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Free Speech

Prosecutors Drop Charges Against Tennessee Man Over Facebook Meme

Larry Bushart was arrested on a $2 million bond for posting a meme on Facebook. He was released this week, after more than a month in jail.

Joe Lancaster | 10.30.2025 1:30 PM

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Larry Bushart after his release from jail. | Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Midjourney
(Illustration: Eddie Marshall | Midjourney)

Last month, Tennessee authorities arrested a man for posting a Facebook meme, a clear violation of his First Amendment rights, and held him on a $2 million bond. This week, prosecutors dropped the case, but that doesn't negate the weeks he spent in jail on a bogus charge.

As Reason previously reported, police arrested 61-year-old Larry Bushart for posting a meme on Facebook. In a thread about the murder of Charlie Kirk, Bushart posted a meme with a picture of President Donald Trump and the quote "We have to get over it," which Trump said after a January 2024 shooting at Perry High School in Perry, Iowa.

Sheriff Nick Weems of nearby Perry County said Bushart intentionally posted the meme to make people think he was referring to Perry County High School. "Investigators believe Bushart was fully aware of the fear his post would cause and intentionally sought to create hysteria within the community," Weems told The Tennesseean.

On September 21, deputies arrested Bushart at his house and booked him on a charge of Threats of Mass Violence on School Property and Activities, a felony that carries at least a year in prison. In body camera footage posted online by Liliana Segura of The Intercept, Bushart is incredulous when presented with the charge. "I don't think I committed a crime," he tells the officer, jokingly admitting that "I may have been an asshole."

"That's not illegal," the officer replies as he leads Bushart into a cell.

Unfortunately, it was no laughing matter: A judge imposed a $2 million bond. Getting out on bail would require Bushart to come up with at least $210,000. According to the Perry County Circuit Court website, Bushart had a hearing scheduled for October 9, where he could file a motion for a reduced bond, but a court clerk told Reason that the hearing was "reset" for December 4. As a result, Bushart sat in jail for weeks.

Right away, it should have been clear how flimsy the case was. But the sheriff doubled down.

As Segura reported at The Intercept, Weems personally responded to people on Facebook suggesting Bushart was arrested because authorities misread a picture that briefly referenced a prior news event on the other side of the country. "We were very much aware of the meme being from an Iowa shooting," Weems wrote. But it "created mass hysteria to parents and teachers…that led the normal person to conclude that he was talking about our Perry County High School."

"Yet there were no public signs of this hysteria," Segura notes. "Nor was there much evidence of an investigation—or any efforts to warn county schools."

In a local news interview, Weems affirmed that while investigators knew the meme was not referencing the local school, "The public did not know."

"This has everything to do with a guy coming onto a Perry County page posting this picture leading people in our community to believe that there was a hypothetical Perry County High School shooting that caused fear in our community," Weems told Phil Williams of WTVF's NewsChannel 5 Investigates, "and we done something about it."

But on October 29, just a day after the interview aired, prosecutors dropped the case. Bushart's attorney confirmed to Reason via email, "the State has elected to nolle prosequi the case and Mr. Bushart has been released." (Nolle prosequi—"not wish to prosecute," in Latin—is a legal filing which says a prosecutor is choosing to dismiss a case.)

WTVF also published body camera footage of local police coming to Bushart's house before his arrest, at the request of a Perry County investigator. "I have really no idea what they are talking about," the officer tells Bushart. "He had just called me and said there was some concerning posts that were made….They said that something was insinuating violence."

Bushart disputed that characterization, and added, "I'm not going to take it down," to which the officer replied, "I don't care. This ain't got nothing to do with me."

"He admitted to making the post and advised that he was not taking it down," Weems said in the interview with Williams. "I mean, what kind of person does that? What kind of person just says he don't care?"

But it's clear from the original body camera footage that the officer didn't even know the details of the post in question and never mentioned a school.

It's good news that Bushart is released, but that doesn't negate the time he spent in jail on a spurious charge—37 days, in total. According to WTVF, "Bushart had lost his job doing medical transport" as a result.

"We are relieved that Larry Bushart has been freed after nearly 40 days in jail, and subject to a $2 million bond, over a Facebook post clearly protected by the First Amendment," Adam Steinbaugh, attorney for the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, said in a statement. "A free country does not dispatch police in the dead of night to pull people from their homes because a sheriff objects to their social media posts."

"Thanks to…any supporters out there, and I'm very happy to be going home," Bushart told local radio station WOPC upon his release, adding with a laugh, "I didn't seek to be a media sensation, but here we are."

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Joe Lancaster is an assistant editor at Reason.

Free SpeechFacebookMemesSocial MediaPoliceLocal GovernmentLaw enforcementCriminal Justice
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  1. Chumby   2 months ago

    Hurt feelings are not a violation of 1A. Like “Fuck Joe Biden.” Threats are. This didn’t look like a threat.

    1. DesigNate   2 months ago

      Agreed.

    2. Roberta   2 months ago

      I can't even figure out what or whom it would've been threatening. Even if people were confused over where the shooting was, it was reporting something that'd already happened, not a potential future event. And yeah, we do have to get over it; we have to get over everything eventually.

      1. Chumby   2 months ago

        When it first dropped, it reminded me of the “ALL YOUR BASE ARE BELONG TO US” incident.

      2. NM Dave   2 months ago

        This arrest was absurd, and the judge should lose his job over this one. $2 million bond for posting a meme, regardless of the content, is absolutely unconstitutional, as was the arrest. I've seen a prosecutor use "the whole community is upset over this" argument, and it is a fairly common hyperbolic statement. It is almost always a blatant lie. Produce even 5 people who were prompted to turn violent over this. They can't of course.

    3. Iwanna Newname   2 months ago

      It's like sub conscious racism. It exists, but you're not aware of it. That community was experiencing sub conscious panic.

  2. Liberty_Belle   2 months ago

    Blatant harassment by the Kirk-Cult , this Sheriff needs to loose his job for malfeasance at best ... incompetence at worst , for this miscarriage of justice. This should be a slam dunk 1A case with police misconduct as a side-dish.

    1. Quo Usque Tandem   2 months ago

      "Kirk-Cult."

      I see you're an asshole too; good thing there's now law against that, huh?

    2. damikesc   2 months ago

      You are a Nazi.

      Let's hope that your allies decide to use that info to do what they tend to do.

      You will not be missed.

      Progressives: They are current threats or soon to be threats. Prepare.

  3. sarcasmic   2 months ago

    Insulting the king or the king's men is a death sentence. He got lucky.

    1. Chumby   2 months ago

      Yup. Ashli Babbitt was not so lucky.

      1. Lester75   2 months ago

        Yea St. Ashli just broke into a government building at the head of a mob. It was just violent trespassing. She didn't do anything as bad as posting a meme.

        1. Chumby   2 months ago

          Civil trespassing in a public building while unarmed. Oh noes.

          Less Lester, not mo Lester.

        2. sarcasmic   2 months ago

          No, no, no. She was totally peaceful. So what if she was crawling through a barricade? She was doing is peacefully.

          What really happened was the officer who shot her woke up that morning wanting to kill a MAGA in cold blood. Then, to his surprise, MAGAs invaded the Capitol where he worked! Boy was he thrilled! As luck would have it, he was there guarding the barricade when low and behold a MAGA tried to crawl through it! Overcome with excitement he shot her dead, then proceeded do dance and sing his happy song and happy dance! Premeditated murder. Straight up.

          1. Chumby   2 months ago

            Light that gas, elder of the strawman guild.

  4. Stupid Government Tricks   2 months ago

    In a just world, that judge and sheriff would be held for 37 days unless they ponied up the $210,000 for the $2 million bond. I don't know about the anonymous "prosecutors". Took too long to dismiss the charges, but the article doesn't say enough about them.

    1. MWAocdoc   2 months ago

      Not to mention delay of the October "hearing" until December!

  5. MWAocdoc   2 months ago

    And what happens to law enforcement officials who blatantly violate the Constitutional rights of citizens? Why, nothing ... nothing at all! Does anyone still wonder why law enforcement officials continue to behave badly when they can almost always get away with it?

    1. Bubba Jones   2 months ago

      The judge that signed the warrant and the judge that imposed bail should both be impeached.

  6. Bubba Jones   2 months ago

    Sheriff and Judge should be impeached and barred from public office.

    Instead: QUALIFIED IMMUNITY

    Hopefully the victim will get a $2M settlement plus legal fees.

    1. Super Scary   2 months ago

      If we're not impeaching judges for all the shit that has been going on last few years, why start now? Judges are the highest authority in the land, apparently.

  7. OldMugwump   2 months ago

    Does this guy have any recourse for the 40 days of his life in jail for no reason? (He should.)

  8. dangfitz   2 months ago

    He should get a settlement that sets him up for life.

  9. Iwanna Newname   2 months ago

    "In a local news interview, Weems affirmed that while investigators knew the meme was not referencing the local school, "The public did not know.""

    This reminded me of the administrator who was fired because his superior did not know the meaning of "niggardly".

    1. windycityattorney   2 months ago

      I suppose the sheriff could have told the public? He is an elected official with a platform after all. Maybe explained what past-tense means? Or that sometimes, locations in different states share the same name? Although i am rather skeptical there ever was any hysteria. Seems like a case of the stupids and a bit of revenge for the guy daring to be 'an asshole.'

      Really curious how a crime that carries 1yr in jail results in 2million bond...i don't recall the defendant having a criminal record or being a flight risk.

  10. TLoro   2 months ago

    Well either the ACLU or fire will take his case and it will cost the city, my place in the pool is $250,000 after you add up the cities lawyers cost.

  11. Cyto   2 months ago

    This article is almost entirely a rehash of what other people are reporting. It references 1 Reason article and "a clerk told reason".

    Is there just no money to do original reporting? Remember the Salad days when Balko did original reporting on wrongful convictions?

    Where is the arrest warrant and affidavit? What is the prosecutors excuse for bringing the case? Why would any US judge sign off on such a warrant?
    This case is far from unique. People all over the country are fighting petty retaliation for offending the wrong people. The connection to politics is the only difference here.

    Take a look at Long Island Audit. He took the harassment of a police officer against him to the mattresses. When the police doubled down, he dug in and found potential massive overtime fraud. When he went to ask the officer about his implausible overtime numbers, he got a gun in his face and spit to go with it.

    Local police arrested him and under direction from on high changed his charges to felonies and charged him $50k in bail.

    The officer who brandished a firearm, threatened to kill him and assaulted him? He wasnt arrested.

    There are dozens of cases like this of petty abuse of power every month. Civil rights lawyers take to youtube to cover it.

    But not Reason. No partisan hook? No budget?

    These are cases where a national megaphone actually makes a difference. Reason could be doing something useful for liberty, rather than working on hit pieces against whoever is the latest popular conservative.

    1. Cyto   2 months ago

      Long island audit assault case begins

      https://youtu.be/Wb_9J4Rs18E?si=VmmWyKtA5DwtdejG

      1. Cyto   2 months ago

        West Virginia Civil rights attorney tells us about a case where a youtuber from Florida traveling through Georgia is harassed and given fake charges by a pair of county sherrifs departments colluding on our interstates.

        https://youtu.be/AXxG43bZR18?si=9Cpp7XlxuTjn6Gzs

        They made a big mistake. They picked on a sweet little (gay?) dude who also happens to be really bright and has nothing but time on his hands. He spent the next year learning the law and representing himself. He exposed a corrupt city attorney who also was assigned as his public defender, got 2 judges refused, the DA recused... and finally the case dismissed.

        He also is filing SLAPP suits against local officials who have sued him, and has multiple federal causes of action incoming.

        1. Cyto   2 months ago

          So he goes out and forms a youtube chanel dedicated to exposing ALL the corruption in these counties. He is getting all of the bodycam and car footage from the departments who harassed him and helping everyone affected by their fundraising scheme look at their cases for evidence of corruption.

          https://youtu.be/437_E8F-_JM?si=ck7XU0AIeRQ2xAU_

          America still has real Americans who arent going to take it. Libertarianism happens to people. Mr Feas is a real American hero that libertarians should know about.

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