Naacp 1020 File
Naacp 1020 File
Naacp 1020 File
Defendants.
Section 1(1)-(2) of H.B. 1020, enacted into law on April 21, 2023, requires
Defendant Randolph to appoint four judges to the Hinds County Circuit Court for nearly
four-year terms by May 8, 2023—within the next 10 days. The statute further permits
these judges to reside anywhere in the State rather than in the county where they serve.
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Residents of all other counties in Mississippi have the right to vote for their Circuit
Judges, and those judges must reside in the county where they serve. Because the
infected with discriminatory intent, Plaintiffs assert that H.B. 1020 deprives them of
those rights available to residents of all other counties in violation of the Equal Protection
Pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 65, Plaintiffs respectfully move this Court for a
the Hinds County Circuit Court. Plaintiffs are not seeking an ex parte order. To the
contrary, summons have been served on the Defendants, and attorneys for several of
them have entered appearances and have been served with copies of the notion.
Furthermore, copies of the Complaint and this motion have been served on the Attorney
General, both as a professional courtesy and in compliance with Fed. R. Civ. P. 5.1(a)(2).
and Urgent Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order, a copy of H.B. 1020 (attached as
Exhibit 1), the Declaration of Charles Taylor (attached as Exhibit 2), the Declaration of
Frank Figgers (attached as Exhibit 3), and the Declaration of Nsombi Lambright-Haynes
(attached as Exhibit 4). As set out in the accompanying memorandum, Plaintiffs have
shown that they are substantially likely to succeed on the merits of their equal protection
1
Plaintiffs have also raised in their Complaint challenges to a number of other features of
H.B. 1020 and S.B. 2343, but because those provisions are implemented on a later time
frame, they are not included in this request for expeditious relief.
2
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challenge to H.B. 1020’s judicial appointment provision. Plaintiffs have also shown a
substantial threat of irreparable injury, for which there is no adequate remedy at law, if
H.B. 1020 is not enjoined before the Circuit Court is packed within the next 10 days.
Further, vacating these state-court appointments after the fact would be more disruptive
to the Hinds County Circuit Court and litigants before it than temporarily enjoining the
appointments while the parties litigate and the Court rules on the motion for a preliminary
Plaintiffs submit that the attached memorandum sets forth sufficient grounds for a
preliminary injunction, but there are additional facts and legal arguments that Plaintiffs
circumstance created by the 15-day deadline for Defendant Randolph to appoint the
Accordingly, Plaintiffs respectfully request that the Court grant Plaintiffs’ Motion
for a Temporary Restraining Order to maintain the status quo and set a schedule for
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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that on April 28, 2023, I electronically filed the foregoing
Plaintiffs’ Necessitous and Urgent Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order with the
Clerk of the Court by using the Court’s CM/ECF system, which will send a notice of
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Defendants.
INTRODUCTION
Defendant Randolph to appoint four judges to the Hinds County Circuit Court for nearly
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Black residents of Hinds County equal protection of the laws, and the irreparable harm
caused by denial of this constitutional right will begin immediately upon the
appointments. Further, vacating these state-court appointments after the fact would be
more disruptive to the Hinds County Circuit Court and those with cases before it than
temporarily enjoining the appointments while the parties litigate and the Court rules on
the motion for a preliminary injunction that Plaintiffs will file. Plaintiffs submit that the
instant memorandum contains sufficient grounds for a preliminary injunction, but there
are additional facts and legal arguments that Plaintiffs wish to add in support of a
preliminary injunction. However, due to the exigent circumstance created by the 15-day
deadline for Defendant Randolph to appoint the additional judges, Plaintiffs are
is a summary of their arguments why the judicial appointments provision of H.B. 1020
restraining order enjoining Defendant Randolph from appointing judges pursuant to H.B.
1020 pending the briefing, hearing, and resolution of Plaintiffs’ forthcoming motion for a
preliminary injunction.
STATEMENT OF FACTS
On April 21, 2023, Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves signed House Bill 1020
(“H.B. 1020”) into law. Ex. 1. The law requires, among other things, that the Chief
1
Plaintiffs are not seeking an ex parte order. They have served summonses on Defendants,
counsel for several of them have entered appearances, and this motion is being served on those
attorneys. Plaintiffs also have provided a copy of the complaint and this motion to the Attorney
General, both as a professional courtesy and in compliance with Fed. R. Civ. P. 5.1(a)(2).
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Justice of the Mississippi Supreme Court appoint four “special temporary” judges to
Hinds County’s Seventh Circuit Court District no later than 15 days after passage of the
Act. Id. §§ 1(1)-(2). Unlike normal Circuit Court judges, the new Hinds County judges
will not be elected by the local community they serve, nor are they required to reside in
Hinds County. See id. And, unlike temporary judges who may be assigned to other
Mississippi courts on an “emergency” basis, the new Hinds County judges will serve
through December 31, 2026—nearly the full four years that an elected Circuit Court
The State has repeatedly packed the Hinds County’s Circuit Court with judges
selected by a white State official rather than authorize more judges for the majority-Black
population to elect. The State has not increased the number of elected judges (four) on
the Circuit Court since 1994, see 1994 Miss. Laws Ch. 564, despite state constitutional
and statutory requirements that circuit courts expand based, among other factors, on case
load and circuit needs, see Miss. Const. art. 6, § 152; Miss. Code § 9-7-3(3). Instead, in
August 2020, the Chief Justice temporarily appointed four additional judges—doubling
the size of that court—for four months to help with a backlog of cases. Then in
September 2022, the Chief Justice again temporarily appointed four judges to the court,
citing a “criminal case backlog.” While each of the court’s elected judges is Black, see
Decl. of Charles Taylor (“Taylor Decl.”), Ex. D, two of the judges appointed in 2020
were white, as are three of the most recently appointed judges. See id., Exs. A–B.
H.B. 1020 ratifies this pattern of a white state official appointing white outsiders
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other circuit court has had a temporary judge appointed since 2020. See id., Ex. E. To
make matters worse, H.B. 1020 allows the current “temporary” judges to be
“reappoint[ed],” id., Ex. 1, § 1(2), giving them terms on the Hinds County’s Circuit Court
beyond the Mississippi Constitution’s four-year limit for elected judges. See Miss.
Plaintiffs and their members include Black voters who reside in Jackson,
Mississippi, which makes up two-thirds of the population of Hinds County. They have
voted in Hinds County Circuit Court elections in the past and plan to do so in future.
They believe, as former Mississippi Chief Justice Prather once wrote, that “elected judges
are reactive to public opinion, while appointed ones who never face popular confirmation
are largely free of its constraint.” Lenore L. Prather, Judicial Selection—What is Right
for Mississippi?, 21 Miss. Coll. L. Rev. 199, 206–07 (2002) (citing Daniel R. Pinello, The
Reaction, and Atrophy 130 (Greenwood Press, 1995)). Plaintiffs bring this suit and
request for a temporary restraining order to prevent H.B. 1020 from depriving them of
rights afforded to Mississippi voters in all other counties and diluting the voting strength
ARGUMENT
injury if the injunction is not issued; (3) the threatened injury outweighs any harm the
injunction might cause defendants; and (4) the injunction will not disserve the public
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interest. Byrum v. Landreth, 566 F.3d 442, 445 (5th Cir. 2009). Here, each factor weighs
facie case, but need not prove that he is entitled to summary judgment.” Daniels Health
Scis., L.L.C. v. Vascular Health Scis., L.L.C., 710 F.3d 579, 582 (5th Cir. 2013).
F.3d 504, 509 (5th Cir. 2000). That prohibition forbids establishing judicial selection
processes with the “purpose and operative effect” of denying or “dilut[ing] the voting
strength of [B]lack citizens.” Voter Info. Project, Inc. v. City of Baton Rouge, 612 F.2d
208, 212 (5th Cir. 1980). Here, H.B. 1020 deprives Hinds County’s Black voters of the
“local control rights given to all other [] voters in the State,” thus denying them equal
protection of the laws. City of Greensboro v. Guilford Cnty. Bd. of Elections, 120 F.
Supp. 3d 479, 489 (M.D.N.C. 2015). H.B. 1020 transfers responsibility for electing half
of Hinds County’s Circuit Court judges from its majority-Black voters to the Chief
Justice of the Mississippi Supreme Court, who is elected in a district that does not include
Hinds County and is in no way accountable to the residents of Hinds County. See Taylor
Decl., Ex. F; see also Kramer v. Union Free Sch. Dist. No. 15, 395 U.S. 621, 626–27
(“Statutes granting the franchise to residents on a selective basis always pose the danger
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of denying some citizens any effective voice in the governmental affairs which
“motivating” factor behind enactment of the law to shift the burden “to the law’s
defenders to demonstrate that the law would have been enacted without this factor.”
Hunter v. Underwood, 471 U.S. 222, 228 (1985). Notably, “[r]acial discrimination need
only be one purpose, and not even a primary purpose,” to violate the Equal Protection
Clause. Id. at 230 (citation and internal quotations omitted). When evaluating intent, a
court may consider “‘direct or indirect circumstantial evidence, including the normal
Brown, 561 F.3d 420, 433 (5th Cir. 2009) (citations omitted); see also Rogers v. Lodge,
458 U.S. 613, 618 (1982) (“discriminatory intent need not be proved by direct
evidence”).
official action, a disparate impact on one race more than another can be an “important
starting point.” Vill. of Arlington Heights v. Metro. Hous. Dev. Corp., 429 U.S. 252, 266
(1977).
Here, it is beyond dispute that H.B. 1020 will have a disparate impact on Black
citizens. Nearly 75% of Hinds County’s residents are Black, Taylor Decl., Ex. G,
compared with only 38% of Mississippi’s residents overall. Id., Ex. H. Hinds County is
home to the largest Black population of any Mississippi county. Id., Ex. I. Hinds County
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also includes the city of Jackson, which has one of the highest proportions of Black
residents in the United States (more than 80%). The overwhelmingly Black residents of
the right to vote for their circuit judges and to have circuit judges who reside in the
Defendants intended H.B. 1020 to adversely impact Black citizens. Pers. Adm’r of Mass.
The Fifth Circuit has noted that “[i]n this day and age,” legislators “rarely . . .
announc[e] an intent to discriminate based upon race” because they are often “careful
about what they [say] and [write] about the purposes” of a law likely to be challenged,
like H.B. 1020. Veasey, 830 F.3d at 235 & n.19. Here, however, discriminatory intent
In a telling exchange, H.B. 1020’s principal author, Rep. Trey Lamar, justified
appointing judges in Hinds County by saying: “[D]o we not want our best and brightest
sitting in judgment, whether that may come from Holmes County or Madison County or
wherever they may be? Why would we limit the talent pool to here?”2 Rep. Lamar
offered no race-neutral explanation for why the “best and brightest” candidates could not
be found within the state’s most populous county, which is predominantly Black.
2
Trey Lamar, MS House Floor - 7 February, 2023; 10:00 AM, YouTube at 6:46:47 (Feb. 7,
2023), https://www.youtube.com/live/HtruSFI0avs?feature=share&t=24394.
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Rep. Lamar is not the first member of the Legislature to argue that predominantly
Black residents of Hinds County and the City of Jackson are incapable of governing
themselves. In 2015, Mississippi State Rep. Lester “Bubba” Carpenter—who voted for
H.B. 1020—connected the dots in telling supporters to vote against a funding initiative
because “[i]f [it] passes in its form, a judge in Hinds County, Mississippi, predominantly
Black—it’s going to be a Black judge—they’re going to tell us where the state education
Courts apply the framework set forth in Arlington Heights to determine whether a
state law was enacted with a discriminatory purpose. Veasey v. Abbott, 830 F.3d 216,
230 (5th Cir. 2016) (en banc). Those factors include: “(1) the historical background of
the decision, (2) the specific sequence of events leading up to the decision, (3) departures
from the normal procedural sequence, (4) substantive departures, and (5) legislative
history, especially where there are contemporary statements by members of the decision-
making body.” Overton v. City of Austin, 871 529, 540, (5th Cir. 1989).. Each of these
succeeding on the merits of their equal protection challenge to H.B. 1020’s appointment
of temporary judges.
1. Historical background
With respect to the first Arlington Heights factor, courts recognize that “history
provides context and that historical discrimination . . . can have effects for many years.”
Veasey, 830 F.3d at 232 (plurality opinion); see, e.g., Patino v. City of Pasadena, 230 F.
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Supp. 3d 667, 682 (S.D. Tex. 2017) (holding that historical evidence supported a showing
minorities, . . . as well as a history of more recent events that are more probative”). In
H.B. 1020’s appointment of judges who are not accountable to Hinds County’s
voters represents the latest step in the Mississippi Legislature’s campaign to deny Black
residents equal political power. This Court has found that Mississippi has a “long history
“extended to the bar and consequently to the judiciary.” Martin v. Allain, 658 F. Supp.
1183, 1192 (S.D. Miss. 1987). Mississippi was the first state to provide for election of all
judges, Miss. Const. 1832, art. 4, § 2, but it had no Black judges from Reconstruction
until 1977. Martin, 658 F. Supp. at 1193. In 1987, this Court struck down the prior
system for electing Hinds County Circuit Court judges in a multi-member district because
it provided Black residents “less opportunity than other members of the electorate to
participate in the political process and to elect representatives of their choice.” Id. at
1204; see also League of United Latin Am. Citizens v. Abbott, 601 F. Supp. 3d 147, 170
(W.D. Tex. 2022) (discriminatory intent supported by evidence that in every decade
“since the statute was passed in 1965, federal courts have held that Texas violated” the
More recently, the State has denied Jackson’s majority-Black citizens and elected
leadership access to the federal transportation funds that the city merits due to its size and
needs; sought to strip the city of control over its municipal airport; and diverted and
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constrained the city’s share of the sales tax revenue collected in Jackson. Taylor Decl.,
Exs. K–N. It has deprived Jackson, its Black leadership, and its majority-Black residents
of the funds they need to operate Jackson’s water systems, and even considered fully
taking control of Jackson’s water systems in order to hijack the approximately $800
million that Congress appropriated to remediate the Jackson water crisis. Taylor Decl.,
Exs. O–P.
Further, H.B. 1020 was enacted against the backdrop of Mississippi’s racially
polarized voting. See, e.g., Martin v. Allain, 658 F. Supp. 1183, 1202 (S.D. Miss. 1987).
Black voters in Hinds County have historically voted for different candidates for
statewide office than their white counterparts in the State. All four of Hinds County’s
elected circuit judges are Black, but Mississippi has not elected a Black official to
statewide office since Reconstruction, and State officials do not need to appeal to Black
The next Arlington Heights factor considers whether the specific sequence of
events leading up to the decision demonstrates a focus on race. As the Fifth Circuit has
The context of H.B. 1020’s introduction is striking for what the Legislature did not
do. Despite purporting to assist Hinds County and Jackson, Rep. Lamar did not consult
their Black representatives before introducing the bill. Taylor Decl., Ex. R. Nor did the
Legislature ever propose increasing the number of Hinds County’s elected judges to
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H.B. 1020 originated as a more than 1,000-page bill that would have substantially
remade the justice system in Hinds County, including by adding appointed judges. After
its introduction, the judges of the Circuit, Chancery, County, and Justice Courts of all
Judicial Districts of Hinds County issued public statements condemning the bill for
During the House deliberations on H.B. 1020, Rep. Robert L. Johnson offered an
majority-Black residents by requiring that the appointed judges “be residents of Hinds
County,”3 consistent with the requirements for elected judges. See Miss. Code § 9-7-1.
The amendment was voted down, providing further evidence that the Legislature
intended to treat Black citizens less favorably than white citizens of Mississippi.4 See
Veasey, 830 F.3d at 236 (describing that rejecting ameliorative amendments can be
As ultimately enacted, H.B. 1020 and its counterpart legislation, S.B. 2343, also
impose on Jackson unelected prosecutors, create a new unelected court, expands the
jurisdiction of the State-run police force, create harsher criminal penalties for Jackson
residents, and constrain residents’ free speech in ways that provide further evidence of
racial animus and disparate treatment. Ex. 1, §§ 4(1), 5(1), 8; S.B. 2343 §§ 1(1), (6)(a)-
(c). Plaintiffs have challenged these provisions in their Complaint, but because they have
3
Robert Johnson, MS House Floor - 7 February, 2023; 10:00 AM, YouTube at 6:46:34 (Feb. 7,
2023), https://www.youtube.com/live/HtruSFI0avs?feature=share&t=24394.
4
Id.
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later effective dates, Plaintiffs do not seek emergency relief with respect to them.
Nonetheless, these provisions provide important context for the judicial appointment
provision. See N. Carolina State Conf. of NAACP v. McCrory, 831 F.3d 204, 228 (4th
Cir. 2016) (stressing the need to consider “the whole picture” under Arlington Heights).
3. Procedural departures
The third Arlington Heights factor considers departures from the normal
procedural sequence of legislation. 429 U.S. at 267. This, too, demonstrates the
At the outset, House Speaker Philip Gunn sent H.B. 1020 to Rep. Lamar’s House
Ways and Means Committee rather than the House Judiciary Committee, where similar
During the conference committee process, the only Black member of the
conference committee that drafted and approved H.B. 1020 was never shown the
amended text of the bill until a vote was taken. Taylor Decl., Ex. T.
Further, at no point was H.B. 1020 referred to the standing committee on local and
private legislation. Mississippi’s Constitution, however, deems laws like H.B. 1020 that
are “limited in operation . . . to certain districts of the territory of the State” to be “local
and private legislation,” and commands that “[n]o local or private bill shall be passed by
either house until it shall have been referred to” the “standing committee on local and
private legislation.” State ex rel. Pair v. Burroughs, 487 So. 2d 220, 223 (Miss. 1986)
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procedural requirements for legislation of this nature provides still further evidence of the
4. Substantive departures
The fourth factor in the Arlington Heights inquiry considers whether, as here, the
law demonstrates a stark substantive departure from the legal principles “usually
For over 100 years, Mississippi’s Constitution has guaranteed that Circuit Court
judges “shall be elected by the people” for “a term of four years.” Miss. Const. art. 6,
§ 153. Furthermore, since 1994, Mississippi law has required that Circuit Court judges
“be elected for and from” their local districts. 1994 Miss. Laws, Ch. 564, § 37 (codified
at Miss. Code. § 9-7-1). But as described above, H.B. 1020’s four new Circuit Court
judges will not be elected, need not reside in Hinds County, and may serve for more than
four years.
The Mississippi Constitution also forbids setting the number of Circuit Court
judges on an ad hoc basis. Instead, it requires that “[t]he Legislature shall, by statute,
establish certain criteria by which the number of judges in each district shall be
determined, such criteria to be based on population, the number of cases filed and other
appropriate data.” Miss. Const. art. 6, § 152. Accordingly, Mississippi law establishes
that “[t]he number of judges in each circuit court district shall be determined” based on
“[t]he population of the district; [t]he number of cases filed in the district; [t]he case load
of each judge in the district; [t]he geographic area of the district; [a]n analysis of the
needs of the district by the court personnel of the district; and [a]ny other appropriate
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criteria.” Miss. Code § 9-7-3(3). No such analysis was conducted in connection with
H.B. 1020. Instead the statute directs the Legislature consider case load and case
disposition data only after these four appointments are made, and even then only to
consider whether to add just one permanent elected judge. Ex. 1, § 12.
creation of new elected, not appointed, judgeships. As the Chief Justice has recognized,
the Hinds County Circuit Court “is the most populous single Circuit Court District.”
Taylor Decl., Ex. C. Yet it still has the same four elected judgeships as several less
H.B. 1020 also departs from the Legislature’s recent approach with majority-white
counties. In 2020, the Legislature took Desoto County out of the Seventeenth Circuit
Court District and made the county into the Twenty-Third Circuit Court District. See
2020 Miss. Laws Ch. 474. The legislation effectively created a new judgeship, reducing
the former district from three to two judges while creating two new seats for the Desoto
County Circuit Court. Id. According to 2020 U.S. Census data, nearly 65% of Desoto
County’s population is white, while less than 35% of the population is Black. Taylor
Decl., Ex. U.
Each of these instances support an inference that H.B. 1020 was enacted with
standards.” United States v. Yonkers Bd. of Educ., 837 F.2d 1181, 1222 (2d Cir. 1987)
(holding that a city violated the Equal Protection Clause where it ignored substantive
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standards by the Planning Board to build low-income homes only in minority areas
5. Legislative history
The final Arlington Heights factor is the legislative history and legislators’
II. Plaintiffs Will Suffer Irreparable Harm if H.B. 1020 Takes Effect.
undone through monetary remedies,” they are necessarily irreparable. See Deerfield
Med. Ctr. v. City of Deerfield Beach, 661 F.2d 328, 338 (5th Cir. 1981). Indeed, courts
often find that “irreparable injury is present as a matter of law” where a motion for
here. Killebrew v. City of Greenwood, 988 F. Supp. 1014, 1016 (N.D. Miss. 1997); see,
e.g., Arnold v. Barbers Hill Indep. Sch. Dist., 479 F. Supp. 3d 511, 529 (S.D. Tex. 2020)
(“It has repeatedly been recognized by the federal courts at all levels that violation of
Indeed, this Court noted in Church at Jackson v. Hinds County, No. 3:21-CV-298-
HTW-LGI, 2021 WL 4344886 (S.D. Miss. Sept. 23, 2021), that “[w]hen an alleged
deprivation of a constitutional right is involved, most courts hold that no further showing
point to this one because it involved an ordinance that plaintiffs claimed treated religious
institutions “on less than equal terms with other non-religious entities,” in violation of a
15
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federal statute. Id. at *3. The Court recognized that because “there is an ‘equal terms’
exercise case under the First Amendment,” id. at *6, and “the loss of First Amendment
freedoms even for minimal periods of time, unquestionably constitutes irreparable harm.”
Id. (citation and internal quotations omitted). Similarly, the violation of the Equal
Moreover, the harms inflicted by H.B. 1020 are real and concrete, not theoretical
Nsombi Lambright-Haynes.
The balance of equities greatly favors Plaintiffs because a TRO (to be followed by
a preliminary injunction) would merely preserve the status quo, shielding Plaintiffs’
Defendants cannot be harmed by being prevented from violating the Constitution. See
Deerfield Med. Ctr., 661 F.2d at 338–39. The harm that H.B. 1020 inflicts on Plaintiffs
thus grossly outweighs any purported harm to the Defendants from an injunction.
Finally, H.B. 1020 is “unconstitutional [and] so the public interest [is] not
Pub. Sch. Dist., 88 F.3d 274, 280 (5th Cir. 1996). That is because “[i]t is always in the
Women’s Health Org. v. Currier, 760 F.3d 448, 458 n.9 (5th Cir. 2014) (citation
16
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omitted). And as a general rule, the public interest is served by “maintaining the status
constitutionality. See, e.g., United States v. Texas, 508 F.2d 98, 101 (5th Cir. 1975).
That is particularly true here because waiting to vacate H.B. 1020’s judicial
appointment provision until after the appointments have been made would mean
unseating the appointed judges, possibly after they have begun to hear cases. This would
be highly disruptive to the Court and litigants. Cf. Ioppolo v. Rumana, 581 F. App’x 321,
332 (5th Cir. 2014) (noting the “public[] interest in the proper administration of the
judicial system.”). Temporarily enjoining the appointments before they are made while
this Court adjudicates plaintiffs’ claim will preserve the status quo and serve the public
interest.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons set forth above, Plaintiffs respectfully request that the Court issue
pursuant to H.B. 1020 pending the briefing, hearing, and resolution of Plaintiffs’ motion
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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that on April 28th, 2023, I electronically filed the foregoing
Plaintiffs’ Motion for a Preliminary Injunction with the Clerk of the Court by using the
Court’s CM/ECF system, which will send a notice of electronic filing to all counsel of
record.
19
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF MISSISSIPPI
NORTHERN DIVISION
Defendants.
INTRODUCTION
(“NAACP”), the Mississippi State Conference of the NAACP (“Mississippi NAACP”), the
Jackson City Branch of the NAACP (“Jackson NAACP”), Derrick Johnson, Nsombi
Lambright-Haynes, Frank Figgers, Charles Taylor, Markyel Pittman, and Charles Jones
enactment of House Bill 1020 (“H.B. 1020”) and Senate Bill 2343 (“S.B. 2343”), which
majority-Black residents on the basis of race for a separate and unequal policing structure
and criminal justice system to which no other residents of the State are subjected. Under
this new regime and unlike in any other jurisdiction in Mississippi, in certain areas of
protection under the law by providing State actors with the unfettered discretion to restrict
and to petition the government—the very means through which they might protest the
4. Jackson’s residents live in a city that has one of the highest proportions of
Black residents in the United States (more than 80%). In municipal and county elections,
these residents wield significant political power. There is a longstanding tradition of Black
leadership in Jackson; the City of Jackson is currently governed by a Black mayor and
majority-Black city council. All four of the elected judges in Hinds County, which is
2
5. H.B. 1020 and S.B. 2343 are designed to, and will in fact, suppress and chill
Black residents’ exercise of their First Amendment rights and strip Black residents of the
political control they have fought to obtain and to which they are entitled.
6. The Capitol Complex Improvement District (“CCID”), which H.B. 1020 and
S.B. 2343 expand, was conceived as part of a beautification project. The CCID was created
by the Mississippi legislature in 2017 “in order to establish regular funding and
Jackson.” Its boundaries originally covered 8.7 square miles around the State Capitol and
“were drawn to encompass the major state properties in Jackson.” Capitol Complex
https://www.dfa.ms.gov/sites/default/files/CCID%20Home/Master%20Plan%20Docume
nts/2019-0306-ccid-pamphlet.pdf.
7. H.B. 1020 expands the CCID to approximately 17.5 square miles to include
roughly half of the white population of Jackson, when only 15 percent of the entire
8. H.B. 1020 and S.B. 2343 are designed to create a system of separate but
unequal law enforcement and criminal justice, and to significantly impede the ability of
Jackson’s residents to exercise their First Amendment rights to challenge State actions.
residents of Jackson and their governmental institutions through three linked sets of
provisions:
3
• One that extends the jurisdiction of the Department of Public Safety (“DPS”),
through the Capitol Police, on a “primary” basis across the CCID and on a
“concurrent” basis across the entirety of Jackson, singling out Jackson and
• One that seizes control of Jackson’s criminal justice system by (1) packing
the existing Circuit Court with unelected judges, thus stripping Jackson
Court judges who live in the community and are locally elected, (2) creating
a parallel and locally unaccountable judicial system within the CCID (the
Court need not be a resident of the City and is not appointed by the City’s
within the CCID, singling out Jackson’s residents for prosecution by officials
who are not overseen by a locally elected member of their community (the
• And one that imposes a vague and overbroad prior restraint on free
10. The prior restraint provision profoundly limits the exercise of First
Amendment rights by Plaintiffs and others like them and exacerbates H.B. 1020 and S.B.
4
2343’s Equal Protection Clause violations. Because it is not yet known what bearing, if
any, the rules and regulations DPS is required to promulgate to “effectuate” this statute will
have on these restraints, Plaintiffs do not at this time pray for any relief with respect to that
11. Taken together, and as explained more fully below, these provisions strip
Jackson residents, including Plaintiffs, of their rights to enjoy the full protections of the
law and to exercise the same civil liberties as other Mississippi citizens.
PARTIES
12. The NAACP is the oldest and one of the largest nonprofit, nonpartisan civil
rights organizations in the United States. Founded in 1909, the NAACP uses litigation,
policy advocacy, public education, and community organizing to ensure the educational,
political, social and economic equality of all persons and to eliminate all forms of race-
13. The NAACP is incorporated in Delaware and has more than two million
NAACP members are predominantly people of color; the majority are Black. The NAACP
has members who live, work, and vote in Jackson, Mississippi. These members will be
unit of the national NAACP. The Mississippi NAACP has been on the forefront of major
battles for civil rights since its first branch was chartered in 1918. The Mississippi NAACP
5
represents over 11,000 members across the State of Mississippi. These members are
predominantly people of color and a majority are Black. Members live, work, and vote in
Jackson, Mississippi. These members will be directly injured by H.B. 1020 and S.B. 2343.
the Mississippi State Conference of the NAACP and of the national NAACP. The Jackson
NAACP has been a civil rights leader in Mississippi since its founding in 1926. It has more
than 200 members across the City of Jackson. These members are predominantly people
of color and a majority are Black. Members live, work, and vote in Jackson, Mississippi.
These members will be directly injured by H.B. 1020 and S.B. 2343.
Mississippi. Mr. Johnson, who is the President and CEO of the NAACP, has participated
in many free speech events in Jackson that now require approval by State officials under
the prior restraint provision. He has protested, marched, and engaged in a range of
collective actions designed to amplify his political voice on behalf of Black and other
people of color nationwide. As a voter, Mr. Johnson considers law enforcement policies
when voting for mayor or other local elected offices, and judicial qualifications when
voting for local elected judges. As a resident of Jackson, Mr. Johnson is now subject to
policing by Capitol Police and the jurisdiction of the new, unelected prosecutors and judges
in Jackson.
17. Plaintiff Frank Figgers is a resident of and registered voter in Jackson. Mr.
Figgers, who is a member of the NAACP, is 73 years old and has lived in Jackson his entire
life. Like Mr. Johnson, Mr. Figgers has participated in all sorts of events in Jackson that
6
now require approval by the Chief of Capitol Police or Commissioner of DPS. Mr. Figgers
also considers law enforcement policies when voting for mayor or other local elected
offices, and judicial qualifications when voting for local elected judges. But, as a resident
of Jackson, Mr. Figgers is now subject to policing by Capitol Police and the jurisdiction of
18. Plaintiff Charles Taylor is a resident of and registered voter in Jackson, where
he has lived since he was four years old. He is the Executive Director of the Mississippi
NAACP. In his personal and official capacities, he has attended numerous demonstrations
and rallies in areas that are now covered by S.B. 2343, including the Capitol Building and
the Governor’s Mansion. Mr. Taylor considers law enforcement policies when voting for
mayor or other local elected offices, and judicial qualifications when voting for local
elected judges. But, as a resident of Jackson, Mr. Taylor is now subject to policing by
Capitol Police and the jurisdiction of the new, unelected prosecutors and judges in Jackson.
Mr. Pittman is a student at Jackson State University; he is president of the Mississippi State
Youth and College Chapter of the NAACP and President of the Jackson State University
College Chapter of the NAACP. In his roles with the NAACP and as a community
organizer, Mr. Pittman has attended and planned a number of events that will now be
covered by S.B. 2343’s prior restraint provision. Most recently, for example, he spoke at
a rally on the steps of the Mississippi State Capitol to call out the repressive nature of the
law. Mr. Pittman has already felt firsthand the effects of the Capitol Police: Jackson State
University, which has a student body that is more than 90% Black, falls within the pre-S.B.
7
2343 jurisdiction of the Capitol Police, and Mr. Pittman and his classmates have been
followed and targeted by the Capitol Police. Mr. Pittman considers law enforcement
policies when voting for local elected offices, and judicial qualifications when voting for
local elected judges. As a resident of Jackson, Mr. Pittman is now subject to expanded
policing by Capitol Police and the jurisdiction of the new, unelected prosecutors and judges
in Jackson.
has lived in the city for more than 50 years. He is a member of the NAACP and has
numerous voter registration drives across the city—which are covered by the prior restraint
provision of S.B. 2343. Law enforcement policy is a key consideration for Mr. Jones when
voting for mayor or other local elected offices, as are judicial qualifications when voting
for local elected judges. But, as a resident of Jackson, Mr. Jones is now subject to policing
by Capitol Police and the jurisdiction of the new, unelected prosecutors and judges in
Jackson.
Jackson where she was born and has lived on and off her entire life. She is the president
of the Jackson City Branch of the NAACP and a long-time activist and organizer. She has
attended and organized numerous protests, rallies, demonstrations and other events
throughout Jackson, including in areas now covered by the CCID. The prior restraint
provision of S.B. 2343 will make this essential expression of her First Amendment rights
8
more difficult, if not altogether negate her ability to speak her mind in parts of the State
Capitol where First Amendment rights should be afforded their greatest protection.
Additionally, democratic accountability for those involved in the enforcement of the law,
from police officers to judges and prosecuting attorneys, is of the utmost importance to her.
Because of H.B. 1020 and S.B. 2343 she will now be subject, as a resident of Jackson, to
22. The NAACP, the Mississippi NAACP, and the Jackson NAACP bring this
Black residents of Jackson who reside or work within the CCID’s boundaries. By virtue
of where they live or earn their living, these members are included in a governmental
subdivision designed in reliance on racial criteria, with the goal of controlling Black
residents through a parallel policing and judicial system that does not answer to
them. These members are also subject to a credible and significantly higher risk of harsher
unaccountable temporary Circuit Court judges or CCID judge. Without moving or quitting
their jobs, these members cannot escape these second-class law enforcement and criminal
justice systems.
23. The organizational Plaintiffs and their members also routinely organize and
racial, social, and economic justice. Many of these gatherings have been at places that now
will be covered by S.B. 2343’s prior restraint regime. Indeed, the regime is designed to—
9
and will in fact—hinder the organizational Plaintiffs and other groups the State wishes to
bar from organizing and engaging in such marches, protests, demonstrations, and public
gatherings. Absent this regime, the organizational Plaintiffs’ members would continue
24. The NAACP, Mississippi NAACP, and the Jackson NAACP also bring this
action on their own behalf. The organizational Plaintiffs worked to prevent passage of
H.B. 1020 and S.B. 2343, and, with the passage of these bills, they will be forced to
divert resources from their routine activities. For example, they will have to train and
educate their members and local residents about the new prior restraint regime, the
expanded police jurisdiction, and the judicial takeover authorized by H.B. 1020 and S.B.
2343. Doing so will require designing and paying for training sessions to educate
members on how to navigate the new application process for “event” approvals from the
DPS. Plaintiffs will also need to divert time and resources to consult with attorneys to
create accurate guidance materials for members and will need to reallocate time and
resources to distribute those materials. It will also require designing new educational
programs to ensure that residents of Jackson know and understand their rights in the new
court system. None of these expenditures are needed under the current legal regime.
These new education programs will divert significant funds away from the ordinary work
of the NAACP, the Mississippi NAACP, and the Jackson NAACP and will limit their
advocacy.
25. Defendant Tate Reeves serves as the Governor of the State of Mississippi.
As Governor, he is responsible for the implementation of H.B. 1020 and S.B. 2343 and
10
ensuring “that the laws are faithfully executed” in the State of Mississippi. Miss. Code § 7-
1-5 (c). He is likewise responsible for appointing and supervising the State’s executive
officers, including the Commissioner of DPS. Miss. Code § 7-1-5 (d)-(e). Governor
Reeves’ official residence and principal place of business are in Jackson, Mississippi. He
charges Commissioner Tindell with overseeing the operation of DPS, which includes the
Capitol Police, and with appointing the Chief of the Capitol Police. See Miss. Code § 45-
1-2. Under S.B. 2343, Defendant Tindell shares responsibility with Defendant Luckey for
approving all events in areas covered by the statute. Sec. 6(c). His principal place of
Chief, Luckey is responsible for the operation and oversight of the Capitol Police. Under
S.B. 2343, Defendant Luckey shares responsibility for approving all events in areas
covered by the statute and is responsible for carrying out law enforcement duties in the
CCID and across the City. Secs. 1(1), 6(a), (c). His principal place of business is in
Supreme Court. H.B. 1020 authorizes Chief Justice Randolph to appoint four temporary
special Circuit Court judges to the Seventh Circuit Court District and a judge to the new
CCID Court. His principal place of business is in Jackson, Mississippi. He is being sued
11
29. Defendant Lynn Fitch is the Attorney General of the State of Mississippi.
H.B. 1020 authorizes Attorney General Fitch to appoint prosecuting attorneys for the new
court that the law creates. Her principal place of business is in Jackson, Mississippi. She
30. This action arises under the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United
States Constitution and 42 U.S.C. § 1983. This Court therefore has subject-matter
31. In addition, this Court has jurisdiction to grant declaratory relief under 28
U.S.C. §§ 2201 and 2202 and Rule 57 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
part of the events giving rise to the claims have occurred or will occur within this District
and because the Mississippi NAACP, Jackson NAACP, all individual Plaintiffs, and all
FACTUAL ALLEGATIONS
33. On April 21, 2023, Governor Tate Reeves signed H.B. 1020 and S.B. 2343
into law. The Acts’ provisions take effect at different times. Section 1 of H.B. 1020
requires the appointment of four new judges to the Seventh Circuit Court District within
15 days after passage of the Act. Section 8 expands the boundaries of the CCID as of July
1, 2024. Section 9 increases the portion of Jackson’s sales taxes that are diverted to the
CCID from 6% to 9% starting “[o]n or before August 15, 2023.” Unless otherwise
12
specified, the remainder of H.B. 1020 is scheduled to “take effect and be in force from and
after July 1, 2023.” Sec. 18. S.B. 2343 will go into effect on July 1, 2023. Sec. 2.
their access to the political process and infringe on their fundamental rights. The enactment
of H.B. 1020 and S.B. 2343 is the latest chapter in a long history of discriminatory efforts
35. For years, the State has discriminated on the basis of race against Jackson
and its majority-Black population. Over the decades, the State has routinely
power. It has denied Jackson access to the federal transportation funds the city merits due
to its size and needs; sought to strip the city of control over its municipal airport; and
diverted and constrained the city’s share of the sales tax revenue collected in Jackson. It
has deprived Jackson, its leadership, and its residents of the funds they need to operate
Jackson’s water systems, and even considered fully taking control of Jackson’s water
systems in order to hijack the approximately $800 million that Jackson’s Black
for remediating the Jackson water crisis. See Michael Goldberg, Federal money driving
Jackson water bill, DOJ appointee says, Associated Press (Jan. 25, 2023),
https://apnews.com/article/politics-health-us-department-of-justice-mississippi-jackson-
09ce15c2f03c6893ca85d755bd176376.
36. During this legislative session, for example, the State enacted legislation,
H.B. 698, which limits Jackson’s ability to establish equitable and financially sustainable
13
water billing rates in the manner proposed by the court-appointed Interim Third Party
has also enacted new provisions targeting Jackson with enhanced scrutiny and reporting
regarding the consistency of special sales tax revenue expenditures with sales tax
37. These efforts to control Jackson’s infrastructure, assets, and the rights of its
citizens—in a manner unlike that experienced by any other area or citizens of Mississippi—
constitute prohibited discriminatory conduct that continues with H.B. 1020 and S.B. 2343.
leadership was excluded from significant portions of the political process surrounding H.B.
1020 and S.B. 2343. For example, neither Jackson’s elected leadership nor legislative
delegation was consulted before the legislation was introduced. No member of Jackson’s
delegation was included in the conference committee that ultimately drafted and approved
S.B. 2343. And the only Black member of the conference committee that drafted and
approved H.B. 1020 was never shown the amended text of the bill; after initially voting in
favor of the conference report, that conference member voted against the report. See
Michael Wines, Revised Plan for Justice System in Mississippi Capital Leaves Same Bitter
https://www.nytimes.com/2023/04/10/us/jackson-mississippi-crime-police.html.
“This has been the most tiring legislative session I’ve had in the 31 years I've been down
here. It’s been also one of the most disappointing sessions that I've had when I look at the
14
kind of toxic legislation that's being directed towards me—and when I say ‘me’ I mean the
people that I represent.” Wicker Perlis, MS Senate passes HB 1020, as clock ticks for
House to do the same before end of session, Miss. Clarion Ledger (Mar. 30, 2023),
available at https://news.yahoo.com/ms-senate-passes-hb-1020-023427548.html.
40. That “toxic legislation” has now passed. As enacted, H.B. 1020 and S.B.
majority-Black residents to live as full citizens with full rights in their own city.
I. S.B. 2343’s Expansion of the Jurisdiction of DPS and the Capitol Police
Intentionally Discriminates Against Jackson’s Majority-Black Residents
41. S.B. 2343’s policing takeover provision violates the Fourteenth Amendment
by denying Plaintiffs equal protection of the law. Prior to the enactment of S.B. 2343, the
Capitol Police were responsible for protecting the Capitol Building, State Legislature, and
other major State properties in Jackson, and they had jurisdiction over only certain State
properties and the CCID. The policing takeover provision of S.B. 2343 extends the
jurisdiction of the Capitol Police to cover the entire City of Jackson, including residential
neighborhoods miles away from the Capitol Complex. In doing so, it discriminatorily
of policing.
42. S.B. 2343’s policing takeover provision expands the direct policing power of
the DPS by empowering “any person or persons appointed by the Department of Public
Safety”—namely, the Capitol Police—to have jurisdiction within the city limits of Jackson.
15
The law creates “primary jurisdiction” for the Capitol Police within the CCID and
and, in turn, deprive these majority-Black residents of the ability to influence the ways in
which they are policed. Similarly, the expansion of the CCID brings within it more of the
highest priced homes in Jackson, with lines drawn to include Jackson’s predominantly
resources from and not provide support for the rest of the city.
44. Under the policing takeover provision, the City of Jackson is now subject to
policing not only by its municipal police agency and county sheriff’s office, but also by a
newly extended and empowered State-run police agency. No other locality in Mississippi
has been singled out for a similar law enforcement scheme. Jackson’s residents alone are
deprived of local, democratic control over the vital governmental function of policing.
45. Jackson’s residents can vote directly for their sheriff and, through electing
their mayor, influence the appointment of their police chief. But they have no such power
with respect to the DPS or the Capitol Police. The Chief of the Capitol Police is appointed
and supervised by a State official—the Commissioner of the DPS, who is, in turn,
appointed and supervised by the Governor of the State of Mississippi. Jackson’s elected
mayor, appointed police chief, and the elected Hinds County sheriff are all Black; all three
of the State officials tasked with overseeing the Capitol Police are white.
16
46. Nothing in the short history of the Capitol Police suggests that that
department is equal to the task of protecting the largest city in the state, or that the Capitol
Police will do anything other than compound the over-policing of Black Mississippians.
Indeed, while H.B. 1020 and S.B. 2343 purport to enhance public safety, they provide no
additional tools or resources to the existing City-run police department, crime lab, or
correctional institutions.
47. Instead, the Acts create a separate 911 emergency response system for the
CCID—diverting vital resources from the Black-populated and Black-led portions of the
City. H.B. 1020, § 13. These laws siphon critical sales tax revenues from the City of
Jackson to the CCID by expanding the proportion of the sales tax taken from Jackson by
half. H.B. 1020, § 9. And while these laws purport to supply solutions to public safety
challenges facing Jackson, they do not. They were developed without input from Jackson’s
local elected officials and adopted over the vehement objections of the area’s legislative
48. S.B. 2343’s policing takeover provision works in tandem with the prior
restraint provision to ensure that Jackson’s residents have limited means of expressing their
discontent if they disapprove of the policing they endure. They have almost no ability to
elect or change the officials in charge of DPS or the Capitol Police, who are not elected by
the residents of Jackson or appointed by the elected leadership of Jackson. And under the
prior restraint provision, they must first receive written approval from these very same
17
49. This expansion of the jurisdiction of the DPS and the Capitol Police exposes
Jackson’s residents and only Jackson’s residents to what amounts to triple policing. Prior
to the enactment of S.B. 2343, these residents were already policed, as many municipalities
in Mississippi are, by two local law enforcement agencies—here, the Jackson Police
Department (“JPD”) and the Hinds County Sheriff’s Office (“HCSO”). The JPD patrols
the city and is subject to municipal authority. See Miss. Code § 21-21-1. The HCSO has
50. Unlike HCSO and JPD, the DPS and Capitol Police are effectively
unaccountable to those they police. Jackson’s voters make up most of the electorate in
Hinds County that elects the Hinds County Sheriff, and they elect the mayor who appoints
the chief of the JPD. As residents of a city that comprises merely 5% of the overall State
offices.
ability to affect statewide elections. Black voters in Jackson vote for different candidates
for statewide office than their white counterparts throughout the State. Mississippi has not
elected a Black official to statewide office since Reconstruction, and statewide officials
52. Unsurprisingly, both the current appointed chief of the JPD and the Hinds
County sheriff are Black, but both Defendant Tindell, the appointed Commissioner of the
statewide DPS, and Defendant Luckey, whom Defendant Tindell appointed to be the
18
53. Rather than real electoral control, S.B. 2343 establishes only that the Chief
of the Capitol Police will call “regular meeting[s] . . . to address the concerns of the public.”
currently extends to specific policing policies. For example, while the JPD has strict
restrictions governing when officers may engage in a car chase, the Capitol Police’s vehicle
pursuit policies, which are set by the Mississippi DPS, date back to the early 2000s, despite
significant changes in policing policy since then. Bracey Harris & Jon Schuppe, The
Mississippi Capitol Police, under fire for a string of shootings, is rewriting the rules, NBC
accountability on these policies, providing only a redacted copy of its “pursuit decision
matrix,” even though it is common practice to provide the public with unredacted copies
of the policy. Martin Kaste, As state-run police expand into Jackson, some welcome the
https://www.npr.org/2023/03/08/1161305763/as-state-run-police-expand-into-jackson-
some-welcome-the-help-others-see-racism.
55. S.B. 2343’s expansion of the jurisdiction and policing power of the DPS and
the Capitol Police occurs against the backdrop of the over-policing of Black Americans
Americans are policed harder, more violently, and to a greater degree than any other race
in the United States. See, e.g., Leah Wang, New data: Police use of force rising for Black,
19
female, and older people; racial bias persists, Prison Policy Initiative (Dec. 22, 2022),
available at https://www.prisonpolicy.org/blog/2022/12/22/policing_survey/.
56. Black residents in Mississippi have historically been arrested at much higher
rates than white residents. Therese Apel, Mississippi race, arrest rates examined, Clarion
https://www.clarionledger.com/story/news/2014/11/19/race-arrest-rates-
Black Mississippians are incarcerated at nearly three times the rate of their white
half times more likely than their white counterparts to be killed by police. Mapping Police
57. Amidst these stark racial disparities, the policing takeover provision targets
the largest Black population in the State of Mississippi for policing by a force entirely
more than 80% Black, which is the highest percentage of Black residents of any major U.S.
city. Across the State, less than 40% of the population is Black; more than 10% of
Mississippi’s total Black population lives in Jackson alone. But no other jurisdiction,
municipality, or county—even those with similar crime rates—is subject to this expanded
policing.
58. As one news report described the effects of the provisions eventually enacted
in S.B. 2343, “the legislation would grant currently all-white State officials control over
20
policing in the 82% Black capital city of the 38% Black state.” Kayode Crown, State-Run
Capitol Police’s Jurisdiction Would Cover All Jackson If Bill Becomes Law, Miss. Free
capitol-polices-jurisdiction-would-cover-all-jackson-if-bill-becomes-law.
59. Although the Legislature pointed to Jackson’s crime rates in enacting S.B.
2343, there is no reason to believe that the policing takeover provision is actually intended
60. Before S.B. 2343, the Capitol Police was a small force with jurisdiction over
an area that was limited almost exclusively to the CCID as then constituted, which was
comprised of a limited number of State facilities and buildings that made up only around
8% of the city. C.J. LeMaster, Capitol Police adding patrols, street suppression unit in
https://www.wlbt.com/2022/07/21/capitol-police-adding-patrols-street-suppression-unit-
61. In fact, the Capitol Police was initially situated within Mississippi’s
Department of Finance and Administration and was almost exclusively responsible merely
for overseeing the operation of security in and around State buildings as well as traffic and
parking enforcement in those same areas. Only in 2021 did the Mississippi legislature
transfer the Capitol Police to DPS and expand its jurisdiction across the then-limits of the
CCID. See Julian Mills, Governor’s Policing Surge In Jackson May not Prevent Violence,
21
https://www.jacksonfreepress.com/news/2021/aug/04/governors-policing-surge-jackson-
may-not-prevent-v/.
62. Any argument that doubling the Capitol Police’s primary geographic
jurisdiction from 8.7 to roughly 17.5 square miles and giving that department jurisdiction
residents who live nowhere near the Capitol Complex and have little or no contact with it
is disingenuous. Instead, the expansion comes at the cost of providing the funds and
programs that Jackson’s residents have actually tasked their elected representatives with
developing. In the 2022 session alone, for example, the Legislature refused to pass six
different bills aimed at funding various programs for local agencies and diversion efforts
in Jackson aimed at preventing crime in the first instance. See Kayode Crown, Jackson
Senators Push for Big Funding for Jails, Police Over Reversing Crime Causes, Mississippi
https://www.mississippifreepress.org/20549/jackson-senators-push-for-big-funding-for-
jails-police-over-reversing-crime-causes.
63. Even exercising the Capitol Police’s limited jurisdiction over the Capitol
itself and nearby buildings has strained the ability of the Capitol Police—sometimes with
64. In just the last few months, members of the Capitol Police have shot at least
four individuals. One victim, a 25-year-old Black father of two, was killed during a routine
traffic stop; another, a 49-year-old Black woman, was shot through her apartment wall
while she was in bed. Bracey Harris & Jon Schuppe, Mississippi wants to expand an
22
aggressive police force responsible for recent shootings (Feb. 24, 2023), available at
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/mississippi-capitol-police-jackson-shootings-
rcna70474.
65. The Capitol Police has also struggled with the more basic aspects of
the passage of S.B. 2343, the Capitol Police has only one investigator (detective) and has
criminal activity.
66. The Capitol Police does not have any holding facilities. Consequently, any
uptick in arrests, which proponents of S.B. 2343 cited as a prime benefit in advocating for
the bill, will likely only further strain Jackson’s pretrial detention facilities. Kayode
Crown, State-Run Capitol Police’s Jurisdiction Would Cover All Jackson If Bill Becomes
https://www.mississippifreepress.org/31048/state-run-capitol-polices-jurisdiction-would-
cover-all-jackson-if-bill-becomes-law.
67. Of note, JPD officers are subject to the June 26, 2020 Mayoral Executive
Order Amending the City of Jackson Police Department’s Use of Force Policy. The
“transparent” with the residents of Jackson, noted that “police officers nationwide have
shot and/or killed by other means (i.e. chokeholds) nearly 1,000 people annually since
2015” and that African Americans are killed by police officers at more than twice the rate
23
of white Americans.” Consequently, the Executive Order amends the City of Jackson
5. Develop a Use of Force Continuum that limits the types of force that can
be used to respond to specific types of resistance; and
See Mayoral Executive Order Amending the City of Jackson’s Use of Force Policy
https://storage.googleapis.com/proudcity/jacksonms/uploads/2020/06/AMENDED-
USE-OF-FORCE-POLICY.pdf
68. By contrast, the Capitol Police have failed to establish basic modern policing
policies. As noted, the Capitol Police’s vehicle pursuit policy is out of date. Capitol Police
24
officers have reportedly shot at fleeing cars, a widely disparaged form of policing because
of its potential to injure bystanders that is prohibited by the City of Jackson Police
Department under Executive Order of Jackson’s Mayor. See Mayoral Executive Order
Amending the City of Jackson’s Use of Force Policy, supra, ¶ 4; Simon Seiver, Cops
Shooting at Cars: A Really Bad Idea, The Marshall Project (June 10, 2015) available at
https://www.themarshallproject.org/2015/06/10/cops-shooting-at-cars-a-really-bad-idea.
69. Moreover, on information and belief, the existing use of force policy appears
Harris & John Schuppe, The Mississippi Capitol Police, under fire for a string of shootings,
https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/mississippi-capitol-police-shootings-use-force-
policy-rcna72802. Because of redactions to the portions of the policy that the Capitol
Police has released, it is impossible to tell when or how Capitol Police officers can use
pursuant to the Mayor of Jackson’s Executive Order. See Mayoral Executive Order
71. Because the white-run Capitol Police are free to engage in tactics—like
shooting at fleeing cars and possibly chokeholds—that are forbidden to the Jackson Police,
Jackson’s majority-Black residents are subject not only to multiple law enforcement
agencies, but may also face different consequences, including different uses of force,
25
depending on whether it is the Capitol Police or the JPD that stops them. And whether
they are stopped at all may depend on which agency happens to be on site.
72. Furthermore, although the Capitol Police has been given the power to arrest
Black residents throughout the city, it lacks the resources to capably respond to
Police’s previously more limited jurisdiction, “[h]istorically, the function of state law
enforcement is not to be the primary response agency in the area. You know, we’re in
uncharted territory. It’s not a common circumstance that you have state agency like this,
which has concurrent jurisdiction in the city for 8.7 square miles of the city.” Capitol Police
adding patrols, street suppression unit in coming months, chief says, WLBT (July 20,
suppression-unit-coming-months-chief-says/.
74. S.B. 2343 has made this uncommon circumstance only more unworkable.
The statute expands the CCID, where the Capitol Police exercise primary jurisdiction, from
8.7 to roughly 17.5 square miles, and it gives the Capitol Police concurrent jurisdiction
over the rest of Jackson. The policing system it establishes is fundamentally at odds with
subject to a local police force whose leadership is appointed by officials who are not locally
elected and therefore are not locally accountable, and whose residents are subject to this
26
75. S.B. 2343’s policing takeover provision is not only an outlier in Mississippi,
but also in the region. Many nearby states have capitol police forces. But none have forces
force, for example, is limited to “the areas within the state capitol complex.” La. R.S.
§ 24:682. Texas’ capitol police are restricted “to the capitol complex.” Tex. Gov’t. Code
§ 411.061–.062. The Texas capitol police may enter into an agreement with the Austin
police to engage in law enforcement activity outside their jurisdiction, but that activity is
limited to traffic and parking enforcement. The Arkansas equivalent is restricted to the area
“in and around the State Capitol.” Ark. Code § 12-14 101 (a), (c).
76. At most, Alabama’s capitol police can exercise their authority throughout the
State incidental to their purpose of protecting “the Capitol and all state buildings occupied
by the state departments and agencies within the State of Alabama” and may serve as peace
77. These states’ capitol police are limited forces generally meant to serve the
specific function of providing police services for the State Capitol and government
buildings. The Capitol Police, however, will now operate as a highly unusual third local
law enforcement arm across the entire City of Jackson. Although unprecedented as a law
enforcement effort, the expansion of the Capitol Police is entirely in keeping with broader
discriminatory efforts by the Legislature to strip Jackson’s residents of their power and
resources and deprive them of the equal protection of the laws. The policing takeover
provision embodies the false and racist notion that safety in Jackson cannot possibly be
achieved by a police force responsible for, and accountable to, the people of Jackson, but
27
only by a wholly different, State-run, white-run institution that operates outside the control
combined with S.B. 2343’s unconstitutionally vague prior restraint provision. Almost any
effort to use protests or demonstrations to challenge the Capitol Police will require the
approval of the very same unelected officials tasked with running the Capitol Police—the
Commissioner of DPS, Defendant Tindell, and the Chief of the Capitol Police, Defendant
Luckey. Put bluntly, S.B. 2343 effectively provides that the Black residents and leaders of
Jackson cannot engage in political expression unless white officials give their permission.
79. The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment guarantees that
those who are similarly situated not be discriminated against on account of their race. The
expansion of the jurisdiction of the Capitol Police, however, does just that.
80. S.B. 2343 singles out for disparate treatment the residents of a large city
whose population is more than 80% Black. These residents, unlike the residents of any
other municipality in Mississippi, are targeted for a new layer of unaccountable policing.
including Plaintiffs in this case. And there is no basis to expect this expansion to achieve
any of its purported goals other than further burdening this community; the Capitol Police
have not demonstrated any ability to protect or be accountable to Jackson’s residents, and
the new reach of the Capitol Police is unprecedented in Mississippi and neighboring states.
In other words, even among states with long and ugly histories of racial discrimination,
none has recently dared to do what S.B. 2343 does. In fact, the only recent analogues to
28
this expansion come from Mississippi’s longstanding pattern of stripping power and
II. H.B. 1020’s takeover of the judicial system in Jackson deprives residents of the
Equal Protection of Laws.
by H.B. 1020’s judicial takeover provision, which supplants the long-established system
of judges who are locally elected or appointed by locally elected bodies and who are
residents of the jurisdiction where they preside. On top of the policing takeover provision,
this takeover of the Hinds County courts further deprives majority-Black Jackson residents
of any political control over their police, prosecutors, and judges. No other municipality
or county in the state faces these deprivations. This special and discriminatory treatment
of Jackson’s residents violates their rights to the Equal Protection of the laws. And like
the expansion of the DPS and Capitol Police, the judicial takeover provisions’ singling out
of Jackson is significantly motivated by race—that is, the desire to deprive the majority-
Black residents of Jackson of the political representation to which they are entitled.
82. Before H.B. 1020, all Mississippi residents enjoyed a court system that was
defined by its accountability to local voters. The Mississippi Constitution creates two types
of courts of general jurisdiction: (1) Circuit Courts, which have original jurisdiction over
civil and criminal matters that are not vested in another court, and appellate jurisdiction
over cases originating in County, Justice, and Municipal Courts and administrative
agencies; and (2) Chancery Courts, which have jurisdiction over family matters and other
causes in equity. See Miss. Const. art. 6, §§ 156, 159–60; see also About the Courts, State
29
of Mississippi Judiciary, https://courts.ms.gov/aboutcourts/aboutthecourts.php. Under the
Mississippi Constitution, Circuit Court and Chancery Court judges “shall be elected by the
people” and “shall hold their office for a term of four years.” Miss. Const. art. 6, § 153.
Mississippi law further requires that Circuit Court and Chancery Court judges “shall be a
resident of the district” in which they serve and “shall be elected for and from” their local
83. To regulate the size of the Circuit Courts and Chancery Courts, the
Mississippi Constitution requires that “[t]he Legislature shall, by statute, establish certain
criteria by which the number of judges in each district shall be determined, such criteria to
be based on population, the number of cases filed and other appropriate data.” Miss. Const.
art. 6, § 152. Accordingly, Mississippi law establishes that “[t]he number of judges in each
circuit court district shall be determined” based on “[t]he population of the district; [t]he
number of cases filed in the district; [t]he case load of each judge in the district; [t]he
geographic area of the district; [a]n analysis of the needs of the district by the court
personnel of the district; and [a]ny other appropriate criteria.” Miss. Code § 9-7-3(3). That
law assigns to the Judicial College of the University of Mississippi Law Center and the
collected “as a basis for applying the above criteria.” Id. § 9-7-3(3).
84. The Seventh Circuit Judicial District encompasses Hinds County. Miss.
Code § 9-7-23(1). Over 70% of Hinds County’s residents are Black, and a majority live in
30
County, Mississippi, U.S. Census Bureau,
Judicial District, there are four subdistricts, Miss. Code § 9-7-23(2), each of which
encompasses part of the City of Jackson and is majority-Black. See Hinds Circuit Court
permanent judges, with one elected from each subdistrict. Miss. Code § 9-7-25(1).
Reflecting Mississippi’s racially polarized voting, all four elected Seventh Circuit judges,
like most of their constituents, are Black. The Mississippi court system also has inferior
courts of limited jurisdiction, including Municipal Courts, that are likewise responsive to
their local communities. Jackson’s municipal judges, like others in the State with a
population of over 10,000, are appointed by the municipality’s governing body and must
be “a qualified elector of the county in which the municipality is located.” Miss. Code
https://courts.ms.gov/aboutcourts/aboutthecourts.php.
86. First, the statute doubles the size of the Hinds County Circuit Court and packs
it with State-appointed judges. Section 1 commands the Chief Justice of the Mississippi
Supreme Court to appoint four temporary special circuit judges for Hinds County’s
31
87. Pre-existing law allowed the Chief Justice “to appoint a special judge to serve
docket.” Miss. Code § 9-1-105(2). In August 2020, the Chief Justice invoked this authority
to appoint four temporary judges to the Seventh Circuit to help with the “backlog of cases
that have resulted from delays caused by COVID-19” for five months. See Four special
judges appointed to assist Hinds Circuit Court, State of Mississippi Judiciary (Aug. 4,
2020),
https://courts.ms.gov/news/2020/08.04.20%20Hinds%20Circuit%20appointment.php. In
September 2022, the Chief Justice again invoked this authority and appointed four
temporary judges to help “reduc[e] the number of pending cases caused by the pandemic,”
though the term of the judges’ appointments was not made public. See Four special judges
appointed to assist Hinds Circuit Courts, State of Mississippi Judiciary (Sept. 22, 2022),
https://courts.ms.gov/news/2022/09.22.22%20Hinds%20Circuit%20special%20judges%2
0appointed.php.
instructs the Chief Justice to appoint, no later than 15 days after passage, four temporary
judges to the Seventh Circuit to serve until December 31, 2026—well beyond any
reasonable expectation of a backlog “caused by the pandemic.” H.B. 1020 even authorizes
the Chief Justice to “reappoint” the temporary judges who have been serving since
September 2022, thus ignoring the Mississippi Constitution’s requirement that circuit
judges “shall be elected” and “shall hold their office for a term of four years.” Miss. Const.
art. 6, § 153.
32
89. Although Miss. Code §§ 9-7-3 & -4 require the that “the number of judges
in each circuit court shall be determined by the Legislature based upon” specific metrics,
with the assistance of the Judicial College of the University Law Center and the
Administrative Office of Court, H.B. 1020 does not attempt to justify appointment of four
temporary circuit judges. Indeed, in a classic example of closing the barn door after the
horse has escaped, H.B. 1020 itself calls for the post hoc generation of case load and case
disposition data after these four appointments are made in order to consider whether to add
90. The Circuit Court judicial appointment provisions in H.B. 1020 come in the
Mississippi. See, e.g., Martin v. Mabus, 700 F. Supp. 327 (S.D. Miss. 1988). And they
91. Second, H.B. 1020 further undermines the local political accountability of
92. Section 4 requires the Chief Justice of the Mississippi Supreme Court to
appoint a judge to this court for a term from January 1, 2024 to July 1, 2027. Unlike
Municipal Court judges in Jackson and other municipalities with a population of 10,000 or
more, see Miss. Code § 21-23-3, the CCID judge is not appointed by the governing
authorities of the municipality, nor is the CCID judge required to be “a qualified elector in
33
the county where the municipality is located,” id., but only “a qualified elector of this
93. The CCID court is granted the same jurisdiction as the Jackson Municipal
Court over preliminary matters, criminal matters, violations of motor vehicle and traffic
laws, and disturbances of the peace that accrue or occur, in whole or in part, within the
boundaries of the CCID. Sec. 4(1)(a). The upshot of this provision is that the State-
appointed CCID judge will set the terms of bail and release for any Jackson residents
unfortunate enough to have charges filed in the CCID court rather than the Jackson
Municipal Court. According to the most recent data available, the duration of pre-trial
detention in Hinds County has been trending downward. See December 2021 - Trending
https://www.msjaildata.com/data/202112-december-2021/trending-inmates-days-held/.
The CCID Court threatens to reverse this trend by taking pre-trial detention decisions out
of the hands of locally accountable judges. Instead, those pre-trial detention decisions will
be made by a judge appointed by the Chief Justice of the Mississippi Supreme Court, who
94. The CCID Court also has powers that no other Municipal Courts have.
Unlike Municipal Court convictions, for example, convictions in the CCID court—even
Department of Corrections facility rather than a city or county jail. Sec. 4(1)(b). That
facility, the Central Mississippi Correctional Facility, is currently the subject of a U.S.
34
confinement. Wines, Revised Plan for Justice System in Mississippi Capital Leaves Same
95. Third, H.B. 1020 usurps Jackson residents’ political influence over their local
prosecutors by establishing two prosecuting attorney positions for any cause of action
within the jurisdiction of the CCID court. Under Section 5, the prosecuting attorneys are
to be appointed by the Mississippi Attorney General and serve through July 1, 2027.
96. This section also sets up a system of vast discretion in determining in which
court criminal cases are filed, supplanting the role of existing Circuit Court judges within
the CCID. The law states that the newly appointed prosecuting attorneys “shall prosecute
cases in the court provided for the CCID inferior court and also in the same manner and
with the same authority of law provided for district attorneys and county prosecuting
attorneys by filing an indictment or any other criminal action that accrues, in whole or
in part, in the CCID.” Sec. 5(1) (emphasis added). This provision allows a CCID
prosecutor to bring charges for any criminal matter in the CCID Court. This provision
presents the opportunity for abusive forum shopping that will supplant the existing Circuit
Courts, particularly when paired with S.B. 2343’s authorization that “[t]he Department of
Public Safety may choose to present cases to either the District Attorney or the prosecuting
attorneys designated by the Attorney General for prosecution of any violation of law that
accrues or occurs, in whole or in part, within the boundaries [of the CCID].” Sec. 1(6)(a)
(emphasis added).
35
97. The lead-up to the enactment of this legislation also demonstrates repeated
instances of recent racial discrimination against Jackson and its citizens by the State
government. The insidious trope that Black-led Jackson is incapable of governing itself,
or simply should not be allowed to govern itself, is a common thread animating activities
ranging from the attempted takeover of the City’s airport, of its drinking water system, and
98. This theme was sounded in 2015, for example, when a Mississippi State
legislator opposed a statewide ballot initiative which would have allowed individuals to
sue if the State fails to provide an adequate and efficient system of free public schools,
going to be a Black judge—they’re going to tell us where the state education money goes.”
H.B. 1020, when the bill’s sponsor, Trey Lamar (R-Senatobia) suggested that others
residents about how to administer their city. Representative Lamar remarked, “If we’re
going to make an additional court in the city of Jackson, do we not want our best and
brightest sitting in judgment, whether that may come from Holmes County or Madison
County or wherever they may be? Why would we limit the talent pool to here?” Trey
Lamar, MS House Floor - 7 February, 2023; 10:00 AM, YouTube (Feb. 7, 2023),
https://www.youtube.com/live/HtruSFI0avs?feature=share&t=24394.
36
100. As with the appointment of temporary Circuit Court judges, the creation of
the new CCID court singles out Jackson for the creation of a substitute judicial system that
predominantly white cities in Mississippi are not subject to. Nor did the Mississippi
resolution time data to support any contention that Jackson’s courts are overloaded or
jurisdictions. Indeed, recent reporting indicates that comparative data on courts’ pending
criminal cases does not exist. See Mina Corpuz, Does a backlog in Hinds County courts
justify appointing five judges? Other counties could be far worse, Mississippi Today (Mar.
docket/.
101. Chief Justice Randolph has previously advocated for the greater use of
unelected judges in Hinds County. In 2022, for example, the Chief Justice testified before
Hinds County. Rather than expand the existing Seventh Circuit and its elected judges, Chief
Justice Randolph sought to have the ability to appoint judges who would resolve cases in
Hinds County. Michael Randolph, Judiciary B - Room 113 - 10 October, 2022; 9:00 AM,
102. In contrast to the Chief Justice’s preference for unelected judges in Hinds
County, the Circuit Judges of the Seventh Judicial District, the Judges of the Hinds County
Court, and the Justice Court Judges of Hinds County objected in vain to the creation of a
substitute unelected court and prosecutors. Those jurists noted that the new law “takes the
37
constitutional power of elected judges and gives it to Judges appointed by the Supreme
Court.”
103. The creation of the unelected CCID Court deprives Jackson’s Black residents
have the right to have their legal cases adjudicated before judges whom they have elected
or their local representatives have chosen, and to vote for their community’s prosecutors
as well; but that is no longer the case for Jackson’s residents under H.B. 1020. Instead,
unlike any other Mississippian, they will be subject to an expansive new court that is neither
elected by them nor accountable to their democratic institutions, and which does not serve
their interests.
permitting system across Jackson that will gravely interfere with Jackson’s residents’
extensive permitting regime that applies to certain types of public events held across the
city. See Jackson, Miss., Code of Ordinances Ch. 14, §§ 176–95. Although the potential
for abuse is always present, this ordinance has, for the most part, provided an onerous but
workable approach. See, e.g., id. § 14-178 (confining permit requirements to limited set of
events); id. § 14-184 (providing only limited reasons for why approval committee may
38
deny permit). So too has the State’s preexisting regime prohibiting demonstrations that
106. Unlike Jackson’s existing permitting regime, S.B. 2343’s prior restraint
provision has no regard for the First Amendment and its protections for the right to speak,
assemble, associate, and petition freely. It instead delegates all responsibility for creating
a valid permitting regime to DPS, in terms so vague, broad, and standard-less that it
107. Under the prior restraint provision, the Chief of the Capitol Police or the
Commissioner of DPS must provide “written approval” before “any event occurs which
will take place on any street or sidewalk immediately adjacent to any building or property
owned or occupied by any official, agency, board, commission, office or other entity of the
hinder ingress thereto and/or egress therefrom.” S.B. 2343, Sec. 1(6)(c). That section also
requires that DPS “shall promulgate rules and regulations to effectuate the provisions of
this paragraph.”
108. By its terms, the provision is both vague and overly broad. The provision
leaves it to DPS’s discretion whether and how to define what qualifies as an “event” that
will require written approval, and it provides no criteria by which DPS is supposed to
39
109. The only clarity provided by the text of the prior restraint provision is that
the provision reaches broadly. It refers to “any event”—not, for example, “major events,”
as related statutory provisions do. See Miss. Code § 29-5-217 (establishing that “[t]he City
of Jackson shall provide police coverage for major events conducted within the district”).
110. Further, the provision is not even limited to locations around State buildings
in the vicinity of the State Capitol. Instead, S.B. 2343’s prior restraint provision covers
“any building or property owned or occupied by any official, agency, board, commission,
office or other entity of the State of Mississippi,” again leaving it to DPS to provide much-
needed clarity regarding how members of the public are supposed to know whether a non-
the reach of the prior restraint provision to a variable set of places “owned or occupied by
any state officials,” the statute’s terms authorize DPS to control what speech State officials
111. Moreover, the provision does not specify how it interacts with Jackson’s
existing permitting regime. Because Jackson’s permitting regime overlaps with that of the
prior restraint provision, an event organizer will need permits for the same event from both
Jackson and DPS or the Chief of the Capitol Police; because of the discretion afforded to
the State officials, a permit might be granted by Jackson but not by the State officials.
112. S.B. 2343 does make clear, however, that DPS and the Capitol Police—
headed by the same officials empowered to approve events—will be tasked with enforcing
violations of the prior restraint provision: S.B. 2343 specifically charges these agencies
40
with making arrests for any violations of “ordinances related to the disturbance of the
public peace.”
113. The prior restraint provision’s vast breadth is coupled with a glaring set of
omissions. The provision’s text provide no criteria against which proposed events must be
evaluated; no process under which an adverse determination must be set forth and
114. This provision threatens to be precisely the type of statutory delegation that
government official or agency” and therefore “constitutes a prior restraint and may result
in censorship.” City of Lakewood v. Plain Dealer Publ’g Co., 486 U.S. 750, 757 (1988).
115. To start, the provision gives DPS unlimited discretion to come up with
audible volume—that could lead either the Commissioner or the Chief to deny approval
for an event.
116. By contrast, the City of Jackson’s current permitting regime—and others like
it—establish that city officials may deny a permit only in narrowly circumscribed
circumstances. See Jackson Code of Ordinances, Sec. 14-184(a)(1) (allowing city officials
to deny a permit if, for example, a permit application “is found to be false in any material
detail”).
41
117. Indeed, the Senate voted down an amendment that would have at least
Judiciary A - Room 216, 23 Feb., 2023; 3:00 P.M., at 1:03:18–05:05, YouTube (Feb. 23,
2023), https://www.youtube.com/live/vj6QKjsksB8?feature=share&t=3798.
118. Further, the provision leaves it to DPS to establish a timeline for how quickly
applications must be adjudicated, allowing DPS to set lengthy deadlines or delay approval
119. The provision also lets DPS decide whether the Commissioner or the Chief
of Capitol Police must provide a written explanation of the grounds for denying an event
application. Absent DPS’s issuance of self-limiting rules and regulations, there is no way
to guarantee that an applicant will be able to discern what formed the basis for the denial
requirement in the statute that they be allowed to appeal that denial—or any guidelines for
how or to whom they might appeal. See Se. Promotions, Ltd. v. Conrad, 420 U.S. 546,
562 (1975).
121. To be sure, S.B. 2343 requires DPS to “promulgate rules and regulations to
effectuate” the prior restraint provision. But this broad command does not specify what
rules and regulations are required and in no way limits the discretion of the Department.
As the Supreme Court has held, “the prior restraint of a license, without narrow, objective,
v. City of Birmingham, 394 U.S. 147, 151 (1969); see also Forsyth Cnty. v. Nationalist
42
Movement, 505 U.S. 123, 130 (1992) (concluding that a permitting regime “may not
122. Until those “effectuating” regulations are issued, the prior restraint provision
suppresses and chills Plaintiffs’ exercise of their First Amendment rights. Even then,
unless DPS promulgates rules and regulations to significantly limit their authority—a rare
sacrifice for any bureaucracy to voluntarily make—Plaintiffs will have no certainty about
what activity might require approval, why approval might be denied, or how to challenge
such standard-less determinations, nor any protection from prohibitions on activities that
123. By its terms, S.B. 2343’s prior restraint provision can be used to deny
permission to hold an “event” due to the content of that event. Plaintiffs and others like
them are also at peril that they will unknowingly fail to get permission, because they do
not know what DPS will decide qualifies as an “event” or what areas DPS believes will be
covered by the statute. Unless these critical ambiguities are resolved to avoid
and speech activities protected under the First Amendment after the law’s July 1, 2023
marches, protests, demonstrations, and public gatherings and from associating with other
members of the NAACP or other civil rights organizations in such activities because the
43
124. Rather than risk violating the law pending the results of DPS’s rulemaking
activities, the organizational Plaintiffs’ members and other Jackson citizens may find it
safer to avoid the provision altogether and not plan or organize “any events” for July 1,
2023, and thereafter that might be covered by the provision. A statute that exerts such an
intimidating influence on the exercise of free speech violates the First Amendment rights
of Plaintiffs and others, because it precludes them from organizing or participating in the
type of activities that are fundamental to Plaintiffs’ ability to speak, assemble, associate,
125. The text of the prior restraint provision proscribes protected First
Amendment activity in which Plaintiffs and others like them regularly engage. For
example, the NAACP, the Mississippi NAACP, and the Jackson NAACP routinely use
marches, parades, and all manner of public gatherings in Jackson to educate the public,
seek to influence lawmakers, and petition the government. These events often draw large
crowds and occupy both sidewalks and roadways with participants chanting, singing,
126. Similarly, Mr. Johnson, Ms. Lambright-Haynes, Mr. Figgers, Mr. Pittman,
Mr. Jones, and Mr. Taylor all frequently engage in these events and in an array of public
activity across Jackson—and especially around the Mississippi State Capitol given its
importance as a public forum for protected speech—that are designed to use their voices
to influence governmental actors and public opinion. They march, protest, and gather
together for news conferences, sit-ins, and educational opportunities—all events that will
44
127. As recently as February 21, 2023, for example, members and leaders of the
NAACP, including Mr. Pittman and Mr. Taylor, stood on the steps of the Mississippi
Capitol to protest the initial versions of H.B. 1020 and S.B. 2343. They were joined by
hundreds of others and used their protected speech to attempt to exert influence over the
128. On its face, S.B. 2343 leaves the NAACP and its members with no way of
knowing whether their rally was an “event,” or what standard they will have to meet to
ensure that such an application would be approved under S.B. 2343’s prior restraint
provision.
129. Unless DPS issues valid regulations that substantially limit its own authority
under the statute, its officials will be empowered to refuse to issue written authorization on
the basis of their views of Plaintiffs’ message, the speaker, or the event attendees.
rulemaking process—the results of which Plaintiffs will challenge if the rules and
regulations fail to remedy the provision’s constitutional defects—Plaintiff and others may
Bullitt, 377 U.S. 360, 372 (1964). But, because the regime established by S.B. 2343 is so
broadly defined, covers such a wide range of potential conduct, and lacks any clear
evaluative standards without regulatory narrowing, Plaintiffs cannot restrict their conduct
that are owned or occupied by any State entity or official. Under the prior restraint
45
CLAIMS FOR RELIEF
COUNT I
42 U.S.C. § 1983
the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution
131. Plaintiffs restate and incorporate all foregoing paragraphs of this Complaint
132. The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the
State of Mississippi from “deny[ing] to any person within its jurisdiction the equal
133. S.B. 2343 singles out the predominantly Black population of Jackson for
134. S.B. 2343 takes democratic control away from Jackson’s residents and
Jackson’s Black-elected officials, exposing them to a State-appointed police force that has
already proven itself unable to safely and fairly serve Jackson’s predominantly Black
population.
135. Plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law other than the judicial relief sought
in this case. A failure to enjoin the expansion of the Capitol Police will immediately
irreparably harm Plaintiffs and the more than 100,000 Black residents of Jackson who will
46
COUNT II
42 U.S.C. § 1983
House Bill 1020’s packing of the Hinds County Circuit Court intentionally
violation of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S.
Constitution
136. Plaintiffs restate and incorporate all foregoing paragraphs of this Complaint
137. The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the
State of Mississippi from “deny[ing] to any person within its jurisdiction the equal
138. H.B. 1020 deprives and disenfranchises the predominantly Black population
of Jackson of the rights accorded to every other Mississippi resident to elect their Circuit
Court judges. While there is no federal right to elected judges, there is a federal equal
protection right for Black residents to be treated like white residents when a state makes
139. Plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law other than the judicial relief sought
in this case. A failure to enjoin the appointment of additional judges to the Hinds County
Circuit Court will immediately irreparably harm Plaintiffs and the more than 100,000 Black
residents of Jackson who will be denied political representation afforded to all other
47
COUNT III
42 U.S.C. § 1983
the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution
140. Plaintiffs restate and incorporate all foregoing paragraphs of this Complaint
141. The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the
State of Mississippi from “deny[ing] to any person within its jurisdiction the equal
142. H.B. 1020 singles out the predominantly Black population of Jackson for
judge sets the terms of bail and release and can sentence misdemeanants to jail time in a
State prison.
143. H.B. 1020 deprives and disenfranchises the predominantly Black population
of Jackson of the rights accorded to every other Mississippi resident to have their local
governing authorities select the judges who exercise the powers of a Municipal Court.
While there is no federal right to locally accountable judges, there is a federal equal
protection right for Black residents to be treated like white residents when a state makes
144. Plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law other than the judicial relief sought
in this case. A failure to enjoin the appointment of a judge to the CCID court will
48
immediately irreparably harm Plaintiffs and the more than 100,000 Black residents of
Jackson who will be denied political representation afforded to all other residents of the
State and subjected to a second-class criminal justice system because of their race.
COUNT IV
42 U.S.C. § 1983
the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution
145. Plaintiffs restate and incorporate all foregoing paragraphs of this Complaint
146. The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the
State of Mississippi from “deny[ing] to any person within its jurisdiction the equal
147. H.B. 1020 singles out the predominantly Black population of Jackson for
prosecution in a second-class criminal justice system in which the vast power and the
immense discretion to enforce the law is placed in the hands of politically unaccountable
prosecutors.
148. H.B. 1020 deprives and disenfranchises the predominantly Black population
of Jackson of the rights accorded to every other Mississippi resident to elect their local
prosecutors. While there is no federal right to elected prosecutors per se, there is a federal
equal protection right for Black residents to be treated like white residents when a state
49
149. Plaintiffs have no adequate remedy at law other than the judicial relief sought
in this case. A failure to enjoin the appointment of prosecutors for the CCID Court will
immediately irreparably harm Plaintiffs and the more than 100,000 Black residents of
Jackson who will be denied political representation afforded to all other residents of the
State, subjected to a second-class criminal justice system, and suffer disparate prosecution
B. Declare that H.B. 1020’s packing of the Hinds County Circuit Court
E. Preliminarily and permanently enjoin the Capitol Police’s authority to cover all
CCID court;
50
G. Permanently enjoin the appointment of any prosecuting attorney for the CCID
court;
H. Award Plaintiffs their attorneys’ fees and costs incurred in bringing this action,
including attorneys’ fees and costs under 42 U.S.C. § 1988(b) for successful 42
I. Retain jurisdiction to render any and all further orders that this Court may
enter; and
J. Grant such other and further relief as this Court deems just and proper.
51
Respectfully submitted this 21st day of April, 2023.
52