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No. 10113268
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Sacramento Homeless Union v. City of Sacramento
No. 10113268 · Decided September 10, 2024
No. 10113268·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
September 10, 2024
Citation
No. 10113268
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
SACRAMENTO HOMELESS No. 23-16123
UNION, a local of the California
Homeless Union/Statewide Organizing D.C. No.
Council; BETTY RIOS; DONTA 2:22-cv-01095-
WILLIAMS; FALISHA SCOTT, TLN-KJN
Plaintiffs-Appellees, ORDER
v.
CITY OF SACRAMENTO,
Defendant-Appellant,
and
COUNTY OF SACRAMENTO,
Defendant.
Filed September 10, 2024
Before: M. Margaret McKeown and Morgan Christen,
Circuit Judges, and David A. Ezra,* District Judge.
*
The Honorable David A. Ezra, United States District Judge for the
District of Hawaii, sitting by designation.
2 SACRAMENTO HOMELESS UNION V. CITY OF SACRAMENTO
Order;
Statement by Judges McKeown, Christen, and Ezra;
Statement by Judge R. Nelson
SUMMARY**
Mootness
The panel denied a petition for panel rehearing and for
rehearing en banc from the panel’s order dismissing as moot
an appeal from the district court’s preliminary injunction in
an action brought by unhoused individuals who alleged that
the City of Sacramento violated the Fourteenth Amendment
under the state-created danger doctrine by clearing homeless
encampments.
Respecting the denial of rehearing en banc Judge
McKeown, joined by Judge Christen and District Judge
Ezra, wrote that a brief account of the facts and the panel’s
faithful application of circuit precedent was appropriate
because Judge Nelson’s statement respecting the denial of
rehearing en banc obscured the basis for the panel’s
underlying dismissal order. Judge McKeown wrote that this
appeal is moot, as the preliminary injunction at issue expired
more than a year ago and invoking an exception to mootness
would be at odds with circuit precedent. The legal issue
underlying the injunction—the state-created danger doctrine
under the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause—is
**
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
SACRAMENTO HOMELESS UNION V. CITY OF SACRAMENTO 3
too fact dependent to decide on circumstances that existed
more than a year ago and circumstances that have changed.
Respecting the denial of rehearing on banc, Judge R.
Nelson, joined by Judges Bumatay and VanDyke, wrote that
this case warrants comment even though it is not a proper
vehicle for en banc review. The panel wrongly dismissed this
appeal as moot because the capable of repetition, yet evading
review, exception to mootness applies. Moreover, the
district court’s injunction was issued in error under this
circuit’s precedent and ignores the original meaning of the
Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
ORDER
The panel unanimously voted to deny the petition for
panel rehearing. Judge Christen voted to deny the petition
for rehearing en banc, and Judges McKeown and Ezra so
recommend. The full court was advised of the petition for
rehearing en banc. A judge of the court requested a vote on
whether to rehear the matter en banc. The matter failed to
receive a majority of the votes of the active judges in favor
of en banc consideration. Fed. R. App. P. 35. The petition
for panel rehearing and rehearing en banc, Dkt. #61, is
DENIED.
4 SACRAMENTO HOMELESS UNION V. CITY OF SACRAMENTO
McKEOWN and CHRISTEN, Circuit Judges, and EZRA,1
District Judge, respecting the denial of rehearing en banc:
In the normal course of events, a four-sentence,
unpublished dispositive order dismissing an appeal as moot
would not require further discussion following denial of a
petition for rehearing en banc. Not surprisingly, as Judge
Nelson acknowledges in his statement, “this case is not the
proper vehicle to expend precious en banc resources,” and
“en banc review . . . is better reserved for a subsequent
case.” Statement Concerning the Denial of Rehearing En
Banc at 8, 16. We couldn’t agree more. However, because
Judge Nelson’s extensive statement obscures the basis for
the underlying order, a brief account of the facts and the
panel’s faithful application of circuit precedent is
appropriate.
Undeniably, this appeal is moot. The preliminary
injunction at issue expired more than a year ago, on August
31, 2023. Even after the City of Sacramento filed an appeal,
no party sought to expedite the appeal. Oral argument before
the panel occurred on March 14, 2024, over six months after
the expiration of the injunction. The panel’s order
dismissing the appeal as moot was filed on March 15, 2024.
Importantly, no party sought to revive the injunction.
The case is continuing in the district court in the ordinary
course. In the absence of an injunction, “the issues are no
longer ‘live’,” and there is nothing left in the interlocutory
appeal for this court to adjudicate. Shell Offshore Inc. v.
Greenpeace, Inc., 815 F.3d 623, 628 (9th Cir. 2016)
(citations omitted). Nothing “evade[s] review” in this case.
1
The Honorable David A. Ezra, United States District Judge for the
District of Hawaii, sitting by designation.
SACRAMENTO HOMELESS UNION V. CITY OF SACRAMENTO 5
Id. at 626. Without an injunction on the books, there is
nothing to review. And nothing precludes another injunction
and another appeal should circumstances change.
Judge Nelson claims that the panel erred in not holding
that this appeal falls within an exception to mootness
because the issue—an expired injunction prohibiting the
clearing of homeless encampments during extreme heat in
the summer of 2023—is “capable of repetition, yet evading
review” under Where Do We Go Berkeley v. California
Department of Transportation, 32 F.4th 853 (9th Cir. 2022).
Nelson Statement at 10–13. But as Judge Nelson recognizes,
“mootness is generally a fact-specific inquiry,” and the facts
here precluded the panel from concluding that this appeal
met the exception. Id. at 13.
After the injunction expired in August 2023, in
September 2023, Sacramento Homeless Union (“Union”)
sought another injunction that the district court denied. D.
Ct. Dkt. No. 74 at 5. Specifically, the district court pointed
out that, in the wake of the prior injunction, the City of
Sacramento had implemented measures to mitigate the
danger of extreme heat to unhoused individuals. Id. at
4. The Union never appealed that denial. Indeed, the
landscape had changed. Thus, the panel followed our
court’s approach in Ahlman v. Barnes, 20 F.4th 489 (9th Cir.
2021), because “any subsequent injunction would be based
on an entirely new set of factual circumstances.” Id. at
495. And, in light of the Union’s failure to secure another
injunction in 2023 and the measures taken by the City, “the
chance that [the Union] successfully acquire[s] another
preliminary injunction . . . is remote.” Id. A remote
hypothetical concerning an as-yet untaken approach by the
City to a new of circumstances cannot revive a moot case.
6 SACRAMENTO HOMELESS UNION V. CITY OF SACRAMENTO
Invoking an exception to mootness here would be at odds
with our precedent. The legal issue underlying the
injunction—the state-created danger doctrine under the
Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause—is too fact
dependent to decide on circumstances that existed more than
a year ago and circumstances that have changed. For a state-
created danger claim, a state official must have engaged in
“affirmative conduct” that “exposed [an individual] to an
actual, particularized danger” and the official must have
“acted with deliberate indifference,” elements that are
inherently factual in nature. Polanco v. Diaz, 76 F.4th 918,
926 (9th Cir. 2023) (cleaned up). It would have been unwise
for the panel to reach the merits or consider the City’s policy
based on an outdated record. And the mixed questions of
fact and law involved in this appeal differ dramatically from
the purely legal issue—the application of the Americans
with Disabilities Act to clearing of encampments—involved
in Where Do We Go Berkeley. 32 F.4th at 859–64.
As our court has counseled, “When events change such
that the appellate court can no longer grant any effectual
relief whatever to the prevailing party, any resulting opinion
would be merely advisory.” Shell Offshore, 815 F.3d at 628
(internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The panel
properly dismissed this appeal because any opinion or
judgment on the expired injunction would have been nothing
more than advisory, something that Article III does not
permit. Judge Nelson’s consideration of the merits also
constitutes nothing more than an advisory opinion on a not-
yet-filed case. See Already, LLC v. Nike, Inc., 568 U.S. 85,
90 (2013) (“[C]ourts have ‘no business’ deciding legal
disputes or expounding on law in the absence of such a case
or controversy.” (citation omitted)). The court as a whole
appropriately decided not to rehear this appeal en banc.
SACRAMENTO HOMELESS UNION V. CITY OF SACRAMENTO 7
R. NELSON, Circuit Judge, with whom Judges BUMATAY
and VANDYKE join, respecting the denial of rehearing on
banc:
For the past decade, California has had the largest
homeless population in the nation.1 More than 180,000
homeless people roam the public streets.2 Sacramento
County alone has over 6,000 homeless.3 This crisis impacts
everyone. It reduces the quality of life for millions, increases
anti-social behavior, and decimates businesses.
Encampments specifically allow for “dependable access to
illegal drugs” and result in “an increase in crimes both
against the homeless and by the homeless.” City of Grants
Pass v. Johnson, 603 U.S. __, __ (2024) (citations omitted).
Local municipalities have struggled to accommodate the
homeless while respecting the rights of the millions of city
dwellers to a safe and clean environment. Court
intervention—most notably from our court—has hamstrung
municipal efforts to address the issue reasonably.
1
Public Policy Institute of California, Homeless Populations Are Rising
Around California (Feb. 21, 2023),
https://www.ppic.org/blog/homeless-populations-are-rising-around-
california/ (https://perma.cc/L473-H2BB).
2
Public Policy Institute of California, An Update on Homelessness in
California (Mar. 21, 2024), https://www.ppic.org/blog/an-update-on-
homelessness-in-california/ (https://perma.cc/6JZB-H3ZK).
3
Emily Hamann, Point-In-Time Count finds 29% drop in homelessness
in Sacramento County since 2022, SACRAMENTO BUSINESS JOURNAL
(June 5, 2024),
https://www.bizjournals.com/sacramento/news/2024/06/05/point-in-
time-2024-shows-homelessness-drop.html (https://perma.cc/LXX9-
YJC6).
8 SACRAMENTO HOMELESS UNION V. CITY OF SACRAMENTO
Facing such difficulties, Sacramento (the City)
attempted to relocate homeless individuals, thereby ensuring
that all Sacramentans had safe access to the City’s public
spaces. Sacramento acted fully within its lawful authority.
Removing these encampments not only helps “address
encampments that pose significant health and safety risks”
but also “encourage[s] their inhabitants to accept other
alternatives like shelters, drug treatment programs, and
mental-health facilities.” Id. (citation and quotations
omitted). That said, the district court below—once again—
moonlighted as the city council. This was error. See id.
Under different circumstances, this case would warrant en
banc review. Because our court dismissed the appeal as
moot in an unpublished disposition, the injunction expired a
year ago and to date no new injunction has been sought,
however, this case is not the proper vehicle to expend
precious en banc resources. Still, it warrants comment.
I
In 2022, the Sacramento Homeless Union (the Union)
alleged that, by clearing encampments, Sacramento violated
the Fourteenth Amendment under what we have called the
state-created danger theory. The Union argued that by
“sweeping existing homeless encampments” during periods
of “extreme heat,” the City was “forcing those swept into the
more dangerous circumstances of uncovered streets.” On
that theory, the Union sought both mandatory and
prohibitory injunctive relief against the City. The mandatory
injunction sought to compel the City to protect the homeless
from extreme heat. And the prohibitory injunction sought to
prevent the removal of existing homeless encampments.
The district court denied the mandatory injunction.
Sacramento Homeless Union v. County of Sacramento, 617
F. Supp. 3d 1179, 1197 (E.D. Cal. 2022) (Sacramento
SACRAMENTO HOMELESS UNION V. CITY OF SACRAMENTO 9
Homeless Union I). But it imposed a twenty-eight-day
prohibitory preliminary injunction “enjoin[ing] the
City . . . from clearing encampments belonging to the
unhoused.” Id. at 1200. This injunction was later extended
until after “the extreme heat days in . . . September [were]
forecasted to largely end.” Sacramento Homeless Union v.
County of Sacramento, No. 2:22-cv-01095-TLN-KJN, 2022
WL 4022093, at *11 (E.D. Cal. Sept. 2, 2022).
The district court found that the City’s clearing of
encampments in extreme heat was “affirmative conduct on
the part of the City in placing Plaintiffs in danger.”
Sacramento Homeless Union I, 617 F. Supp. 3d at 1193
(punctuation omitted). It also found that the Union
adequately established that the City acted with “deliberate
indifference” to a “known or obvious danger”—“extreme
heat.” Id. It recognized that enjoining the City “may hamper
[its] ability to promote the public health, safety, and general
welfare.” Id. at 1199. But “the possible harm in temporarily
restraining the City from clearing encampments” was “far
outweighed by Plaintiffs’ interest in their own health and
welfare.” Id. The City complied with the injunction and did
not appeal.
In 2023, the Union again sought injunctive relief on the
same theory. Sacramento Homeless Union v. County of
Sacramento, No. 2:22-cv-01095-TLN-KJN, 2023 WL
5835750, at *1 (E.D. Cal. Aug. 3, 2023). Again, the district
court granted the Union’s request, concluding that the City’s
“affirmative conduct” subjected homeless individuals to the
“known and obvious danger” of extreme heat. Id.
The three-judge panel dismissed the appeal as moot
because—by the time they decided the case—the 2023
injunction had expired. Citing Ahlman v. Barnes, 20 F.4th
10 SACRAMENTO HOMELESS UNION V. CITY OF SACRAMENTO
489 (9th Cir. 2021), the panel found that changing factual
circumstances may affect the likelihood and scope of any
future injunction.
II
The panel wrongly dismissed this appeal as moot. Our
cases recognize that a case is not moot if the issue is “capable
of repetition, yet evading review.” Native Vill. of Nuiqsut v.
BLM, 9 F.4th 1201, 1209 (9th Cir. 2021). “In order for [this]
exception to apply, (1) the duration of the challenged action
or injury must be too short to be fully litigated; and (2) there
must be a reasonable likelihood that the same party will be
subject to the action again.” Shell Offshore, Inc. v.
Greenpeace, Inc., 709 F.3d 1281, 1287 (9th Cir. 2013)
(cleaned up).
In Ahlman, the district court issued a preliminary
injunction after several inmates sued their county jail
because of its poor COVID-19 prevention measures. 20
F.4th at 492. The injunction expired while on appeal, and
we held that the case was moot. Id. at 494–95. We agreed
that the brief nature of the injunction meant that the appeal
would not be fully litigated before the injunction expired. Id.
at 494. Yet we held that it was unlikely that the inmates
would face the same issue again. Id. at 494–95. We noted
that improving conditions in the jail made the possibility of
another preliminary injunction remote. Id. at 495. Thus, the
case failed to meet the second requirement of our mootness
exception. Id.
Ahlman differs significantly from this case. While
COVID-19 was a once-in-a-century health pandemic,
unlikely to recur, the Union here bases its claims on the
summer heat in Sacramento. That is an annual occurrence
and certain to repeat. Indeed, the Union brought these same
SACRAMENTO HOMELESS UNION V. CITY OF SACRAMENTO 11
claims in 2022 and 2023, avoiding appellate review because
of the brief two-month period for their claims. Ahlman, thus,
does not control the mootness analysis for these claims.
The more apt case for mootness here is Where Do We Go
Berkeley v. California Department of Transportation, 32
F.4th 852 (9th Cir. 2022). Like this case, Where Do We Go
Berkeley involved a government actor clearing homeless
encampments. And we considered whether we could decide
the merits of an injunction when the injunction was near
expiring.4 We held that we could. Unlike the injunction in
Ahlman, the dispute over clearing encampments was likely
to recur. New individuals could join the encampments,
creating similar suits. Id. at 858. And plaintiffs could
challenge the clearing of nearby encampments. Id. We
acknowledged that any future suits would be based on
“different facts.” Id. at 859. But our precedent never
required—and instead precluded—that “identical” facts
were likely to exist in a future case before finding that a case
was not moot. Id. So long as the same party would likely
challenge the same action again, the case remained live. Id.
The mootness analysis here is controlled by Where Do
We Go Berkeley, not Ahlman. First, the duration factor to
our mootness exception is met. Greenpeace, 709 F.3d
4
The original injunction was set to expire on March 23, 2022, before the
district court extended it to April 30. Where Do We Go Berkeley, 32
F.4th at 857. Thus, the injunction was still in place when we issued on
our opinion on April 27. Id. Still, we treated the original injunction as
expired for the purpose of our mootness analysis. Id. (“Although the
appealed order expired before argument . . . we have jurisdiction to
review the expired original injunction.”). Ultimately, whether the
injunction was in place had no bearing on our holding on mootness
because we held that the plaintiffs could file similar injunctions again.
Id. at 858.
12 SACRAMENTO HOMELESS UNION V. CITY OF SACRAMENTO
at 1287. For the past two years, the district court granted the
Union a preliminary injunction that lasted just long enough
for the summer to end but just short enough not to be fully
litigated. There is also a reasonable likelihood that the same
party will be subject to the action again. Id. The Union has
challenged the City’s encampment policies for two years in
a row. Hot weather will continue this year and every year
afterward. And the City continues to seek to remediate
homeless encampments—in the summer and year-round. So
it is likely that the same party will challenge the same action
again. See Where Do We Go Berkeley, 32 F.4th at 858.
Accepting this case as moot, thus, would make few—if
any—similar preliminary injunctions reviewable. And it
would preclude the City—along with every other locality in
the circuit—from ever removing disruptive encampments
from public spaces during extreme weather. Our mootness
doctrine was never designed so that one party could achieve
such a tactical advantage.
The panel’s new theory in its concurrence only
highlights why its mootness determination was wrong. The
panel now claims that the first injunction which expired in
August 2023 was moot because Plaintiff was denied a
second injunction in September 2023. But the September
2023 injunction was denied largely because the City had
complied with the then-expired injunction. Still, the City
was challenging that expired injunction, including on appeal.
It cannot be that a defendant’s compliance with an injunction
by taking remedial measures that never should have been
imposed in the first place can be the basis for “an entirely
new set of factual circumstances.” Ahlman, 20 F.4th at 495.
Ahlman certainly doesn’t stand for that proposition. At
bottom, the panel continues to read the mootness exception
out of existence. Under the panel’s theory, the City would
SACRAMENTO HOMELESS UNION V. CITY OF SACRAMENTO 13
never be able to obtain appellate review of an injunction that
they have acted to comply with. We should not discourage
compliant action in this way.
Even so, mootness is generally a fact-specific inquiry.
The injunction expired nearly a year ago now. And the panel
discussed the appeal as moot in an unpublished order not
binding in any future case. I therefore do not believe our en
banc resources are warranted to review the mootness
question currently. Still, we should not repeat the error on
mootness in future cases.
III
A
Because I do not believe this case is moot, I consider the
merits. The district court erred in its 2022 and 2023 orders
in granting an injunction based on a state-created danger
theory. To make a successful claim under the state-created
danger doctrine, a plaintiff must allege that defendants
“affirmatively create[d] an actual, particularized danger [that
plaintiffs] would not otherwise have faced.” Sinclair v. City
of Seattle, 61 F.4th 674, 681 (9th Cir. 2023) (cleaned up).
And that particular danger must be directed toward a specific
victim. Id. at 682. Generalized danger that “affect[s]
all . . . equally” is not enough. Id.
The Union’s state-created danger doctrine is not
cognizable because the City’s actions fall far short of
creating any such particularized danger. The City did not
create the extreme heat that made it dangerous for those
living in the encampments. See Kennedy v. City of
Ridgefield, 439 F.3d 1055, 1082 (9th Cir. 2006) (Bybee, J.,
dissenting) (recognizing a “sharp distinction” between “facts
demonstrating that police action created the danger to the
14 SACRAMENTO HOMELESS UNION V. CITY OF SACRAMENTO
person and facts demonstrating a danger that existed without
police action”). Indeed, those living in encampments
suffered from heat stroke and other heat-related illnesses
without any government action. Removing the homeless
from the encampments, thus, did not create a danger that
they were not already facing—nor did removal increase the
danger. Sinclair, 61 F.4th at 681. Nor can it be said that
there is a particular danger directed toward a specific victim.
Id. at 682. Like Sinclair, the danger caused by clearing
encampments, if any, “affected all [persons] . . . equally.”
Id. The district court’s merits analysis therefore wrongly
applied our precedent.
B
In addition to being an incorrect application of our
precedent, the decision below further enshrines our circuit’s
troubling trend of misinterpreting the original meaning of the
Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. As
several judges on our court have noted, the “state-created
danger exception” requires a “deprivation of liberty.” See
Murguia v. Langdon, 73 F.4th 1103, 1104, 1118 (9th Cir.
2023) (Bumatay, Circuit Judge, joined by Callahan, Ikuta
and R. Nelson, Circuit Judges, dissenting from the denial of
rehearing en banc). In other words, a constitutional violation
occurs only when the state uses its monopoly on physical
force to coerce an individual’s actions. Id. at 1115. The
lawful clearing of encampments does not rise to that level of
constitutional deprivation. And by straying from the
Fourteenth Amendment’s original meaning, the district court
turned the Fourteenth Amendment into just another “font of
tort law.” Paul v. Davis, 424 U.S. 693, 701 (1976); cf.
Tabares v. City of Huntington Beach, 988 F.3d 1119, 1122
(9th Cir. 2021) (the Constitution and state common law are
thus “two distinct legal frameworks”).
SACRAMENTO HOMELESS UNION V. CITY OF SACRAMENTO 15
The Supreme Court has repeatedly stressed that the
Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause “does not
transform every tort committed by a state actor into a
constitutional violation.” DeShaney v. Winnebago Cnty.
Dep’t of Soc. Serv., 489 U.S. 189, 202 (1989). This case is
a prime example of how we have interpreted the Clause to
do just that. In cases such as Murguia v. Langdon, 61 F.4th
1096, and Kennedy, 439 F.3d 1055, we have strayed far from
an original understanding of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Even when bound by precedent, however, such precedent
that is not in accordance with original understanding should
not be expanded. Cf. Kennedy v. Bremerton Sch. Dist., 4
F.4th 910, 945–46 (9th Cir. 2021) (R. Nelson, Circuit Judge,
joined by Callahan, Bumatay and VanDyke, Circuit Judges,
and by Ikuta, Circuit Judge, as to Part I, dissenting from the
denial of rehearing en banc) (an “ahistorical, atextual, and
failed attempt to define [a Constitutional] Clause . . . should
not [be] extended.”); see also Santa Fe Indep. Sch. Dist. v.
Doe, 530 U.S. 290, 318 (2000) (Rehnquist, C.J., dissenting)
(we should not “distort[] existing precedent” where it would
be “[un]faithful to the meaning” of the Constitutional text).
Thus, in future cases, district courts in our circuit should
reorient their decisions in this area to a more faithful reading
of the original meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment.
IV
In sum, the panel’s decision does not comply with our
court’s precedent on mootness. And the district court’s
injunction was issued in error under our precedent and
ignores the original public meaning of the Fourteenth
Amendment.
But our en banc power is meant to allow “for more
effective judicial administration.” Textile Mills Sec. Corp.
16 SACRAMENTO HOMELESS UNION V. CITY OF SACRAMENTO
v. Comm’r, 314 U.S. 326, 334–35 (1941). Here, en banc
review—with its considerable expenditure of time and
resources—is better reserved for a subsequent case. I hope
that future cases correct this course, and further corrective
measures, like en banc review, are not necessary.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT SACRAMENTO HOMELESS No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT SACRAMENTO HOMELESS No.
0223-16123 UNION, a local of the California Homeless Union/Statewide Organizing D.C.
03Council; BETTY RIOS; DONTA 2:22-cv-01095- WILLIAMS; FALISHA SCOTT, TLN-KJN Plaintiffs-Appellees, ORDER v.
04CITY OF SACRAMENTO, Defendant-Appellant, and COUNTY OF SACRAMENTO, Defendant.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT SACRAMENTO HOMELESS No.
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This case was decided on September 10, 2024.
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