American Council of the Blind v. Steven Mnuchin ( 2020 )


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  •  United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
    Argued September 18, 2020             Decided October 9, 2020
    No. 19-5284
    THE AMERICAN COUNCIL OF THE BLIND AND PATRICK
    SHEEHAN,
    APPELLANTS
    OTIS STEPHENS,
    APPELLEE
    v.
    STEVEN T. MNUCHIN, SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY,
    APPELLEE
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Columbia
    (No. 1:02-cv-00864)
    Jeffrey A. Lovitky argued the cause and filed the briefs for
    appellants.
    Daniel Winik, Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice,
    argued the cause for appellee. With him on the brief were
    Ethan P. Davis, Acting Assistant Attorney General, and
    Charles W. Scarborough, Attorney.
    Before: HENDERSON and WALKER, Circuit Judges, and
    SILBERMAN , Senior Circuit Judge.
    2
    Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge HENDERSON.
    KAREN LE CRAFT HENDERSON, Circuit Judge: Under the
    terms of a 2008 injunction, the Secretary of the United States
    Department of the Treasury (Treasury) must make the various
    Federal Reserve Notes distinguishable to the visually impaired
    no later than the next scheduled redesign of each denomination.
    These redesigns have been significantly delayed. In 2016, the
    American Council of the Blind (Council) moved to impose a
    firm deadline on the Secretary. The district court denied the
    motion, we vacated its order and on remand the district court
    denied a similar motion. The Council challenges this most
    recent denial on two grounds. First, it argues that the district
    court relied on Treasury’s financial burden without obtaining
    “concrete estimates” of that burden, thereby violating our
    mandate in American Council of the Blind v. Mnuchin, 
    878 F.3d 360
    (D.C. Cir. 2017) (ACB II). Second, the Council
    contends that the district court abused its discretion because its
    decision lacked evidentiary support. We disagree on both
    points and affirm the district court.
    I.   BACKGROUND
    Federal Reserve Notes—that is, U.S. paper currency—are
    identical in size and texture and nearly identical in color. These
    characteristics make using paper currency difficult for
    individuals who are blind or nearly blind. In 2002, the Council
    sued the Treasury Secretary, alleging that the design of U.S.
    paper currency violates the Rehabilitation Act, 29 U.S.C.
    § 794, by denying a reasonable accommodation to the visually
    impaired. So began a nearly two decades-long litigation
    odyssey.
    In 2006, the Council won partial summary judgment, see
    Am. Council of the Blind v. Paulson, 
    463 F. Supp. 2d 51
    (D.D.C. 2006), which we affirmed, see 
    525 F.3d 1256
    (D.C.
    3
    Cir. 2008) (ACB I). On remand, the district court disclaimed
    both the “expertise” and the “power” to “choose among the
    feasible alternatives, approve any specific design change, or
    otherwise to dictate to the Secretary of the Treasury how he can
    come into compliance with the law.” 
    581 F. Supp. 2d 1
    , 2
    (D.D.C. 2008) (quoting 
    Paulson, 463 F. Supp. 2d at 62
    ). Thus,
    the district court’s injunction—currently in force—required the
    Secretary to take:
    such steps as may be required to provide
    meaningful access to United States currency for
    blind and other visually impaired persons,
    which steps shall be completed, in connection
    with each denomination of currency, not later
    than the date when a redesign of that
    denomination is next approved by the Secretary
    of the Treasury.
    In response, Treasury developed a three-pronged plan for
    providing meaningful access to currency. See Meaningful
    Access to United States Currency for Blind and Visually
    Impaired Persons, 75 Fed. Reg. 28,331 (proposed May 20,
    2010). First, the Bureau of Engraving and Printing (Bureau)
    would produce new banknotes with a raised tactile feature
    (RTF). Second, the Bureau would continue its project, begun
    in 1997, of incorporating large, high-contrast numerals on new
    currency. Third, the Bureau would distribute handheld
    currency readers to the visually impaired.
    Although the Bureau has made some progress on the
    second and third approaches, it has had little success
    developing an RTF. The Secretary set four goals for selecting
    an RTF: accuracy (the RTF must effectively allow the visually
    impaired    to     distinguish    among      denominations),
    manufacturability (it must be able to be produced in massive
    4
    quantities), durability (it must not degrade prematurely) and
    processability (it must be capable of being processed by
    currency counting machines, vending machines, ATMs, etc.).
    The Bureau contends that balancing these factors is daunting;
    for example, larger, thicker RTFs may increase accuracy and
    durability    while     sacrificing   manufacturability   and
    processability.
    In addition to the RTF’s technical challenges, advances in
    counterfeiting have also pushed back the expected timeline for
    the accessibility redesign.1 Under the 2008 injunction, the
    accessibility redesign is coupled with the security redesign. In
    2012, the Bureau director attested that the expected
    accessibility timeline would not be met because of unexpected
    delays redesigning the $100 note to incorporate new
    anticounterfeiting technologies. Later, in a 2016 status report,
    Treasury said that it had “recently learned of significant
    developments in counterfeiting technology that bear upon the
    long-term effectiveness of the security features” it had planned
    on integrating into new notes. This setback necessitated the
    design and development of new security features.
    The 2008 injunction was premised on the expectation that
    each denomination would be redesigned every seven to ten
    years. Treasury’s most recent timeline contemplates that the
    required accessibility redesigns may not be completed until the
    2030s—some three decades after the district court first found
    that Treasury was in violation of federal law. Understandably
    1
    The original timeline for the $5 note redesign was 2015–2018
    but—as of 2017—the new timeline is 2028. Other notes are facing
    similar or greater delays. For the $10 note, 2013–2016 has become
    2026. For the $20 note, 2010–2013 has become 2030. For the $50
    note, 2011– 2014 has become 2032–2035. And for the $100 note,
    which was not included in the original injunction, the expected
    timeline is 2034–2038.
    5
    frustrated with the delays, the Council moved under Rule 60(b)
    to modify the injunction to a “deadline of December 31, 2020
    by which date the Secretary must provide meaningful access to
    the $10 bill, which is the next bill scheduled to be redesigned.”
    The Council further requested that the modified injunction
    require the Secretary “to make the remaining denominations of
    currency accessible to the blind and visually impaired not later
    than December 31, 2026.” In sum, whereas the existing
    injunction couples the security and accessibility redesigns—
    relying on Treasury’s emphasis on the former to also produce
    the latter—the Council’s proposal decouples the redesigns and
    forces the accessibility redesign by a specific date.
    The district court denied the Rule 60(b) motion,
    concluding that decoupling the redesigns “could create
    unnecessarily duplicative work and potentially increase costs
    for both the government and the private sector.” Am. Council
    of the Blind v. Lew, No. 02-CV-00864, 
    2017 WL 6271264
    , at
    *2 (D.D.C. Jan. 6, 2017). In ACB II, we reversed. Because the
    district court relied on the financial burden imposed by the
    requested relief without obtaining a concrete estimate of that
    burden, we concluded that it had abused its discretion. 
    See 878 F.3d at 371
    . Our holding was straightforward:
    If the district court is to properly conclude that
    withholding meaningful access to paper
    currency from millions of visually impaired
    individuals for eight to twenty years longer than
    expected . . . remains equitable because of the
    potential financial burden resulting from
    granting the plaintiffs’ modification, the district
    court needs more concrete estimates of the costs
    that matter.
    Id. 6
         On remand, the Council again moved to modify the
    injunction to require Treasury to provide meaningful access to
    the $10 note by the end of 2020 and to the other denominations
    by the end of 2026. Treasury opposed the motion. In addition,
    the Bureau expressed doubt about the efficacy of the three-
    pronged approach it had begun to develop in 2010. For
    example, a MITRE Corporation study showed significant
    percentages of experienced Braille readers were unable to
    correctly identify currency with an RTF. And because Braille
    readers were over-represented in the study compared to the
    overall population of visually impaired individuals, there was,
    in the Bureau’s opinion, reason to believe that real-world
    results would be even worse. This was the factual background
    for the Bureau’s December 2018 status report expressing
    “concerns regarding its ability to create a tactile feature for U.S.
    currency with an accuracy rate that will make it suitable for
    reliable use in commerce.”
    In any event, the district court again denied the Council’s
    motion but for ostensibly different reasons from those we
    rejected in ACB II. See Am. Council of the Blind v. Mnuchin,
    
    396 F. Supp. 3d 147
    (D.D.C. 2019). First, it found that
    decoupling the accessibility and security redesign “would
    divert Treasury resources and attention from pressing anti-
    counterfeiting measures.”
    Id. at 189.
    Second, the court opined
    that the Council’s proposed modification would require
    Treasury to begin immediately incorporating RTFs into U.S.
    currency, notwithstanding no suitable RTF is currently
    available.
    Id. at 193–97.
    The Council now appeals that
    decision.
    II. ANALYSIS
    We review the district court’s denial of a Rule 60(b)
    motion for abuse of discretion. See Pigford v. Johanns, 416
    
    7 F.3d 12
    , 16 (D.C. Cir. 2005). Under this standard, we reverse
    “if the district court applied the wrong legal standard or relied
    on clearly erroneous findings of fact.” In re Vitamins Antitrust
    Class Actions, 
    327 F.3d 1207
    , 1209 (D.C. Cir. 2003). The
    district court also abuses its discretion if it violates the mandate
    of the court of appeals. See United States v. Kpodi, 
    888 F.3d 486
    , 491 (D.C. Cir. 2018).
    In denying the Council’s motion to modify the injunction,
    the district court was persuaded by two considerations: security
    and feasibility.      Although those considerations can be
    indirectly affected by additional resources, they are
    distinguishable from the direct financial burden the district
    court considered in ACB II. The question, then, is whether they
    should be distinguished or whether our holding should be read
    more broadly. Both the language we used in ACB II and the
    purpose of the mandate rule counsel against concluding that the
    district court violated our mandate. Of course, we do not affirm
    merely because the court below did not violate the law of the
    case; its rationale must also be supported by record evidence.
    We conclude that it is.
    A.
    An “inferior court has no power or authority to deviate
    from the mandate issued by an appellate court.” Briggs v. Pa.
    R.R. Co., 
    334 U.S. 304
    , 306 (1948). The so-called “mandate
    rule” is a “more powerful version of the law-of-the-case
    doctrine, which prevents courts from reconsidering issues that
    have already been decided in the same case.” Indep. Petroleum
    Ass’n of Am. v. Babbitt, 
    235 F.3d 588
    , 597 (D.C. Cir. 2001)
    (internal quotation marks omitted). In other words, the district
    court cannot “fashion[] a remedy that is ‘inconsistent with
    either the spirit or express terms’” of our holding. Ass’n of Am.
    R.Rs. v. Dep’t of Transp., 
    896 F.3d 539
    , 554 (D.C. Cir. 2018)
    8
    (Tatel, J., dissenting) (quoting Quern v. Jordan, 
    440 U.S. 332
    ,
    347 n.18 (1979)). The obligation to follow past mandates is
    especially compelling in long-running litigation. See Morley v.
    C.I.A., 
    894 F.3d 389
    , 401 (D.C. Cir. 2018) (per curiam)
    (Henderson, J., dissenting).
    The district court violated neither the letter nor spirit of our
    mandate in ACB II. Its first rationale in denying the Council’s
    motion is that the Council’s proposed modification would
    “divert Treasury resources and attention” from its anti-
    counterfeiting responsibilities, thereby “posing risks to the
    global security of U.S. currency with concomitant serious
    ramifications for consumers, businesses, and the health of the
    global 
    economy.” 396 F. Supp. 3d at 189
    –90. The Council
    argues that this concern necessarily implicated the financial
    burden of its proposal, which means the district court should
    have required concrete estimates of the costs involved in
    adopting its proposal.
    There is a certain logic to the Council’s argument. Almost
    any concern about financial burden could be reframed in terms
    of a resource constraint. “I can’t afford the gas for the trip,”
    for example, can be reframed as “I don’t have enough gas to
    make the trip.” Unless it is physically impossible to refill the
    gas tank, the two statements are different ways of phrasing the
    same thought. It would violate the spirit of ACB II’s mandate
    if the district court, possessing no new cost estimates, merely
    rephrased its earlier decision but left its logic unaltered.
    Whether this accurately describes the district court’s
    decision depends on whether we adopt a narrow or broad
    reading of ACB II. On the narrow reading, ACB II’s holding
    prevented the district court from basing its decision on direct
    financial costs without having concrete estimates of the direct
    costs involved. Adopting this view, the Secretary points out
    9
    that the district court did not say “conducting separate security
    and accessibility redesigns would be costlier than conducting a
    single redesign” but instead that “the Bureau can do only so
    many things at once.” On the broad understanding, however,
    our holding extended to any rationale open to cost analysis.
    Looking at both the language we used in ACB II and the
    underlying logic behind the mandate rule, we adopt the narrow
    understanding.       The phrase “financial burden” means
    something specific to most speakers and audiences. Although
    any obstacle short of pure impossibility can be framed as a
    financial obstacle, a financial burden usually refers to costs
    within a fixed budgetary framework rather than quality or
    timeline obstacles that might theoretically be solved with an
    unlimited budget. The district court found that a short-term
    prioritization of the accessibility redesign by itself could impair
    the Secretary’s ability to execute a timely security redesign.
    
    See 396 F. Supp. 3d at 189
    –91. Because the Congress, not the
    Secretary, determines the resources at the Secretary’s disposal,
    this point is logically different from the justification we
    rejected in ACB II. The district court’s security rationale is a
    management consideration, not a budgetary one.
    The distinction between management, i.e., policy, and
    budgetary considerations may be somewhat artificial but it is
    recognized in other areas of the law. In Federal Tort Claims
    Act cases, for example, the “discretionary function exception”
    to liability is implicated if the government’s action is
    “susceptible to policy analysis.” United States v. Gaubert, 
    499 U.S. 315
    , 325 (1991). In a “reverse” context, sister circuits
    have held that a financial consideration is not necessarily a
    policy consideration. As the Ninth Circuit noted, “[b]udgetary
    constraints underlie virtually all governmental activity” so the
    fact that government employees are required to “work within a
    budget” does not turn every government action into a policy
    10
    decision. ARA Leisure Servs. v. United States, 
    831 F.2d 193
    ,
    195–96 (9th Cir. 1987). Similarly, the Eleventh Circuit
    recognized that “financial considerations alone may not make
    a decision one involving policy.” Hughes v. United States, 
    110 F.3d 765
    , 769 (11th Cir. 1997). Here, we make the corollary
    point: a policy consideration is not synonymous with a
    financial one, even if there is substantial overlap.
    The purpose of the mandate rule also supports a narrow
    reading.     The mandate rule is a doctrine of judicial
    administration; its goal is to “achieve finality,” making it
    possible for appellate courts to do their job. Greater Bos.
    Television Corp. v. F.C.C., 
    463 F.2d 268
    , 279 (D.C. Cir. 1971).
    The law of the case doctrine—of which the mandate rule is a
    species—“does not seek to sweep under its coverage all
    possible issues arising out of the facts of the case.” U.S. ex rel.
    Dep’t of Labor v. Ins. Co. of N. Am., 
    131 F.3d 1037
    , 1041 (D.C.
    Cir. 1997). Although there may be good reason to compel the
    district court to quantify its security rationale in dollar-
    denominated terms, ACB II does not require it.
    The district court’s feasibility rationale also comports with
    ACB II’s mandate. The court was persuaded that the Council’s
    proposed modification would require circulating an RTF even
    though no RTF has met the Bureau’s circulation benchmarks.
    
    See 396 F. Supp. 3d at 193
    –98. The Council replies that this
    all translates into financial burden (meaning the district court
    needed a concrete estimate of that burden). Its logic works
    something like this: because the effectiveness of an RTF is
    “largely a question of size,” the Bureau could comply with the
    proposed deadline simply by making the RTF larger. By
    effectiveness, we understand the Council to mean accuracy,
    which is only one of the Bureau’s four benchmarks. In the
    Council’s view, however, the other benchmarks—
    manufacturability, durability and processability—are solely
    11
    economic concerns. Lack of durability could be resolved
    through more frequent currency replacement and lack of
    processability could be resolved by retrofitting existing cash-
    processing machines. But, as we noted earlier, ACB II should
    not be read to encompass any policy tradeoff that could be
    theoretically improved with infinite resources. The Secretary’s
    decision to pursue an RTF that meets all four of its benchmarks
    is nothing if not a policy decision. We therefore reject the
    Council’s suggestion that the district court’s feasibility
    rationale can be boiled down to financial burden.
    That the district court met ACB II’s mandate does not
    decide whether the district court abused its discretion for some
    other reason—a question we take up next.
    B.
    Rule 60(b) provides that, upon motion, the court may
    relieve a party of an injunction if “applying it prospectively is
    no longer equitable.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 60(b)(5). The district
    court should grant a Rule 60(b) motion if “a significant change
    either in factual conditions or in law renders continued
    enforcement detrimental to the public interest.” Horne v.
    Flores, 
    557 U.S. 433
    , 447 (2009) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). The Secretary does not dispute that circumstances
    have changed. In ACB II, after all, we recognized that a “much
    greater than planned delay in providing meaningful access to
    visually impaired individuals is unquestionably a change in
    factual 
    conditions.” 878 F.3d at 366
    –67. The issue is whether
    this change renders enforcement of the 2008 injunction
    “detrimental to the public interest.” The Council has the
    burden of proving that it does. See 
    Horne, 557 U.S. at 447
    .
    The district court’s rationales for denying the Council’s
    motion are sufficiently supported by the record. In setting out
    its security rationale, the district court cited the Secretary’s
    12
    estimate that adding the RTF to the $10 note by the end of 2020
    would likely push back the security redesign of each
    denomination by at least two years—possibly more. 
    See 396 F. Supp. 3d at 191
    n.42. The Council’s only direct rebuttal is
    that “neither the Secretary nor the district court explains the
    counter-intuitive conclusion that imposing an obligation to
    complete a task by the end of 2020 would somehow necessitate
    a delay to an event that is not scheduled to be completed” until
    2026.
    But the Secretary did explain his conclusion. In response
    to an interrogatory from the district court, the Secretary noted
    that “[t]he incorporation of an RTF would necessarily affect the
    overall design of the bills, and thus would affect the design of
    each denomination, including potentially the effectiveness of
    security features.” The complexity of this interaction means
    that “[t]here is no way to predict the results of this testing, and,
    if notes containing any feature failed the testing, there is no way
    to predict how much additional development and testing would
    be required.” In other words, each new feature—accessibility-
    or security-related—requires extensive testing and may
    interact with existing features in unpredictable ways; this
    requires an irreducible amount of testing, no matter how distant
    the deadline.
    The Secretary’s conclusion appears to be the result of a
    hard-learned lesson. The most recently released note, the $100
    note, was delayed for over three years after the Bureau
    determined that the new security ribbons were producing
    creases that made the notes unusable. Worse, this defect was
    only discovered after large-scale production was underway. A
    later review concluded that the Bureau had engaged in
    “insufficient preproduction testing.” The district court cited
    the Secretary’s statement in support of its conclusion that the
    harm of a later than expected accessibility redesign does not
    13
    justify the risks of “delaying an already postponed security
    redesign even 
    further.” 396 F. Supp. 3d at 190
    ;
    id. n.41. It was
    not an abuse of discretion for the district court to credit the
    Secretary’s estimate and weigh the tradeoffs as it did.
    Granted, we do not know much about how the Secretary
    derived his estimate of a two-year delay in the security
    redesign. The estimate is “concrete” but it may fail to fully live
    up to the “show your work” spirit that animated ACB II.
    Nonetheless, the Secretary’s estimate is a predictive judgment
    that “involves deductions based on the expert knowledge of the
    agency” and therefore does not—if, indeed, it can—require
    “complete factual support in the record.” Rural Cellular Ass’n
    v. F.C.C., 
    588 F.3d 1095
    , 1105 (D.C. Cir. 2009) (quoting
    Melcher v. F.C.C., 
    134 F.3d 1143
    , 1151 (D.C. Cir. 1998)).
    Additionally, the estimate does not stand to benefit from
    quantitative support in the same way as a cost-based rationale.
    Budgetary calculations, after all, are uniquely susceptible to
    line-by-line disaggregation. And our caselaw rejects the notion
    that the only acceptable agency analyses are quantitative. See,
    e.g., Am. Farm Bureau Fed’n v. E.P.A., 
    559 F.3d 512
    , 535
    (D.C. Cir. 2009) (“[T]he fact that the EPA’s analysis is
    qualitative rather than quantitative does not undermine its
    validity.”); Ctr. for Sustainable Econ. v. Jewell, 
    779 F.3d 588
    ,
    611 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (“Our decisions afford greater leeway to
    Interior to evaluate qualitatively costs that are difficult to
    quantify.”).
    The district court’s feasibility rationale is also well-
    supported by the record. The Council does not contest that no
    RTF feature is currently available. Instead, its primary rebuttal
    is that today’s RTF difficulties do not suggest that one cannot
    be ready for circulation by December 31, 2026. In other words,
    December 2026 is a long time away so how can the court be
    certain that the Council’s proposed deadline is infeasible? But
    14
    this flips the burden: it is the responsibility of the Council, as
    the moving party, to justify the modification. And in any event,
    it was not an abuse of discretion for the district court not to
    compel the Secretary to take an action that might be possible.
    The Council’s attack on the feasibility rationale is wrong
    for an additional reason—one that strikes at the heart of our
    institutional role. When the Council insists that the Secretary
    could approve a short-term solution, such as notches or paper
    roughening, neither of which has been approved by the
    Bureau’s experts, or when it suggests functionally eliminating
    three of the Bureau’s four requirements for a successful RTF,
    it seeks not merely to compel the Secretary to comply with the
    law but to exercise control over the manner in which he must
    do so.
    Like the district court in 2008, we have serious doubts
    about the authority of a court to compel the Secretary to
    implement any specific design feature. See Paulson, 581 F.
    Supp. 2d at 2. The Congress charged the Secretary with
    “furnish[ing] suitable notes for circulation . . . in the best
    manner to guard against counterfeits and fraudulent
    alterations.” 12 U.S.C. § 418. The Bureau carries out this
    responsibility under the direction of the Secretary, who has the
    authority to direct the “form and tenor” of each note.
    Id. Nothing in federal
    law gives us the authority to require that
    U.S. currency take a particular form. “Courts have no license
    to usurp from agencies the discretion that Congress has granted
    them.” 33 Charles A. Wright, Charles H. Koch, Jr., and
    Richard Murphy, Federal Practice and Procedure § 8384
    (2018); cf. Norton v. S. Utah Wilderness All., 
    542 U.S. 55
    , 63–
    64 (2004) (holding, in APA context, federal court can compel
    agency to take only discrete actions it is required to take). And
    even if we had the authority, it is a task for which we lack
    expertise.
    15
    It would be odd if this court, while eschewing the intention
    to require any specific design, imposed a timetable that
    necessarily compelled a particular design or forced the Bureau
    to abandon plans for its preferred design. Such an action would
    violate “the principle that courts should not impose remedies
    that interfere with an agency’s proper discretion.” Wright,
    Koch & Murphy, supra, § 8384. Thus, we are not swayed by
    the Council’s suggestion that “other viable alternatives” to RTF
    “have never been considered by the Secretary.” Instead, we
    think the district court was wise to abide by the principle that
    an “agency’s own timetable for performing its duties in the
    absence of a statutory deadline is due ‘considerable
    deference.’” Cobell v. Norton, 
    240 F.3d 1081
    , 1096 (D.C. Cir.
    2001) (quoting Sierra Club v. Gorsuch, 
    715 F.2d 653
    , 658
    (D.C. Cir. 1983)); see also Mexichem Specialty Resins, Inc. v.
    E.P.A., 
    787 F.3d 544
    , 555 (D.C. Cir. 2015) (same); Nat. Res.
    Def. Council, Inc. v. Train, 
    510 F.2d 692
    , 712 (D.C. Cir. 1974)
    (“The courts cannot responsibly mandate flat guideline
    deadlines when the Administrator demonstrates that additional
    time is necessary.”).
    We sympathize with the Council’s frustration on behalf of
    those it has so faithfully represented. As the Council said in its
    initial complaint over 18 years ago, “individuals with visual
    disabilities suffer needless impediments in purchasing
    groceries, transportation, and a multitude of other goods and
    services” and are at “heightened risk of fraud and deceit.”
    Because Treasury has yet to comply with federal law, “millions
    of visually impaired individuals” remain largely “dependent on
    the kindness of others” to handle those everyday transactions
    that individuals with sight take for granted. ACB 
    I, 525 F.3d at 1259
    . Nevertheless, the same equitable power that permitted
    the district court to craft the 2008 injunction gave it
    considerable discretion in determining whether to modify it.
    16
    The district court did not exceed that discretion by denying the
    Council’s Rule 60(b) motion.
    For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s judgment is
    affirmed.
    So ordered.