Cops Get Qualified Immunity After Jailing Florida Man for 'I Eat Ass' Bumper Sticker
Dillon Shane Webb will thus not be able to sue for the alleged violation of his free speech rights.

New life was injected into a free speech legal saga over an "I Eat Ass" bumper sticker yesterday when a federal judge ruled that the expression might violate Florida's obscenity law and would thus be unprotected by the First Amendment.
At the center of the odyssey is Florida man Dillon Shane Webb, who was pulled over in May of 2019 after Columbia County Sheriff's Deputy Travis English took exception to the sticker. Webb declined to censor it on the spot, his vehicle was searched, and he was subsequently arrested and booked in jail for "obscene writing on vehicles" and "resisting an officer without violence." (The "resisting" in question refers to his refusal to alter the sticker's appearance at the officer's demand.)
Those charges were dropped shortly thereafter, with the State Attorney's Office citing the First Amendment.
But the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida ruled yesterday that the case is not so cut and dry, awarding qualified immunity to English and thus dooming the suit Webb brought against him for allegedly violating his free speech rights and for falsely arresting him.
"While Webb denies the Sticker was in fact obscene, in interviews he repeatedly acknowledged the sexual nature of his Sticker," wrote Judge Marcia Morales Howard in Webb v. English, "albeit couched as an attempt at humor, showing that the notion that an erotic message was more than hypothetical—it could reasonably be viewed as the predominant message being communicated." She added that "if the Sticker depicted a sexual act, it would be protected speech under the First Amendment only if it had serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value." English, as well as Corporal Chad Kirby—who via phone agreed Webb should be arrested—thus can't be held liable over their subjective determination and the subsequent arrest.
Yet the law in question—Fla. Stat. § 847.011(2), which prohibits "any sticker, decal, emblem or other device attached to a motor vehicle containing obscene descriptions, photographs, or depictions"—is unconstitutional on its face, according to Eugene Volokh, a professor of law at the University of California at Berkeley. "This entire provision is therefore unconstitutionally overbroad and thus invalid on its face, and thus can't be applied even to possession of obscenity in public," Volokh argued in May 2019.
The doctrine of qualified immunity protects certain state actors from accountability for alleged misconduct if the exact way they violated your rights has not been explicitly carved out as unconstitutional in a prior court decision. Though it was supposed to shield government officials only from silly lawsuits, it has instead shielded them from ones with merit, including the more than two-dozen cops who blew up an innocent man's home during a botched SWAT raid on the wrong residence, a cop who conducted an illegal search and ruined a man's car in the process, cops who allegedly stole hundreds of thousands of dollars, and cops who arrested a man on bogus charges after attacking him outside his house. Those who overcome qualified immunity do not win damages as a result; they merely get the opportunity to state their claim before a jury.
This is not the first time a qualified immunity case arose from an alleged breach of the First Amendment. Denver cops affirmatively violated a man's First Amendment rights when they forced him to delete a video of them beating a suspect, a federal court ruled in March. That same court also gave the officers qualified immunity because, though the officers were guilty of violating the man's rights, that right was not "clearly established" at the time, the ruling said.
And the doctrine does not solely apply to police: College administrators at Arkansas State University received qualified immunity after hamstringing a student from recruiting for a conservative political advocacy group. The Supreme Court declined to hear that case, eliciting a scathing rebuke from Justice Clarence Thomas.
Ironically, there was a ruling that may have helped Webb. Nieves v. Bartlett, a 2019 Supreme Court decision, holds that officers may be held liable if they "have probable cause to make arrests, but typically exercise their discretion not to do so." One would assume that applies here, where the officer surely should have exercised his discretion not to make an arrest over a bumper sticker.
Yet in an apt demonstration of how lopsided qualified immunity doctrine is, Judge Howard noted that the Supreme Court handed that particular decision down three weeks after Webb's arrest. "As such," she wrote, "as of the date of Webb's arrest, the right to be free from a retaliatory arrest that was otherwise supported by probable cause was not clearly established."
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"if the Sticker depicted a sexual act, it would be protected speech under the First Amendment only if it had serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value."
"Got your 'artistic value' right here!"
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Sounds like he's advertising a service for the locals. Surely that's got value!
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Perhaps he’s a cannibalism aficionado.
its no Biden painting, but hey - art is in the eye of the beholder i guess
English was just upset at the thought of Webb eating asses *literally*, which would be reducing the availability of his favorite food, which comes out of asses.
All political and legal issues aside, why would anyone choose that as a bumper sticker to put on their car.
“Florida man”
"Oh, very well. I'll swap it out for 'My kid beat up your honor student'!"
“Unaborted Clump of Cells Onboard”
I Narcanned your honor student.
That one I like!
I was an honor student, but I think my parents for never putting one of those stickers on our car.
Well, since there is a shortage of beef and pork, maybe he was promoting donkey meat as an alternative.
Granted that would make it commercial and thus subjecy to regulation, but at least not "obscene" in the eyes of the "know it when I see it crowd in robes.
Never had donkey meat before. Am intrigued. Will mule that over.
I wonder if mule tastes exactly a blend of horse and ass.
It would be an amazing meat flight. Horse, mule, ass. With a flight of wines to pair with it.
Pinto Grigio
and a Pinto Noir
wouldn't that be cannibalism for you E?
If I wasn't mostly sawdust, yeah.
For most large herbivores, if the scent glands and organs are properly removed, the animal's diet affects the taste of the meat more than the species.
I actually thought of that, but then shouldn’t it be, “I eat asses!”
For you, it should be, “I eat crow!”
Why are you such a concern troll?
You must have some pretty boring friends.
Ask Tony.
The Denver cops involved in the beating probably got QI as well. This is the city whose MLB team named their mascot a racial slur…
Judge Marcia Morales Howard. His luck to get a robed lawyer with three names.
At least they weren't apostrophe'd and hyphenated
And that same cop probably has one of those stupid ball sack ornaments hanging off of his pickup's trailer hitch.
Well, since there is a shortage of beef and pork, maybe he was promoting donkey meat as an alternative.
Granted that would make it commercial and thus subject to regulation, but at least not "obscene" in the eyes of the "know it when I see it crowd" in robes.
Hey! I discovered an "edit" feature in the Reason Comments! Albeit, it posts essentially the same message twice plus edits.
At least after the edited version, it looks cleaner, though. The fun you can have exploring!
Huo Jiao Lu
Exceptions for commercial speech...
Yet another unconstitutional power grab.
We gotta quit confirming justices who think "unconstitutional" = "bad policy" and "good policy" = "constitutional". They are not the same thing.
The bill of rights is super simple. It imposes all sorts of unreasonable restrictions on government power. A judges job is to apply the law, not to decide whether it is a good idea.
The first half of what you say is correct. The second half not as much.
"Good policy" does not always equal "Constitutional," but The Bill of Rights and the Reconstruction Amendments were definitely good policy. And their restrictions on Government were very reasonable.
The Knights, Ladies, and Trans Jesters Who Say *N.I.F.F.* also pronounce them very nice and not too expensive!
The Knights Who Say "Ni!" (Our Mideaval Iteration)
https://youtu.be/oas2l8MnyC0
You are impressively unintelligent.
"I TOSS SALAD!" Is that better?
“I Toss Dwarves” the shorthand version
I toss little people salad.
Little Caesar salad?
My state rep tried to ban that. I think Reason did an article on it too.
See worse on license plates around here.
What circle of hell would let you live there?
While looking up at the cars from the ditch after huffing paint thinner?
So it’s likely he posts form on of the computers at the library?
I would go a step further. Anyone who passes or enforces an unconstitutional law should be *personally* liable.
I work in the financial industry and I can be personally liable by the government if I don't follow certain regulations. Not my company, *me*.
If you vote for or enforce something later found to be unconstitutional, no hiding behind the "government". *YOU* should be personally responsible for your actions and be able to be sued or imprisoned.
Libertarian Sci-Fi writer L. Neil Smith had proposed that idea almost exactly. He called it "Bill of Rights Enforcement."
Nah, that only works if the courts are sane. I mean, would you *really* sue or prosecute everyone who passed or enforced the law saying that re-entering the US after being deported is a crime (some judge declared it unconstitutional because he thought there was too much bias when the law was originally passed)?
"But the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida ruled yesterday that the case is not so cut and dry, awarding qualified immunity to English ..."
Would that this quote could be read in the broadest context possible
Volokh is at Berkeley now, is he?
In a pair of closely watched First Amendment cases, this morning the Supreme Court will hear Tennessee v. Anal Polyps for Jesus, followed this afternoon by Missouri v. Satan's Used Foreskin. Oy yea oy yea behold the majesty of this high court.
Can't you prevent ass cancer now by getting the HPV vaccine?
Are those band names? Those 2 together sound like a great lineup.
So are you going to message this guy for a date? I’m sure you got excited by his bumper sticker.
Curious, what about the text of the first amendment excludes protections for obscenities? I presume we're reliant on a long history of poorly written puritanical precedents?
The whole idea of qualified immunity is also a sure. You don't want people filing frivolous lawsuits, make the loser liable for the cost of prosecuting the suit. If they then win it wasn't frivolous.
All of the obscenity laws have been in violation of the constitution. Why stop now.
This is one of the things that drives me nuts. It says "shall make no law".... And the courts invent tests for when they can make a law.
The legislature completely abdicates their responsibility here.. because it fits their need for power. Any judge or justice who joins a ruling that says "compelling government interest" or "rational basis" trumps the black letter law should be immediately impeached.
If you want to ban obscenity, get an amendment that allows such power.
The fact that the law is "unconstitutional on its face" is not exactly relevant to qualified immunity.
If the law actually says that the ass-eating bumper sticker is illegal, or could reasonably be interpreted that way, qualified immunity should attach.
If the legislature and executive and judiciary all failed to comprehend that this was unconstitutional, it is entirely unreasonable to expect the officer to reach that conclusion on the side of the road.
This is exactly what qualified immunity is for. He might still be a dick, but enforcing the law as written is well inside the traditional meaning of qualified immunity, unlike those other eggregiois examples.
Yeah, except it's a stretch to say that the bumper sticker violated the law as written, too. Even if you think it "Depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct...", do you *really* think it is also "material which... The average person, applying contemporary community standards, would find, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest"?
Ah finally a voice of reason.
I'd go further however. Almost all of this article is based on a premise that the law is in fact "unconstitutional on it's face". This is not a fact, but only someone's opinion. Sorry, but the opinion of some law professor in Berkeley is irrelevant in the FL legal system. And in fact, until if and when that law is actually Declared unconstitutional, the law still stands and is enforceable. Good for the judge in this case. While we're all for 1st amendment rights, I don't think there's an actual issue here. I think most average people would read that sticker and come to the conclusion that it was in fact, obscene and depicting a sexual act, therefore not protected free speech.
Too local
Well played...
+1 glib
Yes, he can most certainly can sue, you dumbass, he just cant sue the arresting officer personally
This is where having cops carry liability insurance would be a good thing.
So ima have to draw my libertarian line here. I know what the 1st says, but by our current logic i can project a movie of a horse fucking a woman to death on the side of my house accross from an elementary school. Shit like this is definitely not what the founding fathers were trying to protect.
Even most libertarians accept that private citizens shouldnt own tanks and nukes, but obscenity laws are too progressive? Gtfoh