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Opinion Summary: First Choice v. Davenport | What Happens When State Subpoenas Silence Speech?

Opinion Summary: First Choice v. Davenport | What Happens When State Subpoenas Silence Speech?

Season 2025 Episode 80 Published 1 week, 3 days ago
Description

First Choice Women's Resource Centers, Inc. v. Davenport | Case No. 24-781 | Decided: 4/29/26 | Docket Link: Here

Overview: New Jersey's Attorney General (Platkin) demanded a pro-life nonprofit's donor records despite receiving zero public complaints. The Court unanimously ruled the subpoena inflicted a present First Amendment injury, opening the federal courthouse door immediately.

Question Presented: Whether federal courts can hear First Amendment challenges to state subpoenas demanding donor identities before state courts enforce those subpoenas.

Posture: Third Circuit affirmed dismissal for lack of standing; Supreme Court reversed unanimously.

Holding: First Choice established a present injury to its First Amendment associational rights sufficient for Article III standing.

Result: Reversed and remanded.

Voting Breakdown: 9-0. Justice Gorsuch authored the unanimous opinion.

Majority Reasoning: (1) Government demands for donor information inevitably deter First Amendment associational rights — an injury beginning when the demand arrives and persisting as long as it remains outstanding; (2) The subpoena's "non-self-executing" nature carried no constitutional significance — the "sword of Damocles" chilled association regardless of enforcement status; (3) Confidentiality promises, narrowed demands, and prospective protective orders cannot cure the First Amendment injury a donor-information subpoena inflicts.

Separate Opinions: None. The Court ruled unanimously without concurrences or dissents.

Implications: Every nonprofit, charity, and advocacy organization now holds clear authority to challenge government demands for donor records in federal court immediately under Section 1983 — without exhausting state remedies first. The ruling forecloses the "preclusion trap" that would permanently bar federal review after a state-court loss. Attorneys general nationwide must now account for immediate federal scrutiny before issuing investigatory subpoenas targeting donor rolls. The Court left the merits question open — whether this particular subpoena violated the First Amendment — sending that fight back to the lower courts on remand.

The Fine Print:

  • First Amendment: "Congress shall make no law … abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble."
  • 42 U.S.C. §1983: Authorizes suits against any person who, under color of state law, deprives another of federal constitutional rights — enacted by Congress specifically to guarantee a federal forum when state officials violate constitutional protections.

Primary Cases:

  • NAACP v. Alabama ex rel. Patterson (1958): Government demands for private membership rolls burden First Amendment associational rights; the "vital relationship" between privacy in association and freedom to associate requires the "closest scrutiny" of compelled disclosure.
  • Americans for Prosperity Foundation v. Bonta (2021): State demands for charitable donor information "chill" protected associational rights even when the government promises confidentiality; such demands must overcome heightened First Amendment scrutiny.

Oral Advocates:

  • For Petitioner (First Choice Women's Resource): Erin M. Hawley, Washington, D.C.
  • For United States as Amicus Curiae: Vivek Suri, Assistant to the Solicitor General, Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.
  • For Respondent (New Jersey): Sundeep Iyer, Chief Counsel to the Attorney General, Trenton, N
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