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No. 10656684
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
The Geo Group, Inc. v. Inslee
No. 10656684 · Decided August 19, 2025
No. 10656684·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 19, 2025
Citation
No. 10656684
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
THE GEO GROUP, INC., No. 24-2815
D.C. No.
Plaintiff - Appellee,
3:23-cv-05626-
BHS
v.
JAY INSLEE, Governor; ROBERT
FERGUSON, OPINION
Defendants - Appellants.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the Western District of Washington
Benjamin H. Settle, District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted February 14, 2025
Seattle, Washington
Filed August 19, 2025
Before: William A. Fletcher, Ronald M. Gould, and
Jacqueline H. Nguyen, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge W. Fletcher
2 THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE
SUMMARY *
Intergovernmental Immunity / Preemption
The panel (1) vacated the district court’s grant of a
preliminary injunction sought by GEO Group, Inc. (“GEO”)
against Washington’s Governor and Attorney General,
preventing the enforcement of Sections 2, 3, 5 and 6 of
House Bill 1470 (“HB 1470”), a Washington law that
protects the health and safety of civil detainees held in the
Northwest Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Processing Center (“NWICP”); and (2) granted in part
GEO’s motion to remand to the district court for further
proceedings.
GEO owns and operates the NWIPC, a private, for-profit
detainment facility in Washington State that confines
noncitizen civil detainees while their immigration status is
determined. GEO sought a preliminary injunction against
the enforcement of several provisions of HB 1470: Section
2, which requires Washington’s Department of Health
(“DOH”) to adopt rules to ensure that private detention
facilities provide sanitary, hygienic, and safe conditions for
detained persons; Section 3, which provides that DOH shall
conduct routine, unannounced inspections of private
detention facilities; Section 5, which provides to a detained
person a private cause of action for monetary and injunctive
relief for a violation of HB 1470; and Section 6, which
provides that any person who fails to comply with HB 1470
may be subject to a civil penalty. The district court held that
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE 3
these sections violate the doctrine of intergovernmental
immunity and granted a preliminary injunction against their
enforcement.
After oral argument in this case, HB 1232—which made
several changes to HB 1470—was passed. The panel held
that although HB 1232 affects some of the issues on appeal,
the appeal is not moot.
The panel held that GEO’s challenges to HR 1470, as
amended by HR 1232, constitute a case or controversy
within the meaning of Article III. GEO alleged sufficient
injury in fact to bring a pre-enforcement challenge to Section
2 and relevant enforcement-related provisions of Sections 3
and 6 of HB 1470, as well as relevant provisions of HB
1232. Because no rules have yet been adopted implementing
Section 2, as amended by HB 1232, GEO’s pre-enforcement
challenge is limited to the question of whether GEO has
shown a sufficient likelihood that DOH will adopt such rules
to justify a preliminary injunction.
Addressing GEO’s argument Sections 2, 3, and 6 are
invalid under the intergovernmental immunity doctrine—
which generally immunizes the federal government from
state laws that directly regulate and discriminate against it—
the panel held that Section 2 does not regulate the federal
government directly in violation of the intergovernmental
immunity doctrine. Addressing whether Sections 2 and 3 of
HB 1470 were impermissible discriminatory regulations, the
panel held that it would not decide at this point whether
Washington regulates the conditions of confinement at the
NWIPC differently from the way it regulates the conditions
of confinement in other civil detention facilities. Because
the district court incorrectly concluded that the appropriate
comparator was Washington’s prisons, the panel remanded
4 THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE
to allow the district court to make the comparison with other
civil detention facilities. The panel vacated the district
court’s decision to strike Section 6 as unconstitutional
because it was premised on a comparison to Washington’s
prisons rather than the private civil detention facilities, and
remanded to allow the district court to make the appropriate
comparison.
The panel agreed with the district court that Sections 2,
3, and 6 of HB 1470 were not preempted by federal
law. Under field preemption, the panel saw no clear
indication that Congress had demonstrated any intent to
preempt Sections 2, 3, and 6 of HB 1470 and relevant
portions of HB 1232. Under obstacle preemption, the panel
held that HB 1470 did not present an unconstitutional
obstacle to the accomplishment of the government’s
standards for the conditions of alien detention.
Finally, the panel held that the district court erred in
reaching the merits of GEO’s challenge to Section 5 because
this section provides no cause of action against either the
Washington Attorney General or Governor. Rather than
enjoining enforcement of Section 5 by the Attorney General
and the Governor, the district court should have dismissed
this portion of GEO’s suit.
COUNSEL
Dominic E. Draye (argued) and Christopher M. O’Brien,
Greenberg Traurig LLP, Phoenix, Arizona; John Hodges-
Howell, Harry J.F. Korrell, Davis Wright Tremaine LLP,
Seattle, Washington; Scott Schipma, The GEO Group Inc.,
Boca Raton, Florida; for Plaintiff-Appellee.
THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE 5
Marsha J. Chien (argued) and Cristina Sepe, Deputy
Solicitors General; Robert W. Ferguson, Attorney General;
Office of the Washington Attorney General, Olympia,
Washington; Andrew R.W. Hughes and Ellen E. Range,
Assistant Attorneys General, Office of the Washington
Attorney General, Seattle, Washington; for Defendants-
Appellants.
Bradley Hinshelwood (argued) and Mark B. Stern,
Attorneys, Appellate Staff, Civil Division; Tessa M.
Morgan, United States Attorney; Brian M. Boynton,
Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General; United States
Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., for Amicus
Curiae United States.
Hannah Woerner, Columbia Legal Services, Olympia,
Washington, for Amici Curiae La Resistencia and Professor
Angelina Snodgrass Godoy.
Aaron Korthuis, Matt Adams, Leila Kang, and Glenda A.
Madrid, Northwest Immigrant Rights Project, Seattle,
Washington, for Amicus Curiae Northwest Immigrant
Rights Project.
Andrew L. Schlafly, Far Hills, New Jersey, for Amicus
Curiae Immigration Reform Law Institute.
Anastasia R. Sandstrom, Senior Counsel, Office of the
Washington Attorney General, Seattle, Washington; Eric
Sonju, Senior Assistant Attorney General; Robert W.
Ferguson, Attorney General; Office of the Washington
Attorney General, Olympia, Washington; for Amici Curiae
Department of Health and Department of Labor and
Industries.
6 THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE
OPINION
W. FLETCHER, Circuit Judge:
Plaintiff-Appellee the GEO Group (“GEO”) owns and
operates a private, for-profit detainment facility, the
Northwest Immigration and Customs Enforcement
Processing Center (“NWIPC”), in Washington State. The
NWIPC confines noncitizen civil detainees while their
immigration status is determined. GEO obtained a
preliminary injunction against the Defendants-Appellants,
then-Governor Jay Inslee and then-Attorney General Robert
Ferguson (together, “Washington”), preventing enforcement
of several provisions of House Bill 1470 (“HB 1470”), a
Washington law that protects the health and safety of the
civil detainees held in the NWIPC. We vacate and remand.
I. Background
GEO operates detainment facilities and private prisons
throughout the country under contracts with the federal
government. In 2024, GEO had $2.42 billion in total
revenue and a net income of $31.9 million. The GEO Group
Reports Fourth Quarter and Full Year 2024 Results, The
GEO Group, Inc. (Feb. 27, 2025),
https://investors.geogroup.com/news-releases/news-release-
details/geo-group-reports-fourth-quarter-and-full-year-
2024-results.
GEO operates the NWIPC in Tacoma, Washington,
under a contract with Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (“ICE”). The NWIPC is the only immigration
detention facility in Washington. Persons held at the
NWIPC are civil detainees, awaiting administrative review
of their immigration status. Some detainees lack legal status
THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE 7
in the United States. Others are lawful permanent residents,
some with work authorization. Detainees are held until they
are either deported or released into the United States.
As described in more detail below, the relevant
provisions of Washington’s HB 1470, as amended by HB
1232 in May 2025, require the NWIPC to provide nutritious
food in a clean and safe facility, authorize inspections related
to these requirements, and authorize a monetary penalty for
violations. The question before us is whether these
provisions are consistent with federal law.
A. Predecessors to HB 1470 and HB 1232
In 2020, the Washington legislature passed two related
statutes.
First, the legislature passed Senate Bill 6442. S.B. 6442,
66th Leg., Reg. Sess. (Wash. 2020), enacted as 2020 Wash.
Sess. Laws ch. 318. The statute prohibited Washington’s
Department of Corrections (“DOC”) from contracting with
private prisons for placement or transfer of state prisoners
except in emergencies. Wash. Rev. Code § 72.68.110(1).
The legislature passed the statute after finding that “profit
motives lead private prisons to cut operational costs,
including the provision of food, health care, and
rehabilitative services.” 2020 Wash. Sess. Laws ch 318,
§ 1(2).
Second, the legislature passed House Bill 2576. H.B.
2576, 66th Leg., Reg. Sess. (Wash. 2020), enacted as 2020
Wash. Sess. Laws ch. 284. That statute instructed
Washington’s Department of Health (“DOH”) to evaluate
and report on private detention facilities in Washington
State. The statute provided that “all people confined in
prisons and detention facilities in Washington deserve basic
8 THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE
health care, nutrition, and safety, regardless of whether those
people are confined in publicly or privately operated
facilities.” Id. § 1. DOH finished its report in November
2020. The report noted that “private detention centers are
not all the same. Detainee and advocate complaints are
almost exclusively associated with the [NWIPC]. This
facility is [the] state’s only privately operated, adult
immigration detention center.”
In 2021, based on the findings in the DOH report, the
Washington Legislature passed House Bill 1090. H.B. 1090,
67th Leg., Reg. Sess. (Wash. 2021), enacted as 2021 Wash.
Sess. Laws, ch. 30. The statute prohibited the operation of
any “private detention facility within the state.” Wash. Rev.
Code § 70.395.030. After our court’s en banc decision in
GEO Group, Inc. v. Newsom, 50 F.4th 745 (9th Cir. 2022),
which invalidated a similar law passed in California,
Washington stipulated that it would not enforce HB 1090
against GEO’s operation of the NWIPC. See GEO Group,
Inc. v. Inslee, 702 F. Supp. 3d 1043, 1046 (W.D. Wash. Nov.
16, 2023).
B. HB 1470
In 2023, in the wake of Newsom, the Washington
legislature passed House Bill 1470. H.B. 1470, 68th Leg.
Reg., Sess. (Wash. 2023), enacted as 2023 Wash. Sess. Laws
ch. 419. In enacting HB 1470, the Washington legislature
found
that all people confined in prisons and
detention facilities in Washington deserve
basic health care, nutrition, and safety. As
held in United States v. California, 921 F.3d
865, 886 (9th Cir. 2019), states possess “the
THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE 9
general authority to ensure the health and
welfare of inmates and detainees in facilities
within its borders.” States have broad
authority to enforce generally applicable
health and safety laws against contractors
operating private detention facilities within
the state. The [N]inth [C]ircuit reinforced
this authority in Geo Group, Inc. v. Newsom,
50 F.4th 745, 750 (9th Cir. 2022), stating
“[p]rivate contractors do not stand on the
same footing as the federal government, so
states can impose many laws on federal
contractors that they could not apply to the
federal government itself.”
Wash. Rev. Code § 70.395.010. Four sections of HB 1470
are at issue in this appeal.
C. HB 1232
On May 12, 2025, after we heard oral argument in this
case, now-Governor Ferguson signed Second Substitute
House Bill 1232 (“HB 1232”). See Engrossed Second
Substitute H.B. 1232, 69th Leg., Reg. Sess. (Wash. 2025).
HB 1232 makes several but, in the context of this case,
largely nonmaterial changes to HB 1470.
D. The Present Suit and Appeal
In July 2023, GEO filed a complaint in federal district
court against Washington, seeking declaratory and
injunctive relief against the enforcement of HB 1470. As
relevant to this appeal, GEO challenged Sections 2, 3, 5 and
6 of HB 1470. The district court concluded that it “ha[d]
subject-matter jurisdiction to consider GEO’s constitutional
challenges to Sections 2, 3, 5, and 6 of HB 1470.” The court
10 THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE
held that all of these sections violate the doctrine of
intergovernmental immunity and granted a preliminary
injunction against their enforcement. Washington timely
appealed.
E. Motion by GEO
After the passage of HB 1232, GEO moved in this court
for a dismissal of the current appeal and a remand to the
district court on the ground that changes to HB 1470 wrought
by HB 1232 mooted the appeal. Washington opposed the
motion on the ground that the changes are relatively minor
and that the substance of the appeal remains properly
pending in this court.
We agree with GEO that HB 1232 affects some of the
issues on appeal. However, we disagree with GEO’s
conclusion that we should dismiss the appeal as moot.
Although “the repeal, amendment, or expiration of
challenged legislation is generally enough to render a case
moot and appropriate for dismissal,” that presumption is
rebutted when the legislative change results in a law that is
“substantially similar” to the challenged legislation. Bd. of
Trs. Of Glazing Health & Welfare Tr., 941 F.3d 1195, 1198
(9th Cir. 2019). We conclude that HB 1232’s changes have
resulted in a law that is “substantially similar” to HB 1470’s
initial text, and that this appeal is therefore not moot. Cf.
Teter v. Lopez, 125 F.4th 1301, 1307 (9th Cir. 2025) (en
banc) (finding appeal moot after legislative changes when
the defendant “ha[d] ceased to enforce the challenged law
because it no longer exist[ed]”). Most of the questions
presented to us remain largely unchanged by HB 1232.
We deny GEO’s motion in part and grant in part. We
decide some questions now. We remand other questions to
the district court.
THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE 11
II. Jurisdiction and Standard of Review
We have jurisdiction over interlocutory orders “granting,
continuing, modifying, refusing or dissolving injunctions, or
refusing to dissolve or modify injunctions[.]” 28 U.S.C.
§ 1292(a)(1). We review the grant or denial of a preliminary
injunction for abuse of discretion. See Adidas Am., Inc. v.
Skechers USA, Inc., 890 F.3d 747, 753 (9th Cir. 2018). We
review underlying legal issues de novo “because a district
court would necessarily abuse its discretion if it based its
ruling on an erroneous view of law.” Id. (internal quotation
marks omitted) (quoting GoTo.com, Inc. v. Walt Disney Co.,
202 F.3d 1199, 1204 (9th Cir. 2000)).
III. Preliminary Injunctive Relief
To obtain a preliminary injunction, a plaintiff must
establish “that he is likely to succeed on the merits, that he
is likely to suffer irreparable harm in the absence of
preliminary relief, that the balance of equities tips in his
favor, and that an injunction is in the public interest.” Winter
v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 555 U.S. 7, 20 (2008).
“Likelihood of success on the merits is ‘the most important’
factor; if a movant fails to meet this ‘threshold inquiry,’ we
need not consider the other factors.” California v. Azar, 911
F.3d 558, 575 (2018) (quoting Disney Enters., Inc. v.
VidAngel, Inc., 869 F.3d 848, 856 (9th Cir. 2017)).
IV. Discussion
A. Sections 2, 3, and 6 of HB 1470 and
Relevant Provisions of HB 1232
Section 2 of HB 1470 requires Washington’s DOH to
“adopt rules as may be necessary to . . . ensure private
detention facilities comply with measurable standards
providing sanitary, hygienic, and safe conditions for
12 THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE
detained persons.” Wash. Rev. Code § 70.395.040(1).
Section 2 provides that Washington’s Attorney General
“may enforce violations of this section on its own initiative
or in response to complaints or violations.” Id.
§ 70.395.040(2). DOH has not yet adopted regulations
under Section 2. HB 1232 modifies Section 2 in minor
respects.
Section 3 of HB 1470 provides that DOH “shall . . .
[c]onduct routine, unannounced inspections of private
detention facilities including, but not limited to, inspection
of food services and food handling, sanitation and hygiene,
and nutrition[,]” and shall “[c]onduct investigations of
complaints received relating to any private detention facility
located within the state.” Wash. Rev. Code
§ 70.395.050(1)(a)–(1)(b) (now § 70.395.05(2)(a)–(2)(b)).
Section 3 further provides that Washington’s Department of
Labor and Industries “shall conduct routine, unannounced
inspections of workplace conditions at private detention
facilities, including work undertaken by detained persons.”
Id. § 70.395.050(4) (now § 70.395.050(5)). The Office of
Washington’s Attorney General “may enforce violations of
this section on its own initiative or in response to complaints
of violations.” Id. § 70.395.050(5) (now § 70.395.050(6)).
HB 1232 does not affect any of the issues presented to us
under Section 3.
Section 6 of HB 1470 provides that “[a]ny person who
fails to comply” with HB 1470 “may be subject to a civil
penalty in an amount of not more than $1,000 per violation
per day.” Id. § 70.395.080(1). Section 4 of HB 1232
provides a “civil fine of up to $10,000 per violation, not to
exceed a total fine of $1,000,000, on a private detention
facility” under certain circumstances. H.B. 1232 § 4.
THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE 13
1. Article III Case or Controversy
We first address the question whether GEO’s challenges
to HR 1470, as amended by HR 1232, constitute a case or
controversy within the meaning of Article III. The district
court concluded that they do constitute a case or controversy.
We agree.
Washington contends that because DOH has not yet
adopted implementing rules for Section 2 (now including
amendments contained in HB 1232), GEO has not yet
suffered an injury in fact. Washington contends that GEO’s
pre-enforcement challenge to Section 2 and relevant
enforcement-related portions of Sections 3 and 6 (and now
relevant portions of HB 1232) is therefore unripe under
Article III. We regard Washington’s contention as
equivalent to a contention that GEO lacks Article III
standing. We wrote in Thomas v. Anchorage Equal Rights
Commission, 220 F.3d 1134, 1139 (9th Cir. 2000) (en banc)
(internal quotation marks and citations omitted), a pre-
enforcement injury case:
Whether the question is viewed as one of
standing or ripeness, the Constitution
mandates that prior to our exercise of
jurisdiction there exist a constitutional case
or controversy, that the issues presented are
definite and concrete, not hypothetical or
abstract. In assuring that this jurisdictional
prerequisite is satisfied, we consider whether
the plaintiffs face a realistic danger of
14 THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE
sustaining a direct injury as a result of the
statute’s operation or enforcement.
See also Newsom, 50 F.4th at 753 (“Whether framed as
standing or ripeness, California’s injury requirements ‘boil
down to the same question.’” (citation omitted)).
“Pre-enforcement injury is a special subset of injury-in-
fact.” Peace Ranch, LLC v. Bonta, 93 F.4th 482, 487 (9th
Cir. 2024). We have “adopt[ed] the Supreme Court’s
framework” for determining whether a plaintiff bringing a
pre-enforcement challenge has satisfied Article III’s injury-
in-fact requirement. Id. That test requires the plaintiff to
show “an intention to engage in a course of conduct arguably
affected with a constitutional interest, but proscribed by a
statute, and there exists a credible threat of prosecution
thereunder.” Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus, 573 U.S.
149, 159 (2014) (quoting Babbitt v. United Farm Workers
Nat’l Union, 442 U.S. 289, 298 (1979)).
GEO is already required, pursuant its contract with the
government, to comply with Performance-Based National
Detention Standards (“PBNDS”) in its operation of the
NWIPC. It contends that Section 2 will impose additional
requirements. Before the passage of HB 1232, GEO
contended that rules implementing Section 2 will require it
to change the existing heating and cooling air conditioning
system in the NWIPC; to provide exclusively fresh fruits and
vegetables, whereas the PBNDS requires fresh fruits and
vegetables only in specific situations; and to provide a list of
specified personal toiletries to detainees on a regular basis,
whereas the PBNDS does not require the provision of one of
such toiletries. HB 1232 makes clear that the NWIPC is not
required to provide exclusively fresh fruits and vegetables;
it is now required to provide a “balanced diet, including fresh
THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE 15
fruits and vegetables.” (Emphasis added.) However, the
heating and cooling, as well as the personal toiletries, issues
remain.
We conclude that GEO has alleged sufficient injury in
fact to bring a pre-enforcement challenge to Section 2 and
relevant enforcement-related provisions of Sections 3 and 6
of HB 1470, as well as relevant provisions of HB 1232. We
recognize that DOH has not yet adopted rules implementing
Section 2, as amended by HB 1232. But it is clear that DOH
intends to adopt such rules, and that, once adopted, DOH
intends to enforce them against GEO. GEO contends that
there is a likelihood that such rules will require it to make
the changes described above. GEO contends that requiring
such changes will violate the doctrine of intergovernmental
immunity, and, further, that such changes will be preempted
by federal law. Because no rules have yet been adopted
implementing Section 2, as amended by HB 1232, GEO’s
pre-enforcement challenge is limited to the question whether
GEO has shown a sufficient likelihood that DOH will adopt
such rules to justify a preliminary injunction.
2. Challenges to Sections 2, 3, and 6 of HB 1470 and
Relevant Provisions of HB 1232
GEO argues, first, that Sections 2, 3, and 6 of HB 1470
are invalid under the doctrine of intergovernmental
immunity, and, second, that they are preempted. We apply
its argument to relevant provisions of HB 1232 as well. (For
convenience from this point on, when we refer to sections of
HB 1470 we also refer to relevant provisions contained in
HB 1232 unless otherwise indicated.)
16 THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE
a. Intergovernmental Immunity
“[I]ntergovernmental immunity attaches only to state
laws that discriminate against the federal government and
burden it in some way.” United States v. California, 921
F.3d 865, 880 (9th Cir. 2019). Because federal contractors
are not the federal government, “states may impose some
regulations on federal contractors that they would not be able
to impose on the federal government itself.” Newsom, 50
F.4th at 760 n.10. “If the immunity of federal contractors is
to be expanded beyond its narrow constitutional limits, it is
Congress that must take responsibility for the decision, by so
expressly providing as respects contracts in a particular
form, or contracts under particular programs.” United States
v. New Mexico, 455 U.S. 720, 737 (1982) (citing James v.
Dravo Contracting Co., 302 U.S. 134, 161 (1937)).
“The Constitution’s Supremacy Clause generally
immunizes the Federal Government from state laws that
[1] directly regulate or [2] discriminate against it.” United
States v. Washington, 596 U.S. 832, 835 (2022) (bracketed
numbers added). We address in turn these two ways in
which a state law can be invalid under the intergovernmental
immunity doctrine.
i. Direct Regulation
In the portion of its brief arguing that HB 1470 is an
impermissible direct regulation, GEO focuses only on the
requirements of Section 2. GEO does not make separate
arguments directed to the inspection and enforcement
provisions in Sections 3 and 6. Based on the manner in
which GEO has made its arguments, we conclude that
GEO’s objections to Sections 2, 3 and 6 based on direct
regulation stand or fall based on its arguments about the
validity of Section 2.
THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE 17
The district court held that Section 2 “does not regulate
the federal government directly in violation of the
intergovernmental immunity doctrine.” We agree.
A state has greater ability to regulate a contractor of the
federal government than to regulate the government itself.
As we wrote in Newsom, “The scope of a federal contractor’s
protection from state law under the Supremacy Clause is
substantially narrower than that of a federal employee or
other federal instrumentality.” Newsom, 40 F.4th at 755.
GEO relies on three cases in particular to support its
argument that HB 1470 is impermissible direct regulation.
First, GEO relies on our en banc decision in Newsom.
GEO characterizes AB 32, the California statute at issue in
that case, as “similar” to HB 1470. It writes that HB 1470
was adopted “for the express purpose of circumventing this
Court’s en banc decision in Newsom,” suggesting that
Newsom requires us to hold that HB 1470 is discriminatory.
It is true that HB 1470 was enacted after it became clear
that AB 32 was unconstitutional under our holding in
Newsom. But it is also true that HB 1470 was specifically
designed to avoid the unconstitutional aspects of AB 32. HB
1470 is poles apart from AB 32. AB 32 flatly forbade the
operation in California of private detention facilities
operating under contract with the federal government. In
contrast to AB 32, HB 1470 permits the operation of private
detention facilities such as the NWIPC in Washington.
Further, in holding AB 32 invalid in Newsom, we
emphasized the extraordinary degree of direct control over
federal operations authorized by AB 32:
AB 32 would override the federal
government’s position, pursuant to discretion
18 THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE
conferred by Congress, to use private
contractors to run its immigration detention
facilities. It would give California a “virtual
power of review” over ICE’s detention
decisions, and allow the ‘discretion of the
federal officers [to] be exercised . . . only if
the [state] approves.’
Id. at 751 (citations omitted). No such control is authorized
in HB 1470.
Contrary to GEO’s argument, Newsom supports rather
than undermines the decision we reach here. It is undisputed
that the purpose and effect of HB 1470 is to protect the health
and safety of detainees in the NWIPC. Our opinion in
Newsom explicitly recognized the authority of a state to
protect the health and safety of those within its borders:
States’s historic police powers include
regulation of health and safety. And these
historic powers extend to laws regulating
health and safety in federal detention
facilities located within a state.
Id. at 766 (citations omitted). See also California, 921 F.3d
at 886 (states have “the general authority to ensure the health
and welfare of inmates and detainees in facilities within its
borders”).
Second, GEO relies on Boeing Co. v. Movassaghi, 768
F.3d 832 (9th Cir. 2014), contending that the facts there are
“remarkably similar” to the facts here. In Movassaghi, a
California statute required a “responsible party” to “take or
pay for appropriate removal or remedial action” at a
particular site in California that had been heavily polluted.
THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE 19
Id. at 839. The federal government accepted responsible-
party status at that site and recognized that, as the
responsible party, it was required under state law to clean up
the site. The federal government “actively conduct[ed] the
cleanup through its cleanup contractor, Boeing.” Id. at 839.
The California statute imposed higher clean up standards
and costs on the government than the clean-up standards and
costs imposed by federal law. We struck down the
California statute, holding that it directly, and therefore
impermissibly, regulated the federal government as a
responsible party. In Newsom, we characterized the statute
at issue in Movassaghi as “impermissibly interfer[ing] with
federal functions by overriding federal contracting
decisions” rather than “merely increas[ing] the federal
government’s costs.” Newsom, 50 F.4th at 760.
The case before us is not controlled by Movassaghi.
First, and most important, the statute in Movassghi imposed
an obligation directly on the federal government. HB 1470
imposes no obligation on the federal government. Instead,
it imposes obligations on GEO, a federal contractor.
Second, unlike the statute in Movassaghi, HB 1470 does not
“impermissibly” “overrid[e] federal contracting decisions.”
Id. Many, perhaps all, of the obligations imposed by Section
2 are already imposed by the federal government itself,
through GEO’s contract with ICE. The contract explicitly
orders GEO to comply with obligations imposed under state
law, even when those obligations are more demanding than
those imposed under federal law:
All services [at the NWIPC] must comply
with . . . all applicable federal, state, and local
laws and standards. Should a conflict exist
20 THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE
between any of these standards, the most
stringent shall apply.
Finally, HB 1470 does not increase the federal government’s
costs. Under GEO’s contract with the government, any
increased costs are borne by GEO, not by the government.
Third, after briefing was completed in this appeal GEO
brought to our attention United States v. King County,
Washington, 122 F.4th 740 (9th Cir. 2024), in support of its
position. In King County, the government had challenged a
county executive order that forbade companies at Boeing
Field, a small airport just south of Seattle, from providing
essential services such as fueling to flights chartered by
Immigration and Customs Enforcement (“ICE”). We held
that the order violated intergovernmental immunity on two
grounds. First, the order “forc[ed] ICE either to stop using
Boeing Field or to use government-owned planes there.” Id.
at 756. Second, the order “‘singl[ed] out’ the federal
government and its contractors for unfavorable
treatment,’ . . . ‘burdening federal operations, and only
federal operations.’” Id. at 757.
King County is very different from the case before us.
First, unlike in King County, nothing in Washington law
results in the federal government being unable to use
contractors in the State. HB 1470 does not seek to shut down
the NWIPC; nor does it limit ICE’s ability to detain any
individual in the NWIPC. Through the passage of HB 1470,
Washington seeks only to change the way GEO treats its
detainees. Second, unlike in King County, Washington has
not “singled out” the NWIPC for unfavorable treatment. As
we will discuss in a moment, Washington law regulates two
types of residential treatment facilities, in which people are
THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE 21
held in involuntary civil confinement, in a very similar—
perhaps identical—fashion.
In sum, Section 2 does not “require[] ICE to entirely
transform its approach to detention in the state or else
abandon its [Washington] facilities.” Newsom, 50 F.4th at
750. It does not give Washington “‘virtual power of review’
over ICE’s detention decisions.” Id. at 751. Nor does it
“prevent ICE’s contractors from continuing to run detention
facilities.” Id. at 750. We thus conclude that while Section
2 of HB 1470 does regulate GEO, it does not directly
regulate the federal government.
ii. Discriminatory Regulation
(a) Sections 2 and 3 of HB 1470 and
Relevant Provisions of HB 1232
In the portion of its brief arguing that HB 1470 is an
impermissible discriminatory regulation, GEO again focuses
on the requirements of Section 2. It does not make a separate
argument directed to the inspection or enforcement
provisions in Sections 3. Based on the manner in which
GEO has made its arguments, we conclude that GEO’s
objections to Sections 2 and 3 of HB 1470 based on
discriminatory regulation stand or fall based on its
arguments about the validity of Section 2. We address
Section 6 in a separate subsection.
A state law or regulation impermissibly discriminates
against the federal government if it treats a state entity more
favorably than it treats a comparable federal entity. Dawson
v. Steager, 586 U.S. 171, 175–76 (2019). The “important
consideration” is whether the state has “singled out
contractors who work for the United States for
discriminatory treatment.” Washington v. United States, 460
22 THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE
U.S. 536, 544, 546 (1983). A state law or regulation that
burdens only a federal contractor is not impermissibly
discriminatory if it “duplicate[s] requirements otherwise
mandated under” state law that are imposed on similarly
situated state contractors. California, 921 F.3d at 873; see
also Washington v. United States, 460 U.S. at 541 (sales tax
that applied only to federal contractors did not violate
intergovernmental immunity because “Washington . . .
impose[s] a sales tax on all purchases from contractors who
do not deal with the Federal Government”).
HB 1470 is written in general terms, applying to “for-
profit prisons and detention facilities in the state.” However,
the NWIPC is the only such detention facility in
Washington. Thus, as a practical matter, HB 1470 applies
only to the NWIPC. The fact that HB 1470 applies only to
the NWIPC does not, by itself, mean that it violates the
intergovernmental immunity doctrine. See Washington, 460
U.S. at 541–45 (rejecting argument that statute specifically
targeting federal contractors was discriminatory solely on
that basis); id. at 540 (citing United States v. Mexico, 455
U.S. 720, 734 (1982) (“[I]mmunity may not be conferred
simply because” the law “has an effect on the United States,
or even because the Federal Government shoulders the entire
economic burden.”)). To determine whether HB 1470 is
impermissibly discriminatory, we evaluate how Washington
law treats entities that are “similarly situated” to GEO.
Dawson, 586 U.S. at 177. If Washington law treats similarly
situated entities in the same manner HB 1470 treats the
NWIPC, HB 1470 is not impermissibly discriminatory.
The key issue in this case is whether the entities to which
we should compare the NWIPC are state prisons or civil
detention facilities. For the reasons explained below, we
THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE 23
conclude that the appropriate comparators are civil detention
facilities.
The district court held that Section 2 impermissibly
discriminates against the federal government because it
“impose[s] various burdens on the NWIPC that do not apply
to any similarly situated facility in the State.” The court
concluded that the “similarly situated facilit[ies] in the State”
are Washington’s state-owned and state-operated prisons
rather than private residential treatment facilities and civil
commitment facilities (collectively, “civil detention
facilities”) in Washington. Using Washington’s prisons as
the comparator, the district court concluded that Section 2 is
impermissibly discriminatory.
GEO has consistently contended that the entities to
which the NWIPC should be compared are Washington’s
prisons. In agreeing with GEO, the district court relied in
substantial part on our decision in California. The district
court wrote, “[T]he court [in California] implicitly reasoned
that immigration detention facilities are similarly situated to
state and local detention facilities, such as prisons and jails.”
If the district court had been correct in concluding that the
appropriate comparator is Washington’s prisons, we would
agree with its decision striking down Sections 2 and 3 of HB
1470. However, we disagree with that conclusion.
In California, we compared California’s treatment of
civil immigration detention facilities, on the one hand, to its
treatment of California detention facilities that held
convicted criminals and those charged with crimes, on the
other. We were not asked to compare California’s regulation
of civil immigration facilities to its regulation of civil
detainment facilities. Because we “decide only questions
presented by the parties,” United States v. Sineneng-Smith,
24 THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE
590 U.S. 371, 376 (2020), and because of the fundamental
difference between civil detainees and those charged or
convicted with crimes, we decline to hold that our
comparison in California controls here. Now properly
presented with the question, we therefore decide whether the
appropriate comparison in this case is to private facilities
holding civil detainees or to the public prisons and jails
holding convicted criminals and those charged with crimes.
GEO has consistently argued that the appropriate
comparator to the NWIPC is Washington’s prisons. In
arguing that prisons are the appropriate comparator, GEO
asks us to ignore the critical fact that inmates in
Washington’s prisons have been convicted of crimes, and
that the conditions of their confinement are part of a penal
regime. By contrast, none of the detainees held in the
NWIPC has been convicted of—or even charged with—a
crime. Cf. Zadvydas v. Davis, 533 U.S. 678, 690 (2001)
(Immigration detention is “civil, not criminal” and
“nonpunitive in purpose and effect.”); Mahler v. Eby, 264
U.S. 32, 39 (1924) (“It is well settled that deportation, while
it may be burdensome and severe for the alien, is not a
punishment.”). All of the detainees in the NWIPC are civil
detainees, awaiting determination of their immigration
status. As we noted above, some of the detainees will be
deported based on that determination. Some will be released
into the United States. GEO also asks us to ignore the fact
that Washington owns and operates its prisons. By contrast,
the federal government neither owns nor operates the
NWIPC. Rather, the NWIPC is owned and operated by
GEO, a private, for-profit company. Because of the
fundamental differences between Washington’s prisons,
which are state-owned and state-operated facilities that hold
and punish convicted criminals, and the NWIPC, which is a
THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE 25
privately owned and privately operated detention facility
that holds civil detainees, we conclude that the appropriate
comparator is not Washington’s prisons.
Washington has consistently argued that the entities to
which the NWIPC should be compared are privately owned
and operated civil detention facilities. Like the civil
detainees in the NWIPC, many of the individuals in these
facilities are held in involuntary confinement. See, e.g.,
Wash. Rev. Code §§ 71.05.010–71.05.950 (Washington’s
Involuntary Treatment Act); id. § 11.130.330(7)
(recognizing that facilities can involuntarily detain
individuals consistent with Washington’s Involuntary
Treatment Act); id. § 10.77.150(4) (allowing courts to grant
“conditional release of [a] person to a less restrictive
alternative, including residential treatment” facilities); and
id. §§ 9.94A.660, 9.94A.664 (allowing courts to issue
sentences “conditioned on the offender entering and
remaining in a residential substance use disorder treatment
program,” id. § 9.94A.664(1)(a)). Also like the civil
detainees in the NWIPC, individuals confined in these
facilities are not confined because they have committed
crimes, and the conditions of their confinement are not part
of any punishment. See, e.g., Addington v. Texas, 441 U.S.
418, 428–30 (1979) (explaining the fundamental differences
between criminal and civil commitments, including that ‘[i]n
a civil commitment state power is not exercised in a punitive
sense”). We therefore agree with Washington that the
appropriate comparators to the NWIPC are these civil
detention facilities.
Section 2 sets forth required conditions of confinement
for detainees held in the NWIPC. As noted above, DOH has
not yet adopted rules implementing those requirements.
However, even before implementing rules have been
26 THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE
adopted by DOH, it is evident that the statutory and
contractual requirements imposed on the NWIPC are almost
identical to the requirements imposed under Washington law
on the two types of civil detention facilities to which we
compare them. See California, 921 F.3d at 882–84. We
describe in turn the required conditions of confinement in
these three facilities.
First, Section 2 requires DOH to adopt rules
implementing its requirements that the NWIPC (1) maintain
a “safe, clean, and comfortable environment that allows a
detained person to use the person’s personal belongings to
the extent possible”; (2) clean and sanitize living areas
“regularly”; (3) “provide laundry facilities”; (4) provide
“[b]asic personal hygiene items . . . at no cost”; (5) “provide
a nutritious and balanced diet, including fresh fruits and
vegetables”; (6) maintain “[s]afe indoor air quality”;
(7) have “heating and air conditioning equipment that can be
adjusted by room or area”; and (8) operate an “infection
control program.” Wash. Rev. Code § 70.395.040.
Second, residential treatment facilities in Washington
are “twenty-four hour . . . facilities” that “provid[e] health
care services to persons with mental disorders or substance
abuse disorders.” Wash. Admin. Code § 246-337-001
(2023). These facilities are required under Washington law
to maintain an effective “infection control program,” id.
§ 246-337-060; to serve three nutritious meals per day, with
modifications appropriate to medical conditions and
religious preferences, id. § 246-337-111; to provide laundry
facilities that are clean and in good repair, id. § 246-337-112;
to provide housing that is in good repair, with “heating,
ventilation, and air conditioning,” id. § 246-337-120; to
provide bathing and toilet areas with soap and toilet paper,
id. § 246-337-124; to provide laundry facilities, id. § 246-
THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE 27
337-128; to provide heating and air conditioning that can
maintain “interior temperatures between sixty-five degrees
Fahrenheit and seventy-eight degrees Fahrenheit year-
round,” id. § 246-337-135; and to maintain the facility in a
clean and sanitary condition, id. § 246-337-146.
Third, involuntary civil commitment facilities in
Washington are facilities where individuals are confined
against their will despite the fact that they have not been
convicted of a crime. Such facilities include, for example,
mental health hospitals where mentally ill individuals are
civilly committed under Washington’s Involuntary
Treatment Act. Wash. Rev. Code §§ 71.05.010–71.05.950.
These facilities are required under Washington law to
“[e]stablish and implement an effective hospital-wide
infection control program,” Wash. Admin. Code § 246-322-
100 (2024); to provide a safe and clean environment,
including a ventilation system and a “heating system
operated and maintained to sustain a comfortable
temperature,” id. § 246-322-120; to provide sleeping rooms
with adequate space and bed linens, id. § 246-322-140; to
provide adequate toilet fixtures and rooms, as well as
adequate sink and bathing fixtures, id. § 246-322-160; to
provide three well-balanced and nourishing meals per day,
id. § 246-322-230; and to provide laundry and linen services,
id. § 246-322-240.
We have held that there is no “de minimis exception to
the doctrine of intergovernmental immunity.” California,
921 F.3d at 883. “Any economic burden that is
discriminatorily imposed on the federal government is
unlawful.” Id. at 883–84 (emphasis in original). With
GEO’s challenge in its current posture—before DOH has
promulgated any rules implementing Section 2—the
question before us is whether there is a likelihood that DOH
28 THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE
will adopt rules under Section 2 that are different from the
requirements applicable to the two types of civil detention
facilities.
GEO’s discrimination argument in its brief is based
almost entirely on a comparison of the requirements imposed
by Section 2 with the requirements Washington imposes on
its prisons. GEO argues only in passing that Section 2 is
discriminatory based on a comparison of its requirements to
the requirements Washington imposes on the two types of
civil detention facilities. The only requirements of Section
2 to which GEO has specifically objected in its brief are three
requirements discussed in the portion of its brief dedicated
to its argument about Article III case or controversy.
Generously construed, GEO’s argument is that these three
requirements are different from the comparable
requirements imposed on the civil detention facilities, and
that they are therefore discriminatory.
Though it is a close question, we conclude that the best
course of action is not to decide ourselves at this point
whether Washington regulates the conditions of
confinement at the NWIPC differently from the way it
regulates the conditions of confinement in the two civil
detention facilities. The best course of action is, rather, to
allow the district court to do so in the first instance. That
court should make the comparison between the requirements
imposed on the NWIPC by Section 2 of HB 1470, as
amended by HB 1232, and the requirements imposed by
Washington law on the two types of civil detention facilities.
Because the district court concluded that the appropriate
comparator is Washington’s prisons, it made no attempt to
make that comparison with respect to the requirements
imposed by Section 2; and, because of its recent enactment,
the district court of course could not have included in such a
THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE 29
comparison the requirements of HB 1232. We remand to
allow the district court to make that comparison.
(b) Section 6 of HB 1470 and
Section 4 of HB 1232
As noted above, Section 6 of HB 1470 provides that
“[a]ny person who fails to comply” with HB 1470 “may be
subject to a civil penalty in an amount of not more than
$1,000 per violation per day.” Id. § 70.395.080(1). Section
4 of HB 1232 provides a “civil fine of up to $10,000 per
violation, not to exceed a total fine of $1,000,000, on a
private detention facility” under certain circumstances. H.B.
1232 § 4.
For two reasons, Washington argues in its brief that
Section 6 is not a discriminatory burden. First, DOH
possesses the “authority to impose fines on other facilities
for non-compliance with its regulations.” For example,
Wash. Admin. Code § 246-322-025(6) (2023) allows “civil
fines on a psychiatric hospital . . . of up to $10,000 per
violation.” Second, Washington contends that “other
facilities are subject to a much more stringent enforcement
mechanism: DOH’s authority to deny or suspend their
license or ability to operate at all.” Further, Wash. Admin.
Code § 246-337-021(6) (2023) allows DOH to “revoke” a
license of a residential treatment facility that “[f]ail[s] to
comply” with DOH regulations. Washington therefore
argues that the NWIPC is thus “better off” than the civil
detention facilities to which we compare it. See Washington,
460 U.S. at 541–42 (emphasis in original).
GEO has made no argument to the contrary. In its
responding brief, GEO describes the penalty authorized in
Section 6, but it does not argue that it is discriminatory.
However, GEO has not yet had an opportunity to make an
30 THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE
argument that Section 6, combined with Section 4 of HB
1232, is discriminatory.
The district court struck down Section 6 as a natural
corollary of its decision that the requirements of Section 2
were unconstitutional. But that decision was, of course,
premised on a comparison to Washington’s prisons rather
than the private civil detention facilities to which we now
hold are the appropriate comparators. We vacate the district
court’s decision and remand to allow that court to make that
comparison in the first instance.
b. Preemption
The district court held that Sections 2, 3 and 6 of HB
1470 are not preempted by federal law. Of course, that court
had no opportunity to address HB 1232. However, given the
relatively small changes effectuated by HB 1232, we
conclude that its preemption analysis would not have been
affected.
Federal law preempts state law when Congress has
occupied the “field,” enacting a “scheme of federal
regulation . . . so pervasive as to make reasonable the
inference that Congress left no room for the States to
supplement it.” Rice v. Santa Fe Elevator Corp., 331 U.S.
218, 230 (1947). Federal law also preempts state law when
a party cannot comply with both federal and state law, or
when state law poses an “obstacle to the accomplishment
and execution of the full purposes and objectives of
Congress.” Nat’l Fed’n of the Blind v. United Airlines Inc.,
813 F.3d 718, 724 (9th Cir. 2016) (citation omitted).
There is a presumption against preemption “when a state
regulates in an area of historic state power.” Knox v.
Brnovich, 907 F.3d 1167, 1174 (9th Cir. 2018) (citation
THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE 31
omitted). Once triggered, the presumption against
preemption applies “even if the law ‘touch[es] on’ an area of
significant federal presence.” Id. (alteration in original)
(quoting Puente Ariz. v. Arpaio, 821 F.3d 1098, 1104 n.5
(9th Cir. 2016)); DeCanas v. Bica, 424 U.S. 351, 355 (1976)
(“[T]he Court has never held that every state enactment
which in any way deals with [noncitizens] is a regulation of
immigration and thus per se preempted by this constitutional
power.”); Puente Ariz., 821 F.3d at 1104. To overcome the
presumption against preemption, the challenging party must
show a “clear and manifest purpose of Congress” to preempt
state law. Arizona v. United States, 567 U.S. 387, 400
(2012) (internal citations omitted).
i. Field Preemption
GEO points to the constitutional authority of the federal
government to regulate immigration and argues that many
state-imposed immigration-related measures, including
those at issue here, are preempted by federal law. We
rejected a similar argument in California, where California
law authorized inspection, inter alia, of federal detention
facilities holding noncitizens “for purposes of civil
immigration proceedings.” California, 921 F.3d at 875. The
inspections included review of “conditions of confinement”
and “standard of care.” Id. at 876. We noted that the
government did not “dispute that California possesses the
general authority to ensure the health and welfare of inmates
and detainees in facilities within its borders,” and held that
the government had failed to “demonstrate any intent, let
alone ‘clear and manifest,’ that Congress intended to
supersede this authority.” Id. (emphasis in original); see also
Newsom, 40 F.4th at 766 (emphasizing a state’s “historic”
powers in this domain). Similarly, we see no indication that
Congress has demonstrated any intent, let alone a clear and
32 THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE
manifest intent, to preempt Sections 2, 3 and 6 of HB 1470
and relevant portions of HB 1232.
ii. Obstacle Preemption
GEO contends in its brief that “HB 1470 presents an
unconstitutional obstacle to the accomplishment of the
government’s carefully crafted standards for the conditions
of alien detention.”
As noted above, to prevail in its argument, GEO must
overcome the presumption against preemption. See
California, 921 F.3d 886. HB 1470 and HB 1232 do not
apply to the United States. They apply to GEO. Nothing in
Sections 2, 3 and 6 frustrates the federal government’s
ability to detain individuals at the NWIPC. Nor do these
sections prevent GEO from accomplishing any task that has
been required by the federal government—especially when
its own contract with ICE contemplates more stringent state
requirements in the first place. We therefore conclude that
GEO has not established that these statutes constitute
obstacle preemption.
B. Section 5
Section 5 of HB 1470 provides to a “detained person” a
private cause of action for monetary and injunctive relief for
a violation of HB 1470, including the requirements set forth
in Section 2. Wash. Rev. Code § 70.395.070. Section 5
provides no cause of action to the Attorney General or
Governor. The district court granted a preliminary
injunction against the enforcement of Section 5, holding that
it violates the doctrine of intergovernmental immunity.
In Whole Woman’s Health v. Jackson, 595 U.S. 30
(2021), a provision of a Texas statute, SB 8, allowed private
citizens to enforce the law’s prohibition on abortions through
THE GEO GROUP V. INSLEE 33
the filing of a civil suit. Id. Plaintiffs filed suit against
several defendants, including the Texas Attorney General,
seeking an injunction against enforcement of the statute. Id.
The Supreme Court held that the Attorney General was not
a proper defendant as to SB 8 because “petitioners d[id] not
direct this Court to any enforcement authority the attorney
general possessed in connection with [SB] 8 that a federal
court might enjoin him from exercising.” Id. at 43. Like SB
8, Section 5 of HB 1470 does not grant “any enforcement
authority” to the Attorney General or the Governor. See id.
Thus, the Attorney General and the Governor are not proper
defendants as to Section 5.
Because Section 5 provides no cause of action against
either the Attorney General or Governor, we conclude that
the district court erred in reaching the merits of GEO’s
challenge to this section. Rather than enjoining enforcement
of Section 5 by the Attorney General and the Governor, the
district court should have dismissed this portion of GEO’s
suit.
Conclusion
We vacate the district court’s grant of a preliminary
injunction against Sections 2, 3, 5 and 6 of HB 1470. We
grant in part the motion to remand (Dkt. No. 63) to the
district court for further proceedings consistent with this
opinion.
VACATED and REMANDED.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT THE GEO GROUP, INC., No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT THE GEO GROUP, INC., No.
02JAY INSLEE, Governor; ROBERT FERGUSON, OPINION Defendants - Appellants.
03Settle, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted February 14, 2025 Seattle, Washington Filed August 19, 2025 Before: William A.
04INSLEE SUMMARY * Intergovernmental Immunity / Preemption The panel (1) vacated the district court’s grant of a preliminary injunction sought by GEO Group, Inc.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT THE GEO GROUP, INC., No.
FlawCheck shows no negative treatment for The Geo Group, Inc. v. Inslee in the current circuit citation data.
This case was decided on August 19, 2025.
Use the citation No. 10656684 and verify it against the official reporter before filing.