果冻传媒app官方

FIREin the Courts

The 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 mission is to defend and sustain the individual rights of all Americans to free speech and free thought鈥攖he most essential qualities of liberty. 

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FEATURED CASES

Surprise, Arizona: Mom arrested at city council meeting after criticizing city attorney鈥檚 pay raise

FIREplaintiff Rebekah Massie in Surprise, Arizona.
FIRE plaintiff Rebekah Massie of Surprise, Arizona. (Christine Hillman Photography)

On August 20, 2024, Rebekah Massie and her 10-year-old daughter attended a city council meeting in the City of Surprise, where she lives. When Mayor Skip Hall opened the meeting for public comments, Massie stood up to criticize a proposed pay raise for the city attorney. Mayor Hall interrupted Massie, telling her that the city鈥檚 rules prohibit 鈥渃omplaints鈥 about city employees during city council meetings and gave her a 鈥渨arning鈥 for 鈥渁ttacking the city attorney personally.鈥 When Massie objected that the First Amendment protected her comments, Mayor Hall ordered police to remove Massie. In front of her 10-year-old daughter, Massie was detained, marched out of the room, and arrested.

On Sept. 3, 2024, FIREsued on behalf of Massie and another Surprise resident, asking the court to halt enforcement of the city rule. The lawsuit challenges both Massie鈥檚 arrest and the City of Surprise policy barring residents from offering 鈥渃omplaints鈥 about city officials during City Council meetings. 


Hogarth v. Brinson Bell: North Carolina Threatens Voter with Prosecution for Taking a Ballot Selfie

Photo of FIREplaintiff Susan Hogarth holding up her phone showing her ballot selfie
FIRE "ballot selfie" plaintiff Susan Hogarth of Raleigh, North Carolina. (Shutter by Nitish LLC)

Voting and peaceful political expression are two cherished American freedoms. But North Carolina makes it a crime to do both at the same time with its ban on ballot selfies

In March 2024, Susan Hogarth took a selfie with her completed ballot for a primary election, and then posted the image to social media. A few weeks later, Susan received a letter from the North Carolina State Board of Elections telling her she committed a crime and demanding she take the post down. She refused, and with help from 果冻传媒app官方, she鈥檚 suing members of the board of elections to have the unconstitutional statutes struck down.

鈥淚 won鈥檛 be bullied over such an innocent and wholesome impulse as sharing enthusiasm for my candidates," Hogarth said. "These ballot selfie bans may seem harmless, but they鈥檙e just one more way the state attempts to control and muzzle true self-expression while pretending to protect it.鈥


Hunt adv. Lombardi: Sergeants-At-Arms Expel Man Wearing 'Pro-Life U' Sweatshirt from Colorado State Senate Gallery

Jeff Hunt standing on stairs wearing "Pro Life U" sweatshirt
Jeff Hunt at the Colorado State Capitol.

Government officials can鈥檛 kick someone out of a public legislative gallery just because they don鈥檛 like the message on their shirt. If there is anywhere that Americans鈥 First Amendment rights should be safe, it鈥檚 in their state capitol.

On March 21, 2023, Jeffrey Hunt, a talk radio host and former director of the Centennial Institute think tank at Colorado Christian University, visited the Colorado State Senate with a group of his then-coworkers. Hunt wore a sweatshirt reading 鈥淧ro-Life U鈥 (referring to the University) to silently oppose three bills under consideration that would regulate and penalize crisis pregnancy centers. 

Hunt entered the Senate鈥檚 public gallery, but Colorado sergeants-at-arms determined 鈥淧ro-Life U鈥 is a 鈥減olitical statement鈥 prohibited by a gallery rule banning 鈥減ins or apparel expressing political statements.鈥 They ordered Hunt out of the gallery and said he must remove his sweatshirt if he wanted to re-enter. Unwilling to give up his First Amendment rights, Hunt chose to sit alone, outside the gallery, banished from watching his lawmakers in action.

So on July 16, 2024,  FIREjoined Hunt in standing up for the First Amendment right of all Coloradans to silently and nondisruptively express their opinions in their state Capitol. FIREsent a letter to the Colorado House and Senate sergeants-at-arms demanding they stop enforcing the rule banning political pins and apparel from the galleries. Following our demand letter, Colorado House and Senate officials rescinded their ban on pins and apparel with political statements in the legislative galleries.

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Villarreal v. City of Laredo, et al.: Journalism is not a Crime

Priscilla Villarreal
Priscilla Villarreal

A journalist was thrown in a Texas jail for doing her job. Years later and still seeking justice, she is taking her case to the Supreme Court with the help of 果冻传媒app官方. Priscilla Villarreal, who The New York Times described as 鈥渁rguably the most influential journalist in Laredo,鈥 covers local crime, traffic, and other news for her 200,000 Facebook followers. Like all good journalists, she鈥檚 not shy about criticizing government officials. That鈥檚 why she鈥檚 been repeatedly targeted by them. The district attorney even took her behind closed doors to chastise her for her reporting.

Police dusted off a decades-old statute local officials had never used before to criminalize Priscilla鈥檚 journalism earlier that year about a high-profile suicide and a fatal car accident. Laredo law enforcement issued two warrants for her arrest under the statute, making it a felony to ask for non-public information from a government official if the person asking could benefit from that information. Laredo law enforcement claimed Priscilla benefitted from publishing the news to 鈥済ain popularity on Facebook.鈥

So Priscilla sued, but the district court dismissed her claims. After Priscilla appealed, a panel on the Fifth Circuit ruled in her favor, reversing the dismissal and concluding that if Villarreal鈥檚 arrest 鈥渋s not an obvious violation of the Constitution, it鈥檚 hard to imagine what would be.鈥 But the entire Fifth Circuit decided to reconsider the ruling, and in a 9-7 decision, reversed course. That鈥檚 why FIREis asking the Supreme Court to hear Priscilla鈥檚 case and make clear that Americans can hold officials accountable when they violate First Amendment rights. 

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Bombard v. Riggen, State of Vermont: Vermonter Arrested for Cursing at a Cop

Gregory Bombard of St. Albans, Vermont
Gregory Bombard

A Vermont man was arrested on trumped-up charges after a state trooper took offense to his use of profanity and a middle finger during an illegal traffic stop. The First Amendment squarely protects Americans鈥 right to criticize law enforcement, even in ways that individual officers find profane or insulting. 

Now FIREhas joined Gregory Bombard鈥檚 legal team 鈥 and is releasing for the first time video showing his arrest was illegal retaliation for protected speech. He committed no crime 鈥 not even a minor traffic violation.

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Boren v. Gadwa: FIREDefends Idaho Firewatcher Against SLAPP

Gary Gadwa
Gary Gadwa

FIRE is defending lifelong Idaho conservation officer Gary Gadwa at the Idaho Supreme Court after he was sued by a wealthy tech magnate after Gary opposed a permit application for a designated airstrip. The trial court knocked down the lawsuit on free speech grounds, but the tech magnate appealed the decision to the Idaho Supreme Court. FIREis stepping in to defend Gary and ask the Idaho Supreme Court to affirm strong protections against baseless lawsuits that infringe First Amendment rights.

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Dubash v. City of Houston, et al.: Animal rights advocates sue after facing ongoing censorship and arrest for peaceful advocacy in Houston public park

Faraz Harsini and Daraius Dubash
Faraz Harsini (left) and Daraius Dubash (right) are suing the City of Houston for First Amendment violations.

The Law & Religion Clinic at the University of Texas and the FIREfiled a lawsuit against the City of Houston, several Houston police officers, and Discovery Green Conservancy after police officers arrested an animal rights advocate for refusing to give up his First Amendment right to free speech in Discovery Green, a public park described as the 鈥渃rown jewel of public spaces in downtown Houston.鈥

The management of Houston鈥檚 public Discovery Green Park was concerned that passers-by might be 鈥渙ffended鈥 by the advocates鈥 message. The officers鈥 actions were a clear violation of the advocates鈥 First Amendment right to speak freely in a public park 鈥攁 park where peaceful protests happen regularly.

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Northern Light Health and Eastern Maine Medical Center adv. Samson Cournane: 15-year-old Mainer Fights Hospital Conglomerate鈥檚 Attempt to Silence Him With Lawsuit Threat

Samson Cournane, the 15-year-old college student fighting a hospital over his free speech
Samson Cournane

Samson Cournane isn鈥檛 your average 15-year-old. This fall, he starts his junior year as a computer science major at the University of Maine after making the dean鈥檚 list in the spring. But like many college students, Samson is engaged, outspoken, and passionate. And for that, a healthcare corporation tried to shut him up.

Samson Cournane wrote a petition to his congressman and a letter to his university鈥檚 student newspaper calling attention to patient-safety concerns at a local hospital. The hospital鈥檚 parent corporation, Northern Light Health, responded by threatening to sue Samson鈥檚 mother for defamation. FIREis demanding Northern Light Health retract its lawsuit threat and respect Samson鈥檚 right to speak freely and petition government officials.

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Palsgaard v. Christian: California Community Colleges administrators compel professors to parrot the state鈥檚 views on DEIA in the classroom

Reedley College professor Bill Blanken, one of 果冻传媒app官方's plaintiffs suing the California Community Colleges system
Reedley College professor Bill Blanken, one of 果冻传媒app官方's plaintiffs suing the California Community Colleges system. (Limelight Photography)

In May 2022, the California Community Colleges Board of Governors approved diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility (DEIA) regulations requiring all community college professors to incorporate the state鈥檚 views on DEIA into their teaching. FIREfiled suit on behalf of six professors in the State Center Community College District against California Community Colleges state officials and district officials in State Center Community College District, seeking to halt the state鈥檚 unconstitutional rules and the district鈥檚 enforcement of the rules through its faculty contract. 

The DEIA Rules mandate viewpoint conformity, compel professors to teach and preach the State鈥檚 perspective on DEIA, impose a prior restraint on the sharing of contrary views, and subject professors to an array of overbroad, vague, and arbitrary requirements.

But the government may not impose political or ideological litmus tests on college faculty as a condition of employment or advancement. The First Amendment protects the right of college faculty to teach and speak free from state interference. The DEIA regulations unconstitutionally compel professors to embed and endorse contested ideological views in their academic activities and restrict expression of contrary views through an array of overbroad, vague, and arbitrary requirements. 

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I.P. v. Tullahoma City Schools: A principal鈥檚 ego doesn鈥檛 override the First Amendment

Image depicting a student being suspended for social media content

High schools cannot punish a student for satirizing the principal on social media when the satire occurs off campus and does not cause substantial disruption at school. A principal鈥檚 pride is not an exception to the First Amendment. On Aug. 10, 2022, Tullahoma High School鈥檚 principal and assistant principal called a 17-year-old rising senior to their office and interrogated him about three images on his personal Instagram. The memes caused no disruption at school. Nevertheless, the school slapped the student with a three-day, out-of-school suspension, citing a school policy prohibiting students from posting images on social media which 鈥渆mbarrass,鈥 鈥渄iscredit,鈥 or 鈥渉umiliate鈥 another student or school staff. What鈥檚 more, Tullahoma High School also broadly prohibits social media activity that is 鈥渦nbecoming of a Wildcat,鈥 the school鈥檚 mascot. What those policies mean, specifically and practically, is anyone鈥檚 guess. 

On July 19, 2023, FIREfiled a lawsuit on the student鈥檚 behalf 鈥 and to defend the First Amendment for all America鈥檚 students. Teenagers get to use their First Amendment rights, not just learn about them.

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Gray v. Lt. Hemminger: The First Amendment Is Not 鈥楢 Game鈥 鈥 Not Even In Port Wentworth, GA

Jeff Gray victory
FIRE plaintiff Jeff Gray holding a sign reading "God Bless the Homeless Vets" (Lacy Jessica Photography)

Holding a sign is not a crime. The First Amendment guarantees the right to speak on public property outside City Hall: in Alpharetta, in Blackshear, and across the United States. On July 19, 2021, Jeff Gray stood on the sidewalk outside Port Wentworth City Hall holding a large sign reading 鈥淕od Bless the Homeless Vets.鈥 In a conversation caught on an officer鈥檚 body camera, city employees 鈥 informed by the officer that Gray was doing nothing unlawful 鈥 wanted him removed anyway. When Gray began filming and asked whether he was being banned from the property, Sergeant Robert Hemminger bellowed: 鈥淎s of now you are!鈥

On July 17, 2023, FIREfiled a lawsuit on Jeff Gray鈥檚 behalf 鈥 and to defend the First Amendment for all. Hemminger said Gray was 鈥減laying the game鈥 by standing up for his rights. The Constitution is not a game. It鈥檚 a rulebook. One that FIREwill make Port Wentworth police obey.

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Utah Library Association adv. City of Orem: City Punishing Librarians for Protected Speech

The City of Orem banned book displays for gay pride, women鈥檚 history, and minority groups. When the Utah Library Association (ULA) criticized that policy as discriminating against particular viewpoints, the City stripped library staff, including Orem librarian and former president of the ULA Rita Christensen, of a key professional benefit the city provided for years: time and resources to join and participate in ULA programs. Further, the City warned the librarians not to criticize its policies, or else risk being fired under an unconstitutionally vague social media policy that forbids employees from making 鈥渄isparaging comments鈥 about the city, its policies, or its leadership.

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FIRE to Uvalde: Lift ban on father who questioned school safety or we'll sue

FIREplaintiff Adam Martinez
Adam Martinez, father of two students in the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District. (Photo by Nycole Knoxx)

Mere months after the Uvalde school district suspended its entire police force for failing to effectively respond to a deadly shooting at an elementary school, school officials banned a concerned parent from school property 鈥 because he questioned the qualifications of a new police hire. FIREdemanded the Uvalde Consolidated Independent School District lift its ban against Adam Martinez, a father of two students in the district. The district banned Martinez from all district property for two years, including from school board meetings. 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 letter to UCISD threatens litigation if the district does not lift the unconstitutional ban by May 22, 2023.

鈥淢y community counts on me to be their voice, but the district wants to shut me up,鈥 said Martinez. 鈥淢y fight has always been for the 21 people who no longer have a voice and for those who are too scared to speak up about social injustice.鈥

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D.A. v. Tri County Area Schools: School District Forces FIREto Remove 鈥淟et鈥檚 Go Brandon鈥 Sweatshirts

Let's Go Brandon sweatshirt

In 2022, two students at Tri County Middle School wore sweatshirts to school with the phrase 鈥淟et鈥檚 Go Brandon,鈥 a well-known, non-profane, anti-President Biden political slogan. But school officials ordered the students to remove their political attire while allowing other students to wear apparel with different political messages, including gay-pride-themed hoodies. The U.S. Supreme Court made clear a half-century ago that students do not 鈥渟hed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhouse gate.鈥 On April 25, 2023, FIREfiled a federal lawsuit seeking to block the school鈥檚 viewpoint-discriminatory ban on 鈥淟et鈥檚 Go Brandon鈥 apparel, as well as its dress code provision banning students from wearing clothing which 鈥渃alls undue attention鈥 to the student. Whether it鈥檚 a Pride Flag, Trump flag, or Let鈥檚 Go Brandon shirt, schools can鈥檛 pick and choose which political beliefs are worthy of expression.

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Gray v. City of Alpharetta: Army Veteran Arrested in Alpharetta, Georgia for Holding 鈥楪od Bless the Homeless Vets鈥 Sign in Front of City Hall

Jeff Gray featured image
FIRE plaintiff Jeff Gray holding a sign reading "God Bless the Homeless Vets" (Lacy Jessica Photography)

On January 27, 2022, Jeff Gray held a sign reading 鈥淕od Bless the Homeless Vets鈥 outside Alpharetta City Hall to raise awareness of the plight of homeless veterans. Within minutes, an Alpharetta police officer told Gray that 鈥減anhandling鈥 was illegal in the city and that Gray needed to leave.

Gray was not panhandling, but police argued that his sign was, itself, 鈥減anhandling" and detained him. On January 31, 2023, FIREfiled a lawsuit on Gray鈥檚 behalf to vindicate his constitutional rights and end Alpharetta鈥檚 unwritten ban on 鈥減anhandling.鈥

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Spectrum WT v. Walter Wendler: President Cancels Student-Organized Drag Show, Citing Religion, Natural Rights, and Intent to Violate the First Amendment, if Need Be

WTAMU
FIRE sues Texas university president for illegally blocking charity drag show

On March 20, 2023, Walter Wendler, the president of West Texas A&M University, abruptly canceled a drag show that a student group 鈥 Spectrum WT, an organization for LGBTQ+ students and their allies 鈥 was planning to hold at the public university. In an email (also posted on his personal blog) to students, faculty, and staff, Wendler denounced drag shows as 鈥渟lapstick鈥 intended to 鈥渄enigrate and demean women.鈥 Wendler said he would 鈥渘ot appear to condone鈥 such speech, 鈥渆ven when the law of the land appears to require it.鈥

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Volokh v. James: Big Brother in the Big Apple: New York Law Turns Bloggers into Speech Police

Eugene Volokh plaintiff photo
Eugene Volokh

New York has enacted a new law with the goal of regulating disfavored鈥攂ut constitutionally protected鈥攐nline speech. State lawmakers passed the law in the wake of the tragic mass shooting by a white supremacist this past May in Buffalo, New York. It targets protected online speech that lawmakers consider 鈥渉ateful,鈥 and is so overbroad it reaches a vast swath of the internet. The law seems to be just the first step in further regulation of online speech鈥攚hich, if adopted, would also violate the First Amendment. But FIREis fighting back. On Dec. 1, we sued New York鈥檚 Attorney General in federal court on behalf of Eugene Volokh, a First Amendment scholar and co-founder of , and online platforms Rumble and Locals, seeking to stop enforcement of New York鈥檚 unconstitutional law.

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Novoa v. Diaz: Florida Board of Governors: Florida Law Restricting How College Professors, FIRECan Discuss Race and Sex

More than a half-century ago, the Supreme Court recognized that the First Amendment 鈥渄oes not tolerate laws that cast a pall of orthodoxy over the classroom,鈥 where 鈥渢ruth鈥 is discovered not by 鈥渁uthoritative selection,鈥 but 鈥渙ut of a multitude of tongues.鈥 In a remarkable retreat from Florida鈥檚 Campus Free Expression Act, which recognized that universities should not 鈥渟hield鈥 students from 鈥渦ncomfortable, unwelcome, disagreeable, or offensive鈥 opinions,  Florida鈥檚 鈥淪top WOKE Act鈥 imposes precisely the 鈥減all of orthodoxy鈥 that the Supreme Court warned about decades ago.

Photos of FIREPlaintiffs Adriana Novoa and Sam Rechek
Professor Adriana Novoa and student Sam Rechek are fighting against government censorship in Florida. (Credit: Will Simpson Photography)

The Stop WOKE Act prohibits 鈥渋nstruction鈥 on eight specific 鈥渃oncepts鈥 related to 鈥渞ace, color, national origin, or sex.鈥 . For example, the Stop WOKE Act unlawfully restricts discussions of whether individuals are unconsciously biased based on their race or sex; whether certain virtues 鈥 including 鈥渕erit, excellence, hard work, fairness, neutrality, objectivity, and racial colorblindness鈥 鈥 are racist; and whether particular races or sexes inherently have certain privileges or disadvantages. But in dictating to faculty and students what ideas may be considered in a college classroom, Florida鈥檚 political leaders have run headlong into the First Amendment. 

On August 6, 2022, a University of South Florida professor of history, undergraduate student, and student organization 鈥 represented by FIRE鈥 sued in federal court to challenge the Stop WOKE Act for violating their constitutional rights. 

Read more about 果冻传媒app官方's lawsuit against the Stop Woke Act


RECENTLY RESOLVED CASES

Collin Community College District: History Professor Fired for Criticizing Mike Pence and Her College鈥檚 COVID-19 Response Online

Burnett victory
Collin College history professor Lora Burnett

Lora Burnett was a full-time history professor at Collin College. Like many Americans, Burnett shared her thoughts about important public issues, such as the 2020 presidential election and the COVID-19 pandemic on Twitter. During the October 2020 vice presidential debate, Burnett tweeted: 鈥淭he moderator needs to talk over Mike Pence until he shuts his little demon mouth up.鈥 Burnett also criticized Collin College鈥檚 response to the COVID-19 pandemic. She publicly challenged Collin College President H. Neil Matkin鈥檚 assessment that the pandemic was 鈥渂lown utterly out of proportion.鈥 She also informed the public about the death of a former Collin College professor by tweeting, 鈥淎nother @collincollege professor has died of COVID.鈥 In private text exchanges with Texas State Rep. Jeff Leach, who was apparently upset about Burnett鈥檚 tweets concerning the debate, President Matkin promised to 鈥渄eal with it鈥 and later terminated Burnett.

Read moreabout Lora's Victory


Eastern Virginia Medical School: Medical Student Unconstitutionally Prohibited from Starting Student Club Promoting Healthcare Reform

Eastern Virginia Medical School student Edward Si
Eastern Virginia Medical School student Edward Si

Edward Si, a medical student at Eastern Virginia Medical School, applied to form a chapter of FIREfor a National Health Program, a national student organization dedicated to advocating for a single-payer health system, in December 2020. EVMS鈥檚 Student Government Association denied the application because it did 鈥渘ot want to create clubs based on opinions, political or otherwise, and the mission and goals of [SNaHP] do not describe what we believe to be necessary or sustainable for a club.鈥

Read moreabout 果冻传媒app官方's advocacy for Edward


LAWSUIT: Student journalist SUES his university, and WINS! 

Haskell Indian Nations University Student Journalist Jared Nally
Student journalist Jared Nally

The president of Haskell Indian Nations University issued an unconstitutional directive to student journalist Jared Nally, editor-in-chief of the award winning student newspaper, The Indian Leader, that formally forbade Jared from engaging in protected journalistic activities. Without any notice or explanation, Haskell withheld more than $10,000 from the paper鈥檚 expected funds. He also directed Jared to start showing university administrators the 鈥渉ighest respect鈥 鈥 or else!

On March 2, 2021, on the heels of Student Press Freedom Day 2021, Nally and The Indian Leader 鈥 represented by FIRE鈥 sued Haskell. In bringing this lawsuit, Nally and The Indian Leader seek to hold Haskell鈥檚 leadership accountable for flagrantly violating clearly established First Amendment rights 鈥 and make sure students and student journalists at Haskell and nationwide can ask questions, report the news, and talk with each other about what matters most to them.

Read moreabout Jared's lawsuit

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