First, the cruel and unusual punime clause governs which punishments are permitted. Not what conduct can be prohibited. Second, no precedent spos the ninth circuit rule. Instead they misread robinson to bar any punishment for involuntary conduct linked to a status. But robinson tells on tt states cannot outlaw the status of drug addiction. It made clear they can prohibit conduct like drug use could this court should not rew robinson six decadesat third, the ninth circuits approach has proven woable. The eighth amendment does not tell courts who is involuntarily homeless, what slt is adequate, or what time, ple and manner relations are allowe but in 35 suits and counting feral cous are now deciding everything from the ect size of campsites to the adequacy of empty beds at specific shelters like the Gospel Rescue Mission in grants and cities aretrgling to apply arbitrary shifting standards t field. This court sulreverse and and the failed eerent which has fueled t sead of encampmentshile harming those it purports to protect. I welcome the courts questions. Do you co these civil or criminal penalties . They are both. There is criminal trespass. Is that involved in this case . Yes. Have any of the parties hereby subject to criminal trespass . They are and yes, they do apply here. They are for recidivist ofns. Which party has been held accountable for crimin trespass . None of thinviduals who are currently in the case. s of is involved in this se . For logan and johnson, it is a civil penalty. Is it the anticamping or what is it . Yes, it is. Is that civil or criminal . The camping ordinance is civil and then for repeat offenders it is punishable by crimin oense. But we are not talking repeat offenders right now . Correct. Ave we ever applied the eighth amendment to civi penalties it will be forced to surrender s public spaces as it has been. Unfortunately beds are going unused. People are not getting the help they need. The city is under an injunction and it is unableo allow rely on these basic ordinances. And they give no guidance on how they can navigate ery challenging area. The ninth circuit has effeivy imposed a municipal code under the ninth circuit martin rulto regulate what the city can do in its public spaces. Cannot just stop you a nt . The gospel unused beds are listed at 100 and are thousands of homeless. There are as many as 600 and grants pass. But there are still less than 10beds. That is right. You are not asking us to overturn rn, correct . We think robinson was wrongly extended but we dont need the court to hear. It prohibits you criminalizing homelessness. So what you do is y ly Homeless People who sleep outdoors wilberrested. That is the tesmo of your chief of police. Twor three officers. Which is, if you read the crime, it is only stopping you from sleeping in public for the purpose of maintaining a temporary place toiv and the Police Officers testified that at means that if a stargazeran to take a blanket or a sleeping bag out at night to watch the stars and falls asleep, you donarrest them. You dont arrest babiesho have blankets over them. You dont arrest people who are sleengn the beach, as ien to do if i have been there a while. You only arrest people who don have a second home. Is that correct . Who dont ha aome. Announcer give me one example. Cae your Police Officers could not. They explicitly said if soon has another home has a home anisut there and happens to fall asleep, they wont be arrested. Fall asleep with something on em. Evangelis well, joint appendix page 98 is one example of aion issued to a person with a home address. But, more importantly, i think what were getting e is that these laws regulate conduct of everyone. Theres nothing in the law that criminalizes homelessness. I really want to juste tomayor thats what thats what you say, but if i look at the record and see differently, its a different gument, isnt it . Ms. Evangelis grants pass policy actually very clearly says that beinholess is not a crime. And thats in Justice Sotomayor wel i know thats what you say, but if yourenfcing it only against the homeless, i will suggest that you lo theres one brief let me see if i can findt that talks about this. At any rate, ill find it later d st mention it. E second thing i want to ask you is you seemed to start by sanghat the eighth amendment is limited to forms of punishment and not to the nature of punishment, the proportionality issue. There also is a number of amicus brief that lays out for us that from the magna car tough the founding, through state laws, through weems, which was in 1910, through trop later in the century, that througho a of that, both the english, american colonies, this crtas had some form of proportionality in their eighthmement jurisprudence. Youre asking us to ignore all of that history. Ms. Evanli no, were not, juicsotomayor. What we are saying is that this case doesnt implicate proportionality. Were not asking the court to take a position on whether its a proper inquiry under the eighth amendment. For exame Justice Sotomayor oh, yes, yes, you are, because youre saying that the only things prohibited by the eighth amendment is the form of punishment, but, in those cases and in our history,ve said that certain punishments, trop, for example, canbe done. Ms. Evangelis thats right. And the court has always looked at if a particular punishment considered too extreme or categorically so as in the Death Penalty in some cases, the court looks at whether a lse punishment would be acceptable. Again, its looking at punishment. And thats where the inquiry focuse he, only what what the respondents are asking this court to do is to extend robinson beyond justicsomayor do you have hotels that are valued at 200, 2 iyour city . Ms. Evangeli i i Justice Sotomayor just answer yes or no. Ms. Evangelis i dont i dont know. Juicsotomayor well, lets assume because, even in new yo city, which may be the most expensive city in the nation or close to it, there are hotels that are less than that or at that price. Kind of money, dont you think theyd stay in a hotel . Ms. Evanli so, Justice Sotomayor, the the difficulty here is that this rule that th respondents are proposing rests whether someones conduct is involuntary. Most importantly re, were talking about conduct, so i want to talk about is is completely distinguishable from robinson. The p Justice Kagan so can i talk about ms. Capoor . So taking robinson as a given, could you crize the status of homelessness . Ms. Evangelis i have a couple points to that. Justice kats just a simple question. Angelis so robinson doesnt address that and i think its completely distinguishable. So robinson was a Justice Kagan could you criminalize the stat of homelessness . Ms. Evangelis well, i dont think that homelessness is a state drug addiction, and robinson only stands for that. Justice kagan well, messness is a status. Its the status of not having a home. Msevangelis i actually i disagree with that, justice gan, because it is so fluid, its so different. Experiencing homelessness might be one day without shelter, e next day with. The federal definition contemplates various forms. Justice kagan at the period wi which in the period where where you dont have a home and you are homeless, is that a status . Ms. Evangelis no. Justice kagan cou criminalize that . Ms. Evangelis no, its not. So robinson talked about Justice Kagan so you coult just a disease. Lis addiction like Justice Kagan you y you could criminalize just homelessness . Ms. Evangelis so i want to say, first, a couple of things. So i think that for the the Justice Kagan i mean, that quite striking ms. Evangelis no, i dont. Justice kagan that you think that you can criminali jt homelessness. Ms. Evangelis no, were not saying that homelessness is a status, but, most poantly, i think the eighth amendment Justice Kagan well, re not saying way to focus on this question. Justice kagan itrely a simple question. Can you criminalize holeness . And youre suggesting, yes, you could. Ms. Evangelis no, we do not criminalize homelessness. I not saying Justice Kagan could you criminalize homelessness . Not tell me what you do do, wh y dont do. Could you . Ms. Evangelis so i think there would be due process problems and vagueness problems. I dont think theres an eighth amendment problem in the sense obinson because that was a limited decision where the holding was solely about a disease of addiction. The court was very clear about distinguishing between addiction and possession or use. Justice jackson but, counsel ms. Evangelis and so Justice Kagan youre right that s a different status that was involved in robinson. But robinson made clear that there was a category of cases whh were status offenses, which were different from conduct offse and when you started off here today, you said wereus criminalizing conduct. So, to tell you the truth, thght that this was going to be a question where y wld say no, of course, we cant criminalize a status, but theres conduct here. And then i was going to say what is the conduct her but you didnt say that. You said you could cmilize even the status of homelessness, an that suggests to me that that yre off on the wrong track in thinking about this issue. Msevgelis so, Justice Kagan, i think the the point where we a dagreeing here is really about whether the eighth enent is the right framework for this discussion. Justice kagan well, the eighth amendment was the framework in robinson. And taking robinson as a given, where robinson said the eighth amendment protects you against statusbased crimes ms. Evangelis i dont Justice Kagan ats what the question is. Ms. Evangelis i dont think robinson extends that far. I think robinson itself was cabined and i think the marshall plural justice marshalls plurality in powell goes into a discusbout this and how that was the right line. Justice kagan okay. What is the conduct here . Ms. Evangelis the conduct is campin eablishing a campsite. And its the same as in the federal regulations that the National Park service relies on. Justice kagan so i didnt thk that that was the the uct. I thought that the only conduct here was sleeping outside with a blanket. Ms. Evangelis no, it is the conduct eablishing a campsite, which includes making a bed with bedding or other materials Justice Kagan well ms. Evangelis and the federalais Justice Kagan a campsite suggests somhi different to people. It suggests a tent. It suggests a conglomeration of people. You know, tent camps, if you will. But your ordinance does not just ohit that. Your ordinance prohibits a Single Person who is meless, so does not have another place to sleep, as a status, i dont have another place to sleep, a Single Person slpi instead in public with a blanket. Thats what indstand your statute to do. Is that not what your statute does . Msevangelis the statute does not say anything about homelessnessis a generally applicable law. One more it its very important that it applies toveone Justice Kagan yeah, i i got that. Ms. Evangelis eneople who are camping. Justice kagan but its a Single Person with a blanket. Msevangelis and Justice Kagan you dont have to a tent. You dont have to have a camp. Its a single peon with a blanket. Ms. Evangelis and sleeping in conduct is considere euse me, sleeping in public is considered conduct. And this ur this court in clark discussed that, that that is conduct. Also, the federal regulations justice kaga wl, sleeping is ms. Evangelis are very Justice Kagan a biological necessit s sort of like breathing. I mean, you could say breainis conduct too, but, presumably, you would not think that its okay to criminalize breathing in publi ms. Evangelis i would like to point to the federal regulations which i brought up. Justice kaga for a homeless person who has no place to go, sleeping in pubc kind of like breathing in public. Ms. Evangelis well, two points. So, first, even the federal regulaonprohibit even sleeping. They dont even require any materials, including but but not necsa under the federal regulation. So this is conduct that is undd by jusdictions nationwide and even the federal government to be conduct that is prohibited, and so i want to make that point. Justice kagan see, ill msevgelis the second point Justice Kagan ll tell you the truth, ms. Capoor. I think that this is th is a superhard policy problem for all municipalities. And if you were to come in here and you were to say, you know, we need certain protections to keep our streets safe and we cant have, you know, people sleeping anypla tt they want and we cant have, you know, tent cities croppg , i mean, that would create one set of issues. But your ordinance gs y beyond that. Your ordinance says as to a person and i understand that you think its generally appliclebut we only come up with this problem for a person who is homeless, who has the status of homelessness, who has no other place to sleep, and your statute says that person cannot take himself and himself only a, you know, cant take a blanket and sleep someplace without it being a crime. Nd and and thats, you know well, it just seems like robinson. It seems like youre criminalizing a stat. Ms. Evangelis well, it is not. And we agree with you that this is vy difficult policy question, and thats exacy Justice Kagan but that it isnt. Ms. Evangelis why the eighth Justice Jackson can you answer why . Why is it not . Just i mean, Justice Kagan has put laione the essential problems here, which is thatre making a distinction between status and conduct. Okay. We see that. And you keep saying this is conduct. Can you explain why . Ms. Evangelis the actuseu element, thats exactly what was missing in robinson anths what we have here. And thats why that law was so unique. Its a very peculiar Justice Jackson so it seems to me that robinson actually hurts you and not helps you in the following sense. You know, it seems both cruel and unusual to punish people for acts that constitute basic human needs. So, here, unlike in robinson, where, you know, you had at least the rtf disease state, drugs and and and the like, and potentially culpable acts that relate to that disease state, here, we talking about sleeping that is universalth is a basic function. Ando guess what i dont understand is in this circumstan w that particular state is being considered conduct for the purpose of of of punishment. Ms. Evangelis well, i think that just illustrates the lidwing problems because, if you look at biological necessities and what a person circuits decisions in this area would allow Justice Jackson can i give you a hypothetical . Ms. Evangelis l sorts of behavior. Justice jackson c iive you a hypothetical . Ms. Evangelis yes. Thank you. Justice jackson okay. So suppose the relevant ordinance prohibited eating on public proper rher than sleeping or camping. Were talngbout eating. And thcity, for very, you know, rational reasons, has detein that when people eat outdoors, it creates problems with trash and rodents and the like, and so it bans eating in Public Places and it punishes violators. Now, just he, that seems generally fine because most peopleavrestaurants that they can go to, most people have us that they can eat in. But some people dont have tt public because theyre unhoused and they cant fo to go to a restaurant. So is is your aument the same result, no eighth amendment problem, no problem with the even though thats a publicic, function i mean, excuse me, even though thats a human necessity that everyone engages in, and, really, whats happening is youre only punishing certople who cant afford to do it privately . Ms. Evangelis wl,t sounds like i i take for a moment that you not saying the law that the law draws lines on any sort of irrational basis or any equal protection Justice Jackson n t city has a rational basis. Ms. Evangelis and Justice Jackson when people eat in public angelis yes. Justice jackson there is trh, there are rodents, there are problems. So the city sa what were going to do is were gointoay no eating in public. What im concerned oufrom you know, you call itgestion conduct, i apprecie at, but what we have happening in operation is tt ople who are able to afford doing this thing thats a basic human need privately are okay. Theyreot punished for it. But people who dont have any other optioor opportunity except for to do it in pubc e the ones who are being targeted by this statute. Ms. Evangelis so two responses. First, i thi t eighth amendment is the wrong way to look at it. Someone mive a due process challenge to a law like that if there is a deeply entrenched liberty interest. Justice jackson but punishment is happening. In my hypothetical, people are going to jail because theyre eating in public. Ms. Evangelis so, in that case Justice Jackson why is the eighth amendment not implicated . Evgelis in that case, you would have a defense oregon law, for example, a necessity defense. Justice gorsuch counsel, on on on ms. Evangelis and i want to get to that on the camping. Justice gorsuch counsel, im sorry to interrupt. Ms. Evges yes. Justice gorsuch but, on that poin ihink were having some debate about where to lodge the dens whether its under the eighth amendment or under the urenth amendment. But do you concede that there are instances in which a necessity defense, long recognized at common law, would apply to eating in publi sleeping in public, or other things like that . Ms. Evangelis yesi ree. And, actually, here, in the case ofng, oregon law recognizes a necessity defense, so as a maerf state law and policy and, again, that gs the difficult policy questions thats y states are able to address the of what this issue raises. And so, for something under oregon state law, a rs could raise that defener the necessity defense, and then, if thats not enough, if they believe that thats not broad enough somehow justice gouc and youre saying ms. Evanli they can argue due process. Justice gorsuch oregon law has that defense ms. Evanges yes. Justice gorsuch already ilt into it . Ms. Evangelis thats correct. Justrsuch all right. Thank you. Justice ja let me ask you about oregon law, because one sothreshold concern that i have about this case is i understand that oregon has enacted a statute, a new statute, that seems toddss this very issue, so im trying to understand why iss is still a live case. As i rd e new law, it essentially codifies martins rule, that it says something ouall regulations of this nature have to be objectivel reasonable as to time, place, and manner witrerd to with regards to people experiencing homelessness. So it seems like the state has alrey ecluded grants pass from doing the sort of thing its doing here, so why do we need to weigh in on that . Msevangelis well, no, it hasnt. Sot, both sides agree that this case is not moot. There is no state law challenge in this case. But, more importantly, that standard is very different from martin, and theres never been a challenge to our laws. Justice jackson what about constitutional avoidance . So, fine, its not moot, but wouldnouprinciple be that we dont need to reach the constitutialy of this issue if theres another possible way of resolving it because the state has addressed it . Ms. Evangelis well, not at all. Sohe states law is very different. And we believe ou law is satisfied. T, more importantly, the fact that the state is actingis a good thing. We agree that states should be able me policy and tweh all of the competing concerns. And, here, the need to reverse martin is so critical beus laws like ours, they really do serve an essential purpose. They protect the health and safety of everyone. It is not sa tlive in encampmen. s unsanitary. We see whats happening. And there are the the harms at the encampntthemselves on those in them and outside. We know this. The federal government has cleared encampments heree capital in Mcpherson Square. So this is an urgent problem. And also, there are downstream effects of all the other things that flow from it, but it is very iornt here to understand that the state laws and the juste ckson so is it your argument that the eighth amendment has nothing to say out how the city responds to such problems . I mean, suppose the city decided that w going to execute Homeless People. I mean, very extreme, i know, but it would solve the problems that youre talking about. Ms. Evangelis wel that that would be Justice Jackson do we have an eighth ameme issue in that circumstance . Ms. Evangelis yes. I i think justicjason why . Ms. Evangelis there, you look at the punishment. That again, here, were looking at the punishment, which is lowlevel fine Justice Gorsuch that that would be both cruel and unusual, wouldnt it . Ms. Evangelis i i think it think it absolutely would. I Justice Gorsuch whyotust yes to that . Ms. Evangelis yes. Thank you. Thank you, jusorsu. Justice barrett counsel, can i ask you a question about the of your ordinance . So, as justicn wapointing31 out, this this criminalizes sleeping with a blanket at a minimum, right . Ms. Evangelis yeah. Justice barrett correct . But, i understand it, after this decision and and maybe after martin before that, the s some question about whether it also crinazed having fires, campfires, tents can you talk a little bit about that and what the scope of it is . Does the constitution then make it impossible for a city to limit the use of fires and encampments, tents, those kinds of temporary shelters . Ms. Evangelis it really does because the tiale of martin, the the argument that its a biological necessity to sleep outside, the respondents argue a blanket is necessary in oregon; some might argue a tent and a fire is necessary in north datathe eighth amendment really doesnt give us answers to what cities can and nt prohibit. Its really administratively impossible for cities on the ground, as well as for courts, to administer. So were seeing Justice Sotomayor im sorry. This we have nothing to do with fires or that was exempted unr e District Courts injunction, and the Circuit Court didnt require that. re talking only about sleeping with a blanket. Ms. Evangelis well, i think Justice Sotomayor well, s lets narrow it to what it is. I agree there might be other cases in the ninth circuit that are not rational, ani nt mean to throw aspersions at at those holdings, butomof them are not permitting time place restrictions. Lets go beyond that. Lets go here. Here, youre not precluded from prohibiting fis. Youre not precluded from prohibiting tents. Whats at issue is are you pribed from keeping having someone wear a blanket ywhere in the city. Your intent was rove stated by your mayor, intent is to remove everholess person and gi tm no public space to sit down with a blankeoray down with a blanket and fall asleep. Ms. Evangelis thats not the intent of the law. And wod like to Justice Sotomayor well ms. Evangelis address that point because the other side has you answer the basic question. T ms. Evangelis yes. So Justice Sotomayor its not about fires. s not about tents. Its about not being a time and acrestriction about eliminating all choices. Ms. Evangelis so we think that it is harmful for people to be living in publicpas on streets and in parks, whatever bedding materials. When humans are living in those conditions, we thi tt thats not compassionate and that theres no digni ithat. Justice sotomayor oh, its not, bu ms. Evangelis no. Justice sotomar neither is neither is providing them with nothing ms. Evangelis well, we justice sor to alleviate that situation. Ms. Evangelis this is a difficult policy question, Justice Sotomayor. It is. Justice sotomayor where do we put them if every city, every llage, every town lacks compassion ms. Evangelis we Justice Sotomayor d sses a law identical to this . Where are they suppod sleep . Are they supposed to kill themselves, not sleeping . Ms. Evangelis so this is a necessity fee, as i mentioned, under oregon law is available. States are able to address these concerns. This is a complicated policy question. We believe that the eighth amendment analysis, to go back to it, focuses on thlolevel fines. Justice sotomayor whats so complicated ouletting someone somewhere sleep with a blanket in the outside if they have nowhere to sleep . The laws against defecatio t laws against keeping things unsanitary around yourself, those have all been upheld. The only thing this injunction does is y u cant stop public place without a blanket. Ief stice roberts why dont you answer and then we move on to the next round, and you can be thiabout an answer to justice sotomhile they we move into a different msgeli thank you. Chief Justice Roberts stage of the argument. Is being a bank robber a status . Ms. Evangelis no. I would say thatll well, if if your question is asking would it be permissible to punish being a bank robber, think that would have vagueness prlems probably. Chief Justice Roberts well, it would be someone who robbed a bank. That doesnt sound vague. Ms. Evangelis well, i dont i i dont think that it is a status in the sense of robinn, which, again, i i want to just focus on what we think robinson stands for, and its only its narrow holdinabt addiction. And the the, was the status of being an addict witht y mens rea. So a law like that excuse me withoutnyctus reus. A law like that is problematic wiout an actus reus. I think it would probably have vaguenoblems, due process proble however, the eighth amdment, this entire exercise unr binson is the only time this court has ever evaluated the substantive criminal law, d it raises all of these linedrawing proble and the fact that im not here to defend robinson as a matter of first principles. We dont agree with it. Tnk it was wrongly decided. Were just saying that its far removed that our laws are so far removed from what was at issue in robinson that it just isnt implicated here. Chief justice bes so, if someone is homeless for a week anth finds available shelter, is that person homeless when hes in the shelter . Ms. Evangelis under federal law, the hud regulations, he is actually considered homeless. That shows the fluidity and the different ways of chief Justice Roberts putting the hud gutions to one side, can someone who is sleeping in a shelter beondered homeless . Ms. Evangelis would say yes, that someone who chief Justice Roberts what would you say . Ms. Evangelis i i would say that at that point he is sheltered and homeless. I think he he that that is also right. Justice roberts all let me make it easier. What if he buys a home or finds a home or is gen home . Is he homeless ms. Evangelis no, he is chief Justice Roberts at that . Ms. Evangelis he is not. What whats at issue in this case is chief Justice Roberts u think the status of homelessness can change from one time to another . Ms. Evangelis yes. I think its very fluid. Chief Justice Roberts is that consistent we definition of status in robinson . Ms. Evs no. So robinson treated addiction as a disease something that and and many believe that addiction is something that someone has with them forer and and its a struggle. So that is a very different situation. And, here, if someone has shter lets say they were offered shelter yesterday and they refused it, and then today, when someone comes around and tells them that theyre not permitted to camp, ay involuntarily there if they refused shelter yeery . Thats the estion the eighth amendment does not answer. This is very complex. What if there is a bed available in the Gospel Rescue Mission, buli ms. Johnson, a person doesnt wish to leave thei her rottweilers not permitted the. For a person and a difficultion policy question, but chief Justice Roberts thank you. Ms. Evangelis a persons status yes. Chieice roberts thank you, counsel. Justice thomas . Justice Thomas Robinson actually included a crime of, as i ad it, either to use narcotics or to be addicted to the use of narcoti, d the court was concneabout being the status of being addicted to the use. Is there a crime here for being homeless . Ms. Evangelis no, there is not. Chief Justice RobertsJustice Alito . Justice alito robinson presents a very difficult conceptual question. Do you think that someone who is dr addict is absolutely capable of that all people who are drug addicts are absolutely incapablef refraining from using drugs . Ms. Evangelis well, i think that for som tt may be true, and for some, perhaps they can abstai but thats a question of free llnd agency thats true of every law and what conduct we choose to regulate. Thats a Justice Alito all right. Then compare that with a person who absolutely has no place to sleep in aarcular jurisdiction. Does that person have any alrnive other than sleeping outside . Ms. Evangelis so i think wed ve to ask all the questions i mentioned earlier about what alternatives they might have had yesterday Justice Alito they have ms. Evangelis anhow they ended up there. Justice alito th he none. They have absolutely none. Theres not a single place where they can sleep. Ms. Evan if thats true, then that may be the case. And in that case, at least in oregon, they would have a defense of necessity. Stice alito so the point is that the connection betwn ug addiction and drug usage is more tenuous than t cnection between absolute homelessness and sleeping outside. Ms. Evangelis well, i i think, in in robinson, again, the court did draw that line, but, here, the responden a saying that the two are really the same, that camutside, sleeping outside, and being homeless a t sides of the same coin. We thi tt thats wrong. Its collapsing the status th they claim into the conduc so we think the conduct here is very clear because it pls generally to everyone. The law does not say on its face it is a crime toe meless. I just want to justice alo ll right. Ms. Evangelis make that stice alito thank you. Ms. Evangelis very clear. Thank chief Justice RobertsJustice Sotomayor . Justice sotomayor it was the brief of criminal law and punishment scholars that i was referencing earlier. I want to go back to Justice Thomass beginning question. As i understood itthninth circuit never reached the excessive fines question prented by this case, correct . Ms. Evangelis thats correct. Justice sotomayor so thats stilop. And you didnt seek cert tt issue . Ms. Evangelis thats correct. Juice sotomayor all right. Assuming that there is no standing, i understand one of the appellees died, the one who was camping outse ed during the pendency of this appeal. And therartwo other named plaintiffs. I ow they have fines on them. Im not sure that either of them has any criminal cres charged against them. Where does that put this appeal . Where does that put this case . Ms. Evanges ure. Well, the case Justice Sotomayor should we be vacatingndemanding to see if there is. Angelis no. Justice sotomayor a live plaintiff a plaintiff, a named plaintiff who is still suffering injury . Ms. Evangelis no. So, here, the t sleeping ordinance, which is the one that ms. Blake challenged, that is no longer in the case. That ordinance limited only sleeping in certain rightsofway and sidewalkin the city, and it was a different law, and thats not at issue here. So sleeping is not at issue. Its about the mpg ordinance. And we very much have a live case because we are under the ninth circuis injunction, and the named plaintiffs have Justice Sotomayor no, the question is, could it give an injunction . Do are these people well, guess, if they are not permitted to park ms. Evangelis thats correct. Justice sotomayor so its not the camping, its the parking, isnt it . Ms. Anlis well, and the camping. So we wnd to and to rely on these laws. We want to be able to rely on these laws. Th a very important and Justice Sotomayor youre not anerg just focus on my question. Ms. Evangelis yes. Stice sotomayor both these people sleep in cars. Both of them sleep in cars outside of the town. So theyre not seeking camping permission. Is your tyot provide for overnight parking in any location at night except in private homes . Ms. Evangelis camping in a vehicle is included in the camping ordinance. Justice sotomayor well, thats ing into a camp. How do you define camp . Ms. Evangelis ait is a place where someone has laid down witutny more, has Justice Sotomayor so, if they go into if es a line of cars and they want to and the cars can stay overnight ms. Evangelis so juice sotomayor and they want to park in one of tho spaces, if they fall asleep in the car, theyre gltof violating the camping law . Ms. Evangelis no. Justice somar, ms. Johnson parks her car oftentimes at a friends, so she is not violinthe law at those times. Justice sotomayor just answ my question. Ms. Evangelis parking everywhere is not prohibited. In certain areas, private areas, you can. Justice sotomayor is sleeping in your car prohibited . Ms. Evangelis f u are sleeping in your car in a park, where youre not allowed to park overnight Justice Sotomayor have any of them ms. Evangelis th yes. Justice sotomayor indicated te to sleep in a park, or have they just said they want park somewhere in the city . And can they park somewhere in the city and sleep . Ms. Evangelis yes, the said that they have the intent to continue theiuct and that they will be, therefore, subject to t cys laws and subject to jusotomayor i dont understand that answer. Okay chief Justice RobertsJustice Kagan . Justice kagan youve referred a couple of times to the necessity defense, so could you tell me how that would work . Ms. Evangelis yes. So there under oregon law, if a person says that its effectivelthlesser of two evils. If they had no ative to no legal ternative other than what i did here that broke th then i had no choice therefore had to break the law and it was in so sse involuntary, to use a term that that ma he been discussing. So, ther y it would be very narrow. It is a very narrow defense. So it would be in that moment of Justice Kagan so so suppose that there is a person who is homeless and there are no shelter beds available and the person has no place to go, and the person, of course, has to sleep. And thpeon its cold outside. The person has a blanket. Sohs the minimum conduct that the law prohibits. Sohe person sleeps outside with a blanket, and poce ficer comes, and in the but the person says, well, i h n place else to go. Would the city continue to push for some kind palty . Ms. Evangelis well, there, if a pers reived a citation, so if they did, then they would have a defense of necessity. Its asserted as a defense. So what the other side is trying Justice Kagan well, its asserted as dense. Ms. Evangelis yes. Justice kagan i mn but so youre not willing to say no, re going to tell all our Police Officers that they shount give a citation in that circumstance . You know, were going to give a citation, and then well see how the courts deal with it, is all youre going to tell me . Ms. Evangelis well, officers always have discretion, and we know that they exercise it. And and its hard to know Justice Kagan well, the question is not an individual officers discretion. Individual officers are in a tough situation here. Msevangelis they are. Justice kagan the question is, what is e ty going to tell individual officers . So what is the city going to tell indidl officers about a case of the kind that i said . Are you going to tell individual ficers issue the citation and well see if the peonnows enough to make a necessity defense and well see whath court does about that . Or are you going to say, you know, there are mehings that just ought not to be the subject of civil or criminal infractions . Evangelis so the city, in its policy, at joint appendix, pa 1, for example, talks to do. What officers are supposed theyre suppod put people in touch with Services First to contact if there is available help for them. These laws are absolutely a tool for getting people the services thy need. Many people need that intervention. Justice kagan well, youre not giving me a real answer ms. Evangelis yes. Justice kagan to the question of is the cy telling officers that they should give citations ms. Evangelis no. Justice kagan in that circumstance. Ms. Evangelis no. Discreti. Justice kagan is there anything you can point its a maer of dcrion . Ms. Evangelis yes. Justice kagan theres nothing you n int to that the city says we have a necessity defense, what wre telling officers to do is to, you know, acconsistently with that defense so that if it is truly a tter of need that you are sleeping on the streetlo with a blanket, no, thofcer should not cite the person . Ms. Evangelis theres nothing in the record here that shows officers were told about a necessity defense and that it what it would or would not preclude. That would be an individualized eson after the fact if someone received a citation. And if they thought that that wasnt enough, e oper framework would be this courts ork in kahler, where we would look at e serted defense, there, insanity of some form, and, here, it wod necessity, and we would ask whether iso deeply rooted in our history and and somethat has to be imposed in this way on the states. Justice kagan thank you. Ms. Evangelis ha you. Justice roberts Justice Gorsuch . Justice gorsuch i suppose someone coulal initiate a class action of the sort that happened here if if you were not allowing the necessity defense to operate and seek to have it enforced, couldnt they . Evangelis potentially. I Justice Gorsuch yeah. Thank you. Chief Justice RobertsJustice Kavanaugh . Justice kavanaugh youve said severas that its a difficult policy question, complicated policy question. I think everyo wld agree with that. How does this law help deal with the complicated policys . Ms. Evangelis one of the most difficult challenges is getting people the help that they need. And laws lik allow cities to intervene, and theyre an important tool in helping incentivize people to accept shelr. So johnson, for example, had saher deposition its in the joint appendix that she does not wish to stay at the spel rescue mission. One of the reasons is because of her dog. She also had other reasons. She doesnt like being around people and and so forth. People have alsos of circumstances. Its very comex and the individual decisions justice kavaug how does it help if there are not how est help the rule here, the law rehow does it help if there are not enough beds for thnuer of Homeless People in the jurisdiction . Angelis so, for johnson, she sometimes stays with a friend. So there are other Justice Kavanaugh how aut more more generally, though . Evangelis yes. Justice kavanaugh i gue, theres a mismatch between the number of beds available in shelters, even incdi gospel ue, and the number of Homeless People, there are g to be a certain number of people who therenowhere to go . Ms. Evangelis that t a difficult policy question. And we Justice Kavanaugh how does this ms. Evangelis yes. Justice kavanaugh help with that policy question . Ms. Evangelis so it encourages op to accept alternatives when they come up so that fewer end up camping. It also there is harm in simply camng whatever materials people are using when they are living in public spaces without plumbing and infrture, theres harm to theho city and to the whole community, as well as to them. We know that that encampments and these coitns also breed crime and very dangerous conditions. Sohe city has an interest in protecting everyone, including Justice Kavanaugh dyothink the constitutional rule should be different wn e number of beds available in the jurisdiction excds the number of Homeless People versus the number of mess people exceeds the number of beds available in shelters . Ms. Evges no. Thats what weve seen in the ninth circuit. Weve seen that that is unworkable. There is no way cnt what beds are available and who is perhaps willing to take one and who would consider it adeq then the question becomes, are those beds adequate . So, here, gospel rescue miion again Justice Kavanaugh thats a separate issue, i agree. Ms. Evangelis it is. Juste vanaugh and it can be a challenging issue, i suppose, i know, as well. Let me ask one last question, which is, how doesheecessity defense differ from the constitutional rule . You touched on this, but i just want to get a succinct answer to that, the statlanecessity defense differ from the constuonal rule here. Ms. Evangelis you would weigh the harm from e dividuals conduct in violating the law. Soomeone were camping near a school or near or or doing some something or engaged in some behavior that was particularly harmful and they had another place where they could camp, that ulbe maybe a factor that you would raise in the necessity situation. Is its narrower. So, in a case of a the oregon cases include people who are growing maa for medical reasons but without a license, and so the necessity defense was not acpt in that case because they could have obtained a license. So, if a person had a frie t go to, had a bed available at the Gospel Rescue Mission, they would be expected to te under the necessity defense. I think thats how it would play out. Justice kavanaugh i actually have one lestion. When you get out of jail if you end up whats going to happen then . Are you still dont have a bed available. So how does this help . Ms. Evgelis so the and and i want i do want to mak a point about that about the crinal aspect. The trespass law here is only triggered afr veral civil citations. Justice kavanaugh right. No. Ms. Evangelis and at that point Justice Kavanaugh if you run through that cycle ms. Evangelis yes. Justice kavanaugh and you end up in jail for days, then u get out, i mean, youre not going to be any better offha you were before in finding a bed if there arent going to my earlier question, if the arent beds available in the jurisdiction, unless youre removed from the jurisctn or you decide to to leave somehow. Ms. Evangelis no. There are services available, and the jurisdiction can put you in touch with services and programs to help you in those circstces. And for many people, that is a point where theyre able to get into treatment. So that intervention actually saves lives. Justice kavanaugh okay. Thank you. Chief Justice RobertsJustice Barrett . Justice barrett so let me follow up on that. So youre saying there are services available, theres treatment available, so people would ultimately move off the street . Is that is that what youre saying . Because i think part of the premise of all of this, right, is that there are not enough beds for Homeless People to occupy, and so there will be a mismatch and there are going to be some people who cant be cared for. Are you saying that if your law is enforced, there is a way for everyone to be cared for . Ms. Evangelis no. Im saying thats a policy question that is quite difficult, but these laws are an important part of the puzzle. Theyre not the only solution. And we dont we dont believe that they are, but we think theyre an important tool. And without them, weve seen whats happened on our streets. Weve seen that people are are dying in encampments. Weve seen that cities are are being forced to cede all of their public spaces. So that ultimate question is for the legislature and policymakers to figure out what the right solution, what the right mix of policies is. But the wrong answer is to do what the ninth circuit did here and to constitutionalize Justice Barrett okay. Let me just interrupt you there. Youre right, its a very, very difficult policy question. And i asked you before about whether this was just about blankets or whether it went into having fires or urinating and defecating outdoors and that sort of thing, and Justice Sotomayor pointed out that this particular injunction did carve out those things and was just talking about sleep. But, you know, other cases have been litigated in the ninth circuit that have gone beyond that, and because the line is things that are involuntary, that are human needs, it can it can extend its difficult to draw the line, and whatever we decide here about this case is about the line. So can you describe for me some of the things that are difficult to figure out about the line . Theres sleeping. Theres sleeping with blankets. What else . Ms. Evangelis public urination and defecation, that is a serious problem. Those are parts of biological necessities of being human. A court in sacramento addressed that, and the ninth circuits opinions debated whether its rule would actually reach those things. I think any rule that we are wondering about and debating whether it would go that far, i think that is a sign that it is not a workable rule. The slippery slope here is very real. Its not just for camping and conduct that might be a biological necessity, putting aside tents and fires and cold climates. What other things would be allowed . All of the things that a human needs to survive, for example, potentially come into focus under the ninth circuits rule but also in other areas. Someone could say that my drug use or possession is the other side of the coin because im an addict or because i a a person who violates other laws could say that i had a compulsion to do those things that i couldnt control. And the plurality opinion in powell addressed that very thing and why its so important to draw the line there. And when conduct is involved and once the court gets into deciding which conduct may be excused under the eighth amendment, it is so far afield of what the eighth amendment was ever understood to address. Justice barrett okay. Speaking of status and conduct, youve youve argued that robinson was wrong and we dont need to overrule it. And i agree. I dont i dont think we should overrule robinson. Youve also been kind of resisting the status youve been resisting characterizing anything other than the drug addiction that was at issue in robinson as status. So what if the law said it is unlawful and punishable by days in prison to have the status of homelessness . Just go with me. Just assume that the law defines homelessness as a status and it is a status. Would robinson say that that law is unconstitutional under the eighth amendment . Would you concede that . Ms. Evangelis and youre saying that that is a status . Justice barrett yes. Ms. Evangelis all of the Justice Barrett the law defines it as a status, and its a status. Ms. Evangelis well, yes, and i think it looks a lot like robinson under that hypothetical, but, of course, we disagree that it is Justice Barrett i understand you disagree ms. Evangelis a status in that way. Justice barrett but you are accepting that robinson draws a distinction between status and conduct and youre just fighting about the definition of a status . Ms. Evangelis it it draws the line where a law has no actus reus. So i think thats the easiest line. I i dont defend the line under the eighth amendment because i dont think actually that the court i know the court didnt rely on any eighth amendment principles or history of Justice Barrett but the hypothetical i just gave you had no actus reus either. The status of homelessness, i mean, it could be, you know, 4 00 in the afternoon and the person is just standing outside the bus stop. Do you agree that if the law prohibited that, made that a crime, that under robinson, whether robinson was right or wrong, that under robinson, that would be a violation of the eighth amendment . Ms. Evangelis well, i i i think the better framework is due process. Justice barrett i understand that. Under robinson, do you agree that that would be wrong . Ms. Evangelis yes. Justice barrett okay. Thank you. Ms. Evangelis thank you. Chief Justice RobertsJustice Jackson . Justice jackson so picking up where Justice Barrett left off, you say that the ordinance here pertains to conduct and not to status, and im just trying to figure that out. Im not so sure for this reason. Its because all humans engage in the act in question, sleeping. And yet the statute operates or the ordinance operates to penalize only certain individuals, those who have no choice but to do that act in public. So it appears, i think, not to be the act that the state or the city in this case finds criminally culpable. Its instead the act as engaged in by certain people, by people who cannot afford housing and have nowhere else to go. So why is that the wrong way to think about it . And if that is the right way to think about it, why isnt that a status crime in the way that robinson contemplates . Ms. Evangelis its not because we can look at the law and it has a conduct element. The conduct is establishing a place a campsite. And that is something that a person who has a home or a shelter could do as well. Justice jackson but youve just defined away the basic actus reus, right . The actus reus is sleeping out i guess outside to the extent you put outside in it, but thats the problem im talking about. The actus reus is the sleeping, right . Everybody thats not a criminally culpable kind of activity. Thats what i think might distinguish it from robinson and and make it worse for you in a way because, in robinson at least, to the extent someone had a disease, and the question was, well, are they engaging in otherwise criminally culpable conduct, buying and selling drugs, taking drugs, you know, we we look at that kind of category of things. Here, the actus reus is sleeping, human, universal. The the the city adds, okay, but you cant sleep outside. And i guess what im trying to understand is, to the extent that that only happens with respect to a certain category of people who have no other place to go, why isnt that really just punishing the status of being someone who doesnt have any place to go . Ms. Evangelis it doesnt apply only to those people. The respondents here are trying to exempt a whole category of people. What so what you look at there is the the conduct of camping under federal law and in this courts decision in clark, it was understood that that is conduct. It is just like trespass, where, if you are found in a place, if you enter with permission, but then you remain there without permission under quarles Justice Jackson but its not just like trespass because, presumably, you have other places to go. So let me just let me just ask you this other question. What what is your understanding of the martin rule . Because i i thought it was premised on the circumstance in which someone had nowhere else to go and they needed to sleep and they needed to be there. But you seem to suggest that necessity is not sort of baked into what martin was doing. Ms. Evangelis martin speaks in terms of someone who is involuntarily homeless, and that raises all of those policy questions that weve been discussing about how do you determine that. Justice jackson but assume they exist. Involuntarily homeless means the person has nowhere else to sleep. Ms. Evangelis yes, that is the necessity defense is available. And what respondents are asking to do is to constitutionalize that very defense under the eighth amendment. So, as i said earlier, it could be the argument could be made it would be a very high bar under due process, but that is the sort of argument that we would expect one to make under a due process framework Justice Jackson thank you. Ms. Evangelis under this courts kahler decision. Chief Justice Roberts thank you, counsel. Mr. Kneedler. Mr kneedler justice, and may it please the court in robinson, this court held that the government cannot criminalize status. And respondent has conceded here today that the city cannot criminalize the status of being homeless. Our narrow submission in this case is that government cannot circumvent the principle of robinson by making it unlawful for a person to reside in the jurisdiction if he has that status. That is what the ordinances here do. As applied to someone who has nowhere else to sleep, which is an essential human function, the ordinances are the equivalent of making it a crime to be homeless while living in grants pass. Although we think the ninth circuit was right to recognize that the core principle of robinson is implicated in this case, the court was wrong to award broad injunctive relief in the circumstances and manner in which it did. The robinson principle requires an individualized determination, and the ninth circuits failure to require such a determination and its issuance of much broader injunctive relief has led to the problems at issue that the petitioner and its amici have raised, not the core principle of robinson. And, therefore, we urge the court to adhere to the core principle of robinson but to emphasize that cities have flexibility to implement these and, in particular, time, place, and manner restrictions on where someone can sleep are entirely valid if they are reasonable, and, indeed, the state law that Justice Jackson referred to establishes a state policy that time, manner, and place restrictions are the way to go if they are reasonable. I welcome the courts questions. Justice thomas mr. Kneedler, wouldnt you have a better argument if robinson involved someone being arrested for using drugs, but then the court said that you were in effect arresting him for the status of a drug user because he was he had no choice but to use drugs because hes an addict . Mr kneedler no. Our our position is not that the conduct as in robinson, the drug addict cant stop from using drugs. That is not our position. Thats a question of personal culpability on the basis of what the substances make up Justice Thomas so whats the difference between that and and and camping out . What youre saying here, it seems as though youre saying, well, they theres no other choice, so you have to camp out. Therefore, youre really arresting this person for the status of homelessness. Mr kneedler yes, but but not because of an of an involuntary compulsion sense. I think, as Justice Alito pointed out, the nexus here is actually closer than in the than in the addiction situation because sleeping outside is essentially the mirror image or the other side of the coin or the definition Justice Gorsuch well, mr kneedler of the status of of homelessness. Justice gorsuch kneedler, i i agree that the distinction between status and conduct is a slippery one and that theyre often closely related. And in robinson, though, the court said you cannot make the status of being a drug addict a crime, but you can criminalize the conduct, even if it is involuntary and compulsive. And powell reaffirmed that line very strongly, at least the plurality opinion did, and said were not going to go further. And i wonder whether the government is asking us to take that step that powell counseled against by saying that it is it is status effectively status, and this is throughout your brief. You use the word effective or essentially or tantamount to, those kinds of words, and and so i just wanted to get your response to that that concern. Mr. Kneedler no, we are not asking the court to take the step that it declined to take in powell, which had to do with personal responsibility, the the sort of issues that were involved Justice Gorsuch okay. If youre not asking us to do that, then then then i guess i just want to circle back to what Justice Thomas was getting at, which is, surely, the government wants to continue to enforce the drug laws and all kinds of other laws that people could make an argument that i had involuntary need to do, a necessity defense to. You dont want us to wipe out all those laws . Mr. Kneedler absolutely not, but what is different here is that the conduct that was suggested in powell would have been based on the persons own separate antisocial conduct. Justice gorsuch well, Justice White made clear that some people are going to be forced to drink in public because they dont have a home. He made this very point. Mr. Kneedler no, we dont but but but the point here, it is the government that is prohibiting the alternative. Its not the individuals inability to control his own conduct. The government, because the person because of other circumstances, the lack of money, the lack of a friend to stay with, the lack of shelter space, there is no place we take as a given in our position that there is no other place for the person to sleep Justice Gorsuch and i think, couldnt a drug addict, though, make the exact same argument . I had no other choice. Mr. Kneedler but that is the other choice would be a matter of of personal Justice Gorsuch no. Say the record says mr. Kneedler understanding, personal culpability. Justice gorsuch but the record says that there is no other choice. I had to do it. Mr. Kneedler well, i do think that engaging in conduct that is unrelated to let me take that back. The sleeping outside when you have no other place to go is the definition of homelessness. Justice jackson mr. Kneedler, isnt the response Justice Barrett but but judge Justice Jackson also that those two things are different . I mean, youre sort of saying its about dividual culpability. But its not as though everyone engages in drug use. Mr. Kneedler right. Justice jackson right . Certain people do, and maybe they have addiction, and maybe you cant punish them because of the addiction, but you can still punish them as criminally culpable for engaging in the act. It seems to me we are in a totally different category mr. Kneedler we are, yes. Justice jackson when youre talking about acts that everybody participates in, that no one thinks in and of themselves are criminally culpable. And yet somehow this statute is reaching out to punish certain people who engage in that universal human basic need. That seems to me to be the distinction mr. Kneedler yes. Justice jackson in these situations. Mr. Kneedler that is a critical distinction, and not only is it something that everybody engages in, but its something that everybody has to engage in to be alive. So, if you cant sleep, you cant live, and, therefore, by prohibiting sleeping, the city is basically saying you cannot live in grants pass. Its the equivalent of banishment, which is which is something that is unknown to the way Justice Sotomayor mr. Kneedler wasnt grant passs first attempt, policy choice, to put people Homeless People on buses so they would leave the city . I understood that to be the history of grant pass. They put Police Officers would put buy them a bus ticket, send them out of the city, but that didnt work because people came back because it had been their home, correct . Mr. Kneedler they came back. Justice sotomayor they came back. Mr. Kneedler i think they might have been sent back by the Justice Sotomayor so then they passed this law. And didnt the City Council President say, our intent is to make it so uncomfortable here that theyll move down the road, meaning out of town, correct . Mr. Kneedler that state that statement was made at a at a Public Meeting of the city council. Justice sotomayor all right. So lets assume what youre saying or accepting, that do you happen to know, or maybe i hope one of you knows, how many beds there are in grant pass, shelter beds . Mr. Kneedler i believe the only shelter beds, at least at the at the time the record in this case was compiled, was at the gospel mission. There has been at times a detox place. There has been a Warming Center that has been maintained. But, in terms of excuse me shelter beds Justice Sotomayor well, were talking about disproportionate mr. Kneedler i think its approximately a hundred. There there are mens, womens. Justice sotomayor yeah. I thought it was much less than that. Mr. Kneedler yes. Justice sotomayor all right. So we go back to you want the District Court to make individualized findings. Youve asked us to vacate and remand. Can we go back to that so i understand it . I quite didnt understand it in your brief because i thought individualized findings had to do with the class action, but that question hasnt been certified here. Mr. Kneedler right, but but i think the i think the merits our basic point is that a a person does not have an eighth amendment defense or an eighth amendment claim unless he truly does not have some other place to reside. And so, by speaking of individualized, what we were Justice Sotomayor so mr. Kneedler saying is that it depends on whether that person has some other place, has a relative. Justice sotomayor i accept all of that. This is what i didnt understand from your brief are you saying that there cant be a class certification of Homeless People ever . Mr. Kneedler no. Justice sotomayor that you have to have individuals . Or are you saying that the injunction is too broad if it doesnt provide for remedies that are somehow that the person has to prove a certain number of things before before they are entitled to the i wasnt sure. Mr. Kneedler no, the the eighth amendment claim is a personal one and, in this context, depends on whether the person does have another place to sleep. So the person cannot benefit from the eighth amendment claim without an individualized without that person showing, if it comes up in a in an affirmative injunctive action, without that person showing that he or she has no other place to stay. Chief Justice Roberts thank you, counsel. If there is a the town next to grants pass, minutes away, has just completed building a homeless shelter that has many vacant beds, does that change the analysis here . I mean, we talked about the town wanting to get ship people out of the town. Would it be would would it would there still be a right to sleep, contrary to the ordinances in grants pass, because you dont want to be taken minutes away where theres a homeless shelter . Mr. Kneedler that goes to the question, i think, under the analysis of whether the beds are available. And i think, if theyre right across the town line, it would be appropriate to take into account that theres a homeless shelter there, even though its not one in the city of grants pass. But often, in a situation, the two towns might cooperate to have one homeless shelter. Chief Justice Roberts well, yeah, the next towns dont always cooperate. So what if its miles away . Is it is the shelter available in that case for your purposes, or are you going to tell me it just depends on all the circumstances so municipalities wont have that much guidance . Mr. Kneedler i think it depends on the accessibility. I mean, one of the fundamental points here chief Justice Roberts the accessibility is that when an officer comes up in grants pass and finds a homeless person and says it violates our ordinance, but i will give you a ride down the road, miles, whatever it is, because theres a new homeless shelter there, and the person says, no, i dont want to do that, can that person be given a citation . Mr. Kneedler i i think probably not, but let me if i could explain why. But i think one of the principal features here that shouldnt be overlooked is the city is seeking to banish or expel its own residents, its own citizens, people whose children can go to school in that location, who may pay taxes in that location. So, if the 30mileaway shelter requires the person to leave his community and to live in another place, that that implicates chief Justice Roberts what is the i mean, how far does that go . Lets say there are five cities all around grants pass and they all have homeless shelters. And yet the person wants to stay. You know, ive been a grants pass resident for a long time. I dont want to go to the one of those shelters. Can that person be given a citation . Mr. Kneedler i i think under because of the concern ive mentioned, i think that would be a serious problem because chief Justice Roberts you would say it would be a problem to give them a citation . Mr. Kneedler yes, i think so, because you would be requiring or the citys ordinance requires them to leave the city of grants pass. If the homeless shelter is right over the line, they can still be part of the community of grants pass but sleep in the chief Justice Roberts no, but its in another city. You keep fighting the hypothetical. Mr. Kneedler no, no, and and thats why i think its different. Im not prepared to say it, you know, that absolutely not, but i do think its different because the city is implementing its policy of banishing people, its own residents from chief Justice Roberts banishment is a strange word when youre talking about something minutes away. Mr. Kneedler but, again, the question is whether you could still realistically be part of the community where you grew up. Ja 114, 115 here shows that most of the Homeless People in grants pass are from grants pass. Chief Justice Roberts counsel, everyones mentioned, not everybody, many people have mentioned this is a serious policy problem. And its a policy problem because the solution, of course, is to build shelter to provide shelter for those who are otherwise harmless. It but municipalities have competing priorities. I mean, what if there are lead pipes in the water . Do you build the homeless shelter or do you take care of the lead pipes . What if there arent isnt enough Fire Protection . Which one do you prioritize . Why would you think these nine people are the best people to judge and weigh those policy judgments . Mr. Kneedler were not suggesting that. Were not suggesting that the only solution is for especially in the current circumstances, the only solution would be to build homeless shelters. As i mentioned, time, place, and manner restrictions, i i think, are a very sensible way to go. And, in fact, as i mentioned, oregon state law requires that. In other words, a city adopts a provision that you cant sleep on the sidewalks anywhere because that obstructs people seeking to move. You cant camp near a school. You cant camp downtown. You cant sleep downtown. You might be able to sleep in a park, and that could be patrolled for drug use and whatnot. Chief Justice Roberts counsel, this is mr. Kneedler none of these other laws are inapplicable if theres a time, place, and manner restriction. Chief Justice Roberts this is an old question, but, you know, eating is a basic human function as well, that people have to do, just like sleeping. So if someone is hungry and no one is giving him food, can you prosecute him if he breaks into a store to get something to eat . Mr. Kneedler absolutely, absolutely. Breaking into a store is a common crime that not everybody engages in, unlike sleeping, which is what which is what we have here, which is really chief Justice Roberts but its a necessity for the person who needs food. Mr. Kneedler its not a necessity to break into a store. And with respect to chief Justice Roberts well, youre fighting the hypothetical. Im saying this person needs food. Mr. Kneedler and the eighth amendment does not require that that person be excused from doing it. I think theres theres a certain amount of common sense and practicality to this, and its, i think, well understood that just like drug use is not something the eighth amendment excuses you from, either is eating. And the problem of eating is addressed at the local level as the, you know, history and the poor law shows is that the Community Takes care of its own residents. And its common now as it was at the founding for churches and individuals and whatnot to offer their help, to charity in the community. And thats what happens in grants pass. Various organizations feed the Homeless People. And there are social services to help the Homeless People. So this is this is consistent except for the absolute ban in sleeping in the city. Otherwise the communitys response is what has been done down through history. Chief Justice Roberts thank you, counsel. Mr. Kneedler it is the citys absolute ban chief Justice Roberts thank you. Mr. Kneedler that interrupts that continuity. Chief Justice RobertsJustice Thomas . Justice alito . Justice alito ould you explain how your rule would be carried out by Police Officers on a daytoday basis . Lets say that there are 500 beds in a particular town and lets say its 3 00 in the afternoon, 4 00 in the afternoon on a winter day. What is an individual Police Officer supposed to do if individual Police Officer would go around and count the number of people who are getting ready to sleep outside . I guess if thats 4 00, you wouldnt get that. Lets say its 6 00. Count the number of people who are getting ready to sleep outside for the night and then ask each one of them whether youve tried to find a bed at at a shelter . Whether that person would be willing to go to a shelter if a bed is available without any conditions or whether the bed would have to be available on the conditions that the individual wants, like i wont go to a shelter where they wont take my dog or Something Like that . Can you just explain how it would work on a daily basis. Mr. Kneedler well, first of all, with respect to the individual encounter, i think the way this would work in the well world, and i think the real world, and i think its important to understand what happens on the ground in these situations. I think in the circumstances youre talking about, i think what would happen is that the person encountering the homeless person would know whether there is a spot available. I dont think the homeless person would be required to check each day with each shelter if there are multiple shelters. And in larger cities, these initial encounters are not handled by Law Enforcement. Theyre typically handled by social Services Agencies who are in contact with people who are camping and know what their circumstances are and they are able to say, we know that at such and such shelter, there are beds available Justice Alito what if theres mr. Kneedler would you be willing to go . Justice alito what if theres a question whether there are, indeed, enough shelter beds available . Your rule wouldnt apply if there are enough beds available, right . If there are 500 shelter beds and there are only 200 people who are trying to sleep outside, then your rule wouldnt apply . Mr. Kneedler right, right. Justice alito so you have to have a comparison of the number of beds available with the number of people who want to sleep outside. Mr. Kneedler right, yes. Justice alito so that would be the threshold question . Mr. Kneedler right. And i just want to clarify one point about that. Its not simply a measure of the number of beds against the number of Homeless People, such that if there is a deficit, the city cant enforce the law at all. If you have individualized questioning and you know that there are vacancies available, even if not for everybody but there is a vacancy for the person being interviewed, then, yes, that person if that person is offered and refuses, that person could be prosecuted or cited. Justice alito what if the person says, yeah, i know theres a bed available at the Gospel Rescue Mission but they wont take my dog. Mr. Kneedler i dont think the inability to take your dog to a shelter is a sufficient reason. There are shelters in some larger cities that may well take pets, but Justice Alito i know i could sleep in the home of a Family Member but they really hate me and theyre really nasty to me. Mr. Kneedler you know, i Justice Alito im not these r im just wondering how this is going to be administered on a daily basis. Mr. Kneedler with all respect, i think that example if the family is going to accept him, but, i mean, thats the question. Whether there is a place to sleep. But i dont know that it would very often come down to that that family hates me. On the other hand, if its a woman who left domestic abuse, she couldnt be expected to go back to her home or maybe her relatives home or his relatives home or something. So theres a lot of common sense. And again, the First Encounter that a Police Officer or somebody else has with a homeless person is very unlikely to be a situation in which the person would be issued a citation. Justice alito okay. You mentioned just a couple of things that i wanted to follow up on. Does it matter whether the person grew up in the town or not . Suppose mr. Kneedler no. No. Justice alito ok. Thats irrelevant . So they go up to some Police Officer or social services in san diego, goes up to somebody and says, you know, where are you from . Oh, im from fargo, but if i have to sleep outside, i sure would rather do it here than in fargo. That doesnt matter . Mr. Kneedler know, and i think not because of any eighth amendment rule we are talking about under this courts decisions in edwards and and saenz, the privileges and immunities clause or the Commerce Clause or the various right to travel provisions would prohibit attaching that sort of limitations to a newcomer. But i would as i mentioned, regarding people Justice Alito where i used to live in new jersey, there are a lot of really small municipalities, i think over 500 municipalities in the state. I could go for a 20minute walk in the evening and be in three or four different municipalities. So to get back to the chief justices question, if there arent enough beds available in west caldwell, does it matter . West caldwell is out of luck even though there are a lot of beds available in caldwell, which is, you know, a couple less than a mile away . Mr. Kneedler yeah, i think the way youre describing it, it might be fair to say that that set of small and closelyknit communities would be one community and the person wouldnt basically be banished from where he lived or where he grew up by saying, you know, if theres a shelter in this other location, then you could be expected to go there. Justice alito theres some tiny municipalities. What if a municipality doesnt have a park, so if somebody is going to sleep outside, the only place where that person can sleep is going to have to be on the street . Does a time, place, or manner restriction work there . Mr. Kneedler i mean, certainly not on the street. Because of safety, traffic, et cetera. I mean, there are commonsense accommodations, and i think even in the smallest town, there are probably locations where a person could sleep. You know Justice Alito all right. Thank you. Chief Justice Roberts jusce sotomayor . Justice sotomayor i dont want to be repetitive, t what are we vacating and remanding for . Individualized finding of what . Mr. Kneedler well, the way that first of all, the class was defined simply on the basis of the aggregate numbers without an individualized determination as to whether, frankly, in our view, not a sufficient individualized determination as to the two named plaintiffs. And you identified several factors here. They both slept in their cars. Several of them were able or both of them chose at some times to sleep at a safeway parking lot or with a friend. The other slept in a truck stop out of town. Its not clear that neither of them ever actually camped in a park. And so and, in fact, the dissent below questioned whether one of those two people even had standing. So that there even with respect to the named plaintiffs, there was not the sort of examination of their individual circumstances. Justice sotomayor so you are talking about standing . Mr. Kneedler well, no standing, yes, and there could be typicality or commonality problems there too if the two named plaintiffs slept in vehicles, which may present different problems than in the camp. Justice sotomayor well, we were told that sleeping or camping is out of the case because and the court said that. Mr. Kneedler sleeping, yes, but sleeping in a vehicle counts as camping. Justice sotomayor right. Mr. Kneedler but its not the sort of camping that weve been talking about, to some extent, about sleeping on the ground with a blanket or a tent or Something Like that. And its true, the question of tents are not in the case. If the city wanted to allow tents, i suppose it could even require that they be taken down and put back up. There is a lot of flexibility that the city could have. Chief Justice RobertsJustice Kagan . Justice kagan well, i did want to ask you just about that. I mean, lets say im with you, mr. Kneedler, on the fact that you cant prohibit being homeless, and because you cant prohibit being homeless, you cant prohibit sleeping outside if you are a genuinely homeless person. And lets say im with you that the fact that this ordinance says, well, but were prohibiting using a blanket, that cant be right. You know, youre not, like, just, like, get hypothermia and the problem the constitutional problem will go away. But it does seem as though there are linedrawing issues, as you go up, right . Its a very cold night and somebody wants to make a fire. Its raining and somebody wants to put up a tarp. The city has said you can sleep in particular areas, but it turns out that those areas have a ton of crime. You know, you could go on and on. And im not how do you deal with questions like that . These are not, like, gotcha questions. This is, like, how do you deal with questions like that . Where is the line where the city can say our legitimate municipal interests can come in and say, you know, as to that, as to that, you cant do that. Mr. Kneedler yeah, so what and there are several examples that you have there. With respect to tents and tarps, i guess you were saying, i think theres a difference between what you might need to realistically sleep outside if its raining, snowing, or Something Like that, and what you might prefer to have as a structure for longterm camping. As i mentioned, the city might say you can put up a tent if its very cold, but youve got to take it down in the morning. Thats like being in some shelters say you can stay here overnight, but you have to leave during the day and you can come back. I mean, that might seem gratuitous of the city to do it. It might not want to do it. But were not saying that the eighth amendment would prevent it from doing it, and especially as you say, if theres no alternative and its, you know, 20 degrees. With respect to fires, there are really important issues on the other side of that question. In an urban area, if youre creating fires, there may be hazards in a park. There might be Justice Kagan so how does mr. Kneedler there might be fireplaces in a park. Justice kagan how does a court make these judgments . Because these are tough judgments and usually theyre the kind of judgments that we think of as municipal officials make them. But youre saying, no, theres a certain level where its out of their hands and its in the court hands. And i guess i want to know what the principle is where those questions go to the court and why that principle is the right principle. Mr. Kneedler i think i mean, i think there are two principles. One is that its the municipalitys determination, certainly in the first instance, with a great deal of flexibility how to address the question of homelessness and a time, place, and manner. And then municipalities should be able to choose the place, should be able to choose the attributes of that place, should be able to say were not going to allow more than 20 people or something, to regulated in that manner. And i think the eighth amendment principle would be whether the city has effectively prevented sleeping outside because the protections needed from the elements are not available. And certainly in grants pass, i would think even a blanket would not be enough under some but i think thats the touchstone. Are you basically does it boil down to or is the core principle of robinson that you cant criminalize homelessness, which includes not being able to criminalize sleeping outside . If you cant sleep outside because of lack of protection from the elements, i think thats the principle a court would apply. But the ninth circuit in a number of cases has gone way beyond that and we think thats really the source of the problems that have been identified in the briefs, and not the core principle of robinson. Justice kagan thank you. Chief Justice RobertsJustice Gorsuch . Justice gorsuch mr. Kneedler, i want to probe this a little bit further because it does seem to me this status conduct distinction is very tricky. And i had thought that robinson, after powell, really was just limited to status. And now youre saying, well, theres some conduct thats effectively equated to status. And but youre saying involuntary drug use, you can regulate that conduct. That doesnt qualify as status. Youre saying compulsive alcohol use, you can regulate that conduct in public, public drunkenness, even if its involuntary. That doesnt qualify as status, right . Mr. Kneedler right. Justice gorsuch youre saying you can regulate somebody who is hungry and has no other choice but to steal. You can regulate that conduct, even though its a basic human necessity. And that doesnt come under the status side of the line, right . Mr. Kneedler yes. Justice gorsuch okay. But when it comes to homelessness, which is a terribly difficult problem, youre saying thats different and because there are no beds available for them to go to in grants pass. What about someone who has a Mental Health problem that prohibits them they cannot sleep in a shelter. Are they allowed to sleep outside or not . Is that status or conduct thats regulable . Mr. Kneedler i think the question would be whether that shelter is available. Justice gorsuch its available. Mr. Kneedler well, no, available to the individual . Justice gorsuch its available to the individual. Mr. Kneedler well Justice Gorsuch its just because of their Mental Health problem, they cannot do it. Mr. Kneedler i think there might be i mean, thats, the Mental Health problem Justice Gorsuch status or conduct . Mr. Kneedler the Mental Health situation itself is a status. Justice gorsuch right, i know that. It has this further knockon effect on conduct. Is that regulable by the state or not . Mr. Kneedler i think that i think if the Justice Gorsuch all the you know, alcohol, drug use that they have problems too, but youre saying that conduct is regulable. How about with respect to this pervasive problem of persons with Mental Health problems . Mr. Kneedler i think in a particular situation, if the person would engage in violent conduct as Justice Gorsuch no, no, no, dont mess with my hypothetical, counsel. [laughter] i like my hypothetical. I know you dont. Its a hard one, and thats why im asking it. Im just trying to understand the limits of your line. Mr. Kneedler i think it would depend on how serious the offense was on the individual. Justice gorsuch its a very serious effect. The Mental Health problem is serious, but there are beds available. Mr. Kneedler what i was trying to say it would depend on how serious being required to go into the facility was on the persons mental if it would make his Mental Health situation a lot worse, then that may not be something thats Justice Gorsuch so thats status that falls on the status side . Mr. Kneedler i guess you could put it that way Justice Gorsuch thats what im wondering. Im asking you. I really am just trying to figure out you are asking us to extend robinson. Im asking how far . Mr. Kneedler well, what i was going to say, you could you could think of it as status, but i think another way to think about it, and this is our point about an individualized determination, is that place realistically available to that person because Justice Gorsuch it is in the sense that the bed is available but not because of their personal circumstances. Mr. Kneedler right. Right. And thats my point. Its available in a physical sense. It may be available to somebody else, but requiring an individualized determination might include whether that person could cope in that setting. Thats the only Justice Gorsuch so that might be an eighth amendment violation . Mr. Kneedler because it may not yes, because its not available. Justice gorsuch its an eighth amendment violation to require people to access available beds in the jurisdiction in which they live because of their Mental Health problems . Mr. Kneedler if going there would Justice Gorsuch how about if they have a Substance Abuse problem and they cant use those substances in the shelter . Is that an eighth amendment mr. Kneedler that is not a sufficient Justice Gorsuch why . Why . Theyre addicted to drugs, they cannot use them in the shelter. Thats one of the rules. Mr. Kneedler well, if they if it is the shelters rule, then they cant go there if they are addicted. Justice gorsuch so thats an eighth amendment violation . Mr. Kneedler no, the eighth amendment violation is prohibiting sleeping outside because the only shelter that is available Justice Gorsuch is not really available to that person . Mr. Kneedler wont take them wont take them, yes. And thats an individualized determination. Justice gorsuch same thing with the alcoholic . Mr. Kneedler yes. Justice gorsuch okay. So the alcoholic has an eighth amendment right to sleep outside even though theres a bed available . Mr. Kneedler if the only shelter in town wont take him, then i think he is in exactly the same condition. And there can be all sorts of reasons, and the city doesnt want normally Justice Gorsuch and judges across the country are now going to superintend this under the eighth amendment. Mr. Kneedler i actually dont think that it requires again, i dont think we should let the ninth circuit decisions characterize this. Justice gorsuch you dont like the class certification, but that question is not before us, counsel. Mr. Kneedler no, but all were talking about is the core principle of robinson, which is you cannot punish someone for a status. And i think communities guided by that principle, and its the only principle a court should be enforcing, would retain a lot of flexibility. Justice gorsuch how about if there are no public bathroom facilities . Do people have an eighth amendment right to defecate and urinate outside . Mr. Kneedler no, we Justice Gorsuch is that conduct or is that status . Mr. Kneedler its obviously there is conduct there and we are not suggesting that cities cant enforce Justice Gorsuch why not, if there are no public facilities available to homeless persons . Mr. Kneedler that situation, you know, candidly, has never arisen. And whether or not there i mean, in the litigation as ive seen. But no one is suggesting and were not suggesting that public urination and defecation laws cannot be enforced because there are very substantial Public Health reasons for that. Justice gorsuch well, there are substantial Public Health reasons with drug use, with alcohol, and with all these other things too. Mr. Kneedler and they can all be Justice Gorsuch but youre saying the eighth amendment overrides those. Why not in this circumstance right now . Mr. Kneedler no, im not im not saying the eighth amendment overrides the laws against drug use. Justice gorsuch oh, i know that. Mr. Kneedler oh, im sorry. Justice gorsuch i know that. Mr. Kneedler no, i misunderstood what you Justice Gorsuch that one the government wants to keep. I got that. Mr. Kneedler no, i misunderstood your question. Sorry. Justice gorsuch yeah. Last one. How about fires outdoors . I know you say time, place, and manner, but is there an eighth amendment right to cook outdoors . Mr. Kneedler no. I think what Justice Gorsuch thats a human necessity every person has to do. Mr. Kneedler but this is one of those things that, you know, is taken care of on the ground as a practical matter. There are restaurants where someone can go. There are Justice Gorsuch well, no, no, were talking about Homeless People. Theyre not going to go spend money at a restaurant necessarily. Mr. Kneedler well, there may be inexpensive places. Some people get Justice Gorsuch lets say there isnt, okay . Lets say that there is no reasonable mr. Kneedler and the local community Justice Gorsuch do they have a right to cook . They have a right to eat, dont they . Mr. Kneedler they have a right to eat, a right to cook if it entails having a fire, which i think it probably would, but as i said, the eating and feeding is taken care of in most communities by nonprofits and churches stepping forward as they have for 200 years. Justice gorsuch but if there isnt, theres an eighth amendment right to have a fire . Mr. Kneedler no, no, we are not saying theres an eighth Justice Gorsuch well, i thought you just said there was. Mr. Kneedler well, there theres food that you can eat without cooking it. I mean they could get a handout from an individual that, you know, people can beg for money. I mean, there are there are ways that this works out in practice. Justice gorsuch last question. Im totally sympathetic to the idea that there might be a necessity defense in these cases, and theres a footnote in your brief that indicates that in a lot of cases you could maybe bring advance preliminary injunctive action at least as individuals. And i dont even see why you couldnt do it on a classwide basis. Mr. Kneedler yeah, we havent ruled out class, we havent ruled out class. Justice gorsuch well, i thought you did in that footnote. You said the whole mistake here is that this was done on a classwide basis. Mr. Kneedler without sufficient inquiry into the individual circumstances is what, particularly with the two class representatives here. Justice gorsuch thank you. Chief Justice RobertsJustice Kavanaugh . Justice kavanaugh you just said a minute ago that a lot of this is taken care of on the ground as a practical matter. And i think one of the questions is, who takes care of it on the ground . Is it going to be federal judges, or is it the local jurisdictions with working with the nonprofits and religious organizations . So i guess following up on the necessity question, given the linedrawing problems that weve been going through, if a state has a traditional necessity defense, wont that take care of most of the concerns, if not all, and, therefore, avoid the need for having to constitutionalize an area and have a federal judge superintend this rather than the local community, which youve emphasized many times working with the nonprofits and charitable and religious organizations, which is how it works in most places . Mr. Kneedler well, i i think that the necessity defense at least traditionally has required a much stronger sense of urgency and imminence than this. If states had a necessity defense and we knew that it was available in all of these places, but even in oregon, i think its a case called barrett, the court said its theoretically possible, but there was a remand for factual issues. So we dont know at this point in time whether there is such a defense. And thats really not in the case here. This comes up on an eighth amendment challenge without reference to the necessity defense and, frankly, without reference to the new oregon statute, which seems highly instructive in terms of time, manner, and place that jurisdictions, grants pass should examine. But i dont think the court should put this core point about robinson to one side because, in the possibility that in oregon and maybe, you know, maybe no other place, i dont know about California Law of necessity, maybe it would be taken care of. I think, at this point in time, that is too speculative to Justice Kavanaugh well, usually we think about before constitutionalizing an area or extending a constitutional precedent, you might disagree with that characterization, but before doing that, we usually think about whether state law, local law already achieves those purposes so that the federal courts arent micromanaging homeless policy. And its on a daily basis when you work with the homeless. Its a daily issue, how many people are going to show up that day at the food bank . How many people are going to show up that day at the shelter . So its not like this is a onceayear thing. Mr. Kneedler yeah, no. For the people actually dealing with it day to day, that is certainly true. The city, the Law Enforcement, the city liaisons, the nonprofits, but its not true for the federal court. The federal court doesnt have to get into any of that. The only time the federal court would get into it is when is if the core principle of robinson was being disregarded by not by criminalizing somebody for sleeping outside when they have no place to sleep inside. Thats the core principle. Thats the only thing a court should be enforcing, not the not whether people show up. And the thing i would another thing i would say about the necessity defense, it may be that if the court issues an appropriate injunction in this case or another case limited to the core principle of robinson, but it develops or the state law develops that there is a necessity defense, then i think that should be taken into account. I mean, thats in effect the time, manner, and place or similar to that. If state law comes along and establishes a realistic defense or a realistic approach to how people can remain in the community, then the courts obviously should defer to that. But we dont have that established state law at this time. And i dont think the court should decline to address this question, which is important in the ninth circuit, both because the principle that those courts recognize should be sustained but the approach theyve taken Justice Kavanaugh last question i have on the food hypotheticals about stealing to feed yourself or cooking to feed yourself. You kind of waved all those away by, oh, thats all taken care of by local communities, nonprofits, and religious organizations, and by and large, heroic efforts each day to make sure that happens, but it doesnt always happen by any stretch. Mr. Kneedler no, it doesnt always happen. Justice kavanaugh and then what . Mr. Kneedler but Homeless People are resourceful. They have friends who are also homeless. They may they may know people in town. They may beg for money. And the towns are coping in the same way, frankly, that individual Homeless People do. They do the best they can under the circumstances, but that if those circumstances fail and the nonprofits, et cetera, cant you know, the truck doesnt show up one night, that doesnt become an eighth amendment problem. And were by no means suggesting that there should be a federal judiciary overlay on top of all that. The cities and the nonprofits should be left alone to do the work that theyre doing, unless the core principle of robinson is not respected. Justice kavanaugh thank you. Chief Justice RobertsJustice Barrett . Justice barrett so one odd thing about the posture of this case, putting aside the class part, is its preenforcement nature, because in robinson and in powell too, the punishment you know, the adjudication of guilt had already occurred and it was time for the punishment to be to imposed, and then the eighth amendment challenge was raised. And Justice Alito was asking you about a lot of the very difficult ontheground factual determinations that Law Enforcement would need to make before deciding whether someone could be given a citation for camping outdoors. Why wouldnt it make more sense, assuming that we agree in substance with the line that robinson would control here, why wouldnt it make more sense for the eighth amendment claim to be raised as a defense, much like the necessity defense, once a court is in the position, unlike the Law Enforcement officer just trying to gather information on the ground, to determine whether there were available beds, whether the person had a place to go. Why is a preenforcement challenge the right way to think about this . Mr. Kneedler well, several things. It obviously could be raised as a defense in a in a criminal prosecution or civil citation Justice Barrett sure. Mr. Kneedler but i think for this particular eighth amendment claim, the claim is that the eighth amendment prohibits criminalizing the act to begin with. Its not just the punishment that would be Justice Barrett well, i mean i understand that. I mean lets see i do understand that, but its not that it categorically prohibits punishing this act. As one might say if it, you know, prohibited sleeping altogether for everyone, right, this is because the eighth amendment claim is that it punishes, criminalizes this act in a way that false disproportionately and unconstitutionally on a particular class of people. And that requires adjudication at the front end to figure out whether someone is protected or unprotected. If i go and sleep in an encampment, i can be cited. Its different. Theres a factual determination on the ground. And robinson was a statusbased challenge, and it came up in the context of the individualized criminal proceeding. So why is a preenforcement challenge why does it make sense, given the very, very factintensive nature of this . Mr. Kneedler well, and in you know, in an individual case, i think youre right, but imagine a situation where someone who genuinely had no other place to live and its the third citation, the fourth citation, and you have a pattern as to that person or other people where the city is is consistently not respecting the robinson principle. Then i think you might have a preenforcement review, just as you might for an asserted violation of some other constitutional right, because here, again, its not the eighth amendment regulating only the punishment for an otherwise valid conviction. Here the question is whether the city can criminalize that conduct at all. And so if you have a series of citations that dont rise to the level of probable cause or whatever would be necessary excuse me necessary for the issuance of a citation where the Law Enforcement officer on the ground is not respecting the robinson principle, then you might have an injunctive action. Justice barrett but this would be the first case, right, because it didnt happen in robinson itself, where we had where we required where we had a preenforcement challenge on the basis of the eighth amendment to the criminalization of certain conduct, putting policemen in this situation, right . Mr. Kneedler but i suppose in robinson itself, if the person had been arrested once, been arrested a second time, and then hes arrested a third time, i would think he could bring a preenforcement challenge because the way the police were interacting with him was not respecting the robinson principle with respect to robinson himself. Justice barrett how does the federal government do this . So in the brief, you talked about clearing the encampment at Mcpherson Square. Can you just describe, i mean, briefly, if you can, i mean, do police then make individualized inquiries . How does this work . Mr. Kneedler well, what happened there was the you know, was i think the Gold Standard of the way this should be done, and larger cities have this ability. The park service cooperated very closely with the district government. The park service does not have the sort of social services, et cetera, that a municipality has, in d. C. And so that function is sort of split. These are special National Park properties. But the National Park service relies, as the federal government does, the federal protective service for buildings elsewhere, cooperates with the local government. And the local governments social Service People or the nonprofits went out and interviewed everybody who was in the who was in the encampment in Mcpherson Square and told them about what services are available. There was advance notice given that the encampment is going to be cleared within i think it was days. And people were so people were warned days in advance. They were warned the night before, the day before, so they could collect their things. Some just moved somewhere else. Some did take the city up on the offer. Some went into shelters. And thats the way that shelters are excuse me encampments are typically cleared, is the and particularly in cities where youve gotten a number of amicus briefs explaining the problem. Thats what happens. It isnt the it isnt the example weve been talking about where the Law Enforcement officer for the first time is encountering the person. Smaller cities dont have that capability, but grants pass does have these outreach workers. And thats who thats who carries on the dialogue. And so thats the way it was cleared. Chief Justice RobertsJustice Jackson . Justice jackson and so, given that experience and the fact that martin has actually been the law since 2018, we dont really have to speculate as to how this works, right . I mean, this is happening this is the law, right now, in the ninth circuit. Mr. Kneedler the robinson principle is. Justice jackson the robinson principle as adopted in martin. My understanding is, for example, california says thats the law, we comply with it, and there we are. Mr. Kneedler yeah. They are not asking for robinson to be overruled. What theyre objecting to is the injunctions that go well beyond that by Justice Jackson yes, i understand. Im just sort of responding to some of the questions that youve gotten as to sort of how does this rule work, can it work, that sort of suggest that its not already happening on the ground in these places, that the shelters and the workers are aware of what is available, that people are being advised, that, you know, the principle of martin, at least in the ninth circuit, is we hold that so long as theres a greater number of Homeless Individuals in a jurisdiction than the number of available beds, the jurisdiction cannot prosecute Homeless Individuals for sitting, lying, sleeping. This is not a new rule. Thats what the law is right now in that situation, right . Mr. Kneedler yeah, that thats what thats what martin i dont want to say that the clearance procedures work perfectly in every case or that theyre available in every case, but Justice Jackson no, i just want to say we dont have to speculate about how the rule works. Justice jackson its not a new thing that is being asked for today. Mr. Kneedler how its how its supposed to work. Justice jackson yes. Mr. Kneedler all im saying is that there may be imperfections Justice Jackson all right. Let me ask you about whether or not you are asking for an extension of robinson. Thats come up a couple of times, and i dont i dont i dont see it as an extension or whether thats being asked for. So can you explain whether theres some sort of extension of robinson mr. Kneedler no. Justice jackson happening today . Mr. Kneedler no, i dont think so at all because, as i said, the sleeping outside is an essential human function, and if you say someone cant sleep outside, thats thats sort of or has no place to sleep inside, thats the definition, really, of homelessness. Justice jackson so youre not suggesting that people should be excused from engaging in otherwise criminal conduct . So weve heard this example about people stealing in order to eat. I mean, that would be a situation in which someone is actively participating in what would be otherwise criminal behavior if anybody did it. Mr. Kneedler yes. Justice jackson and the idea, i guess, is that, well, maybe these people need to do it, and so that might be some sort of excuse. Thats not whats happening in the facts here, correct . Mr. Kneedler no. Thats correct. One thing that i think is important to keep in mind in this, is if grants pass can do this, so could every other city. So could a state do it statewide. And, eventually, a homeless person would have no place to be. Justice jackson so this is more like the sort of initial hypo of criminalizing eating outside, not that youd be doing something that was otherwise criminally culpable . Mr. Kneedler yeah. Yes. I suppose there could be ordinances that the city would have about where you can you cant eat at cant consume Justice Jackson that is time, place, and manner. Mr. Kneedler yes. Justice jackson final question. You mentioned with respect to states doing this. Why isnt the federal government arguing this case is moot in light of 195. 530 . This is the oregon recently passed statute that i mentioned earlier. Why doesnt the Government Read that law as i do to prevent grants pass from enforcing its ordinances to block sleeping outdoors at all places and all times . Mr. Kneedler yeah, no, i certainly agree there appears to be a pretty stark inconsistency between that state law and the ordinance. It hasnt been applied. It has to be objectively, reasonable, i think Justice Jackson so would the federal government mr. Kneedler but this isnt time, place and manner at all. Justice jackson right. What would your position be if the court decided that as a matter of constitutional avoidance or whatever else that we dont need to hear this or reach this decision in this case, given this new state ordinance . Mr. Kneedler that would be one possibility. It wouldnt answer the core robinson principle point and the limitations on that point that has that has triggered the amicus briefs. Justice jackson right. But our typical rule is that if theres some other way, we dont necessarily comment on constitutional issues, correct . Mr. Kneedler right. That would be one course to see how what time, place and manner meant under state law and how how the eighth amendment could accommodate that or take it into account. Justice jackson thank you. Chief Justice Roberts thank you, counsel. Ms. Corkran. Ms. Corkran chief justice and may it please the Court Robinson v. California holds that statusbased punishment schemes are categorically cruel and unusual under the eighth amendment. The challenged ordinances inflict statusbased punishment in both effect and purpose. Although the city describes its ordinances as punishing camping on public property, it defines campsite as anyplace a homeless person is while covered with a blanket. The city interprets and applies the ordinances to permit nonHomeless People to rest on blankets in public parks while a homeless person who does the same thing breaks the law. The ordinances by design make it physically impossible for Homeless People to live in grants pass without facing endless fines and jail time. The only question under robinson is whether theres any meaningful difference between a law that says being homeless is punishable and a law that says being homeless while breathing or sleeping or blinking is punishable. In other words, does adding a universal human attribute to the definition of the offense make the punishment conductbased instead of statusbased . The answer is no. The purpose and effect of the second statute is exactly the same as the first, to make people with a status endlessly and unavoidably punishable if they dont leave grants pass. Indeed all the ordinances do is turn the citys homelessness problem into someone elses problem by forcing its homeless residents into other jurisdictions. The injunction below leaves the city with an abundance of tools to address homelessness. It can impose time, place, manner restrictions on when and where Homeless People sleep. It can ban tents and clear encampments. It can enforce a sleeping ban against Homeless People who declines shelter and it can fully enforce laws prohibiting littering, public urination, defecation, drug use and violent or harassing behavior. The only tool the city wants that it doesnt have is authority to impose a 24 7 citywide sleeping ban that forces its homeless residents to either move to another jurisdiction or face endless punishment. The state police power is broad but it does not include the power to push the burdens of social problems like poverty on to other communities or the power to satisfy public demand by compromising individual constitutional rights. I welcome the courts questions. Justice thomas in robinson, there was a statute that outlawed that said that to be addicted is a crime. Is there an ordinance here that says to be homeless is a crime . Ms. Corkran so the language for the purposes of a temporary place to live bakes homelessness into the definition of the offense, Justice Sotomayor was talking about that earlier. So when you combine that language with the best of the camping definition, what you have is an ordinance that says being homeless, while sleeping with a blanket, is punishable. And as i just said earlier, the question becomes when you attach the status to the universal attribute of sleeping, does it then transform the offense into conductbased punishment instead of statusbased punishment and i think the answer is no. Chief Justice Roberts a number of us, i think, are having difficulty with the distinction between status and conduct. Youll acknowledge, wont you, that in those terms, theres a difference between being addicted to drugs and being homeless . In other words, someone whos homeless can immediately become not homeless, right, if they find shelter. Someone who is addicted to drugs, its not so so easy. It seems to me that in robinson, its much easier to understand the drug addiction as an ongoing status, while here i think it is different because you can move into and out of and into and out of the status, as you would put it, as being homeless. Ms. Corkran so its interesting, we today understand addiction as an immutable status. In robinson, the court suggested that someone might be recovered and no longer have the status of addiction. So the Robinson Court wasnt thinking about addiction as something that couldnt change over time. Chief Justice Roberts well, that may limit the applicability of robinson to a different situation, but what is the i mean, what is the analytic approach to deciding whether somethings a status or a situation of conduct . Ms. Corkran so the question is a status is something that a person is when theyre not doing anything. So being addicted, having cancer, being poor, are all statuses that you have apart from any conduct. Chief Justice Roberts having cancer is not the same as being homeless, right . I mean, maybe im just repeating myself because homelessness can you can remove the homeless status in an instant if you move to a shelter or situations otherwise change. And of course it can be moved the other way as well if youre kicked out of the shelter, whatever. So that is a distinction from all these other things that have been labeled status, isnt it . Ms. Corkran i dont think so because, you know, a cancer patient can go into remission, they no longer have that status. I dont think i mean, i dont think theres any question that being poor is a status. Its something that you are apart from anything you do. Its a status that can change over time and at that point you wouldnt be a part of the class but i dont think it changes the fact that it is a status. And what robinson found so offensive about statuses is chief Justice Roberts well, i guess is being a bank robber a status . Ms. Corkran no, because being a bank robber means you rob banks. So so the definition and the conduct chief Justice Roberts violating this ordinance means upon being asked to leave you dont leave. Ms. Corkran violating this ordinance means youre homeless. So again, homelessness is not something that you do. Its just something that you are. And so the question becomes when you attach the universal human attribute of sleeping or breathing to that status, does it make the punishment conductbased instead of statusbased and i think the answer is justice sotomayo counsel, edwards v. California in 1941 struck down a law that made it a crime to transport an indigent person, correct . Ms. Corkran yes. Justice sotomayor indigency is a not is a condition that can change over time, but the law was aimed at the transport of a person who wasnt morally reprehensible. Ms. Corkran yes. I think thats notable because our history and tradition as a country is to emphatically reject any sort of local legislative scheme that has the effect of pushing the burdens of poverty or indigency into other communities. Its woven throughout through our constitution. So edwards located it in the dormant Commerce Clause. We have saenz v. Roe which locates it in the privileges of immunities clause; papachristou addresses that statusbased punishment in the context of a procedural due process. What robinson held is that when that expulsion is effectuated through statusbased punishment, it violates the punishments clause. Justice barrett how do you define a community . So when Justice Alito was descbing how new jersey has so many tightly woven municipalities close together and here, you know, the chief justice was asking about whether if grants pass, if there were was a new homeless shelter with lots of beds right across the border minutes away, you know, could that be taken into account . And i think there was some back and forth and not necessarily agreement on that. What is your position . How do you define a community . Take that example of a homeless shelter right outside the limits of grants pass. Ms. Corkran yes. So to so to answer that hypothetical first, im not concerned i dont have any problems with saying that a homeless person in grants pass has legal and physical access to a shelter thats just over the lines, if thats, in fact, true. Lots of jurisdictions limit their homeless shelters to people who are residents. So and just to be clear, there was no suggestion in the record here that there were any shelters available outside of grants pass. Justice barrett understood. But so community doesnt need to be determined by jurisdictional lines is what youre telling me ms. Corkran no. Justice barrett as a matter of because, lets see, im asking all of this because, in response to Justice Sotomayor, you were pointing out that our you know, our nation has a history and tradition of not saying you can shunt Homeless People or the poor out of your jurisdiction and on to others. So or out of your community and on to others is i think how you how you phrased it. How do we know what those lines are . And youre saying it doesnt have to be jurisdictionspecific. Ms. Corkran no. I think jurisdiction matters because that tells us kind of the lines in which the whatever ordinance or statute applies. So, when shelter is available, the ordinances are enforceable because they punish the conduct of not going to the shelter, as opposed to the status of homelessness. So i think that a municipality can punish the conduct of not going to a shelter thats just over the line if you have physical and legal access to it. Now, for the reasons you say and this dates back to our our Settlement System at the founding er a lot of municipalities do not allow people from outside of the jurisdiction to use their shelters, and so, under those ciumstances, the shelter wouldnt be legally available. Chief Justice Roberts is that cruel and unusual punishment for them to turn away someone who wants to use their shelter . Ms. Corkran no, that wouldnt be punishment. Punishment is the infliction of suffering for a crime. Justice jackson counsel, i chief Justice Roberts well, then then why is the eighth amendment implicated in this case . Ms. Corkran because, here, we have fines and jail time. We have a statusbased punishment scheme that is, in fact, inflicting punishing punishment within the meaning of the eighth amendment. Justice barrett counsel, do you want to oh, im sorry, chief. Were you finished . Chief Justice Roberts no, im done. Thats fine. Justice barrett do you want to address some of the linedrawing problems that weve been going back and forth . I mean, Justice Gorsuch pointed out, you know, eating is a basic human need, and its not the case that soup kitchens or social services will always be able to meet it, and so he asked about whether the eighth amendment would prohibit punishment for stealing food. You might ask the same questions about trespass and squatting in structures if there are you know, if that was the best alternative. So how do we how do we draw these difficult lines about, you know, public urination and those sorts of things . Ms. Corkran so ill start with stealing food. Stealing food is not part of definition of homelessness, and its also not a universal attribute. So so i put that outside the scope of any of the arguments were making here. With respect to public urination and defecation, if you had a i dont think this would ever exist, but if you had a law that said Homeless People cannot urinate or defecate anywhere within city limits, i think then it starts to look like this case. But, if youre saying that people cant urinate or defecate on public property, it is almost its hard to imagine a situation where Justice Barrett they have no place else to go. So a homeless person, there theres no facilities available, and a homeless person has no place else to go. How could a ms. Corkran you might have a i mean, there are commercial establishments. I dont know that anyones pointed to a jurisdiction where you truly dont have access. But if we had to say Justice Barrett well, whats the constitutional principle . Ms. Corkran right. Justice barrett take my hypothetical. Say there theres not commercial establishments dont want nonpatrons coming in to use the facilities, there are no public facilities, and its a generally applicable rule that says no public urination. Ms. Corkran so i think, there, one distinction between urination and defecation and sleeping is that sleeping outside is part of the definition of homelessness, right . Homelessness is lacking a fixed, regular nighttime address. So the sleeping prohibition goes more directly to the status of homelessness than urination or defecation. Justice barrett so it would not so it would not violate the eighth amendment to punish public urination and defecation . Ms. Corkran you might come up with some different theory, but its not the theory that were putting forward in this ca. Justice barrett not the theory that youre okay. Ms. Corkran yes. Ms. Corkran yes. Justice kagan what do you think, ms. Corkran, of this idea that oregons necessity defense essentially functions as an eighth amendment in this context, so we dont have to constitutionalize the kinds of limits that youre talking about . Ms. Corkran yeah, i would say its not at all clear that thats true. As mr. Kneedler pointed out, you know, there is a necessity defense in oregon law, but, so far, the oregon courts have not applied it to this circumstance. It also wouldnt necessarily be available for the fines, the citations, we have here. But i think that this question about the availability of the necessity defense really goes to the injunctive posture of the case. Its not going to come up if youre in the you know, youre if youre presenting the eighth amendment as an affirmative defense at the same time as a necessity defense in a criminal prosecution, right, it kind of moots out the eighth amendment claim. But going to Justice Barretts questions about injunctive relief, there, the question youre asking is, does the plaintiff have a credible threat of future punishment . Id say first that the injunctive relief is not before the court. The city has not challenged the propriety of the injunction here. So i think its a question for another day. The courts here did find that the plaintiffsad shown a credible threat of future punishment, and so i think tt resolves the issue for for this ce. Justice gorsuch counsel, along those lines, we havent mentioned it yet, but in the briefing, theres a lot of discussion about the fact that robinsons eighth amendment holding with respect to status came without any adversarial testing, wasnt what was argued by the parties, it didnt have a whole lot of citation or support, it came kind of in a breezy paragraph. Ms. Corkran right. Justice gorsuch and some have suggested that thats really a mistake because the eighth amendments about punishments. It doesnt prevent states limit states capacity to engage in passing laws that make conduct or actions or anything a crime. It just goes to the nature of what punishments follow, putting aside the excessive fines clause. Ms. Corkran yeah. Justice gorsuch so theres a lot of discussion in the brief about that and some some suggestion that, really, its the fourteenth amendment that should be doing work here, if there is work to be done, because some form of the necessity defense has been always understood as inhering in due process from the founding and whether that can be enforced through state laws, which might differ, kansas versus kahler, but have to have to nonetheless cover the territory, and whether there might be injunctive relief on that basis, possible in advance, not limited to defenses, possible. Just reactions to that. I we havent yet touched on it. Ms. Corkran so robinson predates graham v. Connor, but i think it espouses the same principle, which is, when you can identify an explicit textual source for a right, you locate the right in that amendment and not more generalized notions of due process. And so what the Robinson Court did was they Justice Gorsuch well, but, the more the more limited i mean, let me just play with that for a minute. The more natural home for a necessitytype argument is due process. Thats where its always historically been understood to lie, not the not an amendment having to do with punishments, right . One has to do with what you can criminalize. The other has to do with the punishments that follow. And youre not really attacking the punishments here. Youre saying any punishment is impermissible. Ms. Corkran right. Justice gorsuch and any punishment is impermissible. And that is a necessity defense. Thats a classic necessity defense. Ms. Corkran so i think that its right that robinson describes what it was doing as saying that the eighth amendment prohibited the criminalization. You see that language in i think weems and wilkerson v. Utah. I agree it seems like a bit of a strange fit. Justice gorsuch so, if thats the case, if thats the case, wouldnt that get rid of this awful status conduct distinction that we have that were struggling with here today . Because, if its a necessity, it doesnt matter why its a necessity. Every person can make their own argument about why it was necessary, and then the courts will decide. We dont get into the status conduct stuff that that robinson seems to invite. Thoughts . Ms. Corkran well, but thats here, we dont have necessarily a necessity defense, so that wouldnt be very satisfying Justice Gorsuch you dont think your clients have a good necessity defense . Ms. Corkran the oregon courts so far have not applied the oregon Justice Gorsuch i didnt ask whether the courts have applied it. You havent asked them to apply it, and youre ms. Corkran theyve had a couple of cases like this. Justice gorsuch have they . Ms. Corkran mr. Kneedler referred to the bartlett case. Justice gorsuch and how are they going . Ms. Corkran the so far, they have not applied the necessity defense. They left open the possibility that it might apply, but they havent applied it yet. They didnt find that it was necessary under those circumstances. Justice gorsuch did they rule out that it might be necessary under some circumstances . Ms. Corkran they left open that possibility, but id also say the civil citation or the i dont want to say civil. its a little murky. But the fines here are not subject, i dont think, or its not clear, to the necessity defense. So it wouldnt take care of the entirety of the claim. Justice gorsuch youve got excessive fines clause there, though, right . Ms. Corkran yes. Justice gorsuch and thats not before us either . Ms. Corkran we have raised the fines before this court because our challenge is to the package of punishments, and, historically, thats how the court has looked applying the excessive fines clause and the punishment clause together. Were in a really unfortunate posture here that we have claims that involve both fines and punishment, and yet were only here on the punishments clause piece of it. It was one of the reasons we suggested this isnt a great vehicle. I think the court can say that, you know, its not going to reach the fines because we won on that below, and so you can just focus on the on the jail time for for criminal trespass. Justice alito what is your definition of the stat of homelessness . Is it the lack of a place to stay indoors on a particular night, or is it something broader than that . Ms. Corkran so so homelessness Justice Alito does it require more than that . Ms. Corkran right. Homelessness is defined as lacking a fixed, regular, adequate nighttime address. So, if you have a home, you have a home im not homeless when i go to grants pass because i have a home in d. C. The second part of our class definition focuses on whether the homeless person has access to shelter. Thats not because thats part of the status. Its because, when someone has access to shelter, then the ordinances arent punishing them for the status. Its punishing them for the conduct of not going Justice Alito well, i asked the question because if homelessness is defined as simply lacking a place to stay indoors on a particular night, then there is an ironclad connection between the conduct, which is sleeping outside, and the status of homelessness. But if homelessness is defined to require more than that, then my question would be whether someone who is lacking a place to stay on a particular night or for a particular period of time is homeless, if the reason why the person finds himself or herself in that status is, for example, the person refuses to take antipsychotic medicine thats been prescribed or refuses to go to drug rehab or rehabilitation for alcoholism or the person has chosen to move from one place where the person might have a shelter or a home where the person could live to another place. What about all of that . Ms. Corkran so the status of homelessness is something that only changes once the person has a home. You lose your home, youre homeless. If you have a home again, then youre not in the status anymore. I think what your question gets at is that second piece, which is whether a person has access to shelter. That can change from day to day. And so Justice Alito no, thats not really what my question gets at. The question is you can draw a distinction status is different from conduct, but there are some instances of conduct that are closely tied to status or if homelessness is defined as simply lacking a place to stay in a particular night, they amount to the same thing. The definition of homelessness encompasses the conduct of sleeping outside. So my question is whether this is what if the person finds that person in a homeless state because of prior life choices or their refusal to make future life choices . Thats the question. Ms. Corkran yeah, yeah. So so our definition of lacking access to shelter is lacking physical or legal access to shelter. And youre looking at the person situation on that particular night. I think generally were not doing an inquiry into all of a persons life choices that might have led them to the point where theyre homeless and cant find a place to sleep. Robinson certainly didnt do that sort of analysis with respect to addiction but there could be situations where there is such a tight causal nexus between a choice a person has made and their lack of shelter access that you would say this person has chosen not to take this shelter and to be very clear, if you decline shelter that is physically and legally available to you, youre not in a class youre in Justice Alito well, see but the problem is that once you move away from the definition that makes the inquiry basically tautological, then you get into the question of assessing the closeness of the connection between the status and the conduct. And you do run into problems with the person whos a kleptomaniac, or a person who suffers from pedophilia. So how do you distinguish that . How does the court assess how close the connection has to be . Ms. Corkran so for both of those categories, the status is defined i dont know if status is the right word there being a pedophilia or having pedophilia is defined by the urge that you have, not by your conduct and acting on that urge. So if someone were to act on that urge, that tight causal nexus on why they didnt have access to shelter, then they would be outside of our claim. Justice jackson i thought you made a very interesting remark in response to Justice Alito, and im just trying to clarify. You seem to say that homelessness, as you defined, is not lacking access to shelter on a particular night. Is that am i right about that . Ms. Corkran thats right. I use the hud definition which is homelessness means you lack a fixed regular adequate nighttime address. Justice jackson so that kind of thing might going back to the chief justices original question, thats not changing night to night in the same way. Ms. Corkran it can change over time the same way that a cancer diagnosis could change over time, but Justice Jackson and then the other part that was interesting to me is that assuming thats your definition, homelessness lacking a fixed regular address, when someone does have access to a shelter even though they lack a fixed, regular address, the ordinance in that situation, i thought you said, is operating to punish the act of not going to the shelter ms. Corkran yes. Justice jackson as opposed to punishing the status of being homeless. Ms. Corkran yes, thats thats the exact reason that reasonable time, place, manner restrictions arent a problem because if you have time, manner time, place, and manner restrictions what youre doing is punishing the conduct of not going to sleep where youre allowed to go. That rationale doesnt work when someone has nowhere to go. Justice jackson and can you speak to whether or not we should really be even getting into this in light of the new oregon law . Ms. Corkran so we didnt argue mootness. We made this point in our brief in opposition. We didnt say mootness just because we dont have an injunction under the oregon law yet and its not selfexecuting. I dont think there is any question that the ordinances fall under the oregon law. I mean, it was intended to codify martin. It requires that any sort of restrictions on sleeping or resting outside are reasonable with respect to Homeless Individuals. Clearly the ordinances here dont meet that standard. So i certainly wouldnt have any concerns with the court saying as a matter of constitutional avoidance, it appears this oregon law resolves this whole issue so, you know, were dismissing as improvidently granted or however the court wanted to resolve the case. Justice jackson thank you. Justice sotomayor so the plaintiff im sorry. The plaintiff who died here had used up her provisnal stay credits at the time of class certification, so she no longer had a shelter that was willing to take her. I think the hard hypothetical that Justice Alito was positing and in part Justice Gorsuch is the person who owns a dog. Ms. Corkran yeah. Justice sotomayor or lets say a mentally ill person. Do you have the same response as the government . Ms. Corkran so i would like to live in a world where separating someone from their pet is cruel. But its outside the scope of our claim because we are just talking about physical and legal access to shelter. So if someone turns down a shelter offer thats physically and legally available because of their dog, they would not be within the scope of our claim. To get to the Mental Health hypothetical, if a if the persons Mental Health issues made the shelter either physically unavailable to them because if they went there, they would be at substantial risk of bodily harm or death, then i would say the shelter isnt physically available. You could also have a shelter that wont take people with Mental Health problems, in which case it wouldnt be legally available to them. I would say that if the shelter is physically and legally available, then theyre outside the scope of their our claim but they might have ada claims or some other law that applies that would restrict the citys ability to punish them for not going to that place but thats outside our case. Justice sotomayor thank you. Chief stice roberts thank you, counsel. Can you go from having a fixed regular address to not having one . Ms. Corkran yes. Chief juste roberts can you go from not having one to having one . Ms. Corkran yes. Pele chief Justice Roberts thank you. Justice thomas . Justice thomas in robinson, a narcotics officer testified that based on his experience, the marks on the defendants arm suggested that he was an addict. Ms. Corkran yes. Justice thomas do we have anything like that where an expert testifies that these people that the individuals here are homeless . Ms. Corkran so here the legal burden was on the plaintiffs to show that they were homeless. The lower courts found that their declarations and depositions satisfied that. Justice thomas well, what im interested in is the status. You say that this is the equivalent of robinson. And im trying to determine where the status of homelessness was determined and how it plays a role in this case. Ms. Corkran so it was determined based on the declarations and depositions of the punitive class members and named plaintiffs. It also, you know, we talked a little about the ratio between beds to population. The ninth circuit ended up rejecting that as a hard and fast rule, but the lack of shelter beds in grants pass provides credibility to the putative class members declarations when they say they have nowhere to go. Id also say i dont understand the city to have ever contested that the named plaintiffs are homeless. What they contested is whether they had access Justice Thomas i think whats confusing me is that when i read the ordinance, the ordinance is an anticamping ordinance. Would a backpacker who happens to be in the area for a few days be allowed to camp on on public property . Ms. Corkran i think theoretically no but i would say that the city has never it was not able to identify any circumstance in which it had applied Justice Thomas i understand that. It would apply to a backpacker . Ms. Corkran so it would depend on the circumstances. The line that the Police Officers drew in their depositions was that if they saw a nonhomeless person lying on a blanket, they wouldnt enforce the ordinance. Justice thomas no, im saying some hes back ms. Corkran yep. Justice thomas someone with a backpack whos been wandering around for a couple of years, in the Continental Divide or something. Ms. Corkran so i can imagine im putting myself in the place of the officers who were deposed. If you gave them that hypothetical they might say no, that person isnt setting up a temporary place to live; theyre just traveling through town. That particular hypothetical didnt come up, but we do Justice Thomas so that would not violate the anticamping ordinance . Ms. Corkran i dont know. I mean, maybe this gets to the vagueness of the of the provisions, but chief Justice RobertsJustice Alito . Justice sotomayor . Justice kagan . Justice kavanaugh . Justice kavanaugh i think one of the premises of your argument is that is is not good policy for the homeless, and good policy would help Homeless Individuals transition, get Mental Health treatment, get Substance Abuse treatment, job assistance, and that this doesnt fulfill those objectives. And maybe youre not saying that, but im curious whether you think this is good policy in terms of incentivizing, or bad . You must think its bad, and im curious why. Ms. Corkran yeah, i dont think weve made that argument. It certainly came across the amici briefs. Just on the incentivizing, i think, is a non sequitur because the only question here is whether it violates the eighth amendment to enforce the ordinances when someone has no access to shelter, when theyre turning down the services. So thats a circumstance were looking at. Maybe i think what your honors question gets at is our discussion of no penological purpose. This court has recognized that when a punishment scheme has no penological purpose, it inflict gratuitous suffering, and that is cruel and unusual punishment. And i will say, at this point, the city has not ever identified any penological purpose for punishing Homeless People who do not have access to shelter. If you ask that question, every time they pivot to encampments and fires and sanitation problems, which are all nonsequiturs. As ive said a number of times, this case is only about sleeping outside when theres no shelter available. And so i think that lack of penological purpose is significant. Justice kavanaugh well, weve heard about how its more difficult to have an effective homeless policy, given the rule thats been in effect in the ninth circuit over the last several years. Ms. Corkran i think thats Justice Kavanaugh how are we supposed to ms. Corkran thats flatly wrong. Ill go back to my opening. I gave the whole list of the things that the city is allowed to do under the ordinance and under our claim. The only thing that they cannot do is impose a 24 7 sleeping ban that makes it impossible for Homeless People to stay in the jurisdiction. Id also note, you know, they have a lot of amicus briefs on their side from local governments. Almost the entirety of what those amicus briefs are complaining about isnt at issue in this case. So when you have injunctions against encampments, thats under the Fourth Amendment. We dont have a Fourth Amendment claim. A lot of the injunctions are under the fourteenth amendment, including the san rafael one that the city identifies in its reply brief. I think its remarkable that when the city was trying to identify the best example it could come up with for its reply brief, it chose one involving a different constitutional claim. Justice kavanaugh thank you. Chief Justice RobertsJustice Barrett . Justice barrett no. Chief Justice RobertsJustice Jackson . Justice jackson c a person go from being addicted to drugs to not being addicted to drugs . Ms. Corkran so i think under common as we think about it in terms of modern medicine, the answer is no. But the Robinson Court certainly thought that was the case, right . Sixty years ago, we didnt have the same understanding of addiction. Justice jackson so your view of robinson is that it doesnt really matter, the permanency of the condition; its still a status . Ms. Corkran right. The Robinson Court did not think that the permanency mattered, because it thought that addiction was status that could change. Justice jackson thank you. Chief Justice Roberts thank you, counsel. Rebuttal . Ms. Evangelis thank you. This case is worlds away from robinson. Theighth amendment does not answer any of the questions th weve been discussing today, and that is reason not to extend robinson. All of these questions are unanswerable. First, id like to start with the United States position. That would also bring chaos. It would be a disaster if martin were to remain on the books in any form. It does not make a difference if the inquiry is preenforcement or postenforcement. All the same questions come up about whether the persons conduct is involuntary, what their choices are, how they are there, whether the shelter thats available is adequate, where it is, what rules it has, all of that. And id like to clarify how all of this works in practice because it would be impossible for people on the ground to understand and predict what a court would say about the shelters that are available and the alternatives that are available and the choices that were made, and the difficulty of all that. So here how it works is, under the grants pass policy ill direct the court to page 155 of the joint appendix. There it says, officers are required to give a 24hour notice before issuing a citation. So i want to just focus on that for a moment. How will the officer know, when when she or he comes back, whether the individual has another place to go . Theres no way to know the answer to that. So they would have to take their word for it, perhaps. So it would lead to all of those same proble and it is hyperbole the other side talks about banishment and all of that. The respondents have remained in grants pass for years. Theres nothing like that going on here. They talk about an isolated statement from a Community Meeting that was a threehour meeting. There are pages of minutes. Its one sentence. What that full context shows is a wideranging discussion about all of these difficult policy problems and how the city was trying to incentivize people to accept shelter and dealing with a small group that was causing Serious Problems and crime in the city. And theyre trying to balance those who wouldnt take the help with the citys needs to keep their public spaces open. When the ninth circuit constitutionalized this area, it left cities with really no choice, either keep building enough shelter that may or may not be adequate or suitable to someones preferences, or be forced to give up all of your public spaces. That is whats happened. Weve seen a suspension of enforcement of these basic laws that are so important. The linedrawing problems are neverending. That is exactly why powell, Justice Gorsuch, to your point about powell and the plurality there said that if we embark on this journey and we start constitutionalizing laws that address conduct, the linedrawing problems will be endless. And so that is a reason not to extend robinson here. So i just want to make, again, our basic eighth amendment point here, which is that these are lowlevel fines and very short jail terms for repeat offenders that are in effect in many other jurisdictions. This is not unusual in any way. It is certainly not cruel. And we can just point to our appendix in our reply that goes through jurisdictions from west hollywood, california to watertown, massachusetts, that have the same type of policies. So the policy questions in this case are very difficult. And i think thats what has come across today. The eighth amendment question, though, is not. Here the punishments are the sorts of punishments that have been held to be permissible for since the founding and really are in use today. Theyre not in any way unusual. So we heard a lot of things about guessing how this would work in practice, but it sounds to me like courts would need to have some sort of rules so that they could tell a jurisdiction like chico that the place it set aside for camping was adequate, when the federal court said no, it wasnt, because its outdoors, or a san clemente that was threatened with lawsuits because it didnt provide cell phone chargers in the area that it designated for camping, or san rafael, where the court said that 200 feet between encampments between tents was too much and that 100 feet was the maximum under the eighth amendment. So for all of those reasons, the court should rev