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First Amendment

A Parodist Asks SCOTUS To Let Him Sue the Cops Who Arrested Him for Making Fun of Them

The 6th Circuit ruled that qualified immunity prevented Anthony Novak from vindicating his First Amendment rights.

Jacob Sullum | 9.28.2022 4:45 PM

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Police arrested Anthony Novak for making fun of them. | Institute for Justice
Anthony Novak (Institute for Justice)

Six years ago, police in Parma, Ohio, arrested Anthony Novak for making fun of them. By creating a parody of the police department's official Facebook page, they alleged, Novak had violated a broadly worded state law against using a computer to "disrupt, interrupt, or impair" police services. After a jury unanimously acquitted Novak of that felony, he sued seven officers for violating his First Amendment rights.

Novak's arrest looked like a clear case of abusing the criminal law to punish someone for constitutionally protected speech. But this year the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit concluded that the officers he sued were protected by qualified immunity, which shields police from liability for violating constitutional rights unless their alleged misconduct ran afoul of "clearly established" law. This week the Institute for Justice asked the Supreme Court to review that decision, warning that the 6th Circuit's application of qualified immunity is a license for blatant violations of the First Amendment.

Novak's Facebook parody, which was live for all of 12 hours, copied the police department's name and profile picture. But the account was listed under "community" pages rather than the designation for government agencies. For readers who might have overlooked that distinction, there were plenty of other clues that the page was an elaborate joke. Novak changed the department's motto from "We know crime" to "We no crime," for example, and his six posts were flagrantly farcical.

One post announced "our official stay inside and catch up with the family day," during which anyone venturing outside between noon and 9 p.m. would be arrested. Another described a "Pedophile Reform event" where any participant who visited all of the "learning stations," including a "'no means no' station filled with puzzles and quizzes," would be "removed from the sex offender registry and accepted as an honorary police officer." A job notice said anyone who passed a "15 question multiple choice definition test followed by a hearing test" would be "be accepted as an officer" but added that the department "is strongly encouraging minorities to not apply."

The page noted the robbery of a local Subway outlet by a white man while seeking the public's assistance in apprehending an "African American woman" who was wanted for loitering in front of the sandwich shop during the robbery. Another post warned Parma residents about a new law that barred them "from giving ANY HOMELESS person food, money, or shelter in our city for 90 days"—a measure aimed at encouraging "the homeless population" to "leave our city due to starvation." An announcement offered teenagers abortions, to be performed in a van in the parking lot of a local supermarket "using an experimental technique discovered by the Parma Police Department."

Eleven Facebook users called the police department's nonemergency line about Novak's spoof, which was the basis for the claim that he had disrupted police operations. When the case was presented to a grand jury, Detective Thomas Connor claimed the callers "honest to God believed" that Novak's creation was the department's official page. But when Novak sued Connor and six other officers, the Institute for Justice notes in its Supreme Court petition, "Connor admitted at deposition that none of the callers thought that."

After a federal judge declined to dismiss Novak's lawsuit, a three-judge panel of the 6th Circuit agreed that the case should proceed. "When it comes to parody," Judge Amul Thapar wrote in that 2019 decision, "the law requires a reasonable reader standard, not a 'most gullible person on Facebook' standard. The First Amendment does not depend on whether everyone is in on the joke. Neither is it bothered by public disapproval, whether tepid or red-hot."

Regardless of what the public or the police thought about Novak's humor, the 6th Circuit concluded, "Novak has alleged enough facts that a reasonable jury could find that his page was a parody" protected by the First Amendment. The court added that "whether the police had probable cause to arrest Novak is an issue of fact" that had not yet been resolved.

"If the officers did not have probable cause, they are not entitled to qualified immunity, and Novak can attempt to show the arrest was retaliatory," Thapar wrote. "If the officers did have probable cause, they are entitled to qualified immunity even if Novak's page was protected speech because the law at the time did not clearly establish that charging Novak under the statute would violate his constitutional rights."

Three years later, in another opinion by Thapar, the 6th Circuit saw things differently. At that point, the trial court had granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment, concluding that the officers were protected by qualified immunity. The appeals court agreed.

Thapar, who previously seemed to think it was obvious that Novak's Facebook page qualified as parody, cited two reasons for questioning that conclusion. Novak had deleted comments describing the page as fake, which he thought ruined the joke, and had reposted a police department warning about the ersatz account, which he thought made the joke funnier. "Whether these actions—deleting comments that made clear the page was fake and reposting the Department's warning message—are protected speech is a difficult question," Thapar averred. "But while probable cause here may be difficult, qualified immunity is not."

The officers "reasonably found probable cause in an unsettled case judges can debate," Thapar said in that 2022 decision. "Indeed, Novak has not identified a case that clearly establishes deleting comments or copying the official warning is protected speech….The officers could reasonably believe that some of Novak's Facebook activity was not parody, not protected, and fair grounds for probable cause."

The 6th Circuit noted that the cops were not alone in reaching that conclusion. "Both the City's Law Director and the judges who issued the warrants agreed with them," Thapar wrote. "Reassurance from no fewer than three other officials further supports finding that the officers 'reasonably,' even if 'mistakenly,' concluded that probable cause existed."

The agreement that Thapar saw as reassuring from the officers' perspective is deeply disconcerting for anyone who recognizes the threat posed by arresting people for criticizing the police. "Granting the officers qualified immunity does not mean their actions were justified or should be condoned," Thapar wrote. "Indeed, it is cases like these when government officials have a particular obligation to act reasonably. Was Novak's Facebook page worth a criminal prosecution, two appeals, and countless hours of Novak's and the government's time? We have our doubts. And from the beginning, any one of the officials involved could have allowed 'the entire story to turn out differently,' simply by saying 'No.' Unfortunately, no one did."

Decisions like this one are unlikely to encourage such caution. To the contrary, they imply that police officers who pursue petty vendettas under the cloak of law enforcement need not worry much about the possibility that their victims will try to hold them accountable. As a legal matter, the 6th Circuit said, the cops acted reasonably in arresting Novak. At the same time, it implied that their actions were clearly unreasonable. Something has gone terribly wrong when legal conclusions are so divorced from reality.

As the Institute for Justice notes in its petition, the appeals court's decision deepens a circuit split on the interaction between qualified immunity and well-established First Amendment principles:

The Fifth, Ninth, and Tenth Circuits hold that general First Amendment principles provide government officials fair warning that they cannot punish individuals for exercising their speech rights. In those circuits, protected speech cannot provide the sole basis for probable cause, and a plaintiff need not identify an earlier decision addressing the specific speech at issue. The Sixth, Eighth, and Eleventh Circuits hold, on the other hand, that probable cause from broad interpretations of vague criminal statutes supports qualified immunity and renders the First Amendment irrelevant unless an earlier case clearly establishes that the specific speech at issue is protected. As a result, police in those circuits may arrest and jail someone for criticizing the government, and they cannot be sued for doing so.

This case illustrates how difficult it is for victims of police abuse to get their day in court when qualified immunity is interpreted to require prior decisions with nearly identical facts. The 6th Circuit complained that Novak "has not identified a case that clearly establishes deleting comments or copying the official warning is protected speech." Without such a highly specific precedent, it concluded, Novak could not even attempt to persuade a jury that his rights had been violated.

That sort of demand can be impossible to satisfy even for plaintiffs who have suffered outrageous abuses. It is especially troubling in the First Amendment context, where the mere possibility of criminal charges has a chilling effect on protected speech.

In his 2019 opinion, Thapar noted the danger posed by statutes as vague as Ohio's law against disruption of police operations. "Taken at face value, the Ohio law seems to criminalize speech well in the heartland of First Amendment protection," he wrote. "This broad reach gives the police cover to retaliate against all kinds of speech under the banner of probable cause. Critical online comments, mail-in or phone bank campaigns, or even informational websites that incite others to 'disrupt' or 'interrupt' police operations could violate the law."

The Supreme Court has recognized that constitutional violations can be so obvious that precedents directly on point are not necessary to overcome qualified immunity. The Institute for Justice is urging the Court to take that approach in this case, assuming that it is not ready to reconsider qualified immunity in general.

"Anthony Novak was arrested, jailed, and prosecuted because he made fun of his local police department on Facebook," says Institute for Justice attorney Patrick Jaicomo. "Razzing police isn't a crime; it's protected by the First Amendment. In fact, parodies like those Anthony posted have an American history going back to the time of George Washington. The Supreme Court should make it clear that qualified immunity cannot protect police officers who punish people for exercising the freedom of speech."

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Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason. He is the author, most recently, of Beyond Control: Drug Prohibition, Gun Regulation, and the Search for Sensible Alternatives (Prometheus Books, September 2).

First AmendmentFree SpeechQualified ImmunityPolice AbuseSearch and SeizureFourth AmendmentCriminal JusticeOhioFacebookSocial MediaSupreme CourtInstitute for Justice
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  1. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

    That's nothing. I heard of a bunch of jokers that put up a parody libertarian website filled with a bunch of pro-left articles.

    1. sarcasmic   3 years ago (edited)

      So true. Reason is always pro-left. Never criticized the current administration. Ever. You're so astute and observant.

      1. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

        You of all people should know that sarcasm sometimes requires the suspension of certain facts.

        1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

          I try not to be a dick to my host.

          1. eva295foster   3 years ago (edited)

            I work from home providing various internet services for an hourly rate of $80 USD. I never thought it would be possible, but my trustworthy friend persuaded (emu-03) me to take the opportunity after telling me how she quickly earned 13,000 dollars in just four weeks while working on the greatest project. Go to this article for more information.
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      2. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

        Ideas!

        1. Ted   3 years ago

          Reason is literally he should change his handle to ‘Bitchy Drunk’.

      3. Carey Allison   3 years ago

        For some reason, I suspect Sarcasmic is again being sarcastic while his statement on the surface is factual.

    2. Legend1984   3 years ago

      I don’t get why a podiatrist is getting all of this attention. After all feet are feet.

  2. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   3 years ago

    I sometimes think law could be immensely simplified and much more just if it were based on three principles:

    Show financial harm, whether from theft, lost wages, medical bills, or whatever. Actual measurable financial harm.

    The harm must be from original sin. Rumors may be harmful; repeating them is not.

    Consequences must have been foreseeable. If you mug an old lady who dies of a heart attack, that is foreseeable. If you still a 10-year old's lunch money and he dies of a heart attack, only the theft is a crime.

    But then I laugh at my naiveté. Can you imagine lawyers and politicians signing on for anything simpler when their whole goal is full employment for lawyers and politicians?

    1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

      Q) What's the difference between a road-killed lawyer and a road-killed skunk?

      A) Skid marks. Before the skunk.

      1. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

        Q) What do you call 500 lawyers at the bottom of the ocean?

        A) Oceanic pollution as a result of climate change.

        1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

          Q) Why do lawyers play football?

          A) To get the quarter back.

          1. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

            I assume they all play for the Bills.

            1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

               

              1. Ted   3 years ago

                That’s the smartest thing you’ve ever said.

          2. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   3 years ago

            I thought that was accountants!

    2. mad.casual   3 years ago (edited)
      1. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

        TLDR

        1. mad.casual   3 years ago

          I can't believe I the whole post.

      2. sarcasmic   3 years ago

         

        1. MatthewSlyfield   3 years ago

          This comment intentionally left blank.

          1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

            Yeah, what's up with that.

    3. Dillinger   3 years ago

      >>Rumors may be harmful; repeating them is not.

      pretty sure bearing false witness includes gossip.

      1. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   3 years ago

        Who'd you hear that from?!?

    4. kevrob   3 years ago

      ...original sin....???!!!!

      WTF?

    5. Davedave   3 years ago

      I mean, the things you mention are pretty much how the law works. There are some other bits and pieces too, like basic fairness, reasonableness, etc.

      The only bit you have 'wrong', such as it is, is that repeating harmful rumours is, or can be, harmful. But it isn't always, which is why it's often permitted by the law. Depends on a reasonable assessment of the consequences, like you want it to.

  3. mad.casual   3 years ago (edited)

    As a legal matter, the 6th Circuit said, the cops acted reasonably in arresting Novak. At the same time, it implied that their actions were clearly unreasonable. Something has gone terribly wrong when legal conclusions are so divorced from reality.

    Oh, huh. So, uh, any thoughts on the seizure of classified documents related to the crime of possessing classified documents who’s classified status is immaterial to the case?

    1. Stuck in California   3 years ago

      I got this one.

      Orange man bad. So, it's OK there.

      1. SQRLSY One   3 years ago

        Orange Man bad?!? He BAD, all right! He SOOO BAD, He be GOOD! He be GREAT! He Make America Great Again!

        We KNOW He can Make America Great Again, because, as a bad-ass businessman, He Made Himself and His Family Great Again! He Pussy Grabber in Chief!

        See The Atlantic article https://feedreader.com/observe/theatlantic.com/politics%252Farchive%252F2016%252F10%252Fdonald-trump-scandals%252F474726%252F%253Futm_source%253Dfeed/+view
        “The Many Scandals of Donald Trump: A Cheat Sheet” or this one…

        https://reason.com/2019/09/02/republicans-choose-trumpism-over-property-rights-and-the-rule-of-law/

        He pussy-grab His creditors in 6 bankruptcies, His illegal sub-human workers ripped off of pay on His building projects, and His “students” in His fake Get-Rich-like-Me realty schools, and so on. So, He has a GREAT record of ripping others off! So SURELY He can rip off other nations, other ethnic groups, etc., in trade wars and border wars, for the benefit of ALL of us!!!

        All Hail to THE Pussy Grabber in Chief!!!

        Most of all, HAIL the Chief, for having revoked karma! What comes around, will no longer go around!!! The Donald has figured out that all of the un-Americans are SOOO stupid, that we can pussy-grab them all day, every day, and they will NEVER think of pussy-grabbing us right back!

        Orange Man Bad-Ass Pussy-Grabber all right!

        We CAN grab all the pussy, all the time, and NONE will be smart enough to EVER grab our pussies right back!

        These voters simply cannot or will not recognize the central illusion of politics… You can pussy-grab all of the people some of the time, and you can pussy-grab some of the people all of the time, but you cannot pussy-grab all of the people all of the time! Sooner or later, karma catches up, and the others will pussy-grab you right back!

    2. EdG   3 years ago

      Sounds good, bro. Except it's factually wrong. The docs weren't seized because they were classified, but instead because they were supposed to be turned over by Trump when he left office.

  4. sarcasmic   3 years ago

     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     
     

    1. SQRLSY One   3 years ago

      That's a TOTALLY astute imitation of an air-headed hyper-partisan... Of EITHER side! "Blather without content, assertions without data or thought. And still the man hears what he wants to hear, and disregards the rest."

  5. Liberty_Belle   3 years ago

    Is not the first amendment "well established" ? How many more farces must we endure before we are rid of QI ? Can we at least turn it back around so that it has to be actively invoked in front of a judge instead of defaulted to ? (LIke our 5th amendment rights used to be before this SCOTUS)

    1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

      Yeah, I'm not sure what part of this was NOT a violation of "clearly established law".

      To be fair, I haven't read the case details, and once again, judges (at least try) to rule on the "narrowest grounds". So maybe the court didn't see it as a first amendment issue- or perhaps the way the lawsuit was filed complicated things.

  6. JasonAZ   3 years ago

    Is it really asking TOO much for cops to know the law they're required to enforce and the US Constitution? Maybe just the first 10 amendments?

    1. SRG   3 years ago

      The answer appears to be, yes.

  7. Chuck P. (The Artist formerly known as CTSP)   3 years ago

    Thapar, who previously seemed to think it was obvious that Novak's Facebook page qualified as parody

    Yeah, but that was before someone Tweeted that he was a humorless asshat who wore a dress to work.

  8. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

    test

    1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

       
       
       
      Testes... One... Two...
       
       
       

  9. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

    Ok, Reason ate my comment. Not sure what happened there.

    Anyhoo, yeah, it seems the 6th Circuit is really splitting hairs here.

    To meet his burden, Novak argues that Riley and Connor violated his clearly established
    right to be free from retaliatory arrest. He suggests the arrest was retaliatory because the officers
    based it on his Facebook page—which he argues is parody protected under the First Amendment.
    But there’s no recognized right to be free from a retaliatory arrest that is supported by probable
    cause. See Reichle v. Howards, 566 U.S. 658, 663 (2012). So to prevail on his claim, Novak
    must show it was clearly established that the officers lacked probable cause to arrest him.
    Because he hasn’t done so, the officers are entitled to qualified immunity.
    Start with the basics. For probable cause to exist, “the facts and circumstances known to
    the officer” must be sufficient to lead a “prudent man” to believe an offense has been committed.
    Logsdon v. Hains, 492 F.3d 334, 341 (6th Cir. 2007) (citation omitted). So here, we look to
    whether a reasonable officer would believe each element of Ohio’s disruption statute was met.
    Specifically, that Novak (1) used the computer or Internet (2) to “disrupt” or “interrupt” police
    operations and (3) did so knowingly. See Ohio Rev. Code § 2909.04(B).
    No one contests that Novak used a computer and the Internet to create his knockoff page.
    And the officers believed that Novak’s page had “disrupted” their operations. They knew the
    call center had received multiple calls about the page, and the statute imposes no lower bound on
    how much disruption is required. So the officers could reasonably believe that the calls
    constituted a disruption. As to the knowledge element, the officers were permitted to rely on
    No. 21-3290 Anthony Novak v. City of Parma, Ohio Page 5
    inferences. See United States v. Tagg, 886 F.3d 579, 587 (6th Cir. 2018). Here, the officers
    inferred that Novak knew he was disrupting operations from his decisions to repost the
    Department’s warning post on his own page and to delete comments that explained the page was
    fake.

    So for those who don't want to read the wall of text, the court has essentially said that a "retaliatory arrest that has 'probable cause'" is not sufficient to overcome the Qualified Immunity burden.

    It goes on from there.

    1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

      However, it appears that Mr. Novak was definitely pushing boundaries here:

      Novak argues that the officers’ probable-cause determination is based solely on protected
      speech. Appellant’s Br. 45; see Novak, 932 F.3d at 431 (“The sole basis for probable cause to
      arrest Novak was his speech.”). Whether Novak’s satirical posts were protected parody is a
      question of fact. Novak, 932 F.3d at 428. But Novak didn’t just post fake event advertisements
      mocking the police department. He also modeled his page after the Department’s, using the
      same profile picture. He deleted comments that let on his page wasn’t the official one. And
      when the Department tried to clarify that Novak’s page was imitating its own, he copied the
      official page’s clarification post word for word

      1. heraclitus   3 years ago

        Yeah, that behavior was mentioned in the Reason article above too, though they attempt to excuse it.

        "Thapar, who previously seemed to think it was obvious that Novak's Facebook page qualified as parody, cited two reasons for questioning that conclusion. Novak had deleted comments describing the page as fake, which he thought ruined the joke, and had reposted a police department warning about the ersatz account, which he thought made the joke funnier."

        While I hate Qualified Immunity and I think it needs to be completely gutted, in this case, I do think the officers had a reasonable case to say they were acting under the statute as written. One can't have it both ways: "I'm making a joke, but if anyone points out it's a joke, I'll delete those comments." I mean, I get that Novak thought it made things funnier, but it's also reasonable for police at that point to think that Novak DOESN'T want his page to be taken as a joke -- that it actually was an attempt at disinformation.

        I mean, take police out of the equation for a moment and consider if this were a different parody case -- say, over copyright. Someone posts a parody of a well-known children's book filled with explicit sex acts. Some people begin to link the parody acting like it's the real book and complaining about it. Normally, a parody is protected against copyright claims through the First Amendment, but if people can reasonably start to think that the parody is claiming to BE the original, there are issues of fraud and whether the copyrighted elements fall under "fair use." But all of this wouldn't be a serious question if the parody had prominent disclaimers saying "This is a parody." Yet if it doesn't, and people start posting comments about the joke, and the author of the parody deletes them, at what point do we say the parody author may actually be engaged in disingenuous conduct? I'm not saying it's a clear line, but at some point it may step over a line legally.

        And with the police in this case, the statute didn't create a clear line.

        Of course, none of this warrants an arrest, perhaps. (And certainly not further prosecution once all the facts had been obtained, which is questionable state action but not part of the QI claim.) But is an arrest a reasonable action **under the statute as written**? Frankly, I think so. If anything, Novak's remedy here should be complaining about a vaguely-worded law.

        And therefore I actually don't like the idea of SCOTUS taking this case, because I don't see this as anywhere near the slam dunk against QI that Reason seems to think. This case is murky, and it could easily end up with SCOTUS reinforcing QI in ways that make it harder to overturn in the future. There are hundreds of other completely unreasonable police actions that I'd rather see going to SCOTUS to undermine QI.

        All of that said, Novak maybe has merit in his case on other claims -- under his Fourth Amendment claims about procedural elements and the prior restraint element. But the QI one seems the weakest to me, just from skimming the ruling.

    2. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   3 years ago

      I recommend people view the entire ruling.

      I'd actually like to see the SCOTUS rule on this one.

  10. Sometimes a Great Notion   3 years ago

    "Connor admitted at deposition that none of the callers thought that."

    So he's awaiting trial for perjury, right?

    Fuck this, perjury should immediately end any claim of qi.

    1. heraclitus   3 years ago

      Just noting that if you read the entire ruling, the judge says that caller transcripts indicate that some callers DID think the parody site might be real.

      I think the truth therefore probably lies somewhere in the middle. Some of the callers were probably calling to FIND OUT whether the page was real. That is, they DID believe it might be real. Whether they in fact were certain they were real is a more difficult question, and Connor was probably forced in deposition to admit that he couldn't state to any certainty that any of them truly believed it to be real. (Without seeing the exact quotes from the deposition, it's difficult to know how this line of questioning panned out.)

      I'm not at all excusing Connor, or the police here, mind you. Just noting that a perjury case could be difficult to make here depending on what exactly the call transcripts indicate and what precisely Connor said.

  11. Mike Laursen   3 years ago

    https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/3665014-judge-tosses-sidney-powells-countersuit-against-dominion-voting-systems/

    “Powell’s complaint fails to link her abuse-of-process claim to any act that Dominion has taken other than filing and pursuing its lawsuit,” wrote Nichols, who was appointed to the federal district court in D.C. by former President Trump. “She has thus failed to state a claim for abuse of process.”

  12. John C. Randolph   3 years ago

    "Qualified immunity" is obviously unconstitutional per the equal protection clause, but the only way we'll get rid of it is with the woodchipper.

    -jcr

  13. Master   3 years ago

    I am an expert on this subject...but it doesn't matter because the judges usually aren't and side with protecting the system 99% of the time. People groan when I point out they don't have any rights... because they are just as ignorant.

  14. TangoDelta   3 years ago

    "Both the City's Law Director and the judges who issued the warrants agreed with them,"

    Well yes that's because the Law director and judges don't actually give a shit and take what their 'protectors' say at face value without thinking or using even a modicum of rationality. Basically, it's "the cops said so and I'm not going to actually read through all this standard bullshit, therefore it must be true - QED".

  15. WCPlace   3 years ago

    It is way past time to end qualified immunity, the evidence is overwhelming that law enforcement can no longer be trusted with such an awesome power! Of course the courts can't either!

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