After
Dallas Shootings, Police Arrest People for
Criticizing Cops on Facebook and Twitter
By
Naomi LaChance
July 14, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "The
Intercept"
- Four
men in Detroit were arrested over the past
week for posts on social media that the
police chief called threatening. One tweet
that led to an arrest said that Micah
Johnson, the man who
shot police officers in Dallas last
week, was a hero. None of the men have been
named, nor have they been charged.
“I
know this is a new issue, but I want these
people charged with crimes,”
said Detroit Police Chief James Craig.
“I’ve directed my officers to prepare
warrants for these four individuals, and
we’ll see which venue is the best to pursue
charges,”
he added.
Five police officers were killed in the
Dallas shootings, constituting the highest
number of police casualties in an
attack since September 11. And as a result,
law enforcement officials everywhere are
suddenly much more sensitive to threats
against their lives.
But
one result has been that several police
departments across the country have arrested
individuals for posts on social media
accounts, often from citizen tips — raising
concerns among free speech advocates.
“Arresting people for speech is something we
should be very careful about,” Bruce
Schneier, security technologist at the
Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society
at Harvard University, told The Intercept.
Last weekend in Connecticut, police arrested
Kurt Vanzuuk after a tip for posts on
Facebook that identified Johnson as a hero
and called for police to be killed. He
was charged with inciting injury to
persons or property.
An
Illinois woman, Jenesis Reynolds, was
arrested for writing in a Facebook post that
she would shoot an officer who would pull
her over. “I have no problem shooting a cop
for simple traffic stop cuz they’d have no
problem doing it to me,”
she wrote, according to the police
investigation. She was
charged with disorderly conduct.
In
New Jersey, Rolando Medina was arrested and
charged with cyber harassment. He
allegedly posted on an unidentified
social media platform that he would destroy
local police headquarters. In Louisiana,
Kemonte Gilmore was arrested for an
online video in which he allegedly
threatened a police officer. He was charged
with public intimidation.
“Certainly, posting that kind of thing on
social media is a bad thought,” professor
Larry Dubin of the University of Detroit
Mercy School of Law told the
Detroit News. “But having a bad
thought isn’t necessarily a crime.”
The
policing of online threats is hardly a new
issue. The Supreme Court
set a precedent last year when it ruled
that prosecutors pursuing a charge of
communicating threats need to prove both
that reasonable people would view the
statement as a threat and that the intent
was to threaten. Elonis v. United States
dealt with a man who had posted violent rap
lyrics about his estranged wife; the court
reversed his conviction.
“After Dallas, threats may seem more
threatening to police officers around the
country,” said Daniel Medwed, professor of
law at Northeastern University. “We might be
seeing more arrests right now because the
police will interpret that they have
probable cause to make the arrest,” he said.
“But that doesn’t mean in the end that this
will result in convictions,” he added.
Schneier urged that law enforcement use
caution. “This is complicated,” he said. “We
don’t know how to do this — we’re doing it
pretty badly, and we should do it better.”
But
he said it was a sign of the times. These
days, almost all communications are recorded
in some capacity. “This new world where
things aren’t forgotten is going to be
different,” Schneier said. “And you’re
seeing one manifestation of it in casual
comments that are resulting in arrest.”