The Supreme Court sided with a protest organizer whom a policeman tried to hold personally responsible for an injury suffered at a 2016 protest in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.
Black Lives Matter leader DeRay Mckesson, an advocate of political violence, had led the protest illegally onto a highway, and the police officer was injured by a thrown rock or piece of concrete that hit his head. The assailant is unknown.
The decision comes at a time when many Americans have grown weary of violent demonstrations led by Black Lives Matter and Antifa, and are anxious about an outbreak of political violence on Election Day and in its aftermath as ballots are counted.
The ruling overturns a decision by the New Orleans-based 5th Circuit Court of Appeals that allowed an injured police officer’s lawsuit against Mckesson personally to move forward, sending the case back to the circuit court for another look.
In 2017, U.S. District Judge Brian A. Jackson, who was appointed by then-President Barack Obama, found that neither Mckesson nor the Black Lives Matter movement could be sued over the incident. The police officer, identified pseudonymously as John Doe, appealed, and in 2019, the 5th Circuit resurrected the lawsuit as to Mckesson but dismissed the claim against Black Lives Matter, finding it wasn’t a legal entity capable of being sued.
Doe suffered brain trauma, a head injury, and lost teeth after an unknown assailant threw a rock or piece of concrete at him.
The Supreme Court didn’t rule on Doe’s claim itself.
“The question presented for our review is whether the theory of personal liability adopted by the Fifth Circuit violates the First Amendment,” the court stated in the unsigned ruling.
“Mckesson contends that his role in leading the protest onto the highway, even if negligent and punishable as a misdemeanor, cannot make him personally liable for the violent act of an individual whose only association with him was attendance at the protest.”
The circuit court’s “interpretation of state law is too uncertain a premise on which to address the question presented. The constitutional issue, though undeniably important, is implicated only if Louisiana law permits recovery under these circumstances in the first place.”
The Supreme Court noted that Louisiana Civil Code article 2315(A) provides: “Every act whatever of man that causes damage to another obliges him by whose fault it happened to repair it.”
Louisiana Rev. Statutes Section 14:97 provides: “Simple obstruction of a highway of commerce is the intentional or criminally negligent placing of anything or performance of any act on any railway, railroad, navigable waterway, road, highway, thoroughfare, or runway of an airport, which will render movement thereon more difficult.”
Mckesson interpreted the new ruling as a victory.
“I think that the unrest, the uprising, whatever you call it, is again a cry for justice here and a cry for justice across the country because the police continue to terrorize people. The terrorizing is actually deadly. Broken windows are not broken spines. People are in pain.
“There’s been a lot of positive demonstrations over the past couple months here in Baltimore and across the country because the police have continued to kill people.”
Blitzer said: “But at least 15 police officers have been hurt, 200 arrests, 144 vehicle fires, these are statistics, local police have put out 15 structure fires. There’s no excuse for that kind of violence, right?”
Mckesson replied, “Again, there’s no excuse for the seven people that the Baltimore city Police Department has killed in the past year either, right?”
Following the meeting, Obama praised Mckesson, saying he had carried out “outstanding work mobilizing in Baltimore.”