9th Circuit Says Arresting People For "Fuck The Cops" Chalk Writing Is Unconstitutional Retaliation
Ninth Circuit Says Arresting People For Fuck The Cops Chalk Writing Is Unconstitutional Retaliation
Free Speech
from the CHALK-THE-POLICE! dept
Fri, Mar 25th 2022 09:42am - Tim Cushing
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And so we have this case one that involves cops and words cops feel should be illegal if theyre used to refer to cops. And we have yet another rebuttal of this law enforcement-centric delusion that somehow still results in acts of retaliation against protected speech. (via
Volokh Conspiracy)
The plaintiffs, members of a group, Sunshine Activist Collective (associated with CopBlock), chalked the sidewalk in front of the Las Vegas Metro PD. What was chalked was critical of the PD, mentioning officer-involved shootings and utilizing the phrases Fuck the pigs and Fuck the cops. ... Sergeant Mike Wallace confronted the activists, claiming chalking the sidewalk was unlawful. The plaintiffs refused to stop and informed Wallace that the act was actually not unlawful. Sgt. Wallace cited the plaintiffs for violating Nevadas graffiti statute, which forbids the placing of graffiti on any property (public or private) without permission of the owner.
Fair enough. Except that this enforcement action was actually unfair. The Metro PD placed the unrepentant chalkers under surveillance, with a detective searching their social media profiles to discover further information. The only information that seemed pertinent to the detective was that the protesters were aligned with police accountability group, CopBlock. ... Five days later, the activists again chalked the same sidewalk in front of the Metro PD. Despite the city claiming it cost $300 to un-chalk the sidewalk, no officer cited the activists during this chalking, despite many officers passing by them as they wrote their messages.
The plaintiffs went to court on July 18, 2013 to contend the prosecution. But the city had already decided not to prosecute these alleged offenses. That didnt stop the detective who had searched their social media accounts from issuing arrest warrants for both chalking incidents, including the one where no officer had bothered citing them. ... That led to this:
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