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No. 10658689
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Flaxman v. Ferguson
No. 10658689 · Decided August 22, 2025
No. 10658689·Ninth Circuit · 2025·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
August 22, 2025
Citation
No. 10658689
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
ABRAHAM FLAXMAN, No. 24-919
individually and for a proposed class;
D.C. No.
AMY HAGOPIAN, individually and
2:23-cv-01581-
for a proposed class,
KKE
Plaintiffs - Appellants,
OPINION
v.
BOB FERGUSON, in his official
capacity as the Attorney General of
the State of Washington; KATE
REYNOLDS, Kate Reynolds in her
official capacity as Executive
Director of the Executive Ethics
Board of the State of Washington,
Defendants - Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Washington
Kymberly K. Evanson, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted December 4, 2024
San Francisco, California
Filed August 22, 2025
2 FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON
Before: Mark J. Bennett, Daniel A. Bress, and Danielle J.
Forrest, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Bress;
Dissent by Judge Bennett
SUMMARY *
First Amendment/Ripeness
The panel reversed the district court’s judgment
dismissing as unripe a lawsuit brought by two University of
Washington professors challenging the investigatory
policies of the Washington State Executive Ethics Board
after the Board investigated the professors for misusing their
state email addresses.
The Board investigated the professors after they
forwarded to a faculty listserv several emails that allegedly
contained political discussion and fundraising requests. In
conducting the investigations, the Board reviewed several
months’ worth of the professors’ emails. The Board
ultimately did not discipline one professor, but it fined the
other professor. In their lawsuit, the professors, on behalf of
themselves and a putative class of listserv subscribers,
alleged that the Board’s policies and practices chilled the
exercise of their First Amendment rights.
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON 3
The panel held that the district court erred in dismissing
the professors’ lawsuit as unripe under Article III. The
professors’ allegations that the Board’s policies will chill
their speech are ripe under a pre-enforcement challenge
framework because the professors remain affiliated with the
University, they are the moderators of the listserv, the
Board’s policies are alleged to remain in place, and the
Board’s history of enforcement demonstrates a plausible and
reasonable fear of prosecution. To the extent the professors
also advanced a retaliation theory based on past events, their
claim is ripe because the professors have already been
injured under a regime that has penalized them for their
speech to the listserv.
The panel further held that the district court erred by
concluding that the professors’ claims were prudentially
unripe. The professors’ claims are fit for judicial decision
because the issues are primarily legal, involving the Board’s
investigatory policies that have already been applied to the
professors. Moreover, withholding review would impose a
substantial hardship on the professors.
Because the professors’ claims are ripe, the panel
reversed the district court’s dismissal of their complaint and
remanded for further proceedings.
Judge Bennett dissented because in his view the
professors’ complaint failed to plead an injury in fact that
confers standing under either a pre- or post-enforcement
framework. However, because facts on the ground material
to the prudential ripeness analysis changed during the
pendency of this appeal, he would remand to allow the
professors to amend their complaint.
4 FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON
COUNSEL
Joel A. Flaxman (argued) and Kenneth N. Flaxman, Kenneth
N. Flaxman PC, Chicago, Illinois; Jay Gairson, Gairson Law
LLC, Seattle, Washington; for Plaintiffs-Appellants.
Andrew R.W. Hughes (argued), Attorney; Nathan K. Bays,
Assistant Attorney General; Robert W. Ferguson, Attorney
General; Office of the Washington Attorney General,
Seattle, Washington; for Defendants-Appellees.
OPINION
BRESS, Circuit Judge:
The Washington State Executive Ethics Board
investigated two University of Washington professors for
misusing their state email addresses after they forwarded to
a faculty listserv several emails that allegedly contained
political discussion and fundraising requests. In conducting
the investigations, the Ethics Board reviewed several
months’ worth of the professors’ emails. The Board
ultimately did not discipline one professor, but it fined the
other $750. The professors seek to invalidate certain of the
Ethics Board’s investigatory policies as contrary to the First
Amendment. The district court dismissed the suit as unripe.
We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
I
Washington’s Ethics in Public Service statute, Wash.
Rev. Code § 42.52, prohibits state employees, including
University of Washington professors, from using state
resources “for the private benefit or gain of the officer,
FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON 5
employee, or another.” Wash. Rev. Code § 42.52.160(1).
Another section of the statute prohibits the use of public
resources for political campaigns, defined as acts taken “for
the purpose of assisting a campaign for election of a person
to an office or for the promotion of or opposition to a ballot
proposition.” Id. § 42.52.180(1). Washington’s Executive
Ethics Board is charged with enforcing the law as to
institutions of higher education. Id. § 42.52.360(1). It may
issue sanctions for violations, including reprimands and
monetary penalties. Id. § 42.52.360(3)(e).
Abraham Flaxman and Amy Hagopian are professors at
the University of Washington. They are the primary
moderators of the University’s “Faculty Issues and
Concerns” email listserv, to which more than 2,000 other
instructors subscribe. The listserv is designed to provide a
forum for faculty members to share information of general
concern to those in higher education. Before an email can
be forwarded to the full mailing list, it must be approved by
a moderator. Moderators do not screen emails for content or
subject matter, but they do seek to exclude emails containing
personal attacks or extensive back and forth exchanges, to
ensure that recipients’ inboxes are not overwhelmed.
In December 2022, the Ethics Board received an
anonymous complaint alleging that Flaxman used public
resources for political purposes when he forwarded to the
listserv an email about Whole Washington, a campaign to
bring universal healthcare to Washington state. Even though
Flaxman admitted to forwarding the email, the Ethics Board,
as part of its investigation, gained access to all of Flaxman’s
emails for the surrounding three-month period. The Board’s
email review was not limited to emails that Flaxman
forwarded to the listserv; the Board instead reviewed all his
emails over that time span. After notifying Flaxman of the
6 FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON
anonymous complaint and receiving his response, the Ethics
Board eventually concluded there was reasonable cause to
believe that Flaxman had violated the Ethics in Public
Service law and that the penalty “may be more than $500.”
After Flaxman retained counsel, the Board reconsidered its
determination and terminated the matter in Flaxman’s favor.
In June 2023, the Ethics Board received another
anonymous complaint about Flaxman forwarding an email
to the listserv. The email concerned a potential strike by
University of Washington research scientists and
postdoctoral scholars. The email contained a list of ways to
support the striking colleagues, including by donating to
their “hardship fund.” After investigating the matter,
including another review of Flaxman’s email files over the
relevant three-month period, the Ethics Board found that
Flaxman had again violated Washington’s Ethics in Public
Service law, but that the violation was minor and did not
warrant discipline.
The Ethics Board investigated Professor Hagopian based
on similar allegations. In December 2022, the Board
received an anonymous complaint alleging that Hagopian
used public resources for political campaigns after she
forwarded to the listserv an email about a strike of
researchers and graduate students in the University of
California system. The email asked for support with elected
officials and on social media, and it provided a link to donate
to a “strike fund.”
After notifying Hagopian of the complaint, reviewing
her response, and reviewing her email files (over 2,000
emails), the Ethics Board found that Hagopian had
improperly used state resources to solicit donations. The
Board also found that Hagopian had used her state email for
FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON 7
private benefit, in violation of Wash. Rev. Code § 42.52.160.
This determination was based on emails retrieved from
Hagopian’s account, including an electronic boarding pass,
news alerts from the Seattle Times and New York Times,
and promotional emails from companies such as eBay,
Levi’s, and Delta Airlines. While this appeal was pending,
the Ethics Board issued a final decision fining Hagopian
$750. 1
Flaxman and Hagopian filed this lawsuit in October
2023, on behalf of themselves and a putative class of listserv
subscribers. Their operative amended complaint alleged that
the Ethics Board’s policies and practices in enforcing the
Ethics in Public Service law chill listserv subscribers’
exercise of First Amendment rights. The complaint focuses
specifically on the following Board practices: its allowance
of anonymous complaints, its broad searches of professors’
emails during investigations, its treatment of incidental
financial solicitations in emails as violative of state law, and
its levying of allegedly excessive and disproportional
monetary penalties. The complaint seeks to enjoin these
policies, which “have the effect of restricting the content of
statements that may be shared on the ‘Faculty Issues and
Concerns’ mailing list.”
The district court dismissed the complaint under Federal
Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1), concluding that the
1
Although they post-dated the complaint, we may take judicial notice of
the Ethics Board’s final decisions in Hagopian’s case and in the second
Flaxman proceedings because they are matters of public record. Fed. R.
Evid. 201; Mont. Green Party v. Jacobsen, 17 F.4th 919, 927–28 (9th
Cir 2021). These Ethics Board decisions are not in dispute. Indeed, it is
the State that filed both decisions with us on appeal. In any event, our
determination that this case is ripe does not depend on the outcome of
these proceedings.
8 FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON
professors’ claims were unripe under Article III. The court
concluded that the professors did not allege that the Ethics
Board’s policies had chilled their speech. And as to the
email searches, the court reasoned that “Plaintiffs’ emails are
public records because they are public employees,” which
meant that the professors “do not have a First Amendment
privacy interest in them that is violated by disclosure to the
Executive Ethics Board.” The district court further
concluded that the professors’ claims were prudentially
unripe because Ethics Board investigations against both
professors were ongoing.
The professors appealed. We review the district court’s
Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal of plaintiffs’ complaint de novo,
taking the allegations as true and drawing all reasonable
inferences in plaintiffs’ favor. Manzarek v. Saint Paul Fire
& Marine Ins. Co., 519 F.3d 1025, 1030–31 (9th Cir. 2008).
II
The district court erred in dismissing the professors’
lawsuit as unripe.
A
Article III’s ripeness doctrine is designed to “prevent the
courts, through premature adjudication, from entangling
themselves in abstract disagreements.” Thomas v. Union
Carbide Agric. Prods. Co., 473 U.S. 568, 580 (1985)
(quoting Abbott Lab’ys v. Gardner, 387 U.S. 136, 148
(1967)). To protect against judicial engagement in
hypothetical or speculative disputes, “[a] claim is not ripe for
adjudication if it rests upon ‘contingent future events that
may not occur as anticipated, or indeed may not occur at
all.’” Texas v. United States, 523 U.S. 296, 300 (1998)
(quoting Thomas, 473 U.S. at 580–81).
FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON 9
Constitutional ripeness equates with Article III’s injury-
in-fact requirement for standing. See, e.g., Susan B. Anthony
List v. Driehaus, 573 U.S. 149, 157 n.5 (2014); Twitter, Inc.
v. Paxton, 56 F.4th 1170, 1173 (9th Cir. 2022); Wolfson v.
Brammer, 616 F.3d 1045, 1058 (9th Cir. 2010). The well-
worn prerequisites are “an invasion of a legally protected
interest that is (a) concrete and particularized[,] and
(b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.”
Twitter, 56 F.4th at 1173 (alteration in original) (quoting
Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 560 (1992)).
But in the First Amendment context, because of the
nature of the interests at stake, “we apply the principle that
one need not await ‘consummation of threatened injury’
before challenging a statute restricting speech, to guard the
risk that protected conduct will be deterred.” Wolfson, 616
F.3d at 1058 (quoting Ariz. Right to Life PAC v. Bayless, 320
F.3d 1002, 1006 (9th Cir. 2003)). For these sorts of pre-
enforcement challenges, the “inquiry focuses on (1) whether
the plaintiffs have articulated a concrete plan to violate the
law in question, (2) whether the prosecuting authorities have
communicated a specific warning or threat to initiate
proceedings, and (3) the history of past prosecution or
enforcement under the challenged statute.” Twitter, 56 F.4th
at 1174 (quoting Alaska Right to Life Pol. Action Comm. v.
Feldman, 504 F.3d 840, 849 (9th Cir. 2007)); see also Susan
B. Anthony List, 573 U.S. at 158–59. As the Supreme Court
recently reiterated, for a First Amendment pre-enforcement
challenge, the plaintiff need only “show that ‘the threatened
injury is certainly impending, or there is a substantial risk
that the harm will occur.’” Mahmoud v. Taylor, 145 S. Ct.
2332, 2358 (2025) (quoting Susan B. Anthony List, 573 U.S.
at 158).
10 FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON
The professors allege that the Ethics Board policies will
chill their speech, and so they are bringing a pre-enforcement
challenge. Examining the complaint under that framework,
it is clear their claim is ripe. In asserting a “credible threat
of enforcement,” a plaintiff “must allege ‘an intention to
engage in a course of conduct arguably affected with a
constitutional interest,’” the “intended future conduct must
be ‘arguably . . . proscribed by’” the law in question, and
“the threat of future enforcement must be ‘substantial.’”
Seattle Pac. Univ. v. Ferguson, 104 F.4th 50, 59 (9th Cir.
2024) (quoting Susan B. Anthony List, 573 U.S. at 161–62,
164).
The professors easily clear these hurdles. They remain
affiliated with the University. They allege they are the
moderators of the listserv, which requires them to decide
whether or not to send emails that may be deemed to violate
Ethics Board policies. There is no suggestion that plaintiffs
do not intend to continue as moderators or faculty members,
and that is a reasonable inference (and indeed, the only
apparent inference) of the plaintiffs’ complaint. The Ethics
Board’s challenged policies, meanwhile, are alleged to
remain in place. The State “ha[s] not disavowed
enforcement if [the professors] make similar statements in
the future.” Susan B. Anthony List, 573 U.S. at 165. And
the Board’s history of enforcement is more than sufficient to
demonstrate a “plausible and reasonable fear of
prosecution,” Wolfson, 616 F.3d at 1062 (emphasis omitted),
especially when enforcement can result from anonymous
complaints, see Susan B. Anthony List, 573 U.S. at 164 (“The
credibility of th[e] threat is bolstered by the fact that
authority to file a complaint with the Commission is not
limited to a prosecutor or agency.”).
FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON 11
We have said that “[i]n the context of First Amendment
speech, a threat of enforcement may be inherent in the
challenged statute, sufficient to meet the constitutional
component of the ripeness inquiry.” Wolfson, 616 F.3d at
1059. In this case, we do not need to derive a threat of
enforcement from the statute when we know that the Ethics
Board has already enforced the statute, against these
plaintiffs no less, using the very policies that plaintiffs claim
violate the First Amendment. As the Supreme Court has
explained, “past enforcement against the same conduct is
good evidence that the threat of enforcement is not
‘chimerical.’” Susan B. Anthony List, 573 U.S. at 164
(quoting Steffel v. Thompson, 415 U.S. 452, 459 (1974)).
The dispute before us is therefore neither abstract nor
premature.
To the extent the professors are also advancing a
retaliation theory based on past events, rather than solely
bringing a pre-enforcement challenge, their claim is ripe
from that perspective as well. When “the plaintiff challenges
a state action that has been taken against the plaintiff,” we
do not consider the threat of enforcement, but simply
“focus[] directly” on the requirements for Article III
standing. Twitter, 56 F.4th at 1174. Here, the professors
were injured under a regime that has penalized them for their
speech to the listserv, subjecting the professors to
investigations, an allegedly intrusive and excessive review
of their emails, and enforcement proceedings, with the Board
levying a $750 fine on Hagopian. There is nothing abstract,
hypothetical, or premature about events that have already
happened. See Oklevueha Native Am. Church of Haw., Inc.
v. Holder, 676 F.3d 829, 836–37 (9th Cir. 2012) (“We
require a ‘threat of prosecution’ to ensure that the plaintiff
challenging a statute can ‘demonstrate a realistic danger of
12 FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON
sustaining a direct injury as a result of the statute’s operation
or enforcement.’ In this case, that injury has already
occurred, thereby eliminating any concerns that Plaintiffs’
fear of enforcement is purely speculative.” (citation omitted)
(quoting Babbitt v. United Farm Workers Nat’l Union, 442
U.S. 289, 298 (1979))).
The State argues, and the district court agreed, that the
professors’ complaint was unripe because the professors did
not allege that the Ethics Board’s policies chilled their
speech. But insofar as the professors were challenging the
Board’s “‘retaliatory actions’ after the fact for having
engaged in” allegedly protected First Amendment activity,
Twitter, 56 F.4th at 1174 (quoting Houston Cmty. Coll. Sys.
v. Wilson, 595 U.S. 468, 474 (2022)), no authority required
them to more specifically allege present or future chilling to
demonstrate a ripe dispute.
Regardless, the complaint does allege chilling sufficient
to proceed under the pre-enforcement framework. The
complaint alleges, for example, that the Ethics Board
allowing anonymous complaints “encourages and has
resulted in the submission of complaints to intimidate and
silence discussion of specific topics on the ‘Faculty Issues
and Concerns’ mailing list.” The complaint asserts that the
Board’s “overbroad email search[es] chill[] academic
discussions” on the listserv. And it alleges that in applying
a “zero tolerance standard”—by which any mention of an
“incidental request for financial contributions” in a
forwarded email triggers sanctions—the Board has likewise
“chill[ed] the exercise of First Amendment rights” by faculty
members. Nothing further was required for plaintiffs to
plead a ripe First Amendment claim. See Mahmoud, 145 S.
Ct. at 2358 (“[W]hen a deprivation of First Amendment
FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON 13
rights is at stake, a plaintiff need not wait for the damage to
occur before filing suit.”).
To the extent the State’s position is that the professors
had to allege some specific speech they would have made
but for the challenged policies, the State again identifies no
authority that would impose this sort of pleading obligation
as an Article III prerequisite. See id. (rejecting contention
that plaintiffs’ allegations were insufficiently specific to
allow a pre-enforcement challenge and rejecting a “wait and
see” approach). It hardly takes imagination to conclude that
a state Ethics Board that investigates anonymous complaints
about forwarded emails, reviews months’ worth of faculty
emails in the process, and then threatens and imposes
monetary fines and other sanctions based on allegedly
minute references to monetary contributions, creates a
genuine “risk of a chilling effect.” Americans for Prosperity
Foundation v. Bonta, 594 U.S. 595, 618 (2021); see also 303
Creative LLC v. Elenis, 600 U.S. 570, 580–82 (2023). That
is not only a reasonable inference to draw from the
professors’ complaint, but an inevitable one. The entire
thrust of the complaint is that the Ethics Board’s policies
have created First Amendment harm and pose a threat of
imminent future First Amendment harm. There is clearly a
live controversy in this case.
The dissent’s contrary approach, which would
effectively require plaintiffs to allege magic words in their
complaint, fails to draw all reasonable inferences in
plaintiffs’ favor. The dissent claims plaintiffs have not
alleged the Board’s policies will chill their speech
specifically, but why treat the complaint as excluding the
very professors who brought it? The dissent similarly claims
the plaintiffs have not specifically alleged their intended
future conduct, but what else is the point of a complaint that
14 FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON
alleges plaintiffs’ roles in the present tense and repeatedly
alleges that the Board’s policies will chill speech? Not even
the State makes such fine-grained arguments against
plaintiffs’ ability to maintain this suit. Only by reading the
plaintiffs’ complaint in the least charitable light can the
dissent find that professors who were investigated for their
speech lack standing to complain about speech-restricting
rules that continue to govern them.
The State’s reliance on our decision in Twitter v. Paxton
is also misplaced. In that case, Twitter claimed that a Texas
Attorney General civil investigative demand seeking
documents about Twitter’s content moderation practices
chilled the company’s protected content moderation
decisions. 56 F.4th at 1172–73. We held that Twitter’s First
Amendment challenge was not ripe because the civil
investigative demand for documents did not give rise to a
live First Amendment injury. Twitter’s allegations, we held,
were “vague” and “refer[red] only to a general possibility of
retaliation.” Id. at 1175. The notion that the civil
investigative demand would affect Twitter’s content
moderation decisions was “too indefinite” and “highly
speculative.” Id. And the civil investigative demand was
“not self-enforcing,” meaning that Twitter was
“speculat[ing] about injuries that have not and may never
occur.” Id. 1176.
Twitter concerned the tenuous link between a civil
investigative demand for documents and the allegation that
this demand in and of itself would chill speech. This case is
quite different, with plaintiffs already having been subject to
investigation and enforcement actions concerning their
speech, under a regime that directly penalizes speech. In
Twitter, moreover, Twitter had yet to “face[] any penalties
for its refusal to comply with” the request for documents,
FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON 15
and the Texas Attorney General “ha[d] not alleged that the
law has been broken.” Id. at 1176–77. That is again not the
case here, where the Ethics Board has found that both
plaintiff professors violated Washington law, to the point
that one was ordered to pay monetary penalties. Twitter does
not govern here.
Finally, the district court found that the professors’
lawsuit was constitutionally unripe because “as to the email
searches, Plaintiffs’ emails are public records because they
are public employees.” In the district court’s view, this
meant that the professors “do not have a First Amendment
privacy interest in [the emails] that is violated by disclosure
to the Executive Ethics Board.” The professors’ claims are
not limited to the email searches, so this reasoning was
insufficient to support the conclusion that the entire case was
unripe.
But this reasoning was also incorrect, and the dissent is
therefore incorrect to endorse it. Although the district court
treated the professors’ status as public employees as relevant
to whether they had alleged an injury in fact, the professors
contend that the First Amendment overrides any state law
that would authorize the Ethics Board to search the
professors’ email accounts in the manner that it did.
Whether or not this is correct is a merits question, not a
question of ripeness. We express no views on the merits of
the professors’ First Amendment challenge. But the fact that
they are public employees only tees up the First Amendment
issue; it does not demonstrate that the professors’ lawsuit is
premature or speculative under Article III.
B
The district court also concluded that the professors’
claims were prudentially unripe. Unlike Article III ripeness,
16 FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON
“[p]rudential considerations of ripeness are discretionary.”
Planned Parenthood Great Nw., Haw., Alaska, Ind., Ky. v.
Labrador, 122 F.4th 825, 840 (9th Cir. 2024) (alteration in
original) (quoting Thomas v. Anchorage Equal Rts.
Comm’n, 220 F.3d 1134, 1142 (9th Cir. 2000)). The
Supreme Court has observed that prudential ripeness thus
may be “in some tension with . . . the principle that ‘a federal
court’s obligation to hear and decide’ cases within its
jurisdiction ‘is virtually unflagging.’” Susan B. Anthony
List, 573 U.S. at 167 (quoting Lexmark Int’l, Inc. v. Static
Control Components, Inc., 572 U.S. 118, 126 (2014)). But
setting aside these larger questions about the “continuing
vitality” of the prudential ripeness doctrine, id., we hold that
under current doctrine, the district court erred in finding the
professors’ claims prudentially unripe.
Prudential ripeness turns on two considerations: (1) “the
fitness of the issues for judicial decision,” and (2) “the
hardship to the parties of withholding court consideration.”
Ass’n of Irritated Residents v. U.S. Env’t Prot. Agency, 10
F.4th 937, 944 (9th Cir. 2021) (quoting Abbott Lab’ys, 387
U.S. at 149). As to the former, “pure legal questions that
require little factual development are more likely to be ripe.”
Planned Parenthood Great Nw., 122 F.4th at 840 (quoting
San Diego Cnty. Gun Rts. Comm. v. Reno, 98 F.3d 1121,
1132 (9th Cir. 1996)). In this context, “[r]elevant
considerations include ‘whether the administrative action is
a definitive statement of an agency’s position; whether the
action has a direct and immediate effect on the complaining
parties; whether the action has the status of law; and whether
the action requires immediate compliance with its
terms.” Skyline Wesleyan Church v. Cal. Dep’t of Managed
Health Care, 968 F.3d 738, 752 (9th Cir. 2020) (quoting
Stormans, Inc. v. Selecky, 586 F.3d 1109, 1126 (9th Cir.
FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON 17
2009)). These factors point overwhelmingly in favor of
ripeness, as the issues are primarily legal, involving specific
Ethics Board investigatory policies that have already been
applied to these plaintiffs. See Oklevueha Native Am.
Church of Haw., 676 F.3d at 838 (holding that case was
prudentially ripe because “[i]n contrast to cases in which the
courts are left to hypothesize about how the law might be
applied, Plaintiffs’ claims arise from an enforcement action
that has already occurred”).
Because the issues are fit for judicial decision, we need
not reach the hardship consideration to conclude that this
case is prudentially ripe. See id. Even so, we conclude that
withholding judicial review would impose a substantial
hardship on the professors, who have been investigated and
punished for their allegedly protected speech, and who are
subject to an Ethics Board regime that will continue to do so
going forward, including through substantial reviews of the
professors’ email files. That is sufficient to establish
hardship for purposes of prudential ripeness. See, e.g.,
Planned Parenthood Great Nw., 122 F.4th at 840; Tingley v.
Ferguson, 47 F.4th 1055, 1070–71 (9th Cir. 2022).
In concluding that the professors’ claims were
prudentially unripe, the district court seemingly adopted the
State’s theory that the inquiry turned on whether the Ethics
Board was still investigating Flaxman and Hagopian. After
the district court issued its decision, however, the Ethics
Board concluded its proceedings as to both professors. The
district court’s ground for decision thus no longer stands, as
the State appears to agree.
Regardless, the district court’s rationale was also
incorrect as of the time of decision because the professors’
claims did not depend on the outcome of the Ethics Board
18 FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON
proceedings. Irrespective of how those proceedings ended,
the professors had already endured allegedly
unconstitutional Ethics Board investigations and faced a
genuine risk of future investigation and punishment, which
they asserted violated the First Amendment. The professors’
claims were thus prudentially ripe for the reasons we have
given. That completed Ethics Board proceedings might have
exacerbated their injuries even further did not make their
claims unripe as of the time the district court ruled. And
whatever questions of abstention might have existed at that
time—an issue the district court did not reach—the State
conceded at oral argument that there is no basis for
abstaining now given that the Ethics Board proceedings
against Flaxman and Hagopian have concluded.
Because the professors’ claims are ripe, we reverse the
district court’s dismissal of their complaint and remand for
further proceedings.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON 19
BENNETT, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
Plaintiffs Abraham Flaxman and Amy Hagopian bring a
putative class action against the Attorney General of
Washington and Executive Director of the Washington State
Executive Ethics Board (“EEB” or “Board”) (collectively,
“the State”), alleging that the Board’s enforcement of
Washington’s Ethics in Public Service Act is unlawful.
Because I conclude that Plaintiffs’ operative complaint fails
to plead an injury that confers standing, I respectfully
dissent.
I
“Questions of standing and ripeness may be raised and
considered . . . sua sponte.” Stormans, Inc. v. Selecky, 586
F.3d 1109, 1119 (9th Cir. 2009). The burden of establishing
standing falls on the party invoking federal jurisdiction, and
the burden of establishing ripeness falls on plaintiffs.
Meland v. Weber, 2 F.4th 838, 843, 849 (9th Cir. 2021). In
reviewing a district court’s dismissal, including for lack of
standing or ripeness under Rule 12(b)(1), “all factual
allegations in [a plaintiff’s] complaint are taken as true and
all reasonable inferences are drawn in his favor.” 1 Pride v.
Correa, 719 F.3d 1130, 1133 (9th Cir. 2013). “While we are
mindful of the generous pleading standards that apply to
1
I construe the State’s attack on subject-matter jurisdiction to be facial,
not factual. See Safe Air For Everyone v. Meyer, 373 F.3d 1035, 1039
(9th Cir. 2004). As the district court noted, the State’s “briefing does not
challenge Plaintiffs’ allegations and instead assumes that they are true.”
Thus, “[w]hether subject matter jurisdiction exists therefore does not
depend on resolution of a factual dispute, but rather on the allegations in
[Plaintiffs’] complaint.” Wolfe v. Strankman, 392 F.3d 358, 362 (9th Cir.
2004), overruled in part on other grounds by, Munoz v. Superior Ct., 91
F.4th 977 (9th Cir. 2024).
20 FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON
civil rights plaintiffs, ‘a liberal interpretation of a . . . civil
rights complaint may not supply essential elements of the
claim that were not initially pled’”—including “the essential
elements of Article III standing.” Chapman v. Pier 1 Imps.
(U.S.) Inc., 631 F.3d 939, 954 (9th Cir. 2011) (en banc)
(omission in original) (quoting Pena v. Gardner, 976 F.2d
469, 471 (9th Cir. 1992) (per curiam)).
Ripeness has two components: constitutional ripeness
and prudential ripeness. Thomas v. Anchorage Equal Rts.
Comm’n, 220 F.3d 1134, 1138 (9th Cir. 2000) (en banc). In
many cases, constitutional ripeness “coincides squarely”
with the injury-in-fact prong of the Article III standing
inquiry, although “[s]orting out where standing ends and
ripeness begins is not an easy task.” Id. “The existence of
standing turns on the facts as they existed at the time the
plaintiff filed the complaint.” Skaff v. Meridien N. Am.
Beverly Hills, LLC, 506 F.3d 832, 838 (9th Cir. 2007) (per
curiam) (citing Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 504 U.S. 555, 569
n.4 (1992)). The effect of any subsequent events is
addressed by the doctrines of mootness and ripeness. See
Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Env’t Servs. (TOC),
Inc., 528 U.S. 167, 189–91 (2000); see also Thomas, 220
F.3d at 1138 (“[R]ipeness can be characterized as standing
on a timeline.”). “Whether framed as an issue of standing or
ripeness, an injury must involve ‘an invasion of a legally
protected interest that is (a) concrete and particularized[,]
and (b) actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.’”
Twitter, Inc. v. Paxton, 56 F.4th 1170, 1173 (9th Cir. 2022)
(alteration in original) (quoting Lujan, 504 U.S. at 560).
In the First Amendment context, plaintiffs can allege
injuries based on the state’s “‘retaliatory actions’ after the
fact for having engaged in protected speech,” id. at 1174
(quoting Hous. Cmty. Coll. Sys. v. Wilson, 595 U.S. 468, 474
FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON 21
(2022)), or “[p]re-enforcement standing injuries,” Seattle
Pac. Univ. v. Ferguson, 104 F.4th 50, 59 (9th Cir. 2024).
The former is a “retrospective theory requir[ing] us to
disregard any threat of future enforcement,” id. at 57, while
the latter is “predicated on the anticipated enforcement of the
challenged statute in the future and the resulting chilling
effect in the present,” id. at 59. “Pre-enforcement challenges
to speech regulations and retaliation claims . . . carry
different requirements for standing.” Twitter, 56 F.4th at
1174. But in either case, “[m]ere ‘[a]llegations of a
subjective “chill” are not an adequate substitute for a claim
of specific present objective harm or a threat of specific
future harm.’” Lopez v. Candaele, 630 F.3d 775, 787 (9th
Cir. 2010) (second alteration in original) (quoting Laird v.
Tatum, 408 U.S. 1, 13–14 (1972)).
Although the complaint does not list any causes of
action, it invokes legal standards that apply to First
Amendment retaliation claims by state employees and to
pre-enforcement challenges. Under both frameworks,
Plaintiffs’ allegations do not suffice to plead an injury in
fact. Even if subsequent events have altered the
constitutional ripeness analysis, I believe that the complaint
fails to establish Plaintiffs’ Article III standing. 2
2
To evaluate standing, we may consider “all material allegations of the
complaint and any other particularized allegations of fact, in affidavits
or in amendments to the complaint.” Table Bluff Rsrv. v. Philip Morris,
Inc., 256 F.3d 879, 882 (9th Cir. 2001). In concluding that Plaintiffs
have alleged an injury in fact, the majority relies on the Board’s final
orders in the second of two proceedings against Flaxman and the
proceeding against Hagopian—namely, that “the Ethics Board has found
that both plaintiff professors violated Washington law, to the point that
one was ordered to pay monetary penalties.” Maj. at 15; see also Maj.
22 FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON
A
Plaintiffs’ allegations about harm from the Board’s past
and ongoing enforcement fall short of pleading an injury in
fact. The retaliatory framework could be applied to these
retrospective allegations by Plaintiffs: the Board’s email
searches chilled academic freedom under the First
Amendment (and infringed unspecified privacy rights), and
the Board’s threats of penalties greater than $500 chilled
speech (and violated the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition
on “excessive fines”).
Plaintiffs’ allegations of chilling fail to establish an
injury in fact. The majority contends that “no authority
required [Plaintiffs] to more specifically allege present or
future chilling to demonstrate a [constitutionally] ripe
dispute” under a retaliation theory. Maj. at 12. But Twitter,
Inc. v. Paxton, 56 F.4th 1170 (9th Cir. 2022), to which the
majority cites in this discussion, states that “the injury-in-
fact element is commonly satisfied by a sufficient showing
of self-censorship”—or at the pleading stage, sufficient
allegations of self-censorship—“which occurs when a
claimant is chilled from exercising his right to free
at 4, 11, 13. But both proceedings remained pending when Plaintiffs
filed the First Amended Complaint, which is the operative complaint.
(The first proceeding against Flaxman had terminated in his favor,
without a finding by the Board that he violated Washington law.) While
these subsequent events may be judicially noticed and inform the
constitutional ripeness analysis, the standing analysis is limited to the
operative complaint, as Plaintiffs did not provide the district court with
“affidavits[ containing] further particularized allegations of fact deemed
supportive of [their] standing.” Warth v. Seldin, 422 U.S. 490, 501
(1975); see also Maya v. Centex Corp., 658 F.3d 1060, 1067 (9th Cir.
2011).
FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON 23
expression.” 3 Id. at 1174 (emphasis added) (quoting Edgar
v. Haines, 2 F.4th 298, 310 (4th Cir. 2021), cert. denied, 142
S. Ct. 2737 (2022)). Although we “appl[y] the requirements
of ripeness and standing less stringently in the context of
First Amendment claims,” id. at 1173–74 (alteration in
original) (quoting Wolfson v. Brammer, 616 F.3d 1045, 1058
(9th Cir. 2010)), “vague” allegations about a “general
possibility of retaliation”—that make no “claim about the
chilling effect of the specific investigation at hand”—fail to
allege chilling as an injury in fact, id. at 1175.
In this case, the excerpts below from the complaint are
Plaintiffs’ only allegations about First Amendment injuries
from the Board’s past and ongoing investigations:
• “Plaintiffs, like other faculty members,
use email to develop and share their
thoughts with one another. The
confidentiality of such discussions is vital
to scholarship and fostering an
atmosphere for learning. The EEB’s
boundless examination of faculty email
accounts interferes with the right to
academic freedom protected by the First
Amendment.”
• “This overbroad email search chills
academic discussions on the ‘Faculty
Issues and Concerns’ mailing list and
thereby deprives plaintiffs and other
3
The majority’s distinguishing of Twitter v. Paxton on its facts, Maj. at
14–15, does not change that Plaintiffs have failed to translate those
factual differences into allegations establishing an injury in fact.
24 FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON
subscribers of the mailing list of First
Amendment rights.”
• “Setting penalties to chill protected
speech . . . . The EEB’s practice in
setting penalties contravenes the
‘excessive fines’ clause of the Eighth
Amendment and chills academic
discussions on the ‘Faculty Issues and
Concerns’ mailing list. The EEB has
applied these practices to plaintiffs . . . .”
• “Does the practice of the EEB to
rummage through email to hunt for
potential violations of [Wash. Rev. Code
ch.] 42.52 encroach on academic freedom
in violation of the First Amendment?”
• “Does the practice of the EEB to impose
significant monetary penalties for the use
of state resources for private benefit
deprive subscribers to the ‘Faculty Issues
and Concerns’ mailing list of First
Amendment rights when any potential
use of state resources is financially
inconsequential?”
• “Does the practice of the EEB to impose
significant monetary penalties for
forwarding an email to the ‘Faculty
Issues and Concerns’ mailing list when
the forwarded email contains an
inconsequential solicitation for
contributions deprive plaintiffs of First
Amendment rights?”
FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON 25
• “Does the setting by the EEB of penalties
that far exceed any loss and are intended
to punish chill the exercise of First
Amendment rights?”
Even taking these allegations as true and drawing all
reasonable inferences in Plaintiffs’ favor, I conclude these
facts fall short of establishing concrete and particularized
harm to Flaxman and Hagopian. Many allegations are made
solely in reference to “unidentified members of the class to
which [Plaintiffs] belong” (i.e., all mailing list subscribers),
which cannot confer standing on Flaxman or Hagopian.
Spokeo, Inc. v. Robins, 578 U.S. 330, 338 n.6 (2016) (“That
a suit may be a class action . . . adds nothing to the question
of standing, for even named plaintiffs who represent a class
‘must allege and show that they personally have been
injured, not that injury has been suffered by other,
unidentified members of the class to which they belong.’”
(omission in original) (quoting Simon v. E. Ky. Welfare Rts.
Org., 426 U.S. 26, 40 n.20 (1976))). In fact, Plaintiffs never
allege that their own speech or participation in “academic
discussion” was chilled—let alone how their speech was
chilled by the Board’s email searches or proposed fines. At
most, Plaintiffs make vague allegations about a general
chilling effect, which does not suffice to confer standing.
To the extent that Plaintiffs claim that the Board’s
allegedly overbroad searches of their emails infringed their
“right to privacy in th[ose] communications,” any such
intrusion is not a legally cognizable injury. Plaintiffs fail to
identify a “legal wellspring” for any privacy interest in their
state-provided email accounts that was violated by
disclosure to the Board, whether under the United States
Constitution or the Family Educational Rights and Privacy
26 FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON
Act (FERPA) 4 or another law. Clark v. City of Seattle, 899
F.3d 802, 810 (9th Cir. 2018). As the district court noted,
FERPA’s nondisclosure provisions protect the records of
students, not faculty, and, in any case, provide no private
right of action to remedy violations. Gonzaga Univ. v. Doe,
536 U.S. 273, 278–79, 290 (2002). And as the district court
also noted, the emails of public employees are public records
under the Washington Public Records Act. 5 Wash. Rev.
Code §§ 42.56.010(3), 42.56.070; see also Wash. Admin.
Code § 292-110-010(4) (providing that there is “[n]o
expectation of privacy” in “[e]lectronic records,” including
in state-provided email accounts, because “[s]uch records
may be subject to disclosure under the Public Records Act,
or may be disclosed for audit or legitimate state operational
or management purposes”). “Where, as here, there is . . . a
lack of any predicate legal violation, the injury-in-fact
requirement is not satisfied.” Clark, 899 F.3d at 810
(holding alleged disclosure of plaintiffs’ personal
4
The complaint alleges that because “Plaintiffs’ email, as well as email
of other faculty members, includes messages from students about matters
protected from disclosure by FERPA,” the Board’s “unfettered
examination of faculty email thus interferes with privacy rights
established by FERPA.” In opposing dismissal below, however,
Plaintiffs stated that they were “not bringing an action to enforce
FERPA” but “rel[ied] on the EEB’s violation of privacy rights created
by FERPA to demonstrate the importance of their rights trampled on by
the EEB.”
5
Plaintiffs contend that their emails are not public records under the
Public Records Act because the statute would not permit a request for all
of an individual’s emails and because the statute contains certain
exemptions from public disclosure. But the possibility that the Board-
reviewed emails could not be captured in a single Public Records Act
request or that some would fall under the statutory exemptions does not
change that Plaintiffs’ emails are subject to public disclosure under the
Public Records Act.
FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON 27
information in violation of unspecified privacy rights was
not an injury in fact when plaintiffs were legally required to
publicly disclose “much of the same information”). Thus,
Plaintiffs fail to allege a legally protected privacy interest in
their emails or any injury to such an interest.
As to Plaintiffs’ Eighth Amendment claim, the
complaint does not allege that the Board had levied any fine
against Flaxman or Hagopian. Plaintiffs therefore have not
pled an injury that confers standing for this claim.
B
Plaintiffs also fail to plead a pre-enforcement injury in
fact. I agree with the majority that Plaintiffs’ First
Amendment challenges to the Board’s policies—allowing
anonymous complaints, searching faculty emails, policing of
incidental fundraising requests, and setting penalties greater
than $500—are better viewed through a pre-enforcement
lens. Maj. at 10.
A pre-enforcement challenge is justiciable under Article
III if there are “circumstances that render the threatened
enforcement sufficiently imminent.” Susan B. Anthony List
v. Driehaus, 573 U.S. 149, 159 (2014). The Supreme Court
has outlined “three benchmarks to determine whether there
is ‘a credible threat of enforcement’”:
(1) a plaintiff must allege “an intention to
engage in a course of conduct arguably
affected with a constitutional interest,” (2) a
plaintiff’s intended future conduct must be
“arguably . . . proscribed by [the law]” it
28 FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON
wishes to challenge, and (3) the threat of
future enforcement must be “substantial.”
Seattle Pac. Univ., 104 F.4th at 59 (omission in original)
(quoting Susan B. Anthony List, 573 U.S. at 161–62, 164).
Although pleading a threat of enforcement sufficient for an
Article III injury usually “requires the ‘when, to whom,
where, or under what circumstances’ the plaintiff plans to
violate the law,” when “a plaintiff has previously engaged in
conduct that would violate the challenged law, we have
relaxed the requisite level of detail.” Id. (quoting Unified
Data Servs., LLC v. FTC, 39 F.4th 1200, 1211 (9th Cir.
2022)). Even assuming this relaxed standard applies, I
believe Plaintiffs’ allegations fall short.
First, Plaintiffs’ allegations of their “intention to engage
in a course of conduct arguably affected with a constitutional
interest” are lacking. Susan B. Anthony List, 573 U.S. at 161
(quoting Babbitt v. United Farm Workers Nat’l Union, 442
U.S. 289, 298 (1979)). Plaintiffs seek to compare their case
to Seattle Pacific University v. Ferguson, 104 F.4th 50 (9th
Cir. 2024), in which we held that a private Christian
university had sufficiently alleged an injury in fact in its pre-
enforcement First Amendment challenge to an employment
antidiscrimination law. Id. at 55, 59. Given that the
university’s employment decisions were “plainly affected
with First Amendment interests,” “[t]he real question [wa]s
whether [the university] ha[d] sufficient intention to act.” Id.
at 59. We determined that allegations that the university’s
board had “voted to retain the existing employee conduct
policy” and that the university would lose its religious
affiliation if it acted otherwise “evidenced a sufficient
intention to continue” its course of conduct. Id. at 59–60.
Plaintiffs’ attempted analogy highlights the deficiency of
FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON 29
their complaint. Sending messages to a mailing list is
“plainly affected with First Amendment interests,” so
similarly “[t]he real question” here is whether Plaintiffs have
pled a sufficient intention to act. Id. at 59. The complaint
alleges only that “Plaintiffs serve as the two primary
volunteer moderators of the mailing list” who “seek to
maintain . . . an active discussion of higher education issues
and faculty rights.” Contrary to the majority’s
characterization, Maj. at 10, the complaint lacks any facts
about Plaintiffs’ continued intentions to serve as moderators
of the list or even to send emails to the list. 6
Even if Plaintiffs could meet their burden on the first
prong, the complaint has no allegations relevant to the
second prong—that Plaintiffs’ “intended future conduct is
‘arguably . . . proscribed by [the policies]’ they wish to
challenge.” Susan B. Anthony List, 573 U.S. at 162
(omission in original) (quoting Babbitt, 442 U.S. at 298).
“The concept of ‘intention’ is more counterfactual than
practical”: an “intention to engage in the proscribed conduct,
were it not proscribed”—i.e., self-censorship—works just as
well as a “plan to break the law.” Peace Ranch, LLC v.
Bonta, 93 F.4th 482, 488 (9th Cir. 2024) (citing Bland v.
Fessler, 88 F.3d 729, 737 (9th Cir. 1996)). But to assert self-
censorship, a plaintiff still must “specifically plead[] [his]
intent and allege[] corroborating past practice.” Id. Again,
the complaint does not allege any facts about Plaintiffs’
continued intentions to email the list, let alone their
6
The majority points out that the State does not challenge Plaintiffs’ pre-
enforcement standing in this way, Maj. at 14, but the State’s position is
that this case is not a pre-enforcement challenge in the first place. In any
event, we have “an independent obligation to assure that standing exists”
because it is an Article III jurisdictional requirement. Summers v. Earth
Island Inst., 555 U.S. 488, 499 (2009).
30 FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON
intentions to send—or to stop sending—messages
containing fundraising requests or anything else that might
subject them to the challenged Board policies. Without
allegations supporting the first two prongs, Plaintiffs
necessarily fail to allege a sufficient threat of future
enforcement.
As the majority notes, the Supreme Court has explained
that “past enforcement against the same conduct is good
evidence that the threat of enforcement is not ‘chimerical.’”
Maj. at 11 (quoting Susan B. Anthony List, 573 U.S. at 164).
But alleging past enforcement does not relieve pre-
enforcement plaintiffs of their burden to allege facts about
their future conduct. Even in First Amendment pre-
enforcement challenges featuring “a history of past
enforcement,” the Supreme Court and our court have looked
to the pleadings for “specific statements [plaintiffs] intend to
make in [the] future” or specific actions plaintiffs intend to
take in the future. Susan B. Anthony List, 573 U.S. at 161,
164 (holding two petitioners alleged a “credible” threat when
one “was the subject of a complaint in a recent election
cycle” and “[b]oth . . . pleaded specific statements they
intend to make in future election cycles”); see, e.g., Steffel v.
Thompson, 415 U.S. 452, 456, 459 (1974) (holding
petitioner alleged a credible threat when he “alleged in his
complaint” that he had been warned by police to stop
handbilling at a shopping center at the risk of prosecution
and that “he desired to return to the shopping center to
distribute handbills”); Tingley v. Ferguson, 47 F.4th 1055,
1067 (9th Cir. 2022) (holding plaintiff alleged a “genuine”
threat when his “complaint . . . specifically alleged [how his]
past work with clients and expectations for future work with
clients . . . show a plan or desire to violate [the] law”);
Oklevueha Native Am. Church of Haw., Inc. v. Holder, 676
FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON 31
F.3d 829, 836 (9th Cir. 2012) (holding plaintiffs alleged a
“genuine threat” when they alleged that “they . . . used
marijuana in violation of the [challenged law] countless
times, and plan to continue to do so . . . by purchasing and
consuming marijuana”). By contrast, Plaintiffs’ complaint
contains no allegations about their future conduct. There is
nothing to read in a “charitable light.” Maj. at 14.
II
The district court dismissed without prejudice for lack of
subject matter jurisdiction based on the constitutional and
prudential unripeness of Plaintiffs’ claims. The district court
did not dismiss with leave to amend, although Plaintiffs do
not appear to have asked for another opportunity to amend
their complaint, whether in their opposition to the motion to
dismiss or in their opening brief on appeal. Because I agree
with the district court that the complaint fails to allege a
constitutionally sufficient injury, I would affirm in part on
that basis, without reaching prudential unripeness.
Moreover, facts on the ground material to the prudential
ripeness analysis have changed during the pendency of this
appeal. Thus, I would also reverse in part and remand to
allow Plaintiffs to amend their complaint.
“[E]ven if Plaintiffs did not adequately raise the district
court’s failure to grant leave to amend in their opening brief,
our waiver rule is simply a ‘rule of practice,’ not a
jurisdictional rule.” Unified Data Servs., 39 F.4th at 1213
(M. Smith, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part)
(quoting Krause v. Sacramento Inn, 479 F.2d 988, 989 (9th
Cir. 1973)). “[W]e can exercise our discretion to overlook it
when a ‘detailed discussion’ of an argument ‘is unnecessary’
and the appellee is not prejudiced.” Id. (quoting Williams v.
Gerber Prods. Co., 552 F.3d 934, 940 n.5 (9th Cir. 2008)).
32 FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON
When Plaintiffs filed the operative complaint, the
Board’s proceeding against Hagopian and second
proceeding against Flaxman remained pending. The Board
dismissed the first proceeding against Flaxman on October
13, 2023, three days before Plaintiffs filed the action on
October 16, 2023. The Board dismissed the second
proceeding against Flaxman on May 10, 2024, nine days
after Plaintiffs filed their opening brief on appeal. On
October 28, 2024, the Board issued a final order in
Hagopian’s proceeding, finding that she had violated the
Ethics in Public Service Act and levying a $750 fine. Dkt.
No. 28.
Allowing Plaintiffs to amend their complaint would not
prejudice the State. In light of the final order in Hagopian’s
case, the State requested in a Federal Rule of Appellate
Procedure 28(j) letter that we “remand Professor Hagopian’s
case to the district court with instructions to permit filing of
a Second Amended Complaint, raising any additional claims
or factual allegations Appellants deem appropriate based on
the Order.” Dkt. No. 28. The State confirmed this position
at oral argument. Oral Argument at 19:52–20:01. Although
Plaintiffs maintain that their claims are constitutionally ripe
as alleged, Dkt. No. 29, their counsel stated at oral argument
that if allowed to amend the complaint, Plaintiffs would add
allegations about injuries specific to Flaxman—including
speech that he has changed or forgone because of the
challenged policies, Oral Argument at 8:25–9:33. In light of
the parties’ positions, I would remand for Plaintiffs to amend
their complaint.
* * *
Because Plaintiffs’ injuries as alleged—whether
analyzed under the pre- or post-enforcement framework—
FLAXMAN V. FERGUSON 33
do not confer standing, I would affirm the district court’s
dismissal but remand with instructions to grant leave to
amend. The law does not demand much of First Amendment
plaintiffs, especially those bringing pre-enforcement
challenges, but Flaxman and Hagopian needed to say more
here. I therefore respectfully dissent.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ABRAHAM FLAXMAN, No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ABRAHAM FLAXMAN, No.
02AMY HAGOPIAN, individually and 2:23-cv-01581- for a proposed class, KKE Plaintiffs - Appellants, OPINION v.
03BOB FERGUSON, in his official capacity as the Attorney General of the State of Washington; KATE REYNOLDS, Kate Reynolds in her official capacity as Executive Director of the Executive Ethics Board of the State of Washington, Defendants - Ap
04Evanson, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted December 4, 2024 San Francisco, California Filed August 22, 2025 2 FLAXMAN V.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ABRAHAM FLAXMAN, No.
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This case was decided on August 22, 2025.
Use the citation No. 10658689 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.