ERA Lawsuit - As Filed in Boston
ERA Lawsuit - As Filed in Boston
ERA Lawsuit - As Filed in Boston
Equal Means Equal, The Yellow Roses, and Katherine Weitbrecht bring this action for
INTRODUCTION
1. This action concerns imminent ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment (“ERA”)
and raises novel questions of public importance. Review by this Court will offer significant
pragmatic benefits and provide needed guidance to the litigants, as well as to government
Nevada and Illinois became the 36th and 37th States to ratify the ERA in, respectively, 2017 and
2018. It is widely agreed that Virginia will become the 38th State to ratify the ERA in January
2020.
3. On December 16, 2019, Attorneys General from Alabama, Louisiana and South
Dakota (“Alabama Plaintiffs”) preemptively filed suit in Alabama federal court suit against the
United States Archivist, seeking to block ratification of the ERA when Virginia ratifies. Alabama
et al. v. Ferriero, N.D. Alabama, No. 7:2019cv02032. The Alabama Plaintiffs seek declaratory
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and injunctive remedies, including preliminary and permanent injunctions, directing the
Archivist not to record the ERA as ratified when Virginia ratifies; not to record Virginia’s
4. On December 19, 2019, just days after the Alabama lawsuit was filed, the National
Archives and Records Administration issued a statement declaring that it “does not intend to take
any action regarding the ERA until, at a minimum, it receives the guidance it previously
requested [from the Justice Department’s Office of Legal Counsel] and in no event before
February 15, 2020.” U.S. National Archives and Records Administration, Press Release,
5. By its terms, the ERA becomes enforceable two years after ratification. This two-year
period is designed to give state and federal officials time to examine and repair laws, regulations,
and policies, to remove all sex discriminatory features. Plaintiffs have an interest in ensuring that
6. Plaintiffs have filed this action to ensure that the Archivist properly records Virginia’s
ratification and the ERA’s ratification, and that the Archivist does not improperly remove prior
ratifications by any state. Plaintiffs, therefore, seek by this complaint appropriate writs and court
orders ensuring that the ERA is recorded as duly ratified as soon as Virginia ratifies.
PARTIES
7. Defendant, David S. Ferriero, is the Archivist of the United States. The Archivist
directs and supervises the National Archives and Records Administration and is responsible for
administering the process of recording states’ ratifications of constitutional amendments, and for
recording the amendments. See 1. U.S.C. §106b. The Archivist is sued in his official capacity.
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sole purpose is to advocate for women’s equality and ratification of the ERA.
founded in 2016 for the sole purpose of advocating for ratification of the ERA.
Massachusetts.
JURISDICTION
11. This Court has subject-matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §1331, 28 U.S.C.
§1361 and 28 U.S.C. § 1651, because this case seeks equitable relief, a Writ of Mandamus, and
relief under the All Writs Act, and arises under the Constitution and laws of the United States.
12. Venue is proper under 28 U.S.C. §1391(e) because Defendant is an officer of the
United States sued in his official capacity, this case does not involve real property, and Plaintiff
FACTS
13. In 1972, Congress proposed the Equal Rights Amendment as an amendment to the
United States Constitution, and sent it to the states for ratification. The ERA states, “[e]quality of
rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on
account of sex.” As the same time, however, Congress enacted a separate provision purporting to
give the States only seven years to ratify (by March 22, 1979). This separate deadline was not
included within the text of the ERA itself, thus was not necessarily subject to approval by the
States. Indeed, only some of the states that voted to ratify mentioned the deadline.
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the States to elect a schedule of their choosing on which to consider and ratify - or decline to
15. The first sixteen amendments to the U.S. Constitution had no ratification deadlines.
The first time Congress imposed a deadline was relatively recently, with the Eighteenth
Amendment (prohibition) in 1917. Notably, the deadline for ratification of the Eighteenth
Amendment was not extra-textual; it was included in the text of the proposed amendment itself.
16. In 1978, as the extra-textual deadline approached, Congress passed a joint resolution
by simple majority of both houses, extending the ERA’s extra-textual deadline to June 30, 1982.
Like the extra-textual deadline, the extension bill was enacted separately from the ERA itself and
was not sent to the states for approval. That the extra-textual deadline was extended by routine
statutory process without congressional action on the ERA itself, and was passed by a simple
majority in both houses rather than the two-thirds required for amendments, illustrates not only
its extra-textual nature, but also that Congress perceived the deadline to be untethered to the
ERA. When the extra-textual deadline expired in 1979, 35 states, including Massachusetts, had
ratified the ERA. No additional states ratified between 1979 and 1982.
17. When the ERA extension bill deadline expired in 1982, women’s rights groups
continued to work toward ratification, especially after 1992, when the 27th Amendment
(“Madison Amendment”) was ratified 203 years after it passed Congress. Proponents of the ERA
were incredulous that a congressional pay-raise amendment was ratified centuries after Congress
citizenship to women was given only ten years. The ERA’s proponents were also aware that the
Madison Amendment was ratified and approved by Congress despite the fact that the United
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States Supreme Court had ruled, in Dillon v. Gloss, 256 U.S. 368, 376 (1921), that the Madison
18. Despite the extra-textual deadline and its subsequent extension, women’s rights
groups and others have worked continuously to ratify the ERA, succeeding in Nevada in 2017,
19. The ERA can be ratified despite the extra-textual deadline because the deadline is a
constitutional nullity.
20. Article V of the U.S. Constitution, which sets out the process for ratification,
nowhere grants Congress the power to restrict States’ rights concerning ratification by enacting a
separate provision to limit the time period within which the States must ratify. Article V only
gives Congress authority to “propose amendments” and to “propose” whether they may be
ratified “by state legislature or constitutional convention…” These allocations of proposal power
in Article V neither require nor permit - nor warrant - a grant of implied power to Congress to
21. The Tenth Amendment limits the power of the federal government to constrain
legislatively the States’ power to ratify proposed amendments: “The powers not delegated to the
United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the states
constitutional manner, by placing the deadline within the text of a proposed amendment itself, as
happened with the 20th, 21st, and 22nd Amendments. This at least allows the States to decide for
themselves, as a matter of process and substance, whether they want to ratify an amendment on a
proposed schedule. Congress may not, as occurred with the ERA, enact a provision separately
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from the ERA itself that substantively - and, therefore, unconstitutionally - constrained the
States’ ratification powers and subverted the plain language of Article V by limiting the States’
sovereign rights. It would be equally inappropriate for the States to impose a deadline on the
Congress in circumstances where the States initiated an amendatory process through Convention.
The extra-textual deadline, therefore, offends the constitutional allocation of equal amendatory
power between the federal and state governments established by the Framers in Article V, and
United States Supreme Court precedent permits it to rescind its ratification. Indeed, the
Fourteenth Amendment was successfully ratified despite rescissions by two states. The text of
amendments, as was the fate of the Eighteenth Amendment. Further, nothing in Article V allows
some states to nullify the value of other states’ ratifications, which is inevitable if states are
permitted to rescind.
24. The only court to pass on the issue of whether states may rescind was a single District
Court judge in Idaho. Idaho v. Freeman, 529 F. Supp. 1107, 1128 (D. Idaho 1981). The District
Court ruled that states may rescind their ERA ratifications, but the ruling was appealed to the 9th
Circuit, and a certiorari petition was filed with the United States Supreme Court. The Supreme
Court granted pre-judgment certiorari and stayed the judgment of the District Court. When the
1982 ERA deadline extension expired, the case was dismissed as moot. N.O.W. v. Idaho, 459
U.S. 809 (1982). Thus, there is no case law from any federal court addressing whether a state
may rescind its ratification of an amendment and recent attempts by several states to rescind their
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25. Whether an amendment becomes part of the Constitution is determined solely by the
state-ratification process: an amendment “...shall be valid to all intents and purposes, as part of
this Constitution, when ratified by the legislatures of three-fourths of the several states, or by
conventions in three-fourths thereof...” Nothing more is needed than the vote of three-fourths of
the states, by legislature or by convention. Once that happens, the amendment becomes law and
the Archivist of the United States performs the purely ministerial task of recording the last state’s
ratification decision, followed by a recording of the ratified amendment itself. Dillon at 376 (The
Eighteenth Amendment “was consummated January 16, 1919. That the Secretary of State [now
the Archivist] did not proclaim its ratification until January 29, 1919, is not material, for the date
26. The Archivist has properly recorded ratification documents from 37 states, including
recent ratifications by Nevada (2017) and Illinois (2018). The Archivist has no duty or authority
ratification or ratification by any additional state. Nor may the Archivist decline to record an
27. The Archivist has acted legally in recording the ratifications of thirty-seven states.
His actions respect the Constitution, the plain language of Article V, and the Tenth Amendment.
28. Notwithstanding the Archivist’s compliance with the law thus far, the Alabama
Plaintiffs allege that the Archivist acted illegally by recording the ratifications of Nevada and
Illinois, and by not recording attempted rescissions of prior ratifications by five states.
29. Plaintiffs here, like the Alabama Plaintiffs, seek simply to ensure that the Archivist
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performs his duties. But unlike the Alabama Plaintiffs, Plaintiffs here sue to ensure that the
Archivist performs his duties lawfully, so that the Constitution formally recognizes women’s
30. Article V clearly gives Congress and the States separate, co-equal and distinct roles in
the amendatory process. See The Federalist No. 43 (Hamilton) (explaining that Article V
“equally enables the general and the States governments”). This balance was by design, as it
makes the amendment process “neither wholly national nor wholly federal.” The Federalist No.
39 (Madison). Article V accomplishes this balance by giving Congress and the States “carefully
balanced and approximately equally distributed” powers. Idaho v. Freeman, 529 F. Supp. at
1128.
31. Although Article V states that Congress has the power to control the “mode of
ratification,” see United States v. Sprague, 282 U.S. 716, 732 (1931), this refers solely to the
32. The United States Supreme Court has said that Congress may set “reasonable” time
limits on ratification, Dillon v. Gloss, 256 U.S. 368, 376 (1921). However, the Amendment at
issue in that case - the Eighteenth - expressly included a deadline within the text of the
amendment itself. (See Section 3 of the Eighteenth Amendment: “This article shall be
inoperative unless it shall have been ratified as an amendment to the Constitution by the
legislatures of the several states, as provided in the Constitution, within seven years from the
date of the submission hereof to the states by the Congress.”) Thus, Dillon is authority for at, at
most, the proposition that an amendment may include a deadline - or anything else - in its text.
33. Further, it is arguable that Dillon is no longer good law as the underlying basis for
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Dillon no longer applies. The United States is a much more complex nation today than it was
when Dillon was decided in 1921. In Dillon, the Court was primarily concerned with ensuring
national consensus for proposed amendments. It ruled that substantial contemporaneity between
the date when Congress proposes an amendment, and the date when the last of three-fourths of
overwhelming national support for the ERA. CISION, PR Newswire.com, Americans – by 94% -
Overwhelmingly Support the Equal Rights Amendment, June 17, 2016. Indeed, imposing a short
ratification deadline can undermine consensus, as occurred with Prohibition. The seven-year
deadline put artificial pressure on the states to ratify quickly, without giving sufficient attention
to the consequences of ratification, a reality that quickly became clear when prohibition was
34. Dillon’s viability is questionable not only because its underlying premise about
effectively voided when Congress disregarded the decision by validating the Madison
Amendment in 1992 after it languished with insufficient numbers of ratifying states since its
1992 ignored the Dillon court’s admonition that the Amendment was already too old, in 1921, to
ratify. Dillon at 375 (“proposal and ratification ... are not to be widely separated in time.”)
35. The States have exclusive authority over the ratification process; that authority cannot
be mitigated by ratification deadlines enacted by Congress outside the scope of its power to
extra-textual deadline, thus denying the States their right to exercise exclusive control over the
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ratification process. Dyer v. Blair, 390 F. Supp. 1291, 1307 (N.D. Ill. 1975) (Stevens, J.)
(“[Article V’s] failure to prescribe any particular ratification procedure, or required vote to
effectuate a ratification, is certainly consistent with the basic understanding the state legislature
should have the power and the discretion to determine for themselves how they should discharge
36. Since Congress began imposing deadlines in the early 1900s, it has done so
inconsistently, adding deadlines for some amendments, but not all. For example, a deadline was
imposed on the Eighteenth but not the Nineteenth Amendment. And even when imposing
deadlines, Congress has done so capriciously by placing some deadlines in the text of proposed
addressed by any court, but it should be obvious that amending the Constitution is not run-of-the-
mill lawmaking. The process should be consistent, predictable, and strictly obedient to the
Constitution.
Dillon support Plaintiffs’ request that this Court declare the extra-textual ERA deadline a
constitutional nullity.
38. This Court should also prohibit the Archivist from recording any state’s attempt
to rescind a prior ratification of the ERA. Similar attempts by states to rescind ratification of the
Fourteenth Amendment were unsuccessful as the Fourteenth Amendment was deemed ratified
when the last of three-fourths of the states voted to ratify, despite the fact that some of the states
counted among the three-fourths that ratified had already voted to rescind.
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39. When Virginia ratifies, it will send its ratification documents to the Archivist at the
Office of the Federal Register. The Archivist must then record Virginia’s ratification as the last
of the three-fourths of the States needed to ratify the ERA, and “cause the amendment to be
published, with his certificate, specifying the States by which the same may have been adopted,
and that the same has become valid, to all intents and purposes, as a part of the Constitution of
40. The Archivist’s duties are narrow in scope and purely ministerial in function because
the date when an amendment becomes law is the date when the last state ratifies. Dillon at 376.
The Alabama Plaintiffs seek to disrupt a constitutionally valid process by obtaining a court order
nullifying existing ratifications of the ERA, and forbidding the Archivist to record Virginia’s
ratification and the ERA itself. Plaintiffs here seek a remedy from this Court to ensure that the
Archivist is not unlawfully prohibited from performing his ministerial duties, and recording the
full equality of citizenship. Presently, women enjoy less than full citizenship. For example, the
United States Supreme Court has held that the Fourteenth Amendment’s Equal Protection Clause
prohibits sex discrimination less effectively than it prohibits other forms of discrimination
because the applicable legal standard denies women the strictest level of legal scrutiny, thus
permitting more sex discrimination than is legally tolerated against other social classes. See, e.g.,
42. Virginia will ratify the ERA in early 2020. After Virginia’s November 2019
elections where the ERA was a major campaign issue, ERA opponents were unseated in the
House of Delegates and the Senate. Since then, the soon-to-be Speaker of the House of Delegates
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has stated that ratifying the ERA will be a “top priority” and will take place “very soon after we
gavel in January,” adding it will be one of the first issues addressed by the Virginia legislature.
R. Frazin, The Hill, December 1, 2019. Virginia State Senator Jennifer McClellan similarly
stated, “it’s a top priority for both the Senate and the House Democrats,” adding, “I suspect it
will pass very quickly” that “Republicans in the Senate are [also] supporting” it. Id. The bill
43. The issues presented here are justiciable, non-political questions. “[G]ving plenary
power to Congress to control the amendment process runs completely counter to the intentions of
the founding fathers.” Freeman, 529 F. Supp. at 1126. Because Article V “split[s]” the amending
power “between Congress and the states,” “it is evident … that the framers did not intend either
of those two parties to be the final arbiter of the process”; rather, “the courts, as a neutral third
party … [would] decide … questions raised under article V.” Id. at 1134. Courts are “not …
Stevens explained, because “the [Supreme] Court has on several occasions decided questions
arising under article V, even in the face of ‘political questions’ contentions.” Dyer, 390 F. Supp.
44. If the Alabama court grants Plaintiffs the relief requested, Plaintiffs in this matter and
all women will suffer serious injury because government officials will decline to begin
identifying and repairing sex discriminatory provisions in their laws, regulations and policies.
See Buckley v. Valeo, 424 U.S. 1, 117 (1976) (per curiam) (“Party litigants with sufficient
concrete interests at stake may have standing to raise constitutional questions of separation of
powers with respect to an agency designated to adjudicate their rights”). See also, N.O.W. v.
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45. Plaintiff Katherine Weitbrecht and other women in Massachusetts will suffer an
increased risk of harm because women as a class are currently excluded from protection under
the state’s hate-crime statute, Mass.G.L.c.265, §39, which means they are being denied equal
crimes ensuing from their enforcement. Further, because the Massachusetts hate crime statute is
legal injury. The hate crime statute will need to be repaired during the two-year period after
Virginia ratifies the ERA. Likewise, law enforcement and related policies must be amended, but
lawmakers and other government officials will not take steps to fix the hate crime statute and
related policies if a federal judge in Alabama rules that the ERA is not valid.
46. Relief from this Court will protect Plaintiffs and all women, as well as the States,
from suffering irreparable injury. See Maryland v. King, 567 U.S. 1301 (2012) (Roberts, C.J., in
chambers) (“[A]ny time a State is enjoined by a court from effectuating statutes enacted by
47. Precluding the enforcement of the Constitution, like “the threat of enforcement of [an
unconstitutional law,] is an Article III injury in fact.” Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus, 573
48. Plaintiffs seek to vindicate their rights, and the rights of the States to exercise fully
their co-equal constitutional role in the amendatory process, on par with the national
government, by respecting the plain language of Article V, and the Tenth Amendment.
49. Thus, Plaintiffs ask this Court to issue any and all appropriate writs and orders to
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50. Violence against women is the product of women’s inequality and is reinforced by
51. Nearly 1 in 2 women experiences some form of sexual violence in their lifetime, 37%
between the ages of 18-24.2 Females are 5 to 8 times more likely than men to be victimized by an
intimate partner and they suffer disproportionately high rates of domestic and dating violence,3
sexual assault,4 and stalking.5 Only a small percentage of victims report sexual assaults to
government officials because, inter alia, they expect the government not to provide effective
1
U.N. General Assembly, 2006, In-Depth Study on All Forms of Violence against Women:
Report of the Secretary General. A/61/122/Add.1; United Nations, New York,
http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/vaw/v-sg-study.htm, February 2010; D. Rhode,
Speaking of Sex, 1997, the Denial of Gender Inequality.
2
Rape Prevention and Education Program, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 2013.
http://www.cdc.gov/violenceprevention/rpe/>.
3
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Violence by Intimates: Analysis of Data on Crimes by
Current or Former Spouses, Boyfriends, and Girlfriends, (March 1998) (violence by an intimate
partner accounts for about 21% of violent crime experienced by women and about 2% of the
violence experienced by men.) 92% of all domestic violence incidents are committed by men
against women; accord, U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Violence Against Women, Bureau of
Justice Statistics, January, 1994; and Koss, M.P. (1988), Hidden Rape: Incidence, Prevalence
and Descriptive Characteristics of Sexual Aggression and Victimization in a National Sample of
College Students. In Burgess, A.W. (ed.) Sexual Assault. Vol. II. New York: Garland Pub. (84%
of raped women know their assailants and 57% of rapes occur on a date.)
4
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, 2003 National Crime Victimization Survey (nine out of ten rape
victims are female); Koss, M.P., id, (women aged 16-24 are four times more likely to be raped
than any other population group.)
5
8% of women and 2% of men in the United States have been stalked at some time in their life.
78% of stalking victims identified in a survey were women, and 22 percent were men. Thus, four
out of five stalking victims are women. By comparison, 94 percent of the stalkers identified by
female victims and 60 percent of the stalkers identified by male victims were male. Overall, 87
percent of the stalkers identified by the victims were male. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF JUSTICE
Stalking in America: Findings from the National Violence Against Women Survey, 1998.
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redress, and they fear the legal system will cause additional harm.6
52. 9% of all rapists are prosecuted, 5% lead to conviction, and less than 3% spend even
fosters rape-supportive attitudes and behaviors, which is correlated with sexual aggression.8
54. One in three to one in four women are victimized by sexual assault during college.9
Given that approximately 916,000 women graduated from post-secondary schools in 2009,10 this
means over 200,000 women are victimized by sexual assault during college. Some studies find as
55. Female students in the United States endure pervasive unequal treatment, harassment
and violence, on the basis of sex, throughout all levels of education.12 Women also suffer
6
D. Kilpatrick et al., Drug-facilitated, incapacitated, and Forcible Rape: A National Study,
2007; U.S. Bureau of justice Statistics, M. Planty and L. Langton, Female Victims of Sexual
Violence, 1994-2010,” 2010.
7
Probability Statistics Calculated by the Rape, Abuse and Incest National Network, “Reporting
Rats,” 2013.
8
L. Bouffard, Exploring the Utility of Entitlement in Understanding Sexual Aggression, 38
Journal of Criminal Justice, pp.870-879 (2010).
9
https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/221153.pdf, pp. xii-xiii and 2-1 (2007); U.S.
Department of Justice Office of Community Oriented Policing Services, Acquaintance Rape of
College Students, March 28, 2002, http://www.cops.usdoj.gov/pdf/e03021472.pdf;
https://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/nij/grants/221153.pdf; Freyd, J. Rosenthal, M. & Smith, C.,
Preliminary Results from the University of Oregon Sexual Violence and Institutional Behavior
Campus Survey, 2014, http://dynamic.uoregon.edu/jjf/campus/UO-campus- results-
30Sept14.pdf.
10
http://www.census.gov/prod/2012pubs/p20-566.pdf.
11
B. Fischer, et al., Sexual Victimization of College Women, National Institute of Justice,
(2000), http://www.nij.gov/publications/pages/publication-detail.aspx?ncjnumber=182369 (5%).
12
Sadker, & Zittleman, Still Failing at Fairness, How Gender Bias Cheats Girls and Boys in
School and What We Can Do About It, Scribner Press 2009;
www.hks.harvard.edu/centers/carr/research-publications/carr-center-working-papers-
series/caplan-and-ford-%22the-voices-of-diversity-%22.
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disproportionately high rates of domestic and dating violence,13 sexual assault14 and stalking.15
56. Because women do not enjoy full constitutional equality, they suffer
disproportionately higher rates of violence, and offenders of violence against women are less
57. The relief sought here is, therefore, necessary to protect the rights of the Plaintiffs
58. Equal Means Equal (EME) is a national 501(c)(4) non-profit organization whose
sole purpose is to advocate for sex/gender equality and fully equal rights for women. In 2016,
EME produced an award-winning film entitled Equal Means Equal. This film, a decade in the
making, examined the status of American women in over two dozen areas where women
experienced sex discrimination, and analyzed whether ratification of the ERA would mitigate
this overall pattern of discrimination in American society. Along with producing the film, EME
13
Women are less likely than men to be victims of violent crimes overall, but women are 5 to 8
times more likely than men to be victimized by an intimate partner. Violence by Intimates:
Analysis of Data on Crimes by Current or Former Spouses, Boyfriends, and Girlfriends, U.S.
Department of Justice, March, 1998; violence by an intimate partner accounts for about 21% of
violent crime experienced by women and about 2% of the violence experienced by men. Id. 92%
of all domestic violence incidents are committed by men against women. Violence Against
Women, Bureau of Justice Statistics, U.S. Department of Justice, January, 1994; 84% of raped
women know their assailants and 57% of rapes occur on a date. Koss, M.P. (1988). Hidden
Rape: Incidence, Prevalence and descriptive Characteristics of Sexual Aggression and
Victimization in a National Sample of College Students. In Burgess, A.W. (ed.) Sexual Assault.
Vol. II. New York: Garland Pub.
14
Nine out of ten rape victims are female, U.S. Department of Justice, 2003 National Crime
Victimization Survey. 2003; Women aged 16-24 are four times more likely to be raped than any
other population group. Koss, M.P., id.
15
8% of women and 2% of men in the United States have been stalked at some time in their life.
78% of stalking victims identified in a survey were women, and 22 percent were men. Thus, four
out of five stalking victims are women. By comparison, 94 percent of the stalkers identified by
female victims and 60 percent of the stalkers identified by male victims were male. Overall, 87
percent of the stalkers identified by the victims were male. National Institute of Justice 1998.
Stalking in America: Findings from the National Violence Against Women Survey).
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has been instrumental in raising awareness about the ERA and helping to pass ERA ratification
bills in Nevada and Illinois. EME’s executive director, Kamala Lopez, testified in front of the
Illinois legislature in support of the ERA. EME has engaged in educational campaigns in many
states, including Virginia, Arizona, North Carolina, South Carolina, Missouri, Utah, Georgia,
Louisiana, Florida, and Oklahoma. EME’s involvement in this litigation is intended to represent
EME in its own right, and the multitude of women who have suffered and are at increased risk of
59. EME has over twenty-thousand active supporters including members of the
entertainment and media community. The organization is well known as a leader in the modern
strategy for ratification of the ERA and has worked in collaboration with major labor unions
such as the Teamsters and the Screen Actors Guild, American Federation of Radio and
Television Artists, the United Nations (UN Women), the National Women’s Political Caucus,
the YWCA, the AAUW, the ACLU, the League of Women Voters, Yale Women, the National
National Black Women’s Caucus, Black Voters Matter, Common Cause, Indivisible, Women
Occupy Hollywood, NOW Hollywood, Hispanics Organized for Political Equality (HOPE), the
Latino Legislative Caucus of the State of California, among others. Since 2009, the ERA
Education Project and EME have actively engaged in advocacy and educational services,
including working directly with government officials to address discriminatory laws, regulations,
and policies, related to women’s equality and the ERA. They have received many
commendations for their work in the service of advancing women’s equality and ensuring
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Quincy, Massachusetts in 2016 by a group of middle school girls who were surprised to learn in
school that women were not yet equal citizens under the U.S. Constitution. The organization’s
sole mission is to advocate for and raise public awareness about ratification of the ERA.
61. The Yellow Roses has engaged in numerous activities, including circulating a petition
for the ratification of the ERA; interviewing and being interviewed by local and national
publications; meeting with state and federal officials to advocate for the equal treatment of
women and ratification of the ERA; collaborating with activists such as Gloria Steinem, and
making public appearances to advocate for and teach young people to be activists in their
communities.
violence because they are female, and not equally protected under the law.
64. Ms. Weitbrecht personally suffered a violent act because she is female when
she was strangled in Massachusetts by a man who mocked her for wearing a rape whistle on
campus late at night. The man had a history of making discriminatory and derogatory comments
about females.
65. Ms. Weitbrecht reported the strangulation incident to law enforcement, but
no hate crime charges could be filed because, as a female, she is not protected under the
Massachusetts hate crime statute, Mass.G.L.c.265, §39. Had she suffered the exact same crime
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based on a different protected class category, such as ethnicity or religion, a hate crime charge
66. Although Ms. Weitbrecht was strangled, the offender was charged only with a
single misdemeanor count of assault and battery. The offender’s case was continued without a
criminal activity she may endure in the future because she is female. As a college student, Ms.
Weitbrecht faces a disproportionately high risk of harm because she is female. Ms. Weitbrecht
fears that reporting crimes committed against her because she is female will lead to inadequate
charges and unjust treatment by law enforcement and the legal system.
68. Ms. Weitbrecht’s rights and well-being are threatened and violated by her lack of
full Constitutional equality because she is not equally protected by the U.S. Constitution, or
Massachusetts law.
69. When the ERA becomes law, Massachusetts officials will be required to repair
the hate crime statute to ensure the equal protection of Ms. Weitbrecht and all females.
COUNT I
(Article V of the U.S. Constitution)
70. Plaintiffs repeat and reallege each of the prior allegations in this complaint.
71. Congress cannot limit the amount of time that States have to ratify a constitutional
amendment because Article V of the United States Constitution nowhere grants Congress the
power to impose deadlines. Under Article V, an amendment becomes valid when three-fourths of
72. When Congress proposed the ERA in 1972, it imposed a seven-year ratification
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deadline on the states by enacting a separate deadline provision. In 1978, Congress enacted
another statute, extending the deadline to 1982. As Congress had no authority to impose an
extra-textual ratification deadline on the states, the ERA ratification deadline is null and void and
73. If Congress has authority to impose ratification deadlines on the States, it must do so
from the text of the ERA itself, Congress violated Article V and the ERA deadline is null and
74. The Archivist has recorded thirty-seven states’ ratifications, including from Nevada
75. The Archivist’s recordings of all 37 ERA ratifications to date were legal and are
COUNT II
(Tenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution)
76. Plaintiffs repeat and reallege each of the prior allegations in this complaint.
77. Congress cannot limit the amount of time that States have to ratify a constitutional
amendment because the Tenth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides that all
rights not specifically granted to the federal government are reserved to the States, and the
United States Constitution nowhere grants to Congress the power to impose extra-textual
statutory deadlines on the States. Under the Tenth Amendment, and in light of Article V which
states that an amendment becomes valid when three-fourths of the states ratify, the States have
78. When Congress proposed the ERA in 1972, it imposed a seven-year ratification
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Case 1:20-cv-10015 Document 1 Filed 01/07/20 Page 21 of 23
deadline on the states by enacting a separate provision that was not part of the ERA itself. In
1978, Congress enacted another law, extending the deadline to 1982. The extra-textual ERA
deadline encroached unconstitutionally on the States’ Article V right to ratify. Thus, the ERA
79. If Congress has authority to impose ratification deadlines on the States, it must do so
from the text of the ERA itself, Congress violated Article V and the ERA deadline is null and
80. The Archivist has recorded thirty-seven states’ ratifications, including from Nevada
81. The Archivist’s recordings of all 37 ERA ratifications were legal and are consistent
COUNT III
(Article V of the U.S. Constitution)
82. Plaintiffs repeat and reallege each of the prior allegations in this complaint.
83. A State cannot rescind its ratification of a constitutional amendment. Any attempt to
84. Five States—Nebraska, Idaho, Tennessee, Kentucky, and South Dakota—have voted
to rescind their prior ratifications of the ERA. These efforts have no legal effect and are null and
void.
85. The Archivist correctly refused to record any rescissions of prior ratifications because
That would not be consistent with the plain language of Article V, or Supreme Court precedent.
86. The Archivist’s actions to date are constitutional and consistent with the plain
language of Article V.
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COUNT IV
(All Writs Act)
87. Plaintiffs repeat and reallege each of the prior allegations in this complaint.
88. The Archivist is mandated to perform the ministerial task of recording state
89. The Archivist is mandated to record Virginia’s ratification of the ERA when Virginia
90. The Archivist currently faces legal action in federal court in Alabama to prevent him
from recording Virginia’s ratification, require him to remove prior ratifications by other states,
and prevent him from recording the ERA as a duly ratified amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
91. Plaintiffs have no plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law, other than the remedies
92. Failure to record the ERA as a duly ratified amendment threatens to cause harm, and
will continue to cause harm to Plaintiffs’ rights, and the rights of similarly situated others, and is
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs respectfully request that this Court enter judgment in favor of
i. A declaratory judgment that the ERA amends the United States Constitution when
the last of three-fourths of the states ratifies the ERA;
ii. A declaratory judgment that the extra-textual ERA ratification deadline enacted
by Congress is a constitutional nullity;
iii. A declaratory judgment that Nebraska, Idaho, Tennessee, Kentucky, and South
Dakota did not and may not validly rescind their prior ratifications of the ERA
because such rescissions are not permitted under the Constitution;
iv. A writ requiring the Archivist to record all states’ decisions to ratify
the ERA irrespective of the congressional deadline;
v. A writ prohibiting the Archivist from removing previously recorded ratifications
of the ERA;
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vi. A writ requiring the Archivist to record the ERA as duly ratified when Virginia
ratifies;
vii. A permanent injunction precluding the Archivist from removing previously
recorded ratifications, or from recording rescissions from Nebraska, Idaho,
Tennessee, Kentucky, and South Dakota;
viii. A preliminary injunction granting the above relief during the pendency of this
action;
ix. Plaintiffs’ reasonable costs and expenses of this action, including attorneys’ fees;
and
x. All other further relief to which Plaintiffs might be entitled.
Respectfully submitted,
WENDY MURPHY
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JS 44 (Rev. 06/17) CIVIL COVER SHEET
The JS 44 civil cover sheet and the information contained herein neither replace nor supplement the filing and service of pleadings or other papers as required by law, except as
provided by local rules of court. This form, approved by the Judicial Conference of the United States in September 1974, is required for the use of the Clerk of Court for the
purpose of initiating the civil docket sheet. (SEE INSTRUCTIONS ON NEXT PAGE OF THIS FORM.)
(b) County of Residence of First Listed Plaintiff Equal Means Equal County of Residence of First Listed Defendant Washington
(EXCEPT IN U.S. PLAINTIFF CASES) (IN U.S. PLAINTIFF CASES ONLY)
NOTE: IN LAND CONDEMNATION CASES, USE THE LOCATION OF
THE TRACT OF LAND INVOLVED.
(c) Attorneys (Firm Name, Address, and Telephone Number) Attorneys (If Known)
Wendy J. Murphy
New England Law|Boston
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II. BASIS OF JURISDICTION (Place an “X” in One Box Only) III. CITIZENSHIP OF PRINCIPAL PARTIES (Place an “X” in One Box for Plaintiff
(For Diversity Cases Only) and One Box for Defendant)
’ 1 U.S. Government ’ 3 Federal Question PTF DEF PTF DEF
Plaintiff (U.S. Government Not a Party) Citizen of This State ’ 1 ’ 1 Incorporated or Principal Place ’ 4 ’ 4
of Business In This State
’ 2 U.S. Government ’ 4 Diversity Citizen of Another State ’ 2 ’ 2 Incorporated and Principal Place ’ 5 ’ 5
Defendant (Indicate Citizenship of Parties in Item III) of Business In Another State
The JS 44 civil cover sheet and the information contained herein neither replaces nor supplements the filings and service of pleading or other papers as
required by law, except as provided by local rules of court. This form, approved by the Judicial Conference of the United States in September 1974, is
required for the use of the Clerk of Court for the purpose of initiating the civil docket sheet. Consequently, a civil cover sheet is submitted to the Clerk of
Court for each civil complaint filed. The attorney filing a case should complete the form as follows:
I.(a) Plaintiffs-Defendants. Enter names (last, first, middle initial) of plaintiff and defendant. If the plaintiff or defendant is a government agency, use
only the full name or standard abbreviations. If the plaintiff or defendant is an official within a government agency, identify first the agency and
then the official, giving both name and title.
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(c) Attorneys. Enter the firm name, address, telephone number, and attorney of record. If there are several attorneys, list them on an attachment, noting
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