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Police

Homeless Veteran Sues Police After Service Dog Tased During Panhandling Arrest

Joshua Rohrer not only seeks damages for his violent arrest but also wants the city's anti-panhandling ordinance overturned on First Amendment grounds.

C.J. Ciaramella | 7.17.2023 2:54 PM

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dog | Photo 75964884 © Ritmoboxer | Dreamstime.com
(Photo 75964884 © Ritmoboxer | Dreamstime.com)

A homeless military veteran whose service dog was tased by North Carolina police officers and later died has filed a federal civil rights lawsuit. 

Reason reported in 2021 on the case of Joshua Rohrer, who was arrested by two police officers in Gastonia, North Carolina, for panhandling after a 911 caller complained that he was "using this dog to make people feel sorry for [him]." When Rohrer argued that he wasn't doing anything illegal, the officers tackled him and tased his service dog, Sunshine. Sunshine ran away and was later hit by a car.

"They laughed at me," Rohrer told Army Times, recounting the officers' reaction to his distress.

Prosecutors later dropped charges against Rohrer for panhandling and resisting arrest. Now Rohrer, who has service-related post-traumatic stress disorder, is suing, arguing that the violent arrest violated his First and Fourth Amendment rights, as well as the Americans with Disabilities Act.

In addition, the suit alleges that the Gastonia Police Department and city officials made hundreds of false and defamatory comments on Facebook about Rohrer in retaliation for speaking out following his arrest. For example, the police department repeatedly posted that Rohrer had agreed to take a plea deal before the charges were dropped. The suit argues that by posting about Rohrer's plea deal, which ultimately never happened, the department not only smeared Rohrer as guilty but also accessed and published details from his sealed case file.

"The daily barrage and high volume of these posts, the specific targeting of Mr. Rohrer, and the fact that they reveal confidential information demonstrate a pattern of harassment that would chill a reasonable person from exercising their First Amendment rights," the suit reads.

The lawsuit seeks punitive and compensatory damages, as well as an injunction against the city's panhandling ordinance, which it argues is facially unconstitutional under the First Amendment.

Towns frequently use overly broad panhandling ordinances to crack down on begging and roust homeless people, despite numerous court decisions upholding a general First Amendment right to ask others for money in a public space. For example, earlier this year the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE), a First Amendment nonprofit, filed a lawsuit on behalf of a man who was harassed by police for holding a sign that read, "God Bless Homeless Vets."

In one of the many Facebook posts about Rohrer's case, the Gastonia Police Department wondered: "If this is such a clear violation against the Constitution and civil rights, there should have been several attorneys willing to take this case pro-bono right? But yet, that hasn't happened. Perhaps you should ask Mr. Rohrer why [he] hasn't pursued anything further."

The department now has its answer. Rohrer is represented by the Guidry law firm and by the Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection (ICAP) at Georgetown University.

"Mr. Rohrer has been—and continues to be—targeted by the Gastonia police for his constitutionally protected speech, from standing on a median accepting donations from passersby to protesting government misconduct and calling for accountability in the wake of his arrest," ICAP senior counsel Joseph Mead said in a press release. "This case is about ensuring that even members of the most vulnerable populations in our society—including people with disabilities or without housing—will be protected from government overreach and retaliation."

A spokesperson for the City of Gastonia declined to comment, citing the pending litigation.

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NEXT: DOJ Opens Probe Into Jail Where Inmate Died Covered in Insects

C.J. Ciaramella is a reporter at Reason.

PoliceFirst AmendmentHomelessnessPolice AbuseNorth CarolinaFourth Amendment
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  1. Chumby   2 years ago

    Mayor Walker E. Reid III (D)

    1. Jerry B.   2 years ago

      Yep. The party of (assaulting) the people.

      1. JulianColeman   2 years ago (edited)

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    2. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

      As what I dub myself, "A Self-Hating Gastonian," I can vouch for what a dump this Mayor and past Mayors have made of this City.

  2. Leo Kovalensky II   2 years ago

    In addition, the suit alleges that the Gastonia Police Department and city officials made hundreds of false and defamatory comments on Facebook about Rohrer in retaliation for speaking out following his arrest.

    Good, now I have a Facebook page to troll the rest of the afternoon.

    1. dogot282   2 years ago (edited)

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  3. sarcasmic   2 years ago

    "They laughed at me," Rohrer told Army Times, recounting the officers' reaction to his distress.

    Of course they did. They know how they'd feel if one of their dogs was killed, so they're rubbing it in.

    1. LauraHansen   2 years ago (edited)

      I quit working at shoprite and now I make $65-85 per/h.I’m working online! My work didn’t exactly make me happy so I decided to take a chance on something new… after 4 years it was so hard to quit my day job but now I couldn’t be happier.

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  4. Liberty_Belle   2 years ago (edited)

    who was arrested by two police officers in Gastonia, North Carolina, for panhandling after a 911 caller complained that he was “using this dog to make people feel sorry for [him].”

    And what business is that of yours ? Leave people alone.

    1. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

      “using this dog to make people feel sorry for [him].”

      To be fair, he's doing that now.

      Boom.

      1. Eeyore   2 years ago

        You use the tools you have.

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    3. Chumby   2 years ago

      Panhandler Hounds Pedestrians with Dog

  5. A Cynical Asshole   2 years ago

    Homeless Veteran Sues Police After Service Dog Tased During Panhandling Arrest

    He should just be glad they didn't shoot his dog. I'll assume the cop was going for his gun but grabbed the taser by mistake.

    1. Wizard4169   2 years ago

      The dog is dead and the officers went home safely. It's all good.

  6. Public Entelectual   2 years ago

    Has Reason licensed the National Lampoon's
    "Donate or we shoot the dog." campaign?

  7. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   2 years ago

    So I'm hearing that the Biden administration is claiming the Ukrainian offensive would have been a success had it not been for Russian defense.

    1. Nazi-Chipping Warlock   2 years ago

      Well, if Russia would just go home, the Ukrainians could easily retake the ground they just seeded with cluster bomblets.

      1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

        Just remember: Putin is never an agent in any of this mess, always someone acted upon by everybody else. Putin's second-banana anthem next to The Internationale is:

        "Blame It On Midnight, Shame On The Moon."
        https://youtu.be/XUl-83PSZks

    2. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

      Funny, Nardz would make such a factually and morally inverted statement too.

  8. VULGAR MADMAN   2 years ago

    Gastonia is the armpit of the south.

    1. THX1138   2 years ago

      Gastonia is a town stuck in the middle. Charlotte makes fun of them because they eat squirrel, and Shelby laughs because they don't know how to cook it.

      1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

        Squirrel? Well, if that's the case, it's an upgrade and it's news to this here Self-Hating Gastonian.
        😉

        40 years ago, Gastonia had Road-Weary Brand Potted Possum™ on the shelves of it's convenience stores.

        (Ackshuyally, the label ingredients said it was Textured Vegetable Protein (TVP) which means it was doctored-up Soy. It was also used in Survival Rations sold in Soldier of Fortune Magazine Evidently, this was an early secret experiment by "The New World Order" in creating Soy Boys, with sadly a large measure of success for the researchers. )
        🙂

    2. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

      No, no, no. As A Self-Hating Gastonian, I can tell you that Gastonia is not The Armpit of the South...Gastonia is The Sweaty, Moldy Jock Strap on the Bible Belt of the South!
      🙂

  9. Honest Economics   2 years ago

    For sound economic perspective go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/

    1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

      Unless you have an article on how to turn Gastonia from a One-Horse, Hick-Burg, shell of a dead textile town to a Libertopian Paradise, Hell, no!

  10. LauraHansen   2 years ago (edited)

    I quit working at shoprite and now I make $65-85 per/h.I’m working online! My work didn’t exactly make me happy so I decided to take a chance on something new… after 4 years it was so hard to quit my day job but now I couldn’t be happier.

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  11. MWAocdoc   2 years ago (edited)

    Although the First Amendment is a very important guarantee of our right to free speech, freedom of the press and freedom to assemble, it doesn’t cover nearly as much ground as the court has tried to allege over the decades. For example, just because you have the right to hold opinions and to speak or print and distribute them doesn’t mean you can stand in the middle of a street and stop automobile traffic while speaking. You also do not have the right to stand outside someone’s home at 1 AM and speak your opinions through a bull horn. While you might have the right to ask for money as you walk by people on the sidewalk, you do not have the right to block them or intimidate them or assault them in the process or to camp out there. Just as government officials frequently abuse their power, citizens can abuse their rights.

    1. Jefferson's Ghost   2 years ago

      "Although the First Amendment is a very important guarantee of our right to free speech, freedom of the press and freedom to assemble, it doesn’t cover nearly as much ground as the court has tried to allege over the decades."

      To the best of my knowledge, the courts (at least in general), have not sanctioned any of the particular activities you mention, interfering with others right to travel on the sidewalk, etc. Many localities do have laws specifically aimed at "aggressive" panhandling. I don't see any of that in as a bearing in this particular case.

      I used to live in CA, and the local city decided to pass a law making it illegal to handout money to homeless folks on the street. A SF Bay Area City once tried to outlaw giving food to the homeless -- specifically sandwiches distributed during the holiday season by a church. Both laws were withdrawn before the courts had to get directly involved.

      The world has been dealing with homelessness (indigents) long before there were cities and towns and governments. There may be a way to reduce it, but it will never be absent.

    2. Wizard4169   2 years ago

      Best I can tell, this guy's most antisocial act was "using a dog to make people feel sorry for him".

    3. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

      I agree with you that exercising the right to free expression should be compatible with the equal individual rights of others to sleep, to travel freely, and to use their private property as they see fit. I frequently have railed here against religious pamphleteers giving out their literature in the store where I work without management consent.

      Although I have never met Joshua Rohrer, the things you mentioned do not appear to be the gravement of this case. This is a case of Gastonia Police compensating for their ham-handedness in fighting real crime with real victims--which Gastonia has by the shitload--by picking an easy target in a homeless man. The Police clearly picked wrong and the City deserves all the litigation they get.

    4. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

      I agree with you that exercising the right to free expression should be compatible with the equal individual rights of others to sleep, to travel freely, and to use their private property as they see fit. I frequently have railed here against religious pamphleteers giving out their literature in the store where I work without management consent.

      Although I have never met Joshua Rohrer, the things you mentioned do not appear to be the gravement of this case. This is a case of Gastonia Police compensating for their ham-handedness in fighting real crime with real victims--which Gastonia has by the shitload--by picking an easy target in a homeless man. The Police clearly picked wrong and the City deserves all the litigation they get and Taxpayers should kick them all out for bringing that burden upon them.

    5. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

      I agree with you that exercising the right to free expression should be compatible with the equal individual rights of others to sleep, to travel freely, and to use their private property as they see fit. I frequently have railed here against religious pamphleteers giving out their literature in the store where I work without management consent.

      Although I have never met Joshua Rohrer, the things you mentioned do not appear to be the gravement of this case. This is a case of Gastonia Police compensating for their ham-handedness in fighting real crime with real victims--which Gastonia has by the shitload--by picking an easy target in a homeless man. The Police clearly picked wrong and the City deserves all the litigation it gets and Taxpayers should kick out the whole lot in City Hall for bringing that burden upon them.

    6. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

      Sorry for the repeat posts. The comment section is fidgety on posting.

      This reminds me of the old kid's joke:

      Peat and Repeat are sitting on a log. Peat fell off. Who's left?
      🙂

      1. MWAocdoc   2 years ago

        🙂

  12. Eeyore   2 years ago

    It is time to disarm the police. This includes tasers and clubs.

  13. Earth-based Human Skeptic   2 years ago

    Don't like unpleasant things in the public commons? Then eliminate the public commons.

    1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

      This too, as always.

    2. MWAocdoc   2 years ago

      Well, it does raise the question of whether the sidewalk outside a store in a city is a "commons." Libertarians are very good at oversimplifying complex realities. I think that private property should include the store and the sidewalk in front of it, but it pushes the principle involved one step further - who owns the street, who owns the building that the store is in, what is the store owner's remedy if a homeless person panhandles on her sidewalk, etc etc etc etc

      1. Its_Not_Inevitable   2 years ago

        Is/ought. It ought to be private property. It is public.

      2. pound_hash   2 years ago

        "Libertarians are very good at oversimplifying complex realities."

        Haha, bingo! I'm trying to write a story at the moment that centers on this fact.

        And I'm homeless.

  14. Sympatica   2 years ago

    Gastonia Police Department is a good example of why so many people want to defund the police. What a bunch of jerks.

    1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

      What I would say is defund these individual police involved in instances of oppression and brutality, but replace them with police thoroughly schooled in The U.S. Constitution and The Bill of Rights and loyal to the ideals of Individual Rights and Limited Government.

    2. MWAocdoc   2 years ago (edited)

      “Defunding” the police isn’t actually a thing! It’s a slogan, and not a very good one at that. It’s an emotional response to police abuse. The remedy for police committing crimes is to investigate, charge, try and convict police who commit crimes. Police abuse has several clearly identifiable historic causes, none of which is relevant to the problem at hand. Contributing factors include “community policing” under the “broken window” theory; big city corruption and police union power and the resultant tolerance of official crimes; and the wars on drugs and poverty and hundreds or thousands of victimless “crimes” like jaywalking, prostitution, gambling, selling loose cigarettes etc etc etc

      1. Its_Not_Inevitable   2 years ago

        Plus, power attracts the corrupt who want power. A job that allows one to be a thug attracts thugs.

  15. Polaris   2 years ago

    Literally the ONLY thing I wanted to know in this story was whether Sunshine was okay or not. "Sunshine ran away and was later hit by a car," doesn't necessarily mean it was fatal. Unfortunately, in this case, it was. RIP Sunshine.

    1. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

      Indeed. Veterans have some beautiful service doggies, all well-groomed and trained to be well-behaved. One Veteran that comes in the store where I work has an English Mastiff puppy that is big enough to ride little kids on his back. Full grown, it would be 6 Feet in height! Majestic!

    2. David Jay   2 years ago

      You are right. Deeply sad.

  16. JeremyR   2 years ago

    This is bad, and presumably a case of the cop accidentally mistaking his taser for his gun (since they usually shoot dogs, not tase them), but a big part of the problem is the cops being called in the first place.

    People need to understand that any time they call the police, the result can be dead people. They only need to call them in a real emergency. Police are a necessary evil.

  17. TheReEncogitationer   2 years ago

    I'm just wondering where Rev. Artie is. If ever a place met his stereotype of slack-jawed, bitter-clinging, knuckle-dragging, can't-keep-uppers, it is Gastonia, NC. Having lived their most of my life, I would have to agree with him on this one instance.

    1. Its_Not_Inevitable   2 years ago

      Ha! You would think it would be one of the first places they would be "replaced" with their "betters".

  18. tommhan   2 years ago

    PTSD, depression, bipolar, other mental problems etc... I see just about everyone on benefits, homeless and many of the jobless use these excuses, kinda like the racist excuse for everything. I guess this won't stop until half the population has these problems. We need to go back to when disabled meant you actually could not work and change the laws to open up new mental hospitals to warehouse them. How many are just drug addicts and alcoholics or just don't want to work?

    1. pound_hash   2 years ago (edited)

      And how many make rash and grossly negligent decisions due to an utter disregard for circumspection?

      You supported the Iraq War, didn’t you? And yet you feel no pang of regret about the fallout from it, do you?

      But you complain about this pittance being "freely" given to the jobless. No sense of irony here? None?

  19. pound_hash   2 years ago (edited)

    “A spokesperson for the City of Gastonia declined to comment, citing the pending litigation.”

    That’s funny because I just called and asked why they did this, and their response was that they wouldn’t be commenting on it because the case is CLOSED.

    They have no integrity. Unfortunately, the powers at be don’t care. And on and on we go.

  20. Thenterage   2 years ago (edited)

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