Federal Defenders of New York, Inc. v. Federal Bureau of Prisons ( 2020 )


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  • 19-1778
    Federal Defenders of New York, Inc. v. Federal Bureau of Prisons
    In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Second Circuit
    ______________
    August Term, 2020
    (Argued: February 11, 2020                  Decided: March 20, 2020)
    Docket No. 19-1778
    ______________
    FEDERAL DEFENDERS OF NEW YORK, INC., ON BEHALF OF ITSELF AND ITS
    CLIENTS DETAINED AT THE METROPOLITAN DETENTION CENTER-BROOKLYN,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    –v.–
    FEDERAL BUREAU OF PRISONS, WARDEN HERMAN QUAY, IN HIS OFFICIAL
    CAPACITY,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    ______________
    B e f o r e:
    WALKER, PARKER, and CARNEY, Circuit Judges.
    ______________
    Plaintiff-Appellant the Federal Defenders of New York, Inc. (the “Federal
    Defenders” or “Defenders”) appeals from a June 4, 2019 judgment of the United States
    District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Brodie, J.), dismissing the
    organization’s complaint against Defendants-Appellees the Federal Bureau of Prisons
    (the “BOP”) and Warden Herman Quay (“Warden Quay”) (together, “Defendants”).
    The Federal Defenders allege that Defendants’ curtailment of inmate-attorney visits at
    the Metropolitan Detention Center-Brooklyn (the “MDC”) in early 2019 violated the
    Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”), 5 U.S.C. § 706(2), and the constitutional right to
    counsel established by the Sixth Amendment. We conclude that the District Court erred
    in dismissing the Federal Defenders’ APA claim by failing to consider applicable BOP
    regulations in its zone-of-interests analysis. In its ruling, the District Court also
    misconstrued the Defenders’ Sixth Amendment claim: whereas the Federal Defenders
    invoke the court’s traditional equitable powers in their Sixth Amendment claim against
    Defendants, the District Court treated this claim as purporting to arise under the
    Constitution itself. Because the equitable basis of the Federal Defenders’ Sixth
    Amendment claim raises novel questions of constitutional law, we think it prudent to
    defer ruling on its merits. We therefore vacate the District Court’s judgment and
    remand the cause for further proceedings. In particular, we direct the District Court on
    remand to consider appointing a master to mediate the parties’ differences at the
    earliest possible time to ensure that the Federal Defenders have meaningful, continuous
    access to their clients either in person or by remote access pending adjudication of these
    claims, as these claims may be amended to address similar issues of access arising
    during the current public health emergency.
    VACATED and REMANDED. The mandate shall issue FORTHWITH.
    ______________
    JENNA M. DABBS (Sean Hecker, Joshua Matz, Matthew J.
    Craig, Benjamin D. White, on the brief), Kaplan Hecker
    & Fink LLP, New York, NY, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
    SEAN P. GREENE (Varuni Nelson, Rachel G. Balaban, Seth D.
    Eichenholtz, on the brief), for Richard P. Donoghue,
    United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New
    York, Brooklyn, NY, for Defendants-Appellees.
    ______________
    2
    JOHN M. WALKER, JR., BARRINGTON D. PARKER, SUSAN L. CARNEY:
    This appeal concerns the severe curtailment of defense attorneys’ access to client
    inmates held at the Metropolitan Detention Center-Brooklyn (“MDC”), most of whom
    are pretrial detainees who have not been convicted of a crime.
    In February 2019, the Federal Defenders of New York, Inc. (the “Federal
    Defenders” or “Defenders”) sued the Federal Bureau of Prisons (the “BOP”) and
    Warden Herman Quay (“Warden Quay”) (together, “Defendants”), alleging that their
    cancellation of inmate-attorney visits at the MDC violates the Administrative Procedure
    Act (“APA”), 5 U.S.C. § 706(2), and the right to counsel established by the Sixth
    Amendment. The United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York
    (Brodie, J.), dismissed the complaint for failure to state a claim. The District Court held
    that the Federal Defenders’ APA claim did not satisfy the zone-of-interests test and it
    concluded that the Defenders did not have a cause of action under the Sixth
    Amendment because the constitutional right to counsel is personal to the accused.
    For the reasons set forth below, we VACATE the District Court’s judgment. The
    District Court erred in dismissing the Defenders’ APA claim by failing to consider
    relevant BOP regulations in its zone-of-interests analysis. It also misunderstood the
    basis of their Sixth Amendment claim: whereas the Federal Defenders bring this claim
    under the federal courts’ inherent equitable powers, the District Court treated the claim
    as purporting to arise directly under the Sixth Amendment. Because the equitable
    nature of the claim raises important questions of constitutional law not fully explored
    by the District Court, we remand the cause for further proceedings on the APA claim
    and, if necessary, for reconsideration of the Sixth Amendment claim.
    3
    BACKGROUND
    The MDC is the principal federal pretrial detention facility in the Eastern District
    of New York. It houses more than 1,600 inmates in two buildings located in Brooklyn.
    The BOP, which administers the nation’s federal jail and prison system, oversees and
    directs operations at the MDC, with Warden Quay superintending the facility during
    the period relevant to this appeal.
    Regulations issued by the BOP govern inmate-attorney visits at the MDC. 1 Under
    these rules, the Warden is responsible for “set[ting] the time and place” for attorney
    visitation. 28 C.F.R. § 543.13(b). In doing so, he must “provide the opportunity for
    pretrial inmate-attorney visits on a seven-days-a-week basis,” 
    id. at §
    551.117(a), and he
    must “make every effort to arrange for a visit when prior notification is not practical,”
    
    id. at §
    543.13(c). In addition, the Warden generally may not restrict the frequency of
    attorney visits or require these visits to take place outside of normal visitation hours,
    although he “may make exceptions according to local conditions or for an emergency
    situation demonstrated by the inmate or visiting attorney.” 
    Id. at §
    543.13(b).
    The “standard practice” at the MDC is to allow attorneys to visit detainees from
    8 am to 8 pm, seven days per week. 2 Joint App’x (“JA”) 11. The Federal Defenders—a
    1Congress has vested the Attorney General with the broad authority to “control and manage[]”
    federal penal and correctional institutions. 18 U.S.C. § 4001(b)(1). The Attorney General, in turn,
    has delegated that authority to the federal BOP. See 28 C.F.R. § 0.96.
    2This statement of facts is drawn from the allegations in the complaint, the documents filed by
    the Federal Defenders in connection with their motion for a temporary restraining order (which
    were incorporated by reference into the complaint), see JA 14, and “matters of which judicial
    notice may be taken.” S.E.C. v. Apuzzo, 
    689 F.3d 204
    , 207 (2d Cir. 2012) (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    4
    not-for-profit organization that “is dedicated to offering public defense services to
    indigent persons in federal criminal cases brought in the Eastern and Southern Districts
    of New York”—rely on this schedule to visit their clients at the MDC. JA 10.
    In January 2019, however, a series of events resulted in a severe curtailment of
    the Federal Defenders’ access to MDC inmates. First, the BOP cancelled or substantially
    delayed attorney visitation at the MDC during seven days in January, citing staffing
    issues related to a partial shutdown of the federal government that resulted from a
    budgetary dispute. Shortly after the government shutdown ended on January 25 and
    attorney visiting resumed, the BOP again cancelled all inmate-attorney visits at the
    MDC, effective from January 28 through February 2, this time in response to a fire that
    started in the MDC’s switch gear room on January 27 and caused power outages
    throughout the facility. Inmate-attorney visits resumed again, temporarily, on February
    3, but were then abruptly halted after less than four hours, apparently because of a
    confrontation between BOP officials and individuals who had assembled in the MDC’s
    lobby.
    The Federal Defenders spent “significant time, focus, and resources” in
    responding to these disruptions in the MDC’s schedule for attorney visits. JA 16. During
    the January government shutdown, for example, the Federal Defenders complained in a
    contemporaneous letter to BOP officials that the “[l]ast-minute scheduling changes and
    unexpected closings impose[d] significant burdens on the Defenders and other defense
    lawyers, particularly those who ha[d] to travel long distances to meet with clients at
    these facilities, need[ed] to arrange for interpreters or other experts to attend meetings
    5
    with their clients, or ha[d] a time-sensitive matter to discuss.” JA 47. 3 Later, in the wake
    of the January 27 fire, the Federal Defenders dedicated resources to contacting their
    clients in the MDC and gathering information about their clients’ welfare. After hearing
    reports that the power outages had deprived many detainees of heating, electricity, hot
    water, phones, medical care, and other basic services, the Defenders repeatedly
    requested information from BOP officials on the conditions at the MDC and sought to
    know the reasons that the facility cancelled visitation. When the BOP “[s]tonewall[ed]”
    their requests, the Federal Defenders turned to the courts, seeking and securing an
    administrative order from the District Court (Irizarry, then C.J.) that required the BOP
    to allow the Federal Defenders to inspect the MDC facilities and to speak directly with
    the inmates. JA 13-14.
    In addition to draining the Federal Defenders’ resources, the BOP’s cancellations
    and delays of attorney visits impaired the Defenders’ ability to represent their clients.
    During these periods of curtailment, the Federal Defenders could not review discovery
    files with clients. Nor could they counsel MDC inmates on pleading decisions, trial
    strategy, or the sentencing process. Disruptions to the visiting schedule also forced the
    Defenders’ attorneys to cancel presentence and expert interviews and to postpone
    interviews for reentry programs that could have shortened their clients’ periods of
    detention at the MDC.
    3As noted above, the complaint incorporates the documents submitted by the Federal
    Defenders in connection with their motion for a temporary restraining order, including their
    January 22 letter to the BOP.
    6
    On February 4, 2019, the Federal Defenders filed this action. 4 In their Complaint,
    they allege that Defendants’ suspension of attorney visitation at the MDC in early 2019
    violated the APA (by contravening the BOP’s own regulations on inmate-attorney
    visits) and the Sixth Amendment (by interfering with the right to counsel). The Federal
    Defenders request injunctive and declaratory relief, primarily in the form of an order
    requiring Defendants to maintain daily attorney visitation at the MDC.
    On the day that the Federal Defenders filed their complaint, the District Court
    (DeArcy Hall, J.) granted their concurrent application for a temporary restraining order
    (the “TRO”). The TRO required Defendants to reinstate attorney visits “in accordance
    with the MDC’s normal schedule and procedures for such visits.” JA 157. Inmate-
    attorney visitation at the MDC—which had been cancelled again on February 4, 2019,
    because of a bomb threat—resumed. The District Court (Brodie, J.) then scheduled a
    March 1 hearing date for the Defenders’ application for a preliminary injunction,
    directing the parties to prepare “for oral argument on the issue of whether [the Federal
    Defenders] ha[ve] standing to bring this action.” JA 6. 5
    At the March 1 hearing, the District Court reframed the discussion. The
    government had opposed the Federal Defenders’ motion for a preliminary injunction,
    arguing that the Defenders lacked standing to sue for the stated violations of legal
    rights, which (they asserted) belonged to MDC inmates alone. In the District Court’s
    4On February 22, 2019, certain MDC inmates acting on behalf of an asserted class filed a
    separate, but related, action for damages, alleging that in the aftermath of the January 27 fire,
    BOP officials subjected them to unconstitutional conditions and deprived them of legal counsel.
    See Am. Compl., Scott v. Quay, No. 19-cv-1075 (E.D.N.Y. Nov. 15, 2019), ECF No. 29.
    5   Defendants agreed to keep the TRO in effect until the preliminary injunction hearing.
    7
    view, however, the central issue was not whether the Federal Defenders had Article III
    standing to bring their claims, but rather whether they could maintain a cause of action
    under the APA or the Sixth Amendment to press for relief. The District Court expressed
    concern, in particular, about whether the Federal Defenders’ claims satisfied the so-
    called zone-of-interests test—a test developed in case law and holding generally that a
    plaintiff has no cause of action if his interests lie outside the zone of interests arguably
    protected or regulated by the law that the plaintiff seeks to invoke. See Lexmark Int’l, Inc.
    v. Static Control Components, Inc., 
    572 U.S. 118
    , 126-29 (2014). After hearing from both
    sides, the District Court denied the Federal Defenders’ application for a preliminary
    injunction, concluding that, under the zone-of-interests doctrine, they had failed to state
    a claim under either the APA or the Sixth Amendment.
    The Defenders declined to amend their complaint to address the flaw perceived
    by the District Court. Instead, they informed the District Court that they would appeal
    the dismissal of their suit. Accordingly, on May 20, 2019, the District Court dismissed
    the complaint sua sponte for failure to state a claim. See Order, Federal Defs. of N.Y., Inc. v.
    Fed. Bureau of Prisons, No. 19-cv-660 (MKB) (E.D.N.Y. May 19, 2019), ECF No. 33
    (“Order”). In a brief six-page opinion that reiterated and, to some extent, clarified the
    court’s reasons for denying the Federal Defenders a preliminary injunction on March 1,
    the District Court set forth its two primary conclusions. First, it ruled that the Defenders
    have no cause of action under the Sixth Amendment to sue for alleged violations of the
    right to counsel. This is because, the District Court stated, the constitutional right to
    counsel is personal to the accused and does not accrue to the Federal Defenders.
    Second, the Court determined that the Defenders’ APA claim does not fall within the
    zone of interests that Congress sought to protect in 18 U.S.C. § 4001 (which the Federal
    Defenders identified as the relevant statutory provision at the March 1 hearing) or 18
    8
    U.S.C. § 4042 (which the District Court identified, on its own, as potentially relevant). 6
    Omitting any mention of the BOP regulations on attorney visitation that the Federal
    Defenders cited in their complaint, the District Court’s decision focused exclusively on
    statutory sections 4001 and 4042. It concluded that, although these provisions are
    “broadly worded,” they do “not protect [the Defenders’] interest in access to its clients”
    because the provisions “relate primarily to the health, safety, and well-being of inmates
    and facility personnel.” Order at 6.
    This timely appeal followed.
    DISCUSSION
    We review de novo a district court’s sua sponte dismissal of a complaint for failure
    to state a claim. See J.S. v. T’Kach, 
    714 F.3d 99
    , 103 (2d Cir. 2013). In doing so, we accept
    as true all well-pled factual allegations in the complaint, drawing all reasonable
    inferences in favor of the plaintiff. See Forest Park Pictures v. Universal Television Network,
    Inc., 
    683 F.3d 424
    , 429 (2d Cir. 2012).
    The Federal Defenders contend that, in dismissing their complaint, the District
    Court misapplied the zone-of-interests test. With respect to their APA claim, they urge
    that the District Court erred by failing to consider the BOP regulations that govern
    inmate-attorney visits. As for their Sixth Amendment claim, the Federal Defenders
    assert that the zone-of-interests test does not apply to constitutional claims for relief
    6Section 4001 provides, in relevant part, that the Attorney General has rulemaking authority
    related to “[t]he control and management of Federal penal and correctional institutions, except
    military or naval institutions.” 18 U.S.C. § 4001(b)(1). Section 4042 instructs the BOP to “provide
    for the safekeeping, care, and subsistence of all persons charged with or convicted of offenses
    against the United States.” 
    Id. § 4042(a)(2).
    9
    pursued under the court’s inherent equitable powers, and that even if the test does
    apply, their interests in this litigation would satisfy it. Below, we consider these
    arguments in turn. Before doing so, however, we address Defendants’ contention that
    the Federal Defenders lack Article III standing because the relief they request will not
    redress their alleged injury. See Strubel v. Comenity Bank, 
    842 F.3d 181
    , 187 (2d Cir. 2016)
    (“[B]ecause standing is necessary to our jurisdiction, we are obliged to decide the
    question at the outset.”). If the Defenders do not have Article III standing, we must
    dismiss for want of jurisdiction. As set forth below, however, we reject this threshold
    argument.
    I.     Redressability
    To establish “the irreducible constitutional minimum” of Article III standing, a
    plaintiff must show: (1) “an injury in fact,” (2) “a causal connection between the injury
    and the conduct complained of,” and (3) a likelihood that “the injury will be redressed
    by a favorable decision.” Lujan v. Defs. of Wildlife, 
    504 U.S. 555
    , 560-61 (1992) (internal
    quotation marks omitted). Defendants submit that the Federal Defenders’ stated injury
    fails to satisfy the third element: redressability. They contend that, because Defendants
    reinstated normal visitation schedules at the MDC after this action was filed, the
    Federal Defenders’ alleged injuries constitute “past harms” that cannot be addressed by
    their request for prospective injunctive and declaratory relief. Appellees’ Br. 20.
    Under established standing doctrine, however, we evaluate “whether the party
    invoking jurisdiction had the requisite stake in the outcome when the suit was filed.”
    Carter v. HealthPort Techs., LLC, 
    822 F.3d 47
    , 56 (2d Cir. 2016) (emphasis added). Thus, if
    the Federal Defenders’ claims satisfy Article III’s redressability requirement “as of the
    outset of litigation,” they will continue to do so throughout the litigation. Klein ex rel.
    10
    Qlik Techs., Inc. v. Qlik Techs., Inc., 
    906 F.3d 215
    , 221 (2d Cir. 2018) (internal quotation
    marks omitted), cert. dismissed sub nom. Cadian Capital Mgmt., LP v. Klein, 
    139 S. Ct. 1406
    (2019). Here, the Federal Defenders allege that Defendants continued to interfere with
    their access to MDC inmates up through the filing of the complaint on February 4, 2019.
    Taken as true, this allegation establishes that the Federal Defenders’ injuries were
    ongoing when this suit was filed and were therefore amenable at that time to redress by
    their request for prospective injunctive relief. This is enough to satisfy Article III’s
    redressability requirement.
    In arguing that the Federal Defenders’ stated injuries are not redressable because
    the MDC has returned to its normal inmate-attorney visitation schedule, Defendants
    appear to confuse standing with mootness. While standing doctrine determines
    whether a plaintiff has a personal stake in the litigation when the complaint is filed,
    “[m]ootness doctrine determines what to do if an intervening circumstance deprives the
    plaintiff of a personal stake in the outcome of the lawsuit, at any point during litigation
    after its initiation.” 
    Id. at 221
    (internal quotation marks and brackets omitted).
    Defendants, however, “cannot automatically moot [this] case simply by ending [their]
    unlawful conduct once sued.” Already, LLC v. Nike, Inc., 
    568 U.S. 85
    , 91 (2013). Instead,
    they must show that “it is absolutely clear the allegedly wrongful behavior could not
    reasonably be expected to recur.” 
    Id. Although the
    events of early 2019 were hardly
    routine, Defendants have not argued—much less demonstrated—that the circumstances
    that disrupted attorney-client visits at the MDC are unlikely to arise again. Indeed,
    recent public health-related developments suggest that they are all too likely to recur.
    See Danielle Ivory, “We Are Not a Hospital”: A Prison Braces for the Coronavirus, N.Y.
    TIMES (Mar. 18, 2020), https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/17/us/coronavirus-prisons-
    jails.html (reporting that the BOP has suspended visits, including most visits by
    11
    lawyers, to the federal prison system for 30 days in response to the outbreak of COVID-
    19). Accordingly, Defendants have not carried their “formidable burden” of
    demonstrating that intervening events mooted the Federal Defenders’ claims. Friends of
    the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc., 
    528 U.S. 167
    , 190 (2000).
    Defendants also insist that, as a matter of law, the Federal Defenders’ claims are
    not redressable because courts do not have the authority to provide the relief requested.
    No judge, they contend, “could, as a legal or practical matter, prevent Defendants from
    taking such actions as they deem necessary in emergency situations to protect those
    entrusted to their care, including, if necessary, altering the attorney visitation schedule
    while those emergencies persist.” Appellees’ Br. 20. In support, Defendants cite several
    BOP regulations that charge the Warden with developing various detention-facility
    procedures. See 28 C.F.R. §§ 540.40 (regarding inmate visitation by family, friends, and
    others, and restrictions of such visits when necessary for “security and good order”),
    543.10 (affording inmates “reasonable access to legal materials and counsel, and
    reasonable opportunity to prepare legal documents”), 543.13 (permitting “visits by the
    retained, appointed, or prospective attorney of an inmate or by an attorney who wishes
    to interview an inmate as a witness”).
    This argument is unavailing. Judicial consideration of claims is generally
    available unless clearly precluded by Congress. See Webster v. Doe, 
    486 U.S. 592
    , 603
    (1988). Here, Defendants do not identify any statute that precludes courts from
    evaluating the lawfulness of the Warden’s conduct, even during emergency situations.
    The BOP regulations that Defendants reference in their appellate brief merely delegate
    to the Warden the authority to develop procedures for inmate visitations and access to
    legal counsel; they do not shield the Warden’s conduct from judicial review. Nor are we
    12
    persuaded that judicial relief is unavailable as a “practical matter.” Appellee’s Br. 20. If
    the Federal Defenders prevail on the merits of this dispute, we see no reason why a
    court could not grant appropriate relief and order Defendants to conform their conduct
    to statutory and constitutional law. Even if such an order were to acknowledge the
    Warden’s authority to close a facility in an emergency, it could nevertheless establish
    the legal boundaries that limit such a closure.
    For these reasons, we conclude that the Federal Defenders satisfy the
    redressability requirement of constitutional standing.
    II.    APA Claim
    We next consider whether the District Court correctly dismissed the Federal
    Defenders’ APA claim for failing to satisfy the zone-of-interests test. Under the zone-of-
    interests doctrine, a plaintiff may state a cause of action only when his interests in the
    litigation “fall within the zone of interests protected by the law invoked.” Bank of Am.
    Corp. v. City of Miami, 
    137 S. Ct. 1296
    , 1302 (2017) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Although courts traditionally classified this doctrine as part of ”[the] prudential branch
    of standing,” the Supreme Court recently clarified in its Lexmark decision that the zone-
    of-interests test actually determines whether a plaintiff has a right to sue under a
    particular substantive law, and is not of jurisdictional import. 
    Lexmark, 572 U.S. at 126
    -
    27 (internal quotation marks omitted). More precisely, the test “requires us to
    determine, using traditional tools of statutory interpretation, whether a legislatively
    conferred cause of action encompasses a particular plaintiff’s claim.” Bank of Am. 
    Corp., 137 S. Ct. at 1303
    (citation omitted).
    Here, the Federal Defenders sue under the APA, alleging that Defendants failed
    to comply with the BOP’s own regulations on inmate-attorney visits. The APA provides
    13
    a civil cause of action to those “suffering legal wrong because of agency action, or
    adversely affected or aggrieved by agency action within the meaning of a relevant
    statute.” 5 U.S.C. § 702; see also Sharkey v. Quarantillo, 
    541 F.3d 75
    , 83-84 (2d Cir. 2008). In
    doing so, the statute functions as an “omnibus judicial-review provision,” permitting
    “suit[s] for [agency] violations of numerous statutes of varying character that do not
    themselves include causes of action for judicial review.” 
    Lexmark, 572 U.S. at 130
    .
    The relevant zone of interests for an APA claim is defined by “the statute that
    [the plaintiff] says was violated,” rather than by the APA itself. Match-E-Be-Nash-She-
    Wish Band of Pottawatomi Indians v. Patchak, 
    567 U.S. 209
    , 224 (2012) (internal quotation
    marks omitted); see also East Bay Sanctuary Covenant v. Trump, 
    932 F.3d 742
    , 767-68 (9th
    Cir. 2018). In keeping with “Congress’s evident intent when enacting the APA to make
    agency action presumptively reviewable,” the zone-of-interests test is not “especially
    demanding” in the APA context, as the Supreme Court has explained. 
    Match-E, 567 U.S. at 225
    (internal quotation marks omitted). The test “forecloses suit only when a
    plaintiff’s interests are so marginally related to or inconsistent with the purposes
    implicit in the statute that it cannot reasonably be assumed that Congress intended to
    permit the suit.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks omitted). The Supreme Court has
    emphasized, moreover, that an APA claim need only “arguably” fall within “the zone of
    interests to be protected or regulated by the statute that he says was violated,”
    explaining that “the word ‘arguably’ . . . indicate[s] that the benefit of any doubt goes to
    the plaintiff.” 
    Id. at 224-25
    (emphasis added) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    The Federal Defenders submit that their APA claim satisfies this “lenient” test.
    
    Lexmark, 572 U.S. at 130
    . On appeal, they point to three regulatory provisions, adopted
    by the BOP and published in title 28 of the Code of Federal Regulations, as sheltering
    14
    their organization’s interests in having frequent and predictable access to clients housed
    at the MDC. The first, which is codified at section 551.117(a), directs the Warden to
    “provide the opportunity for pretrial inmate-attorney visits on a seven-days-a-week
    basis.” 7 The second, found in section 543.13(b), sets forth various parameters for
    scheduling this daily visitation. 8 As relevant to the present appeal, the provision
    generally prohibits the Warden from “limit[ing] the frequency of attorney visits” or
    requiring these visits to occur outside of “regular visiting hours,” while at the same
    time empowering the Warden to “make exceptions according to local conditions or for
    an emergency situation demonstrated by the inmate or visiting attorney.” 28 C.F.R.
    § 543.13(b). Finally, the Federal Defenders highlight section 543.13(c), which directs the
    Warden to “make every effort to arrange for a[n] [attorney-client] visit,” even when the
    attorney is unable to notify the Warden of the visit in advance. 9
    The District Court did not address these regulations when it dismissed the
    Federal Defenders’ APA claim. Instead, it confined its zone-of-interests analysis to the
    two statutory provisions mentioned above: 18 U.S.C. § 4001, which generally authorizes
    7See 28 C.F.R. § 551.117(a) (“The Warden shall provide the opportunity for pretrial inmate-
    attorney visits on a seven-days-a-week basis.”).
    8See 28 C.F.R. § 543.13(b) (“The Warden generally may not limit the frequency of attorney visits
    since the number of visits necessary is dependent upon the nature and urgency of the legal
    problems involved. The Warden shall set the time and place for visits, which ordinarily take
    place during regular visiting hours. Attorney visits shall take place in a private conference
    room, if available, or in a regular visiting room in an area and at a time designed to allow a
    degree of privacy. The Warden may make exceptions according to local conditions or for an
    emergency situation demonstrated by the inmate or visiting attorney.”).
    928 C.F.R. § 543.13(c) (“The attorney shall make an advance appointment for the visit through
    the Warden prior to each visit; however, the Warden shall make every effort to arrange for a
    visit when prior notification is not practical.”).
    15
    the Attorney General to promulgate rules relating to “[t]he control and management of
    Federal penal and correctional institutions,” and 18 U.S.C. § 4042, which entrusts the
    BOP with, inter alia, providing for “the safekeeping, care, and subsistence of all persons
    charged with . . . offenses against the United States.” Although the District Court’s
    written opinion provides no explanation for its decision to focus exclusively on sections
    4001 and 4042 of title 18, the transcript of its March 1 preliminary injunction hearing
    offers some clues to the Court’s thinking. In that hearing, the District Court expressed
    uncertainty about whether it could consider regulations when applying the zone-of-
    interests test, asking the parties on several occasions whether its inquiry had to be
    limited to the relevant statutory provisions.
    The District Court’s hesitation is understandable. We have not addressed in any
    detail the role that agency regulations might play in the zone-of-interests inquiry. 10 Nor
    have we explicitly held that a plaintiff may satisfy this doctrine by demonstrating that
    his interests fall within those protected or regulated by agency rules. Moreover, we can
    see how, at first blush, agency regulations might be viewed as irrelevant, or even
    inappropriate, to the zone-of-interests analysis. The core concern of the zone-of-interests
    doctrine is, after all, whether a plaintiff has a cause of action under the law invoked, see
    
    Lexmark, 572 U.S. at 126
    -27, and courts have long recognized that agency regulations
    cannot themselves “conjure up a private cause of action that has not been authorized by
    Congress,” Alexander v. Sandoval, 
    532 U.S. 275
    , 291 (2001); see also Smith v. Dearborn Fin.
    10We have identified only one published opinion in which this Court expressly considered
    agency regulations when applying the zone-of-interests test. In Acevedo v. Nassau County, we
    concluded, in dicta and without much discussion, that the plaintiffs failed to satisfy the zone-of-
    interests test because their interests did not align with, inter alia, “[t]he purposes” of certain
    regulations issued by the General Services Administration. 
    500 F.2d 1078
    , 1083 (2d Cir. 1974).
    16
    Servs., Inc., 
    982 F.2d 976
    , 979 (6th Cir. 1993) (“[F]ederal regulations cannot themselves
    create a cause of action; that is a function of the legislature.”).
    Upon closer examination, however, we conclude that agency regulations
    properly inform the zone-of-interests inquiry in at least two ways. First, agency
    interpretations of their enabling statutes are among the “traditional tools of statutory
    interpretation” that the Supreme Court has instructed us to use when defining the zone
    of interests protected by a given statute. Bank of Am. 
    Corp., 137 S. Ct. at 1303
    (internal
    quotation marks omitted). Recognizing the value that agency expertise can bring to
    statutory interpretation, courts have developed canons of construction that afford
    varying degrees of deference to an agency’s views of the law that it is charged with
    administering. See United States v. Mead Corp., 
    533 U.S. 218
    , 227-28 (2001) (discussing
    levels of deference owed to agencies); see also Greathouse v. JHS Sec. Inc., 
    784 F.3d 105
    ,
    113 (2d Cir. 2015) (noting that the “traditional tools of statutory interpretation” include
    “affording some degree of weight to the interpretations of the agencies charged with
    enforcing [the statute under review]”). We think that those same canons can help courts
    apply the zone-of-interests doctrine, given that the related inquiry is, in most cases,
    simply an exercise in statutory interpretation. 11 Indeed, the Supreme Court signaled as
    much in Match-E, where it looked to agency rules for guidance on whether a plaintiff’s
    APA claim fell within the zone of interests protected by the Indian Reorganization Act,
    observing that “[these] regulations make [the Act’s] statutory concern with land use
    crystal 
    clear.” 567 U.S. at 226
    .
    11The parties dispute whether the zone-of-interests test applies to constitutional claims. As
    discussed below, however, we need not—and do not—reach this question to resolve the Federal
    Defenders’ appeal.
    17
    Second, agency regulations are likely to be critical to a correct zone-of-interests
    analysis where, as here, a plaintiff’s APA claim is predicated on an agency’s violation of
    its own regulations. Under deeply rooted principles of administrative law, not to
    mention common sense, government agencies are generally required to follow their
    own regulations. See United States ex rel. Accardi v. Shaughnessy, 
    347 U.S. 260
    , 268 (1954)
    (“Accardi”) (articulating this principle); Singh v. DOJ, 
    461 F.3d 290
    , 296 (2d Cir. 2006)
    (observing that, at least since Accardi, “the Supreme Court has held that an
    administrative agency must adhere to its own regulations”). When agencies fail to do
    so, the APA (as developed by case law) gives aggrieved parties a cause of action to
    enforce compliance. See 
    Webster, 486 U.S. at 602
    n.7 (“[T]he Agency’s failure to follow its
    own regulations can be challenged under the APA . . . .” (emphasis in original)); see also
    Thomas Brooks Chartered v. Burnett, 
    920 F.2d 634
    , 642 (10th Cir. 1990) (“The failure of an
    agency to follow its own regulations is challengeable under the APA.”); Thomas W.
    Merrill, The Accardi Principle, 74 GEO. WASH. L. REV. 569, 594 (2006) (explaining that the
    APA provides aggrieved parties with a cause of action to enforce an agency’s duty to
    adhere to its own rules). Importantly, such a cause of action under the APA stands
    independent of any other right to sue agencies for violations of a statute. It exists to
    bring an agency’s conduct into conformity with “existing valid regulations,” not to
    ensure that an agency’s regulations are, themselves, lawful and valid. 
    Accardi, 347 U.S. at 268
    .
    We think that our application of the zone-of-interests test must reflect the
    purpose and contours of this particular APA cause of action for regulatory
    noncompliance. After all, the test’s raison d'être is to ascertain “whether a legislatively
    conferred cause of action encompasses a particular plaintiff’s claim.” Bank of Am. 
    Corp., 137 S. Ct. at 1303
    (internal quotation marks omitted). Thus, when an aggrieved party
    18
    invokes the APA’s right to sue an agency for failing to adhere to its own valid
    regulations, the zone-of-interests inquiry—like the cause of action that it seeks to
    delineate—should focus on the regulations that were allegedly violated. In such cases,
    we hold, the applicable zone of interests includes, at a minimum, those protected or
    regulated by the agency rule that the plaintiff says was violated. 12 This rule ensures that
    the APA’s right to sue agencies for failing to adhere to their own regulations can be
    exercised by “those who in practice can be expected to police the interests that the
    statute protects.” Mova Pharm. Corp. v. Shalala, 
    140 F.3d 1060
    , 1075 (D.C. Cir. 1998); see
    also Clarke v. Sec. Indus. Ass’n, 
    479 U.S. 388
    , 397 n.12 (1987) (observing that the zone-of-
    interests inquiry seeks to identify plaintiffs who are “reliable private attorney[s]
    general” insofar as their suits will “further statutory objectives” rather than “frustrate
    [them]”).
    Here, the Federal Defenders’ APA claim falls squarely within the zone of
    interests to be protected and regulated by the three BOP regulations on inmate-attorney
    visits that Defendants allegedly violated. In bringing this suit, the Federal Defenders
    12Several of our sister circuits have articulated the zone-of-interests test in ways suggesting that
    a plaintiff may satisfy the test by showing that his interests in the litigation fall within the zone
    of interests protected or regulated by agency rules. See, e.g., Busse Broad. Corp. v. F.C.C., 
    87 F.3d 1456
    , 1463 (D.C. Cir. 1996) (defining the relevant “zone of interests” as those “protected by the
    underlying statute or regulation [the plaintiffs] accuse the agency of violating” (internal
    quotation marks omitted)); accord Kurapati v. U.S. Bureau of Citizenship & Immigration Servs., 
    775 F.3d 1255
    , 1260 (11th Cir. 2014); Hayes Int’l Corp. v. McLucas, 
    509 F.2d 247
    , 256 (5th Cir. 1975).
    Notably, the Tenth Circuit, in City of Albuquerque v. U.S. Dep’t of Interior, 
    379 F.3d 901
    , 915 (10th
    Cir. 2004), expressly rejected the argument that “standing under the Administrative Procedure
    Act can only be provided through a statute itself” rather than an “executive order or
    regulation.” City of Albuquerque suggests that the APA’s provision of a cause of action for those
    “suffering legal wrong because of agency action” easily applies to parties directly regulated or
    protected by an executive order or regulation who seek enforcement of that executive order or
    regulation against an agency. 
    Id. 19 seek
    to protect their interests in having adequate access to their clients at the MDC.
    Those interests mirror the interests that these BOP regulations seek to protect, namely:
    the strong interests of MDC inmates, especially pretrial detainees whose cases have not
    been adjudicated, in having adequate access to legal counsel. Thus, far from being
    “marginally related to or inconsistent with the purposes implicit in [these regulations],”
    
    Lexmark, 572 U.S. at 130
    (internal quotation marks omitted), the Defenders’ APA claim
    directly advances the three regulations’ plain—and critical—objective of ensuring that
    detainees have frequent and predictable opportunities to consult with their attorneys.
    Defendants do not seriously dispute that the BOP regulations on attorney
    visitation bear on the zone-of-interests analysis of the Federal Defenders’ APA claim.
    Instead, they assert that the Federal Defenders’ interests fall outside the zone of
    interests protected by these regulations because the BOP intended the regulations to
    benefit MDC inmates, not their attorneys. We reject this line of argument. As the
    Federal Defenders correctly observe, the zone-of-interests test does not require an APA
    plaintiff to be the intended beneficiary of the law that he charges was violated. See
    
    Match-E, 567 U.S. at 225
    (“We do not require any indication of congressional purpose to
    benefit the would-be plaintiff.” (internal quotation marks omitted)). Rather, in the APA
    context, the test is satisfied where, as here, a plaintiff’s interests in the litigation are
    simply more than “marginally related” to the purposes implicit in the law or
    regulations invoked. 
    Id. The Federal
    Defenders easily satisfy this standard.
    Accordingly, we conclude that the District Court erred in dismissing the Federal
    20
    Defenders’ APA claim for failure to state a claim under the zone-of-interests test. 13
    III.   Sixth Amendment Claim
    Turning next to the Sixth Amendment claim, the Federal Defenders allege that
    Defendants’ suspension of attorney visitation in early 2019 violated the Sixth
    Amendment right to counsel. They do not bring this claim under a statute (e.g., the
    APA). Nor do they assert that they can maintain a cause of action springing directly
    from the Sixth Amendment. Instead, they invoke “a cause of action in equity” that
    derives from the judiciary’s traditional “equitable power[s],” Defenders’ Br. 12, relying
    in particular on the Supreme Court’s decision in Armstrong v. Exceptional Child Center,
    Inc., 
    575 U.S. 320
    (2015).
    In Armstrong, certain Medicaid providers sought to enforce section 30(A) of the
    Medicaid Act, claiming that Idaho’s Medicaid plan reimbursed them at rates lower than
    section 30(A) permitted. 
    Id. at 322-23.
    The plaintiffs asserted that they had “an implied
    right of action under the Supremacy Clause to seek injunctive relief against the
    enforcement or implementation of state legislation.” 
    Id. at 324
    (internal quotation marks
    omitted). The Supreme Court disagreed, however, explaining that the Supremacy
    Clause is merely “a rule of decision” that “instructs courts [on] what to do when state
    13Defendants also urge us to reach the merits of the Federal Defenders’ APA claim, arguing that
    “the record fails to support” the complaint’s allegations that Defendants acted arbitrarily and
    capriciously when they curtailed attorney visits at the MDC. Appellees’ Br. 12. The District
    Court did not address this contention, however, and we decline to do so here, especially on a
    motion to dismiss, where the record is undeveloped and reliance on evidence submitted by
    Defendants would run afoul of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(d). Instead, we vacate and
    remand with respect to this claim, following “our settled practice” of allowing the District Court
    to “address arguments in the first instance.” Farricielli v. Holbrook, 
    215 F.3d 241
    , 246 (2d Cir.
    2000).
    21
    and federal law clash.” 
    Id. at 324
    -25. The Clause “is not the source of any federal rights,
    and certainly does not create a cause of action,” it held. 
    Id. at 324
    -25 (internal quotation
    marks and citations omitted).
    The Supreme Court did not end its inquiry there, however. Instead, it examined
    whether the plaintiffs’ “suit c[ould] proceed against Idaho in equity.” 
    Id. at 327.
    The
    Court explained that a plaintiff may, in certain circumstances, invoke the court’s
    inherent “equitable powers” to “sue to enjoin unconstitutional actions by state and
    federal officers.” 
    Id. at 327-28.
    Such a cause of action “in equity” stands “quite apart
    from any cause of action conferred by [the Constitution].” 
    Id. at 327.
    Instead, it “is the
    creation of courts of equity, and reflects a long history of judicial review of illegal
    executive action, tracing back to England.” Id.; see also 
    id. at 326-27
    (identifying Osborn v.
    Bank of United States, 
    9 Wheat. 738
    (1824), and Ex parte Young, 
    209 U.S. 123
    (1908), as
    suits in equity).
    Notwithstanding these deep roots, the precise scope and contours of the court’s
    equitable powers of this nature are ill-defined. See Lisa Manheim & Kathryn A. Watts,
    Reviewing Presidential Orders, 86 U. CHI. L. REV. 1743, 1807-09 (2019). In Armstrong, the
    Supreme Court explained that Congress may expressly or impliedly foreclose pursuit of
    an equitable cause of action, and it applied this principle to conclude that the Medicaid
    Act implicitly precluded enforcement of section 30(A) through suits in 
    equity. 575 U.S. at 328
    . Beyond that, however, the Supreme Court has done little to define the
    boundaries, if any, that might circumscribe this “judge-made remedy.” 
    Armstrong, 575 U.S. at 327
    ; see also Manheim & 
    Watts, supra, at 1809
    n.346 (identifying a multitude of
    questions that Armstrong “raises, but does not answer”).
    22
    The Federal Defenders plunge headlong into these deep and murky waters.
    Although they describe their Sixth Amendment claim as nothing more than a
    continuation of “a centuries-old tradition of equity,” Defenders’ Br. 25, their appeal
    raises a host of unfamiliar and thorny legal issues. These include, inter alia: (1) whether
    criminal defense attorneys have rights of their own under the Sixth Amendment,
    independent of those guaranteed to their clients; (2) whether a party without a strictly
    personal right under the Sixth Amendment can nevertheless invoke a cause of action in
    equity to sue for Sixth Amendment violations; (3) whether the zone-of-interests test
    applies to causes of action in equity; (4) whether the judiciary’s equitable powers are
    constrained at all by “the so-called third-party standing bar,” a rule of prudential
    standing that generally prevents “litigants from asserting the rights or legal interests of
    others simply to obtain relief from injury to themselves,” New York State Citizens' Coal.
    for Children v. Poole, 
    922 F.3d 69
    , 75 (2d Cir. 2019) (internal quotation marks and brackets
    omitted); and (5) whether the APA in any way displaces suits in equity.
    We are not convinced that the District Court fully appreciated the nature or
    complexity of the Federal Defenders’ Sixth Amendment claim, or the legitimacy of their
    reliance on Armstrong as a basis for pursuing suits in equity. Rather than recognizing
    that the Defenders frame this claim as one in equity that is separate and distinct from
    any cause of action conferred by the Constitution, see 
    Armstrong, 575 U.S. at 327
    , the
    District Court seemed to treat the claim as purporting to arise directly under the Sixth
    Amendment. As a result, it did not grapple with many of the weighty issues raised by
    this aspect of the appeal.
    To take one example, the District Court reasoned that the Federal Defenders lack
    “a cause of action under the Sixth Amendment” because the right to counsel belongs
    23
    solely to “the accused.” Order at 3-4. In reaching this conclusion, the District Court
    overlooked a narrow but well-drawn line of precedent establishing that a plaintiff may
    invoke the court’s equitable powers to enjoin a defendant from violating constitutional
    provisions that do not, themselves, grant any legal rights to private plaintiffs. See, e.g.,
    
    Armstrong, 575 U.S. at 324
    , 327 (recognizing that a plaintiff has a cause of action “in
    equity” to enforce the Supremacy Clause, even though that clause “is not the source of
    any federal rights” (internal quotation marks omitted)); Free Enter. Fund v. Pub. Co.
    Accounting Oversight Bd., 
    561 U.S. 477
    , 491 n.2 (2010) (recognizing that plaintiffs may
    pursue “Appointments Clause [and] separation-of-powers claim[s]” against a federal
    regulatory agency, even if they have no “implied private right of action directly under
    the Constitution”).
    We decline to address and decide these substantial questions of constitutional
    law in the first instance. Instead, we vacate judgment as to this claim, and direct the
    District Court on remand to consider the Defenders’ Sixth Amendment action as one in
    equity under Armstrong. Remand “is particularly appropriate” where, as here, “the
    district court never considered [a theory of the case] . . . and the issue has been given a
    somewhat cursory and confused treatment [by the parties] on appeal.” United Food &
    Commercial Workers Union v. CenterMark Props. Meriden Square, Inc., 
    30 F.3d 298
    , 306-07
    (2d Cir. 1994).
    Familiar principles of constitutional avoidance further counsel against an
    appellate decision on the Federal Defenders’ Sixth Amendment claim at this early stage
    of the litigation. “It is axiomatic that the federal courts should, where possible, avoid
    reaching constitutional questions.” Allstate Ins. Co. v. Serio, 
    261 F.3d 143
    , 149-50 (2d Cir.
    2002). We therefore generally refrain from addressing constitutional claims when those
    24
    claims would not “entitle [plaintiffs] to relief beyond that to which they were entitled
    on their statutory claims.” See Lyng v. Nw. Indian Cemetery Protective Ass’n, 
    485 U.S. 439
    ,
    446 (1988). Here, if the Federal Defenders prevail on their APA claim on remand, it is
    possible that they will obtain the injunctive and declaratory relief that they request,
    making it “unnecessary and therefore inappropriate” for a court to decide their Sixth
    Amendment claim. 
    Id. Moreover, as
    we discuss further below, both parties expressed a
    willingness at oral argument to consider mediating this dispute. Mediation would
    enhance the prospect that this litigation can be resolved without a judicial ruling on the
    novel constitutional issues that it raises.
    For these reasons, we defer ruling on the Federal Defenders’ Sixth Amendment
    claim at this time. See Clinton v. Jones, 
    520 U.S. 681
    , 690 (1997) (“[W]e have often stressed
    the importance of avoiding the premature adjudication of constitutional questions.”).
    We therefore reinstate this claim and remand it to the District Court for further
    consideration as necessary.
    CONCLUSION
    In this lawsuit, the Federal Defenders have raised claims of the utmost gravity
    about the lawfulness of the BOP’s unilateral curtailment of the ability of pretrial
    detainees and others confined at the MDC to consult with legal counsel. The right to
    consult with legal counsel about being released on bond, entering a plea, negotiating
    and accepting a plea agreement, going to trial, testifying at trial, locating trial witnesses,
    and other decisions confronting the detained suspect, whose innocence is presumed, is
    a right inextricably linked to the legitimacy of our criminal justice system. As we have
    discussed above, the Federal Defenders’ assertions that their resources are drained
    needlessly by the BOP’s summary actions give them standing to assert such claims.
    25
    Their suit, moreover, is not mooted by the re-initiation of attorney access after the
    February 2019 fire; rather, the record makes clear that the suspension of legal
    consultation can be expected to recur. As for the merits of their claims, the Federal
    Defenders have plausibly alleged violations of the APA, and while we decline to decide
    at this moment whether they can maintain a cause of action in equity to vindicate
    violations of the Sixth Amendment, they have raised serious arguments in favor of
    allowing this claim to proceed as well.
    The Defenders describe a course of events that demands the attention of all
    components of the system that our country relies on for meting out justice. The
    regulations that the BOP has adopted raise fundamental legal questions about the
    seriousness—for the whole justice system—of curtailing the right of legal consultation,
    and the need for stringent oversight of the scope of curtailment and alternatives offered
    for consultation when some curtailment is reasonably determined to be unavoidable.
    Curtailment of attorney contact can adversely affect the efficacy of judicial proceedings,
    which in turn bears directly on the quality of justice received. The judicial branch bears
    a unique supervisory responsibility for ensuring that the right of legal consultation is
    not unnecessarily restricted by prison authorities. We therefore take special care in
    scrutinizing this complaint by the Federal Defenders and the concerns that it reflects.
    We recognize, of course, that proper prison management presents daunting
    challenges. Public safety depends on successful management of those challenges both in
    ordinary times and in times of emergency; it also depends, however, on maintaining the
    integrity of the criminal justice system and the public trust in that system. In 2019, the
    MDC and the BOP faced several different emergencies, requiring adjustments as the
    BOP carried out its responsibilities: staffing shortages; a fire in an aging facility; a bomb
    26
    scare. As we write this opinion, a different and even more dramatic challenge is
    presented by COVID-19, a novel and easily transmitted viral disease that has prompted
    a rapid reorientation of workplace practices and social life in support of public health.
    The impact of this recent emergency on jail and prison inmates, their counsel (in the
    lead, the Federal Defenders), the United States Attorneys, and the BOP, including the
    individual Wardens and the personnel of each facility, is just beginning to be felt. Its
    likely course we cannot foresee. Present information strongly suggests, however, that it
    may be grave and enduring.
    These challenges to prison management implicate statutory and constitutional
    rights that, as they have been here, are often addressed in the courts. And indeed, the
    judiciary is well-positioned, usually after the fact, to vindicate such rights. Courts can
    and must help ensure that constitutional boundaries are not transgressed by
    considerations of expediency. At the same time, the careful balancing of needs and
    rights that such emergencies require is likely not best achieved by protracted and
    contentious litigation after the fact, and certainly not at the appellate level. It requires
    real-time, comprehensive solutions, reached in cooperative institutional discussions.
    In this case, both parties are federal governmental entities: the BOP is an agency
    within the Department of Justice, and the Federal Defenders are situated in the judicial
    branch and funded within its budget. Accordingly, at oral argument, we pressed the
    parties on their openness to mediation and were assured that both the Defenders and
    the BOP were amenable to pursuing this alternative to litigation. Correspondence
    received by the Court since oral argument, however, leaves little doubt that the parties
    have made no progress on this front, and indeed that they have taken no meaningful
    steps to engage in mediation. The parties point fingers at each other, and it is apparent
    27
    that hostility and obstruction, not cooperation, have prevailed. The BOP, in particular,
    has appeared to be unresponsive to the Defenders’ entreaties, perhaps relying on the
    District Court’s rapid dismissal of the underlying action.
    We therefore urge in the strongest possible terms that, as soon as the District
    Court again has jurisdiction over this case, it consider convening the parties to obtain
    their advice as to the appointment of an individual with the stature, experience, and
    knowledge necessary to mediate this weighty dispute and ultimately facilitate the
    adoption of procedures for dealing with ongoing and future emergencies, including the
    COVID-19 outbreak. Such a person should diligently and speedily work to ensure that
    those incarcerated at the MDC and those who represent them have access to each other,
    and that the BOP—while maintaining its ability and authority to manage the facility in
    a safe way—takes every reasonable step to preserve the statutory and constitutional
    rights of the inmates and their counsel. We are confident that under wise leadership
    and guidance, these parties, whose common interest is service to the public, will rise to
    the occasion and achieve a satisfactory resolution to their permanent credit.
    We VACATE the District Court’s judgment in its entirety and REMAND the
    cause for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We invite the District Court,
    to consider its full range of options for efficiently and judiciously resolving this
    institutional-level dispute. The mandate shall issue FORTHWITH.
    28