Tennessee to Pay $125,000 to Settle Lawsuit by Man Arrested for Posting Meme Mocking Dead Cop

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Joshua Garton, 29, was arrested in January of 2021 and charged with harassment following a Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI) probe into a pseudonymous Facebook post that appeared to show two men urinating on the tombstone of an officer who was shot and killed in 2018. A judge dismissed the charges a month later, and Garton filed a federal civil rights lawsuit alleging malicious prosecution, false arrest, and First Amendment retaliation.

In a settlement agreement filed earlier this month, two TBI agents and 23rd District Attorney General Ray Crouch did not admit any guilt, but they agreed to pay Garton to avoid further litigation costs.

"First Amendment retaliation is illegal, and law enforcement officials who arrest people for offending them will pay heavy consequences," Daniel Horwitz, Garton's lead attorney, said in a press release issued Monday. "Misbehaving government officials apologize with money, and Mr. Garton considers more than $10,000 per day that he was illegally incarcerated to be an acceptable apology."

The TBI, Tennessee's lead investigative law enforcement agency, launched an investigation into the offending Facebook post at the request of 23rd District Attorney Ray Crouch. Agents visited the officer's gravesite and quickly surmised that the picture Garton posted was fake. It was in fact a doctored photo of the cover of "Pissing on Your Grave," a single by The Rites, which originally depicted two men urinating on the tombstone of punk legend GG Allin.

Despite knowing that no one had physically desecrated the grave, the TBI continued its investigation, soliciting tips on Twitter about Garton's identity. When it finally nabbed Garton, TBI put out a press release, complete with mugshot, announcing his arrest for "manufacturing and disseminating a harassing photograph on social media."

As Reason wrote when Garton was first arrested, it was unclear how a dead person could be criminally harassed under Tennessee law, which requires that the subject be "frightened, intimidated or emotionally distressed."

Nevertheless, Garton was held on a $76,000 bond and spent nearly two weeks in jail. ...


No one ever accused cops of having a sense of humor.
 
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