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Flannery v. D.C. Department of Health

For media inquiries, please contact:
Lisa Gates, vice president of communications
(614) 224-3255 or Lisa@BuckeyeInstitute.org


Background on the Case

Key Question in the Case: Did the District of Columbia violate the U.S. Constitution and the Home Rule Act of 1973 in using rolling 90-day emergency amendments and emergency orders during the pandemic to evade congressional review and judicial scrutiny?

Beginning in March 2020, D.C. Council issued a series of 90-day emergency amendments, and Mayor Muriel Bowser began issuing rolling emergency orders. Specifically relevant to this case, in late December 2021, the mayor issued orders requiring that restaurants impose the city’s mask mandate and also check the vaccination status of customers beginning in mid-January 2022. By issuing 90-day emergency amendments and extending them in 90-day increments, the District of Columbia improperly thwarted congressional review under the U.S. Constitution and the Home Rule Act of 1973, and transformed the temporary 90-day emergency amendment procedure into a two-year exception that swallowed the rule. All told, Mayor Bowser relied upon these unlawful rolling emergency amendments to extend her initial public emergency declaration at least 16 times over the course of two years.

Further, by regulating people and businesses through a series of emergency orders—which D.C. law says cannot be reviewed by a court “until after the expiration date of the emergency executive order”—D.C. also effectively closed the courthouse doors to District residents, including The Buckeye Institute’s client Eric Flannery, in clear violation of due process protections afforded by the U.S. Constitution.

Eric Flannery, a proud Navy veteran and co-owner of neighborhood bar and grill The Big Board, refused to become an agent of the government and instead tweeted out that, “everyone is welcome” at his local tavern. D.C. government’s response was swift and aggressive. The government suspended The Big Board’s operating and liquor licenses and forced the place to close—indefinitely. After weeks of protracted negotiations, The Buckeye Institute and Eric finally won a hard-fought victory, and The Big Board was ultimately able to reopen.

Unfortunately, D.C.’s harassment of Eric did not end there. D.C. Department of Health then sought to levy additional fines related to the initial “violation” of pandemic regulations in order to further penalize him. Eric challenged those fines, and an administrative law judge ruled in his favor on October 11, 2022, but did not address the constitutional claims. So the larger question remained: Did the D.C. government have the authority to issue the string of emergency amendments and orders that resulted in The Big Board’s shutdown? That is the crux of the lawsuit.


About Buckeye’s Client

Eric Flannery’s father, Rear Admiral Gerard Flannery, Jr., was always a bit of a gourmand, and his sons inherited their dad’s love of both good food and service. In 2011, Eric, together with his brothers Mark and Doyle and longtime friend Dave, turned that love of food and service into a business and opened The Big Board, a popular neighborhood bar and grill in our nation’s capital.

Armed with the Rear Admiral’s special marinade, The Big Board became one of D.C.’s top burger spots—that is, until the District of Columbia suspended its operating and liquor licenses and forced it to close.

As Americans witnessed and experienced, cities across the country imposed specious mask and vaccine verification mandates upon individual citizens and business owners alike. The District of Columbia was one of the worst, as it imposed upon small business owners, like Eric, to check the vaccination status of their customers and forced them to impose absurd mask mandates that had unmasked guests seated and drinking on one side of a bar while masked employees stood on the other side of the same bar. Frustrated with these ludicrous rules, Eric said he would welcome anyone who wanted to enjoy his great burgers and beer selection to his facility.

The District of Columbia had other plans for him.

On the same day Washington D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser announced that D.C. businesses would no longer be forced to check the vaccination status of guests and that the mask mandate would end, the District of Columbia nonetheless affirmed the suspension of The Big Board’s liquor license, which meant Eric’s business—and with it his entire livelihood—would continue to be closed down for not enforcing contrived mandates that the city itself had already ended.


Facts of the Case

Current Status
Appeal pending with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia. Oral arguments are scheduled for January 17, 2025, at 9:30 a.m.

Case Number
1:2022cv03108

Originally Filed
October 13, 2022

Original Court
United States District Court for the District of Columbia

Plaintiff
Eric J. Flannery, co-owner of The Big Board

Lawyers
Robert Alt, president and chief executive officer, The Buckeye Institute
David C. Tryon, director of litigation, The Buckeye Institute
Patrick Strawbridge, Consovoy McCarthy PLLC
David L. Rosenthal, Consovoy McCarthy PLLC
Frank H. Chang, Consovoy McCarthy PLLC

Related Cases
Flannery v. Eckenwiler


Timeline of the Case

November 27, 2024
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia scheduled oral arguments in Flannery v. D.C. Department of Health for January 17, 2025, at 9:30 a.m.

November 4, 2024
The Buckeye Institute filed its reply brief in Flannery v. D.C. Department of Health with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.

May 24, 2024
The Buckeye Institute filed its appeal in Flannery v. D.C. Department of Health with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia.

January 17, 2024
The Buckeye Institute files its notice of appeal with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia in Flannery v. D.C. Department of Health.

December 18, 2023
The United States District Court for the District of Columbia rules that Eric Flannery does not have standing to challenge the D.C. Department of Health’s violations.

February 13, 2023
The Buckeye Institute files its response in opposition to the District of Columbia’s motion to dismiss the case. 

October 13, 2022
The Buckeye Institute files a lawsuit against the District of Columbia Department of Health, urging the court to rule that the D.C. Council’s series of emergency legislative amendments, and Mayor Muriel Bowser’s rolling emergency orders, upon which D.C. relied in order to force the closure of The Big Board, violate the U.S. Constitution and the Home Rule Act of 1973.

October 11, 2022
D.C. administrative law judge rules in favor of Eric Flannery—dismissing without prejudice D.C. Health’s notice of infraction against him—and finds that a fine cannot be assessed against him for the violation charged.

March 16, 2022
The Buckeye Institute and its client, Eric Flannery, celebrate a hard-fought victory in its case to re-open Eric Flannery’s popular bar and grill, The Big Board. After weeks of protracted negotiations, the District of Columbia agreed to lift its suspension of Eric Flannery’s liquor license at an Alcoholic Beverage Control Board (ABC Board) hearing on March 16, 2022. The order was effective at 8 a.m. on March 17, 2022, St. Patrick’s Day. Previously—after receiving The Buckeye Institute’s February 18 demand letter—the District of Columbia’s Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs reinstated The Big Board’s operating license on March 1.

February 24, 2022
The Buckeye Institute files a motion with the District of Columbia’s Alcoholic Beverage Control Board (ABC Board) demanding that it immediately lift the summary suspension of The Big Board’s liquor license. 

February 18, 2022
The Buckeye Institute issues a demand letter to the District of Columbia’s Department of Consumer and Regulatory Affairs (DCRA) demanding that Eric Flannery’s operating license be immediately reinstated.