English French German Italian Portuguese Spanish
facebook
FIRST AMENDMENT FOUNDATION is on Facebook

Sunshine in the News

Tweet-tweet

Messaging is in the sunshine, too…


Court: Alachua violated state open records law

The city was obligated to provide meeting minutes to political activists, a court ruled.…


PAT RICE: The public's right to know extends to everyone

I’m a big fan of Barbara Petersen, President of the First Amendment Foundation of Florida. She’s such an energetic champion of open government. And she’s a ch…


FAF Events

Tuesday September 14, 2010

There are no events today

Search

Home News Open Government News Open Government News
Judge strikes down law prohibiting publication of police officer's personal information
May 3, 2010
Tallahassee Democrat Online (original article)

A federal judge has struck down as unconstitutional a nearly 40-year-old Florida law that forbids the malicious publication of a law enforcement officer's home address or telephone number.

The ruling late last week by U.S. District Judge Richard Smoak is a victory for Rob Brayshaw, a Tallahassee man who, along with the American Civil Liberties Union, challenged the law.

Brayshaw was charged under the statute for publishing true personal information about Tallahassee police officer Annette Garrett on the website Ratemycop.com.

Smoak wrote in his opinion that the law was overly broad and on its face, unconstitutional. Such speech, he said, was not "malicious" or constituted a threat and was protected under the First Amendment.

Open Government News