He Was Arrested for Criticizing the Cops. A Federal Court Says He Can Sue.
Jerry Rogers Jr. complained that police hadn't solved a murder yet—and found himself in a jail cell.

The U.S. Supreme Court declared in 1987 that "the freedom of individuals verbally to oppose or challenge police action without thereby risking arrest" is one of the chief distinctions separating "a free nation from a police state." Some officials apparently needed a reminder about that, and this month the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana provided it.
The court ruled that St. Tammany Parish Sheriff Randy Smith, Chief Danny Culpeper, and Sgt. Keith Canizaro violated clearly established law when they arrested and attempted to publicly humiliate a man for criticizing one of the department's investigations.
Jerry Rogers Jr. became apoplectic with the St. Tammany Parish Sheriff's Office in the years following Nanette Krentel's 2017 murder, which had gone unsolved and remains so. He began speaking with her family via email. His messages didn't sit well with the sheriff's office, which then sought to have Rogers indicted for defamation. The district attorney informed them that this was not constitutional, but Sgt. Canizaro proceeded anyway, obtaining what was arguably an illegal search warrant by citing a crime—"14:00000"—that doesn't exist and arresting Rogers for denouncing them.
The office then sent out a press release before he'd been booked. According to Canizaro's testimony, it had never done this before. It also filed a complaint with Rogers' workplace. According to Sheriff Smith, this had never been done either. The message sent to the community was clear: If you're alleged to have murdered or raped someone, you will receive less public shaming from the St. Tammany Parish Sheriff's Department than if you have the audacity to privately shame them.
When Rogers sued, the officers contended that they are entitled to qualified immunity, a legal doctrine that sometimes allows government actors to avoid lawsuits for infringing on people's rights if there is no prior court precedent that "clearly established" their behavior is unconstitutional. Put differently, the cops in St. Tammany Parish said there was no possible way they could have known what they were doing was a violation of the Constitution, even though the statute they used to arrest him had been declared unconstitutional half a century ago and even though the district attorney told them as much prior to seeking his arrest.
The judges didn't buy it. "This Court finds that no reasonable officer could have believed that probable cause existed where the unconstitutionality of Louisiana's criminal defamation statute as applied to public officials has long been clearly established," wrote Judge Jane Margaret Triche Milazzo, "and where the officers had been specifically warned that the arrest would be unconstitutional." The officers tried to circumvent this conclusion by claiming that, because no prior precedent said that police were public officials, they couldn't have known what they were doing was wrong. This sort of hair-splitting is common in qualified immunity cases, as the doctrine demands an absurd level of specificity. Sometimes it works. This time it didn't.
"Louisiana has seen a repeated, horrific pattern of law enforcement officers responding to criticism with handcuffs," says William Most, Rogers' attorney. "This ruling proves that they can be held accountable for their actions."
That doesn't mean Rogers has won his suit. But it means the claim will be allowed to move forward to a jury should the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit also side with him.
A similar case recently went before the 6th Circuit after Anthony Novak was arrested in Parma, Ohio, for creating a parody Facebook page that satirized the local police department. It was full of tasteless and unsavory humor mocking the town's cops, which led to a trial, an acquittal, and several appeals on the taxpayer dime. That time, the officers received qualified immunity.
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All that is going to do is incentivize cops not to seek the advice of the DA before arresting/charging people.
It might but that would be a monumentally stupid decision by the cops. The court very clearly ruled that the behavior was unconstitutional and had been unambiguously so for nearly 50 years. The "you did it even after asking the DA" was just icing on the cake.
Stupid for whom and to what end? Stupid for people getting arrested for BS non-existent crimes? Of course. Stupid for police accountability? Of course not. If they hadn't asked the DA first and been told "no" then their QI defense would have been, perversely, a lot stronger. Ignorance of the law is no excuse... unless you're the police, then it's the ultimate defense.
The district attorney informed them that this was not constitutional, but Sgt. Canizaro proceeded anyway, obtaining what was arguably an illegal search warrant by citing a crime—"14:00000"—that doesn't exist and arresting Rogers for denouncing them.
Hmm, lot of moving parts here. Can someone get me the phone # for the judge?
"Louisiana has seen a repeated, horrific pattern of law enforcement officers responding to criticism with handcuffs," says William Most, Rogers' attorney.
In some cases, murder. Just FYI.
While not surprising, it is disturbing that the judge would sign a warrant based on a nonexistent statute.
Basically, this proves there is no judicial review. Just a rubber stamp. The judicial branch is supposed to be a check and balance thing, you have to convince a judge what you're doing is proper, legal, and constitutional. This judge obviously abrogated that responsibility.
Yeah, the cops are corrupt pieces of shit in this story (presuming it's as it's been presented) but the whole POINT of the judge signing a warrant is they're supposed to be the check-and-balance to the system. So either the judges are corrupt or incompetent, you have to pick one.
Are incompetence and corruption really mutually exclusive? I suspect their are any number of judges that manage those in parallel quite well.
YES! Getting a warrant is a formality unless of course it is for a rich/powerful person, then it will get some scrutiny.
"Oh, yeah? Well, here's a murder we can solve: yours."
an illegal search warrant by citing a crime—"14:00000"—that doesn't exist
Just because a crime doesn't exist, doesn't mean you haven't committed it. Do you even Louisiana?
This pile of left shit does:
"JasonT20
February.6.2022 at 6:02 pm
“How many officers were there to stop Ashlee Babbitt and the dozens of people behind her from getting into the legislative chamber to do who knows what?...”
Murder as a preventative keeping someone from doing something the lefty shit doesn't like!
"apoplectic" isn't a word you see every day. I like it. It's a good word.
Neither is "garboard". Has nothing to do with this article, I'm just saying.
"apoplectic" was in the article.
That's the most disgusting thing about QI. The fact that government actors don't even face scrutiny. Once you're in the club you're beyond reproach. You passed a background check and now you can do no wrong. Unlike anyone you meet on the street who hasn't had the same background check and training. They're the public. The sheep. You're a wolf dog. Sheep don't tell the wolf dog what to do.
Well at least in This case, the judge decided QI doesn't apply. So they will at least have to face scrutiny. Though if you ask me, it's still not enough, even if he wins. If he wins, the most that will happen is he will be awarded damages. I.E. Money. It's past time that cops, DA's, cheifs of police were held actually accountable personally. In this case, both the chief and his underlings knew they were breaking the law. So why not put them in jail for awhile?
Putting them in jail would require some prosecutor to bring the case. Likely the same prosecutor that is depending on the chief and other cops to win the cases that his/her political career depends on. Or more charitably, to win the cases that put the really bad people away. There are just too many conflicts of interest to expect the police/prosecutors to police themselves. That's why in 1871 Congress created the alternative of a Sec 1983 right to a civil trial in the first place.
That's what I keep saying and people are like "sarc, government people have a duty." I say they're all on the same team. That's why cops literally do whatever they want. I watched a pair of cops go into a pawn shop, go behind the counter, and do some shopping. Who could the shop owner call? The cops? And like you said, a DA who prosecutes criminal cops will be met with cops who refuse to do anything at all. So cops do whatever they want. Who is going to stop them?
The "free" world is barely and I mean barely better than others, this is one reason why it is BARELY.
"qualified immunity" is obviously forbidden by the Equal Protection clause. Any judge that ever let a government goon skate on that pretext should be disbarred.
-jcr
How dare you challenge the knighthood bestowed by El Presidente?
Fascinating, absolutely fascinating.
I remember a conversation with a police commander telling me that he was going to be bring me (at the time the “intake” prosecutor for a county of about 150.000 people) a case for criminal libel, which was an actual offense in the statute book, but one which I thought was clearly unconstitutional. The “victim” was not a police official, but one party to an acrimoniously ended romantic relationship. He looked me straight in the eye and told me he didn’t need my permission to make an arrest, and that they were going to make such an arrest if they could find the suspect, and therefore I would have to explain to the “victim” why I was not going to proceed with the charges.
I saw similar things throughout the years. The police would come to us with an arrest warrant they wanted, and we would say that there was not sufficient evidence. Because our judges would not sign off on a warrant that the prosecutor did not approve, the cops would often say something along the lines that they would go ahead and make a warrantless arrest, book the suspect, and then put it on us to “dismiss” the case and, yes, explain ourselves to the victim (which we were required to do in most cases) or the press.
And we always ended up declining to prosecute, and they always complained to our boss (the elected prosecutor), or tried to embarrass our boss in the press, or both. Good bosses always had our back. But not all were good.
But, but all the defenders tell us how it is just a few bad apples...when it is the whole stinking institution.
Why didn't you prosecute the cops for false arrest?
Another great example in the land of the free of "if you have done nothing wrong you have nothing to worry about."
Just wait until the writers at Reason learn about what has happened to those held in jail due to protesting on January 6th 2021 in D.C. They will be appalled! Books will be written! Funds will be raised. Attorneys will form groups to defend those held in jail for over a year without a trial. It will be an epic defense of Constitutional Rights! I can't wait to see and hear it!
[Still waiting....and waiting....and waiting....]
While we are waiting let me tell you about another major miscarriage of justice. You see, years ago a President of a nation called the United States of America was accused with colluding with a foreign government to "steal" an election and to win it to become President of that great nation. But it turns out, it was all false. You see, the evil queen of D.C. had faked all that evidence and told the nation's biggest and baddest cops that the President was guilty. Since they didn't like the elected President anyway, they were happy to go and pursue him on those charges. They did so for many, many years.......and that nation is no longer great. Daddies and Mommies in that nation have to search everywhere for food to feed their hungry children.
Oh, you don't like this story because you believed the evil Queen and this makes you look stupid as hell?
Well, let me tell you another one that will make you feel better.
Once there was this big fat guy in a red suit who really liked children. He decided that to make the children like him, he would give them presents every year. So he/she/it became a teacher......oh, wait a minute, this is an x-rated story.
Nevermind!
Cops...proving that maybe some riots are justified.
Cops down there still follow the WWHD protocols - What would Huey Long do if they made fun of him?