Austin Gates v. Hassan Khokar
Opinion
This action arises from Plaintiff Austin Gates's arrest for violating Georgia's mask statute, O.C.G.A. § 16-11-38, during a protest in downtown Atlanta on November 26, 2014. Plaintiff alleges that he was arrested without probable cause in violation of the Fourth Amendment, and that this flawed arrest also violated the First Amendment and various state laws. In this appeal, we consider his claims against three City of Atlanta police officers who were involved in the arrest: defendants Khokhar, Brauninger, and Whitmire (collectively "Defendants"). As to these individual officers, and based on this arrest, Plaintiff has asserted federal claims, pursuant to
Having carefully reviewed the record, and after hearing oral argument, we conclude that Defendants are entitled to qualified immunity on Plaintiff's § 1983 claims and to official immunity on Plaintiff's state law claims. Accordingly, we REVERSE the district court's order denying the motion to dismiss and REMAND the case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
BACKGROUND
We assume the following facts to be true for purposes of this appeal. 1 On November 26, 2014, Plaintiff participated in a march *1295 in downtown Atlanta to protest a grand jury's decision in a police-shooting case in Ferguson, Missouri. During the protest, Plaintiff was given a "V for Vendetta" mask by another protestor. As the image attached to the complaint shows, the mask is a stylized image of the Guy Fawkes character from the movie "V for Vendetta." It is designed to cover the entire face. According to Plaintiff, the mask has become popular among people protesting against politicians, banks, and financial institutions. Plaintiff acknowledges that he and other protesters wore the "V for Vendetta" masks during this Ferguson protest in Atlanta. Plaintiff alleges that he wore the mask both to "express himself and his disagreement with the Ferguson, Missouri grand jury's decision," and to maintain his anonymity during the protest. Plaintiff claims he never intended to threaten or intimidate anyone by wearing the mask.
At some point during the protest, Defendant Whitmire ordered the protesters to remove their masks. Plaintiff acknowledges that Whitmire warned the protesters multiple times over a loudspeaker that any person wearing a mask during the protest would be arrested. Plaintiff, however, claims he did not hear the warning. Whitmire subsequently issued an order over the radio for the police to arrest anyone who was wearing a mask.
According to Plaintiff, after Whitmire issued the order to arrest protesters wearing masks, a "swarm" of officers dressed in riot gear, including Defendant Khokhar, pushed their way into the protesting crowd. Plaintiff alleges that Khokhar grabbed Plaintiff by the shoulder, pulled him by the strap of his backpack, and arrested him. When Plaintiff asked what he had done and why he was being arrested, Khokhar did not immediately respond. After conferring with other officers, Khokhar "handcuffed [Plaintiff] with plastic cuffs" and "shoved [him] into [a] police car." Khokhar told Plaintiff that he was being arrested for wearing a mask.
Plaintiff alleges that he subsequently was taken to the Zone 5 precinct, where he was searched and then left in a chair in a back room, handcuffed. While Plaintiff was detained, Khokhar drafted an offense report charging Plaintiff with violating Georgia's mask statute, O.C.G.A. § 16-11-38. The report stated:
I [Officer Khokhar] observed [Plaintiff] wear a "V for Vendetta" mask. [Plaintiff] was actively participating in a protest. The protest had been warned on the loud speakers multiple times that anyone wearing a mask will be arrested. This information was relayed by Unit 15 over the radio that anyone wearing a mask should be arrested. [Plaintiff] still had his mask on. [Plaintiff] was arrested for wearing a mask.
Defendant Brauninger, Khokhar's supervising officer, reviewed and authorized the offense report.
Based on the charges asserted against him in the offense report, Plaintiff, along with other arrestees from the protest, was booked, searched, and photographed at the precinct. After several hours of waiting at the precinct, Plaintiff was taken to the Fulton County jail. Once he arrived at the jail, Plaintiff was able to make a phone call and ultimately post bail.
Plaintiff filed a complaint about his arrest with the City of Atlanta Office of Professional Standards. The City determined that Plaintiff's arrest was "justified, lawful, and proper" and exonerated all of the officers who were involved in it. As noted, Plaintiff thereafter sued the City of Atlanta and the individual officers, asserting § 1983 claims and state law claims. The individual officers moved to dismiss Plaintiff's § 1983 claims on the ground of qualified immunity and his state law claims *1296 on the ground of official immunity. 2 The district court denied the motion.
DISCUSSION
I. Standard of Review
We review the denial of a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss on qualified or official immunity grounds
de novo
, applying the same standard as the district court.
See
Bailey v. Wheeler
,
II. Qualified Immunity
A. Standard
Defendants argue that they are entitled to qualified immunity on Plaintiff's federal constitutional claims asserted under § 1983. "Qualified immunity protects government officials performing discretionary functions from suits in their individual capacities unless their conduct violates clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known."
Dalrymple v. Reno
,
To be clearly established, a right must be well-established enough "that every reasonable official would have understood that what he is doing violates that right."
Reichle v. Howards
,
Fair warning is most commonly provided by materially similar precedent from the Supreme Court, this Court, or the highest state court in which the case arose.
See
Terrell v. Smith
,
A defendant who asserts qualified immunity has the initial burden of showing he was acting within the scope of his discretionary authority when he took the allegedly unconstitutional action.
See
Bennett v. Hendrix
,
B. District Court's Order
The district court implicitly agreed that Defendants had probable cause to arrest Plaintiff based on the elements of the mask law as set out in the statute. The court, however, noted that the Georgia Supreme Court has also imposed a mens rea element onto the statute, requiring that the wearer of the mask know or reasonably should know that his actions give rise to a reasonable apprehension of intimidation, threats, or impending violence. The district court further added that Plaintiff had alleged that he never intended to threaten, intimidate, or cause the apprehension of violence by his mask-wearing. Given this protestation by Plaintiff in his complaint, the district court concluded that the defendant officers lacked even arguable probable cause to arrest Plaintiff for violating the mask statute.
Addressing whether existing precedent gave Defendants fair notice that an arrest under these circumstances would be unlawful, the district court stated, "The Eleventh Circuit has concluded that it is '
clearly established
that an arrest without probable cause to believe a crime has been committed violates the Fourth Amendment.'
Von Stein v. Brescher
,
C. Constitutional Violation: False Arrest
In support of his § 1983 claims, Plaintiff alleges that he was arrested without probable cause while engaging in a protest, which action, he says, violated his Fourth Amendment and First Amendment rights. It is true that a warrantless arrest lacking probable cause violates the Constitution, and such an arrest can therefore potentially underpin a § 1983 claim.
Brown v. City of Huntsville
,
Ala.
,
"Probable cause exists where the facts within the collective knowledge of law enforcement officials, derived from reasonably trustworthy information, are sufficient to cause a person of reasonable caution to believe that a criminal offense has been or is being committed."
Brown
,
Even without actual probable cause, however, a police officer is entitled to qualified immunity if he had only "arguable" probable cause to arrest the plaintiff.
See
Lee v. Ferraro
,
"Arguable probable cause exists where reasonable officers in the same circumstances and possessing the same knowledge as the [defendant]
could
have believed that probable cause existed to arrest."
Whether an officer has probable cause or arguable probable cause, or neither, "depends on the elements of the alleged crime and the operative fact pattern."
Brown
,
Viewing the facts in the light most favorable to Plaintiff, we think Defendants had actual probable cause to arrest Plaintiff for violating Georgia's mask statute. But even assuming they lacked actual probable cause, these officers clearly had arguable probable cause. We explain why.
The Georgia mask statute makes it a misdemeanor for a person to "wear[ ] a mask, hood, or device by which any portion of the face is so hidden, concealed, or covered as to conceal the identity of the wearer" while he is "upon any public way *1299 or public property." O.C.G.A. § 16-11-38(a). The statute includes exceptions for:
(1) A person wearing a traditional holiday costume on the occasion of the holiday;
(2) A person lawfully engaged in trade and employment or in a sporting activity where a mask is worn for the purpose of ensuring the physical safety of the wearer, or because of the nature of the occupation, trade, or profession, or sporting activity;
(3) A person using a mask in a theatrical production including use in Mardi gras celebrations and masquerade balls; or
(4) A person wearing a gas mask prescribed in emergency management drills and exercises or emergencies.
In addition to the statutory exceptions, the Georgia mask statute must be read in light of the limitations placed on it by the Georgia Supreme Court in
State v. Miller
,
In
Daniels
, the Georgia Supreme Court applied the intent requirement recognized in
Miller
to reverse a defendant's conviction under the mask statute.
See
Daniels
,
Taking into account the statutory elements of O.C.G.A. § 16-11-38, as interpreted by the Georgia Supreme Court in Miller and Daniels , we conclude that Defendants had probable cause to arrest Plaintiff for violating the mask statute under the circumstances alleged in the complaint. Construed in Plaintiff's favor, the facts within the collective knowledge of Defendant officers were as follows. Defendant officers were on the public streets of Atlanta as a "crowd" of demonstrators marched peacefully in protest of the grand jury decision in the Ferguson, Missouri police shooting case. Some of the protestors-including Plaintiff-were wearing "V for Vendetta" masks. The masks covered the entire face and, thus, concealed the identity of the wearer. At about 9:15 p.m., the police began ordering the protestors to disperse. Officers also issued "repeated orders" over loud speakers for protestors to remove their masks or be subject to arrest. At about 10:00 p.m., a "swarm of officers in full riot gear pushed their way into the crowd" of protestors. Officer Khokhar then arrested Plaintiff, who was still wearing his mask as he continued to march on public property.
Plaintiff alleges no facts that would support the application of any of the statutory exceptions to the prohibition on mask-wearing. That is, Plaintiff was not wearing the mask as part of a traditional holiday costume or theatrical production, for the purpose of ensuring his safety while engaged in a particular trade, profession, or sporting activity, or during an emergency or emergency drill.
See
O.C.G.A. § 16-11-38(b). Given these facts, an objectively reasonable officer at the scene could have believed that probable cause existed to arrest Plaintiff for violating the mask statute.
See
Lee
,
Plaintiff argues, however, that when one also factors in the additional intent requirement imposed onto the statute by Miller and Daniels for purposes of sustaining a conviction, Defendants had neither arguable nor actual probable cause to believe that Plaintiff wore the "V for Vendetta" mask with the intent to threaten, intimidate, or provoke the apprehension of violence, or with reckless disregard for the fact that his conduct could cause the above reaction. We disagree.
First, as far as arguable probable cause is concerned, our Court has repeatedly held that "[s]howing arguable probable cause does not ... require proving every element of a crime."
Brown
,
*1301
The Georgia Supreme Court has instructed that, in assessing whether a mask-wearer acts with the requisite criminal intent, one must consider the surrounding circumstances.
See
Miller
,
Like some other protesters, Plaintiff was wearing a mask that covered his entire face, and thus concealed his identity, during this night-time protest. That conduct might be sufficient by itself to suggest an intent to intimidate. But there is more: the calculus changed dramatically when the police repeatedly asked the masked protesters to remove their masks, else be arrested. Notwithstanding this command, Plaintiff nonetheless persisted, in what could reasonably be perceived as defiance of this lawful order by the police. A reasonable officer could infer that Plaintiff intended to intimidate based on such conduct, or, at the least, infer that Plaintiff could reasonably foresee that his behavior would be viewed as intimidating.
Cf.
Miller
,
That Plaintiff now alleges he did not hear Whitmire's warnings to remove his mask is immaterial. For purposes of our qualified immunity analysis, "we look only to whether a reasonable officer,
knowing what [Defendants] knew at the time
, objectively could have believed probable cause existed."
See
Brown
,
In concluding that arguable probable cause to arrest was lacking, the district court relied on Plaintiff's allegation that he never intended to intimidate anyone through his wearing of the V for Vendetta mask. Ergo, the court concluded, arguable probable cause evaporated. This approach *1302 was error. It is not Plaintiff's post-hoc explanation of his actions that counts. What matters is what a reasonable police officer under the circumstances could infer from those actions. A reasonable officer could infer that, in disobeying Whitmire's commands to remove his mask, Plaintiff actually intended to intimidate or, at the least, acted with "reasonable foresight" that his conduct would do so.
Although not outcome-determinative, we also note that, in explaining the origins of the Guy Fawkes mask, Plaintiff implicitly acknowledges that the mask could be perceived as celebrating violent protest against the government. Specifically, the complaint links to an article
4
that describes Guy Fawkes as "an infamous insurgent who tried to blow up the British Parliament in 1605."
See
http://theweek.com/articles/463151/brief-history-guy-fawkes-mask. The article notes that the Guy Fawkes mask became more familiar in popular culture following release of the graphic novel and film
V for Vendetta
, whose protagonist is a vigilante who attempts to destroy the government.
In short, and for all of the above reasons, we conclude that Defendants, at the very least, had arguable probable cause to arrest Plaintiff for violation of the mask statute. We disagree with the district court's conclusion to the contrary.
D. Clearly Established Law
In deciding that clearly established law existed sufficient to put Defendants on notice that their arrest of Plaintiff was unconstitutional, the district court made the following statement: "The Eleventh Circuit has concluded that it is "
clearly established
than an arrest without probable cause to believe a crime had been committed violates the Fourth Amendment." (citation omitted) (emphasis in district court order). Of course, no one would disagree that the Fourth Amendment requires an arrest to be based on probable cause. But we reiterate that an officer who has arrested someone without probable cause might still be entitled to immunity. This is so because the "clearly-established" inquiry does not ask whether there was probable cause in actuality. Instead, it asks whether the preexisting law was so clear that, given the specific facts facing a particular officer, one must say that "every reasonable official would have understood that what he is doing violates" the Constitutional right at issue.
al-Kidd
,
In framing its inquiry more broadly than the above standard permits, the district court erred, running afoul of the Supreme Court's oft-repeated directive "not to define clearly established law at a high level of generality."
Mullenix v. Luna
, --- U.S. ----,
*1303
("Today, it is again necessary to reiterate the longstanding principle that clearly established law should not be defined at a high level of generality." (internal quotation marks omitted) );
City & Cnty. of San Francisco, Ca. v. Sheehan
, --- U.S. ----,
Reframing the analysis to conform with the direction of the Supreme Court, the dispositive question is whether it was already clearly established, as a matter of law, that at the time of Plaintiff's arrest, an objective officer could not have concluded reasonably that probable cause existed to arrest Plaintiff
under the particular circumstances Defendants confronted
.
See
Mullenix
,
Plaintiff does not cite, and we have not found, any already existing law that clearly established-beyond debate-the unlawfulness of an arrest under the circumstances present here. 5 And that is not *1304 surprising, given our conclusion that, at the very least, Defendants arguably had probable cause to arrest. Because we conclude-as a matter of law-that Defendants violated no already clearly established right, we thus conclude that the district court erred in denying Defendants' motion to dismiss based on qualified immunity. Accordingly, we reverse the district court's denial of that motion.
III. Official Immunity
In addition to his federal claims, Plaintiff asserts state claims against Defendants alleging that they violated his privacy rights, committed an assault and battery against him, and unlawfully detained and maliciously prosecuted him. Defendants moved to dismiss Plaintiff's state claims on the ground of official immunity, which under Georgia law protects an officer from personal liability arising from his performance of "official functions" as long as the officer did not act with "actual malice" or "actual intent to cause injury." See Ga. Const. art. I, § 2, para. IX (d). The district court likewise denied this motion.
Similar to qualified immunity, official immunity is intended to "preserve the public employee's independence of action without fear of lawsuits and to prevent a review of his or her judgment in hindsight."
Cameron v. Lang
,
The parties agree that Defendants were performing a discretionary act within the scope of their official authority when they arrested Plaintiff. Thus, Defendants can only be liable on Plaintiff's state claims if they acted with "actual malice" or "actual intent to cause injury" as required to overcome official immunity.
See
Adams v. Hazelwood
,
*1305
None of the facts alleged in the complaint support a plausible claim that Defendants acted with actual malice or an actual intent to injure Plaintiff, as those terms have been defined by the Georgia Supreme Court. The only allegations that could potentially be relevant to a finding of actual malice or intent to injure are that: Defendants approached Plaintiff in "full riot gear" and arrested him without probable cause; they "pushed" or "pulled" Plaintiff while making the arrest; they handcuffed Plaintiff, transported him to the precinct and jail, and processed and booked him; and they made Plaintiff wait approximately twelve hours without food, water, or a place to sleep. Construing these allegations as liberally as possible, together with our conclusion that arguable probable cause existed, the most that can be made of them is that Plaintiff was arrested and subjected to the routine inconveniences that attend any arrest. These facts are obviously insufficient to show actual malice or intent to injure.
See
Reed v. DeKalb Cty.
,
Accordingly, for the above reasons, we reverse the district court's denial of Defendants' motion to dismiss state-law claims made against them.
CONCLUSION
We conclude that Defendants are entitled to qualified immunity on Plaintiff's § 1983 claims and to official immunity on Plaintiff's state claims. We therefore REVERSE the district court's order denying dismissal of these claims under Federal Rule 12(b)(6) and REMAND the case with the direction that the district court dismiss these claims against the individual defendants.
KATHLEEN M. WILLIAMS, District Judge, dissenting in part:
Although I agree that official immunity warrants dismissal of the state-law claims against Appellants, I do not agree that the officers are entitled to qualified immunity on Gates's federal claims. More specifically, I believe that Gates has adequately pled that Appellants lacked actual or arguable probable cause to arrest him for wearing a Guy Fawkes mask during an admittedly peaceful protest in downtown Atlanta. Therefore, I would affirm the district court's finding that Gates's First and Fourth Amendment claims should survive a motion to dismiss. 1
The majority concludes otherwise, based on a qualified immunity analysis that fails to adequately address the First-Amendment
*1306
implications of the conduct and statute at issue here. While it is true that the existence of probable cause to arrest can defeat a First Amendment claim arising out of that arrest in certain circumstances-for example in cases like
Dahl
and
Redd
, where a presumptively valid arrest under an unrelated statute for non-protected conduct had the ancillary effect of terminating protected speech-it is not appropriate here. This is because the Anti-Mask Act, which was purportedly the sole basis of Gates's arrest, was itself challenged under the First Amendment over two decades ago in
State v. Miller
,
The first question addressed in a qualified immunity analysis is whether the right was "clearly established" at the time of the alleged violation. In order to demonstrate that a right is "clearly established" for the purposes of qualified immunity, "[w]e do not require a case directly on point, but existing precedent must have placed the statutory or constitutional question beyond debate."
Ashcroft v. al-Kidd
,
This Circuit has unambiguously held that "[our] [d]ecisions ... have put police officers on notice for decades that protestors present on public property have a First Amendment right to peacefully express their views, in the absence of narrowly tailored ordinances restricting the time, place, or manner of the speech."
Childs v. Dekalb Cty., Ga.
,
But even beyond the clearly established right to peacefully protest that is set out in the First Amendment, it would be unreasonable for the officers to believe that the Anti-Mask Act was intended to cover the type of protected speech at issue here. As the
Miller
court declared in defending the constitutionality of the Anti-Mask Act twenty years ago, "[i]t would be absurd to interpret the statute to prevent non-threatening political mask-wearing."
Miller
,
As to whether a violation of this right occurred, the majority suggests that there was no violation because "[they] think Defendants had actual probable cause to arrest Plaintiff for violating Georgia's mask statute." In support of this observation, they note that Gates's conduct fell within a purely textualist reading of the statute and did not qualify for any of the listed exceptions, making arrest under the statute reasonable. That conclusion is untenable. First, it ignores the majority's own acknowledgement that "the Georgia mask statute must be read in light of the limitations placed on it by the Georgia Supreme Court in
State v. Miller
,
Still, in order to prevail on his federal claims, Gates must also demonstrate that the officers lacked arguable probable cause for his arrest. The complaint clearly acknowledges that the mask Gates wore concealed his identity. As such, the question of arguable probable cause turns on whether, taking the facts alleged in the light most favorable to Gates, "reasonable officers in the same circumstances and possessing the same knowledge ...
could
have believed" that Gates "intended to threaten, intimidate, or provoke the apprehension of violence" as opposed to simply being engaged in "non-threatening political mask-wearing."
See
Lee v. Ferraro
,
The majority offers two alternative bases for finding that the officers had arguable probable cause to believe that Gates intended to intimidate or should have known that his conduct would be intimidating. First, they state that "[l]ike some other protesters, Plaintiff was wearing a mask that covered his entire face, and thus concealed his identity, during this night-time protest," concluding that "[t]hat conduct might be sufficient by itself to suggest an intent to intimidate." 4 This reading *1308 of the breadth of the Anti-Mask Act cannot be reconciled with the analysis in Miller . In fact, because the protest was concededly peaceful, this approach would prohibit the "non-threatening political mask-wearing" First-Amendment conduct that Miller explicitly allows, simply because the political event took place at night. Absent more, 5 this cannot form the basis for arguable probable cause.
The majority goes on, however, to state that even if those circumstances alone were insufficient, Gates's failure to remove his mask when the police ordered the protesters to do so "changed [the calculus] dramatically," and led to a reasonable inference that such a refusal was "a gesture intended to intimidate." Again, the discussion of Gates's First Amendment right to anonymously protest in a non-violent manner is conspicuously absent from the conclusory finding that noncompliance with this order gave rise to arguable probable cause.
There can be no doubt that the order to remove the masks was directed at what would be constitutionally-protected expression,
6
unless it was brought outside the
*1309
ambit of the First Amendment through some exception-here, the threat of violence or intimidation that was criminalized by the Anti-Mask Act.
7
As discussed above, the record at this juncture does not demonstrate that such a threat existed at the time the order was given, and so there was no legal basis for ordering Gates to remove his mask.
8
To the contrary, the order itself constituted an impermissible incursion on Gates's right to free speech, and, as the Supreme Court explained in
Wright v. State of Ga.
,
In sum, nothing in the complaint or attached documentation supports a finding that a reasonable officer could have believed that Gates's conduct evidenced an intent to threaten or intimidate, as required under the Anti-Mask Act. The complaint alleges that Gates was wearing a mask "to express himself" during a "peaceful protest" in downtown Atlanta, and that he was improperly arrested after the police gave an "unconstitutional ... order" to remove his mask and he did not do so. The arrest report attached to the complaint similarly states that "Mr. Gates was arrested for wearing a mask" while participating in a protest, with no mention of threats or intimidation. Based on these allegations, it is clear that Gates's behavior is a far cry from the "terrorization by masked vigilantes" that the Anti-Mask Act was designed to prevent.
Miller
,
When considering the merits of a motion to dismiss under Federal Rule 12(b)(6), we accept the factual allegations in the complaint as true and construe them in the light most favorable to Plaintiff.
See
Keating v. City of Miami
,
The City of Atlanta moved to dismiss Plaintiff's § 1983 claims under
Monell v. Dep't of Soc. Serv. of City of New York
,
Of interest, albeit not dispositive for purposes of a § 1983 analysis, the Georgia Supreme Court has suggested that an arrest for violation of the mask statute can be lawful, even though the facts concerning the intent element would be insufficient to justify a conviction. In
Miller
, the Georgia Supreme Court distinguished between the evidence sufficient to support an arrest under the mask statute and the evidence required to sustain a conviction, noting that the defendant's arrest was constitutional but that "[t]he particular facts of [the] case may or may not support conviction under the statute."
See
Miller
,
The article states, in part: "Over the past decade, dissidents across the globe have appropriated the visage of Guy Fawkes, the infamous insurgent who tried to blow up the British Parliament in 1605, warping the once-reviled fringe rebel into a widespread symbol of resistance. The iconic version of the Guy Fawkes mask owes its popularity to the graphic novel and film V for Vendetta , which centers on a vigilante's efforts to destroy an authoritarian government in a dystopian future United Kingdom." See http://theweek.com/articles/463151/brief-history-guy-fawkes-mask for the full article.
What the Georgia Supreme Court decided in
Miller
is that Georgia's mask statute prohibits "mask-wearing conduct when the mask-wearer knows or reasonably should know that the conduct provokes a reasonable apprehension of intimidation, threats or violence": an intent that must be determined based on the surrounding circumstances of the case.
Miller
,
Officers can incur personal liability for the negligent performance of "ministerial functions." See Ga. Const. art. I, § 2, para. IX (d).
Because we are addressing this case on a motion to dismiss, the allegations in the amended complaint and its attachments, taken as true, must control our analysis of whether Gates has alleged a violation of a clearly established constitutional right that would preclude the application of qualified immunity.
See
Keating v. City of Miami
,
As the majority acknowledges, the
Miller
court narrowed the reach of the statute to cover "only ... mask-wearing ... when the mask-wearer knows or reasonably should know that the conduct provokes a reasonable apprehension of intimidation, threats or violence," which "does not reach a substantial amount of constitutionally protected conduct" because "the restriction is limited to threats and intimidation, which is not protected expression under the First Amendment."
State v. Miller
,
Plaintiff's complaint points out that the arrest report makes no mention of a "threat" or intent to threaten. Instead, the report reinforces Plaintiff's contention that he was arrested based solely on the fact that he was wearing a mask and failed to remove it. It states that Officer Khokhar "observed [Gates] wear a 'V for Vendetta' mask," that Gates "was actively participating in a protest" and that "the protesters had been warned on loud speakers multiple times that anyone wearing a mask will be arrested." It then states, "Mr. Gates still had his mask on. Mr. Gates was arrested for wearing a mask."
The Supreme Court has held arguably more "threatening" conduct to be "a far cry" from the "violence or threat of violence" that would bring such conduct outside of the protections of the First Amendment.
See, e.g.,
Edwards v. South Carolina
,
The majority notes that the significance of the Guy Fawkes mask could "bolster" the Officers' reasonable inference that Gates intended to threaten or intimidate. They rely on an article attached to the complaint, which explains that Guy Fawkes was an "infamous insurgent who tried to blow up the British Parliament in 1605," and that the mask bearing his face became popular based on "the graphic novel and film
V for Vendetta
, which centers on a vigilante's efforts to destroy an authoritarian government in a dystopian future United Kingdom." Apart from the fact that this inference turns the motion to dismiss standard on its head, the citation does not posit an equivalent predicate to the violent legacy of the Ku Klux Klan in Georgia described in
Miller
: "harassment, intimidation and violence against racial and religious minorities carried out by mask-wearing Klansmen and other 'hate' organizations" that "operated as vigilantes and were responsible for numerous beatings and lynchings."
Miller
,
The Supreme Court has held that peaceful protests constitute "an exercise of ... basic constitutional rights in their most pristine and classic form."
Edwards,
Even apart from the Anti-Mask Act, nothing in the complaint or attached documents gives any indication that Gates's conduct involved the type of "lewd and obscene, [ ] profane, [ ] libelous, and [ ] insulting or 'fighting' words" that would otherwise militate against invocation of the First Amendment.
Chaplinsky v. State of N.H.
,
Plaintiff's complaint expressly alleges that the order to remove the masks was "unconstitutional" and "unlawful" because it was given "without regard to [the protesters'] constitutional right[ ] to wear [the] masks."
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Austin GATES, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. Hassan KHOKHAR, Individually, J. Brauninger, Individually, James Wayne Whitmire, Individually, Officers of the City of Atlanta Police Department, Defendants-Appellants.
- Cited By
- 207 cases
- Status
- Published