Sagataw v. Frey

U.S. District Court, District of Minnesota

Sagataw v. Frey

Trial Court Opinion

             UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                            
                DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Cheryl  Sagataw,  DeAnthony  Barnes,     File No. 24-cv-001 (ECT/TNL)     
Roberta  Strong,  and  Travis  Neloms  on                                 
behalf of themselves and a class of similarly-                            
situated individuals,                                                     

     Plaintiffs,                                                     

v.                                       OPINION AND ORDER                

Mayor  Jacob  Frey,  in  his  individual  and                             
official capacity,                                                        

     Defendant.                                                      

Kira Aakre Kelley and Claire Glenn, Climate Defense Project, Minneapolis, MN, for 
Plaintiffs Cheryl Sagataw, DeAnthony Barnes, Roberta Strong, and Travis Neloms.   
Sharda R. Enslin, Kristin R. Sarff, J. Haynes Hansen, and Heather Passe Robertson, 
Minneapolis City Attorney’s Office, Minneapolis, MN, for Defendant Mayor Jacob Frey.   
________________________________________________________________________  
This case concerns a homeless camp the parties refer to as Camp Nenookaasi.  Since 
January 1, 2024, the camp has occupied five different locations in the City of Minneapolis, 
each on City-owned property.  When this case was first filed on January 2, 2024, the camp 
was located on City-owned property between 12th and 13th Streets and 23rd and 24th 
Avenues.                                                                  
Plaintiffs, who alleged they were residents of Camp Nenookaasi at this first location, 
sought a preliminary injunction to prevent Defendant Mayor Jacob Frey from forcibly 
removing the camp’s residents and clearing the camp from this site.  Among other legal 
theories, Plaintiffs alleged that the camp’s anticipated removal would violate their rights 
under the Fourth, Fourteenth, and Eighth Amendments to the United States Constitution.  
Following an expedited briefing process and a hearing, this motion was denied from the 
bench on January 3.  The camp was cleared the next day, January 4.        

In the weeks since, the camp has relocated four times, each time to a different City-
owned parcel.  The first three of these relocations shared basic facts: The Mayor decided 
to clear the camp.  The decision to clear the camp was communicated to the camp’s 
organizers and residents—sometimes with more notice, other times with less or perhaps no 
notice.  The clearing occurred with some level of police presence.  Around the time the 

camp was cleared, its organizers, residents, or perhaps both identified nearby City-owned 
property to which the camp might be relocated, and camp residents then relocated to that 
property.  In relocating, organizers or camp residents cut through perimeter fencing at the 
identified property and removed no-trespassing signs so that the camp could be established 
at the new location.                                                      

The fourth relocation was different because it was not ordered by Mayor Frey or 
prompted by any other City agent’s official action.  In early February, after the Mayor 
ordered the camp cleared from its third site, the camp moved to a fourth site on 28th Street 
between 11th and 12th Avenues.  The camp was at this location until February 29.  That 
day, an uncontrolled fire broke out in the camp.  The fire destroyed everything in the camp, 

including yurts, tents, wood-burning stoves, and propane-burning heaters, among other 
items.    See  Camp  Nenookaasi  (@campnenookaasi),  X  (Feb.  29,  2023,  3:30  p.m.) 
https://twitter.com/campnenookaasi/status/1763315905486885276  (requesting  post-fire 
donations and identifying tents, blankets, cigarettes, water, buddy heaters, firewood, and 
financial donations as “current needs”).  After the fire, the camp relocated to a fifth 
location, a City-owned parcel at 2839 14th Avenue South.                  
This background sets the table for the issue to be decided.  On February 20—after 

filing an Amended Complaint that purports to account for the camp’s location changes and 
that adds a claim under Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act—Plaintiffs filed a 
second motion for a preliminary injunction.  ECF No. 31.  The motion sought an order 
enjoining Mayor Frey from clearing Camp Nenookaasi from its fourth location.  Id. ¶ 1(a).  
An order was issued the next day requiring the Mayor to file its opposition materials by 

March 1 and scheduling a hearing on Plaintiffs’ motion for March 14.      
The issue is whether the intervening fire rendered Plaintiffs’ preliminary injunction 
motion moot.  For legal and practical reasons, the better answer is that it did.  Plaintiffs’ 
motion was specific to the camp’s fourth location.  That location’s address is identified in 
the motion and the proposed order Plaintiffs submitted.  To quote from the motion’s 

primary request:                                                          
     Plaintiffs seek to enjoin Defendant Jacob Frey and his officials, 
     employees, agents, assigns, and all those working in concert    
     with  Defendant  from  .  .  .  [e]victing,  bulldozing,  clearing, 
     sweeping, dismantling, demobilizing, removing infrastructure,   
     or ceasing services to Camp Nenookaasi, the encampment of       
     unhoused individuals located between 11th and 12th Avenues      
     on 28th Street, Minneapolis Minnesota.                          

Id. (emphasis added).  Owing to the fire, neither the camp nor Plaintiffs remain at that site.  
The motion reasonably could be denied as moot on just this basis.         
Plaintiffs argue it would be appropriate to consider their motion as if it concerned 
the camp’s current fifth location, but this is not persuasive.  Indeed, a discussion of several 
issues relevant to this argument shows why the motion should be denied as moot.   

(1) The record includes almost no information concerning the camp’s current, fifth 
location.  Some missing information seems quite fundamental.  For example, though a 
plaintiff only has standing to seek prospective injunctive and declaratory relief when she 
faces an ongoing injury or a “real and immediate” threat of future injury, City of Los 
Angeles v. Lyons, 
461 U.S. 95
, 101–05, 107 n.8 (1983), no record evidence shows whether 

any Plaintiff resides in the camp at this site.  When asked at the hearing, the two lawyers 
who appeared for Plaintiffs offered sincere-but-problematic answers to this question.  
Plaintiffs’ first lawyer represented that, to the best of her knowledge, all four Plaintiffs 
reside at the camp’s current site.  As support for this response, counsel referred to a 
newspaper article concerning the fire at the camp’s fourth location, Louis Krauss & Andy 

Mannix, Large Fire Destroys South Minneapolis Homeless Encampment, Star Tribune, 
Feb.  29,  2024,  https://www.startribune.com/large-fire-erupts-at-south-minneapolis-
homeless-encampment/600347180/.  The article does not refer to any Plaintiff.  It reports 
only that, on the day the fire occurred, “some of the camp residents had already moved” to 
the camp’s current site.  Plaintiffs’ second lawyer represented that Plaintiff Roberta Strong 

remains at the camp and that she believes Plaintiff Travis Neloms remains in the camp, but 
counsel lacked information concerning Plaintiffs Cheryl Sagataw and DeAnthony Barnes.  
Regardless, these facts are not in the record, and counsels’ responses do not eliminate 
uncertainty regarding the issue.  To put it directly, it is difficult to understand—and 
Plaintiffs have not explained—how a Plaintiff who does not reside in the camp today would 
have standing to seek prospective relief.  Without record evidence establishing that a 
Plaintiff resides in the camp’s current location, it would seem irresponsible to consider 

Plaintiffs’ requests for relief with respect to this site.                
(2) The record includes no information regarding Mayor Frey’s specific plans to 
clear the camp from the current site.  Several unknowns in this respect bear directly on 
Plaintiffs’ own theory of the case.  For example, we do not know whether Mayor Frey 
plans to provide notice of any removal or, if so, the content or timing of any notice.  We 

do not know whether, or the extent to which, social services resources may be made 
available on site during any planned removal.  We do not know the extent to which police 
officers may be involved or whether a seizure of Plaintiffs’ property are planned to, or may, 
occur.  We do not know whether, or in what numbers, shelter beds may be available to 
Plaintiffs when any clearing occurs.  We do not know whether available shelter beds might 

be acceptable to Plaintiffs.  We do not know the extent of community harms, if any, Mayor 
Frey believes the camp’s residents are causing to those who live or work in the camp’s 
vicinity.  This is not to suggest whether Plaintiffs’ theory of the case is meritorious.  It is 
to say that, if one accepts Plaintiffs’ legal theories for argument’s sake, several facts that 
seem significant to Plaintiffs’ theories are missing from this record.1  A decision made 

without record evidence regarding these facts would depend on hypotheticals.   

1    Consider just Plaintiffs’ Eighth Amendment theory.  For this theory, Plaintiffs cite 
Martin v. City of Boise, 
920 F.3d 584
 (9th Cir. 2019), and argue that its holding should be 
adopted and applied here.  Martin’s Eighth Amendment holding is this:     
(3) Plaintiffs argue that “Camp Nenookaasi is not a place, it is a community of 
people.”  ECF No. 63 at 1.  From this starting point, Plaintiffs go on to suggest that no 
matter where they may relocate within the City of Minneapolis, any removal Mayor Frey 

might order of Camp Nenookaasi would likely be unlawful.  When asked at the hearing, 
Plaintiffs did not disclaim a theory that Mayor Frey would be enjoined from removing them 
from even City-owned indoor spaces to which the camp might relocate, including the 
Minneapolis Convention Center.  In other words, under this theory, Plaintiffs would seek 
issuance of a City-wide injunction that would travel with Camp Nenookaasi wherever it 

might choose to go and prohibit its removal from any City-owned property it might choose 
to inhabit.  There are several problems with this theory.  For this order’s purposes, it is 
enough to mention two.  First, Camp Nenookaasi is not the Plaintiff in this case.  Four 
individuals are, so any injunctive relief must be responsive and tailored to their individual 
circumstances.  Second, Plaintiffs cite no authority supporting the notion that a government 


     that  “so  long  as  there  is  a  greater  number  of  homeless 
     individuals in [a jurisdiction] than the number of available beds 
     [in  shelters],”  the  jurisdiction  cannot  prosecute  homeless 
     individuals for “involuntarily sitting, lying, and sleeping in  
     public.”  [Jones v. City of Los Angeles, 
444 F.3d 1118, 1138
    
     (9th Cir. 2006), vacated, 
505 F.3d 1006
 (9th Cir. 2007)].  That 
     is,  as  long  as  there  is  no  option  of  sleeping  indoors,  the 
     government cannot criminalize indigent, homeless people for     
     sleeping outdoors, on public property, on the false premise they 
     had a choice in the matter.                                     

920 F.3d at 617
.  Accept Plaintiffs’ assertion that Mayor Frey’s removal and clearing of a 
homeless camp is itself a “prosecution” or “criminalizes” homelessness.  It is nonetheless 
difficult to understand how one might determine whether Plaintiffs had the “option of 
sleeping indoors” without a record showing the availability of those indoor options close 
in time to the camp’s closure.  We don’t have anything like that in the record here. 
might reasonably be enjoined from removing government-property trespassers no matter 
what government property those trespassers might choose to occupy.        
If one considers just the big picture, this order could be faulted for delaying a 

decision on the inevitable.  Everyone seems to understand that Mayor Frey intends to clear 
the  camp  from  its  current  location  at  some  point,  perhaps  soon.    It  is  possible  the 
circumstances of this closure will resemble the circumstances of past closures.  There is 
nonetheless an Article III problem with resolving this case on big-picture possibilities.  To 
enjoin government action based on allegations of future injury, a plaintiff must show for 

Article III’s purposes “that the injury is certainly impending.”  Clapper v. Amnesty Int’l 
USA, 
568 U.S. 398, 409
 (2013) (quoting Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 
504 U.S. 555
, 565 n.2 
(1992)).  Here, it may not be speculative to predict that Mayor Frey will clear the camp.  It 
is speculative, however, to predict precisely how he will order that the camp’s closing be 
accomplished, and (as noted) details concerning the camp’s closure matter a great deal to 

the claims Plaintiffs have chosen to assert.  The other problem is that deciding the case 
based on big-picture possibilities seems another way of describing a decision based on 
policy considerations.  That too would be inconsistent with Article III.   

ORDER

Therefore, based on the foregoing, and on all the files, records, and proceedings 
herein, IT IS ORDERED THAT:                                               

1.   Plaintiffs’ Second Motion for Temporary Restraining Order [ECF No. 31] is 
DENIED as moot.                                                           
2.   Plaintiffs’ Motion to Amend Address in Second Motion for Temporary 
Restraining Order [ECF No. 64] is DENIED.                                 


Dated: March 18, 2024            s/ Eric C. Tostrud                                       
                            Eric C. Tostrud                          
                            United States District Court             

Trial Court Opinion

             UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT                            
                DISTRICT OF MINNESOTA                                


Cheryl  Sagataw,  DeAnthony  Barnes,     File No. 24-cv-001 (ECT/TNL)     
Roberta  Strong,  and  Travis  Neloms  on                                 
behalf of themselves and a class of similarly-                            
situated individuals,                                                     

     Plaintiffs,                                                     

v.                                       OPINION AND ORDER                

Mayor  Jacob  Frey,  in  his  individual  and                             
official capacity,                                                        

     Defendant.                                                      

Kira Aakre Kelley and Claire Glenn, Climate Defense Project, Minneapolis, MN, for 
Plaintiffs Cheryl Sagataw, DeAnthony Barnes, Roberta Strong, and Travis Neloms.   
Sharda R. Enslin, Kristin R. Sarff, J. Haynes Hansen, and Heather Passe Robertson, 
Minneapolis City Attorney’s Office, Minneapolis, MN, for Defendant Mayor Jacob Frey.   
________________________________________________________________________  
This case concerns a homeless camp the parties refer to as Camp Nenookaasi.  Since 
January 1, 2024, the camp has occupied five different locations in the City of Minneapolis, 
each on City-owned property.  When this case was first filed on January 2, 2024, the camp 
was located on City-owned property between 12th and 13th Streets and 23rd and 24th 
Avenues.                                                                  
Plaintiffs, who alleged they were residents of Camp Nenookaasi at this first location, 
sought a preliminary injunction to prevent Defendant Mayor Jacob Frey from forcibly 
removing the camp’s residents and clearing the camp from this site.  Among other legal 
theories, Plaintiffs alleged that the camp’s anticipated removal would violate their rights 
under the Fourth, Fourteenth, and Eighth Amendments to the United States Constitution.  
Following an expedited briefing process and a hearing, this motion was denied from the 
bench on January 3.  The camp was cleared the next day, January 4.        

In the weeks since, the camp has relocated four times, each time to a different City-
owned parcel.  The first three of these relocations shared basic facts: The Mayor decided 
to clear the camp.  The decision to clear the camp was communicated to the camp’s 
organizers and residents—sometimes with more notice, other times with less or perhaps no 
notice.  The clearing occurred with some level of police presence.  Around the time the 

camp was cleared, its organizers, residents, or perhaps both identified nearby City-owned 
property to which the camp might be relocated, and camp residents then relocated to that 
property.  In relocating, organizers or camp residents cut through perimeter fencing at the 
identified property and removed no-trespassing signs so that the camp could be established 
at the new location.                                                      

The fourth relocation was different because it was not ordered by Mayor Frey or 
prompted by any other City agent’s official action.  In early February, after the Mayor 
ordered the camp cleared from its third site, the camp moved to a fourth site on 28th Street 
between 11th and 12th Avenues.  The camp was at this location until February 29.  That 
day, an uncontrolled fire broke out in the camp.  The fire destroyed everything in the camp, 

including yurts, tents, wood-burning stoves, and propane-burning heaters, among other 
items.    See  Camp  Nenookaasi  (@campnenookaasi),  X  (Feb.  29,  2023,  3:30  p.m.) 
https://twitter.com/campnenookaasi/status/1763315905486885276  (requesting  post-fire 
donations and identifying tents, blankets, cigarettes, water, buddy heaters, firewood, and 
financial donations as “current needs”).  After the fire, the camp relocated to a fifth 
location, a City-owned parcel at 2839 14th Avenue South.                  
This background sets the table for the issue to be decided.  On February 20—after 

filing an Amended Complaint that purports to account for the camp’s location changes and 
that adds a claim under Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act—Plaintiffs filed a 
second motion for a preliminary injunction.  ECF No. 31.  The motion sought an order 
enjoining Mayor Frey from clearing Camp Nenookaasi from its fourth location.  Id. ¶ 1(a).  
An order was issued the next day requiring the Mayor to file its opposition materials by 

March 1 and scheduling a hearing on Plaintiffs’ motion for March 14.      
The issue is whether the intervening fire rendered Plaintiffs’ preliminary injunction 
motion moot.  For legal and practical reasons, the better answer is that it did.  Plaintiffs’ 
motion was specific to the camp’s fourth location.  That location’s address is identified in 
the motion and the proposed order Plaintiffs submitted.  To quote from the motion’s 

primary request:                                                          
     Plaintiffs seek to enjoin Defendant Jacob Frey and his officials, 
     employees, agents, assigns, and all those working in concert    
     with  Defendant  from  .  .  .  [e]victing,  bulldozing,  clearing, 
     sweeping, dismantling, demobilizing, removing infrastructure,   
     or ceasing services to Camp Nenookaasi, the encampment of       
     unhoused individuals located between 11th and 12th Avenues      
     on 28th Street, Minneapolis Minnesota.                          

Id. (emphasis added).  Owing to the fire, neither the camp nor Plaintiffs remain at that site.  
The motion reasonably could be denied as moot on just this basis.         
Plaintiffs argue it would be appropriate to consider their motion as if it concerned 
the camp’s current fifth location, but this is not persuasive.  Indeed, a discussion of several 
issues relevant to this argument shows why the motion should be denied as moot.   

(1) The record includes almost no information concerning the camp’s current, fifth 
location.  Some missing information seems quite fundamental.  For example, though a 
plaintiff only has standing to seek prospective injunctive and declaratory relief when she 
faces an ongoing injury or a “real and immediate” threat of future injury, City of Los 
Angeles v. Lyons, 
461 U.S. 95
, 101–05, 107 n.8 (1983), no record evidence shows whether 

any Plaintiff resides in the camp at this site.  When asked at the hearing, the two lawyers 
who appeared for Plaintiffs offered sincere-but-problematic answers to this question.  
Plaintiffs’ first lawyer represented that, to the best of her knowledge, all four Plaintiffs 
reside at the camp’s current site.  As support for this response, counsel referred to a 
newspaper article concerning the fire at the camp’s fourth location, Louis Krauss & Andy 

Mannix, Large Fire Destroys South Minneapolis Homeless Encampment, Star Tribune, 
Feb.  29,  2024,  https://www.startribune.com/large-fire-erupts-at-south-minneapolis-
homeless-encampment/600347180/.  The article does not refer to any Plaintiff.  It reports 
only that, on the day the fire occurred, “some of the camp residents had already moved” to 
the camp’s current site.  Plaintiffs’ second lawyer represented that Plaintiff Roberta Strong 

remains at the camp and that she believes Plaintiff Travis Neloms remains in the camp, but 
counsel lacked information concerning Plaintiffs Cheryl Sagataw and DeAnthony Barnes.  
Regardless, these facts are not in the record, and counsels’ responses do not eliminate 
uncertainty regarding the issue.  To put it directly, it is difficult to understand—and 
Plaintiffs have not explained—how a Plaintiff who does not reside in the camp today would 
have standing to seek prospective relief.  Without record evidence establishing that a 
Plaintiff resides in the camp’s current location, it would seem irresponsible to consider 

Plaintiffs’ requests for relief with respect to this site.                
(2) The record includes no information regarding Mayor Frey’s specific plans to 
clear the camp from the current site.  Several unknowns in this respect bear directly on 
Plaintiffs’ own theory of the case.  For example, we do not know whether Mayor Frey 
plans to provide notice of any removal or, if so, the content or timing of any notice.  We 

do not know whether, or the extent to which, social services resources may be made 
available on site during any planned removal.  We do not know the extent to which police 
officers may be involved or whether a seizure of Plaintiffs’ property are planned to, or may, 
occur.  We do not know whether, or in what numbers, shelter beds may be available to 
Plaintiffs when any clearing occurs.  We do not know whether available shelter beds might 

be acceptable to Plaintiffs.  We do not know the extent of community harms, if any, Mayor 
Frey believes the camp’s residents are causing to those who live or work in the camp’s 
vicinity.  This is not to suggest whether Plaintiffs’ theory of the case is meritorious.  It is 
to say that, if one accepts Plaintiffs’ legal theories for argument’s sake, several facts that 
seem significant to Plaintiffs’ theories are missing from this record.1  A decision made 

without record evidence regarding these facts would depend on hypotheticals.   

1    Consider just Plaintiffs’ Eighth Amendment theory.  For this theory, Plaintiffs cite 
Martin v. City of Boise, 
920 F.3d 584
 (9th Cir. 2019), and argue that its holding should be 
adopted and applied here.  Martin’s Eighth Amendment holding is this:     
(3) Plaintiffs argue that “Camp Nenookaasi is not a place, it is a community of 
people.”  ECF No. 63 at 1.  From this starting point, Plaintiffs go on to suggest that no 
matter where they may relocate within the City of Minneapolis, any removal Mayor Frey 

might order of Camp Nenookaasi would likely be unlawful.  When asked at the hearing, 
Plaintiffs did not disclaim a theory that Mayor Frey would be enjoined from removing them 
from even City-owned indoor spaces to which the camp might relocate, including the 
Minneapolis Convention Center.  In other words, under this theory, Plaintiffs would seek 
issuance of a City-wide injunction that would travel with Camp Nenookaasi wherever it 

might choose to go and prohibit its removal from any City-owned property it might choose 
to inhabit.  There are several problems with this theory.  For this order’s purposes, it is 
enough to mention two.  First, Camp Nenookaasi is not the Plaintiff in this case.  Four 
individuals are, so any injunctive relief must be responsive and tailored to their individual 
circumstances.  Second, Plaintiffs cite no authority supporting the notion that a government 


     that  “so  long  as  there  is  a  greater  number  of  homeless 
     individuals in [a jurisdiction] than the number of available beds 
     [in  shelters],”  the  jurisdiction  cannot  prosecute  homeless 
     individuals for “involuntarily sitting, lying, and sleeping in  
     public.”  [Jones v. City of Los Angeles, 
444 F.3d 1118, 1138
    
     (9th Cir. 2006), vacated, 
505 F.3d 1006
 (9th Cir. 2007)].  That 
     is,  as  long  as  there  is  no  option  of  sleeping  indoors,  the 
     government cannot criminalize indigent, homeless people for     
     sleeping outdoors, on public property, on the false premise they 
     had a choice in the matter.                                     

920 F.3d at 617
.  Accept Plaintiffs’ assertion that Mayor Frey’s removal and clearing of a 
homeless camp is itself a “prosecution” or “criminalizes” homelessness.  It is nonetheless 
difficult to understand how one might determine whether Plaintiffs had the “option of 
sleeping indoors” without a record showing the availability of those indoor options close 
in time to the camp’s closure.  We don’t have anything like that in the record here. 
might reasonably be enjoined from removing government-property trespassers no matter 
what government property those trespassers might choose to occupy.        
If one considers just the big picture, this order could be faulted for delaying a 

decision on the inevitable.  Everyone seems to understand that Mayor Frey intends to clear 
the  camp  from  its  current  location  at  some  point,  perhaps  soon.    It  is  possible  the 
circumstances of this closure will resemble the circumstances of past closures.  There is 
nonetheless an Article III problem with resolving this case on big-picture possibilities.  To 
enjoin government action based on allegations of future injury, a plaintiff must show for 

Article III’s purposes “that the injury is certainly impending.”  Clapper v. Amnesty Int’l 
USA, 
568 U.S. 398, 409
 (2013) (quoting Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 
504 U.S. 555
, 565 n.2 
(1992)).  Here, it may not be speculative to predict that Mayor Frey will clear the camp.  It 
is speculative, however, to predict precisely how he will order that the camp’s closing be 
accomplished, and (as noted) details concerning the camp’s closure matter a great deal to 

the claims Plaintiffs have chosen to assert.  The other problem is that deciding the case 
based on big-picture possibilities seems another way of describing a decision based on 
policy considerations.  That too would be inconsistent with Article III.   

ORDER

Therefore, based on the foregoing, and on all the files, records, and proceedings 
herein, IT IS ORDERED THAT:                                               

1.   Plaintiffs’ Second Motion for Temporary Restraining Order [ECF No. 31] is 
DENIED as moot.                                                           
2.   Plaintiffs’ Motion to Amend Address in Second Motion for Temporary 
Restraining Order [ECF No. 64] is DENIED.                                 


Dated: March 18, 2024            s/ Eric C. Tostrud                                       
                            Eric C. Tostrud                          
                            United States District Court             

Reference

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