Reason.com - Free Minds and Free Markets
Reason logo Reason logo
  • Latest
  • Magazine
    • Current Issue
    • Archives
    • Subscribe
    • Crossword
  • Video
  • Podcasts
    • All Shows
    • The Reason Roundtable
    • The Reason Interview With Nick Gillespie
    • The Soho Forum Debates
    • Just Asking Questions
    • The Best of Reason Magazine
    • Why We Can't Have Nice Things
  • Volokh
  • Newsletters
  • Donate
    • Donate Online
    • Donate Crypto
    • Ways To Give To Reason Foundation
    • Torchbearer Society
    • Planned Giving
  • Subscribe
    • Reason Plus Subscription
    • Print Subscription
    • Gift Subscriptions
    • Subscriber Support

Login Form

Create new account
Forgot password

Police Abuse

He Was Arrested for Making a Joke on Facebook. A Jury Just Awarded Him $205,000 in Damages.

The verdict vindicates the constitutional rights that Louisiana sheriff's deputies flagrantly violated when they hauled Waylon Bailey off to jail.

Jacob Sullum | 2.1.2024 4:20 PM

Share on FacebookShare on XShare on RedditShare by emailPrint friendly versionCopy page URL
Media Contact & Reprint Requests
Waylon Bailey holds papers | Institute for Justice
Waylon Bailey (Institute for Justice)

On a Friday in March 2020, a dozen or so sheriff's deputies wearing bulletproof vests descended upon Waylon Bailey's garage at his home in Forest Hill, Louisiana, with their guns drawn, ordered him onto his knees with his hands "on your fucking head," and arrested him for a felony punishable by up to 15 years in prison. The SWAT-style raid was provoked by a Facebook post in which Bailey had made a zombie-themed joke about COVID-19. Recognizing the harm inflicted by that flagrantly unconstitutional arrest, a federal jury last week awarded Bailey $205,000 in compensatory and punitive damages.

"I feel vindicated that the jury agreed that my post was satire and that no reasonable police officer should have arrested me for my speech," Bailey said in a press release from the Institute for Justice, which helped represent him in his lawsuit against the Rapides Parish Sheriff's Office and Detective Randell Iles, who led the investigation that tarred Bailey as a terrorist based on constitutionally protected speech. "This verdict is a clear signal that the government can't just arrest someone because the officers didn't like what they said."

On March 20, 2020, four days after several California counties issued the nation's first "stay-at-home" orders in response to an emerging pandemic, Bailey let off some steam with a Facebook post that alluded to the Brad Pitt movie World War Z. "RAPIDES PARISH SHERIFFS OFFICE HAVE ISSUED THE ORDER," he wrote, that "IF DEPUTIES COME INTO CONTACT WITH 'THE INFECTED,'" they should "SHOOT ON SIGHT." He added: "Lord have mercy on us all. #Covid9teen #weneedyoubradpitt."

The Rapides Parish Sheriff's Office snapped into action, assigning Iles to investigate what he perceived as "an attempt to get someone hurt." According to a local press report, the authorities were alarmed by "a social media post that promoted false information related to the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic." In response, "detectives immediately initiated an investigation," and as a result, Bailey, then 27, was "arrested for terrorism."

Another news story reported that Bailey "was booked into the Rapides Parish Detention Center on one count of terrorizing." William Earl Hilton, the sheriff at the time, explained why, saying he wanted to "impress upon everyone that we are all in this together, as well as remind everyone that communicating false information to alarm or cause other serious disruptions to the general public will not be tolerated."

Bailey's joke was deemed to pose such a grave and imminent threat that Iles did not bother to obtain an arrest warrant before nabbing him, just a few hours after Bailey's facetious appeal to Brad Pitt. But in a probable cause affidavit that Iles completed after the arrest, the detective claimed that Bailey had violated a state law against "terrorizing," defined as "the intentional communication of information that the commission of a crime of violence is imminent or in progress or that a circumstance dangerous to human life exists or is about to exist, with the intent of causing members of the general public to be in sustained fear for their safety; or causing evacuation of a building, a public structure, or a facility of transportation; or causing other serious disruption to the general public."

Bailey was apologetic when the sheriff's deputies confronted him, saying he had "no ill will towards the Sheriff's Office" and "only meant it as a joke." He agreed to delete the offending post after Iles said he otherwise would ask Facebook to take it down. But that was not good enough for Iles, who hauled Bailey off to jail anyway.

For very good legal reasons, the Rapides Parish District Attorney's Office declined to prosecute Bailey. But when Bailey sued Iles for violating his constitutional rights and making a false arrest, U.S. District Judge David C. Joseph dismissed his claims with prejudice, concluding that his joke was not covered by the First Amendment, that the arrest was based on probable cause, and that Iles was protected by qualified immunity.

That doctrine allows civil rights claims against government officials only when their alleged misconduct violated "clearly established" law. Joseph thought arresting someone for a Facebook gag did not meet that test. "Publishing misinformation during the very early stages of the COVID-19 pandemic and [a] time of national crisis," he averred, "was remarkably similar in nature to falsely shouting fire in a crowded theatre."

That was a reference to Schenck v. United States, a 1919 case in which the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously upheld the Espionage Act convictions of two socialists who had distributed anti-draft leaflets during World War I. Writing for the Court, Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. said, "The most stringent protection of free speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a theatre and causing a panic."

Holmes' much-abused analogy, which had nothing to do with the facts of the case, was not legally binding. And in the 1969 case Brandenburg v. Ohio, the Supreme Court modified the "clear and present danger" test it had applied in Schenck—a point that Joseph somehow overlooked. Under Brandenburg, even advocacy of criminal conduct is constitutionally protected unless it is "directed" at inciting "imminent lawless action" and "likely" to do so—an exception to the First Amendment that plainly did not cover Bailey's joke.

With help from the Institute for Justice, Bailey asked the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit to overrule Joseph, which it did last August. Writing for a unanimous 5th Circuit panel, Judge Dana M. Douglas said Joseph "applied the wrong legal standard," ignoring the Brandenburg test in favor of the Supreme Court's earlier, less speech-friendly approach.

"At most, Bailey 'advocated' that people share his post by writing 'SHARE SHARE
SHARE,'" Douglas wrote. "But his post did not advocate 'lawless' and 'imminent' action, nor was it 'likely' to produce such action. The post did not direct any person or group to take any unlawful action immediately or in the near future, nobody took any such actions because of the post, and no such actions were likely to result because the post was clearly intended to be a joke. Nor did Bailey have the requisite intent to incite; at worst, his post was a joke in poor taste, but it cannot be read as intentionally directed to incitement."

Another possibly relevant exception to the First Amendment was the one for "true threats," defined as "statements where the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular individual or group of individuals." In a deposition, Iles claimed to view Bailey's post as threatening because it was "meant to get police officers hurt." The joke was especially dangerous, he said, because there were "a lot of protests at the time in reference to law enforcement."

As Douglas noted, that claim was patently implausible "because Bailey was arrested in March 2020, while widespread protests concerning law enforcement did not begin until after George Floyd's murder in May 2020." In any case, Bailey's joke clearly did not amount to a true threat.

"On its face, Bailey's post is not a threat," Douglas writes. "But to the extent it could
possibly be considered a 'threat' directed to either the public—that RPSO deputies would shoot them if they were 'infected'—or to RPSO deputies—that the 'infected' would shoot back—it was not a 'true threat' based on context because it lacked believability and was not serious, as evidenced clearly by calls for rescue by Brad Pitt. For the same reason, Bailey did not have the requisite intent to make a 'true threat.'"

Furthermore, the 5th Circuit held, Iles should have known that Bailey's post was protected speech. "Based on decades of Supreme Court precedent," Douglas said, "it was clearly established that Bailey's Facebook post did not fit within one of the narrow categories of unprotected speech, like incitement or true threats." Iles therefore could not find refuge in qualified immunity.

The appeals court rejected Iles' claim that he had probable cause to arrest Bailey, whose conduct clearly did not fit the elements of the crime with which he was charged. "Iles is not entitled to qualified immunity," Douglas wrote, "because no reasonable officer could have found probable cause to arrest Bailey for violating the Louisiana terrorizing statute in light of the facts, the text of the statute, and the state case law interpreting it."

The 5th Circuit also thought Bailey plausibly claimed that Iles had retaliated against him for exercising his First Amendment rights. As Douglas noted, "Iles admitted that he arrested Bailey at least in part because of the content of his Facebook post, rather than for some other conduct." And it was clear that Bailey's speech was chilled, since he agreed to delete the post after Iles told him the sheriff's office otherwise "would contact Facebook to remove it."

That decision did not assure Bailey of victory. It merely gave him the opportunity to persuade a jury that Iles had violated his First Amendment rights and the Fourth Amendment's prohibition of "unreasonable searches and seizures." The 5th Circuit said he also could pursue a state claim based on false arrest.

Last week's verdict against Iles and the sheriff's office validated all of those claims. "It is telling that it took less than two hours for a jury of Mr. Bailey's peers in Western Louisiana to rule in his favor on all issues," said Andrew Bizer, Bailey's trial attorney. "The jury clearly understood that the Facebook post was constitutionally protected speech. The jury's award of significant damages shows that they understood how Mr. Bailey's world was turned upside down when the police wrongly branded him a terrorist."

Institute for Justice attorney Ben Field noted that "our First Amendment rights aren't worth anything if courts won't hold the government responsible for violating them." Bailey's case, he said, "now stands as a warning for government officials and as a precedent that others can use to defend their rights."

Start your day with Reason. Get a daily brief of the most important stories and trends every weekday morning when you subscribe to Reason Roundup.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

NEXT: Test Scores Are Rebounding After Pandemic School Closures, but Some Students Will Never Catch Up

Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason.

Police AbuseFirst AmendmentFree SpeechFourth AmendmentSearch and SeizureCivil LibertiesLitigationQualified ImmunitySupreme CourtLouisianaCoronavirusPandemicInstitute for JusticeFacebookSocial Media
Share on FacebookShare on XShare on RedditShare by emailPrint friendly versionCopy page URL
Media Contact & Reprint Requests

Hide Comments (62)

Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.

  1. Bubba Jones   1 year ago

    He should probably move out of the jurisdiction if he hasn't already.

    1. MrMxyzptlk   1 year ago

      Yeah, once you piss in the cornflakes of a Sheriff you need to get far away. Alaska might be a good choice.

  2. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

    Now do Douglas Mackey.

    1. JesseAz   1 year ago

      Thank God it wasn't a meme.

      1. VULGAR MADMAN   1 year ago

        Imagine if he had a Nazi saluting pug.

        1. Commenter_XY   1 year ago

          Imagine if he posted a meme suggesting that people should vote on Wednesday, November 6, 2024.

          1. VULGAR MADMAN   1 year ago

            He’d be fine if he’s a democrat.

            1. Richard Bees   1 year ago

              I'm old enough to remember when it was Bernie Sanders (S), then it became Bernie Sanders (I).

          2. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

            Apparently it's okay to do that as long as you wear the magic (D).

            1. Jerry B.   1 year ago

              Darn. I should have copyrighted “magic (D)”.

    2. prfd1   1 year ago (edited)

      Everybody watching Gov. Hochul’s people (illegal migrants) kicking NYPD officers in the head while they are down on the ground? Officers who stupidly pay union dues to support her so she can destroy the officers’s lives.
      "You will own nothing and be happy" - WEF

      1. Elmer Fudd the CHUD 2: Steampunk Boogaloo   1 year ago

        Just get rid of the democrats.

    3. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

      Spot the difference!

      1. InsaneTrollLogic   1 year ago

        Let's see...

        One's arrested for a joke and gets $205,000 rightly awarded in damages. The other is arrested for a joke and gets thrown in jail as a political prisoner.

        So go ahead, spot the difference, ObviouslySpam.

        1. Alric the Red   1 year ago

          I'll spot the difference: One really was a joke, and the other had deceptive intent, and was part of a network intent on doing so.

          That should do it, right?

      2. Sometimes a Great Notion   1 year ago

        5th vs 2nd.

  3. MWAocdoc   1 year ago (edited)

    “This verdict is a clear signal that the government can’t just arrest someone because the officers didn’t like what they said.”

    Nope, not even close. Please note that this ruling has come almost four years after the violation of his civil rights. Not only that, but if Iles does not personally have to pay the damages out of his own pocket, it sends the opposite message: “The government CAN and will arrest someone for whatever reason they want to, knowing that nothing bad will happen to them if they do.” Also, if IJ had not taken on the case, it's probable that the ruling would never even have happened.

    1. MWAocdoc   1 year ago (edited)

      Gerald Goines killed two innocent people napping in their own home – and their dog – with a falsified affidavit and a fabricated probable cause on 28 January 2019 in Houston; was charged with two counts of murder SIX MONTHS later; and has yet to come to trial four and a half years after being charged. Clear messages do not work!

      1. car-keynes   1 year ago

        But is it ever all right to call the police to swat someone because you know what they likely would do?

    2. hvance@mac.com   1 year ago

      well stated.....

  4. Rev. Arthur L. Kirkland   1 year ago

    This seems to be the Waylon Bailey who describes himself as a Christian and a boxer . . . . so, naturally gullible and has been hit in the head a bunch.

    1. VULGAR MADMAN   1 year ago

      How shocking that an inbred imbecile like yourself would support the cops.

  5. Iwanna Newname   1 year ago

    Well that's one civil rights violation during the Covid panic of 2020-21 that has received justice. Only 97,617 more to go.

  6. Use the Schwartz   1 year ago

    It's only a few bad precincts...

  7. Don't look at me!   1 year ago

    Did he get arrested from a joke or with a joke?

    1. VULGAR MADMAN   1 year ago

      He was arrested by a joke.

  8. rloquitur   1 year ago

    Additur seems appropriate here.

  9. CE   1 year ago

    That's not funny.

  10. SMP0328   1 year ago

    Judge David C. Joseph should be thrown off the bench for using a disgraceful, and long since repudiated, SCOTUS decision, written by a disgraceful Justice to uphold a blatant free-speech violation by a disgraceful police officer. Fortunately, the Fifth Circuit was far more intelligent.

  11. bacchys   1 year ago

    MAGAts in the Reason comments section can rest easy: no Deputies were harmed in the jury finding...

    1. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

      Didn't actually read the comments I see.

  12. Rev Arthur L kuckland   1 year ago

    Now do Dave Mackay you faggot.

  13. Diane Reynolds (Paul. they/them)   1 year ago

    You know who else was arrested for making a joke on Facebook?

    1. ObviouslyNotSpam   1 year ago

      It wasn't a joke to him and his pals, though, was it?

      1. VinniUSMC   1 year ago

        Principals, not principles. Only (D) can make jokes, right Spam?

  14. Denys Picard   1 year ago

    " "terrorizing," defined as "the intentional communication of information that the commission of a crime of violence is imminent or in progress or that a circumstance dangerous to human life exists or is about to exist, with the intent of causing members of the general public to be in sustained fear for their safety;..." Haven't our governments and their law enforcement been doing exactly this through media every single day since 9-11? Terrorizing us...

    1. Just thinkin aloud   1 year ago

      Yeah, but the gubmint keeps investigating themselves and finding that they need another raise.

  15. Crackers Boy   1 year ago

    My wife and I donate to the IJ pretty much every time they ask. It's one of the two organizations that I freely donate to; GOA being the other.

    CB

    1. PMBug   1 year ago

      IJ does great work and I try to support them whenever I can.

  16. Yuno Hoo   1 year ago

    "my post was satire"

    "That's what they *all* say!"

    How about if TPTB publish an exhaustive list of "true threats" (prefaced with "This is just a drill") so people know what to avoid in posting satire?

  17. Letters_Triumverate   1 year ago

    So how much of that $205,000 will go to his lawyers, and how much will be remaining to actually compensate him for his lost time and headache?

    The process is the penalty...

  18. PMBug   1 year ago

    Bless all the hard working folks at the Institute for Justice. They do a lot of heavy lifting for liberty and sanity.

  19. sarcasmic   1 year ago

    Whatabout J6? Huh? Whataboutwhataboutwhatabout?

    *scrolls up*

    Oh, the second comment was about J6. Everything is about J6.

  20. hvance@mac.com   1 year ago (edited)

    The real problem lays with the law. For someone to be immune from prosecution is wrong. Law enforcement officers, judges, and other government employees are like the rest of us. Some are great, some average, some bad, and others’ use of their power, like Iles in this case, should be held accountable, and fined and dismissed from their jobs.

    1. Mark U   1 year ago

      I agree with you except for blaming the law. The problem is the supreme court that invented qualified immunity without any basis in the constitution or legislation.

  21. car-keynes   1 year ago

    Police should not be the ones who investigate the crime of freedom of speech. We need people poor at hangman and worse at reading.

  22. NM Dave   1 year ago

    Cops are now so pussified that their hurt feelings are now probable cause for arresting someone? They've reached the bottom and are now continuing to dig.

    1. 5.56   1 year ago

      Okay, okay... People with NM in their name CAN have common sense takes, its just not very likely.

  23. samnvic   1 year ago

    There is a lot of good cops out there but some of them are as dumb as a rock. Do not follow unlawful orders or you are as bad as the criminals out there. What happened to respect and dignity that cops use to have?? If I were their boss there would be no foul language on the job, tattoo's of any kind would have to be covered and they would all be trained to know citizen's civil rights.

    1. bacchys   1 year ago

      There isn't that many good cops out there. If there were, there wouldn't be so many bad cops.

  24. Bill-NM   1 year ago

    Bailey is a complete asshole for "joking" about police in that way. He clearly used extremely poor judgment.

    The author forgets that we live in a society with a lot of crazies - a person can't expect that when they are "joking" on Facebook/wherever, that all 300,000,000 Americans will understand that (as has been PROVEN many times over). There's a decent chance some nut will take the "joke" seriously and start shooting.

    I don't know that Bailey should have been arrested, but man oh MAN he's an irresponsible idiot.

    I side with law enforcement.

    1. Just thinkin aloud   1 year ago

      So everyone must still bow to your "god," El Jabbo of Big Governmentistan, after being proved a very false god, and take it doggy style, "for the greater good."
      Gotcha

    2. bacchys   1 year ago

      Well, you're an idiot.

    3. 5.56   1 year ago

      You would be okay with restricting your and everybody elses freedom of speech to appease a small number of nuts. Gotcha. Well it even says "NM" in your handle, doesn't exactly presage a high IQ take.

  25. bacchys   1 year ago

    As always, the reaction to these judgements is misguided. The Sheriff's Office and the lawbreaking deputies aren't facing any consequences. What would "[vindicate] constitutional rights" and "send a clear message" is criminal charges and a permanent bar to ever holding any office of trust or profit in these United States for all government officials involved in this abuse of power.

  26. edbeau99   1 year ago

    Good thing he didn't make a joke about Hillary Clinton, or he would have gone to jail for the full 15 years.

  27. CE   1 year ago

    Are you sure?

  28. VULGAR MADMAN   1 year ago

    Who’s retarded sock are you?

  29. JesseAz   1 year ago

    That is KAR.

  30. Mother's Lament   1 year ago

    Absolutely KAR. Say something nice about Mormons and you'll see.

  31. MT-Man   1 year ago

    confirmed.

  32. tracerv   1 year ago

    Wonder what happened to Chuck?

Please log in to post comments

Mute this user?

  • Mute User
  • Cancel

Ban this user?

  • Ban User
  • Cancel

Un-ban this user?

  • Un-ban User
  • Cancel

Nuke this user?

  • Nuke User
  • Cancel

Un-nuke this user?

  • Un-nuke User
  • Cancel

Flag this comment?

  • Flag Comment
  • Cancel

Un-flag this comment?

  • Un-flag Comment
  • Cancel

Latest

How Trump's Tariffs and Immigration Policies Could Make Housing Even More Expensive

M. Nolan Gray | From the July 2025 issue

Photo: Dire Wolf De-extinction

Ronald Bailey | From the July 2025 issue

How Making GLP-1s Available Over the Counter Can Unlock Their Full Potential

Jeffrey A. Singer | From the June 2025 issue

Bob Menendez Does Not Deserve a Pardon

Billy Binion | 5.30.2025 5:25 PM

12-Year-Old Tennessee Boy Arrested for Instagram Post Says He Was Trying To Warn Students of a School Shooting

Autumn Billings | 5.30.2025 5:12 PM

Recommended

  • About
  • Browse Topics
  • Events
  • Staff
  • Jobs
  • Donate
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Media
  • Shop
  • Amazon
Reason Facebook@reason on XReason InstagramReason TikTokReason YoutubeApple PodcastsReason on FlipboardReason RSS

© 2024 Reason Foundation | Accessibility | Privacy Policy | Terms Of Use

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

r

Do you care about free minds and free markets? Sign up to get the biggest stories from Reason in your inbox every afternoon.

This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

This modal will close in 10

Reason Plus

Special Offer!

  • Full digital edition access
  • No ads
  • Commenting privileges

Just $25 per year

Join Today!