Veteran With PTSD Can Sue the Cops Who Arrested Him for Panhandling and Tased His Service Dog, Court Rules
Joshua Rohrer's dog, Sunshine, ran away and was later hit and killed by a car.

A homeless veteran arrested for panhandling—and whose service dog was tased by law enforcement—can move forward with his lawsuit against police and the city, a federal court ruled this week.
Apart from the individual implications, the case also raises broader questions about the constitutionality of anti-panhandling ordinances, which have suffered defeats in various courts in recent years.
In October 2021, law enforcement in Gastonia, North Carolina, arrived at an intersection where Joshua Rohrer was standing on a median after a 911 caller phoned in to report Rohrer was "using [his] dog to make people feel sorry" for him. An officer requested backup from the Gastonia Police Department (GPD), and the scene quickly became somewhat of a circus, with several patrol cars and a slew of officers dispatched to address an alleged panhandler.
An officer demanded to see Rohrer's identification, after which he furnished his Veteran ID card. Police said that did not suffice, promptly arresting him and ultimately booking him for solicitation and resisting arrest. (You can watch the bodycam footage here and decide for yourself if he resisted arrest.)
During that interaction, an officer tased Rohrer's service dog, Sunshine, who ran off and was later hit by a car, killing her.
The government would ultimately drop the charges against Rohrer. But even after the ordeal, law enforcement has continued to subject him "to a relentless campaign of harassment" according to his complaint against the City of Gastonia and several officers with the GPD. It alleges violations of his First and Fourth Amendment rights, including for excessive force and the unreasonable seizure of his service animal.
Rohrer's complaint also notes that the GPD has posted "hundreds of statements that belittle and disparage Mr. Rohrer and spread false and misleading information about the incident" on social media.
"You also know that two grand juries supported the charges and that Mr Rohrer and his private legal team could have challenged the charges in court but that's not what they chose to do now was it?"the city posted on its official GPD page. "Instead they accepted the plea deal that was offered to him. Perhaps to avoid having an actual court date where evidence and testimony would have been presented. Who knows why they chose to accept the deal offered." Rohrer did not, in fact, plead guilty to anything tied to the October arrest.
His suit this week survived the government's attempt to have it dismissed. The officers involved are not entitled to qualified immunity, the U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina ruled, depriving police of the legal protection that prevents plaintiffs like Rohrer from suing if they cannot prove the government's alleged misconduct was "clearly established" as unconstitutional at the time of the offense.
Nor is the city of Gastonia entitled to protection under the Monell doctrine, the court said, which shields municipalities from such suits unless a plaintiff can sufficiently allege that the misconduct was a result of an official government policy, custom, practice, or lack of training. According to Rohrer's complaint, the city of Gastonia "aggressively arrests and seeks prolonged detention" for homeless people over "trivial or fabricated offenses." (Though qualified immunity has commanded most of the attention in the national dialogue around such issues, Monell in many ways can be even more difficult to overcome.)
Whether or not Gastonia's ordinances against panhandling are themselves unconstitutional is an open question. Similar laws have failed to withstand scrutiny when they are found to be content-based. A prohibition against asking for donations is a prohibition against a very particular type of speech, making it difficult to square with the First Amendment. Though there have been many such cases, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit just this year struck down Alabama's anti-panhandling laws and confirmed that begging is, in fact, protected speech.
Had that been the case in Gastonia, the confrontation with Rohrer—who struggles with service-related post-traumatic stress disorder—over his alleged panhandling would likely never have happened. And his dog, in that case, might still be alive.
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.
Please
to post comments
Ruh Roh-er
- Gastonia
Rohrer
is it rar- er ?
Or is it
Roar- er?
Why do I ask ?
Because....
Oh yeah? Well you were fine when Saint Babbitt was viciously murdered for absolutely no reason you hypocrite. You should be writing about the malevolent pig who murdered her, not some homeless loser with a dog. And what about how the heroes of January Sixth? Huh? What about them? What about how they were treated? Whatabout? Whatabout whatabout whatabout whatabout whatabout whatabout whatabout whatabout whatabout whatabout whatabout whatabout whataboooooooouuuuuuuuut!!!11!
Jack and sarc,
Went to the park,
Each with a buck and a quarter.
Sarc came back with two fifty.
Was this you buddy?
I back the blue when they’re right. In this case, as you very well know, the cop didn’t know she was unarmed and from his vantage point he couldn’t see the crowd. He just saw someone crawling through a smashed barricade while hearing chaos on the police radio. So based upon what he knew based upon what he could see and hear, he did what he thought was right.
I'm tired of bums. I'm out of sympathy. I believe I'm speaking for America on this.
America is not out of sympathy for PTSD vets, it's just you.
All bums have a sob story.
Counter point. Dem run cities spent a lot of taxpayer money on illegals that had been going to homeless vets. Discuss.
No, you're not speaking for America on that.
But even if you were, that does not justify unconstitutional actions against them.
You're assuming we're getting the real story here, which is not supported by past performance.
Police are called and instantly make whatever situation there was ... worse ? I've got decades of evidence of that.
In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if he tasered the dog by accident because he meant to draw his gun instead.
(You can watch the bodycam footage here and decide for yourself if he resisted arrest.)
It's at about the 19m mark. And yea, you can clearly see he's noncompliant. He refuses to give up the hands, he gets taken to the ground (I'm frankly amazed they didn't tase him at that point, because it would have been justified), and then he begins to mount a foot-escape. Brought down, hands cuffed, subdued. Without any further force or violence imposed upon him.
That looks legit.
But let's talk about that dog of his. Dog straight up splits at like 19:55. So, a couple theories on this. True service dogs, when faced with their masters in distress do one (or more) of three things: 1) look for and lead the nearest "safe" person to render help; 2) bark for attention; 3) stay very physically close.
They don't just run off (let alone into traffic, they're not stupid). Given the entirety of the video, I'm inclined to say it was a very well trained and obedient dog (it kept prone and calm during the majority of the ordeal), but not willing to commit to service animal.
Nowhere in the video was their evidence of the animal being tased. And even if it was, it still didn't behave like a properly trained service animal.
Whether or not Gastonia's ordinances against panhandling are themselves unconstitutional is an open question.
How about you try answering it, coward.
Let's go to the Complaint, because it's a laugh riot!
First off, full disclosure, the BWC that Reason links is silent. I would love to hear the audio, because I am genuinely of the position that it would change my position on almost all of this.
But since Billy is a queermo gimp non-journalist who didn't bother, we're going with what he gave us.
And, as you all know, any complaint of this nature with 200+ lines is going to be HILARIOUS. Goat rodeo clown show law practice that's less for the court and more for retards like LMAO jOuRnALiSt Billy. I never get tired of them. I will seriously spend all day reading and mocking these stupid things (especially since I know YOU won't).
Let's go.
Mr. Rohrer was unable to work because of his disability, but he found solace in walking around the City with Sunshine while interacting with members of the Gastonia community. Mr. Rohrer often would smile and wave at drivers to convey a message of positivity and combat negative stereotypes about people experiencing homelessness.
Hahahahaha, ngl props to the legal team that distorted being a panhandling vagrant into.... that.
He sometimes would stand or walk in the medians of streets, but Mr. Rohrer did not obstruct traffic.
Because normal people do that.
*ahem* BRING BACK THE SANITARIUMS.
You readily admit that the dude has PTSD. Assuming you believe he has a legit service animal for this, it's reasonable to conclude that he experiences episodes related to said PTSD. (And if you've never seen such a thing first hand, let me tell you it's very real - dudes straight up going into a fugue state and screaming in Vietnamese and then coming out of it wondering where they are and how they got there.)
And unless under direct care (either medical or family) - these people have no business roaming the streets. They need genuine help. But progressives, in their infinite stupidity, decided to empty the asylums and give them all gift cards for cardboard signs.
Although Mr. Rohrer caused no problems
Is this kinda like the "Even though the illegal alien posed no threat to public safety" bit?
After seeing Mr. Rohrer accept a donation from a passing vehicle
Panhandling!
Mr. Rohrer asked Defendant Brooks if she was really going to issue a citation to a “disabled veteran who’s living in the woods,”
Oh my gosh, his own admission to vagrancy.
Mr. Rohrer’s state ID was expired and did not contain his correct address.
Yea, that's common with vagrants.
In response, Defendant Taylor stated, for the first time and with Sunshine
visibly several feet away and facing away from Taylor, “He just bit me.”
Yea, OK, I actually don't believe that. By all evidence on that bodycam, the dog was pretty well behaved. Arguably, one could say it bolted because it was tased. No evidence of that, but I'll entertain it.
Injured and in distress from the tasing, Sunshine ran away.
That I will not entertain. Because genuinely well-trained service dogs will take a bullet but still not abandon their charge.
When later asked by a supervisor whether Taylor tased Sunshine, Brooks
smiled and laughed while saying, “Yeah, he did.” (BWC Part Two at 45:26).
THAT'S the kind of thing that makes Billy NOT a journalist. If he cared about anything beyond his ACAB narrative, he'd have gone and found BWC Part Two at 45:26. At least before publishing.
Mr. Rohrer continued to weep, sob for help, and beg for Sunshine as the
officers milled around.
*sadface*
Mr. Rohrer needed to use a wheelchair and a walker for months after the incident
https://vimeo.com/164891140 (skip to 4:20, you stoners should appreciate that).
The incident also forced Mr. Rohrer to move out of Gastonia and start his
life over in a new community. He avoids Gastonia and anywhere in its vicinity whenever possible because he does not feel safe there.
Everybody wins! Yaaay!
People who witnessed the incident were outraged.
LOL, pleadings for the media!
Taylor at one point said to Mr. Rohrer, “You walk up and down the street
all the time. You’re not disabled; your legs work fine.”
Valid point!
Defendants Taylor and Brooks insisted that Mr. Rohrer’s bond should be increased by claiming that Mr. Rohrer—a homeless individual with few resources—was a flight risk
Eh, not a valid point.
Mr. Rohrer’s mother, outraged by the unjust treatment of her son, sent
money to pay the bond.
Wait stop. What? He has a caregiver who wasn't providing him care?
One of the taser darts was still stuck through the back
end of the vest.
NGL, this DOES make me dispute the accounts of 5-0 when it comes to the tasing of the dog. Still, I have serious reservations this was a service animal.
When Mr. Rohrer was finally released from jail, he—along with many
members of the community—searched for Sunshine. But Sunshine would never be reunited with Mr. Rohrer. As a result of being separated from Mr. Rohrer and the trauma inflicted by the tasing, Sunshine—who, prior to the tasing, was trained to cross the street safely on her own—ran into traffic and was struck
and killed by a vehicle.
Aww. Cue the sad violin music.
Also, renew the disbelief about this being a service animal.
Upon learning of Sunshine’s death, Mr. Rohrer experienced a severe mental
health episode and ran head-on into traffic, attempting to end his life.
*ahem* BRING BACK THE SANITARIUMS.
“But whatever … Y’all still bothered and I’m still living, counting down the days until I’m at Mardi Gras.”
Callous. Hilarious, but come on dude. Don't do that. Social media is not your friend.
Mr. Rohrer attended several rallies organized to support him and oppose the
City’s mistreatment of its unhoused population ... Mr. Rohrer gave numerous press interviews about his arrest ...
Seems odd for a guy who wanted to *checks notes* throw himself into oncoming traffic.
The footage shocked and angered many members of the public.
WHICH IS WHY WE'RE FILING THIS SUIT IN THE COURT OF PUBLIC OPINION!
Mr. Rohrer maintains a personal profile on Facebook.
At his mom's house, or at the public library? Exactly how destitute is this vagrant wandering around city streets collecting "donations?"
Mr. Rohrer pleaded guilty only to unrelated charges that occurred on a different day, the City and Defendants Goodale and Doe have repeatedly and falsely implied that Mr. Rohrer pleaded guilty to the charges arising out of the October 13 incident
Ummmmmmmm... "The veteran whose October 2021 arrest by the Gastonia Police Department was captured on viral video has now reached a plea agreement that will see charges stemming from the incident dismissed."
When commenters attempt to correct the City’s false assertions
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!
You're a lawyer? Who actually put that into a pleading? AHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!
Oh my gosh, this is what we have to look forward to isn't it. Millennial/GenZ's citing facebook comments in their fact patterns. Sigh.
The attack on Mr. Rohrer is just one example of a longstanding campaign
by the City against people experiencing homelessness.
There it is. Screw the voters, screw the legislature, screw the governor - we want policy dictated by judicial fiat! That's the LibErTaRiAn way LMAO!
I told you this was gunna be hilarious. Congrats on reading to the end.
Didn't read it, but I like your use of bold and all caps and the overall length. Makes me feel better about ignoring you.
Didn't read it
I always find it odd when people point out their own willful ignorance.
"Sunshine ran away and was later hit and killed by a car."
Some service dog. He should be brought up on desertion charges.
This is all fine, but eventually the cops will get "Qualified Immunity" granted and get off scot-free.
Not convinced that the officers/ordinances were in the right here, but the footage pretty clearly shows that he was told not to hang around on the median (regardless of whether he was panhandling) because it was a hazard to traffic. He told the cop he understood...and then he went right back to the same spot, where he chose to argue with the next cop. Seems like he was asking for trouble.
Dude effed around, found out, and his dog paid the price.