John Does v. Richard Snyder , 834 F.3d 696 ( 2016 )


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    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
    File Name: 16a0207p.06
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    _________________
    JOHN DOES #1–5; MARY DOE,                                         ┐
    Plaintiffs-Appellees (15-1536)    │
    │
    Plaintiffs-Appellants/Cross-Appellees (15-2346 & 15-2486),     │
    │
    v.                                                             > Nos. 15-1536/2346/2486
    │
    RICHARD SNYDER, Governor of the State of Michigan, in his │
    official capacity; KRISTE ETUE, Director of the Michigan State │
    Police, in her official capacity,                                    │
    Defendants-Appellants (15-1536), │
    │
    Defendants-Appellees/Cross-Appellants (15-2346 & 15-2486).
    │
    ┘
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit.
    No. 2:12-cv-11194—Robert H. Cleland, District Judge.
    Argued: January 27, 2016
    Decided and Filed: August 25, 2016
    Before: MERRITT, BATCHELDER, and DONALD, Circuit Judges.
    _________________
    COUNSEL
    ARGUED: Erik A. Grill, OFFICE OF THE MICHIGAN ATTORNEY GENERAL, Lansing,
    Michigan, for Appellants in 15-1536 and for Appellees/Cross-Appellants in 15-2346 and 15-
    2486. Miriam J. Aukerman, AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION FUND OF MICHIGAN,
    Grand Rapids, Michigan, for Appellees in 15-1536 and for Appellants/Cross-Appellees in 15-
    2346 and 15-2486. ON BRIEF: Erik A. Grill, OFFICE OF THE MICHIGAN ATTORNEY
    GENERAL, Lansing, Michigan, for Appellants in 15-1536 and for Appellees/Cross-Appellants
    in 15-2346 and 15-2486. Miriam J. Aukerman, AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION
    FUND OF MICHIGAN, Grand Rapids, Michigan, Michael J. Steinberg, AMERICAN CIVIL
    LIBERTIES UNION FUND OF MICHIGAN, Detroit, Michigan, Paul D. Reingold,
    MICHIGAN CLINICAL LAW PROGRAM, Ann Arbor, Michigan, William W. Swor, Detroit,
    Michigan, for Appellees in 15-1536 and for Appellants/Cross-Appellees in 15-2346 and 15-
    2486. Christian J. Grostic, KUSHNER & HAMED CO., LPA, Cleveland, Ohio, Candace C.
    1
    Nos. 15-1536/2346/2486                  Does, et al. v. Snyder, et al.                         Page 2
    Crouse, PINALES STACHLER YOUNG BURRELL & CROUSE CO., LPA, Cincinnati, Ohio
    for Amicus Curiae in 15-1536. Liisa R. Speaker, SPEAKER LAW FIRM PLLC, Lansing,
    Michigan, Sonja B. Starr, UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN LAW SCHOOL, Ann Arbor,
    Michigan, Douglas Mullkoff, KESSLER, MULLKOFF & HOOBERMAN LLP, Ann Arbor,
    Michigan, Craig Jaquith, OHIO PUBLIC DEFENDER, Columbus, Ohio, N.C. Deday Larene,
    LARENE & KRIGER, P.L.C., Detroit, Michigan, Jennifer M. Kinsley, NORTHERN
    KENTUCKY UNIVERSITY, Highland Heights, Kentucky, for Amici Curiae in 15-2346 and 15-
    2486.
    _________________
    OPINION
    _________________
    ALICE M. BATCHELDER, Circuit Judge. Like many states, Michigan has amended its
    Sex Offender Registration Act (SORA) on a number of occasions in recent years for the
    professed purpose of making Michigan communities safer and aiding law enforcement in the
    task of bringing recidivists to justice. Thus, what began in 1994 as a non-public registry
    maintained solely for law enforcement use, see Mich. Pub. Act 295, § 10 (1994), has grown into
    a byzantine code governing in minute detail the lives of the state’s sex offenders, see Mich.
    Comp. Laws § 28.723, et seq. Over the first decade or so of SORA’s existence, most of the
    changes centered on the role played by the registry itself. In 1999, for example, the legislature
    added the requirement that sex offenders register in person (either quarterly or annually,
    depending on the offense) and made the registry available online, providing the public with a list
    of all registered sex offenders’ names, addresses, biometric data, and, since 2004, photographs.
    See Mich. Pub. Act. 85 §§ 5a(4), 8(2), 10(2)(3) (1999); Mich. Pub. Acts 237, 238 (2004).
    Michigan began taking a more aggressive tack in 2006, however, when it amended SORA to
    prohibit registrants (with a few exceptions, see Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.734–36) from living,
    working, or “loitering”1 within 1,000 feet of a school. See Mich. Pub. Acts 121, 127 (2005). In
    2011, the legislature added the requirement that registrants be divided into three tiers, which
    ostensibly correlate to current dangerousness, but which are based, not on individual
    assessments, but solely on the crime of conviction. See Mich. Pub. Acts 17, 18 (2011). The
    1
    SORA defines “loiter” as “to remain [in a place] for a period of time and under circumstances that a
    reasonable person would determine is for the primary purpose of observing or contacting minors.” Mich. Comp.
    Laws §28.733(b)).
    Nos. 15-1536/2346/2486               Does, et al. v. Snyder, et al.                     Page 3
    2011 amendments also require all registrants to appear in person “immediately” to update
    information such as new vehicles or “internet identifiers” (e.g., a new email account). See 
    id. The 2006
    and 2011 amendments apply retroactively to all who were required to register under
    SORA. See Mich. Pub. Act 46 (2006); Mich. Pub. Acts 17, 18 (2011). Violations carry heavy
    criminal penalties. See Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.729.
    The Plaintiffs in this case—identified here only as five “John Does” and one “Mary
    Doe”—are registered “Tier III” sex offenders currently residing in Michigan. It is undisputed on
    appeal that SORA’s 2006 and 2011 amendments apply to them retroactively. That law has had a
    significant impact on each of them that reaches far beyond the stigma of simply being identified
    as a sex offender on a public registry. As a result of the school zone restrictions, for example,
    many of the Plaintiffs have had trouble finding a home in which they can legally live or a job
    where they can legally work.       These restrictions have also kept those Plaintiffs who have
    children (or grandchildren) from watching them participate in school plays or on school sports
    teams, and they have kept Plaintiffs from visiting public playgrounds with their children for fear
    of “loitering.” Plaintiffs are also subject to the frequent inconvenience of reporting to law
    enforcement in person whenever they change residences, change employment, enroll (or un-
    enroll) as a student, change their name, register a new email address or other “internet identifier,”
    wish to travel for more than seven days, or buy or begin to use a vehicle (or cease to own or use
    a vehicle). See Mich. Comp. Laws §§ 28.722(g), 725(1).
    Plaintiffs sued Michigan Governor Richard Snyder and Colonel Kriste Etue, the director
    Michigan’s state police (collectively, “Michigan”), challenging SORA’s validity on a number of
    different grounds, including that portions of SORA are unconstitutionally vague, that its
    requirements should not be construed as creating strict liability offenses, that SORA violates the
    right to free speech guaranteed by the First Amendment, and that it violates the Fourteenth
    Amendment by imposing oppressive restrictions on Plaintiffs’ ability to parent, work, and travel.
    Plaintiffs also contended that SORA’s retroactive application to them—specifically, the
    retroactive application of the amendments that went into effect starting in 2006 or later—
    amounts to an Ex Post Facto punishment prohibited by the Constitution. See U.S. Const. art. I,
    §10, cl. 1.
    Nos. 15-1536/2346/2486               Does, et al. v. Snyder, et al.                       Page 4
    In a handful of opinions, including an opinion following from a Rule 52 bench trial, the
    district court concluded, among other things, that SORA was not an Ex Post Facto law and that
    most of its provisions did not violate the Constitution’s guarantee of due process.             It did
    conclude, however, that Plaintiffs were correct that some of SORA’s provisions were
    unconstitutionally vague, that those who are required to register under that law cannot be held
    strictly liable for violating its requirements, and that its retroactive requirement that sex offenders
    register on-line aliases for life violated the First Amendment. Both sides filed timely appeals,
    which we have consolidated.
    We begin our analysis with the Ex Post Facto issue. As is the case with many of the
    Constitution’s guarantees—“due process of law,” “the freedom of speech,” “the right of the
    people to keep and bear arms”—the Ex Post Facto clause leaves unanswered foundational
    questions about the guarantee’s scope and means of enforcement. The document itself provides
    simply that “No State shall . . . pass any . . . ex post facto Law.” U.S. Const. art. I § 10, cl. 1. As
    with the other guarantees, it is the courts that have done most of the work in expounding the
    legal meaning of this provision—indeed, the Ex Post Facto clause was one of the first, if not the
    first, such constitutional question to be exposited by the Supreme Court, when it issued its
    1798 decision in Calder v. Bull, 
    3 U.S. 386
    (1798). That case, consistent with what scholars
    have identified as the majority position at the time of the founding, held that the Constitution’s
    ban on Ex Post Facto laws does not bar all retroactive lawmaking, but only retroactive
    punishment, a codification of what many in the founding generation believed to be a self-evident
    truth: nulle poena sine lege, no punishment without a law. See 
    Calder, 3 U.S. at 388
    (Opinion of
    Chase, J.) (explaining the Court’s holding that the Ex Post Facto clause prohibits only retroactive
    punishment and opining that such punishment was so “contrary to the great first principles of the
    social compact [that it could not] be considered a rightful exercise of legislative authority” even
    if there were no provision in the Constitution prohibiting it); see also David F. Forte, Ex Post
    Facto, in The Heritage Guide to the Constitution, 203, 203–04 (David F. Forte & Matthew
    Spalding, eds. 2d ed. 2014).
    This understanding has kept courts from interfering with state sovereignty in many cases,
    but it has also provided a powerful check on states when they have sought to punish socially
    Nos. 15-1536/2346/2486              Does, et al. v. Snyder, et al.                   Page 5
    disfavored persons without prior notice. As Chief Justice John Marshall explained in Fletcher v.
    Peck:
    Whatever respect might have been felt for the state sovereignties, it is not to be
    disguised that the framers of the constitution viewed, with some apprehension, the
    violent acts which might grow out of the feelings of the moment; and that the
    people of the United States, in adopting that instrument, have manifested a
    determination to shield themselves and their property from the effects of those
    sudden and strong passions to which men are exposed.
    
    10 U.S. 87
    , 137–38 (1810). The guarantee is, as James Madison put it, a “constitutional bulwark
    in favour of personal security and private rights.”       The Federalist No. 44, at 232 (James
    Madison) (The Gideon ed., George W. Carey & James McClellan eds., Liberty Fund 2001). As
    these quotations suggest, moreover, the distinction between civil regulation and criminal
    punishment has never been woodenly applied. “[I]t is the effect, not the form, of the law that
    determines whether it is ex post facto.” Weaver v. Graham, 
    450 U.S. 24
    , 31 (1981).
    And while some have questioned the self-evidence of nulle poena sine lege, see, e.g.,
    
    Calder, 3 U.S. at 399
    (Opinion of Iredell, J.) (“The ideas of natural justice are regulated by no
    fixed standard: the ablest and the purest men have differed upon the subject.”), and others have
    called into doubt the correctness of Calder’s civil/criminal distinction, see, e.g., Eastern
    Enterprises v. Apfel, 
    524 U.S. 498
    , 539 (1998) (Thomas, J., concurring) (“I would be willing to
    reconsider Calder and its progeny to determine whether a retroactive civil law that passes muster
    under our current Takings Clause jurisprudence is nonetheless unconstitutional under the Ex Post
    Facto Clause.”), the test we must apply, as a lower court, is quite fixed: an ostensibly civil and
    regulatory law, such as SORA, does not violate the Ex Post Facto clause unless the plaintiff can
    show “by the clearest proof” that “what has been denominated a civil remedy” is, in fact, “a
    criminal penalty,” Smith v. Doe, 
    538 U.S. 84
    , 92 (2003) (citation and internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    The Supreme Court’s decision in Smith is particularly germane to this case. In Smith, the
    Court considered an Ex Post Facto challenge to Alaska’s sex-offender registry law. Alaska’s
    regime was more modest than SORA, but the two share some core provisions: sex offenders
    residing in Alaska had to submit to annual or quarterly registration (though not in person) and
    Nos. 15-1536/2346/2486              Does, et al. v. Snyder, et al.                    Page 6
    had to give the State updates for such things as moving, growing a beard, changing hair color, or
    getting a new car. 
    Id. at 90–91;
    101. Like Michigan under SORA, Alaska maintained a website
    that published the offenders’ names, addresses, photos, physical descriptions, license numbers,
    places of employment, dates of birth, crimes of conviction, dates and places of conviction, and
    length of sentences, as well the offenders’ compliance with the registration requirements. 
    Id. at 91.
    The Court in Smith concluded that Alaska’s law was civil, not criminal, employing a two-
    part test: (1) Did the legislature intend to impose punishment? And (2), if not, is the statutory
    scheme “‘so punitive either in purpose or effect as to negate [the State’s] intention’ to deem it
    ‘civil.’” 
    Id. at 92
    (quoting Kansas v. Hendricks, 
    521 U.S. 346
    , 361 (1997)) (brackets in original).
    With respect to the first question, SORA, like the Alaska statute, includes a statement of
    purpose that evinces no punitive intent:
    The legislature declares that the sex offenders registration act was enacted
    pursuant to the legislature’s exercise of the police power of the state with the
    intent to better assist law enforcement officers and the people of this state in
    preventing and protecting against the commission of future criminal sexual acts
    by convicted sex offenders. The legislature has determined that a person who has
    been convicted of committing an offense covered by this act poses a potential
    serious menace and danger to the health, safety, morals, and welfare of the
    people, and particularly the children, of this state. The registration requirements
    of this act are intended to provide law enforcement and the people of this state
    with an appropriate, comprehensive, and effective means to monitor those persons
    who pose such a potential danger.
    Mich. Comp. Laws § 28.721a. And while Plaintiffs do point to some features that might suggest
    a punitive aim—e.g., SORA is triggered solely by criminal offenses and the registration
    requirement is recorded on the judgment; registration is handled by criminal justice agencies like
    the police; SORA imposes criminal sanctions; and it is codified in Chapter 28 of the Michigan
    Code, a chapter that deals with police-related laws—these are similar enough to the arguments
    rejected in Smith that we see no warrant for concluding that SORA’s intent is punitive.
    See Smith, 538 U.S.at 95.
    Nos. 15-1536/2346/2486                Does, et al. v. Snyder, et al.                  Page 7
    We must therefore consider whether SORA’s actual effects are punitive. Out of the
    seven factors—non-dispositive “guideposts”—that typically inform this inquiry, Smith identified
    five that are relevant in this kind of case:
    (1) Does the law inflict what has been regarded in our history and traditions as
    punishment?
    (2) Does it impose an affirmative disability or restraint?
    (3) Does it promote the traditional aims of punishment?
    (4) Does it have a rational connection to a non-punitive purpose?
    (5) Is it excessive with respect to this purpose?
    
    Smith, 538 U.S. at 97
    (citing Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez, 
    372 U.S. 144
    , 168–69 (1963)). We
    consider each factor in turn.
    History and Tradition. As amici law professors point out, though SORA has no direct
    ancestors in our history and traditions, its restrictions do meet the general, and widely accepted,
    definition of punishment offered by legal philosopher H.L.A. Hart: (1) it involves pain or other
    consequences typically considered unpleasant; (2) it follows from an offense against legal rules;
    (3) it applies to the actual (or supposed) offender; (4) it is intentionally administered by people
    other than the offender; and (5) it is imposed and administered by an authority constituted by a
    legal system against which the offense was committed. See H.L.A. Hart, Punishment and
    Responsibility 4–5 (1968).
    More specifically, SORA resembles, in some respects at least, the ancient punishment of
    banishment. True, it does not prohibit the registrant from setting foot in the school zones, and it
    certainly doesn’t make a registrant “dead in law [and] entirely cut off from society,” which is
    how Blackstone described the banished. 1 William Blackstone, Commentaries *132. But its
    geographical restrictions are nevertheless very burdensome, especially in densely populated
    areas.   Consider, for example, this map of Grand Rapids, Michigan, prepared by one of
    Plaintiff’s expert witnesses:
    Nos. 15-1536/2346/2486             Does, et al. v. Snyder, et al.                   Page 8
    Sex Offenders are forced to tailor much of their lives around these school zones, and, as the
    record demonstrates, they often have great difficulty in finding a place where they may legally
    live or work. Some jobs that require traveling from jobsite to jobsite are rendered basically
    unavailable since work will surely take place within a school zone at some point.
    SORA’s requirements also resemble traditional shaming punishments. Unlike the law in
    Smith, which republished information that was already publically available, SORA ascribes and
    publishes tier classifications corresponding to the state’s estimation of present dangerousness
    Nos. 15-1536/2346/2486              Does, et al. v. Snyder, et al.                     Page 9
    without providing for any individualized assessment. These designations are unappealable, and
    apply even to those whose offenses would not ordinarily be considered sex offenses. Doe # 1,
    for example, is on the registry because of a non-sexual kidnapping offense arising out of a 1990
    robbery of a McDonald’s. In other cases, SORA discloses otherwise non-public information.
    Doe # 2, for example, is on the registry because, in 1996, when he was eighteen years old, he
    pled guilty under Michigan’s “Holmes Youthful Trainee Act,” Mich. Comp. Laws § 762.11, a
    record-sealing statute for young offenders, to “Criminal Sexual Conduct III” for having sex with
    a fourteen-year-old girl with whom he had a romantic relationship. But for SORA’s retroactive
    application to him, his criminal record would not be available to the public. Thus, unlike the
    statute in Smith, the ignominy under SORA flows not only from the past offense, but also from
    the statute itself.
    Finally, SORA also resembles the punishment of parole/probation. In Smith, which
    involved nothing more than reporting requirements, the Court took seriously the claim that the
    Alaska statute resembled parole/probation, acknowledging that “[t]his argument has some force,
    but,” concluding that it was ultimately dissimilar because, unlike parolees, “offenders subject to
    the Alaska statute are free to move where they wish and to live and work as other citizens, with
    no 
    supervision.” 538 U.S. at 101
    . Under SORA, by contrast, registrants are subject to numerous
    restrictions on where they can live and work and, much like parolees, they must report in person,
    rather than by phone or mail. Failure to comply can be punished by imprisonment, not unlike a
    revocation of parole. And while the level of individual supervision is less than is typical of
    parole or probation, the basic mechanism and effects have a great deal in common. In fact, many
    of the plaintiffs have averred that SORA’s requirements are more intrusive and more difficult to
    comply with than those they faced when on probation.
    In sum, while SORA is not identical to any traditional punishments, it meets the general
    definition of punishment, has much in common with banishment and public shaming, employs
    geographical restrictions similar to those employed by punitive sun-down laws, and has a
    number of similarities to parole/probation. This factor thus weighs in Plaintiffs’ favor.
    Affirmative Disability or Restraint. As should be evident, SORA requires much more
    from registrants than did the statute in Smith.      Most significant is its regulation of where
    Nos. 15-1536/2346/2486               Does, et al. v. Snyder, et al.                     Page 10
    registrants may live, work, and “loiter.” As discussed above, these restrictions put significant
    restraints on how registrants may live their lives. Further, as also mentioned above, registrants
    must appear in person, both initially and for updates, and, if they are “Tier III” offenders, they
    must do so for life. These are direct restraints on personal conduct.
    Michigan points out, however, that these restraints are not physical in nature and
    contends that the actual effects are therefore “minor and indirect” like those in the statute
    considered in 
    Smith, 538 U.S. at 100
    . But surely something is not “minor and indirect” just
    because no one is actually being lugged off in cold irons bound. Indeed, those irons are always
    in the background since failure to comply with these restrictions carries with it the threat of
    serious punishment, including imprisonment. These restraints are greater than those imposed by
    the Alaska statute by an order of magnitude. Cf. 
    Smith, 538 U.S. at 101
    (noting, for example,
    that “[t]he Alaska statute, on its face, does not require these updates to be made in person”).
    Michigan has a stronger point in noting that SORA’s restrictions are in some ways not as
    severe as complete occupation-disbarment, which has been held to be non-punitive. 
    Id. at 100;
    see also De Veau v. Braisted, 
    363 U.S. 144
    (1960) (forbidding work as a union official); Hawker
    v. New York, 
    170 U.S. 189
    (1898) (revocation of a medical license). But no disbarment case we
    are aware of has confronted a law with such sweeping conditions or approved of disbarment
    without some nexus between the regulatory purpose and the job at issue. SORA’s restrictions
    are again far more onerous than those considered in Smith. And this factor too therefore weighs
    in Plaintiffs’ favor.
    Traditional Aims of Punishment. SORA advances all the traditional aims of punishment:
    incapacitation, retribution, and specific and general deterrence. Its very goal is incapacitation
    insofar as it seeks to keep sex offenders away from opportunities to reoffend. It is retributive in
    that it looks back at the offense (and nothing else) in imposing its restrictions, and it marks
    registrants as ones who cannot be fully admitted into the community. Further, as discussed
    below, it does so in ways that relate only tenuously to legitimate, non-punitive purposes. Finally,
    its professed purpose is to deter recidivism (though, as discussed below, it does not in fact appear
    to do so), and it doubtless serves the purpose of general deterrence. See J.J. Prescott & Jonah E.
    Nos. 15-1536/2346/2486               Does, et al. v. Snyder, et al.                     Page 11
    Rockoff, Do Sex offender Registration and Notification Laws Affect Criminal Behavior?, 54 J.L.
    & Econ. 161 (2011).
    Of course, many of these goals can also rightly be described as civil and regulatory. See
    
    Smith, 538 U.S. at 102
    (“Any number of governmental programs might deter crime without
    imposing punishment. To hold that the mere presence of a deterrent purpose renders such
    sanctions criminal would severely undermine the Government’s ability to engage in effective
    regulation.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). And we accordingly give this
    factor little weight.
    Rational Relation to a Non-Punitive Purpose. “The Act’s rational connection to a
    nonpunitive purpose is a ‘[m]ost significant’ factor in our determination that the statute’s effects
    are not punitive.” 
    Id. (quoting United
    States v. Ursery, 
    518 U.S. 267
    , 290 (1996)) (brackets in
    original). As in Smith, the legislative reasoning behind SORA is readily discernible: recidivism
    rates of sex offenders, according to both the Michigan legislature and Smith, are “frightening and
    high”; informing the public of sex offenders’ addresses, photos, tier rankings, etc. provides a
    mechanism to keep tabs on them with a view to preventing some of the most disturbing and
    destructive criminal activity; and school zones keep sex offenders away from the most
    vulnerable.
    Intuitive as some may find this, the record before us provides scant support for the
    proposition that SORA in fact accomplishes its professed goals. The record below gives a
    thorough accounting of the significant doubt cast by recent empirical studies on the
    pronouncement in Smith that “[t]he risk of recidivism posed by sex offenders is ‘frightening and
    
    high.’” 538 U.S. at 103
    (quoting McKune v. Lile, 
    536 U.S. 24
    , 34 (2002)). One study suggests
    that sex offenders (a category that includes a great diversity of criminals, not just pedophiles) are
    actually less likely to recidivate than other sorts of criminals. See Lawrence A. Greenfield,
    Recidivism of Sex Offenders Released from Prison in 1994 (2003). Even more troubling is
    evidence in the record supporting a finding that offense-based public registration has, at best, no
    impact on recidivism.     [R. 90 at 3846–49].       In fact, one statistical analysis in the record
    concluded that laws such as SORA actually increase the risk of recidivism, probably because
    they exacerbate risk factors for recidivism by making it hard for registrants to get and keep a job,
    Nos. 15-1536/2346/2486                  Does, et al. v. Snyder, et al.                     Page 12
    find housing, and reintegrate into their communities. See Prescott & Rockoff, supra at 161.
    Tellingly, nothing the parties have pointed to in the record suggests that the residential
    restrictions have any beneficial effect on recidivism rates. And while it is intuitive to think that
    at least some sex offenders—e.g., the stereotypical playground-watching pedophile—should be
    kept away from schools, the statute makes no provision for individualized assessments of
    proclivities or dangerousness, even though the danger to children posed by some—e.g., Doe # 1,
    who never committed a sexual offense—is doubtless far less than that posed by a serial child
    molester.
    Excessiveness. Further, while the statute’s efficacy is at best unclear, its negative effects
    are plain on the law’s face. As explained above, SORA puts significant restrictions on where
    registrants can live, work, and “loiter,” but the parties point to no evidence in the record that the
    difficulties the statute imposes on registrants are counterbalanced by any positive effects.
    Indeed, Michigan has never analyzed recidivism rates despite having the data to do so. [R. 90 at
    3768–69]. The requirement that registrants make frequent, in-person appearances before law
    enforcement, moreover, appears to have no relationship to public safety at all. The punitive
    effects of these blanket restrictions thus far exceed even a generous assessment of their salutary
    effects.
    So, is SORA’s actual effect punitive? Many states confronting similar laws have said
    “yes.” See, e.g., Doe v. State, 
    111 A.3d 1077
    , 1100 (N.H. 2015); State v. Letalien, 
    985 A.2d 4
    ,
    26 (Me. 2009); Starkey v. Oklahoma Dep’t of Corr., 
    305 P.3d 1004
    (Okla. 2013);
    Commonwealth v. Baker, 
    295 S.W.3d 437
    (Ky. 2009); Doe v. State, 
    189 P.3d 999
    , 1017 (Alaska
    2008). And we agree. In reaching this conclusion, we are mindful that, as Smith makes clear,
    states are free to pass retroactive sex-offender registry laws and that those challenging an
    ostensibly non-punitive civil law must show by the “clearest proof” that the statute in fact inflicts
    punishment. But difficult is not the same as impossible. Nor should Smith be understood as
    writing a blank check to states to do whatever they please in this arena.
    A regulatory regime that severely restricts where people can live, work, and “loiter,” that
    categorizes them into tiers ostensibly corresponding to present dangerousness without any
    individualized assessment thereof, and that requires time-consuming and cumbersome in-person
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    reporting, all supported by—at best—scant evidence that such restrictions serve the professed
    purpose of keeping Michigan communities safe, is something altogether different from and more
    troubling than Alaska’s first-generation registry law. SORA brands registrants as moral lepers
    solely on the basis of a prior conviction. It consigns them to years, if not a lifetime, of existence
    on the margins, not only of society, but often, as the record in this case makes painfully evident,
    from their own families, with whom, due to school zone restrictions, they may not even live. It
    directly regulates where registrants may go in their daily lives and compels them to interrupt
    those lives with great frequency in order to appear in person before law enforcement to report
    even minor changes to their information.
    We conclude that Michigan’s SORA imposes punishment. And while many (certainly
    not all) sex offenses involve abominable, almost unspeakable, conduct that deserves severe legal
    penalties, punishment may never be retroactively imposed or increased. Indeed, the fact that sex
    offenders are so widely feared and disdained by the general public implicates the core counter-
    majoritarian principle embodied in the Ex Post Facto clause. As the founders rightly perceived,
    as dangerous as it may be not to punish someone, it is far more dangerous to permit the
    government under guise of civil regulation to punish people without prior notice.              Such
    lawmaking has “been, in all ages, [a] favorite and most formidable instrument[] of tyranny.”
    The Federalist No. 84, supra at 444 (Alexander Hamilton). It is, as Justice Chase argued,
    incompatible with both the words of the Constitution and the underlying first principles of “our
    free republican governments.” 
    Calder, 3 U.S. at 388
    –89; accord The Federalist No. 44, supra at
    232 (James Madison) (“[E]x post facto laws . . . are contrary to the first principles of the social
    compact, and to every principle of sound legislation.”). The retroactive application of SORA’s
    2006 and 2011 amendments to Plaintiffs is unconstitutional, and it must therefore cease.
    As we have explained, this case involves far more than an Ex Post Facto challenge. And
    as the district court’s detailed opinions make evident, Plaintiffs’ arguments on these other issues
    are far from frivolous and involve matters of great public importance. These questions, however,
    will have to wait for another day because none of the contested provisions may now be applied
    to the plaintiffs in this lawsuit, and anything we would say on those other matters would be dicta.
    Nos. 15-1536/2346/2486             Does, et al. v. Snyder, et al.               Page 14
    We therefore reverse the district court’s decision that SORA is not an Ex Post Facto law and
    remand for entry of judgment consistent with this opinion.