N.D.Ohio: Arrest of County Commissioner for speaking at public meeting shown 1A retaliation and without PC

Plaintiff is a County Commissioner arrested by police at a Commission meeting for being disruptive. The arrest was shown to be First Amendment retaliation and without Fourth Amendment probable cause. Plaintiff was never ruled “out of order” by the chair; that was delegated to the police to arrest if they thought so. Frenchko v. Monroe, 2024 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7313 (N.D. Ohio Jan. 16, 2024):

Here in America, we do not arrest our political opponents. This case tests that longstanding norm as well as our Constitution’s robust protections for free speech that allow us to criticize our representatives and public officials. Plaintiff Niki Frenchko won election to the three-member Board of County Commissioners of Trumbull County, Ohio. She was an outsider, and the only member of County government from her political party. As a public official, she used her position to needle the incumbents and, in her view, hold them accountable for their decisions. For their part, they viewed her as ignorant of the basic workings of county government and a nuisance, to put it mildly. As her colleagues became more and more frustrated and impatient with her, their personal and political disagreements grew increasingly heated.

After Commissioner Frenchko criticized the performance of Sheriff Paul Monroe, a Defendant in this action, two of his deputies arrested her during a public meeting of the Trumbull County Commission as she spoke on a matter of public concern and criticized the Sheriff. Based on this and other incidents, Plaintiff brought this lawsuit seeking to vindicate her federal constitutional rights. She sued several public officials, as well as Trumbull County itself, the County Sheriff’s Department, and the Trumbull County Board of Commissioners. Both Plaintiff and all Defendants seek a summary judgment in their favor.

For the reasons that follow, the Court GRANTS IN PART AND DENIES IN PART each motion. On some claims, Commissioner Frenchko is entitled to summary judgment; on others, Defendants are entitled to summary judgment; a jury must decide some; and still others are best addressed in State court.

Update: techdirt: Judge Reminds Deputies They Can’t Arrest Someone Just Because They Don’t Like What Is Being Said by Tim Cushing (“It shouldn’t need to be said, but it bears repeating: the First Amendment definitely protects speech the listener doesn’t like. [¶] This holds true even if the one doing the speaking is personally and professionally unlikable. There’s some backstory to this First Amendment retaliation suit, which explains why certain government employees might have wanted to arrest someone for talking. But nothing can explain actually following through with that fantasy.”)

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