Court Revives Lawsuit Filed Over Texas Journalist's Arrest
Court Revives Lawsuit Filed Over Texas Journalist's Arrest
A federal appeals court on Monday revived a lawsuit filed by an online freelance journalist in Texas who says she was arrested for merely seeking information from the police.

NEW ORLEANS: A federal appeals court on Monday revived a lawsuit filed by an online freelance journalist in Texas who says she was arrested for merely seeking information from the police.

Priscilla Villarreal goes by the name La Gordiloca on Facebook and Twitter. Monday’s opinion from the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals describes her as a non-traditional journalist who posts livestreamed video and information on crime scenes in the Laredo area, along with often unfiltered commentary that is sometimes critical of local authorities.

Her lawsuit, revived in a 2-1 decision by the appeals court panel, said she was arrested in 2017 and accused of violating a little-known Texas law that a judge later found unconstitutional.

Monday’s opinion said the law made it a crime for a person to solicit information from public officials that has not been made public if the person seeking the information intends to benefit from it in some way. Villarreal had sought and obtained from a police officer the identities of a person who killed himself and a family involved in a car accident and published the information on her Facebook. The arrest affidavit said she sought the information to gain Facebook followers.

The charges against Villarreal were thrown out by a judge who ruled that the state law was unconstitutionally vague. Villarreal sued Laredo officials, alleging her constitutional rights to free speech and protection from unlawful seizure were violated when police arrested her.

In district court filings, the Laredo officials lawyers said the police acted in good faith and had no reason to believe the law under which Villarreal was arrested would later be found unconstitutional.

A federal district judge in Texas found the officials were protected by qualified immunity meaning the law largely protects them for actions they take as part of their official duties.

But two of the three judges for the New Orleans-based 5th Circuit disagreed, reversing much of the district court’s ruling.

Priscilla Villarreal was put in jail for asking a police officer a question, Judge James Ho, who was nominated by former President Donald Trump, wrote for the majority. If that is not an obvious violation of the Constitution, its hard to imagine what would be. And as the Supreme Court has repeatedly held, public officials are not entitled to qualified immunity for obvious violations of the Constitution.

Ho was joined by Judge James Graves, who was nominated by former President Barack Obama. Judge Priscilla Owen, nominated by former President George W. Bush, dissented. The court said her reasons would be posted later.

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