDC, are subject to the supervision of the

Attorney General.  See 18 U.S.C. § 4041.  We have also found one unpublished district

court decision that concludes that the Attorney General and employees of a BOP facility

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1 D. Qualified Immunity

2 The DOJ Defendants, Hasty, and Sherman are not entitled to qualified

3 immunity on this claim.  First, the MDC Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged a

4 Section 1985(3) conspiracy claim against these Defendants.  In addition, as we

5 concluded in Hasty, in the wake of the 9/11 attacks, “even without a definitive

6 ruling from this Court on the application of section 1985(3) to federal officials,

7 federal officials could not reasonably have believed that it was legally

8 permissible for them to conspire with other federal officials to deprive a person

9 of equal protection of the laws.”  490 F.3d at 177.  In that case, we denied the

10 defendants qualified immunity on the Section 1985(3) claim.  See id.  Given the

11 sufficiency of the allegations in this case, our qualified immunity decision in

12 Hasty controls here.

13 Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s dismissal of the Section 1985(3)

14 claim against the DOJ Defendants and affirm the denial of Hasty and Sherman’s

15 motions to dismiss this claim.  Because the MDC Plaintiffs fail to adequately

                                                                                                                                                                                               

cannot conspire together under Section 1985.  See Chesser v. Walton, No. 12‐cv‐01198‐

JPG, 2013 WL 1962285, at *3 (S.D. Ill. May 10, 2013).  However, for the reasons stated

above, neither this statutory provision nor district court case satisfy us that Defendants

here were sufficiently similar to the members of a single corporate policymaking body

such that the intracorporate conspiracy doctrine should apply.

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1 plead that Zenk acted with discriminatory animus, we reverse the denial of

2 Zenk’s motion to dismiss the conspiracy claim.  This claim is also dismissed with

3 respect to the Passaic Plaintiffs, as they fail to adequately plead that Defendants

4 acted with the requisite discriminatory animus.

5 VII. Final Thoughts

6 If there is one guiding principle to our nation it is the rule of law.  It

7 protects the unpopular view, it restrains fear‐based responses in times of trouble,

8 and it sanctifies individual liberty regardless of wealth, faith, or color.  The

9 Constitution defines the limits of the Defendants’ authority; detaining

10 individuals as if they were terrorists, in the most restrictive conditions of

11 confinement available, simply because these individuals were, or appeared to be,

12 Arab or Muslim exceeds those limits.  It might well be that national security

13 concerns motivated the Defendants to take action, but that is of little solace to

14 those who felt the brunt of that decision.  The suffering endured by those who

15 were imprisoned merely because they were caught up in the hysteria of the days

16 immediately following 9/11 is not without a remedy.

17 Holding individuals in solitary confinement twenty‐three hours a day with

18 regular strip searches because their perceived faith or race placed them in the

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1 group targeted for recruitment by al Qaeda violated the detainees’ constitutional

2 rights.  To use such a broad and general basis for such severe confinement

3 without any further particularization of a reason to suspect an individual’s

4 connection to terrorist activities requires certain assumptions about the “targeted

5 group” not offered by Defendants nor supported in the record.  It assumes that

6 members of the group were already allied with or would be easily converted to

7 the terrorist cause, until proven otherwise.  Why else would no further

8 particularization of a connection to terrorism be required?  Perceived

9 membership in the “targeted group” was seemingly enough to justify extended

10 confinement in the most restrictive conditions available.

11 Discovery may show that the Defendants—the DOJ Defendants, in

12 particular—are not personally responsible for detaining Plaintiffs in these

13 conditions.  But we simply cannot conclude at this stage that concern for the

14 safety of our nation justified the violation of the constitutional rights on which

15 this nation was built.  The question at this stage of the litigation is whether the

16 MDC Plaintiffs have plausibly pleaded that the Defendants exceeded the bounds

17 of the Constitution in the wake of 9/11.  We believe that they have.

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1 CONCLUSION

2 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm in part and reverse in part the district

3 court’s decision on Defendants Rule 12(b)(6) motions.  More specifically, we

4 conclude that: (1) the MDC Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged a substantive due

5 process claim against the DOJ Defendants, against Hasty with regard to both

6 official and unofficial conditions, and against Sherman with regard to official

7 conditions only, and these Defendants are not entitled to qualified immunity on

8 this claim; (2) the MDC Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged an equal protection

9 claim against the DOJ Defendants, Hasty, and Sherman, and these Defendants

10 are not entitled to qualified immunity on this claim; (3) the free exercise claim is

11 dismissed as to all Defendants; (4) the MDC Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged

12 their Fourth Amendment strip search claim against Hasty and Sherman, and

13 these Defendants are not entitled to qualified immunity on this claim; (5) the

14 MDC Plaintiffs have plausibly alleged the Section 1985(3) conspiracy claim

15 against the DOJ Defendants, Hasty, and Sherman, and these Defendants are not

16 entitled to qualified immunity on this claim; and (6) the MDC Plaintiffs have not

17 plausibly alleged any claims against Zenk.  We affirm the dismissal of the claims

18 brought by the Passaic Plaintiffs.

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1 The Clerk of the Court is directed to enter an order consistent with these

2 conclusions, AFFIRMING in part and REVERSING in part, and REMANDING

3 the matter to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this

4 opinion.

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