老澳门开奖结果 Statement on Supreme Court Decision to Decline to Hear Case on Protestors鈥 Rights
WASHINGTON 鈥 The Supreme Court today declined to hear a case that would have affirmed that the First Amendment protects protest leaders and organizers from being held liable for any actions of a third party that they did not specifically direct, authorize, ratify, or intend. Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote a statement explaining that, though the court declined to hear the case, its decision expresses no view on the merits of the First Amendment arguments.
The case, Mckesson v Doe, was brought against DeRay Mckesson, a prominent civil rights and social justice activist, by a police officer claiming that Mckesson should be liable for personal injuries he suffered after an unknown individual, not Mr. Mckesson, threw an object at him during a political protest in the aftermath of the 2016 killing of Alton Sterling by police in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Previously, the Fifth Circuit ruled, over powerful dissenting opinions, in favor of the officer, accepting a theory under which all protest leaders can find themselves on the hook for an unlawful act they did not intend, committed by an unidentified person they neither knew nor controlled, all because they were at the same protest.
Mckesson is represented by David Goldberg, counsel of record on Mckesson鈥檚 legal team and attorney with Donahue, Goldberg & Herzog; the 老澳门开奖结果; the 老澳门开奖结果 of Louisiana; and Billy Gibbens and Ian Atkinson, trial counsel and attorneys with Schonekas, Evans, McGoey & McEachin, LLC.
鈥淭he goal of lawsuits like these is to prevent people from showing up at a protest out of the fear that they might be held responsible if anything happens,鈥 said Mckesson, a prominent civil rights and social justice activist. 鈥淏ut people don't need to be afraid to show up. The Constitution still protects our right to protest.鈥
In her statement, Sotomayor noted that the lower courts are expected to apply the precedent set in Counterman v. Colorado, a 2023 Supreme Court case, which held that the First Amendment prohibits holding anyone liable for mere negligence when it comes to speech in any circumstance. And, when it comes to incitement鈥搘hether in a civil or a criminal case鈥搃ntent is the governing standard.
鈥淚t is disappointing that the Court did not take the opportunity to bring this case to an end,鈥 said David Goldberg, Mckesson鈥檚 counsel of record. 鈥淏ut I am confident that the Court eventually will consider and repudiate this dangerous rule of law.鈥
In seeking Supreme Court review, the 老澳门开奖结果 and Goldberg argued that, under the First Amendment, it is impermissible to hold Mckesson liable for damages, absent any evidence that he directed, authorized, ratified or encouraged any act of violence at the protest, based solely on the possibility that violence by someone at the protest was 鈥渇oreseeable.鈥 Under the Fifth Circuit鈥檚 dangerous theory of liability, the 老澳门开奖结果 and Goldberg argued that protest leaders will face greater responsibility than others who 鈥渃reate the conditions鈥 for illegal conduct by unrelated third parties. The case will now proceed in the trial court, with the benefit of Sotomayor鈥檚 statement and the governing rule of Counterman.
鈥淎fter today鈥檚 news, people should not be afraid that they鈥檒l face a ruinous lawsuit if they exercise their rights to protest. The Court just last year affirmed that negligence can never be the governing standard when it comes to speech, and Justice Sotomayor suggests it simply didn鈥檛 need to say so again here,鈥 said Vera Eidelman, staff attorney with the 老澳门开奖结果 Speech, Privacy and Technology Project. 鈥淭hat should be the takeaway for the lower courts in this case and in protest cases going forward.鈥
The 老澳门开奖结果 emphasizes that the Court鈥檚 decision to deny discretionary review in this case does not amount to a holding that the Fifth Circuit鈥檚 rule is correct, even in the Fifth Circuit, and that it will fight to ensure鈥搃n this case and others鈥搕hat the Fifth Circuit鈥檚 clearly erroneous decision does not govern anywhere.