Police in Peoria, IL raided the home of a 27 year-old resident who set up a parody Twitter account for the Peoria mayor. The raid did not result in any arrests, but computers and phones were seized and the residents questioned. The police are investigating the account for breaking a law forbidding "impersonating a public official". If the case moves forward, the alleged owner of the account, Michelle Pratt, could face a $2,500 fine and up to a year in jail.
Even if it is eventually dropped, this could have a chilling effect on satirical political speech and seems like a massive overstep by a local police force to save face for an elected official.
(Score: 3, Insightful) by frojack on Thursday April 17 2014, @05:19PM
Oh, come on. This gets tossed the first time it comes to court.
And probably the Police (and city government) pay dearly for attempting this, perhaps millions of dollars.
Its a "use once" tactic, that courts are striking down as fast as they appear.
No, you are mistaken. I've always had this sig.
(Score: 4, Insightful) by Ethanol-fueled on Thursday April 17 2014, @05:26PM
You are likely correct about this particular incident, but there is a trend of the Feds skirting laws by outsourcing their work to criminals, corporations, and common cops by way of fusion centers, [wikipedia.org] etc. See also: parallel construction. [wikipedia.org]
(Score: 4, Informative) by SuddenOutbreak on Thursday April 17 2014, @05:46PM
It MAY get thrown out, but the crime remains on the books, and the threat of arrest, with its commensurate loss of time, computer equipment, and money, are pretty damn chilling anyway. The computer equipment may never be recovered, or recovered in a completely unusable state.
Note in Louisiana where police were rounding up men for breaking an anti-sodomy law which had already been deemed unconstitutional [msnbc.com]. 'When asked to defend the arrest, the sheriff's office pointed to the statute that's "still on the books of the Louisiana criminal code." '
(Score: 5, Interesting) by tathra on Thursday April 17 2014, @11:01PM
then anyone affected has grounds to sue (and absolutely should). laws that are deemed unconstitutional [wikipedia.org] are immediately void, [wikipedia.org] and are to be treated as if they never existed (because they never legitimately did), and can not legitimately be enforced. the law has been struck down, therefore it is not still on the books - that sheriff and his officers are breaking the law and should be charged with, at a minimum, kidnapping and false imprisonment, in addition to assault, battery, harassment, and all the other crimes they are committing.
(Score: 2, Informative) by SuddenOutbreak on Thursday April 17 2014, @05:49PM
Yes, at a lot of places, this is also how you lose your job. Pretty chilling.
(Score: 3, Informative) by Angry Jesus on Thursday April 17 2014, @06:20PM
> FTFA: ...as were two other people who were met by police at their workplaces.
>
> Yes, at a lot of places, this is also how you lose your job. Pretty chilling.
As a lot of the wrong kind of cops are fond saying, "You might beat the rap, but you won't beat the ride."