果冻传媒app官方

Case Overview

FIRE Victory closed

Today鈥檚 criminal codes are bloated. Flip through them, and you鈥檒l soon find that police can find a broad or vaguely worded law to arrest almost anyone for almost anything鈥搃ncluding arresting their critics. That鈥檚 why government critics and dissenters need to have a remedy when officials wrongfully arrest speakers they disagree with.

The Supreme Court of the United States held a few years ago in Nieves v. Bartlett that plaintiffs suing over an arrest made in retaliation for First Amendment-protected speech must show a lack of probable cause. But the Court also created an exception to that rule: Where police technically have probable cause to arrest a speaker but do not usually arrest people for the same conduct, the probable cause does not bar a claim for retaliatory arrest under the First Amendment. Consider jaywalkers. Police usually don鈥檛 arrest people for jaywalking. But if police selectively enforced a jaywalking law against a critic or dissenter who skipped the crosswalk, that speaker could sue for First Amendment retaliation. 

Under Nieves鈥檚 exception, Sylvia Gonzalez, a 72-year-old, former city councilwoman in Castle Hills, Texas, should have a remedy against local officials for First Amendment retaliation. Those officials arrested Sylvia鈥揳n outspoken critic of the city manager鈥揻or misplacing a petition to oust the city manager. The statute they relied on? A Texas law intended to punish things like fake government IDs. 

Common sense would dictate that the police usually don鈥檛 arrest people for misplacing documents, let alone under that Texas law. While the federal district court agreed, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit did not. Instead, it dismissed Sylvia鈥檚 claim, holding that Sylvia could meet the Nieves exception only by showing comparative evidence of individuals who also mishandled a government petition, but were not critics of Castle Hills officials and thus not arrested. In support of Sylvia鈥檚 request for rehearing, FIREand the Cato Institute joined the American Civil Liberties Union鈥檚 鈥渇riend of the court鈥 brief to the Fifth Circuit. 

Yet the Fifth Circuit denied rehearing, leaving in place a rigid view of Nieves鈥檚 exception that strips a vital remedy from Americans arrested for their speech and enables police to abuse their discretion against critics without accountability. 

The Supreme Court agreed to hear Sylvia's case. So 果冻传媒app官方, along with the Cato Institute and the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers, is joining the ACLU and ACLU of Texas鈥檚 "friend of the court" brief to the Supreme Court. The brief argues that when an arrest is a premeditated attempt to punish someone for speech protected by the First Amendment, then the arrest is clearly an unconstitutional "retaliation." It also explains that there is a real risk that government officials will misuse sprawling criminal codes to silence critics.

In a short per curiam opinion, the Supreme Court agreed that the Fifth Circuit's view of the Nieves exception was too rigid--"overly cramped" in the Court's words. It therefore reversed and remanded so that the lower courts can correctly analyze Gonzalez's arguments.

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