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Brown v. Stored Value Cards Inc, Prisoner Debit Cards, Appeal, 2019

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No. 18-35735

In the United States Court of Appeals
for the Ninth Circuit
___________________
DANICA LOVE BROWN,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
STORED VALUE CARDS, INC., D/B/A NUMI FINANCIAL, ET AL.,
Defendant-Appellee.
____________________
ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON
_____________________________________________________________
MOTION FOR LEAVE TO FILE BRIEF OF AMICI CURIAE IN SUPPORT
OF PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT DANICA LOVE BROWN
_____________________________________________________________
TYCKO & ZAVAREEI LLP
Hassan Zavareei (CA SBN 181547)
Anna C. Haac
Tanya S. Koshy (CA SBN 277095)
1828 L St. NW Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20036
Telephone: 202-973-0900
hzavareei@tzlegal.com
ahaac@tzlegal.com
tkoshy@tzlegal.com
Counsel for Amici Curiae

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Pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 29, amici curiae
respectfully move for leave to file the accompanying brief. Amici curiae are
national and statewide nonprofit organizations and law school clinics with
expertise in criminal justice and immigrant justice, and include: International
CURE (Citizens United for Rehabilitation of Errants), Equal Justice Under Law,
The Florida Institutional Legal Services Project of Florida Legal Services, The
Legal Aid Society, The National Police Accountability Project, Public Counsel,
The San Francisco Public Defender’s Office, The Southern Poverty Law Center,
Texas Civil Rights Project, Working Narratives, and University of California
Davis School of Law Immigration Law Clinic (collectively, “amici”).
Amici are familiar with the issues presented in this case and are able to
inform the Court with regard to areas that may not otherwise be addressed
adequately in the briefing. Specifically, amici are able to advise the Court on the
lived experiences of people who face multiple social barriers that make Numi’s
debit release cards far from the functional equivalent of the money they replace.
Because of their unique perspective and their interest in the issues now before the
Court, amici respectfully request permission from the Court to file the
accompanying brief.
//
//

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Respectfully submitted,
Dated: March 8, 2019

TYCKO & ZAVAREEI LLP
/s/ Hassan Zavareei
Hassan A Zavareei (SBN 181547)
1828 L St. NW Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20036
Telephone: 202-973-0900
hzavareei@tzlegal.com

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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that, on March 8, 2019, I electronically filed the foregoing
with the Clerk of the Court for the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit by using the appellate CM/ECF system. I also certify that all other
participants in the case are registered CM/ECF users, and service will be
accomplished by the appellate CM/ECF system.
Dated: March 8, 2019

TYCKO & ZAVAREEI LLP
/s/ Hassan Zavareei
Hassan A. Zavareei (SBN 181547)
1828 L. St. NW Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20036
Telephone: 202-973-0900
hzavareei@tzlegal.com

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No. 18-35735

In the United States Court of Appeals
for the Ninth Circuit
___________________
DANICA LOVE BROWN,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
STORED VALUE CARDS, INC., D/B/A NUMI FINANCIAL, ET AL.,
Defendant-Appellee.
____________________
ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON
_____________________________________________________________
PROPOSED BRIEF OF AMICI CURIAE IN SUPPORT OF PLAINTIFFAPPELLANT DANICA LOVE BROWN
_____________________________________________________________
TYCKO & ZAVAREEI LLP
Hassan Zavareei (CA SBN 181547)
Anna C. Haac
Tanya S. Koshy (CA SBN 277095)
1828 L St. NW Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20036
Telephone: 202-973-0900
hzavareei@tzlegal.com
ahaac@tzlegal.com
tkoshy@tzlegal.com
Counsel for Amici Curiae

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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Contents

I. INTRODUCTION ...............................................................................................1
II. BACKGROUND .................................................................................................5
III. ARGUMENT .......................................................................................................8
A. Numi’s debit release card program is part
of a larger “captive market” industry that
outsources correctional services to private companies .................................9
B. Like other private companies involved in
providing services to correctional facilities, Numi
imposes numerous unavoidable fees on its cards
that render them substantially less valuable than cash ................................11
i. .Because of barriers people in poverty
routinely face, many people released from
incarceration cannot avoid Numi’s fees ...............................................13
ii. People released from incarceration face
disproportionate challenges that make it difficult
to make informed decisions on avoiding fees ......................................16
iii. .People deported after release find release cards
largely unusable, which benefits Numi’s bottom line .......................19
C. Compounding the substantial costs of Numi’s
cards is the fact that the card is a forced contract
that threatens the privacy of already marginalized people ..........................21
IV. CONCLUSION .................................................................................................24

i

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TABLE OF AUTHORITIES
Page(s)
Other Authorities
American Civil Liberties Union, Warehoused and
Forgotten: Immigrants Trapped in Our
Shadow Private Prison System (June 2014),
https://www.aclu.org/sites/default/files/field_document
/060614-aclu-car-reportonline.pdf. ........................................................... 10
Arun Gupta, The Financial Firm that Cornered the Market on Jails,
The Nation (Aug. 1, 2016),
https://www.thenation.com/article/the-financial
-firm-that-cornered-the-market-on-jails/. ............................................ 15, 20
Ashley Hackett, Thousands of Privately Owned
Companies Are Profiting from the U.S. Prison System,
Pacific Standard (Apr. 27, 2018),
https://psmag.com/social-justice/thousands-ofprivately-owned-companies-are-profiting-fromthe-us-prison-system. ................................................................................ 11
Bernadette Rabuy & Daniel Kopf, Prisons of Poverty:
Uncovering the Pre-Incarceration Incomes of the Imprisoned,
Prison Policy Initiative (July 9, 2015),
https://www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/income.html. ................................. 13
Brian Alexander, When Prisoners Are a ‘Revenue Opportunity,’
The Atlantic (Aug. 10, 2017),
https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/
2017/08/remote-video-visitation/535095/. ................................................ 10
Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Contracting
for Indigent Defense Services: A Special Report 3 n.1 (2000) ................... 3
Carmen Sandi, Stress and Cognition,
Wiley Interdis. Rev. Cogn. Sci. (May 2013)............................................. 18
Catherine E. Akenhead, How States Can Take A Stand Against
Prison Banking Profiteers,
85 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 1224 (2017).......................................................... 21
ii

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Prison Policy Initiative, Comment Letter on Proposed
Amendments to Regulation E 4 (Mar. 18, 2015),
http://static.prisonpolicy.org/releasecards/CFPB-comment......................23
Dana Hunt et al., ADAM II 2013 Annual Report:
Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring Program II,
National Criminal Justice Reference Service (Jan. 2014),
https://www.ncjrs.gov/App/Publications/abstract.aspx?ID=269191. ....... 17
David Koon, New UALR Survey Finds a Lack of Basic ‘Financial
Literacy’ Among Inmates,Arkansas Times (June 19, 2014),
https://www.arktimes.com/arkansas/new-ualrsurvey-finds-a-lack-of-basic-financial-literacy-amonginmates/Content?oid=3351524............................................................ 14, 15
Eli McCormick The Best Prepaid Debit Cards of 2017,
Top Ten Reviews,
http://prepaid-debit-cards-review.toptenreviews.com/
[https://perma.cc/QCE6-UDXL] ............................................................... 23
Elizabeth Brico, What It’s Like to Detox in Jail,
Tonic (Nov. 20, 2018), https://tonic.vice.com/
en_us/article/5988q3/what-its-like-to-detox-in-jail. ................................. 16
Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp., FDIC National Survey of
Unbanked and Underbanked Households (2017),
https://www.fdic.gov/householdsurvey/2017/2017report.pdf. ................. 12
Henry J. Steadman et al., Prevalence of Serious Mental
Illness Among Jail Inmates, Psychiatric Services (June 2009),
https://ps.psychiatryonline.org/doi/pdf/10.1176/ps.2009.60.6.761. ......... 17
Jerry Mitchell, Mississippi, Companies Profit Off Inmates,
Families, Clarion Ledger (Nov. 21, 2015),
https://www.clarionledger.com/story/news/2015/11/21/
mississippi-companies-profit-off-inmates-families/75884224/. ............... 10
Kasey Bubnash, No free rides: Detainees released late at night
from Santa Barbara County Jail don't get a ride home anymore,
including those from North County, Santa Maria Sun (Aug. 29, 2017),
http://www.santamariasun.com/cover/16440/no-free-ridesdetainees-released-late-at-night-from-santa-barbara-countyjail-dont-get-a-ride-home-anymore-including-those-from-north-county/ ........ 18
iii

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Katherine Beckett & Alexes Harris, On Cash and Conviction:
Monetary Sanctions as Misguided Policy,
10 Criminology & Pub. Pol. 509 (2011) ..................................................... 3
Madison Pauly, Los Angeles County Has Agreed to Try to
Fix Its “Jail to Skid Row” Problem, Mother Jones (Dec. 12, 2018),
https://www.motherjones.com/crime-justice/2018/12/
los-angeles-county-jail-mental-health-settlement/. ................................... 16
Mary Madden et. al., Privacy, Poverty, and Big Data:
A Matrix of Vulnerabilities for Poor Americans,
95 Wash. U.L. Rev. 53 (2017) ............................................................ 23, 24
Matthew Goldberg, 13 Data Breaches That Stung US Consumers,
Bankrate.com (Nov. 30, 2018),
https://www.bankrate.com/finance/banking/
us-data-breaches-1.aspx#slide=12............................................................. 23
Max Lewontin, As More Americans Go Smartphone-Only,
High-Speed Internet Becomes a Luxury,
The Christian Science Monitor (Dec. 22, 2015),
https://www.csmonitor.com/Technology/2015/1222/
As-more-Americans-go-smartphone-onlyhigh-speed-Internet-becomes-a-luxury. .................................................... 13
Max Lewontin, Why Many Low-Income Families Have
Internet Access, But Remain ‘Under-Connected,’
The Christian Science Monitor (Feb. 3, 2016),
https://www.csmonitor.com/Technology/2016/0203/
Why-many-low-income-families-haveInternet-access-but-remain-under-connected. ........................................... 14
Michael Ames, Captive Market,
Harpers Magazine (Feb. 2015),
https://archive.harpers.org/2015/02/pdf/
HarpersMagazine-2015-02-0085313.pdf?AWSAccessKeyId=
AKIAJUM7PFZHQ4PMJ4LA&Expires=1551898707
&Signature=bOoKF2JXGHOfTzFxkIkiZiGOp44%3D. .......................... 11
National Household Travel Survey, Mobility Challenges for
Households in Poverty, (2014),
https://nhts.ornl.gov/briefs/PovertyBrief.pdf. ........................................... 14

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No More Deaths, Shakedown: How Deportation
Robs Immigrants of Their Money and Belongings 30-31 (2014),
http://nomoredeaths.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/12/Shakedownwithcover.pdf. ............................................................................................ 20
Nuala Sawyer, Late-Night Jail Releases Under Fire
(Aug. 8, 2018), http://www.sfweekly.com/news/
late-night-jail-releases-under-fire/ ............................................................. 19
Peter Wagner & Bernadette Rabuy, Following the Money of Mass
Incarceration, Prison Policy Initiative (January 25, 2017),
https://www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/money.html. .................................... 9
Peter Wagner & Bernadette Rabuy, Mass Incarceration:
The Whole Pie 2017, Prison Policy Initiative (March 14, 2017),
https://www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/pie2017.html. .................................. 9
Rachel Chason, Doing time far from home, D.C. prisoners
face extra barriers to rehabilitation,
Washington Post (Dec. 13, 2017),
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/
dc-politics/incarcerated-in-federal-prisons-far-from-homedc-prisoners-face-extra-barriers-to-rehabilitation/2017/12/
13/b57d42aa-ca5e-11e7-aa9654417592cf72_story.html?utm_term=.e975f1d20ae1 .............................. 18
Rupert Neate, Welcome to Jail Inc: How Private Companies
Make Money Off US Prisons, The Guardian (June 16, 2016),
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2016/jun/16/
us-prisons-jail-private-healthcare-companies-profit. ................................ 10
Shivani Tomar, The Psychological Effects of Incarceration on
Inmates: Can We Promote Positive Emotion in Inmates,
Delhi Psychiatry Journal (Apr. 2013),
http://medind.nic.in/daa/t13/i1/daat13i1p66.pdf. ...................................... 18
Steven Renderos and Ramla Sahid, How the Government’s
Surveillance Practices Criminalize Communities of Color,
Colorlines (Jul. 20, 2018),
https://www.colorlines.com/articles/how-governmentssurveillance-practices-criminalize-communities-color-opinion. .............. 23

v

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Taylor Elizabeth Eldridge, The Big Business of Prisoner Care Packages,
The Marshall Project (Dec. 21, 2017),
https://www.themarshallproject.org/2017/12/20/thebig-business-of-prisoner-care-packages. ................................................... 10
TriMet, Honored Citizen Fares,
https://trimet.org/fares/honoredcitizen.htm
(low-income riders pay $1.25 for a single bus
ride in Multnomah County) (last accessed March 6, 2019) ...................... 15
Urban Justice Center and Corrections Accountability Project,
The Prison Industrial Complex: Mapping
Private Sector Players (April 2018),
https://static1.squarespace.com/static/58e127cb
1b10e31ed45b20f4/t/5ade0281f950b7ab293c86a6/
1524499083424/The+Prison+Industrial+Complex++Mapping+Private+Sector+Players+%28April+2018%29.pdf. ............... 10
Victoria Law, $15 for 15 Minutes: How Courts Are Letting
Prison Phone Companies Gouge Incarcerated People,
The Intercept (June 16, 2017),
https://theintercept.com/2017/06/16/fcc-prisonphone-call-rates-court-deregulate-trump/.................................................. 10
William Wan, Think crowded jails are an urban problem?
A new study says rural jails are growing fastest,
Washington Post (June 13, 2017),
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/thinkcrowded-jails-are-an-urban-problem-a-new-studysays-rural-jails-are-growing-fastest/2017/06/13/08cd91e2-4f
be-11e7-be25-3a519335381c_story.html?utm_term=.9e425cb62e1b. .... 18

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I.

INTRODUCTION

Amici curiae 1 International CURE (Citizens United for Rehabilitation of
Errants), Equal Justice Under Law, The Florida Institutional Legal Services Project
of Florida Legal Services, The Legal Aid Society, The National Police
Accountability Project, Public Counsel, The San Francisco Public Defender’s
Office, The Southern Poverty Law Center, Texas Civil Rights Project, Working
Narratives, and University of California Davis School of Law Immigration Law
Clinic2 submit this brief in support of Plaintiff-Appellant Danica Brown and the
thousands of people who will be harmed if the district court’s decision in this case
stands.
To aid the Court in its assessment of the district court’s summary judgment
ruling, amici seek to add the perspective of the populations they serve—people
most commonly entangled in the criminal justice system—to show the real-world
limitations of Defendant-Appellee Stored Value Cards, Inc.’s (“Numi”) debit
release cards that make it nearly impossible to avoid the card’s fees.

1

Amici curiae file this brief pursuant to Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 29.
Amici curiae state that no counsel for any party has authored this brief in whole or
in part; no party or a party’s counsel has contributed money that was intended to
fund preparing or submitting this brief; no person—other than the amici curiae or
its counsel—contributed money that was intended to fund preparing or submitting
this brief.
2
A list with descriptions of proposed amici is attached as Appendix A.
1

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The question for the Court is whether the district court wrongly concluded
that no permanent taking occurs when a person released from a correctional facility
has no other option but to accept the return of their money in the form of Numi’s
debit release card, which bears numerous, unavoidable fees designed to consume a
substantial amount of their money. When the practical implications of Numi’s
cards are taken into account, it is clear that cards are not the functional equivalent
of cash they replace and the district court erred in granting summary judgment on
Plaintiff’s per se takings claim. Amici urge this Court to reverse.
The district court’s ruling does not take into account that Numi capitalizes
on and profits from the particular vulnerabilities of those released from
incarceration. Traditionally, at the time of release, correctional facilities returned
any money people possessed at booking or accrued during incarceration in the
form of cash or check. Often, this is the only money releasees 3 have available
when leaving incarceration, and they need it to pay for basic and immediate needs:
transportation, food, and housing, to list a few.
Numi convinced Multnomah County and others like it to provide releasees
their money in the form of Numi’s debit release cards, which include unreasonably

3

People are released from incarceration under a number of circumstances,
including being released from jail on bail pending the outcome of a criminal
proceeding, after completing a term in prison, or being released from immigration
detention to deportation. The brief will collectively refer to this population as
“releasees.”
2

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high fees that are designed to be unavoidable, particularly given the specific and
numerous challenges people face upon release from incarceration. Numi is able to
extract such high fees because it enjoys monopolistic power over the terms
associated with its cards, including the fees, which are foisted on releasees without
a cash or check alternative option.
In granting summary judgment, the district court wrongly concluded that the
card Numi provides to a person upon release does not constitute a per se taking
because it is the “functional equivalent” of the money it replaced. (ER 44.) The
district court also incorrectly found that accessing money was “ridiculously easy”
because Plaintiff Brown could withdraw the full value of her money using the card
at any Mastercard-affiliated bank without a fee. (ER 41-42.) 4 But there is nothing
“ridiculously easy” about avoiding fees for people released from this country’s
criminal justice and immigrant detention systems who are overwhelmingly poor. 5
Indeed, Numi was able to charge service fees to nearly 80% of releasees who were

4

The district court did not address Plaintiff’s argument in the alternative that the
release card was an invasive regulatory taking that substantially affected her ability
to use her money. (ER 37-45.)
5
See Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, Contracting for Indigent
Defense Services: A Special Report 3 n.1 (2000) (estimating that 60% to 90% of
criminal cases nationwide involve indigent defendants); Katherine Beckett &
Alexes Harris, On Cash and Conviction: Monetary Sanctions as Misguided Policy,
10 Criminology & Pub. Pol. 509, 516 (2011) (“Criminal defendants are
overwhelmingly poor . . .”).
3

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given cards. That statistic belies any characterization of the avoidance of fees as
“ridiculously easy.”
For the people amici serve, there are few, if any, benefits of Numi’s high-fee
cards and the transactional costs associated with them are substantial—especially
compared to the relatively small amounts of money they contain. Releasees face
immediate, urgent needs and, in comparison to the general population, are
financially unsophisticated and lack the resources to avoid Numi’s fees. They are
likely to have limited or no access to the internet, transportation, and bank
accounts. They are also likely to experience substantial stress and trauma from
their incarceration and may suffer from mental health or substance abuse problems.
Any one of these vulnerabilities presents urgent challenges upon release that may
affect a person’s ability to absorb information and make rational, informed
decisions on how to access their money to avoid fees. Moreover, some releasees
are deported to another country, where it is difficult to access money at all.
Numi understands and exploits these particular vulnerabilities of releasees,
charging fees that are intentionally structured to be difficult to avoid for this
population. One egregious example is the $5.95 “monthly” maintenance fee the
Numi charges a mere five days after a person is released—a time period that is
particularly critical and challenging to survival for releasees. Numi also charges a
fee to check a balance on an ATM machine, a fee to withdraw money from an
4

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ATM, and a fee when a purchase is declined due to insufficient funds or an
incorrect PIN. Once a card has a balance of less than $20, releasees are
functionally barred from withdrawing money from an ATM. And if they want to
withdraw money from a bank, releasees must identify a Mastercard-affiliated
bank—which is not readily apparent to most people—and go to the bank during
business hours. Withdrawals from non-Mastercard-affiliated bank will incur fees.
In short, because fees are basically unavoidable for the releasee population,
the cards are worth less than the money they replace, meaning Numi’s cards are far
from the functional equivalent of cash. The cards are not the functional equivalent
of cash for other reasons. Numi requires releasees to give up sensitive financial and
personal information if a releasee wants to have her money transferred to her bank
or to track her balance, which constitutes a government-forced erosion of privacy
that itself has additional risks, given the rise and frequency of widespread data
breaches. Thus, only when considered in a vacuum would the costs and benefits of
Numi’s cards amount to a “wash,” as the district court concluded. (ER 41.) Amici
respectfully requests that this Court reverse the district court’s ruling which
directly harms the most vulnerable people in our communities.
II.

BACKGROUND

Rather than return releasees’ money by cash or check, Numi convinced
Multnomah County to allow Numi to return releasees’ money in the form of pre5

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activated debit cards that carry unreasonable and excessive fees. These fees are
exceedingly difficult for releasees to avoid, significantly disproportionate to any
purported benefits, and unrelated to the costs of maintaining the accounts. In short,
Numi’s cards are designed to maximize Numi’s profits by making it prohibitively
difficult for releasees to access their full balance on the cards.
Most notably, Numi charges releasees exorbitant “monthly” maintenance
fees of $5.95 only five days after activating the card—when releasees are likely
still trying to meet immediate housing, food, and transportation needs. Numi also
charges numerous other fees that do not appear to have any relationship to the cost
of doing business. The following chart lists the fees that Numi charges under this
profit-generating scheme:
Fee
Amount
$5.95

Fee Description
Monthly service charge (which first occurs only 5 calendar
days after activation)

$9.95

Fee for requesting the balance of the card via check

$2.95

ATM withdrawal fee (in addition to any fee charged by the
ATM terminal)

$4.95

International ATM withdrawal fee (which is in addition to any
surcharges that the ATM operator may assess)

$4.95

Bank cash advance fee

$1.00

ATM balance inquiry fee

6

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$1.50

ATM international balance inquiry fee

$1.95

Declined ATM transaction fee

$0.50

Automated consumer service inquiry fee (the first is free)

$3.95

Live consumer service inquiry (the first is free)

$3.00

Paper statement fee

$0.95

Fee for each transaction declined for insufficient funds or
incorrect PIN

(ER 615.)
The district court nevertheless found that the transactional costs of the
release cards are “outweighed or equaled by [their] benefits.” (ER 39.) That is, the
district court concluded that the “transactional costs here . . . are small in either
direction, de minimus such that . . . they [don’t] matter ultimately . . . [and are] a
wash here in [the] functional equivalency analysis.” (ER 41.) In reaching this
finding, the district court noted as “very important” that getting cash was
“ridiculously easy to do” because it involved going to a Mastercard-affiliated bank
and withdrawing the funds. (ER 41-42.)
But what a Mastercard-affiliated bank is or how to locate one is not selfevident. And Numi’s fees include a $4.95 “bank cash advance fee,” which makes
the mistake of withdrawing from a non-Mastercard-affiliated bank all the more
consequential. The district court’s holding also ignores the time and monetary
costs of transportation involved in traveling to such a bank during business hours.
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Further, to avoid the first fee of $5.95 for “monthly” maintenance, a releasee must,
within five days of receiving the card, use the funds entirely or transfer the funds
by registering with Numi online and providing sensitive personal and financial
information or finding a Mastercard-affiliated bank to withdraw their money. In
short, there is a fee, or prohibitive transactional cost, with every means of
accessing or using one’s own money. Cash, of course, would not impose any of
these fees or restrictions on a releasee’s use.
Plaintiff Danica Love Brown filed this class action, on behalf of herself and
a nationwide class of similarly situated individuals, to redress injuries that she and
thousands of others have suffered and continue to suffer as a result of Numi’s
extortionate practices.
III.

ARGUMENT

In granting summary judgment on Plaintiff’s takings claim, the district court
did not appreciate the practical implications of Numi’s predatory release card
practices on a particularly vulnerable releasee population. That is, the district court
ignored the serious impediments that releasees face in accessing their money
without fees, including but not limited to lack of affordable transportation, internet
access, and the immediate need to find food, safety, and shelter. Given the urgent
survival needs that these individuals must meet upon release from incarceration,
accessing funds without unnecessary and unreasonable fees is not a simple task.
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When considered in context of the experiences and needs of releasees, Numi’s fees
are significant and unavoidable—not de minimus and voluntarily assumed.
A.

Numi’s debit release card program is part of a larger “captive market”
industry that outsources correctional services to private companies
It is worth first considering the backdrop behind Numi’s debit release card

program. 641,000 people exit state prison and people enter county jails over 11
million times each year. 6 At any given point, more than 2.3 million people are
incarcerated in correctional facilities in the United States, giving it the highest
incarceration rate in the world. 7 Given this incarceration rate and “churn” of people
in and out of the system, the correctional system alone costs $81 billion annually. 8
Recognizing the potential for substantial profits, private companies have birthed a
new industry to tap the enormous flow of funds through prisons, jails, and
detention facilities

6

See Peter Wagner & Bernadette Rabuy, Mass Incarceration: The Whole Pie
2017, Prison Policy Initiative (March 14, 2017),
https://www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/pie2017.html.
7
This includes state and federal prisons, local and Indian County jails, juvenile
correctional facilities, as well as in military prisons, immigration detention
facilities, civil commitment centers, and prisons in the U.S. territories. See id.
8
Peter Wagner & Bernadette Rabuy, Following the Money of Mass Incarceration,
Prison Policy Initiative (January 25, 2017),
https://www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/money.html.
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through the outsourcing of healthcare, 9 phone calls, 10 commissary items, 11 family
visits, 12 and even care packages.13
The increasing privatization of the correctional industry creates perverse
incentives to maximize revenue by encouraging overcrowding and poor living
conditions. 14 Thus, increasingly, in a system that permits more than 3,100
corporations to profit off of people in jails and prisons,15 the ones who shoulder the

9

Rupert Neate, Welcome to Jail Inc: How Private Companies Make Money Off US
Prisons, The Guardian (June 16, 2016), https://www.theguardian.com/usnews/2016/jun/16/us-prisons-jail-private-healthcare-companies-profit.
10
Victoria Law, $15 for 15 Minutes: How Courts Are Letting Prison Phone
Companies Gouge Incarcerated People, The Intercept (June 16, 2017),
https://theintercept.com/2017/06/16/fcc-prison-phone-call-rates-court-deregulatetrump/.
11
Jerry Mitchell, Mississippi, Companies Profit Off Inmates, Families, Clarion
Ledger (Nov. 21, 2015),
https://www.clarionledger.com/story/news/2015/11/21/mississippi-companiesprofit-off-inmates-families/75884224/.
12
Brian Alexander, When Prisoners Are a ‘Revenue Opportunity,’ The Atlantic
(Aug. 10, 2017), https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2017/08/remotevideo-visitation/535095/.
13
Taylor Elizabeth Eldridge, The Big Business of Prisoner Care Packages, The
Marshall Project (Dec. 21, 2017),
https://www.themarshallproject.org/2017/12/20/the-big-business-of-prisoner-carepackages.
14
American Civil Liberties Union, Warehoused and Forgotten: Immigrants
Trapped in Our Shadow Private Prison System (June 2014)
https://www.aclu.org/sites/default/files/field_document/060614-aclu-carreportonline.pdf.
15
Urban Justice Center and Corrections Accountability Project, The Prison
Industrial Complex: Mapping Private Sector Players (April 2018),
https://static1.squarespace.com/static/58e127cb1b10e31ed45b20f4/t/5ade0281f950
b7ab293c86a6/1524499083424/The+Prison+Industrial+Complex++Mapping+Private+Sector+Players+%28April+2018%29.pdf.
10

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heaviest burden and are hurt the most are incarcerated people and their families.
Private vendors capitalize on a literally captive population, where no free market or
competition exists to drive prices down or incentivize better services. 16 Companies
take advantage of this vulnerable population, knowing that incarcerated individuals
and their families disproportionately lack the political power and resources
necessary to challenge these exploitative practices. 17
B.

Like other private companies involved in providing services to
correctional facilities, Numi imposes numerous unavoidable fees on its
cards that render them substantially less valuable than cash
Numi’s release cards are a prime example of private companies capitalizing

on incarcerated individuals and their families by forcing them to pay unnecessary
and exorbitant fees for the sole purpose of generating profit.
As background, Multnomah County, like many state and local governments,
contracts with Numi to provide pre-activated release cards to releasees that contain
money from their inmate trust accounts. But Numi’s release cards are different,
and more exploitative in some sense, than other correctional services outsourced to

16

Michael Ames, Captive Market, Harper’s Magazine (Feb. 2015),
https://archive.harpers.org/2015/02/pdf/HarpersMagazine-2015-020085313.pdf?AWSAccessKeyId=AKIAJUM7PFZHQ4PMJ4LA&Expires=155189
8707&Signature=bOoKF2JXGHOfTzFxkIkiZiGOp44%3D.
17
Ashley Hackett, Thousands of Privately Owned Companies Are Profiting from
the U.S. Prison System, Pacific Standard (Apr. 27, 2018),
https://psmag.com/social-justice/thousands-of-privately-owned-companies-areprofiting-from-the-us-prison-system.
11

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private companies. That is, the one service that Numi provides is returning
releasees their own money. But Numi then imposes a fee schedule and usage
requirements that make it extremely difficult, if not practically impossible, for
releasees to access their own money without incurring excessive fees.
As a threshold matter, Numi charges a $5.95 “monthly” fee that is really a
misnomer because it is first charged just five days after activation. Accordingly,
the only way to avoid this fee is if a releasee: 1) has online access and an existing
bank account to transfer all of her funds within five days of card activation; 2)
finds a Mastercard-affiliated bank and withdraw all funds within five days of card
activation; or 3) spends all of her money in point of sale transactions within five
days of card activation.
All three scenarios present obstacles that cash or a check do not. And when
the person is poor, unbanked 18 and financially illiterate, mentally unstable, battling
an addiction, suffering from acute stress, or facing deportation, like many of
amici’s clients, those obstacles can be nearly insurmountable. In that sense, Numi
imposes fees on a particularly vulnerable population for no other reason than it
can.

18

The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation defines “unbanked” as having no
checking or savings account. See Fed. Deposit Ins. Corp., FDIC National Survey
of Unbanked and Underbanked Households (2017),
https://www.fdic.gov/householdsurvey/2017/2017report.pdf.
12

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i.

Because of barriers people in poverty routinely face, many people
released from incarceration cannot avoid Numi’s fees

Poverty drives many of the challenges that releasees face upon incarceration,
which make it difficult for them to access their money in a way that avoids fees.
To avoid fees, releasees need to spend all their money, go online to create an
account on Numi’s website and transfer money, or travel to a bank to withdraw
money. But releasees, disproportionately poor,19 may have difficulty accessing
modern-day necessities, including the internet and transportation, that are required
to make any of these tasks easy. In that sense, avoiding Numi’s fees is not just
mildly inconvenient, but practically prohibitive or impossible for many releasees.
Specifically, approximately 15% of Americans lack internet access and 13%
of Americans have access only through their smartphones. 20 Moreover, internet
access through a phone does not mean uninterrupted access: Among families that
use a phone to go online, 24% had their phone service cut off because they could

19

Reports indicate that people in state prison have a median annual income of just
$19,185 prior to their incarceration, which is 41% less than people who have not
been incarcerated. See Bernadette Rabuy & Daniel Kopf, Prisons of Poverty:
Uncovering the Pre-Incarceration Incomes of the Imprisoned, Prison Policy
Initiative (July 9, 2015), https://www.prisonpolicy.org/reports/income.html.
20
Max Lewontin, As More Americans Go Smartphone-Only, High-Speed Internet
Becomes a Luxury, The Christian Science Monitor (Dec. 22, 2015),
https://www.csmonitor.com/Technology/2015/1222/As-more-Americans-gosmartphone-only-high-speed-Internet-becomes-a-luxury.
13

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not afford their bills. 21 And transportation costs, which rise each year, have a
disproportionate impact on people in poverty. 22 Indeed, people in poverty take
three times as many trips on public transit and are less likely to own a vehicle.23
In practical terms, withdrawing or transferring money from Numi’s cards
means having to pay an expensive phone bill (to access the internet) and finding
bus or gas money (to go to and from a bank)—all within five days of being
released from incarceration. That is far from a simple task for someone living on
the margins.
Other challenges faced by releasees impact their ability to avoid fees. Just as
poverty affects internet and transportation access, it also impacts a person’s
financial literacy and access to banking. A study of people in Arkansas correctional
facilities found that 27% had never opened a checking account, and 16.8% had
never opened an account of any kind in a bank. 24 And over a third could not
correctly answer this question: “If you put $100 in a bank account paying 5 percent

21

Max Lewontin, Why Many Low-Income Families Have Internet Access, But
Remain ‘Under-Connected,’ The Christian Science Monitor (Feb. 3, 2016),
https://www.csmonitor.com/Technology/2016/0203/Why-many-low-incomefamilies-have-Internet-access-but-remain-under-connected.
22
National Household Travel Survey, Mobility Challenges for Households in
Poverty, (2014), https://nhts.ornl.gov/briefs/PovertyBrief.pdf.
23
Id.
24
David Koon, New UALR Survey Finds a Lack of Basic ‘Financial Literacy’
Among Inmates, Arkansas Times (June 19, 2014),
https://www.arktimes.com/arkansas/new-ualr-survey-finds-a-lack-of-basicfinancial-literacy-among-inmates/Content?oid=3351524.
14

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interest, how much will you have in your account after one year?”25 Given this
backdrop, Numi’s options to transfer money to a bank or to go to a bank to
withdraw money are simply not practical for many of amici’s clients—particularly
within a five-day timeframe.
As described briefly above, Veronica Thompson’s experience reflects the
substantial, not de minimis, transactional costs of Numi’s fees for poor releasees. 26
Like Plaintiff Brown, Ms. Thompson was arrested and placed in jail in Multnomah
County, giving up $15.50 in cash. When Ms. Johnson was released the next
morning, Multnomah County gave her a Numi release card with $15.50 on it. Ms.
Thompson tried to get cash back at a convenience store near the jail but the cashier
refused her. Without money, she had to walk three miles home. And before she
could use up all of the money, Numi took $5.95 as a “monthly” fee, eating up the
remaining balance. That $5.95 is not inconsequential. Not only does $5.95 amount
to 38% of the total Ms. Thompson possessed, it is also the cost of nearly four rides
on the local bus line offered by Multnomah County27 or the cost of a hot meal at a
fast food restaurant. In short, Ms. Thompson’s experience with Numi’s release

25

Id.
Arun Gupta, The Financial Firm that Cornered the Market on Jails, The Nation
(Aug. 1, 2016), https://www.thenation.com/article/the-financial-firm-thatcornered-the-market-on-jails/.
27
TriMet, Honored Citizen Fares, available at
https://trimet.org/fares/honoredcitizen.htm (low-income riders pay $1.25 for a
single bus ride in Multnomah County) (last accessed March 6, 2019).
26

15

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cards demonstrates how easily fees are sustained by poor releasees and are far from
“voluntary,” as Numi suggests.
ii.

People released from incarceration face disproportionate
challenges that make it difficult to make informed decisions on
avoiding fees

Compounding the barriers imposed by poverty are the wide and diverse
range of other challenges many releasees face that make it even more difficult to
focus on avoiding fees associated with release cards.
Take Philip Kramer’s experience upon release as an example.28 During an
opioid and cocaine relapse, Mr. Kramer was arrested and booked into a jail for a
traffic violation in Las Vegas. He was incarcerated for a month, during which time
he received no treatment for his addiction, which only served to lower his tolerance
to opioids. A few days after he was released, with his now lower opioid tolerance,
Mr. Kramer overdosed, was hospitalized, and was then sent home. A few days
later, he overdosed again and, within days, passed away. Similarly, Los Angeles
County Jail released Derrick Thomas, diagnosed with post-traumatic stress
disorder, paranoid schizophrenia, and traumatic brain injury, at 2 a.m. 29 Officers

28

Elizabeth Brico, What It’s Like to Detox in Jail, Tonic (Nov. 20, 2018),
https://tonic.vice.com/en_us/article/5988q3/what-its-like-to-detox-in-jail.
29
Madison Pauly, Los Angeles County Has Agreed to Try to Fix Its “Jail to Skid
Row” Problem, Mother Jones (Dec. 12, 2018),
https://www.motherjones.com/crime-justice/2018/12/los-angeles-county-jailmental-health-settlement/.
16

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threatened Thomas with re-arrest if he did not get off jail property. With no place
to go at that late hour, and without any counseling or housing assistance, Mr.
Thomas walked over to Skid Row and spent the night—which he described as
“cold as hell”—under cardboard. Mr. Thomas then spent weeks trying to fill his
PTSD medication, a task made difficult because he lost his identification.
Mr. Kramer and Mr. Thomas faced immediate and life-threatening
challenges upon release and their experiences are not unusual. 30 Under these
common circumstances, avoiding Numi’s fees is simply not a focus. Immediate
and urgent challenges, such as filling medication or avoiding a relapse, make it
more difficult, if not impossible, for many releasees to prioritize identifying ways
to use release cards to avoid fees.
More broadly, releasees, even those without mental health and substance
abuse issues, suffer from acute stress of incarceration. Incarceration induces a

30

Indeed, a substantial percentage of people in correctional facilities experience
mental health and substance abuse issues. Approximately 2 million people with
serious mental illnesses are booked into jail each year; stated otherwise, 14.5% of
men and 31.0% of women booked into jail have a serious mental illness. Henry J.
Steadman et al., Prevalence of Serious Mental Illness Among Jail Inmates,
Psychiatric Services (June 2009),
https://ps.psychiatryonline.org/doi/pdf/10.1176/ps.2009.60.6.761. Likewise, 63%
to 83% of adult men in a study of five major American cities tested positive for at
least one drug in their system at the time of arrest and entrance in jail. Dana Hunt
et al., ADAM II 2013 Annual Report: Arrestee Drug Abuse Monitoring Program II,
National Criminal Justice Reference Service (Jan. 2014),
https://www.ncjrs.gov/App/Publications/abstract.aspx?ID=269191.
17

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number of negative psychological effects, including depression, anxiety, stress, and
delusions.31 These psychological consequences have a direct impact on cognition
and information processing.32 Thus the trauma of incarceration diminishes a
person’s ability to focus on and digest details related to Numi’s debit release cards.
And there are other practical challenges releasees face. Yet another example
is the fact that releasees are oftentimes released at night. Both Mr. Thomas and
Plaintiff Brown were released from jail at 2 a.m. (ER 292 ¶ 51.) Indeed, it is all too
common for jails to be in remote areas or areas far away from releasees’ homes or
shelter, and to release people at night.33 For example, Santa Rita Jail in Dublin,

31

See Shivani Tomar, The Psychological Effects of Incarceration on Inmates: Can
We Promote Positive Emotion in Inmates, Delhi Psychiatry Journal (Apr. 2013),
http://medind.nic.in/daa/t13/i1/daat13i1p66.pdf.
32
See Carmen Sandi, Stress and Cognition, Wiley Interdisc. Rev. Cogn. Sci. 245,
245-46 (May 2013).
33
See, e.g., Rachel Chason, Doing time far from home, D.C. prisoners face extra
barriers to rehabilitation, Washington Post (Dec. 13, 2017),
https://www.washingtonpost.com/local/dc-politics/incarcerated-in-federal-prisonsfar-from-home-dc-prisoners-face-extra-barriers-torehabilitation/2017/12/13/b57d42aa-ca5e-11e7-aa9654417592cf72_story.html?utm_term=.e975f1d20ae1; Kasey Bubnash, No free
rides: Detainees released late at night from Santa Barbara County Jail don't get a ride
home anymore, including those from North County, Santa Maria Sun (Aug. 29, 2017),
http://www.santamariasun.com/cover/16440/no-free-rides-detainees-released-late-atnight-from-santa-barbara-county-jail-dont-get-a-ride-home-anymore-including-thosefrom-north-county/; William Wan, Think crowded jails are an urban problem? A
new study says rural jails are growing fastest, Washington Post (June 13, 2017),
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national/think-crowded-jails-are-an-urbanproblem-a-new-study-says-rural-jails-are-growing-fastest/2017/06/13/08cd91e24fbe-11e7-be25-3a519335381c_story.html?utm_term=.9e425cb62e1b.
18

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California has a standard practice of releasing people at 1 a.m., even though the jail
is a two-mile, 40-minute walk to the closest subway station which starts running at
5 a.m. 34
Released late at night, and in unfamiliar neighborhoods far away from home
or shelter to walk, releasees may be forced to withdraw cash from a debit card at
an ATM and sustain a fee in order to get money for a cab. Under these
circumstances, it strains credulity to characterize incurring fees as voluntary.
In short, there are numerous, and all too common, challenges that make
avoiding fees an insurmountable task. Many releasees often have to focus on other
immediate concerns, including finding shelter, obtaining medication, finding
transportation, or managing drug withdrawal. Given these challenges, avoiding
fees by finding a Mastercard-affiliated bank or transferring all money to a bank
account is far from a “ridiculously easy” task.
iii.

People deported after release find release cards largely unusable,
which benefits Numi’s bottom line

For many releasees deported upon release from incarceration, Numi’s
release cards effectively deprive them of the entirety of their money. Many people
are not able to access their money internationally—ATMs may not permit

34

Nuala Sawyer, Late-Night Jail Releases Under Fire (Aug. 8, 2018),
http://www.sfweekly.com/news/late-night-jail-releases-under-fire/
19

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withdrawals and stores may not accept the cards for purchases.35 And entities that
do accept the card invariably require exorbitant international exchange fees, among
other fees.36
Martin Quintana-Cerna’s experience demonstrates how Numi’s release card
scheme is uniquely structured to deprive people released to deportation of their
money. After Mr. Quintana-Cerna was deported to Tijuana in April 2015, he had
$9.90 on a Numi card. A denied withdrawal from an ATM cost him $3.45 in fees,
even more than the $1.95 it would have cost him in the United States. Attempting
to access the remaining $6.45 was futile because $4.95 would be deducted as an
international ATM fee, in addition to a 3% foreign transaction fee and the local
ATM fee. 37 Under this commonplace scenario, Numi’s release card loaded with
$9.90 in no way functions the same as $9.90 in cash and instead results in a
windfall for Numi.
The multiple barriers the releasee population face function as a practical bar
to obtaining releasees’ money without fees. Indeed, Numi has charged service fees
to nearly 80% of releasees who were given cards. (ER 301¶14.) Numi’s release

35

No More Deaths, Shakedown: How Deportation Robs Immigrants of Their
Money and Belongings 30-31 (2014), http://nomoredeaths.org/wpcontent/uploads/2014/12/Shakedown-withcover.pdf.
36
Id.
37
Arun Gupta, The Financial Firm that Cornered the Market on Jails, The Nation
(Aug. 1, 2016), https://www.thenation.com/article/the-financial-firm-thatcornered-the-market-on-jails/.
20

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cards, therefore, are not the functional equivalent to cash and are worth
substantially less. Cash simply does not impose similar fees on a marginalized
population with limited means to avoid them.
C.

Compounding the substantial costs of Numi’s cards is the fact that the
card is a forced contract that threatens the privacy of already
marginalized people
There are other attributes of the release cards that render it inferior to cash or

check. First, because releasees must accept Numi’s cards or forego their money,
the release cards function as a forced contract. Without any real bargaining power,
Plaintiff Brown and other releasees are forced to accept the terms of release cards.
Given that the release cards are forced on releasees, there is no incentive for
Numi to lower its fees. Without any competition from other financial services
companies and no option to get money in the form of cash or check, Numi can
charge fees in an exploitative manner that most people, under other circumstances,
would not accept. That is, Numi’s fee schedule depends on having a captive—
literally—customer base without any meaningful choice to opt out. And these fees
tend to be higher than similar cards available to consumers. 38

38

Catherine E. Akenhead, How States Can Take A Stand Against Prison Banking
Profiteers, 85 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 1224, 1240 (2017) (citing Prison Policy
Initiative, Comment Letter on Proposed Amendments to Regulation E 4 (Mar. 18,
2015), http://static.prisonpolicy.org/releasecards/CFPB-comment; Eli
McCormick, The Best Prepaid Debit Cards of 2017, Top Ten Reviews,
http://prepaid-debit-cards-review.toptenreviews.com/ [https://perma.cc/QCE6UDXL].
21

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Most notably, Numi can charge a “monthly” maintenance fee of $5.95 just
five days after activation, which Numi could not likely charge to the general
population that can seek business elsewhere. In addition to the fees, the Numi
Cardholder Agreement has an arbitration provision which Numi wields to compel
releasees into arbitration, notwithstanding the fact that releasees have been forced
to accept a release card and thus have not voluntarily agreed to arbitrate. (See ER
933, Dkt. 22.)
Releasees are not only forced to accept oppressive terms and fees, they must
give up their privacy to avail themselves of Numi’s touted benefits and to avoid
certain fees. Numi charges $0.95 if a purchase is declined for insufficient funds
and $1.00 to track a card’s balance on an ATM. 39 Thus the only way to track a
balance, while avoiding an insufficient funds fee and an ATM balance inquiry fee,
is to sign up for an online account with Numi and provide sensitive personal and
financial information in the process. Likewise, a releasee would have to create an
online account if she would like to transfer money to a bank account. Finally, if a
person wants to avail himself of lost or stolen card protections, he must also create
an online account.
And not only does a releasee have to give Numi sensitive information to set
up an online account, but such an account also enables Numi to track a person’s

39

See supra Section II.
22

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spending activity. Further, importantly, in this age of multiple widespread data
breaches, releasees’ private information is vulnerable to identity theft.40 Identity
theft renders all people vulnerable to financial loss, but for low-income people, the
consequences can be even more devastating, including harassment from debt
collection companies, child support garnishments to collect on unpaid debt, and
wrongful arrests. 41
This disregard for releasees’ privacy is part of a broader, historical pattern of
disregarding the boundaries and privacy of marginalized people. Marginalized
people are subject to numerous erosions of their privacy when, for example, they
apply for food stamps, Medicaid, or public housing. Those erosions include forced
DNA tests, fingerprinting, and intrusive questioning into private relationships. 42
And the public has come to understand that poor neighborhoods and communities
of color are routinely over-surveilled and over-policed. 43 In this context, requiring
releasees to divulge sensitive information to Numi is ostensibly de minimis but fits

40

Matthew Goldberg, 13 Data Breaches That Stung US Consumers, Bankrate.com
(Nov. 30, 2018), https://www.bankrate.com/finance/banking/us-data-breaches1.aspx#slide=12.
41
Mary Madden et. al., Privacy, Poverty, and Big Data: A Matrix of
Vulnerabilities for Poor Americans, 95 Wash. U.L. Rev. 53, 62–63 (2017).
42
Id. at 59.
43
See Steven Renderos and Ramla Sahid, How the Government’s Surveillance
Practices Criminalize Communities of Color, Colorlines (Jul. 20, 2018),
https://www.colorlines.com/articles/how-governments-surveillance-practicescriminalize-communities-color-opinion.
23

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with a larger pattern of ignoring the privacy harms marginalized people uniquely
face. Those privacy harms “even if they are not always visible, . . . are real and can
have physical and psychological impacts.” 44
Cash and checks simply do not have the same oppressive terms and privacy
harms. As such, these harms should be taken into account when determining
whether Numi’s release cards are the functional equivalent to cash or checks. For
all the reasons stated above, they are not.
IV.

CONCLUSION

For the foregoing reasons, amici urge this Court to reverse the District
Court’s summary judgment ruling.
Respectfully submitted,
/s/ Hassan Zavareei
Hassan A. Zavareei (SBN 181547)
1828 L St. NW Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20036
Telephone: 202-973-0900
hzavareei@tzlegal.com

44

Madden, et al., supra note 42.
24

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CERTIFICATE OF COMPLIANCE
1. This brief complies with the type-volume limitation of Fed. R. App. P.
29(a)(5) and 32(a)(7)(B) because the brief contains 6,474 words.
2. This brief complies with the typeface requirements of Fed. R. App. P.
32(a)(5) and the type style requirements of Fed. R. App. P. 32(a)(6) because this
brief has been prepared in a proportionally spaced typeface using Microsoft Word
for Office 365 in 14-point Times New Roman type.

/s/ Hassan Zavareei
Hassan A. Zavareei (SBN 181547)
1828 L St. NW Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20036
Telephone: 202-973-0900
hzavareei@tzlegal.com
Counsel for Amici
March 8, 2019

25

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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that, on March 8, 2019, I electronically filed the foregoing
with the Clerk of the Court for the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit by using the appellate CM/ECF system. I also certify that all other
participants in the case are registered CM/ECF users, and service will be
accomplished by the appellate CM/ECF system.

/s/ Hassan Zavareei
Hassan A. Zavareei (SBN 181547)
1828 L St. NW Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20036
Telephone: 202-973-0900
hzavareei@tzlegal.com
Counsel for Amici
March 8, 2019

26

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No. 18-35735

In the United States Court of Appeals
for the Ninth Circuit
___________________
DANICA LOVE BROWN,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
STORED VALUE CARDS, INC., D/B/A NUMI FINANCIAL, ET AL.,
Defendant-Appellee.
____________________
ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF OREGON
_____________________________________________________________
APPENDIX A OF PROPOSED BRIEF OF AMICI CURIAE IN SUPPORT
OF PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT DANICA LOVE BROWN
_____________________________________________________________
TYCKO & ZAVAREEI LLP
Hassan Zavareei (CA SBN 181547)
Anna C. Haac
Tanya S. Koshy (CA SBN 277095)
1828 L St. NW Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20036
Telephone: 202-973-0900
hzavareei@tzlegal.com
ahaac@tzlegal.com
tkoshy@tzlegal.com
Counsel for Amici Curiae

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APPENDIX A

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APPENDIX A
International CURE (Citizens United for Rehabilitation of Errants) has
been working with released prisoners for almost fifty years and has received
consultative status from the United Nations. From CURE’s experience, the key to
successful reentry is having money on release. To lose any of the release money
will result in a higher recidivism rate.
Equal Justice Under Law (“EJUL”) works to eliminate wealth-based
discrimination in the criminal justice system through litigation and advocacy.
EJUL recognizes that most incarcerated persons cannot afford ongoing legal
representation, and that cutting them off from access to the best source of free and
up-to-date information on how they may know and vindicate their rights will
disadvantage them vis-à-vis wealthier prisoners, epitomizing how access to the
justice system is restricted for those lacking financial resources.
The Florida Institutional Legal Services Project of Florida Legal
Services (“FLS”) is a non-profit that uses impact litigation, community lawyering,
and policy advocacy to defend and advance the civil rights of adults and children
who are incarcerated in prisons, jails, juvenile justice facilities, and immigration
detention centers statewide in Florida. FLS also provides re-entry assistance and
self-help resources to assist formerly incarcerated persons with obtaining access to
Appendix A-1

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housing, healthcare, and public benefits when returning to their communities. In
addition, FLS engages in legal advocacy to eliminate discriminatory barriers to
economic opportunity for persons who are formerly incarcerated that have an
unfair burden on those with low or no income.
The Legal Aid Society is a private, non-profit organization that has
provided free legal assistance to indigent New Yorkers for 130 years, and serves as
New York City’s largest public defender. Its Prisoners’ Rights Project (PRP),
founded in 1971, seeks to ensure that incarcerated people are afforded full
protection of their legal rights while incarcerated and returning to society. PRP
advocates and litigates on behalf of people confined in and released from New
York State prisons, New York City jails, and federal prisons and jails. PRP
engages in litigation (including class action litigation) to remedy unconstitutional,
unlawful, and inhumane prison conditions, including inadequate medical and
mental health treatment, mistreatment, brutality, sexual abuse and discrimination
based on disability.
The National Police Accountability Project (“NPAP”) was founded in
1999 by members of the National Lawyers Guild to address allegations of
misconduct by law-enforcement and detention-facility officials through
coordinating and assisting civil-rights lawyers representing their victims. NPAP
provides training and support for these attorneys and other legal workers, public
Appendix A-2

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education and information on issues related to law-enforcement and detentionfacility misconduct and accountability, and resources for non-profit organizations
and community groups involved with victims of such misconduct. NPAP supports
legislative efforts aimed at increasing law- enforcement and detention-facility
accountability and appears regularly as amicus curiae in cases such as this one
presenting issues of particular importance for its member lawyers and their clients.
NPAP’s members regularly represent prisoners and detainees in civil rights
litigation.
Public Counsel is the nation’s largest pro bono law firm, located in Los
Angeles, California. Its attorneys have successfully challenged excessive fees and
fines imposed on indigent defendants who cannot pay them. Public Counsel’s
Consumer Law Project also works on matters involving bail bonds, access to credit
and banking services, and criminalization of poverty.
The San Francisco Public Defender’s office accepts appointment in over
25,000 cases per year in felony, misdemeanor, and juvenile courts. Our office
represents the majority of the indigent defendant, but San Francisco also has an
active conflicts panel and private bar which handles the remaining cases. Though
this practice is not currently used in our jails, we fear the denial of this suit will
encourage the ubiquity of these cards which will be another obstacle to reentry and
rehabilitation for our clients.
Appendix A-3

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The Texas Civil Rights Project (TCRP) boldly serves the movement for
equality and justice in and out of the courts. We are Texas lawyers for Texas
communities, and we use our tools of litigation and legal advocacy to protect and
advance the civil rights of everyone in Texas. We undertake our work with a vision
of a Texas in which all communities can thrive with dignity, justice, and without
fear. Through its Criminal Justice Reform Program, TCRP represents prisoners
and persons most affected by the criminal justice system. TCRP has worked
extensively on behalf of communities that are impacted by grossly burdensome
costs imposed by our criminal justice system. Recent advocacy includes
challenging fines and fees imposed through Class C misdemeanors and traffic
tickets (the nonpayment of which may result in incarceration), working to
eliminate unconstitutional bail practices, and eliminating oppressive costs imposed
by private companies that restrict liberties and profit disproportionately from
persons with limited economic resources.
The Southern Poverty Law Center (“SPLC”) has provided pro bono civil
rights representation to low-income persons in the Southeast since 1971, with
particular focus on combating unlawful discrimination and ending poverty. The
SPLC provides educational materials, engages in policy reform, and develops
litigation to minimize the burdens placed on the poor, to ensure meaningful access
to social safety nets, and to enable upward mobility.
Appendix A-4

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Working Narratives is an arts and social justice organization that works
with prisoners, formerly incarcerated persons, their families, and policy makers to
advance positive criminal justice reform. Each year, arts and education
programming reaches thousands of prisoners. Working Narrative’s work focuses
on building connections with those inside prisons and working to create
community driven solutions.
The University of California Davis School of Law Immigration Law
Clinic (“The Clinic”) is an academic institution dedicated to defending the rights
of detained noncitizens in the United States. The Clinic provides direct
representation to detained immigrants who are placed in removal proceedings. In
addition, the Clinic screens unrepresented individuals to facilitate placement with
pro bono attorneys and presents legal orientation programs for detained individuals
in removal proceedings who are unable to obtain direct representation.

Appendix A-5

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CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
I hereby certify that, on March 8, 2019, I electronically filed the foregoing
with the Clerk of the Court for the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth
Circuit by using the appellate CM/ECF system. I also certify that all other
participants in the case are registered CM/ECF users, and service will be
accomplished by the appellate CM/ECF system.

/s/ Hassan Zavareei
Hassan A. Zavareei (SBN 181547)
1828 L St. NW Suite 1000
Washington, DC 20036
Telephone: 202-973-0900
hzavareei@tzlegal.com
Counsel for Amici
March 8, 2019

Appendix A-6



 

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