The Supreme Court on Tuesday was sympathetic to a group of faith-based pregnancy centers in their quest to challenge New Jerseyâs demand for information about the groupâs fundraising practices in federal court. The state contends that the group, First Choice Womenâs Resource Centers, must litigate its claims in state court, but after Tuesday morningâs oral argument, a majority of the justices appeared ready to side with First Choice in its bid to litigate its First Amendment claim in federal court.
The oral argument was the latest skirmish in the two-year-old legal battle that began when New Jerseyâs attorney general, Matthew Platkin, issued subpoenas to First Choice seeking (among other things) information about the groupâs donors. Platkin and his office said they were investigating whether First Choice may have misled women about whether it provides certain reproductive-health services, such as abortions.
First Choice, which describes itself as âa faith-based nonprofitâ that provides âmaterial support and medical services like ultrasounds and pregnancy tests under the direction of a licensed medical director,â went to federal court in New Jersey to challenge the subpoena. It argued that the subpoena either had or would have a âchillingâ effect on both its own First Amendment rights and those of its donors â that is, that the subpoena would (among other things) discourage donors from making contributions and, because it sought the identities of the groupâs staff, caused First Choice to remove videos that identified its staff from its YouTube channel.
A federal judge in Trenton, New Jersey, declined to block the subpoena. U.S. District Judge Michael Shipp ruled that the dispute was not yet âripeâ â that is, ready for the federal court to take up. Only a state court, Shipp said, has the power to enforce or block a subpoena, and no state court had done so yet.
When Platkin attempted to enforce the subpoena, a state court granted his request and directed First Choice to ârespond fullyâ to the stateâs demands for information â which, the state court later made clear, would also allow First Choice to object to those demands.
Back in federal court, Shipp once again ruled that the dispute was not yet ripe. Although the state court had granted Platkinâs request to enforce the subpoena, Shipp wrote, it had not yet determined whether First Choice would face sanctions if it did not comply.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 3rd Circuit upheld that decision. It wrote that First Choice âcan continue to assert its constitutional claims in state court as that litigation unfolds; the parties have been ordered by the state court to negotiate to narrow the subpoenaâs scope; they have agreed to so negotiate; the Attorney General has conceded that he seeks donor information from only two websites; and First Choiceâs current affidavits do not yet show enough of an injury.â
Judge Stephanos Bibas dissented. In his view, First Choiceâs case was âindistinguishable from Americans for Prosperity Foundation v. Bonta,â the Supreme Courtâs 2021 decision striking down, on First Amendment grounds, Californiaâs requirement that charities and nonprofits in the state provide the state attorney generalâs office with the names and addresses of their largest donors.Â
Representing First Choice, Erin Hawley told the justices that the âsweeping subpoenaâ issued by the New Jersey attorney general violated the groupâs First Amendment right to association as soon as it received the subpoena, even if the subpoena was not self-executing (meaning that the attorney general cannot himself enforce it or impose penalties for noncompliance, but instead must go to court to do so). And First Choice should have been able to challenge that subpoena in federal court without waiting for the state courts to act, Hawley continued. Federal courts, she said, have a âvirtually unflagging obligation to decide cases within their jurisdiction.â
Vivek Suri, an assistant to the U.S. solicitor general who argued on behalf of the federal government, which supports First Choice, offered a slightly different theory. A plaintiff like First Choice, Suri said, has a legal right to sue, known as standing, as long as there is a âcredible threatâ that the subpoena would be enforced against it.
But Sundeep Iyer, from the New Jersey attorney generalâs office, countered that First Choice had not shown that the mere issuance of the subpoena had chilled its First Amendment rights. Any legal duty to produce the documents that the subpoena requests, Iyer argued, are âwholly contingentâ on a future order from a state court directing the group to do so. And in this case, Iyer emphasized, the state court has not issued such an order during two years of litigation.
Several justices pushed back against the characterization of the subpoena in this case as non-self-executing. Justice Neil Gorsuch made this point several times, telling Iyer that the subpoena seems âpretty self-executing to me.â
Justice Samuel Alito pressed a related point, appearing to suggest that the state had characterized the subpoena as non-self-executing as a litigation tactic rather than because it necessarily believed that was the case. âWhen,â Alito asked Hawley, did the attorney general argue that these subpoenas were non-self-executing?
Hawley responded that, to her knowledge, the attorney general had first made that argument in this case.
Iyer conceded that if the Supreme Court rejected the stateâs characterization of the subpoena as non-self-executing, there was âno disputeâ that a plaintiff like First Choice would have a right to sue âfrom the moment of the issuance of the subpoenaâ â a concession that could effectively resolve the dispute.
Beyond the issue of the nature of the subpoena, much of the argument focused on the two theories under which First Choice and the Trump administration argued that First Choice should prevail. Pressing the theory that the subpoena violates First Choiceâs constitutional right of association, Hawley told the court that it should look at whether âa reasonable donor would have been chilledâ by the subpoena â and that the answer in this case is âyes.â
Chief Justice John Roberts seemed to agree. âYou donât think,â he told Iyer somewhat incredulously, âit might have an effect on future potential donors ⦠to know that their name, phone number, address, et cetera could be disclosed as a result ofâ a subpoena like the one that First Choice received?
Justice Brett Kavanaugh also was sympathetic to this argument. He noted that a âfriend of the courtâ brief filed by the American Civil Liberties Union voiced concerns about âsuppression by subpoena.â â[T]his is just kind of obvious that thereâs some kind of objective chill,â he said.
Justice Elena Kagan appeared receptive to this argument as well. In a case like this, she posited, an ordinary person wonât be âparticularly reassured by the fact thatâ you still need a court order before the subpoena will be enforced. The mere issuance of the subpoena, she seemed to suggest, would be enough to deter a potential donor.
Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was skeptical of the governmentâs theory that a plaintiff can go to court as long as there is a credible threat that the subpoena will be enforced. The Supreme Court, she said, has generally required âa really clear showingâ that a plaintiff faces an imminent injury â a higher bar, and one that she suggested is not met in this case, because it is ânot certainâ that First Choice will have to disclose information.
Iyer contended that adopting the âcredible threatâ theory would open the door to a flood of cases challenging state and local subpoenas. First Choice and the Trump administration, he said, âhavenât identified a single caseâ adopting that theory. And because the theory canât be limited to First Amendment cases like this one, he warned, âfederal courts would potentially be inundated.â
Alito (among others) also expressed concern about the effects of requiring plaintiffs like First Choice to wait until the state court orders them to comply with the subpoena before they can go to federal court to press their First Amendment claim.
Even Jackson, who had been among the justices most receptive to New Jerseyâs arguments, jumped in. Wouldnât First Choice be âprecluded,â she asked Iyer, from pursuing a First Amendment claim in federal court once the state court had ruled on it? âI mean, youâve sort of made it impossible for them,â she added.
Iyer agreed that âwe think they would be precludedâ from going to federal court in a case like this â a concession that, while candid, likely garnered First Choice more sympathy.
A decision in the case is expected by late June or early July.
Cases: First Choice Womenâs Resource Centers, Inc. v. Platkin
Recommended Citation:
Amy Howe,
Court appears sympathetic to faith-based pregnancy centersâ argument,
SCOTUSblog (Dec. 2, 2025, 2:45 PM),
https://www.scotusblog.com/2025/12/court-appears-sympathetic-to-faith-based-pregnancy-centers-argument/





