AI Case Brief
Generate an AI-powered case brief with:
šKey Facts
āļøLegal Issues
šCourt Holding
š”Reasoning
šÆSignificance
Estimated cost: $0.10ā$0.50 per brief, depending on opinion length and retries
Full Opinion
USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 1 of 111 [PUBLISH] In the United States Court of Appeals For the Eleventh Circuit ____________________ No. 24-10139 ____________________ BRUCE HENRY, Plaintiļ¬-Appellee, versus SHERIFF OF TUSCALOOSA COUNTY, ALABAMA, in his oļ¬cial capacity, DISTRICT ATTORNEY OF TUSCALOOSA COUNTY, ALABAMA, in his oļ¬cial capacity, ATTORNEY GENERAL OF THE STATE OF ALABAMA, in his oļ¬cial capacity, Defendants-Appellants. ____________________ USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 2 of 111 2 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 Appeals from the United States District Court for the Middle District of Alabama D.C. Docket No. 2:21-cv-00797-RAH-JTA ____________________ Before ROSENBAUM, ABUDU, and WILSON, Circuit Judges. ROSENBAUM, Circuit Judge: Alabama Code § 15-20A-11(d)(4) prohibits āadult sex of- fender[s]ā who have been convicted of a sex oļ¬ense involving a child from āresid[ing] or conduct[ing] an overnight visit with a mi- nor,ā including their own child. No exceptions. Plaintiļ¬-Appellee Bruce Henry, who pled guilty to one count of possessing child por- nography in 2013, challenges Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) facially and as applied to him. Henry has completed his term of imprisonment, married, and fathered a son. But Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) doesnāt allow Henry to live with his son. Henry asserts that Section 15-20A- 11(d)(4) violates his First Amendment right of intimate association and the Fourteenth Amendmentās guarantees of equal protection of the laws and due process of law. In particular, he argues that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) interferes with āperhaps the oldest of the fundamental liberty interestsā that the Fourteenth Amendment se- cures, the āfundamental right of parents to make decisions con- cerning the care, custody, and control of their children,ā Troxel v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57, 65ā66 (2000) (plurality opinion), which USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 3 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 3 includes the right to āestablish a home and bring up children,ā Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390, 399 (1923). We agree. To be sure, Alabama has a compelling reason for its law: to protect children. And certainly some sex oļ¬enders should never have the chance to be near children, including their own. But Alabama has not narrowly tailored its law to achieve its goal. The law oļ¬ers no escape hatch whatsoever. So a person whoās been convicted of a qualifying oļ¬ense has no chance to avoid the lawās prohibition by proving that they wouldnāt be dangerous to their child. Rather, in every case without fail, Alabamaās law pro- hibits sex oļ¬enders whoāve been convicted of a qualifying oļ¬ense from residing with their child, even if the individual can prove they present no risk to their child. As a result, it deprives some individ- uals convicted of qualifying oļ¬enses of their fundamental right to establish a home and bring up their own children, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. And it deprives some children in Al- abama of the presence of a parent who may be ļ¬t to lovingly care for and raise them. To understand the vast breadth of Section 15-20A-11(d)(4), consider, for instance, a college freshman convicted of download- ing sexually explicit photos their high-school partner sent them. Under Alabamaās law, that person will necessarily never be able to reside with their child, even if that college freshman does not be- come a parent until decades after graduating and even if that col- lege freshman never engages in any other sex oļ¬ense. The USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 4 of 111 4 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 Fourteenth Amendment doesnāt allow for the automatic removal of a parentās fundamental right to establish a home and raise their child in every circumstance that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) imposes that penalty. So after careful consideration, and with the beneļ¬t of oral argument, we aļ¬rm the district courtās holding that Section 15- 20A-11(d)(4) impermissibly burdens Henryās fundamental rights to āestablish a home and bring up children.ā Id. at 399. But thereās an easy ļ¬x for Alabama to defeat as-applied chal- lenges like Henryās: Alabama can amend its statute to provide par- ents with a meaningful chance to show that they are ļ¬t despite their conviction. See also infra note 10 (addressing other possible less re- strictive alternatives). Indeed, as far as we can tell, thatās what every other state that strips unļ¬t parentsāincluding those who are sex oļ¬endersāof the right to live with their children does. Still, we canāt say that the Section is unconstitutional in all its applications. For example, the Section applies to non-parental relatives, such as stepparents and stepsiblings, who may not enjoy the same fundamental rights of cohabitation as a parent does with their own child. And here, Henryāa parentāis the only party to this lawsuit challenging the facial and as-applied constitutionality of the Section. So we do not need to pass on that complex consti- tutional question to redress Henryās injury. We therefore conclude that the district court abused its discretion in facially enjoining Sec- tion 15-20A-11(d)(4). For that reason, we vacate the district courtās USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 5 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 5 injunction and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. I. BACKGROUND A. Factual and Statutory Background In 2013, Henry pled guilty to one count of possessing child pornography in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 2252A(a)(5)(B). He had never been convicted of a sexual oļ¬ense before. At the time of his arrest in 2011, he possessed two videos and 348 photos of prepu- bescent and adolescent girls, which he downloaded from the inter- net. 1 Henryās collection focused on āgirls between the ages of six and tenā and included depictions of sadomasochism and bestiality. The district court sentenced Henry to 70 months of prison and 60 months of supervised release with special conditions. He served ļ¬ve years of his sentence before his release in March 2018. After release, Henry completed a qualiļ¬ed Sex Oļ¬ender Treatment Program, as well as individual and group counseling. Henry con- tinues to attend weekly Sex Addicts Anonymous meetings. And he maintains a steady job, attends church, and volunteers. Two special conditions of Henryās supervised release are of note. First, Henry must participate in the United States Probation Oļ¬ceās computer restriction-and-monitoring program. That 1 That amount is significant. Still, itās less than one-tenth of the median amount found in child-pornography offendersā possession. In fiscal year 2019, for instance, non-production child-pornography offenders possessed a median of 4,265 illegal images, according to the U.S. Sentencing Commission. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 6 of 111 6 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 program prohibits Henry from possessing or using certain elec- tronic devices that may communicate with other electronic devices without the Probation Oļ¬ceās prior approval. And second, Henry may not have āany unsupervised, one-to-one contact with any chil- dren under the age of 18 other than his own children.ā Despite these restrictions, while on supervised release, Henry in two instances accessed pornography. In July of 2019, Henry admitted during a polygraphed interview that he used an Amazon Firestick to view pornography. A forensic examination re- vealed no saved images, but Henry had viewed images with ātitles indicating that they were of young or teenage females.ā And Henry admitted in a follow-up polygraph test that he actively sought out images of teen girls and children posed in sexual posi- tions. Also, in December 2019, Henry used his wifeās unlocked phone to search for pornographic images. He disclosed the inci- dent to his sexual-oļ¬ender-treatment provider but failed to inform his probation oļ¬cer during the oļ¬cerās home visit in January 2020. Instead, the probation oļ¬cer learned about the incident from Henryās supervision report for that month. Citing these violations, Henryās probation oļ¬cer ļ¬led a pe- tition to revoke Henryās supervised release. A federal judge de- clined. Instead, the district court extended Henryās term of super- vised release from 60 to 96 months (through March 2026). Henry is now married and has a three-year-old son. But be- cause of the Alabama Sex Oļ¬ender Registration and Community USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 7 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 7 Notiļ¬cation Act (āASORCNAā), Henry cannot live or reside over- night with him (and by extension, his wife). As weāve noted, ASORCNA prohibits any sex oļ¬ender from āresid[ing] or conduct[ing] an overnight visit with a minorā unless the sex oļ¬ender āis the parent, grandparent, stepparent, sibling, or stepsibling of the minor.ā ALA. CODE § 15-20A-11(d). But those exemptions are substantially less inclusive than they appear on ļ¬rst glance. Thatās so because Section 15-20A-11(d)ās exception itself has ļ¬ve exceptions. As relevant here, a sex oļ¬ender may not reside or conduct an overnight visit with a minor, even if they are the minorās parent, if ā[t]he adult sex oļ¬ender has been convicted of any sex oļ¬ense involving a child, regardless of whether the adult sex oļ¬ender was related to or shared a residence with the child victim.ā2 Id. § 15- 20A-11(d)(4). This subsection applies to Henry because a āsex of- fense involving a childā includes āoļ¬ense[s] involving child pornog- raphy.ā Id. § 15-20A-4(27); see also id. § 15-20A-4(2) (deļ¬ning āchildā as a āperson who has not attained the age of 12ā). 2 None of the statuteās other four exceptions apply to Henry. Alabama has not terminated (and is not currently terminating) Henryās parental rights, ALA. CODE § 15-20A-11(d)(1); Henry hasnāt been convicted of a sexual offense in- volving his child or a minor with whom he resided, id. § 15-20A-11(d)(2), (3); and he has not been convicted of a sexual offense involving the forcible com- pulsion of a minor, id. § 15-20A-11(d)(5). USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 8 of 111 8 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 The statuteās deļ¬nitions of āresideā and āconduct an over- night visitā eļ¬ectively prevent Henry from living with his son. Under Alabama law, a sex oļ¬ender resides at a place if they are āhabitually or systematically present atā it. Id. § 15-20A-4(20). We determine that, in turn, āby the totality of the circumstances, including the amount of time the person spends at the place and the nature of the personās conduct at the place.ā Id. As a baseline, an oļ¬ender resides at a place if he āspend[s] more than four hours a dayā there āon three or more consecutive daysā or āmore than four hours a dayā there āon 10 or more aggregate days during a calendar month.ā Id. As for an āovernight visit,ā that occurs whenever an oļ¬ender is in the same place as a minor for any part of the period ābetween the hours of 10:30 p.m. and 6:00 a.m.ā Id. § 15-20A-4(14) (explain- ing ā[a]ny presenceā causes an overnight visit). So to summarize, Section 15-20A-11(d) prevents Henry from being present in the same home as his son (1) at any time between the hours of 10:30 p.m. and 6:00 a.m.; (2) for more than four hours a day on three consecutive days; (3) for more than four hours a day on ten or more days during a calendar month; or (4) in any other circumstance where he is habitually and systematically present at his sonās home. And those restrictions are permanent. Alabama law aļ¬ords no oļ¬ramp to Henry or anyone else: the statute contains no mech- anism for oļ¬enders to challenge its restrictions on residing or stay- ing overnight with minors, even their own children. By contrast, USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 9 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 9 ASORCNA oļ¬ers a limited exception for sex oļ¬enders who are āterminally ill or permanently immobileā or suļ¬ering from a āde- bilitating medical condition.ā Id. § 15-20A-23(a). Those oļ¬enders may petition for relief from the requirement of living more 2,000 feet away from a school, childcare, or camp facility. Id. At bottom, the Section prevents sexual oļ¬enders whose of- fense involved a minor from living with their children until the re- strictions expire when their children turn eighteen. See id. § 15-20A- 4(13). B. Procedural History In November 2021, Henry sued Defendants-Appellants Ron Abernathy, the Sheriļ¬ of Tuscaloosa County; Hays Webb, the Dis- trict Attorney of Tuscaloosa County; and Steve Marshall, the At- torney General of Alabama (collectively, āDefendants,ā āAlabama,ā or āthe Stateā), in their oļ¬cial capacities under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. He claimed that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) violates his First Amend- ment right to intimate association and Fourteenth Amendment rights to equal protection and due process. Henry sought a declar- atory judgment that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) is overbroad and un- constitutional both facially and as applied, and he requested that the district court enter an injunction against Defendants to prevent the lawās enforcement. The district court denied Henryās motion for a preliminary injunction. But it partially granted Henryās motion for summary judgment, ļ¬nding Section 15-20A-11(d) facially unconstitutional. Based on that conclusion, the court enjoined Alabama from USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 10 of 111 10 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 enforcing the statute in its current form. We recount both district- court decisions. 1. The district court denied Henryās motion for a preliminary injunction. In March 2022, Henry moved for a preliminary injunction, requesting that the district court permit him to conduct overnight visits with his son and reside with his wife and son for the pendency of his lawsuit. He argued that Section ā15-20A-11(d)(4), on its face, severely restricts [his] First and Fourteenth Amendment rights of familial association to the serious detriment not only of him but of his infant child as well.ā After holding an evidentiary hearing, the district court denied Henryās motion. Henry relied principally on the testimony of three wit- nesses: Dr. Keith Hersh, Dr. Barry Burkhart, and Jerome Wells. Dr. Hersh is a psychologist who specializes in treatment of and recidivism among sex oļ¬enders. And Dr. Burkhart is a clinical psychologist with expertise in recidivism of sex oļ¬enders, sex of- fendersā psychology, and the psychological and development eļ¬ects of absent parents on early childhood development. Drs. Hersh and Burkhart testiļ¬ed that child-pornography of- fenders have a low recidivism rate generally (around 1ā4% over a 3ā5-year period); that they pose a low risk of committing a contact sex oļ¬ense speciļ¬cally (around 1ā2% over a 5ā9 year period); and that relevant factors, like time, treatment, and a parent-child rela- tionship, further decrease the likelihood of recidivism. Even so, on cross-examination, Alabama elicited testimony that sexual interest USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 11 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 11 in children is a robust indicator of risk of committing a contact of- fense and that the number of images a person possesses, as well as a personās noncompliance with terms of supervised release, in- crease that personās risk of committing a future contact oļ¬ense. But ultimately, both Drs. Hersh and Burkhart opined that evaluating an oļ¬enderās risk of recidivism, particularly their risk of harming their own child, requires an individualized assessment. And both testiļ¬ed that Henry posed a low risk of harming his son. Dr. Burkhart added that, given the detriment of an absent father to a developing child, he would recommend that Henry live at home with his son full time. Wells is a counselor for those who have committed sexual oļ¬enses. The court admitted him as an expert in risk-assessment tools used for sexual oļ¬enders and the treatment of sexual oļ¬end- ers. Wells treated Henry and met with him around 150 to 200 times. He recounted Henryās treatment programs and the results of three risk-assessment tools that indicated Henry was a low risk to his son. But Wells acknowledged on cross-examination that he could not recall Henryās August 2019 admission that Henry sought out images of girls in sexual positions; that he did not address that admission during Henryās course of counseling; and that one of his exams did not account for Henryās admission. Nor could Wells re- call that Henryās supervised release had been extended. Still, Wells concluded that, in his professional opinion, Henry is a low risk of USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 12 of 111 12 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 being a contact or hands-on oļ¬ender and that Henry would not sexually assault his son. For its part, Alabama called Dr. Matthew DeLisi to testify in response to Henryās experts. Dr. DeLisi is a professor at Iowa State University who is a generalist researcher in criminology and crimi- nal justice. The district court admitted him as an expert in crimi- nologyāspeciļ¬cally, the risk factors for crime. Dr. DeLisi opined that sexual oļ¬enders are more likely to commit contact oļ¬enses than non-sexual oļ¬enders, and he cited research showing that many child-pornography oļ¬enders display an interest in pedophilia. He cited studies suggesting 12ā55% of child-pornography oļ¬enders commit a contact oļ¬ense. But DeLisi neither evaluated Henry nor opined on his individual risk of recid- ivism or the risk that Henry might harm his son. After the hearing, the district court denied Henryās motion for a preliminary injunction. The court concluded that Henry failed to show a substantial likelihood of success on the merits and that the equities did not weigh in his favor. As to the merits, the district court emphasized that the volume of Henryās child-pornog- raphy collection was ātroublingā and that key witnessesānamely, Henry, his wife, and his probation oļ¬cerādid not testify at the pre- liminary-injunction hearing. Because Henryās motion would ādis- rupt the status quo,ā the court explained, Henry bore the burden of showing that he would not pose a risk to his son if the court permitted Henry to live with him. And in this preliminary posture, Henryās experts did not suļ¬ciently abate the courtās two concerns. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 13 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 13 As to the balance of the harms, the district court concluded they weighed in Alabamaās favor: the risk that Henry would recid- ivate and thereby harm his child outweighed the risk that Henry would be unconstitutionally deprived of his ability to live with his child and that his son would not have a father at home during his formative years. The court stressed in conclusion that its denial of Henryās motion for a preliminary injunction was āan eļ¬ort to āavoid the error that is most costly in the circumstancesāā before it could address the complex factual and constitutional issues āat a more mature stage of the litigation process.ā 2. The district court partially granted Henryās motion for sum- mary judgment and issued an injunction facially enjoining enforcement of Section 15-20A-11(d)(4). On March 31, 2023, the parties ļ¬led cross-motions for sum- mary judgment. The district court partially granted Henryās mo- tion, and it denied Defendantsā in full. The court concluded that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) implicated Henryās substantive due-pro- cess right to the ācare, custody and controlā of his child. 3 As a re- sult, the court reasoned that the Section could stand only if it 3 The district court also noted that, while the summary-judgment motions were pending, Alabama enacted House Bill 6. The law ārecognized that par- ents have a fundamental right to direct the upbringing of their childrenā and that ā[t]he liberty protected by the due process clause includes the fundamen- tal right of parents to direct the education, upbringing, care, and control of their children.ā H.B. 6, Ala. 2023 Reg. Sess. (Ala. 2023). The law requires that infringements on parental rights clear strict scrutiny, the most demanding standard of judicial review. See id. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 14 of 111 14 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 survived strict scrutiny. But because the court found that the law was not narrowly tailored to further Alabamaās compelling interest of protecting the health and safety of minors, the court determined the law was unconstitutional. As the district court saw things, the law is both over- and un- derinclusive. Concerning the lawās overinclusiveness, the court characterized Section 15-20A-11(d)(4)ās āoverbreadthā as ābreath- taking.ā The law, it said, sweeps in āthe worst of the worst oļ¬end- ersā along with consensual teen sexual relationships without any āmechanismā for ārelief.ā And at the underinclusiveness end of the spectrum, the court reasoned, Section 15-20A-11(d) āallows every qualifying adult sex oļ¬ender daily unsupervised access to minors for four hours at a time in any one place on two consecutive days and nine aggregate days per month, as long as such access occurs between the hours of 6:00 a.m. and 10:30 p.m.ā The district court also highlighted the Sectionās novelty, both across the United States and in Alabama. The parties and the dis- trict court were āunaware of any statute enacted by another state substantially similar to [Section] 15-20A-11(d)(4).ā And āexcept for ASORCNA, Alabama has never statutorily limited parentsā contact or ability to live with their children based upon the single fact of conviction.ā For those reasons, the court concluded that Section 15-20A- 11(d)(4) facially violates parentsā fundamental rights, as the Four- teenth Amendmentās Due Process Clause secures them. The dis- trict court partially granted Henryās requests for declaratory and USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 15 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 15 injunctive relief. It declared Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) facially uncon- stitutional, and it enjoined Defendants from enforcing the law in its current form. The district court denied as moot Henryās re- maining claims, including those under the Fourteenth Amend- mentās Equal Protection Clause. * * * After the district court entered judgment, Alabama timely appealed. Alabama then moved to stay the permanent injunction pending appeal. Henry opposed a stay. But the district court granted Alabamaās stay motion. Then, in this Court, Henry ļ¬led an unopposed motion to expedite the appeal. We granted that mo- tion and now consider the appeal. II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW Summary judgment is appropriate when no genuine issue of material fact exists and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a); Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 322ā23 (1986). An issue of fact is genuine if a reasonable trier of fact could return judgment for the non-moving party. An- derson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248 (1986). And a fact is material if it āmight aļ¬ect the outcome of the suit under the gov- erning lawā and is not āirrelevant or unnecessary.ā Id. On appeal, we review de novo a district courtās grant of summary judgment, construing all evidence in the light most fa- vorable to the non-moving party. Marbury v. Warden, 936 F.3d 1227, 1232 (11th Cir. 2019). And we review both a district courtās decision to grant an injunction, as well as the scope of that injunction, for USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 16 of 111 16 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 abuse of discretion. Angel Flight of Ga., Inc. v. Angel Flight Am., Inc., 522 F.3d 1200, 1208 (11th Cir. 2008). III. DISCUSSION Alabama raises three arguments on appeal. First, it argues that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) is constitutional as applied to Henry because individuals convicted of a sex oļ¬ense do not have a fundamental right to reside with their child. And it asserts that even if Henry does have such a right, the law survives strict scrutiny because it is narrowly tailored to advance Alabamaās compelling interest in protecting children. Second, the State argues that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) is fa- cially constitutional because it covers at least some crimes for which the fact of a conviction is narrowly tailored to advance its compelling interest in protecting children and because it covers at least some relatives who do not have the same fundamental rights of cohabitation as do parents. Alabama contends that cases at the intersection of those two edgesānamely, stepsiblings or steppar- ents who have raped or traļ¬cked childrenāfall within the statuteās plainly legitimate sweep. Third, and relatedly, Alabama asserts that, at a minimum, the district court erred in entering a āuniversalā injunction that ex- tends to plaintiļ¬s other than Henry, who are not party to this law- suit. We address each argument in turn. But to preview, we reject Alabamaās ļ¬rst claim and hold that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) is USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 17 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 17 unconstitutional as applied to Henry. The Constitution guarantees parents the right to live with their children. Henry did not neces- sarily forfeit that right when he committed a sexual oļ¬ense, yet Sec- tion 15-20A-11(d)(4) automatically deprives him of that right. So the law must pass strict scrutiny. But Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) is not narrowly tailored to advance the Stateās extremely compelling in- terest in protecting children. Rather, itās overinclusiveāapplying to some crimes that bear little relationship to a parentās ļ¬tness or the likelihood that they will harm their childāand underinclu- siveāpermitting apparently dangerous child predators to spend substantial amounts of unsupervised time with children. Plus, Al- abama failed to rebut the eļ¬ectiveness of Henryās proļ¬ered less re- strictive alternatives: the State did not show that an opportunity for individualized relief would undermine its statutory scheme. As to Alabamaās second argument, we agree that the Section is not facially invalid. At least in this posture, Henry has not shown that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) is unconstitutional in all its applica- tions. For instance, as Alabama points out, stepsiblings and step- parents may not have the same constitutional rights to cohabitation as do parents and children. The issue received limited brieļ¬ng, so we conclude, at least for this appeal and without conclusively pass- ing on the merits of that question, that Henry has not met the lofty burden that the facial-challenge standard imposes. And ļ¬nally, because we vacate the district courtās injunction, we do not address Alabamaās argument that the district court abused its discretion in entering a universal injunction. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 18 of 111 18 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 A. Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) violates parentsā fundamental rights to es- tablish a home and live with their children. The Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits any state from ādepriv[ing] any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.ā U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 1. Its guarantee is both procedural and substantive. Washington v. Glucksberg, 521 U.S. 702, 719ā20 (1997). And when, as here, a plain- tiļ¬ asserts a violation of their substantive-due-process rights, we generally employ a two-step framework to resolve the claim. At the ļ¬rst step, we determine whether a right is āfundamen- tal.ā Id. at 710. Rights are fundamental if they are āobjectively, deeply rooted in this Nationās history and tradition, and implicit in the concept of ordered liberty, such that neither liberty nor justice would exist if they were sacriļ¬ced.ā Id. at 720ā21 (cleaned up). We require litigants to propose a āācareful descriptionā of the asserted fundamental liberty interest.ā Id. at 721 (quoting Reno v. Flores, 507 U.S. 292, 302 (1993)). We do that so we can better focus our analysis of our āNationās history, legal traditions, and practices,ā which re- veal whether a right is deeply rooted in this Nationās history and tradition and implicit in the concept of ordered liberty. Id. At the second step, we scrutinize the government action ei- ther strictly or loosely depending on whether we determine the as- serted right is fundamental. If the right is fundamental, the gov- ernment action that burdens the right is presumptively wrongful, and the government bears the burden to show that its action is ānarrowly tailored to serve a compelling state interest.ā Flores, 507 USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 19 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 19 U.S. at 302. We call this level of review strict scrutiny. Lofton v. Secāy of Depāt of Child. & Fam. Servs., 358 F.3d 804, 815 (11th Cir. 2004). By contrast, if the asserted right is not fundamental, then the government action is presumptively lawful, and we reject the plaintiļ¬ās claim so long as the government action is ārationally re- lated to legitimate government interests.ā Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 728. We call this rational-basis review. Rational-basis review is much like a sieve because most government action passes through it unscathed. Indeed, we sustain the governmentās action if āthere is any reasonably conceivable state of facts that could provide a ra- tional basisā for it. FCC v. Beach Commcāns, Inc., 508 U.S. 307, 313 (1993); see Williamson v. Lee Optical of Oklahoma Inc., 348 U.S. 483, 488 (1955). In applying this framework to Henryās claim, we conclude ļ¬rst, that the right of a parent to live with their child is both deeply rooted in this Nationās history and tradition and implicit in the con- cept of ordered liberty. In fact, binding Supreme Court precedent has already said so. And second, we hold that Section 15-20A- 11(d)(4) does not pass strict scrutiny because it is not narrowly tai- lored to advance Alabamaās compelling state interest. The simple fact of a conviction for any one of a number of crimes that the statute covers does not necessarily and conclusively prove that a parent, including Henry, is forever either unļ¬t or an imminent dan- ger to their child. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 20 of 111 20 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 1. Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) burdens Henryās fundamental right to establish a home with his son. Our analysis proceeds in three parts. First, we recount our Nationās history of familial cohabitation and our precedent respect- ing that. Binding case law properly captures that a personās right to live with their family is deeply rooted in our Nationās history, legal traditions, and practices. Second, we explain how Section 15- 20A-11(d)(4) deprives Henry of that fundamental liberty interest. And third, we address Alabamaās counterarguments. Although parents generally have a right to live with their children and Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) would substantially burden that right, the State ar- gues the statute is constitutional because Henry completely lacks a constitutional right to live with his children. Child-pornography oļ¬enders, Alabama asserts, categorically lose their parental rights at the moment of conviction. In the third subsection, we explain why that approach to fundamental rights does not comport with the Constitutionās text or Supreme Court precedent. i. A parentās right to live with their child is deeply rooted in this Nationās history and tradition. As weāve noted, the Supreme Court has already concluded that parents have the constitutional right to live with their children. See Meyer, 262 U.S. at 399. Indeed, that right is part and parcel of āperhaps the oldest of the fundamental liberty interestsā that the Fourteenth Amendment secures, the right to raise oneās children. Troxel, 530 U.S. at 65ā66; see Obergefell v. Hodges, 576 U.S. 644, 667ā 68, (2015) (explaining the rights to marry, establish a home, and USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 21 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 21 bring up children make up a āuniļ¬ed wholeā that is a ācentral part of the liberty protected by the Due Process Clauseā (citation omit- ted)). The right to live with oneās family is one of the ļ¬rst to ļ¬nd judicial recognition in the United States Reports. And that rightās privileges have been at the center of the American way of life since our Republicās inception. At the Founding, the family was a domi- nant and primarily āprivate institution.ā MICHAEL GROSSBERG, GOVERNING THE HEARTH 6 (1985). Although cultures throughout history had established familial arrangements ābased on political, religious, and ļ¬nancial concerns,ā Obergefell, 576 U.S. at 659, the American family reļ¬ected the Revolutionary ideals of individual liberty, see id. at 659ā60; GROSSBERG, supra, at 6. ā[I]n the republican household[,] parents and children became bound together by a new egalitarianism and by aļ¬ection.ā GROSSBERG, supra, at 8. Our ānationās households . . . were seen by almost all Amer- icans as crucial to national well-being.ā Id. at 6. For it was the homeās ādomestic intimacyā that served āas a counterweight to marketplace competitionā that would come to characterize Ante- bellum life. Id.; see SUSAN L. BROWN, FAMILIES IN AMERICA 14ā15 (2017). As Alexis de Tocqueville recounted after his travels throughout the United States, āwhen the American retires from the turmoil of public life to the bosom of his family, he ļ¬nds in it the image of order and of peace.ā 1 ALEXIS DE TOCQUEVILLE, DEMOCRACY IN AMERICA 332 (Henry Reeve, transl., 4th ed. 1841); USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 22 of 111 22 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 see also id. (āThere is certainly no country in the world where the tie of marriage is so much respected as in America . . . .ā). In turn, our Founders recognized through constitutional guarantees āthe right of a man to retreat into his own home and there be free from unreasonable governmental intrusion.ā 4 Silver- man v. United States, 365 U.S. 505, 511 (1961) (discussing the Fourth Amendment); see Lawrence v. Texas, 539 U.S. 558, 562 (2003) (āLib- erty protects the person from unwarranted government intrusions into a dwelling or other private places. In our tradition the State is not omnipresent in the home.ā). But our Foundersā reverence for the home did not stem solely from its role as an intimate refuge from the public sphere. āThe home [also] derives its pre-eminence as the seat of family life,ā a seat where parents raise their children and pass to them our 4 Throughout our fundamental-rights jurisprudence, the Court has empha- sized the home and treated invasions of it as highly suspect. See, e.g., Stanley v. Georgia, 394 U.S. 557, 565 (1969) (āWhatever may be the justifications for other statutes regulating obscenity, we do not think they reach into the pri- vacy of oneās own home.ā); Payton v. New York, 445 U.S. 573, 598 (1980) (rely- ing on the common lawās āunequivocal endorsement of the tenet that āa manās house is his castleāā to conclude the Fourth Amendment prevents warrantless home arrests); District of Columbia v. Heller, 554 U.S. 570, 634ā35 (2008) (de- scribing the Second Amendmentās ācore protectionā as the āuse arms in de- fense of hearth and homeā); McDonald v. City of Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 767 (2010) (āExplaining that the need for defense of self, family, and property is most acute in the home, we found thatā the Second Amendment āright applies to handguns because they are the most preferred firearm in the nation to keep and use for protection of one's home and family.ā (cleaned up)). USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 23 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 23 traditions and values. Poe v. Ullman, 367 U.S. 497, 551ā52 (1961) (Harlan, J., dissenting). At common law, parents were charged with āgivingā their children āan educationā that would prepare them for a successful life. 1 WILLIAM BLACKSTONE, COMMENTARIES ON THE LAWS OF ENGLAND 645 (William Carey Jones ed., S.F., Bancroft-Whitney Co. 1915). That did not change after the Revolution. American parents shouldered the āprimary responsibilityā of educating the next gen- eration. GROSSBERG, supra, at 8. Indeed, the Founders āunderstood parents to have a right and duty to govern their childrenās growth.ā Brown v. Ent. Merchs. Assān, 564 U.S. 786, 828 (2011) (Thomas, J., dis- senting). And that remains true to this day: āparentsā claim to au- thority in their own household to direct the rearing of their chil- dren is basic in the structure of our society.ā Ginsberg v. New York, 390 U.S. 629, 639 (1968). In short, āthe importance of the familial relationship, to the individuals involved and to the society, stems from the emotional attachments that derive from the intimacy of daily association, and from the role it plays in promoting a way of life through the in- struction of children.ā Smith v. Org. of Foster Fams. For Equal. & Re- form, 431 U.S. 816, 844 (1977) (cleaned up). Census data concretely show how Americans lived out these sentiments about the home. They reļ¬ect the long-held and unin- terrupted practice of the American family living together under one roof. āIn the mid-nineteenth century, about 70 percent of per- sons aged 65 or older lived with their children or children-in-law.ā USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 24 of 111 24 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 Steven Ruggles, Multigenerational Families in Nineteenth-Century America, 18 CONTINUITY & CHANGE 139, 141 (2003); see id. at 142ā 43 (āThus, 80 per cent of the aged population either resided with children or in an adjacent dwelling.ā); see also Matt A. Nelson, The Decline of Patrilineal Kin Propinquity in the United States 1790ā1940, 41 DEMOGRAPHIC RSCH. 501, 526 (2020) (āIn 1850, 52% of 65-year-old persons lived near someone with the same surname compared to 44% of 20-year-old persons.ā). And that ļ¬gure only increases when we consider that some elderly Americans didnāt have children to live with: in 1850, over 80 percent of elderly Americans who could live with their children or children-in-law did so. Ruggles, supra, at 145, 151. These high rates of familial cohabitation persisted largely because āchildren never moved outā of their parentsā home. Id. at 152ā53. In other words, at the Founding and through Reconstruc- tion, Americans lived most of their lives with their families. Parents lived with their minor children as they grew into adulthood. Then, if those children turned into parents themselves, they raised the familyās next generation under the same roof. And āas near as we can measure, the practice was essentially universal.ā Id. at 143. So itās unsurprising that the Supreme Court has repeatedly recognized the constitutional right to live with oneās family. After all, our Constitution secures those fundamental rights that āhave, at all times, been enjoyed by the citizens of the several states which compose this Union.ā Corļ¬eld v. Coryell, 6 F. Cas. 546, 551 (C.C.E.D. Pa. 1825) (No. 3,230) (Washington, Circuit Justice); see Glucksberg, USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 25 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 25 521 U.S. at 710 (āWe begin, as we do in all due process cases, by examining our Nationās history, legal traditions, and practices.ā); Robertson v. Baldwin, 165 U.S. 275, 282 (1897) (explaining the Thir- teenth Amendment did not ādisturb the right of parents and guard- ians to the custody of their minor children or wardsā because Americans āadopted [it] with reference to a state of aļ¬airs which had existed in certain states of the Union since the foundation of the governmentā). Indeed, since the Founding, our courts have respected the rights of parents to live with their children. See, e.g., Kirkpatrick v. Lockhart, 4 S.C.L. (2 Brev.) 276, 277ā79 (S.C. Const. App. 1809) (per- mitting recovery in tort from a person who knowingly took a mi- nor away from a parent); United States v. Anderson, 24 F. Cas. 813 (C.C.D. Tenn. 1812) (No. 14,449) (granting writ of habeas corpus to return a child in military service to their parent); Commonwealth v. Downes, 41 Mass. 227, 232 (1836) (same); see also Frances M. Clarke & Rebecca Jo Plant, No Minor Matter: Underage Soldiers, Par- ents, and the Nationalization of Habeas Corpus in Civil War America, 35 L. & HIST. REV. 881, 892ā95 (2017) (explaining parentsā wide- spread use of the writ of habeas corpus to regain custody of their children was ārooted in common law traditions that imbued par- ents with substantial authority over their children until they reached the age of majorityā). As for the Supreme Courtās express recognition that the Fourteenth Amendment protects the fundamental right to live with oneās family, that itself traces back more than a hundred years USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 26 of 111 26 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 to Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390 (1923), and Pierce v. Society of the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus & Mary, 268 U.S. 510 (1925). In Meyer, the Supreme Court invalidated a Nebraska law bar- ring the teaching of certain foreign languages. 262 U.S. at 400ā03. The Court explained that the Due Process Clauseās guarantee of ālibertyā secures more than āmere[] freedom from bodily re- straint.ā Id. at 399. It protects āthose privileges long recognized at common law as essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men,ā including the right āto engage in any of the common occu- pations of life, to acquire useful knowledge, to marry,ā and, as rel- evant here, to āestablish a home and bring up children.ā Id. at 399 (em- phasis added). And by barring children from learning certain lan- guages, the Court explained, the law violated the childrenās right to acquire such useful knowledge and āthe right of parents to . . . in- struct their childrenā in languages long thought āhelpful and desir- able.ā Id. at 400. Then, in Pierce, the Court expanded on its conclusion that parents have a fundamental right to establish a home and bring up children. There, the Court considered a challenge to Oregonās Compulsory Education Act of 1922, which required parents to send their children to public school. Pierce, 268 U.S. at 530ā31. Re- lying on Meyer, the Court concluded that Oregonās statute āunrea- sonably interfere[d] with the liberty of parents and guardians to di- rect the upbringing and education of children under their control.ā Id. at 534ā35. As a result, the State could not require parents to USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 27 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 27 send their children to public school; parents had a right to educate them privately. Weāve explained that āMeyer and Pierce ushered in a line of Supreme Court decisions that recognized, and further deļ¬ned the contours of, parentsā liberty interest to control the upbringing of their children.ā Eknes-Tucker v. Governor of Ala., 80 F.4th 1205, 1222 (11th Cir. 2023); see, e.g., Prince v. Massachusetts, 321 U.S. 158, 170 (1944) (upholding a child-labor law against a challenge that it vio- lated parentsā rights to raise their children); Stanley v. Illinois, 405 U.S. 645, 646ā59 (1972) (holding unconstitutional a law that desig- nated children of unwed parents as wards of the state upon a motherās death because fathers have protected āinterest[s] in retain- ing custody of [their] childrenā); Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205, 213ā234 (1972) (striking down a Wisconsin law that compelled school attendance beyond the eighth grade because it interfered with āthe traditional interest of parents with respect to the reli- gious upbringing of their childrenā); Parham v. J. R., 442 U.S. 584, 604 (1979) (explaining the Constitution āpermit[s] the parents to retain a substantial, if not the dominant, role in [their childrenās medical] decision[s], absent a ļ¬nding of neglect or abuseā); San- tosky v. Kramer, 455 U.S. 745, 769 (1982) (requiring that the state prove by clear and convincing evidence that parental rights should be terminated); Lassiter v. Depāt of Soc. Servs., 452 U.S. 18, 27 (1981) (declining to require the state to appoint counsel for parents at a termination proceeding, although explaining that ā[a] parentās in- terest in the accuracy and justice of the decision to terminate his or her parental status is . . . a commanding oneā); Troxel, 530 U.S. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 28 of 111 28 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 at 60ā75 (declaring unconstitutional a visitation statute because the law interfered with parentsā fundamental right āto make decisions concerning the care, custody, and control of their childrenā and in- structed courts to disregard āthe traditional presumption that a ļ¬t parent will act in the best interest of his or her childā). Relying on this line of precedent, and other cases establish- ing the āprivate realm of family life,ā Prince, 321 U.S. at 166, the Supreme Court in Moore v. City of East Cleveland, 431 U.S. 494 (1977) (plurality opinion), reaļ¬rmed that family members have the fun- damental right to live with one another. There, the plaintiļ¬s chal- lenged East Clevelandās housing ordinance that limited occupancy of a dwelling to members of a single family. Id. at 495ā96. The Supreme Court invalidated the ordinance as an unjustiļ¬ed intru- sion into family life. Id. at 506. As Moore explained, āthe Constitution protects the sanctity of the family precisely because the institution of the family is deeply rooted in this Nationās history and tradition,ā for ā[i]t is through the family that we inculcate and pass down many of our most cherished values, moral and cultural.ā Id. at 503ā04. Moore further recognized that the right of āparents and childrenā and ex- tended family members, like grandparents, to āshar[e] a house- holdā lies at the core of the American family. Id. at 504. And East Cleveland had no authority to deprive its citizens of that privilege. The Court based its conclusion not only on its understand- ing of Americansā āpractice[]ā of living with their families (alt- hough that would have been suļ¬cient), see Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 29 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 29 710 (citing Moore, 431 U.S. at 503); cf. Ruggles, supra, at 141, 145, 151; Nelson, supra, at 526, but also on the Courtās ļ¬rmly rooted precedent establishing the rights of parents (and sometimes ex- tended family members) to raise children, see Moore, 431 U.S. at 505 & n.15. The Court recognized that parents may not be able to ādi- rect the upbringing . . . of [their] children,ā Pierce, 268 U.S. at 534, without the corresponding ability to live and āestablish a homeā with them, Meyer, 262 U.S. at 399. Those rights, though inde- pendently worthy of constitutional protection, are interrelated and well established. See Obergefell, 576 U.S at 667ā68; GROSSBERG, su- pra, at 8. Since Moore, the Supreme Court has repeatedly reaļ¬rmed the right of parents to live with their children. 5 In Roberts v. United States Jaycees, for instance, the Court said that the Bill of Rights af- fords ācertain kinds of highly personal relationships a substantial measure of sanctuary from unjustiļ¬ed interference by the State.ā 5 The Court has entertained many challenges to statutes on the ground that they āintrude on choices concerning family living arrangements.ā Bowen v. Gilliard, 483 U.S. 587, 602 (1987) (cleaned up). And to be sure, it has rejected some of them because only statutory classifications that āādirectly and substan- tiallyā interfere with family living arrangementsā burden the fundamental right. Lyng v. Castillo, 477 U.S. 635, 638 (1986) (quoting Zablocki v. Redhail, 434 U.S. 374, 386ā387 & n.12); Lyng v. Intāl Union, United Auto., Aerospace & Agr. Implement Workers, 485 U.S. 360, 365 (1988); Bowen, 483 U.S. at 601ā02. But as we explain in the body of this opinion, Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) ādirectly and substantiallyā interferes with Henryās living arrangements, Lyng, 477 U.S. at 638, by severely limiting the amount of time he can spend in the same home as his son and by precluding him from living with his own son. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 30 of 111 30 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 468 U.S. 609, 618 (1984). The Court continued, explaining that ā[f ]amily relationships . . . involve deep attachments and commit- ments to the necessarily few other individuals with whom one shares not only a special community of thoughts, experiences, and beliefs but also distinctively personal aspects of oneās life.ā Id. at 619ā20. As a result, the Court conļ¬rmed, the Constitution secures parentsā rights to ārais[e] and educat[e]ā their children and to āco- habitat[e]ā with them. Id. at 619. We have also consistently acknowledged family membersā fundamental right to cohabitate, including a parentās right to live with their children. See, e.g., Picou v. Gillum, 874 F.2d 1519, 1521 (11th Cir. 1989) (recognizing that the Constitution protects āthe structure of the family unitā); Elliott v. City of Athens, 960 F.2d 975, 981 (11th Cir. 1992) (āMoore and Belle Terre, read together, indicate that a feasible method of controlling density is to place occupancy limitations on unrelated persons but not on related persons.ā), ab- rogated on other grounds by City of Edmonds v. Oxford House, Inc., 514 U.S. 725 (1995); Parks v. City of Warner Robins, 43 F.3d 609, 614 n.3 (11th Cir. 1995) (citing case law establishing that government may not ādirectly and substantially interfere with family living arrange- mentsā (cleaned up)); Ross v. Clayton County, 173 F.3d 1305, 1311 (11th Cir. 1999) (explaining āthat the First Amendment right of free association encompasses ācohabitation with oneās relativesāā (quot- ing U.S. Jaycees, 468 U.S. at 619)); Eknes-Tucker, 80 F.4th at 1221ā22 (recognizing āthat the ālibertyā guaranteed by the Due Process Clause includes the right āto . . . establish a home and bring up chil- drenā (emphasis in original) (quoting Meyer, 262 U.S. at 399)); cf. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 31 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 31 Burton v. Tampa Hous. Auth., 271 F.3d 1274, 1285 (11th Cir. 2001) (re- jecting a claim that a zero-tolerance policy for federal housing di- rectly and substantially interfered with family living arrange- ments); Konikov v. Orange County, 410 F.3d 1317, 1326 (11th Cir. 2005) (acknowledging āthe fundamental right to freedom of per- sonal choice in marriage and family lifeā (citing Moore, 431 U.S. at 499)); Wilson v. Taylor, 733 F.2d 1539, 1544 (11th Cir. 1984) (āA state violates the fourteenth amendment when it seeks to interfere with the social relationship of two or more people.ā). So have our sister circuits. See, e.g., Halet v. Wend Inv. Co., 672 F.2d 1305, 1311 (9th Cir. 1982) (āA fundamental right is even more clearly involved here because the rental policy infringes the choice of parents to live with their children rather than the choice of more distant relations.ā); Franz v. United States, 707 F.2d 582, 595 (D.C. Cir. 1983) (explaining the Fourteenth Amendment protects ācohab- itation with members of oneās extended familyā); Doe v. City of But- ler, 892 F.2d 315, 321 (3d Cir. 1989) (āZoning restrictions cannot be applied to hinder those in a familial relationship from living to- gether.ā); Hameetman v. City of Chicago, 776 F.2d 636, 642 (7th Cir. 1985) (āA state or city that forces a man to live apart from his family deprives him of a form of liberty protected by the due process clause, and therefore violates the Fourteenth Amendment if due process is denied.ā); cf. Johnson v. City of Cincinnati, 310 F.3d 484, 501, 506 (6th Cir. 2002) (striking down a Cincinnati ordinance that limited a grandparentās access to the neighborhood where her grandchild lived as violative of the āfundamental right to USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 32 of 111 32 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 participate in child-rearing,ā including the āright to āestablish a home and bring up childrenāā (quoting Meyer, 262 U.S. at 398)). Not only that, but Alabama courts have also recognized a parentās fundamental right to live with their children. See Alabama v. C.M., 746 So. 2d 410, 415 n.7 (Ala. Crim. App. 1999) (acknowledg- ing the āright to live with relativesā). In fact, in rejecting a challenge to ASORCNAās precursor, Alabamaās Court of Criminal Appeals recognized that the statute ādirectly infringe[d]ā the plaintiļ¬-sex- oļ¬enderās fundamental rights by prohibiting him āfrom choosing to reside with his children.ā Herring v. State, 100 So. 3d 616, 624 (Ala. Crim. App. 2011). And so the court applied āthe strict-scru- tiny test to determine whether th[e] [relevant] sections violate[d] Herringās due-process and equal-protection rights.ā Id. at 625. Alt- hough, as we explain later, we disagree with Herringās result and conclude that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) canāt survive strict scrutiny, Herring shows Alabamaās recognition that statutes that restrict a parentās ability to live with their child burden a fundamental right that the Fourteenth Amendment protects. In sum, precedent instructs that the government may not in- terfere with how a parent raises their minor child, target the cus- tody of oneās minor child, Robertson v. Hecksel, 420 F.3d 1254, 1259ā 60 (11th Cir. 2005), or restrict a parentās ability to live with their child, see, e.g., Meyer, 431 U.S. at 399; Moore, 431 U.S. at 499; Bowen, 483 U.S. at 602, without a compelling state interest that the state action is narrowly tailored to further, Flores, 507 U.S. at 302. So we USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 33 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 33 turn next to whether Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) inappropriately bur- dens a parentās fundamental right to live with and raise their child. ii. Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) directly and substantially infringes Henryās ability to live with his son. In this section, we consider whether Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) substantially burdens Henryās constitutional rights, which would require us to apply strict scrutiny in our review of it. We conclude that it does. Although we show our work below, we note that the parties donāt dispute that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) substantially bur- dens a parentās right to live with their child. After all, the statuteās plain text criminalizes that conduct. But a body of law addresses the extent to which state action may burden peopleās living ar- rangements without inviting stringent constitutional review. So we summarize it below, in showing our work and explaining why we conclude that we must apply strict scrutiny to Section 15-20A- 11(d)(4). Although the Fourteenth Amendment secures individualsā rights to live with their family members, not all state action aļ¬ect- ing their ability to do so requires heightened constitutional scru- tiny. After all, who someone lives with or where someone lives are important ļ¬nancial decisions. And many government programs or policies could have eļ¬ects on the costs of such decisions. But we aļ¬ord the government a great deal of latitude in crafting social and economic policy. See Lee Optical, 348 U.S. at 488. So only those laws that āādirectly and substantiallyā interfere with family living ar- rangementsā warrant careful judicial review. Castillo, 477 U.S. at USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 34 of 111 34 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 638 (quoting Zablocki, 434 U.S. at 387). As the Court has summa- rized, āthat some families may decide to modify their living ar- rangements in order to avoid the eļ¬ect of ā a given law ādoes not transformā that law āinto an act whose design and direct eļ¬ect are to intrude on choices concerning family living arrangements.ā Bowen, 483 U.S. at 601ā02 (cleaned up). So in assessing claims that state action interferes with a fam- ilyās living arrangements, courts generally have not applied height- ened scrutiny to those regulations that have an āincidental and un- intended eļ¬ectā on the family, Hameetman, 776 F.2d at 643, or that āaļ¬ect[] or encourage[] decisions on family matters,ā Doe v. Miller, 405 F.3d 700, 710 (8th Cir. 2005) (quoting Gorrie v. Bowen, 809 F.2d 508, 523 (8th Cir. 1987)). When thatās the case, the rational-basis test controls. Conditions on beneļ¬ts typify the incidental or nudging ef- fect government may permissibly have on familial arrangements. For example, the Supreme Court took no issue with the āallotment of food stampsā based on the statuteās deļ¬nition of a āhouseholdā because the deļ¬nition did not āprevent any group of persons from dining togetherā or substantially increase the chance that ārelatives would choose to live apart.ā Castillo, 477 U.S. at 638; see also Intāl Union, United Auto., Aerospace & Agr. Implement Workers, 485 U.S. at 365 (holding that an amendment preventing individuals on strike from receiving food stamps did not directly and substantially im- pact familial living arrangements). Nor, the Supreme Court has concluded, did the consideration of a householdās collective USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 35 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 35 income as a condition of eligibility for federal aid violate Ameri- cansā right to cohabitate. Bowen, 483 U.S. at 601ā02. And a housing authority did not violate the Constitution when it evicted a person under a policy that prevented any member of a tenantās household from engaging in drug-related criminal activity at or near the pub- lic housing. Burton, 271 F.3d at 1285. Courts have also been less likely to apply strict scrutiny if the challenged state action primarily aļ¬ects where someone lives with- out directly altering whom someone lives with. For instance, in Hameetman v. City of Chicago, the Seventh Circuit found no consti- tutional inļ¬rmity in Chicagoās requirement that ļ¬reļ¬ghters live within the Cityās limits. 776 F.2d at 642ā43. As the court explained, the requirement was ānot a regulation of the composition or loca- tion of the family.ā Id. at 643. Instead, any impact on Hameetmanās family was āindirect,ā a consequence of his familyās unique circum- stances and preference for suburban life. Id. Although in some cases an indirect impact on family living arrangements āwould be so cruel and arbitrary . . . as to be deemed a denial of due process of law,ā the Seventh Circuit concluded that the one before it was not so āextreme.ā Id.; see id. (explaining also that Hameetman did not request an accommodation from the City and that he failed to show why his family could not live in Chicago). On similar logic, the Eighth Circuit upheld restrictions pre- venting an adult convicted of sex oļ¬enses involving minors from residing within 2,000 feet of a school or child-care facility. Doe v. Miller, 405 F.3d 700, 704ā05 (8th Cir. 2005); see also Doe v. Moore, 410 USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 36 of 111 36 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 F.3d 1337, 1344 & n.5 (11th Cir. 2005) (acknowledging Miller in a decision rejecting a substantive-due-process challenge to the publi- cation of sex oļ¬endersā personal information); McGuire v. Marshall, 50 F.4th 986, 1024ā25 (11th Cir. 2022) (concluding Alabamaās law restricting certain sex oļ¬enders from residing near a school or child-care facility was not an ex-post-facto law). The court upheld the statute because it did ānot operate di- rectly on the family relationship.ā Miller, 405 F.3d at 710. As the court explained, ā[a]lthough the law restricts where a residence may be located, nothing in the statute limits who may live with the Does in their residences.ā Id. (emphasis added); cf. McGuire, 50 F.4th at 1009 (explaining similar residency restrictions were not an ex- post-facto law, in part, because oļ¬enders may still āgo into exclu- sion zones to . . . visit friends or familyā). To be sure, the statute limited some from living with family, like parents who already re- sided within a prohibited area. Miller, 405 F.3d at 711. But on the whole, the statute did not infringe upon oļ¬endersā liberties āin a fashionā so direct and pervasive that it ārequire[d] heightened scru- tiny.ā Id.; cf. Johnson, 310 F.3d at 503 (concluding an ordinance that ābroadly excludes individuals from Over the Rhine without regard to their reason for travel in the neighborhoodā violated Johnsonās right to raise a grandchild). As Hameetman and Miller expressly state, they upheld laws that stand in contrast to those that facially restrict who, or some- times how many, may inhabit a dwelling. Cf. City of Santa Barbara v. Adamson, 27 Cal. 3d 123, 133 (1980) (āIn general, zoning ordinances USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 37 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 37 are much less suspect when they focus on the use than when they command inquiry into who are the users.ā (emphasis omitted)). So for instance, in Moore, the Supreme Court explained that East Clevelandās ordinance directly infringed Mooreās fundamental rights because ā[o]n its face it selects certain categories of relatives who may live together and declares that others may not.ā 431 U.S. at 498ā99. That rendered āthe usual judicial deference to the legis- lature . . . inappropriate.ā Id. at 499. Here, thereās no reasonable disputeāindeed, the parties do not disputeāthat Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) falls into the Moore campāthat is, the category of laws whose ādesign and direct eļ¬ect are to intrude on choices concerning family living arrangements.ā Bowen, 483 U.S. at 601ā02 (cleaned up). By its plain terms, Ala- bamaās statutory scheme stops Henry from āresid[ing]ā with his child. ALA. CODE § 15-20A-11(d). Its restrictions do ānot merely āinconvenienceāā Henry āin exercising his fundamental right as a parentā; they ādirectly infringe on that right by removing his free- dom of choice regarding family matters.ā Herring, 100 So. 3d at 624; see R.E.H. v. C.T., 327 So. 3d 248, 253 (Ala. Civ. App. 2020) (āThis state-imposed separation of oļ¬enders and children necessarily ren- ders the father unable to assume physical custody of the child . . . .ā). Just as East Cleveland made āa crime of a grand- motherās choice to live with her grandson,ā Moore, 431 U.S. at 499, Alabama makes a crime, punishable up to ten years in jail, ALA. CODE §§ 13A-5-6(a)(3), 15-20A-11(i), of Henryās cho[ice] to reside with hisā son, Herring, 100 So. 3d at 624. In short, Section 15-20A- 11(d)(4) āādirectly and substantiallyā interfere[s] withā Henryās USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 38 of 111 38 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 āfamily living arrangements.ā Castillo, 477 U.S. at 638 (quoting Zablocki, 434 U.S. at 387). As a result, we must carefully review its statutory scheme to ensure it is narrowly tailored to advance a compelling governmen- tal interest. Flores, 507 U.S. at 302. iii. Alabamaās arguments for why the Fourteenth Amendment does not secure Henryās right to live with his son ļ¬nd little support in the Constitutionās text or our precedent. But before we consider the tailoring of Alabamaās statutory scheme, we take a moment to address Alabamaās arguments that strict scrutiny does not apply here, even though Section 15-20A- 11(d)(4) is the type of law that falls into the Moore camp and would otherwise be subject to strict scrutiny. As Alabama sees it, Henryās past conviction entirely removes this case from Moore and other pa- rental-rights decisions. Alabama argues that we do not need to strictly scrutinize Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) because Henry, as a con- victed sex oļ¬ender, lacks the constitutional right to direct the up- bringing of his child. In the Stateās view, Henryās claimed right ābreak[s] new groundā under substantive due process, so it requires a new ācareful description of the asserted right,ā Flores, 507 U.S. at 302 (quoting Collins v. City of Harker Heights, 503 U.S. 115, 125 (1992))āone that includes in its deļ¬nition the fact of Henryās con- viction. In support of its position, Alabama asserts that Henry hasnāt identiļ¬ed a binding case or a historical tradition aļ¬ording sex of- fenders parental rights. In Alabamaās view, under the Supreme USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 39 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 39 Court precedent, only āļ¬t parentsā have such rights, Troxel, 530 U.S. at 68, so even āthe loosest description of the asserted right neces- sary includesā Henryās āqualifying conviction.ā And without a tra- dition of aļ¬ording sex oļ¬enders parental rights, the State con- cludes, Henryās substantive-due-process claim fails, for Section 15- 20A-11(d)(4) is rationally related to its legitimate governmental in- terest in securing children. We disagree with Alabamaās evaluation of Henryās substan- tive-due-process claim. 6 Broadly, Alabama conļ¬ates the identiļ¬ca- tion of the right at issue with the tailoring analysis. Whether a right exists is a diļ¬erent question from whether the state may con- stitutionally restrict the exercise of that right. And the Constitu- tionās text as well as the Courtās fundamental-rights precedents conļ¬rm this point. āThe traditional restrictionsā on a constitu- tional right āgo to show the scope of the right, not its lack of fun- damental character.ā McDonald v. City of Chicago, 561 U.S. 742, 802 (2010) (Scalia, J., concurring). In other words, Henryās status as a sex oļ¬ender may give Alabama a compelling reason to limit his 6 Alabama also misidentifies the relevant rights that Henry asserts. Henry claims that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) unconstitutionally prevents him from liv- ing with his child, not just, as Alabama seems to suggest, that it undermines Henryās parental right to exercise physical custody over his son. Although those rights overlap, they are constitutionally distinct. And the right to live with family is one that has long been ācarefully describedā and repeatedly af- firmed by precedent, none of which suggests the right to live with family is definitionally qualified by a prior conviction. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 40 of 111 40 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 constitutional rights, but it does not eliminate those rights whole- sale. Three points illustrate this general problem in Alabamaās ar- gument. We discuss them as follows. First, we establish that the Constitutionās text does not support Alabamaās contention that Henryās prior conviction automatically deprives him of a well-es- tablished fundamental right. Second, we explain why the funda- mental-rights case law does not enable Alabama to avoid strict scru- tiny solely because of Henryās conviction. Third, we show how the parental-rights cases support our reading of the Constitutionās text and the general principles our fundamental-rights jurisprudence has set forth. The Constitutionās Text. We begin with the relevant provi- sion: the Fourteenth Amendmentās Due Process Clause. That Clause prevents state and local governments from ādepriv[ing] any person of . . . liberty . . . without due process of law.ā U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 1 (emphasis added). For three reasons, the best read- ing of that language requires the conclusion that Henryās convic- tion bears on the stateās justiļ¬cation for depriving him of his fun- damental rights, not whether he has them in the ļ¬rst place. First, the clauseās structure does not support Alabamaās ar- gument. The main clue comes from the provisionās object: āany person.ā Itās by now beyond debate that that phrase is broad. The Supreme Court has repeatedly conļ¬rmed that the use of āany per- sonā makes the Due Process Clauseās reach āuniversal . . . in appli- cation.ā Plyler v. Doe, 457 U.S. 202, 212 (1982) (emphasis omitted) USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 41 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 41 (quoting Yick Wo v. Hopkins, 118 U.S. 356, 369 (1886)). So the Clause covers Henry. After all, he is a āperson,ā and his conviction does not change that fact. As a result, the Constitutionās plain terms guarantee him certain liberties. See United States v. Jimenez-Shilon, 34 F.4th 1042, 1046 (11th Cir. 2022) (explaining ādangerous felonsā āare indisputably part of āthe peopleāā who the Second Amend- ment protects); Kanter v. Barr, 919 F.3d 437, 453 (7th Cir. 2019) (Bar- rett, J., dissenting) (same). That means that the right to āestablish a home and bring up children,ā Meyer, 262 U.S. at 399āa liberty within the meaning of the Due Process Clauseāis a right guaran- teed to all āperson[s],ā including Henry. And the only remaining question is whether restricting a āperson[ās]ā (in this case, Henryās) liberties comports with due process of law. Second, Alabamaās reading of the Due Process Clauseāor any other rights-securing provisionādoes not make much sense in application. āIt is one thing to say thatā certain liberties āfall out- side the scopeā of the Fourteenth Amendment, but it āis another thing to say that certain people fall outside the Amendmentās scope.ā Kanter, 919 F.3d at 452 (Barrett, J., dissenting). To suggest the latter, as Alabama does, would imply that āa person could be in one day and out the next: the moment he was convicted of a [sex] crime . . . , his rights would be stripped as a self-executing conse- quence of his new status.ā Id. To put it mildly, that is āan unusual way of thinking about rights.ā Id. And it is not one that the Constitution adopts. The Four- teenth Amendment anticipates that state action will deprive USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 42 of 111 42 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 individuals of their constitutional rights and that state action will determine the scope of the deprivation. Id. In this respect, the Fourteenth Amendment provides that ā[n]o State shall make or en- force any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor . . . deprive any person of life, lib- erty, or property, without due process of law; nor denyā them āthe equal protection of the laws.ā U.S. CONST. amend. XIV, § 1 (em- phasis added). āFelon voting rights are a good example: a state can disen- franchise felons, but if it refrains from doing so, their voting rights remain constitutionally protected.ā Kanter, 919 F.3d at 453 (Barrett, J., dissenting); accord Jones v. Governor of Fla., 975 F.3d 1016, 1028ā29 (11th Cir. 2020) (en banc). So too with the right to keep and bear arms. Weāve explained that ādangerous felonsā are part of āthe peopleā the Second Amendment protects but that they āmay be prohibited from possessing ļ¬rearms without oļ¬endingā the preex- isting right the Second Amendment secures. Jimenez-Shilon, 34 F.4th at 1046. In both instances, āa person convicted of a qualifying crime does not automatically lose his right[s] . . . but instead be- comes eligible to loseā them, Kanter, 919 F.3d at 453 (Barrett, J., dis- senting), in appropriate circumstances. Third, Alabamaās view of the Constitution leads to some perverse results. If Alabama were right that a possible reason for regulating fundamental rights precluded stringent judicial review, nothing would stop Alabama from disregarding the usual limita- tions on statesā power to infringe constitutional rights. Thatās so USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 43 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 43 because, as weāve noted, rational-basis review applies when the right involved is not āfundamental.ā And under rational-basis re- view, courts generally donāt strike down legislationāregardless of how poorly tailored restrictions are or how much of a historical outlier they may be. See Beach Commcāns, Inc., 508 U.S. at 313ā15. But that is not how courts usually assess fundamental-rights claims; a valid reason for limiting rights does not justify every means of lim- iting rights. See United States v. Rahimi, 602 U.S. 680, 692 (2024) (āWhy and how the regulation burdens the right are central to this inquiry.ā (emphasis added)); Flores, 507 U.S. at 302 (permitting state action that is ānarrowly tailored to serve a compelling state inter- estā). Yet Alabama seeks to turn a potential justiļ¬cation for tar- geted regulation of personsā fundamental rights into a regulatory blank check. The Constitution does not allow states to evade judi- cial review in that way when fundamental rights are at issue. When we consider these three points together, the text of the Due Process Clause dispatches Alabamaās argument: the Con- stitution secures fundamental rights for all persons, but the govern- ment may deprive individuals of those fundamental rights under only very limited circumstances. See Flores, 507 U.S. at 301ā02 (ā[O]ur . . . cases . . . interpret[] the Fifth and Fourteenth Amend- mentsā guarantee of ādue process of lawā to include a substantive component, which forbids the government to infringe certain āfun- damentalā liberty interests at all, no matter what process is pro- vided, unless the infringement is narrowly tailored to serve a com- pelling state interest.ā). So whether Henryās conviction is a USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 44 of 111 44 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 āqualifyingā one that renders him āeligibleā to be deprived of his rights, Kanter, 919 F.3d at 453 (Barrett, J., dissenting), raises a ques- tion of tailoring, see Flores, 507 U.S. at 301ā02, or history, see Kerry v. Din, 576 U.S. 86, 95 (2015) (plurality opinion). Fundamental-Rights Precedent. Our fundamental-rights ju- risprudence conļ¬rms the conclusion we draw from the text of the Due Process Clause: Henryās conviction bears on the Stateās justiļ¬- cation for restricting his constitutional rights, not on the existence or deļ¬nition of Henryās constitutional rights in the ļ¬rst place. In fact, the Supreme Court has squarely rejected Alabamaās positionāwhich would wholesale deprive certain āperson[s]ā of fundamental rightsāas āinconsistent with the approachā it āhas used in discussingā well-established fundamental rights, āincluding marriage and intimacy.ā Obergefell, 576 U.S. at 671. Rights are not ādeļ¬ned by who exercised them in the past.ā Id. (emphasis added). Indeed, āLoving did not ask about a āright to interracial marriageā; Turner did not ask about a āright of inmates to marryā; and Zablocki did not ask about a āright of fathers with unpaid child support du- ties to marry.āā Id. When governments have attempted to deprive certain groups of people of their fundamental rights, the Court has āinquired about the right . . . in its comprehensive sense, asking if there was a suļ¬cient justiļ¬cation for excluding the relevant class from the right.ā Id. So the question in cases like Henryās is whether the state has a suļ¬cient justiļ¬cation for and appropriate means of denying the right to certain individuals. And itās not, as Alabama USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 45 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 45 attempts to frame the dispute, whether Henry has the right in the ļ¬rst place. To be sure, in some cases, the Supreme Court has found the status of the person āwho[m]ā the government is regulating im- portant to its careful description of the fundamental right. But it has normally done so because that fact informs what right the plaintiļ¬ is asserting. Cf. id. The Supreme Courtās recent substantive-due-process case, Department of State v. MuƱoz, oļ¬ers an example. 602 U.S. 899 (2024). MuƱoz ļ¬led suit after the United States prevented her husband, a noncitizen, from entering the country. She argued that the deci- sion undermined her right to marriage and the right to live with her family. Id. at 903ā07, 910. The Court rejected MuƱozās claim and, as relevant here, her framing of the dispute. As the Court saw things, MuƱoz claimed āsomething distinct: the right to reside with her noncitizen spouse in the United States.ā Id. at 910. Because MuƱozās husband, a noncitizen, did not have the right to reside in the United States, her claim āinvolve[d] more than marriage and more than spousal cohabitation.ā Id. In turn, the Court concluded that MuƱoz failed to show āthat the right to bring a noncitizen spouse to the United States is deeply rooted in this Nationās history and tradition.ā Id. at 911 (cleaned up). But Henryās case is unlike MuƱoz. MuƱozās husbandās status as a noncitizen required her to establish something āmore than spousal cohabitationāāthe right to have her husband enter and USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 46 of 111 46 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 reside in the United States. Id. at 910. By contrast, itās hard to see, and Alabama does not explain, how Henryās status as a sex oļ¬ender requires him to assert āsomething distinctā from or something āmore than . . . cohabitationā with his family. Id. Rather, living with his family is the core relief Henry seeks through his com- plaint. So precedent detailing how to carefully describe fundamen- tal-rights claims does not suggest Henryās status as a felon is mate- rial to whether the Fourteenth Amendment guarantees him the fundamental right to live with his family in the ļ¬rst place. Decisions from cases on more analogous facts prove the point. Consider prisonersā attempts to enforce their fundamental rights. As the Court has repeatedly explained, ā[p]rison walls do not form a barrier separating prison inmates from the protections of the Constitution.ā Turner v. Saļ¬ey, 482 U.S. 78, 84 (1987). Convicted individuals, even when they are serving their sen- tences, retain, for instance, the right to petition the government for redress, Johnson v. Avery, 393 U.S. 483, 486 (1969), the right to be free of racial discrimination, Lee v. Washington, 390 U.S. 333, 333ā34 (1968), the right to the freedom of speech, Procunier v. Martinez, 416 U.S. 396, 418 (1974), overruled on other grounds by Thornburgh v. Ab- bott, 490 U.S. 401 (1989), the right to the free exercise of religion, OāLone v. Est. of Shabazz, 482 U.S. 342, 348 (1987), and the right to marry, Turner, 582 U.S. at 95ā96. Each is undoubtedly a āālibertyā interest within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment,ā and each does not fade away upon conviction āeven thoughā a right USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 47 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 47 may be āqualiļ¬ed of necessity by the circumstance of imprison- ment.ā Martinez, 416 U.S. at 418. And if prisoners retain their constitutional rights, so too do those who have served their terms of incarceration and are rejoin- ing society. Cf. Doe v. Harris, 772 F.3d 563, 572 (9th Cir. 2014) (con- cluding āregistered sex oļ¬enders who have completed their terms of probation and parole enjoy the full protection of the First Amendmentā (cleaned up)). Our sister circuits have uniformly recognized that principle in cases directly analogous to Henryās. When district courts im- pose special conditions of supervised release that interfere with a felonās, including a sex oļ¬enderās, ability to raise or live with their child, the courts of appeals have acknowledged that such re- strictions interfere with āa fundamental liberty interest.ā United States v. Bear, 769 F.3d 1221, 1229 (10th Cir. 2014) (quoting United States v. Edgin, 92 F.3d 1044, 1049 (10th Cir. 1996)); United States v. Del Valle-Cruz, 785 F.3d 48, 56ā57, 64 (1st Cir. 2015); United States v. Myers, 426 F.3d 117, 125ā26, 130 (2d Cir. 2005) (Sotomayor, J.); United States v. Voelker, 489 F.3d 139, 154ā55 (3d Cir. 2007); United States v. Worley, 685 F.3d 404, 408 (4th Cir. 2012); United States v. Widmer, 785 F.3d 200, 208 (6th Cir. 2015); United States v. Quinn, 698 F.3d 651, 652 (7th Cir. 2012) (Easterbrook, C.J.); United States v. Da- vis, 452 F.3d 991, 995 (8th Cir. 2006); United States v. Wolf Child, 699 F.3d 1082, 1092ā93 (9th Cir. 2012). USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 48 of 111 48 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 As a result, many courts review the challenged conditions to ensure they āinterfere with the right of familial association . . . only in compelling circumstancesā through means that are āāespecially ļ¬ne-tunedā to achieve the statutory purposes of sentencing.ā Bear, 769 F.3d at 1229 (ļ¬rst quoting United States v. Smith, 606 F.3d 1270, 1284 (10th Cir. 2010); and then quoting Edgin, 92 F.3d at 1049); ac- cord Quinn, 698 F.3d at 652 (āPutting the parent-child relationship under governmental supervision for long periods (under this judg- ment, until the son turns 18) requires strong justiļ¬cation.ā); Wid- mer, 785 F.3d at 208 (āSpecial conditions of supervised release that implicate parental rights are considered more intrusive and require explicit consideration by the sentencing court.ā); United States v. Cabrera-Rivera, 893 F.3d 14, 33 (1st Cir. 2018) (āBecause impairment of a defendantās relationship with his child involves a very signiļ¬- cant deprivation of liberty, it requires a greater justiļ¬cation.ā (cleaned up)).7 So even after a person has been convicted of a sex 7 We have not articulated a special standard of review for conditions of super- vised release that infringe individualsā constitutional rights. All special condi- tions of supervised release must be āreasonably related to the statutory sen- tencing factors,ā involve āno greater deprivation of liberty than is reasonably necessary for the purposes set forth inā 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a), and remain ācon- sistent with any pertinent policy statements issued by the Sentencing Com- mission.ā United States v. Etienne, 102 F.4th 1139, 1146 (11th Cir. 2024). So we generally consider claims that a condition violates a constitutional right as an argument that the condition āis more restrictive than necessary.ā Id. We have āaffirmed restrictive conditions of supervised release that burden constitu- tional rights so long as the conditions are tempered by reasonable exceptions.ā Id. at 1446ā47. In other words, we generally donāt impose āabsolute bar[s]ā on individualsā exercise of their constitutional rights, id. at 1147, and we attempt to ensure that restrictions on such rights are ānarrowly prescribed,ā id. at 1149. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 49 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 49 oļ¬ense, including those involving child pornography, courts uni- versally view those individuals as still enjoying their fundamental rights, including their rights to live with and contact family, subject to limits based on appropriate tailoring. Our precedent comports with this principle. In Doe v. Moore, we rejected a substantive-due-process challenge to Floridaās regis- tration and notiļ¬cation scheme and DNA-collection statute. 410 F.3d at 1344ā45. We did so for two reasons. First, we concluded the plaintiļ¬s had no liberty interest in preventing āa stateās publica- tion of truthful information that is already available to the public.ā 8 Id. at 1345. No history or tradition supported such a proposition. And second, as relevant here, we conļ¬rmed the challenged provision did not āfall under a fundamental right classiļ¬cation.ā Id. That was so, we explained, because the law didnāt ārestrict See, e.g., United States v. Zinn, 321 F.3d 1084, 1093 (11th Cir. 2003) (upholding a restriction on access to the internet in a child-pornography prosecution be- cause the supervisee could still use the internet for valid purposes with his probation officerās permission); United States v. Coglianese, 34 F.4th 1002, 1010ā 11 (11th Cir. 2022) (same). 8 To be sure, in Doe v. Moore, our careful description of the asserted right in- cluded the plaintiffsā convictions. See 410 F.3d at 1344 (defining the right as āthe right of a person, convicted of āsexual offenses,ā to refuse subsequent reg- istration of his or her personal information with Florida law enforcement and prevent publication of this information on Floridaās Sexual Offender/Predator websiteā); see also United States v. Ambert, 561 F.3d 1202, 1209 (11th Cir. 2009). But, as we explain above, that definition had no impact on how we ultimately resolved the claim, nor did it lead us to discount the importance of a sex of- fenderās familial rights. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 50 of 111 50 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 plaintiļ¬sā freedom of action with respect to their families,ā nor did it otherwise āintrude upon the aspect of the right to privacy that protects an individualās independence in making certain types of important decisions.ā Id. (quoting Paul P. v. Verniero, 170 F.3d 396, 405 (3d Cir. 1999)); see id. at 1345 n.6 (recognizing ālimitations on state regulatory power in areas regarding āmarriage, procreation, contraception, family relationships, and child rearing and educa- tionāā (quoting Paul v. Davis, 424 U.S. 693, 713 (1976))). The dispositive factor wasnāt that sex oļ¬enders lacked famil- ial rights. To the contrary, we emphasized that these rights, which we described as āprivacy interests,ā were important to our decision. See id. at 1344 n.4. But we upheld the challenged provision because Floridaās laws had only āindirect eļ¬ectsā āon the oļ¬enderās relation- ship with his family,ā and those eļ¬ects just ādid not rise to the in- fringement of a fundamental right.ā Id. at 1344ā45; see id. at 1344 n.5 (citing Miller, 405 F.3d at 710ā11, which upheld a location-based residency restriction on sex oļ¬enders because it did not limit who may live with the oļ¬enders in their residences). But as weāve ex- plained, thatās not the case here. Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) criminal- izes conduct at the core of āfamily relationships,ā id. at 1345 n.6 (citation omitted)ānamely a personās ability to live with and raise their own child. So Supreme Court precedent, case law from our sister cir- cuits, and our own decisions point to and compel the conclusion that Henry enjoys the right to live with his child. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 51 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 51 Parental-Rights Precedent. Despite the Constitutionās text and the general principles that guide our inquiry into fundamental- rights claims, Alabama argues the Supreme Courtās parental-rights cases require that Henry prove our society has ātraditionally ac- corded such a fatherā (that is, a father with a child-pornography con- viction) the rights he asserts. Michael H. v. Gerald D., 491 U.S. 110, 126 (1989) (plurality opinion) (emphasis added). Alabama also cites Stanley, 405 U.S. at 649, Lehr v. Robertson, 463 U.S. 248 (1983), and Troxel, 530 U.S. at 69, in support of its position. But Alabama overreads Michael H. and misinterprets the other cases on which it relies. Rather than support Alabamaās po- sition, Michael H., Stanley, Lehr, and Troxel conļ¬rm that Henry has a right to live with his son, at least and until the State limits that right through a means consistent with due process. We discuss Mi- chael H. ļ¬rst and then address the remaining cases on which Ala- bama relies. In Michael H., Michael, a putative father, sought parental and visitation rights for his purported natural child. That child was born into a womanās marriage with another man and had been ac- cepted and raised as the legitimate child of that marriage. 491 U.S. at 113, 127. California law presumed a child born of wedlock, like the one in Micheal H., was the natural child of the married couple, and it disallowed collateral attacks on the legal status of that family. Id. So Michael argued the statutory scheme was unconstitutional. But the Court rejected the challenge. Id. at 116ā17, 130. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 52 of 111 52 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 Contrary to Alabamaās assertion, the Court did not do so be- cause states may generally deny the parental rights of āan adulter- ous natural father.ā Id. at 130. Rather, a plurality rejected Mi- chaelās claim because āCalifornia law, like nature itself, ma[d]e[] no provision for dual fatherhood.ā Id. at 118. Michaelās claim that the Constitution ought to protect his parental rights was necessarily a claim that the Constitution had to ādeny protection to [the] marital father.ā Id. at 130. And in the situation of competing claims to parental rights, Michael could oļ¬er no evidence showing that states traditionally preferred his parental-rights claim over those of a mar- ried father who āwishes to embrace the child.ā Id. at 127. To the contrary, āour traditions ha[d] protected the marital family . . . against the sort of claim Michael assert[ed].ā Id. at 124. The āpre- sumption of legitimacy,ā to which California adhered and which Michael challenged, āwas a fundamental principle at common law.ā Id. So Alabamaās reliance on Michael H. is misplaced. 9 The Court was not concerned with Michaelās status as an adulterous 9 The Michael H. coalition fractured sharply. Only four Justices joined Justice Scaliaās plurality opinion. See Michael H., 491 U.S. at 113. And two of those Justices disagreed with the analytical approach Justice Scalia took. See id. at 132 (OāConnor, J., concurring in part) (explaining the ārelevant traditions pro- tecting asserted rightsā āmight not beā articulated at āāthe most specific levelā availableā (citation omitted)); cf. Obergefell, 576 U.S. at 671. So at its narrow- estāwhere it is firmly binding, see Marks v. United States, 430 U.S. 188, 193 (1977)āMichael H. is a narrow-tailoring case. Justice Stevens affirmed because California afforded Michael a sufficient opportunity to establish paternity and that his parentage would be in the childās best interest. Michael H., 491 U.S. at USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 53 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 53 natural father for its own sake but because that status required Mi- chael to prove something ādistinctā and āmore thanā a right to pa- ternity, MuƱoz, 602 U.S. at 910āthat the Constitution grants natu- ral fathers parental rights at the expense of marital fathers, see Mi- chael H., 491 U.S. at 127, 130. But Alabama again fails to show how Henryās status as a sex oļ¬ender requires that he claim a ādistinctā right or something āmore than . . . cohabitation.ā MuƱoz, 602 U.S. at 910. Tradition and history also doomed Michaelās claim. Mi- chaelās claim ran headlong into the common lawās āpresumption of legitimacyā that had protected āthe marital family . . . against the sort of claim Michael assert[ed].ā Michael H., 491 U.S. at 124. So whatever rights Michael generally had as a natural father were historically circumscribed by āa tradition denying the speciļ¬c appli- cation of ā them. Din, 576 U.S. at 95; see MuƱoz, 602 U.S. at 911ā12. In other words, California prevailed because it adhered to tradi- tional restrictions on parental rights, not necessarily because Mi- chael lacked parental rights in the ļ¬rst place. See Michael H., 491 U.S. at 127 n.6 (explaining āa more speciļ¬c tradition . . . unquali- ļ¬edly denies protection toā the ānatural father of a child adulter- ously conceivedā); see also id. at 127 n.6, 129 n.7 (acknowledging that in the absence of a āmore speciļ¬c tradition,ā courts may have 135ā36 (Stevens, J., concurring in the judgment). Still, for purposes of this opinion, we accept the plurality opinionās logic as controlling. But even then, the plurality opinion does not support Alabamaās argument that Henry lacks a fundamental right to live with his son. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 54 of 111 54 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 to āreason from[] the traditions regarding natural fathers in gen- eralā). So at most, Michael H. stands for the unremarkable proposi- tion that states may limit a personās exercise of a fundamental right if the stateās action accords with our Nationās history and tradition. See Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 691 (explaining āif a challenged regulation ļ¬ts within [our regulatory] tradition, it is lawfulā). But thatās not the case here. On Michael H.ās own terms, Henry is indisputably a member of a āunitary familyā that Americans have āhistoric[ally] respect[ed].ā Id. at 123. And as we will discuss, Alabama has not shown a history and tradition of extinguishing familial rights merely because of the fact of conviction. The remaining cases on which Alabama relies aļ¬rmatively undermine its claim that Michael lacks a constitutional right to live with his child. Stanley, Lehr, and Troxel make clear that broad, stat- utory classiļ¬cations abrogating parental rights are presumptively improper. True, in Stanley, the Court framed the relevant question as whether āa presumption that distinguishes and burdens all unwed fathers [is] constitutionally repugnant.ā 405 U.S. at 649. But it im- mediately concluded that āas a matter of due process of law, Stan- ley was entitled to a hearing on his ļ¬tness as a parent before his children were taken from him.ā Id. Then, in Lehr, another case involving an unwed parent, the Supreme Court applied Stanley. New York āadopted a special USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 55 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 55 statutory scheme to protect the unmarried fatherās interest in as- suming a responsible role in the future of his child.ā 463 U.S. at 263. But the absentee father failed to avail himself of the schemeās protections, so the Court rejected his bid to establish his parental rights through a constitutional claim. Id. at 263ā65. And in Troxel, the Court described the plaintiļ¬ as a āļ¬t cus- todial parentā because āno court . . . found[] that Granville was an unļ¬t parent.ā 530 U.S. at 68. In turn, the āpresumption that ļ¬t parents act in the best interests of their childrenā attached. Id. In each of these three cases, the Court presumed the puta- tive parent had a constitutional right unless an adequate state pro- cedure terminated those rights for appropriate reasons. In other words, the Fourteenth Amendment prevented the state from de- priving the parents of the right to the care, custody, and control of their child unless and until the state aļ¬orded them due process. None of the cases Alabama marshals establishes that a prior child-pornography conviction eliminates Henryās fundamental rights as a matter of law. To the contrary, Supreme Court prece- dent generally requires an individualized ļ¬nding to terminate pa- rental rights: when state law āforecloses the determinative issues of competence and care, when it explicitly disdains present realities in deference to past formalities, it needlessly risks running roughshod over the important interests of both parent and child.ā Stanley, 405 U.S. at 657. In sum, state regulation of parental rights based on status alone is constitutionally suspect. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 56 of 111 56 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 * * * Henry has a fundamental right to live with his family, includ- ing his son. Alabama Code § 15-20A-11(d)(4) directly and substan- tially interferes with that right by making it a crime for Henry to reside with him. So we must closely examine Alabamaās law to en- sure it passes constitutional muster. 2. Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) does not pass constitutional review because it is neither narrowly tailored to further Alabamaās compelling governmental interest nor consistent with our Nationās history and tradition of regulating familial cohabi- tation. The next step in our analysis asks whether, even if Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) infringes Henryās fundamental right to live with his son, it does so unconstitutionally. Alabama argues that the law sur- vives constitutional review because it passes strict scrutiny and comports with this Nationās history and tradition of regulating pa- rental rights. We disagree. Alabama certainly has a compelling interest in protecting its youth from sexual abuse. But the challenged provi- sion is not narrowly tailored to further that interest. And our Na- tionās history and tradition of regulating parental rights conļ¬rms that conclusion: we have given parents the chance to show that physical custody of their children is in the childrenās best interest. Alabamaās law oļ¬ers no such opportunity for anyone convicted of a qualifying āsex oļ¬enseā under any circumstances. Because USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 57 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 57 Alabamaās law fails strict scrutiny and departs from our traditions, we conclude that it is unconstitutional. We begin with strict scrutiny and then address Alabamaās historical arguments. i. Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) is not narrowly tailored to further Alabamaās compelling governmental interests. To satisfy strict scrutiny, the government bears the burden to prove that it has ānarrowly tailoredā its state action āto serve a compelling state interest.ā Flores, 507 U.S. at 302. Alabama has surely shown it has a ācompelling interest.ā Indeed, it āis indisput- able āthat a Stateās interest in safeguarding the physical and psycho- logical well-being of a minor is compelling.āā Otto v. City of Boca Raton, 981 F.3d 854, 868 (11th Cir. 2020) (quoting New York v. Ferber, 458 U.S. 747, 756ā57 (1982)). But āit is not enough for the [State] to identify a compelling interest.ā Id. āTo survive strict scrutiny,ā Alabama āmust proveā that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) furthers āthat compelling interest andā is ānarrowly tailored to that end.ā Id. (cleaned up). Tailoring is especially important in cases like this one, where familial rights are involved. Thatās so because the State has no compelling interest in removing children from parents who are in fact competent to love and care for them. See Stanley, 405 U.S. at 652 (ā[T]he State registers no gain towards its declared goals when it separates children from the custody of ļ¬t parents.ā); Santosky, 455 U.S. at 760 (ā[U]ntil the State proves parental unļ¬tness, the child and his parents share a USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 58 of 111 58 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 vital interest in preventing erroneous termination of their natural relationship.ā). Three factors guide our determination on whether state ac- tion is suļ¬ciently tailored: overinclusiveness, underinclusiveness, and the opportunity to enact less restrictive alternatives. See Ent. Merchs. Assān, 564 U.S. at 805 (explaining that compelling interests āmust be pursued by means that are neither seriously underinclu- sive nor seriously overinclusiveā); MuƱoz, 602 U.S. at 919 (acknowl- edging that a burden on a fundamental right ātrigger[s]ā the gov- ernmentās āobligation to demonstrateā that its action āis the least restrictive means of servingā its compelling āinterestā). Overinclusiveness. A law is overinclusive when it regulates too much conduct. In other words, the law applies to individuals whom the government does not have a compelling interest in reg- ulating. Overinclusive cases present the greatest constitutional concern because the government abridges constitutional rights without justiļ¬cation. See Zablocki, 434 U.S. at 390 (concluding a statute forbidding marriage without a court order was āsubstan- tially overinclusiveā because it possibly prevented individuals, through marriage to wealthy spouses, from āimproving their abil- ity to satisfyā the prior familial support obligations that Wisconsin claimed to enact the statute to secure); cf. City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr., 473 U.S. 432, 448 (1985) (ā[T]he record does not reveal any rational basis for believing that the Featherston home would pose any special threat to the cityās legitimate interests.ā). After all, USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 59 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 59 the government may not āburn the house to roast the pig.ā Butler v. Michigan, 352 U.S. 380, 383 (1957). Still, narrow tailoring does not require āperfect tailoring.ā Williams-Yulee v. Fla. Bar, 575 U.S. 433, 454 (2015). At bottom, when we account for these considerations, state action is not narrowly tailored if it advances the stateās compelling interest in only āsomeā cases. Stanley, 405 U.S. at 654; Ent. Merchs. Assān, 564 U.S. at 804. Underinclusiveness. On the ļ¬ip side, a law is underinclusive if it leaves unregulated similar conduct that also threatens the com- pelling interest that the state action purports to advance. Reed v. Town of Gilbert, 576 U.S. 155, 172 (2015). We assess a state actionās underinclusiveness because a āwoefully underinclusiveā act may undermine our belief that the government truly wishes to advance its asserted interest. Republican Party of Minn. v. White, 536 U.S. 765, 780 (2002); see City of Ladue v. Gilleo, 512 U.S. 43, 52ā53 (1994) (ex- plaining underinclusiveness ādiminish[es] the credibility of the gov- ernmentās rationaleā for regulating fundamental rights). Underinclusiveness doesnāt raise the same constitutional concerns as does overinclusiveness. And some underinclusive situ- ations may arise, as here, where no reasonable person would doubt that the government is genuine in its eļ¬orts to advance its asserted interest. Plus, the government āneed not address all aspects of a problem in one fell swoop.ā Williams-Yulee, 575 U.S. at 449. But even so, the state bears the burden of identifying āgood reason[s]ā USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 60 of 111 60 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 for āsingl[ing] outā the conduct it did regulate. TikTok Inc. v. Gar- land, 145 S. Ct. 57, 70 (2025). And to the extent the government leaves unregulated some conduct that may undermine its asserted interest, that fact may hamper the governmentās ability to disprove the viability of proļ¬ered less restrictive alternatives. Less Restrictive Alternatives. That brings us to the next fac- tor. State action infringing fundamental rights fails strict scrutiny āif less restrictive alternatives would be at least as eļ¬ective in achieving the legitimate purpose that the statute was enacted to serve.ā Reno v. ACLU, 521 U.S. 844, 874 (1997). Put simply, āthe government cannotā advance a compelling interest āby means that ābroadly stiļ¬e fundamental personal liberties when the end can be more narrowly achieved.āā Lynch v. Baxley, 744 F.2d 1452, 1459 (11th Cir. 1984) (quoting Shelton v. Tucker, 364 U.S. 479, 488 (1960)). This does not mean that states must aļ¬rmatively proļ¬er and then rebut less restrictive alternatives. United States v. Grady, 18 F.4th 1275, 1286 n.12 (11th Cir. 2021) (discussing least-restrictive al- ternatives under the Religious Freedom and Restoration Act); see also Knight v. Thompson, 797 F.3d 934, 946 (11th Cir. 2015) (acknowl- edging that, at least under the Religious Land Use and Institution- alized Persons Act, we split on this issue with the First and Third Circuits, which require that governments show they considered and rejected less restrictive alternatives). But if a plaintiļ¬ āpre- sent[s]ā the government āwith a plausible, less restrictive alterna- tive,ā it is āfor the Government . . . to prove the alternative to be USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 61 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 61 ineļ¬ective.ā United States v. Playboy Ent. Grp., 529 U.S. 803, 823 (2000); Grady, 18 F.4th at 1286. Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) ļ¬unks each of these three testsā overinclusiveness, underinclusiveness, and less restrictive alterna- tivesāso it fails strict scrutiny. Overinclusiveness. The statute is vastly overinclusive. De- fendants assert that their āinterest in protecting children is ad- vanced by preventing āsexual recidivism,ā which is the commission of another sex crime . . . .ā Appellantsā Reply Br. at 16. But a con- viction that satisļ¬es Section 15-20A-11(d)(4)ās criteria does not alone predict with substantial precision an oļ¬enderās likelihood of harming their own child. Nor does such a conviction oļ¬er, as Ala- bama law and our Constitution usually require, āclear and convinc- ing evidenceā that the regulated individual āis unsuited or unļ¬t to assume the place of a [parent] in providing a safe and comfortable home . . . .ā Ex parte Sullivan, 407 So. 2d 559, 563 (Ala. 1981) (quot- ing Chandler v. Whatley, 238 Ala. 206, 209 (1939)); see Santosky, 455 U.S. at 769 (requiring the clear-and-convincing standard of proof to terminate parental rights). At its broadest, Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) covers some crimes that sustain little to no rational inference that a parent is likely to harm their child. For instance, as weāve mentioned, Section 15- 20A-11(d)(4) would bar from residing with their child a 19-year-old college freshman convicted of downloading sexually explicit con- tent that their 16-year-old high-school sweetheart sent them. And USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 62 of 111 62 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 because Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) operates forever without excep- tion, that categorical bar would remain even if the 19-year-old col- lege freshman later fathered a child at the age of ļ¬fty or sixty and after living several decades of a law-abiding life. Alabama oļ¬ers no justiļ¬cation for treating that person exactly like one who just last week traļ¬cked or raped children. And for at least some of the core conduct Section 15-20A- 11(d)(4) targets, the sole fact of a conviction is not suļ¬ciently tai- lored to advance Alabamaās interests in protecting children. The parties hotly contest whether a qualifying conviction, speciļ¬cally a child-pornography conviction, may adequately stand in for the dan- ger that a parent poses to a child. They do so primarily through expert testimony on the recidivism rates for sex oļ¬enders generally and child-pornography oļ¬enders speciļ¬cally. Cf. United States v. Ke- bodeaux, 570 U.S. 387, 396 (2013) (acknowledging that, generally, there is āconļ¬icting evidenceā on sex oļ¬endersā recidivism rates). We brieļ¬y recount that evidentiary debate, and we credit the evi- dence Alabama marshaled. But even applying our summary-judg- ment standard of review, Alabama has not shown the Section is narrowly tailored. Alabama relies mostly on three ļ¬gures to argue that child- pornography oļ¬enders recidivate at a high rate and therefore pose a continuing danger to their own children. First, Alabama suggests that within ļ¬ve years of release, an estimated 9.2% to 46% of child- pornography oļ¬enders will commit another sex oļ¬ense. It reaches that estimate by multiplying a ļ¬ve-year sex-oļ¬ense recidivism rate USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 63 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 63 for child-pornography oļ¬enders (4.6%) by its expertsā claim that actual recidivism rates are undercounted at a multiple of two to ten times the reported ļ¬gures. Second, the State asserts that ļ¬fty per- centāand up to eighty-ļ¬ve percentāof child-pornography oļ¬end- ers have previously committed a contact oļ¬ense against a child (meaning an oļ¬ense involving the sexual molestation of a child). And third, Alabama argues that, for those who have committed a contact oļ¬ense and have recidivated, about a quarter did so even after ten years of living free in their community. So the risk an oļ¬ender poses, the State posits, does not decrease over time. Henry disputes the relevance and the accuracy of some of these ļ¬gures. He counters that Alabama fails to diļ¬erentiate be- tween child-pornography oļ¬enders who have committed a contact oļ¬ense in the past and those who have not. And Henryās expert proļ¬ered that less than two percent ofāthat is, fewer than one in ļ¬ftyāoļ¬enders who have only viewed or possessed child pornog- raphy, like Henry, commit a future contact oļ¬ense. Henry also contests the extrapolations the State makes from its estimates of unreported recidivism. Alabamaās unreported- crime-multiplier, Henryās expert claims, relies on unreported crimes committed by those who have not yet been caught, not re- cidivism rates of those who have been convicted of an oļ¬ense, like Henry; estimates of unreported crime do not make estimates of unreported recidivism. Henryās expert also argues that the risk of sexual recidivism halves every ļ¬ve years an individual is living in the community as a law-abiding citizen. And after around ten to USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 64 of 111 64 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 ļ¬fteen years, Henry adds, most individuals who have committed a sex oļ¬ense are no more likely to commit a new sex oļ¬ense than are individuals with a non-sexual criminal history. Though, for low- risk sex oļ¬enders, Henryās expert points out that it may take only ļ¬ve years to pose a risk that is statistically indistinguishable from other non-sexual oļ¬enders. Of course, we do not wade into these factual disputes at the summary-judgment stage; we must draw all reasonable inferences in favor of the non-movant (here, Alabama). Marbury, 936 F.3d at 1232. But even under the summary-judgment standard, Alabama has not carried its burden. That is so for two reasons. First, none of the ļ¬gures Alabama proļ¬ers show that Henryās qualifying conviction necessarily makes him and others like him, without more, a danger to their children. The law doesnāt distinguish between oļ¬enders like Henry, who havenāt committed a previous contact oļ¬ense and appear statistically unlikely to com- mit one in the future, and oļ¬enders who have committed a previ- ous contact oļ¬ense and who may be more likely to commit another in the future. In other words, Alabama defends Section 15-20A- 11(d)(4) by relying on material distinctions the law itself does not make and which do not even apply to oļ¬enders in Henryās shoes. That is a concession of overinclusiveness. To be sure, the premise of Alabamaās position is that many sexual oļ¬enses go unreported, so broad legislative categories are necessary to prevent likely contact oļ¬enders from recidivating with USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 65 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 65 their own child. But as applied to Section 15-20A-11(d)(4), that logic just uses a child-pornography conviction as a proxy for oļ¬end- ers who have previously committed a contact oļ¬ense, even when they havenāt. Then Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) uses the ļ¬rst proxy as a second proxy for the dispositive conclusion that the regulated of- fender poses a threat to their own child. See Stanley, 405 U.S. at 657 (holding, in parental-rights cases, āthe determinative issuesā are ācompetency and careā). But this logicātwice removed from Henryās non-contact situationāfalls apart as soon as we look at the record: noticeably absent from it is direct evidence that child-por- nography-only oļ¬enders like Henry pose a danger to their chil- dren. In this respect, Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) sweeps with too broad a brush. Second, even if we disregard that error, the overinclusive- ness problems persist. The most relevant statistic the State prof- fered was its ļ¬rst: that 9.2% to 46% of child-pornography oļ¬enders will commit another sex oļ¬ense. That ļ¬gure raises several concerns. For starters, it includes a substantial range because it depends on estimates of the amount of unreported recidivism. That range of uncertaintyāa span of about 37 percentage pointsāis so large that it makes the estimate of recidivism meaningless. Plus, even crediting the highest recidivism rate in that range, as we must in this posture, still at least half the parents the law pre- vents from residing with their children will not pose a danger to USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 66 of 111 66 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 them. Indeed, our sister circuits have determined that a conviction for viewing child-pornography images, without more, does not es- tablish that an oļ¬ender is a danger to their own child. See, e.g., Da- vis, 452 F.3d at 995 (ļ¬nding āplain errorā where a district court barred a child-pornography oļ¬ender from having unsupervised contact with his own daughter where there was āno evidence that he has abused a childā); Bear, 769 F.3d at 1229 (vacating conditions limiting Bearās ability to reside with his children because, despite his prior sex oļ¬enses, the record did not show āa danger to his own three childrenā); Del Valle-Cruz, 785 F.3d at 64 (same); Worley, 685 F.3d at 408ā09 (same). Of course, any new contact oļ¬ense is a trag- edy. But so is depriving a child of a caring, competent, loving par- ent who presents no danger to the child. And although narrow tai- loring does not require āperfect tailoring,ā Williams-Yulee, 575 U.S. at 454, it demands more than a coin ļ¬ip. Other courts have held as much, declaring unconstitutional statutes that terminate parental rights based solely on the fact of a conviction, for the reason that they ignored individualized evidence relevant to a parentās ļ¬tness. See In re Amanda D., 811 N.E.2d 1237, 1242 (Ill. App. 2004) (āWe conclude that a conviction of aggravated battery to a child is not an adequate proxy for unļ¬tnessā because it āfails to take into account several things relevant to the ultimate ļ¬tness determination.ā), aļ¬ād sub nom. In re D.W., 827 N.E.2d 466 (Ill. 2005). In short, the State cannot justify abridging fundamental rights by advancing its compelling state interests in āsomeā cases. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 67 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 67 See Stanley, 405 U.S. at 654 (āBut all unmarried fathers are not in this category; some are wholly suited to have custody of their chil- dren.ā); Ent. Merchs. Assān, 564 U.S. at 804 (ā[S]ome of the legisla- tionās eļ¬ect may indeed be in support of what some parents of the restricted children actually want . . . . [But] [t]his is not the narrow tailoring to āassisting parentsā that restriction of First Amendment rights requires.ā). And thatās especially so when, as we discuss later, Alabama has other tools at its disposal to ensure the safety of its children. Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) is fatally overinclusive. Underinclusiveness. At the same time, Section 15-20A- 11(d)(4) is puzzlingly underinclusive. The statute does not prohibit a covered oļ¬ender from unsupervised visitation with āhis or her child at the residence of the criminal sex oļ¬ender where the child does not also reside.ā S.A.N. v. S.E.N., 995 So. 2d 175, 178 (Ala. Civ. App. 2008). In other words, it āallows every qualifying adult sex oļ¬ender daily unsupervised access to minors for four hours at a time in any one place on two consecutive days and nine aggregate days per month, as long as such access occurs between the hours of 6:00 a.m. and 10:30 p.m.ā Henry v. Abernathy, 711 F. Supp. 3d 1300, 1305 (M.D. Ala. 2024). So while Alabama burdens many who may in fact be ļ¬t to love and care for their children, at the same time, it may allow those who are in fact a danger to minors to enjoy unsupervised access to their next potential victims. That is not the sort of narrow tailoring strict scrutiny looks favorably upon. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 68 of 111 68 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 To be clear, we donāt doubt that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) re- ļ¬ects Alabamaās genuine eļ¬orts to secure the safety and wellbeing of its children. We believe the State is sincere in exercising its parens patriae authority to the beneļ¬t of its citizenry. The legislature could have aļ¬orded even dangerous oļ¬enders the visitation rights weāve just discussed to allow their children the beneļ¬t of a relation- ship with their parent, subject to a judicial determination that vis- itation is not in the childās best interest. See S.A.N., 995 So. 2d at 178ā79. But under strict scrutiny, where we must consider a lawās eļ¬ectiveness in light of less restrictive alternatives, a ālaw cannot be regarded as protecting an interest of the highest order, and thus as justifying a restriction on [fundamental rights], when it leaves appreciable damage to that supposedly vital interest unprohibited.ā Reed, 576 U.S. at 172 (internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Republican Party of Minn., 536 U.S. at 780). Less Restrictive Alternatives. Besides Section 15-20A- 11(d)(4)ās over- and underinclusiveness, Alabama could employ less restrictive alternatives to accomplish its goals. Henry focuses pri- marily on the alternative that Alabama could provide the oppor- tunity for judicial review and individualized relief. 10 10 Besides this alternative, Henry suggests several other ways Alabama could more narrowly tailor its statute: by including fewer qualifying offenses, by time-limiting its law, by providing criteria for reinstatement into the home (such as completion of a treatment program), or by allowing residence under certain conditions (such as the presence of a separate, qualified caregiver or ongoing supervision by the Alabama Department of Human Resources). We donāt further address these proposed alternatives because we agree with USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 69 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 69 Currently, Alabamaās statutory scheme prevents covered of- fenders from living with their children āregardless of the opinion of experts, lay persons, and the trial court that the registered sex oļ¬ender does not pose a threat to the child.ā K.E.W. v. T.W.E., 990 So. 2d 375, 381 (Ala. Civ. App. 2007). So if Henry ļ¬led suit to prove his ļ¬tness as a parent, ASCORNA would foreclose the claim and forbid the judge from considering any evidence on the matter. But Henry has developed evidence that a personās likelihood of recidi- vism declines substantially when we account for certain factors and that an individualized review can oļ¬er the most accurate assess- ment of the danger a particular person may pose to their child. Plus, generally, āparents are constitutionally entitled to a hearing on their ļ¬tness before their children are removed from their cus- tody.ā Stanley, 405 U.S. at 658; cf. Doe v. Kearney, 329 F.3d 1286, 1295 (11th Cir. 2003) (ā[A] state may not remove a child from parental custody without judicial authorization unless there is probable cause to believe the child is threatened with imminent harm.ā). So Henry has proļ¬ered a plausible less restrictive alternative. See ACLU, 521 U.S. at 874. Henry that his primary proposed alternative is a plausible one. We also donāt assess the constitutionality of a more narrowly tailored scheme that adopts Henryās additional suggestions, even if it does not provide the opportunity for individualized review. We donāt resolve such a hypothetical, in part, because this case does not require us to decide whether individualized review is a via- ble less restrictive alternative as compared to any other, more narrowly tailored scheme Alabama could enact. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 70 of 111 70 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 Alabama disputes the viability of individualized hearings.11 It contends that no expert tool can establish with a reasonable 11 Alabama also briefly expresses in its reply brief some doubt that we may properly consider Henryās primary alternative, calling it āa sort of substantive- due-process right to more process.ā We donāt find that suggestion persuasive for two reasons. First, Defendants raise it for the first time in their reply briefāand even then, make only a passing reference to it. But we donāt con- sider issues raised for the first time in a reply brief or matters mentioned only in passing. See Sapuppo v. Allstate Floridian Ins. Co., 739 F.3d 678, 681 (11th Cir. 2014). Second, and in any case, Henryās claim is not one of procedural due process. Henry does not make the usual procedural-due-process points. He does not contest the āconstitutional adequacy of [state] procedures,ā Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 335 (1976), like when a person challenges the accept- ability of post-deprivation hearings, id. at 349; the applicable standard of proof, Santosky, 455 U.S. at 769ā70; or the lack of appointed counsel, Lassiter, 452 U.S. at 31ā32. Instead, Henryās claim sounds in substantive due process. He raises the opportunity for individualized relief only to show that that there is not an āadequa[te] . . . āfitā between the classification and the policy that the classifi- cation servesāāthe fit is inadequate, Henry claims, because there is more tai- lored way to advance the Stateās policy. Michael H., 491 U.S. at 121; see Flores, 507 U.S. at 308 (confirming the plaintiffs merely ārecast[ed]ā a āāsubstantive due processā argumentā in āāprocedural due processā termsā by claiming indi- vidualized proceedings āwould better serveā the plaintiffsā interests). That the less restrictive alternative is more procedure is immaterial. The Court has recognized that certain procedural rules may satisfy substantive due process by furthering a compelling state interest. See, e.g., Cruzan ex rel. Cruzan v. Dir., Mo. Depāt of Health, 497 U.S. 261, 280ā85 (1990) (concluding Missouri could require clear-and-convincing evidence of a patientās intent before discontinu- ing nutrition and hydration because such a requirement permissibly furthers the stateās interest in safeguarding the patientās wishes and preserving life); United States v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739, 750ā51 (1987) (holding the Bail Reform Actās restriction of physical liberty was justified by the ācareful delineation of the circumstancesā in and the procedures by which one could be detained be- fore trial, furthering the governmentās interest in abating āan identified and USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 71 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 71 degree of scientiļ¬c accuracy whether an oļ¬ender poses a risk to their child. And Alabama argues that individualized determina- tions could never advance its compelling interest as eļ¬ectively as its current statutory scheme because some future oļ¬enders may slip through the cracks of any individualized process. But Alabama has failed to introduce evidence that satisļ¬es its burden of proving that the mere availability of individualized relief will make its statutory scheme less eļ¬ective. See Playboy Ent. Grp., 529 U.S. at 823; Grady, 18 F.4th at 1286. Thatās so for three reasons. First, Alabama too narrowly deļ¬nes the end to which it must narrowly tailor its law. Alabama must advance āthe physical and psychological well-beingā of all its children. Otto, 981 F.3d at 868 (citation omitted). As weāve explained, āthe State registers no gain towards its declared goals when it separates children from the custody of ļ¬t parents.ā Stanley, 405 U.S. at 652. So if Henry, or any other parent, āis a ļ¬tā one, then Alabama āspites its own articulated goals when it needlessly separates him from his family.ā Id. at 652ā 53. articulable threat to an individual or the communityā). At bottom, claims that a statute is unconstitutional as applied to a plaintiffābecause the plaintiff āis not likely to be currently dangerousāāāāmust ultimately be analyzedā in terms of substantive, not procedural, due process,ā at least if, as is the case here, dan- gerousness is not already ārelevant under the statutory scheme.ā Connecticut Depāt of Pub. Safety v. Doe, 538 U.S. 1, 7ā8 (2003) (quoting Michael H., 491 U.S. at 121). USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 72 of 111 72 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 In turn, the most eļ¬ective means of pursuing Alabamaās stated goal is the one that maximizes the number of children who can remain with ļ¬t parents while minimizing the number of chil- dren who may be placed with unļ¬t ones. On this rubric, permitting some form of individualized relief comports more eļ¬ectively with advancing the Stateās interests than does a categorical rule. See id. at 655 (āGiven the opportunity to make his case, Stanley may have been seen to be deserving of custody of his oļ¬spring. Had this been so, the Stateās statutory policy would have been furthered by leaving custody in him.ā). Second, Alabama fails to show how the opportunity for in- dividualized adjudications will make its statutory scheme less eļ¬ec- tive, given the lawās underinclusiveness that weāve already pointed out. As weāve noted, Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) permits even the worst covered oļ¬enders periods of unsupervised access to their children. Weāve taken those visitation rights as an attempt to bal- ance the competing interests at stake in this diļ¬cult area of family law. But even when we view Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) in this light, Alabama has not adduced evidence showing that employing a scheme that permits some individualized determinations that a parent is ļ¬t to reside with their child would undermine its interests. For starters, Alabama has not oļ¬ered evidence on how likely its trial courts are to err in making individualized determinations. Nor has it shown that the number of future oļ¬enders who may slip through the cracks of an alternative scheme with individualized re- lief would be far greater (or even any greater) than the number of USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 73 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 73 those who escape ASCORNAās current reach. And that seems es- pecially unlikely if the alternative scheme eliminates ASCORNAās current underinclusivity and is narrowly tailored to cover those who either decline their opportunity for individualized relief, see Lehr, 463 U.S. at 264ā65, or, after petitioning for relief, are adjudi- cated to be dangerous, see Stanley, 405 U.S. at 654ā55. After all, to police the statuteās current underinclusiveness, the ālegislature obviously relie[s] heavily on the understanding that trial courtsā will ārestrict the visitation rights of a parent who poses a danger of sexually abusing a child.ā S.A.N., 995 So. 2d at 179. So the State canāt reasonably contend that individualized adjudications are so often wrong that they seriously threaten ASORCNAās eļ¬ec- tiveness; it already relies on them. Without more evidence, we canāt conclude that a genuine dispute of material fact exists on whether Henryās proļ¬ered alternatives are less eļ¬ective. Third, and relatedly, to the best of our knowledge, every other state in the country gives oļ¬enders the chance to prove that they do not pose a danger to their child or that it is in the childās best interest to live with them. Indeed, in the district-court pro- ceedings, both the parties and the district court were āunaware of any statute enacted by another state substantially similar to § 15- 20A-11(d)(4).ā Henry, 711 F. Supp. 3d at 1305. That fact is important to our analysis of less restrictive alter- natives. If Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) is an outlier, we can more easily conclude that Henry successfully proļ¬ered a viable less restrictive USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 74 of 111 74 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 alternative. See Ullman, 367 U.S. at 554 (Harlan, J., dissenting) (ā[C]onclusive, in my view, is the utter novelty of this enactment.ā); cf. Packingham v. North Carolina, 582 U.S. 98, 108 (2017) (āIt is instruc- tive that no case or holding of this Court has approved of a statute as broad in its reach.ā). The Supreme Court has conļ¬rmed that other statesā practices may show that a given measure has āalready proven eļ¬ectiveā in advancing the Stateās interests. TikTok, 145 S. Ct. at 71; see McCullen v. Coakley, 573 U.S. 464, 490ā494 (2014) (con- cluding a state law burdened more speech than necessary where it had not considered less restrictive measures successfully adopted by other jurisdictions). And on appeal, Alabama points to no other state that has used a law like ASCORNA. In fact, each comparison law that Ala- bama points to includes the very opportunity for individualized re- lief that the State denies its citizens. We start with the examples Alabama cites in reply: Arizona, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. In Arizona, āproof of convictionā of a crime that āsupports a rational inference of unļ¬tnessā will ācreate[] a rebuttable pre- sumption that the father is unļ¬t to parent children.ā Matter of Pima Cnty., Juv. Action Nos. S-826 & J-59015, 643 P.2d 736, 738 (Ariz. Ct. App. 1982). But importantlyāand unlike with Section 15-20A- 11(d)(4)āāthe parent may rebut the assessment of unļ¬tness based on a past act by showing actual ļ¬tness at the time of the hearing.ā Matter of Juv. No. J-2255, 613 P.2d 304, 307 (Ariz. Ct. App. 1980). USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 75 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 75 So too for Minnesota. There, a previous conviction for a sex oļ¬ense satisļ¬es a statutory basis for terminating a personās parental rights. See Matter of Welfare of Child of S.B.G., 981 N.W.2d 224, 226 (Minn. Ct. App. 2022), aļ¬ād, 991 N.W.2d 874 (Minn. 2023). But againāand unlike in Alabamaāa court āmay not order the termi- nation of parental rights without determining that the termination is in the childās best interests.ā Id. at 232; see Matter of Welfare of Child of M. Z., 2019 WL 2167826, at *4 (Minn. Ct. App. May 20, 2019) (āA juvenile court may terminate the parental rights of a par- ent when at least one statutory ground for termination is sup- ported by clear and convincing evidence and termination is in the childās best interests.ā). The same goes for Wisconsin. Although convictions of sex- ual oļ¬enses may satisfy statutory grounds for parental-rights ter- mination, see WISC. STAT. § 48.415(5), (9m)(a)-(am), āthe court need not terminate the parentās rightsā if the evidence does not warrant such an order, In re Jayton S., 629 N.W.2d 768, 776 (Wisc. 2001); see also In re M.D., 2019 WI App 21, ¶¶ 3ā9, 36ā39 (reversing an order terminating the parental rights of an individual convicted of pos- sessing child pornography because the trial court did not conduct a hearing to determine the childās best interests). So Alabamaās own examples show that states account for a parentās prior conviction, either by making it a statutory basis for termination or by using it as a basis for a presumption of unļ¬tness. But in either case, parents have the chance to show that they are ļ¬t USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 76 of 111 76 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 in fact or that their continuing custody would be in their childās best interest. And thatās not just the case in Arizona, Minnesota, and Wis- consin. As far as we can tell, itās also the case in every other state that Alabama claims to allow the termination of parental rights based on a conviction. See, e.g., MISS. CODE § 93-15-121(h)(i) (prior conviction āmay be grounds for termination of the parentās paren- tal rights if reuniļ¬cation between the parent and child is not desir- able toward obtaining a satisfactory permanency outcomeā); In re D.F., 777 N.E.2d 930, 940 (Ill. 2002) (āIf the court makes such a ļ¬nd- ing [of unļ¬tness], it will then consider whether it is in the best in- terests of the child that parental rights be terminated.ā); In re A.K., 924 N.E.2d 212, 224 (Ind. Ct. App. 2010) (āIn determining what is in the best interests of the child, the trial court is required to look at the totality of the evidence.ā); In re T.M.P., 126 So. 3d 741, 756 (La. App. 4 Cir. 2013) (āAlthough the State need only establish one statutory ground, the trial court must also ļ¬nd that termination is in the childās best interests.ā); In re P.L.O., 131 S.W.3d 782, 788 (Mo. 2004) (ā[T]he trial court must ļ¬nd by clear, cogent, and convincing evidence that one or more grounds for termination exists,ā and āthe trial court must ļ¬nd that termination is in the best interests of the children.ā); In re A.B., 815 N.W.2d 764, 776 (Iowa 2012) (āEven after we have determined that statutory grounds for termination exist, we must still determine whether termination is in the chil- drenās best interests.ā); In re Child. of Christopher S., 203 A.3d 808, 811 (Me. 2019) (āOnce a court determines that a parent is unļ¬t, it USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 77 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 77 must determine whether termination of the parental rights is in the childās best interest.ā); In re Christopher T., 101 A.D.2d 997, 997 (N.Y. App. Div. 1984) (ā[T]ermination of parental rights is not war- ranted, and certainly not mandated, if such is not in the childās best interests, even though the statutory requirements for termination have been established.ā), aļ¬ād sub nom. In re Joyce T., 478 N.E.2d 1306 (N.Y. 1985); In re Adoption of L.D.S., 155 P.3d 1, 8 (Ok. 2006), as sup- plemented on rehāg (Mar. 6, 2007) (āParents must be provided the op- portunity to fully and ļ¬nally litigate . . . before . . . the child is per- manently removed from the family.ā); White v. Moody, 171 S.W.3d 187, 193 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004) (ā[A] ļ¬nding of unļ¬tness does not necessarily require that the parentās rights be terminated. Not all parental misconduct is irredeemable.ā (internal citation omitted)). Not only that, but the very cases Alabama cites undermine the proposition that a mere fact of conviction conclusively resolves whether the state may separate a parent from their child. Instead, those cases considered the totality of the circumstances and indi- vidual ļ¬ndings of the danger, if any, that a parent posed to their children. See, e.g., Trawick v. Trawick, 173 So. 2d 341, 343 (La. Ct. App. 1965) (explaining the āconviction of certain felonies presuma- bly do indicate moral unļ¬tness of a parent to look after and direct the welfare and future of a small child, but . . . it is more important for us to determine if the act . . . will be of such a handicap as to so seriously jeopardize the future of the child as to warrant the court in separating it from her motherā); Commonwealth v. Lapointe, 759 N.E.2d 294, 299ā300 (Mass. 2001) (concluding a probation USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 78 of 111 78 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 condition that prevented a sex oļ¬ender from living with his child did not violate the oļ¬enderās constitutional rights because āthe judge has retained jurisdiction to revisit all the conditionsā and to issue āappropriate future orders based on changed circum- stancesā); State ex rel. Juv. Depāt of Lane Cnty. v. Brammer, 892 P.2d 720, 722 (Or. Ct. App. 1995) (aļ¬rming that, under ātotality of the circumstances,ā the lower court did not err in ļ¬nding āa reasonable likelihood of harm to the welfare of ā the at-issue children); Allen v. State, 141 A.3d 194, 206 (Md. 2016) (explaining āa party to a child custody hearing that has previously abused a child shall be denied custody unless the court speciļ¬cally ļ¬nds that there is no likelihood of further child abuse or neglect by the partyā (cleaned up)); In re C.R.C., 450 P.3d 1169, 1176 (Utah Ct. App. 2019) (concluding āpos- sessing child pornography is prima facie evidence of unļ¬tnessā but terminating parental rights because the father āfailed to demon- strate to the court why he should be considered a ļ¬t parent and why it was not in Childās best interest to terminate his rightsā). Put simply, as far as we can tell, in every other state, parents may present evidence that they are not a danger to their child. Sec- tion 15-20A-11(d)(4)ās āutter noveltyā highlights its constitutional inļ¬rmity. Ullman, 367 U.S. at 554 (Harlan, J., dissenting). Indeed, the availability of judicial review in every other state suggests that measure has āalready proven eļ¬ectiveā in advancing the Stateās as- serted interests. TikTok, 145 S. Ct. at 71. As a result, Alabama has not met its burden under strict scrutiny of rebutting Henryās USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 79 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 79 proļ¬ered less restrictive alternative. See Playboy Ent. Grp., 529 U.S. at 823. Because Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) is both overinclusive and underinclusive, and because less restrictive alternatives are plausi- bly at least just as eļ¬ective, the law fails strict scrutiny. See In re Amanda D., 811 N.E.2d at 1238, 1241ā48 (holding unconstitutional a statute that terminated parental rights based solely on the fact that the parent āwas previously convicted of aggravated battery of a childā). ii. Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) departs from our Nationās history and tradition of regulating parental rights. Alternatively, Alabama argues that thereās a well-established and enduring tradition of limiting the parental rights of those guilty of gross misconduct. Whatever rights Henry may have had as a parent generally, the State suggests, a ātraditionā exists that de- nies āthe speciļ¬c application of ā those rights based on his convic- tion. Din, 576 U.S. at 95; see MuƱoz, 602 U.S. at 911ā12. But even assuming that a historical tradition of relevantly similar regulation can support the constitutionality of Section 15- 20A-11(d)(4) even though the law fails strict scrutiny, we disagree that the tradition Alabama marshals is suļ¬ciently analogous to sus- tain Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) and its current statutory scheme. When the Supreme Court has relied primarily on history to sustain the constitutionality of a law that severely burdens a USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 80 of 111 80 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 fundamental right, it has required that āthe challenged regulationā be āconsistent with the principles that underpin our regulatory tra- dition.ā Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 692. That means we have looked to the laws of earlier eras to see whether they burdened the fundamental right at issue in a relevantly similar way. āWhy and how the regu- lation burdens the right are central to this inquiry.ā Id. By under- standing why our predecessors enacted a law or followed an exist- ing legal regime, as well as how they furthered their goals, we dis- cern the scope of the rights our predecessors meant to enshrine in our fundamental law when they voted for the Fourteenth Amend- ment. See Dobbs v. Jackson Womenās Health Org., 597 U.S. 215, 240 (2022) (ā[W]e must ask what the Fourteenth Amendment means by the term āliberty.āā). So by asking whether a modern law is āārele- vantly similarā to laws that our tradition is understood to permit,ā we apply āfaithfully the balance struck by the [Reconstruction] gen- eration to modern circumstances.ā Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 692 (citation omitted). Of course, āa challenged regulation [need] not precisely match its historical precursors.ā Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 692. āThe in- sightā we take from an analogue āis not the authoritative status of theā analogue itself, ābut the apparent rule at play given that such an [analogue] is expected to follow from it.ā Id. at 740 (Barrett, J., concurring) (quoting Keith E. Whittington, Originalism: A Critical Introduction, 82 FORDHAM L. REV. 375, 386 (2013)). In other words, ā[h]istorical regulations reveal a principle, not a mold.ā Id. Our goal, then, is to āpull[] principle from [that] precedent.ā Id. And USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 81 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 81 we must do so at ājust the right level of generalityā so that we are continuing to respect the Fourteenth Amendment, see id., while not ātrap[ping] [the] law . . . in amber,ā id. at 691 (Roberts, C.J., major- ity). Put diļ¬erently, we must ask ourselves whether we are āen- dorsing outliers that our ancestors would never have accepted.ā N.Y. State Riļ¬e & Pistol Assān v. Bruen, 597 U.S. 1, 30 (2022) (citation omitted). In this case, the evidence suggests Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) is such an āoutlier[].ā To be sure, governments throughout our his- tory have removed children from parents and homes when a dan- ger to the childrenās health or safety existed. But historically, courts have aļ¬orded parents individualized relief, including the chance to show that they were not a danger to their children and that their custody over their children was in the childrenās best interests. Yet Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) denies parents like Henry that opportunity. It operates as substantive law, foreclosing on the merits any claim that a parent who falls within its reach is in fact ļ¬t or competent, āregardless of the opinion of experts, lay persons, and the trial court that the registered sex oļ¬ender does not pose a threat to the child.ā K.E.W., 990 So. 2d at 381. In that way, it restricts parentsā rights to live with their children based on simply a fact of convic- tion. And by doing so, Alabama departs from our Nationās history and tradition. We support this conclusion in the next two sub-sections. First, we recount the history of custodyāthe bundle of parentsā rights over children that allowed parents to live with their USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 82 of 111 82 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 childrenāfrom its common-law origins through the legal regime at the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment. Court cases, as well as a wave of state legislation about childrenās welfare, establish the principles that governed parentās rights, including their custo- dial rights. Then, we apply the history-and-tradition legal frame- work to the lessons weāve learned from our history. In doing so, we conclude that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) departs from our Na- tionās history and tradition. a. Although historically states could remove children from parents who posed a danger to them, parents enjoyed the right to petition courts for relief and to show that they were no longer a danger to their children. Because substantive due process derives from the Four- teenth Amendment, which Americans adopted in 1868, the rele- vant period for our analysis of regulations of substantive-due-pro- cess rights is the Reconstruction Era.12 See Dobbs, 597 U.S. at 240; 12 To the extent we rely on evidence from after the Reconstruction Era, we do so because it is part of a continuing tradition and because we believe it is con- sistent with the public understanding of the rights Americans intended to se- cure through the Fourteenth Amendment. See Bruen, 597 U.S. at 35ā37; CFPB v. Cmty. Fin. Servs. Assān of Am., 601 U.S. 416, 445 (2024) (Kagan, J., concurring) (explaining a ācontinuing traditionā may have great weight in constitutional interpretation). We also note that Alabama proffered much of the post-ratifi- cation evidence on which we rely as representative of our Nationās regulatory tradition. Cf. Bruen, 597 U.S. at 25 n.6 (explaining courts are āentitled to decide a case based on the historical record compiled by the partiesā). USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 83 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 83 Eknes-Tucker, 80 F.4th at 1221. Even so, a review of the common- law background is helpful. āThe fundamental principle of the common law is that the father has the paramount right to the custody and control of his minor children.ā JAMES SCHOULER, A TREATISE ON THE LAW OF DOMESTIC RELATIONS, *333 (Bos., Little, Brown & Co. 2d. ed. 1874). Or as Blackstone put it, children were subject to the āempire of the father.ā 1 BLACKSTONE, supra, at 648. Traditional legal systems āas- sured fathers of absolute dominion over children and property.ā J. Herbie DiFonzo, From the Rule of One to Shared Parenting: Custody Presumptions in Law and Policy, 52 FAM. CT. REV. 214, 214 (2014). So a āfather had the supreme right to the guardianship of his infant heirsā as a āby-product of the laws of inheritance and land owner- ship.ā Sarah Abramowicz, Note, English Child Custody Law, 1660- 1839: The Origins of Judicial Intervention in Paternal Custody, 99 COLUM. L. REV. 1344, 1366 (1999). But over the course of the eighteenth and nineteenth centu- ries, the unassailable version of paternal rights softened. In England, after the Tenures Abolition Act of 1660 empow- ered fathers to appoint guardians to their children by will, the Court of Chancery ātook on itself the task of supervising testa- mentary guardiansā to āensure that after a father died, his children would be brought up as he would have wanted them to be.ā Id. at 1391. If appointed guardians breached the trust in which fathers placed their children, the court could intervene for the beneļ¬t of the children. See, e.g., Beaufort v. Berty (1721) 24 Eng. Rep. 579, 579; USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 84 of 111 84 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 1 P. Wms. 703, 704; Eyre v. Shaftsbury (1722) 24 Eng. Rep. 659, 660; 2 P. Wms. 103, 104; Morgan v. Dillon (1724) 88 Eng. Rep. 361, 365ā 66; 9 Mod. 135, 142ā43. But with that precedent set, it was only a matter of time be- fore the new ātradition of judicial involvement in child custodyā would be āturned against fathers themselves.ā Abramowicz, supra, at 1391; see Rex v. Delaval (1763) 97 Eng. Rep. 913, 913ā16; 3 Burr. 1434, 1434ā40 (implying that if a father were involved with arrang- ing eighteen-year-old daughterās āprostitution,ā he should not re- tain custody). And eventually, the Court of Chancery in England conļ¬rmed its authority to remove a child from their parent. See, e.g., Shelley v. Westbrooke (1817) 37 Eng. Rep. 850, 851; Jacob 266, 267 Wellesley v. Beaufort (1827) 38 Eng. Rep. 236, 243ā45, 247; 2 Russ. 1, 19ā24, 30 (suggesting interference with parental rights was ālong settled by judicial practiceā to be āthe law of the landā). Still, the common law continued to ensure a father āthe custody of his mi- nor childā in recognition of his āabsolute right.ā WALTER C. TIFFANY, HANDBOOK ON THE LAW OF PERSONS AND DOMESTIC RELATIONS 267 (Roger W. Cooley ed., St. Paul, West Pub. Co. 2d ed. 1909); SCHOULER, supra, at *337ā38 (conļ¬rming the āEnglish rule . . . that the father is entitled to the sole custody of his infant child; controllable, in general, by the court only in case of very gross misconduct, injurious to the childā). But it made exceptions āin the cases of the most ļ¬agrant unļ¬tness.ā TIFFANY, supra, at 267. During the same period, American courts followed suit. Drawing on English legal developments, Justice Story remarked USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 85 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 85 that the power āto remove infant children from the custody of their parentsā was āof extreme delicacyā but a ājurisdiction whichā was āindispensableā to our Nationās courts. 2 JOSEPH STORY, COMMENTARIES ON EQUITY JURISPRUDENCE § 1342 (Melville M. Bi- gelow ed., Bos., Little, Brown & Co. 13th ed. 1886). That jurisdic- tion was indispensable, in part, because the āprimary object of the Americanā family-law system was āto secure the welfare of the child.ā SCHOULER, supra, at *339. So parental rights became synonymous with āthe traditional presumption that the parents [will] act in the best interests of their child,ā Parham, 442 U.S. at 604, and will fulļ¬ll ātheir dutiesā to pro- tect and care for them, 2 JAMES KENT, COMMENTARIES ON AMERICAN LAW *203 (O. W. Holmes, Jr. ed., Bos., Little, Brown & Co. 12th ed. 1873). As a result, āthe courts of law, as well as those of equity, while acknowledging the general rule thatā parents are āentitled to the childās custody, modif[ied] the rule to a greater or less extent by adopting the equitable principle that this right must yield to con- siderations aļ¬ecting the well-being of the child.ā TIFFANY, supra, at 268. This meant that parents were āgenerally entitled to the cus- tody of ā their children but could lose that custody when the āinter- ests of the children strongly require[d] it.ā KENT, supra, at *205 (em- phasis added). Through the Antebellum period, a general structure of fam- ily law emerged. See TIFFANY, supra, at 268 (ā[T]he great weight of authority establishes the following propositions.ā). USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 86 of 111 86 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 First, courts did not āact arbitrarily, and disregard the rights of the father,ā for the āright of the father [wa]s generally held to be a paramount right, if he [wa]s a ļ¬t person.ā Id.; see Brinster v. Comp- ton, 68 Ala. 299, 302 (1880) (explaining the courtās jurisdiction was to be āexercised for the beneļ¬t of the infant primarily, but not arbi- trarily in disregard of the fatherās natural right to be preferredā). Courts recognized that āparents are the natural guardians and prima facie are entitled to the custody of their minor children.ā Foulke v. People ex rel. Foulke, 36 P. 640, 643 (Col. App. 1894) (citing State ex rel. Mayne v. Baldwin, 5 N.J. Eq. 454, 455 (Ch. 1846)). So if the parent was āa ļ¬t and proper person, he ha[d] a legal right to that custody, and the court [was] bound to give it to him.ā Foster v. Alston, 7 Miss. (6 Howard) 406, 472 (1842); accord Miner v. Miner, 11 Ill. 43, 49 (1849); Armstrong v. Stone, 50 Va. (9 Gratt.) 102, 106 (1852); State ex rel. Sharpe v. Banks, 25 Ind. 495, 500 (1865); Johnson v. Terry, 34 Conn. 259, 263 (1867); Baird v. Baird, 21 N.J. Eq. 384, 388 (1869); Henson v. Walts, 40 Ind. 170, 172 (1872); Rust v. Vanvacter, 9 W. Va. 600, 612ā15 (1876); Lovell v. House of the Good Shepherd, 9 Wash. 419, 422ā23 (1894). As especially relevant here, though, courts required āa clear and strong case of unļ¬tnessā to intervene. Commonwealth v. Briīs, 33 Mass. (16 Pick.) 203, 205 (1834); see Striplin v. Ware, 36 Ala. 87, 90 (1860) (ā[T]he parental authority will not be interfered with, except in case of gross misconduct . . . .ā); accord Miller v. Wallace, 76 Ga. 479, 487 (1886). In short, āno court [was] at liberty to disregardā parentsā āright to the custodyā of their children āin the absence of USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 87 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 87 any positive disqualiļ¬cation . . . for the proper discharge of [their] parental duties.ā State ex rel. Herrick v. Richardson, 40 N.H. 272, 275 (1860). Second, in determining whether a parent was unļ¬t, courts considered pertinent facts āwith reference rather to the interests of the child than the moral delinquency of the parent.ā SCHOULER, supra, at *336; see STORY, supra, § 1341 (explaining courts will inter- fere where a parent āacts in a manner injurious to the morals or in- terests of his childrenā (emphasis added)). The Massachusetts high court, for instance, declared that it would interfere if the parent was āwholly unable to provide for the safety and wants of the child.ā Briīs, 33 Mass. (16 Pick.) at 205; see Foster, 7 Miss. (6 Howard) at 457 (concluding the mother should be preferred āunless there be something in the conduct or character of the mother to operate against the interest of the childā). Under this standard, courts showed no reservation in remov- ing children from homes when parents were guilty of āgross ill treatment or cruelty towardsā children. STORY, supra, § 1341; see, e.g., In re Cuneen, 17 How. Pr. 516, 516ā17 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1859) (deny- ing custody to a father with a āsuspicious and splenetic temperā that led to āmany of the instances of tyrannical and abusive con- ductā); Boīs v. Boīs, 49 Iowa 190, 192 (1878) (ļ¬nding unļ¬t a father who confessed āto bad treatmentā and āthe striking of [a] little girl upon the head with a hoeā). Nor did they wait for mistreatment to occur; courts could act if it āappear[ed] that the child would be ex- posed to cruelty.ā KENT, supra, at *194 n.(c). ā[I]f a father USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 88 of 111 88 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 wrong[ed] his wife,ā for instance, āit [wa]s readily presumed that he w[ould] wrong his children likewise.ā SCHOULER, supra, at *340. Still, as these examples show, the focus remained on the ac- tual or likely welfare of the children. So in Alabama, the Supreme Court refused to disturb a motherās custody over her children in the absence of evidence showing she was āeither physically or men- tally, incapable of taking proper care of [her] childrenā or that the children were āin danger of being personally abused.ā Striplin, 36 Ala. at 90ā91. And it did so even though the motherās new husband was of āsomewhat exceptionableā morals. Id. at 91 If the facts showed that the children were likely to be safe and cared for by their parents, the parentsā misdeeds or shortcomings did not justify state intervention. See, e.g., id.; Lovell, 9 Wash. at 423. Third and relatedly, in applying these values to determine custody, all āthe circumstancesā were āfully considered by the court,ā and ā[m]uch [was] left to the peculiar surroundings of each case.ā SCHOULER, supra, at *339ā40. The āAmerican rule [was] not . . . one of ļ¬xed and determined principles.ā Id. Rather, the totality of the circumstances controlled. See United States v. Green, 26 F. Cas. 30, 31 (C.C.D.R.I. 1824) (No. 15,256) (Story, Circuit Jus- tice) (conļ¬rming, in matters of custody, courts āwill look into all the circumstancesā); Briīs, 33 Mass. (16 Pick.) at 205 (explaining āall the circumstances are to be taken into considerationā); Banks, 25 Ind. at 500 (āThe court should judge upon the circumstances of the particular case, and give direction accordingly.ā); Baird, 21 N.J. Eq. at 388 (noting āthe circumstances of each case must, of USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 89 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 89 necessity, become important elements entering into the grounds of decisionā); Verser v. Ford, 37 Ark. 27, 29 (1881) (concluding ā[n]o rigid rules to regulate the practice have or can be formulatedā and that courts āmust exercise [their] judgment upon the peculiar cir- cumstances of the caseā). Indeed, some courts disregarded āinļ¬ex- ibleā statutory rules that determined custody āwithout any refer- ence to the best interests of the childrenā or āthe circumstancesā and āparticular necessities of the case.ā Sturtevant v. State, 19 N.W. 617, 618 (Neb. 1884). Our predecessorsā holistic approach meant even certain āvi- olation[s] of lawsā did ānot necessarily demonstrate depravity of heart or moral unļ¬tness to bring up a child.ā Jensen v. Jensen, 170 N.W. 735, 736 (Wis. 1919) (rejecting that a motherās infraction ānec- essarily stamp[ed] her as an unļ¬t person to bring up her childā). So even if, earlier, a mother āwas not a competent person to maintain control of [a] child,ā courts would consider whether those ādiļ¬- culties . . . have now passed awayā such that āthe necessity of sepa- rating the mother and child has ceased to exist.ā Lovell, 9 Wash. at 423; see In re Kelley, 152 Mass. 432, 435 (1890) (āA parent who has neglected his child may become competent, and may desire to fur- nish a better home . . . to his child . . . , and the good of the child may require that it should be restored to its parent.ā); Striplin, 36 Ala. at 91 (rejecting as a grounds for removing children from their mother prior ādomestic disturbance[s] between the husband and wifeā because āthe domestic peace has been restored, and the par- ties are living together in harmonyā). USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 90 of 111 90 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 If the parents could āconvince[]ā the court that they would ātreat[] the[] children with kindness,ā the court would award them custody. Striplin, 36 Ala. at 91; see Jensen, 170 N.W. at 736 (declining to rescind custody from a mother āin the face of proof showing that the child is being well taken careā). So even a prior loss of custody did not necessarily āprecludeā parents from āapplying to obtain the custodyā of their children; āthe Courts [were] always open to [parents] for a renewed applicationā to show their custody would be in the best interest of their children. Verser, 37 Ark. at 31ā 32. These principles developed primarily through decisions of the courts. SCHOULER, supra, at *339. But Antebellum and Recon- struction legislatures also played a role in securing childrenās wel- fare. Most prominently, states throughout the Antebellum period established reformatories for children who committed crimes, were beyond the control of their parents, were found vagrant, or were in the custody of an unļ¬t parent. See, e.g., Ex Parte Crouse, 4 Whart. 9 (Pa. 1839); see also LEWIS HOCHHEIMER, THE LAW RELATING TO THE CUSTODY OF INFANTS 101ā09 (Baltimore, Harold B. Scrimger 3d ed. 1899) (providing an overview of this wave of state legislation). Courts generally upheld these laws and allowed the state to commit children to the institutions they created as a proper exercise of the stateās parens patriae authority. In this way, courts saw the laws as ensuring the ācare of neglected childrenā by USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 91 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 91 āsupply[ing] to them the parental custody which theyā did not have. Farnham v. Pierce, 141 Mass. 203, 204 (1886). Still, these legislative eļ¬orts were not without constitutional diļ¬culties. Principally, courts took issue with the āease with whichā the parentās āright to the care, custody and assistance of his childā was ādisrupted under the laws in question.ā People ex rel. OāConnell v. Turner, 55 Ill. 280, 284 (1870). āBefore any abridgment of the [parentās] right,ā courts held, āgross misconduct or almost total unļ¬tness on the part of the parent, should be clearly proved.ā Id. at 284ā85; see State ex rel. Bethell v. Kilvington, 45 S.W. 433, 435 (Tenn. 1898) (āOrdinarily, the parent is entitled to the custody, com- panionship, and care of the child, and should not be deprived thereof except by due process of law.ā); Mill v. Brown, 88 P. 609, 613 (Utah 1907) (āBefore the state can be substituted to the right of the parent it must aļ¬rmatively be made to appear that the parent has forfeited his natural and legal right to the custody and control of the child . . . .ā); accord Ex parte Becknell, 119 Cal. 496, 498 (1897), overruled on other grounds by In re Daedler, 194 Cal. 320, 327ā28, 331ā 32 (1924) (overruling Becknell to the extent it established a jury-trial right for juvenile oļ¬enses and rejecting a parental-rights challenge because the relevant statute required a court to ļ¬nd āthat the wel- fare of such person requires that his custody be taken from said parent or guardianā), disapproved of by In re Javier A., 159 Cal. App. 3d 913, 950ā56 (Ct. App. 1984) (discussing Becknellās, Daedlerās, and their progenyās treatment of juvenile jury-trial rights). USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 92 of 111 92 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 When laws failed to clear this hurdle, courts declared them unconstitutional. So courts set aside laws that demanded only āslight evidenceā or oļ¬ered āan informalā if non-existent āmode of procedureā that made them āconļ¬ict with the natural right of the parent.ā Turner, 55 Ill. at 284; see id. at 288 (āThe constitution is the highest law; . . . and as the laws under which the detention is had, are in conļ¬ict with its provisions, we must so declare.ā); see also State ex rel. Cunningham v. Ray, 63 N.H. 406, 412 (1885) (declaring unconstitutional a statute that committed a minor on only a com- plaint). Most often, 13 though, courts saved the statutesā constitution- ality by realigning them with parentās rights. See McLean County v. 13 We are aware of one treatise that has suggested āthere is no constitutional limitation to the power of the State to interfere with the parental control of minors.ā CHRISTOPHER G. TIEDEMAN, A TREATISE ON THE LIMITATIONS OF POLICE POWER IN THE UNITED STATES 561 (St. Louis, F. H. Thomas L. Book Co. 1886). That treatise reached that conclusion by conceptualizing parental control as a ādutyā delegated by the legislature to the parent. Id. at 560. Under that reasoning, the legislature may, in its ādiscretion,ā ādetermine under what circumstances, if at all, a parent may be entrusted with the rearing of his child.ā Id. In other words, that treatise rejected the notion that parents had a ānatural rightā in the custody of their child because, as the treatise recognized, if par- ents had such rights, guarantees of due process attached. And that meant that āany interference with the parental control must be justified . . . because of the evil character of the parents; and like all other similar cases of restraint upon natural right, the commitment of the child to the care of the State authorities must rest upon a judicial decree, after a fair trial, in which the parents have the right to appear and defend themselves against the charge of being unfit to re- tain the custody of the child.ā Id. With the utmost respect, we think Professor Tiedeman got this one wrong. For one, precedent rejects his position, and USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 93 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 93 Humphreys, 104 Ill. 378, 384 (1882) (acknowledging that while there was āno ground for declaring the act unconstitutional,ā āthe con- stitution clothes the judiciary with ample authority to correct any abuses that may arise under the actā). They did so by permitting individualized proceedings to determine whether the parents were ļ¬t to have their children returned to their custody. In some cases, courts required individualized ļ¬ndings of un- ļ¬tness ābefore a child c[ould] be made a ward of the stateā and sep- arated from their parents. Mill, 88 P. at 614; see, e.g., id. at 614ā15 (returning child to parentās custody until the child āshall be legally adjudicated to be a ward of the state in accordance with the views herein expressedā); Ex parte Becknell, 119 Cal. at 498 (discharging minor because there was no ļ¬nding that the parent was āunļ¬t or tribunals have guaranteed the very protections he suggested parents did not have. From the time of the Fourteenth Amendment to today, courts have held that, ā[o]rdinarily, the parent is entitled to the custody, companionship, and care of the child, and should not be deprived thereof except by due process of law.ā Kilvington, 45 S.W. at 435; see Meyer, 262 U.S. at 399 (considering the right to āestablish a home and bring up childrenā one ālong recognized at com- mon lawā). For another, the dicta the treatise cites in support of its unyielding proposition comes from a case that did not involve parental rights. Rather, it concerned the prosecution of a person who sold liquor to a minor under the age of twenty-one and who presented as a defense that the minorās father au- thorized the sale. See State v. Clottu, 33 Ind. 409, 409 (1870). But as we show above, when confronted with actual infringements of a parentās rights, courts have enforced well-defined limits on the stateās police power. Were the op- posite true, the legislature could enact laws to remove all children from their parents at birth (or any other age) for the benefit of nearly any stated interest, with the stateās decision subject to only rational-basis review. We think the incorrectness of that position speaks for itself. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 94 of 111 94 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 unwilling or unable to perform their parental dutiesā). Sometimes, the āstatuteā itself conformed to that āconstitutional principleā and āguard[ed] the interests and rights of parents by requiring that their children shall not be taken from them without a hearing, upon due notice, in the courts of the state.ā Van Walters v. Bd. of Child.ās Guardian of Marion Cnty., 32 N.E. 568, 569 (Ind. 1892); see, e.g., In re Ferrier, 103 Ill. 367, 372 (1882) (requiring āthe court [to] ļ¬nd[] that the parent is not a ļ¬t person to have the custody of the infantā); People ex rel. Van Heck v. N.Y. Cath. Protectory, 4 N.E. 177, 179 (N.Y. 1886) (granting parents the āopportunity to be heard, and to show the real factsā); Ex parte Peterson, 187 N.W. 226, 227 (Minn. 1922) (aļ¬ording notice and a jury trial); In re Daedler, 194 Cal. at 331 (re- quiring ļ¬nding that loss of custody is in childās best interest). But if the relevant law didnāt guarantee that trial courts or other judicial oļ¬cers would make such a ļ¬nding, courts of review avoided any constitutional inļ¬rmity by noting that, in the instant case, the parents took āpart in the proceedingsā that resulted in their loss of custody, see State ex rel. Olson v. Brown, 52 N.W. 935, 937 (Minn. 1892); In re Turner, 145 P. 871, 872ā73 (Kan. 1915), or that an adequate ļ¬nding had in fact been made, see People ex rel. Tobano v. Governors of House of Refuge, 18 How. Pr. 409, 409ā11 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1859) (child was a vagrant); Ex parte Ah Peen, 51 Cal. 280, 281 (1876) (parent abandoned child); Bryant v. Brown, 118 So. 184, 191 (Miss. 1928) (child convicted of a crime). In other cases, courts allowed parents to assert their rights in court after the removal of their children to allow them the chance USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 95 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 95 to regain custody. Courts rejected the premise that the institution- alization statutes were āintended to foreclose the right of a parent, when competent, to resume the custody and care of his child.ā Mil- waukee Indus. Sch. v. Milwaukee Cnty. Supārs, 40 Wis. 328, 339 (1876). So any time a state conļ¬ned a child, the statute did not ābind the parent or guardianā or āpreclude[]ā them āfrom asserting any right to the custody and care of the child, which he may be afterwards able to establish.ā Id.; see Mill, 88 P. at 614 (āThe parent is not bound by the judgment against the child, and may at any time institute proper proceedings to obtain custody of him.ā). Rather, ā[t]he right of the parent [was] suļ¬ciently guarded by permitting the parent on habeas corpus proceedings to inquire into the propriety or necessity of the detention, and to have the custody restored upon a proper showing that he or she is compe- tent, and a proper person, to have charge of the child.ā Kilvington, 45 S.W. at 435; see Farnham, 141 Mass. at 205 (explaining a parent has āa right to show that the cause stated for the commitment does not now exist; that he is competent and ļ¬t to have the care of his child; and that the welfare of the child will permit of her removal from her present custodyā); accord Cincinnati House of Refuge v. Ryan, 37 Ohio St. 197, 204 (1881); In re Kelley, 152 Mass. at 435ā36; Ex parte Sharp, 96 P. 563, 565ā66 (Idaho 1908); In re Alley, 182 N.W. 360, 362ā63 (Wisc. 1921). Thus, it was black-letter law that āthe courts may . . . inquire into the existence of a suļ¬cient cause for detentionā of a minor āeven though a statute should expressly prohibit such inquiry.ā USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 96 of 111 96 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 HOCHHEIMER, supra, at 105; see, e.g., Cannon v. Stuart, 8 Del. (3 Houst.) 223, 225 (1866) (releasing minor to parent by āwrit of ha- beas corpus under the constitution, which is paramount to that, or any other statute of the legislatureā); Prescott v. State, 19 Ohio St. 184, 189 (1869) (doubting that the legislature could ārestrict the power of the court, invested by the constitution with jurisdiction in habeas corpus, from inquiring fully into the cause of the deten- tion of aā minor taken from his parents); accord Dumain v. Gwynne, 92 Mass. (10 Allen) 270, 274ā75 (1865). Dumain v. Gwynne oļ¬ers an example of these Reconstruction Era principles. There, a āfather had disqualiļ¬ed himself from tak- ing proper care of his children in their early infancy by his intem- perate habits,ā and he later ācommitted the crime of burglary, for which oļ¬ence he was sentenced to the state prison for the term of three years.ā 92 Mass. (10 Allen) at 272ā73. As a result, the father forfeited the custody of his children. Id. at 273. Soon after the fa- ther went to prison, the wife bequeathed custody of the children to a temporary home that Massachusetts established. Id. at 273ā 74. And that home later placed the children with a family who adopted them. Id. Then āfour months beforeā the fatherās prison term expired, he left prison, discharged āfor his good behavior.ā Id. at 274. Upon returning to society, he rekindled his relationship with his wife, pursued a trade as a blacksmith, established a good char- acter, and became āable to support [his] children comfortably.ā Id. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 97 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 97 So with the desire to obtain custody of them, he ļ¬led a writ of ha- beas corpus. The adoptive families resisted. Id. But the Massachusetts high court did not hold that āthe rights of either parent in respect to the children [were] absolutely lost.ā Id. Instead, the tribunal ex- plained that the trial judge had the āpower upon this process to in- quire fully into the matter,ā to determine āthe liberty and welfare of the children,ā and āto satisfy himself whether the children are improperly restrained, and whether their comfort and education are properly attended to.ā Id. at 275. All āreasonable and proper sources of evidenceā could factor into the judgeās determination. Id. So the court remanded the case to determine whether the best interest of the children weighed in favor of returning custody to their natural parents. Id. Upon remand, the trial court, after considering āthe evidence,ā determined the children āwere mem- bers of a good family in this commonwealth,ā ātreated kindly and aļ¬ectionately,ā and likely to be given āan education much better than their parents could give them.ā Id. at 275ā76. So although the father had the opportunity to present his case, he failed to regain custody. Id. at 276. We discern from this history the following principle: gov- ernment can remove children from parents who pose a danger to them, but parents enjoy the right to petition courts for relief, to prove that they are no longer a danger to their children, and to USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 98 of 111 98 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 show that returning the children to their custody is in the childrenās best interest. b. Alabama departs from our history and tradition by denying Henry the opportunity to prove, based on the totality of the circumstances, that he is a ļ¬t parent who can best care for his child. Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) departs from our history and tradi- tion of regulating parental rights because it does not impose āa comparable burdenā to those of its predecessors. Bruen, 597 U.S. at 29. To be sure, Alabama enacted the Section to ensure the safety of its children, just as states had done throughout our Nationās his- tory. So Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) shares the same āwhyā with state action of the past, Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 692: to ensure children are not in the custody of parents who are āwholly unable to provide for the[ir] safety and wants,ā Briīs, 33 Mass. (16 Pick.) at 205. But although Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) regulates the right of parents to live with their children āfor a permissible reason,ā the law is not ācompatible with the rightā because it regulates that right āto an extent beyond what was done atā Reconstruction. Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 692. Alabamaās statutory scheme turns an inquiry traditionally predicated on individual ļ¬ndings after a parent presented any rele- vant evidence into the non-individualized, automatic removal of a parentās fundamental right to reside with their child. Section 15- 20A-11(d)(4) prevents a parent from living with their child based solely on the fact of a prior conviction, āregardless of the opinion USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 99 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 99 of experts, lay persons, and the trial court that the registered sex oļ¬ender does not pose a threat to the child.ā K.E.W., 990 So. 2d at 381. So even if Henry petitioned Alabama courts for relief, Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) would, as a matter of substantive law, prevent the trial court from hearing any evidence on the matter of Henryās ļ¬t- ness; such evidence would be legally irrelevant. But that was not how similar laws worked when Americans voted for the Fourteenth Amendment. We know so for three rea- sons. First, as weāve already detailed, the ālegal traditionsā and āpracticesā of American courts, Glucksberg, 521 U.S. at 710, were āto inquire fully into the matterā of custody, Dumain, 92 Mass. (10 Al- len) at 275. Parents had the āopportunity to be heard, and to show the real facts,ā Van Heck, 4 N.E. at 179, including that they were ācompetent and ļ¬t to have the care of [their] child; and that the welfare of the child will permit of her removal from her present custody,ā Farnham, 141 Mass. at 205; Kilvington, 45 S.W. at 435. Prior shortcomings, even convictions, did not ānecessarily stamp [a parent] as an unļ¬t person to bring up her child,ā especially āin the face of proof showing that the child [wa]s being well taken care of.ā Jensen, 170 N.W. at 736; see, e.g., Dumain, 92 Mass. (10 Al- len) at 272ā75; Striplin, 36 Ala. at 91; Lovell, 9 Wash. at 423. Simply put, ā[a] parent who has neglected his child may become compe- tent, and may desire to furnish a better home and parental care and inļ¬uences to his child . . . , and the good of the child may require that it should be restored to its parent.ā In re Kelley, 152 Mass. at USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 100 of 111 100 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 435. So āthe Courts [were] always open to [parents] for a renewed applicationā to demonstrate their custody would be in the best in- terest of their children. Verser, 37 Ark. at 32. Second, to the extent Reconstruction Era legislatures in- volved themselves in family law, their statutes often conformed to these principles, requiring individualized review based on the total- ity of the circumstances. Based on the historical record that Ala- bama presented and which our research has uncovered, legislatures primarily removed children from unļ¬t parents through institution- alization and reformatory statutes. See, e.g., Ex Parte Crouse, 4 Whart. at 9. But even then, they enabled parents to retain or regain custody of their children by showing that they were in fact ļ¬t to love and care for them. See, e.g., Milwaukee Indus. Sch., 40 Wis. at 339; Van Walters, 32 N.E. at 569. Or at the very least, courts con- strued the statutes to avoid such constitutional roadblocks should the statutes appear to run into them. See, e.g., Farnham, 141 Mass. at 205; In re Kelley, 152 Mass. at 436; Sturtevant, 19 N.W. at 618. In this way, the procedural rules codiļ¬ed in the reformatory statutes that the states employed evince āthe historical tradition that delim- its the outer bounds of the rightā of parents to live with their child. Bruen, 597 U.S. at 19. Third, if statutes regulating parental rights exceeded the usual rules for permanently separating a parent from their child, courts ārejected [them] on constitutional grounds.ā Bruen, 597 U.S. at 27. Indeed, just two years after the adoption of the Fourteenth Amendment, the Illinois Supreme Court struck down the Stateās USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 101 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 101 reformatory statute as violative of parentsā āright to the care, cus- tody and assistance of his child,ā in part, because of the āease with whichā it ādisruptedā parentsā rightsāit ārequiredā only āslight ev- idenceā and an āinformal mode of procedureāāand in part be- cause it foreclosed parents from ļ¬ling the writ of habeas corpus to regain custody over their children. Turner, 55 Ill. at 284ā86, 288. Americans recognized that the āconstitution clothe[d] the judiciary with ample authority to correct any abuses that may ariseā from state interference of parentās rights. Humphreys, 104 Ill. at 384. So the general rule was that courts could fully inquire into the matter of custody, āeven though a statute should expressly prohibit such inquiry.ā HOCHHEIMER, supra, at 105 (discussing the writ of habeas corpus); see id. at 105ā06 (also noting the courts of chancery could employ their equitable power to remove a child from the institu- tion to which the child has been committed). In short, although the state could separate parents from chil- dren to whom they posed a danger, courts guaranteed substantive and procedural protections that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) doesnātā namely, the chance to prove current ļ¬tness based on relevant and present facts. And nearly every court has recognized those guaran- tees as fundamental to parentsā rights. For these reasons, Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) is not analogous in āhowā it regulates the right of parents to live with their children. And it departs from our history and tradition of regulating family cohabitation and parentās rights to raise their children. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 102 of 111 102 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 * * * As applied to Henry, Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) violates the Fourteenth Amendmentās Due Process Clause. That provision guarantees parents the right to live with their children. Yet the Sec- tion automatically precludes precisely that conduct for parents who fall within its scope. To be sure, Alabama enacted its law to advance a compelling state interest. That fact cannot be stated enough: Sec- tion 15-20A-11(d)(4) seeks to protect minors from horriļ¬c abuse. But it does not do so through constitutional means. The statute just does not target its strong medicine narrowly to advance the Stateās compelling interest. Nor does it comport with our Nationās history and tradition of regulating parental rights. Both strict scrutiny and our traditions require a more pre- cise approach.14 As a result, Alabama may not constitutionally en- force the statute, at least in some circumstances, including as to Henry and other similarly situated parents. 14 We donāt address whether Alabama must in all instances provide the oppor- tunity for individualized review. Perhaps Supreme Court precedent or our Nationās regulatory tradition may lead to that conclusion in the future. Per- haps not. But to resolve this case, we donāt need to hold that individualized fact-finding is necessary in every case that a state severely burdens parental rights. See supra note 10. So we donāt so hold. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 103 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 103 B. The district court abused its discretion in facially enjoining Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) because it is not unconstitutional in all its applica- tions. Even if a court concludes that a statute violates the Consti- tution at least in some applications, as we just did, it canāt āerase a duly enacted law from the statute books.ā Jacobson v. Fla. Secāy of State, 974 F.3d 1236, 1255 (11th Cir. 2020) (citation omitted). āOur power is more limited: we may enjoin executive oļ¬cials from tak- ing steps to enforceā the unconstitutional law. Id. (cleaned up). And in entering such injunctions, we must be speciļ¬c about their terms and the acts that we are restraining or requiring. See FED. R. CIV. P. 65(d). In other words, we need to make clear in an injunc- tion the cases in which an executive oļ¬cial can (or cannot) enforce the putatively unconstitutional law. Sometimes, the injunction is easy to craft: we can simply state that the defendant may not enforce the unconstitutional law or provision at all. Those are called facial injunctions. But we may facially enjoin enforcement of a statute only if a challenger estab- lishes āthat no set of circumstances exists under which the Act would be valid,ā United States v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739, 745 (1987), or that the law lacks a āplainly legitimate sweep,ā Wash. State Grange v. Wash. State Republican Party, 552 U.S. 442, 449 (2008) (cleaned up). Thatās a demanding standard, and for good reason. āClaims of facial invalidity often rest on speculation about the lawās cover- age and its future enforcement.ā Moody v. NetChoice, LLC, 603 U.S. 707, 723 (2024) (cleaned up). āAnd facial challenges threaten to USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 104 of 111 104 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 short circuit the democratic process by preventing duly enacted laws from being implemented in constitutional ways.ā Id. (cleaned up). Wary of these concerns, the Supreme Court has āmade facial challenges hard to win,ā id., and has directed courts to consider āthe circumstances in whichā the challenged statute is āmost likely to be constitutional,ā Rahimi, 602 U.S. at 701. Of course, we can always enjoin enforcement of a statute on a case-by-case basis. We routinely grant narrow injunctions when plaintiļ¬s bring an as-applied challenge. See Moody, 603 U.S. at 723 (noting ācourts usually handle constitutional claims case by caseā). But in this case, Henry brought both as-applied and facial chal- lenges to Section 15-20A-11(d)(4). And the district court decided to facially enjoin the statute. So we must consider whether Henry has met our demanding standard for facially enjoining a statuteās oper- ation. Alabama argues that Henry has not done so. It asserts that in some cases, it can apply Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) constitutionally. Speciļ¬cally, Alabama contends that it can apply the law constitu- tionally to the most dangerous people who fall within its ambit and to non-parental relatives who donāt enjoy the same constitutional rights as Henry does. Henry responds that the district court properly entered a facial injunction because Section 15-20A- 11(d)(4) fails strict scrutiny, which modiļ¬es the traditional Salerno no-set-of-circumstances test. We think both parties are partially correct. But ultimately, we must conclude that the district court abused its discretion in entering a facial injunction. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 105 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 105 We begin with Alabamaās argument that Section 15-20A- 11(d)(4) is facially constitutional because it will prevent at least some truly dangerous people from harming their children. As to this argument, Henryās response rings true. Weāve held that āthe question that Salerno requires us to answer is whether the statute fails the relevant constitutional test.ā Club Madonna Inc. v. City of Miami Beach, 42 F.4th 1231, 1256 (11th Cir. 2022). In other words, āSalerno is correctly understood not as a separate test applicable to facial challenges, but a description of the outcome of a facial chal- lenge in which a statute fails to satisfy the appropriate constitu- tional framework.ā Id. (quoting Doe v. City of Albuquerque, 667 F.3d 1111, 1123 (10th Cir. 2012)). Johnson v. United States oļ¬ers an example. 576 U.S. 591 (2015). The Supreme Court declared void for vagueness a federal criminal statute that punished individuals for possessing a ļ¬rearm if they were previously convicted of three crimes that presented āa serious potential risk of physical injury to another.ā 576 U.S. at 593ā94 (emphasis omitted) (quoting 18 U.S.C. § 924(e)(2)(B)(ii)). The dis- sent argued that the statute was facially constitutional because it was not vague in all its applications; that is, the statute covered āsome clearly risky crimes.ā See id. at 603. But the Court rejected that proposition. As it explained, the āsupposed requirement of vagueness in all applications is not a requirement at all, but a tau- tology: If we hold a statute to be vague, it is vague in all its appli- cations (and never mind the reality).ā Id. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 106 of 111 106 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 Thatās the case here. The relevant constitutional test is strict scrutiny. And as weāve explained, Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) fails strict scrutiny because, by being overinclusive, underinclusive, and more restrictive than other eļ¬ective alternatives, it is not narrowly tai- lored to advance the governmentās compelling interest. So the tau- tology holds: because āwe hold a statute to [not] be [narrowly tai- lored], it is [not narrowly tailored] in all its applications.ā Id. So both Supreme Court and our precedent reject Alabamaās argument that the statuteās constitutional application to particularly danger- ous oļ¬enders makes a facial injunction inappropriate. For good reason. The ālarger problemā with the Stateās ap- proach is that it would allow defendants to āconsistently sidestep facial challengesā and continue to abridge individualsā fundamental rights so long as they ācrafted some instanceā where the statute ad- vances a stateās compelling interest or comports with our Nationās history and tradition. Club Madonna, 42 F.4th at 1256. That ācanāt be right,ā especially when fundamental rights are at stake. Id. Salerno is so demanding because we presume democratically enacted laws are constitutional. See Moody, 603 U.S. at 723. But after we conclude that a statute abridges a fundamental right, the presumption of constitutionality ļ¬ips and the burden shifts to the state to justify the infringement. See Zablocki, 434 U.S. at 390 (hold- ing āa statutory classiļ¬cationā that burdens a fundamental right ācannot be upheldā unless it satisļ¬es strict scrutiny); Ent. Merchs. Assān, 564 U.S. at 799 (explaining an act that restricts protected speech āis invalid unless California can demonstrate that it passes USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 107 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 107 strict scrutinyā); Playboy Ent. Grp., 529 U.S. at 813 (āSince § 505 is a content-based speech restriction, it can stand only if it satisļ¬es strict scrutiny.ā). Alabama canāt shirk that burden by positing āthe exist- ence of some clearly riskyā individuals to whom its law may apply. Johnson, 576 U.S. at 603. By contrast, the Stateās second argumentāthat the law isnāt facially unconstitutional because it applies to non-parental rela- tivesāhas merit because it highlights cases where the statute may not infringe any fundamental rights. As weāve noted, Section 15- 20A-11(d)(4) also applies to any āgrandparent, stepparent, sibling, or stepsibling,ā ALA. CODE §15-20A-11(d), who is an āadult sex of- fenderā āconvicted of any sex oļ¬ense involving a child,ā id. § 15- 20A-11(d)(4). At least some of those relatives may not have as strong a constitutional interest in living with a child relative as Henry does in living with his own son. And if thatās the case, and if Alabama enforced its law against those individuals, strict scrutiny may not applyāinstead, our rational-basis test might. And thereās certainly a rational basis for Section 15-20A-11(d)(4). True, as Henry points out, the Supreme Court has explained that the right to live with family is āby no meansā limited to āmem- bers of the nuclear familyā; the ātradition of uncles, aunts, cousins, and especially grandparents sharing a household along with par- ents and children has roots equally venerable and equally deserving of constitutional recognition.ā Moore, 431 U.S. at 504. But at the same time, the Court has cautioned that āthe mere existence of a biological link does not merit equivalent constitutional USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 108 of 111 108 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 protection.ā Lehr, 463 U.S. at 261. So if family members have not shown the necessary interest in establishing a familial relationship, āthe Federal Constitution will not automatically compel a state to listen.ā Id. at 262. Because the state regulates contact with non-immediate family members, we canāt so easily assume āthe emotional attach- ments that derive from the intimacy of daily association,ā Smith, 431 U.S. at 844, which our Constitution secures in the case of par- ents. Whether an oļ¬ender āhas a right to familial association with respect to an extended family memberā may be āa fact-intensive inquiry that requires the party claiming associational rights to demonstrate the nature of that relationship.ā Salah v. People, 550 P.3d 698, 709ā10 (Colo. 2024). So states may constitutionally draw certain lines on the assumption that the āemotional attachmentsā necessary to establish a liberty interest under the Fourteenth Amendment have not yet āripen[ed]ā to the point of ārequiring procedural protection and/or judicial inquiry.ā Smith, 431 U.S. at 853ā54 (upholding a statute requiring a proceeding into the propri- ety of continuing foster care only for those āfoster children who have been in foster care for 18 months or moreā). In short, good arguments exist on both sides of the constitu- tional debate. The parties have ably identiļ¬ed authorities in sup- port of their respective positions. But they have not briefed this complex constitutional question in detail, especially as it relates to the scope of injunctive relief. And we need not resolve those hard questions here to fulļ¬ll our constitutional duty of awarding relief USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 109 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 109 to Henry, the only plaintiļ¬. See Keener v. Convergys Corp., 342 F.3d 1264, 1269 (11th Cir. 2003) (āInjunctive relief should be limited in scope to the extent necessary to protect the interests of the par- ties.ā); see also Ashwander v. Tenn. Valley Auth., 297 U.S. 288, 346ā47 (1936) (Brandeis, J., concurring) (explaining courts do ānot antici- pate a question of constitutional law in advance of the necessity of deciding itā and do ānot formulate a rule of constitutional law broader than is required by the precise facts to which it is to be ap- pliedā (cleaned up)). A facial injunction would require us to speculate āabout the lawās coverage and its future enforcementā and wade into complex constitutional issues when the facts of this case do not require it. Moody, 603 U.S. at 723. Given these considerations, we conclude that Henry has not met his lofty burden of showing that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) is unconstitutional in all its applications. For this reason, we vacate the district courtās injunction. C. Because we vacate the district courtās injunction, we do not address the argument that the district court inappropriately entered a univer- sal injunction. Finally, Alabama argues that the district court abused its dis- cretion in entering a universal injunction. A universal injunction, or a nationwide (in this case, a statewide) injunction, is the now- common name for an injunction that prevents a state or the federal government from enforcing a law against both parties and non-par- ties. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 110 of 111 110 Opinion of the Court 24-10139 Weāve held that āa federal district court may issue a nation- wide, or āuniversal,ā injunction in appropriate circumstances.ā Flor- ida v. Depāt of Health & Hum. Servs., 19 F.4th 1271, 1281 (11th Cir. 2021) (cleaned up); Georgia v. President of the United States, 46 F.4th 1283, 1304 (11th Cir. 2022). Those āappropriate circumstances are rare,ā but they may arise when a universal injunction āis necessary to provide complete relief to the plaintiļ¬s, to protect similarly sit- uated nonparties,ā āto avoid the chaos and confusion of a patch- work of injunctions,ā to guard plaintiļ¬s ādispersed throughout the United States,ā or āwhen certain types of unconstitutionality are found.ā Florida, 19 F.4th at 1282 (cleaned up). These are just a few examples. Our list of appropriate cir- cumstances is not exhaustive, but it is also not āa checklist.ā Geor- gia, 46 F.4th at 1306. The āscope of injunctive relief is dictated by the extent of the violation established,ā Califano v. Yamasaki, 442 U.S. 682, 702 (1979), and any appropriate circumstances weāve dis- cussed must be understood with reference to that principle, Geor- gia, 46 F.4th at 1306. Because we vacate the district courtās order, we do not need to address whether this case presents an appropriate circumstance for a universal injunction. On remand, Henry may opt for one of the many āprocedural devices [that] allow nonparties with similar interests to seek the protection of injunctive relief.ā Id. And if he does so, the question becomes moot. Alternatively, Henry may be happy just to win his as-applied challenge. And in that case, too, the question of a universal injunction becomes moot. USCA11 Case: 24-10139 Document: 59-1 Date Filed: 04/23/2025 Page: 111 of 111 24-10139 Opinion of the Court 111 IV. CONCLUSION We conclude that Section 15-20A-11(d)(4) violates Henryās fundamental right to live with his child and, as a parent, to the care and custody of his child because his conviction alone does not prove that he is a danger to his child. But we conclude the district court abused its discretion in facially enjoining Section 15-20A- 11(d)(4) because Henry has not met his burden of showing that the law is unconstitutional in all its applications. For these reasons, we aļ¬rm in part and reverse in part the district courtās grant of sum- mary judgment to Henry, vacate the district courtās injunction, and remand the case for further proceedings consistent with this opin- ion. AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED IN PART; VACATED AND REMANDED IN PART.
Case Information
- Court
- 11th Cir.
- Decision Date
- April 23, 2025
- Status
- Precedential