W.S.R. v. Sessions
W.S.R. v. Sessions
Opinion of the Court
In two separate cases, minors W.S.R. and C.D.A. challenge the placement decisions of the United States government after the boys (who are not related to one another) were forcibly separated from their fathers shortly after the father-son pairs crossed the United States-Mexico border in May 2018. W.S.R. R. 14, W.S.R. Am. Compl.; C.D.A. R. 10, C.D.A. Am. Compl.
I. Background
A. W.S.R.
W.S.R. turned 16 years old last week and is a citizen of Brazil. W.S.R. R. 18, Exh. A, [redacted] Decl. ¶ 2. His father is [redacted], a former resident of Ipatinga, Minas Gerais, Brazil. Id. ¶ 1. In May 2018, [redacted] and W.S.R. fled Brazil in order to request asylum in the United States. Id. ¶¶ 18-20. For the five months before entering the United States, [redacted] and W.S.R. lived together in Brazil, and fled because they were being targeted with death threats by a drug trafficker who lived in their neighborhood. Id. ¶¶ 5-9. [redacted] and W.S.R. attempted to relocate within Brazil, but still did not feel safe and feared for their lives. Id. ¶¶ 10-11. [redacted] feared seeking police protection because of allegedly rampant corruption in the Brazilian police force. Id. ¶ 12. [redacted] alleges that he and W.S.R. cannot evade the drug trafficking network anywhere in Brazil, and if they return to Brazil, they will be killed. Id. ¶¶ 13-15. [redacted] did not tell W.S.R. every detail about the threats because [redacted] did not want to worry his son. Id. ¶ 16.
On May 23, 2018, [redacted] and W.S.R. allegedly tried to present themselves at a port of entry at the United States border to seek asylum, but were told that the port of entry was closed. [redacted] Decl. ¶¶ 19-20. [redacted] and W.S.R. then entered the United States outside of a port of entry and were stopped by Customs and Border Patrol (CPB) officers. Id. ¶ 20. Two days later, on the night of May 25, a guard told [redacted] he was being transferred to a jail and that W.S.R. would be separated from him for two or three days, or at most five. Id. ¶ 22. W.S.R. cried a lot when he learned of the separation. Id. ¶ 23. Father and son have not seen each other since that day.
B. C.D.A.
The other plaintiff in this case is C.D.A. He is 9 years old and a citizen of Brazil. C.D.A. R. 18, Exh. A, [redacted] Decl. ¶ 2. His father is [redacted], a former resident of Capitão Andrade, Minas Gerais, Brazil. Id. ¶ 1. [redacted] borrowed $8,000 from a loan shark in Brazil in order to get to the United States. Id. ¶ 3. The loan shark belongs to a large group of human traffickers. Id. ¶¶ 3, 6. According to [redacted], the human traffickers are part of a large criminal organization in Brazil, and the organization also runs a drug trafficking operation. Id. ¶ 10. Back when [redacted] was a teenager, he refused to join the operation and the drug traffickers attacked him and burned him with a hot knife. Id. ¶¶ 7-9. He alleges that if he and C.D.A. return to Brazil, they will be forced into indentured servitude or killed. Id. ¶¶ 11-16.
Like W.S.R. and his father, C.D.A. and [redacted] allegedly tried to present themselves at a port of entry on May 23, 2018, but were told that the port was closed. [redacted] Decl. ¶ 17. That same day, they crossed outside of a port of entry and were detained. Id. ¶¶ 18-19. Two days later, a guard told [redacted] that the guard was taking C.D.A. to a facility for children, but that they would be separated for no more than five days. Id. ¶ 21. C.D.A. had never been separated from both his mother and father, and cried when [redacted] said that they would be apart for three days, five days at the most. Id. ¶ 22. The two have not seen each other since.
*1121C. After the Separation
After being separated from their sons, both [redacted] and [redacted] were transferred to detention facilities in New Mexico where they were jailed-without knowing where their sons were being held. [redacted] Decl. ¶ 24; [redacted] Decl. ¶ 26. Both fathers appeared in court on a misdemeanor charge of entering the United States illegally. W.S.R. Mot. TRO at 5; [redacted] Decl. ¶¶ 24-25; C.D.A. Mot. TRO at 5. Both pled guilty. W.S.R. Mot. TRO at 5; see [redacted] Decl. ¶ 25; [redacted] Decl. ¶¶ 24-25. [redacted] was allegedly never allowed to address the court or explain that the port of entry was closed, and was sentenced to time served. [redacted] Decl. ¶¶ 25-26. [redacted] appeared in court in a group of around two dozen others who were also charged with unlawful entry. [redacted] Decl. ¶¶ 24-25. He pled guilty and received time served. See id. ¶ 25.
After pleading guilty and receiving time-served sentences, both [redacted] and [redacted] were returned to Immigration and Custom Enforcement's (ICE) custody and are now detained at separate detention centers in New Mexico. [redacted] Decl. ¶¶ 27-28; W.S.R. Mot. TRO at 3; [redacted] Decl. ¶¶ 28-29. Meanwhile, both W.S.R. and C.D.A. were placed in the custody of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), specifically its Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR). W.S.R. Am. Compl. ¶ 62; W.S.R. Mot. TRO at 3; C.D.A. Am Compl. ¶ 64; C.D.A. Mot. TRO at 3. ORR placed the boys at the Heartland International Children's Rescue Center (Heartland) in Chicago, Illinois, where they remain, separated from their fathers. W.S.R. Am. Compl. ¶ 62; W.S.R. Mot. TRO at 3; C.D.A. Am Compl. ¶ 64; C.D.A. Mot. TRO at 3.
On June 15, 2018-after three weeks of separation-[redacted] was allowed to speak to W.S.R. on the phone for the first time since the separation. [redacted] Decl. ¶ 29. W.S.R. was upset and told [redacted] that he did not think he would ever see him again. Id. ¶ 30. Sometime in around early June 2018, [redacted] spoke to C.D.A. for the first time since being separated. [redacted] ¶ 27. The conversation was a brief one over the telephone. Id. During the week of June 18, [redacted] had a second telephone conversation with C.D.A. Id. ¶ 31. C.D.A. said that he did not want anyone to go through what he was going through. Id. ¶ 32.
On around June 25, 2018, an ICE officer attempted to get [redacted] to sign a voluntary removal form, but the form was written in the English language, which [redacted] does not understand. See [redacted] Decl. ¶ 35; W.S.R. Mot. TRO at 6. [redacted] refused to sign it. See [redacted] Decl. ¶ 35; W.S.R. Mot. TRO at 6. The parties reported during the July 5, 2018 hearing that [redacted] has not yet been interviewed to determine whether he has a credible fear of persecution as part of his asylum claim. [redacted] did undergo a credible-fear interview, and received a negative finding. C.D.A. Mot. TRO at 3. An immigration judge has not yet reviewed that finding. Id.
D. Preliminary Injunction in Ms. L. II
On June 26, 2018, the District Court for the Southern District of California issued a class-wide injunction requiring the government to reunite minor children under the age of five with their parents by July 10 and those five and over by July 26. Ms. L. v. U.S. Immigration & Customs Enf't ,
*1122Ms. L. II ,
II. Analysis
A preliminary injunction is "an extraordinary remedy that may only be awarded upon a clear showing that the plaintiff is entitled to such relief." Winter v. Natural Res. Def. Council ,
A. Reunification
The first claim at issue is Plaintiffs' request to be immediately reunited with their fathers. This is a narrower claim than the request that the reunification be effectuated by simultaneously releasing their fathers. As noted earlier, the class-action order in Ms. L. II already requires that the government reunite Plaintiffs with their fathers by July 26, which is the thirty-day deadline for children age five and over. Practically speaking, the government has stated that it intends to comply with the class-action order, 6/29/18 Order; Gov't Resp. Br. at 2, and does not directly oppose Plaintiffs' request for reunification-it only contests the timeline (and the broader request for simultaneous release of the fathers). Gov't Resp. Br. at 14, 18-19. The government asserts that the entry of additional reunification orders will impede its efforts to comply with Ms. L. II . Id. at 18-19.
Although the government's objection to reunification is limited to timing, a start-to-finish analysis of the reunification claim is necessary for two reasons. First, the relative strengths of the parties' positions bear on the consideration of the preliminary-injunction factors, because ultimately the "court must somehow balance the nature and degree of the plaintiff's injury, the likelihood of prevailing at trial, the possible injury to the defendant if the injunction is granted, and the wild card that is the 'public interest.' " Girl Scouts ,
1. Subject Matter Jurisdiction / Sovereign Immunity
The threshold inquiry in any case is to check whether subject matter jurisdiction applies. On the reunification claim-independent of the request for release of the fathers-jurisdiction is secure because Plaintiffs can rely on habeas jurisdiction,
Independent of habeas jurisdiction, there is federal-question jurisdiction to consider Plaintiffs' claim that the substantive component of the Fifth Amendment's Due Process Clause requires reunification.
*11242. Likelihood of Success
With jurisdiction secure over the reunification claim, the first question in the preliminary-injunction analysis asks whether Plaintiffs have shown that they are likely to succeed on the claim. Plaintiffs allege that their continued separation from their fathers violates their substantive due process right to familial association.
Here, the liberty interest at stake is a child's right to remain in the custody of his parent. That interest has long been recognized as a fundamental right. Prince v. Massachusetts ,
We have little doubt that the Due Process Clause would be offended if a State were to attempt to force the breakup of a natural family, over the objections of the parents and their children, without some showing of unfitness and for the sole reason that to do so was thought to be in the children's best interest.
434 U.S. at 255,
In this case, the initial separation was triggered by the decision to prosecute W.S.R.'s and C.D.A.'s fathers for reentry misdemeanors,
With the fundamental right thus described and recognized, the next step in the analysis asks whether the government has directly and substantially interfered with the right to reunification. There is no doubt: it has. The government forcibly separated W.S.R. and C.D.A. from their respective fathers and is now maintaining the boys in a facility almost 1,000 miles away from the fathers.
The final question is whether the government's action serves a legitimate governmental objective, or if instead it is arbitrary or conscience-shocking.
Here, the fathers of W.S.R. and C.D.A. are no longer in criminal detention. They've served their time. And of course W.S.R. and C.D.A. have not been charged with any crime at all. So Overton has no direct applicability. Without any further explanation by the government on what objective is being served-and served legitimately-by separation, the government's insistence on keeping these boys from their fathers can only be deemed arbitrary and conscience shocking. Plaintiffs are likely to succeed on the reunification claim. Indeed, the irreparable harm inflicted on the boys reinforces why the separation shocks the conscience. That harm, and the inadequacy of any other relief, is discussed next.
3. Inadequate Remedy / Irreparable Injury
The next factors in assessing whether to issue a preliminary injunction are whether Plaintiffs are suffering irreparable harm and have no adequate remedy at law-that is, "the remedy must be seriously deficient as compared to the harm suffered." Foodcomm Int'l v. Barry ,
Common sense would tell anyone that keeping these boys separated from the only family they have in the United States-in a facility where they have limited access to talk to their fathers and where very few people speak their language-is causing irreparable harm, for which no other form of relief, monetary or otherwise, would be adequate. But there is more than common sense. In the record is this plea of hopelessness from W.S.R., when he finally spoke to his father on the phone: "Dad, I'm never going to see you again." [redacted] Decl. ¶ 30. W.S.R. is "crying a lot and desperate to get out of the center where he is being held." Id. ¶ 31. As intense as that harm is, nine-year-old C.D.A. is suffering worse. A clinical psychologist, Dr. Michelle Cutler, interviewed and evaluated C.D.A. on July 2, 2018. C.D.A. R. 29, Exh. B, Clinical Assessment. Dr. Cutler also reviewed the records of Heartland Alliance, including daily monitoring logs, counseling notes, incident *1127reports, and psychiatric records. Id. at 3. Based on this thorough and detailed assessment, Dr. Cutler opines that C.D.A. is suffering "severe anxiety and depression due to this separation." Id. at 4. This deterioration of mental health is showing up in both reported thoughts of self-harm and actual acts of self-harm, as well as harming others. Id. at 3, 4. Those are just examples of C.D.A.'s mental suffering; the Clinical Assessment is riddled with other cries for help that demonstrate the trauma of the separation. Id. at 2-4.
4. Balance of Equities / Public Interest
The final considerations in determining whether to issue a preliminary injunction requiring reunification-and if issued, the deadline for reunification-is the balance of the equities and the public interest. To balance the equities, "the court must compare the potential irreparable harms faced by both parties to the suit-the irreparable harm risked by the moving party in the absence of a preliminary injunction against the irreparable harm risked by the nonmoving party if the preliminary injunction is granted." Girl Scouts ,
The key question, then, is timing: by when must the government accomplish the reunification? The government contends that reunifying Plaintiffs with their fathers on a faster track than the Ms. L. II order will impede its efforts to timely comply with that class-action order. Gov't Resp. Br. at 18-19. Plaintiffs argue that this hardship is self-inflicted. Pl.'s Reply Br. at 18-19. That is true: the government embarked on a zero-tolerance policy, bringing misdemeanor charges and separating thousands of children from their parents, without a plan for reunification after the short time-served sentences. Ms. L. II ,
What makes this a close call, however, is that the Court also must consider the public interest, "which includes the ramifications of granting or denying the preliminary injunction on nonparties to the litigation." Girl Scouts ,
Ultimately, however, the balance of equities favors accelerated reunification for W.S.R. and C.D.A. Yes, all of the children of the Ms. L. II class members are suffering *1128irreparable harm, but the record evidence compiled in this case demonstrates that W.S.R. and C.D.A. are suffering extreme irreparable harm to their mental health. It might be that many other sons and daughters of Ms. L. II class members would be able to compile the same record evidence if they had the lawyers and resources to do so. But the fact of the matter is that W.S.R. and C.D.A. have proven that every day of separation is causing dangerous harm to their mental health. And the entry of this order on July 9, 2018 means that the government should be reunifying most of the 100 or so under-five kids imminently (by July 10) and then moving on to devoting efforts to reunifying the remainder of the children. The government also has not raised any questions about the parental relationship between W.S.R. and [redacted] or C.D.A. and [redacted], nor about either father's fitness to parent. The outcome of the balancing of equities, and consideration of the public interest, is this: absent any government filing alleging parental unfitness or danger posed by the fathers, the government must reunite C.D.A. with his father, [redacted], and must reunite W.S.R. with his father, [redacted], both within 72 hours of the posting of this order on the docket.
B. Release of the Fathers
Moving on from the reunification claim, Plaintiffs make much broader requests, specifically, for an order reuniting the sons with their fathers "somewhere within the jurisdiction of the Northern District of Illinois," and for an order "[r]eleasing Plaintiffs and their fathers from custody pursuant to the Flores Settlement and 8 C.F.R. 1236.3(b)(2)." Pls.' Reply Br. at 19.
1. Judicial Review of Placement Under the Flores Agreement
The threshold issue for Plaintiffs' claim under the Flores Agreement is whether this Court has subject matter jurisdiction to decide it. By itself, the claim under the Flores Agreement does not allege that the boys' custody violates the Constitution or federal law, so habeas jurisdiction does not apply,
The real question is whether the Flores Agreement permits this District Court-or, for that matter, any other District Court aside from the District Court overseeing the consent decree-to decide individual claims under the Agreement. Typically, a consent decree is enforced by the District Court before which the decree was entered. See Local No. 93, Int'l Ass'n of Firefighters, AFL-CIO v. City of Cleveland ,
2. Parental Release
Before addressing Plaintiffs' claim for simultaneous release of their fathers, the government makes the threshold argument that Paragraph 24(B) of the Flores Agreement does not provide for judicial review in this forum of even a child 's claim for release, let alone a parent's. The government offers a reasonable argument, though it is ultimately flawed. Specifically, the government points out that Paragraph 24(B) allows for judicial review when a minor "disagrees with the INS's determination to place that minor in a particular type of facility ...." Flores Agreement ¶ 24(B) (emphasis added). To the government's way of thinking, the determination that is subject to review is only as to the type of facility, not as to whether release to a parent is required. Gov't Resp. Br. at 17-18. Under this interpretation, for example, a child can challenge placement in a State or county juvenile detention facility and instead seek to be transferred to a licensed program-but cannot challenge the refusal to release the minor from INS (now ORR) custody in the first place.
But this reading is too narrow. First, context is crucial in interpreting any contract. One of the exhibits to the Flores Agreement is a detailed set of instructions to immigration officers. Flores Agreement, Exh. 2, Instructions to Service Officers. Paragraph 24(B) is implemented by a specific instruction that treats challenges to a refusal to release in the same way as challenges to a refusal to be placed in a license program:
(j) Notice of right to bond redetermination and judicial review of placement. A minor in deportation proceedings shall be afforded a bond redetermination hearing before an immigration judge in every case, unless the minor indicates on the Notice of Custody Determination form that he or she refuses such a hearing. A juvenile who is not released or placed in a licensed placement shall be provided (1) a written explanation of the right of *1130judicial review as set out in Exhibit 6 of the Flores v. Reno Settlement Agreement, and (2) the list of free legal services providers compiled pursuant to INS regulations (unless previously given to the minor[ ) ].
Instructions to Service Officers, ¶ (j) (emphasis added). The first sentence of Instruction Paragraph (j) addresses Paragraph 24(A)'s grant of a right to a bond redetermination hearing. The next sentence of Instruction Paragraph (j) thus implements the right of judicial review in Paragraph 24(B). The instruction specifically tells immigration officers to provide the judicial review notice for challenges to a refusal to release, and makes no mention that the Central District of California is the sole forum for that challenge. The parties to the Flores Agreement also presumably took practical considerations into account when crafting Paragraph 24(B). As a matter of judicial resources, it would make little sense to require every single individual detention challenge to be brought in the Central District of California. Indeed, because minors seeking release could be located in Districts all around the Nation, the most relevant sources of evidence-the minor and, usually, the pertinent government officials-would be located in those other Districts. Of course, judicial review of requests for class -based relief remains exclusively within the Central District of California's purview. But Paragraph 24(B) does authorize other Districts to consider a child's claim for release under the Flores Agreement.
On the merits, however, the Flores Agreement does not encompass a right to a parent 's release, at least on consideration of the issue at the preliminary-injunction stage. The Ninth Circuit so held in Flores v. Lynch ,
To buttress the parental-release claim, Plaintiffs contend that the Flores Agreement can work in conjunction with a federal regulation,
The cases on which Plaintiffs rely do not support the conclusion that § 1236.3(b)(2) confers authority to District Courts to order a simultaneous release of parents. To be sure, the court in Bunikyte made remarks that might be read to suggest that the court was considering parental release, but in fact the court was merely observing that
This rule does not require simultaneous release and indeed appears to prefer release to an adult relative not in custody over simultaneous release of parent and child....
It therefore appears that nothing in this rule or in the terms of the Flores settlement would prevent release of the children to an adult relative not in ICE custody. This illustrates the fact that the Flores Settlement gives the minor Plaintiffs enforceable rights, but does not create rights in the parents separate from their children's rights .
Bunikyte ,
The other case cited by Plaintiffs, United States v. Dominguez-Portillo ,
Nor do any of the cases cited by Plaintiffs stand for the proposition that the substantive due process to family integrity dictates release of the parents (as distinct from reunification). The governmental interest is expressed in the statutes governing mandatory detention for those seeking asylum at the stages of the process that Plaintiffs' fathers find themselves in. [redacted] (C.D.A.'s father) has received a negative finding after his credible-fear interview, C.D.A. Mot. TRO at 3, and therefore is subject to mandatory detention,
*1133It is worth noting that, practically speaking, the reunification ordered by Ms. L. II will result in the release of many parents with their children. The government recognizes that it does not have enough "family residential centers" to maintain all of the Ms. L. class-action parents and their children in detention, and will end up releasing many of them together. See Gov't Resp. Br. at 19. So it still might be that the fathers of W.S.R. and C.D.A. will be released with their sons.
C. Consolidation of Immigration Proceedings
The other forms of relief that Plaintiffs request are directed at the immigration proceedings that they and their fathers are undergoing. Specifically, Plaintiffs wish to protect their right to seek asylum "by consolidating Plaintiffs' immigration cases with their parents in the Chicago Immigration Court, as well as the ability to participate in the removal process with their parents as witnesses," and if "Plaintiffs and their fathers are not released from custody, requiring DHS and ICE to make Plaintiffs and their fathers available as witnesses for additional proceedings in these cases, as appropriate." Pls.' Reply Br. at 19.
Plaintiffs rely on procedural due process as the basis for the immigration-proceedings relief.
To be sure, those are important interests, but any preliminary injunction is an "extraordinary remedy," Winter ,
*1134D. Removal of Fathers without Plaintiffs
On June 29, 2018, the Court ordered that "Defendants and their officers, agents, servants, employees, attorneys, and all those who are in active concert or participation with them, are preliminarily enjoined from removing from the United States either [redacted] without W.S.R. or [redacted] without C.D.A." 6/29/18 Order at 2. At that point, the government had not articulated a legitimate interest in removing the fathers from the country without their sons.
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons discussed above, the Court grants the following relief:
1. The government must reunite C.D.A. with his father, [redacted], within 72 hours of the posting of this order on the docket.17
2. The government must reunite W.S.R. with his father, [redacted], within 72 hours of the posting of this order on the docket.
3. The government must continue to comply with the order of June 29, 2018. Specifically, Defendants and their officers, agents, servants, employees, attorneys and all those who are in active concert or participation with them are preliminarily enjoined from removing from the United States either [redacted] without W.S.R. or [redacted] without C.D.A.
The other preliminary relief requested by Plaintiffs is denied. The status hearing of July 11, 2018, remains as scheduled.
Citations to the record in
Venue is proper in this District under
In light of the alleged policymaking at the highest levels of the federal agencies, another possible exception to sovereign immunity would have been to seek injunctive relief by naming the federal supervisory officials in their individual, rather than official, capacities. In that situation, a Bivens claim for injunctive relief might be appropriate. See Bunn v. Conley ,
In their reply brief, Plaintiffs also assert that their continued separation violates procedural due process. Pls.' Reply Br. at 10-11. That claim was not specifically argued in Plaintiffs' original motions for a temporary restraining order. In any event, because their claim for reunification is likely to succeed based on the substantive due process right to family integrity, it is not necessary to address procedural due process right now.
See Jack Metzler, Cleaning Up Quotations , 18 Journal of Appellate Practice and Process 143 (2017).
It might very well be that interference with the fundamental right of a parent to maintain the custody and care of a child is subject to strict scrutiny, see Troxel ,
Plaintiffs' counsel represent that the Catholic Charities of Chicago will sponsor the family for housing and support during any immigration proceedings. Pls.' Reply Br. at 19.
Sovereign immunity is not an obstacle to a claim under the Flores Agreement. By entering into the agreement and expressly consenting to suits challenging placement determinations, the government waived sovereign immunity. What's more, a final placement determination also may be challenged under the Administrative Procedure Act's waiver of sovereign immunity.
The government argues that the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008 (TVPRA) supersedes
The text of
Ms. L. II has already ordered that the government "must immediately take all steps necessary to facilitate regular communication between Class Members [parents] and their children who remain in ORR custody ...." Ms. L. II ,
Nor is there any holding, or even reasoning, in Reno v. Flores ,
There is a right to immigration-judge review of the asylum officer's negative finding "as expeditiously as possible, to the maximum extent practicable within 24 hours, but in no case later than 7 days after the date of the determination" of no credible fear.
If the asylum officer or immigration judge determines that [redacted] or [redacted] (during his immigration-judge review) has a credible fear of persecution, then expedited removal proceedings are vacated and they will be referred for removal proceedings before an immigration judge under 8 U.S.C. § 1229a ;
In the immigration-judge decisions submitted by Plaintiffs after the hearing, the judges held that they have authority to conditionally parole both a minor and the parent under
Plaintiffs' original motions for a temporary restraining order do not explicitly state the legal basis for the immigration-proceedings relief, and contain minimal argument in support of it. Perhaps reflecting the absence of detailed argument in the opening motions, the government's response does not address the requested relief. Plaintiffs' reply brief more explicitly states that procedural due process is the premise of the claim. Pls.' Reply Br. at 10-11. If it appeared that relief might be warranted, then the Court would have allowed the government to file a sur-reply. But because Plaintiffs are not likely to succeed on the claim, further briefing is not necessary.
The Court's staff will endeavor to reach at least one counsel of record for both sides by phone immediately after the posting of this Opinion.
For now, this Opinion is being uploaded as a restricted document, which limits its remote access (though the Opinion is still public). But it appears that Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 5.2(c)(2)(B) requires orders and opinions, even in immigration cases, to be accessible remotely. If either party wishes to maintain the document as restricted, then the request should be made at the status hearing (the Court would then give the requesting party some time to file a concise brief on the issue).
Reference
- Full Case Name
- W.S.R. and C.D.A. v. Jefferson B. SESSIONS III, Attorney General of the United States
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published