Santa Cruz Homeless Update - Norse arrest upheld at the federal Ninth Circuit
Von: me (dhm_at_best_dot_com@yahoo.com) [Profil]
Datum: 05.11.2009 17:03
Message-ID: <f6101e2e-036a-4770-8344-c7b95321cd7e@g22g2000prf.googlegroups.com>
Newsgroup: alt.society.homeless alt.activismmisc.legal alt.californiascruz.general
Datum: 05.11.2009 17:03
Message-ID: <f6101e2e-036a-4770-8344-c7b95321cd7e@g22g2000prf.googlegroups.com>
Newsgroup: alt.society.homeless alt.activismmisc.legal alt.californiascruz.general
Below is the text of Robert Norse's dispatch concerning the decision at the federal court of appeals which supports his arrest for disrupting a meeting with a Nazi salute. They are going for a rehearing but it seems to me that the judges will first have to feel Norse's case is important enough. The only reason they are ruling on the case at all is because an "attorney" (Beauvais) has been pursuing it. If not for this, the court personnel would sabotage the case. I previously commented that Norse did not attack the Council on the basis of the meeting lacking public integrity that excluded affected interests from the political process. The city council (and for that matter the 9th Circuit) are comprised of post-secondary graduates which Norse is not. For example, Mayor Rotkin is an extension of the hegemony of the University of California, Santa Cruz and its gentrified constituency. As the de facto Constitution says, "First you gentrify people. Next, you gentrify services for their benefit. Next, everyone else can go to hell." The text of the decision is included at the end of this posting. -----Forwarded Message----- [huffsantacruz] Silently Mock-Salute a City Council, Go to Jail Wed, November 4, 2009 12:32:44 AM From: Robert Norse <rnorse3@hotmail.com> To: HUFF yahoo groups <huffsantacruz@yahoogroups.com> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/huffsantacruz/message/1092 The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals decided this week that a silent "you're acting like a bunch of fascists" Nazi salute to a City Council was justification for an arrest. As a homeless activist in Santa Cruz, CA I witnessed substantive anti- homeless laws being passed (such as the city's "fall asleep after 11 PM outside, go to jail" Sleeping Ban). I also experienced increasingly repressive procedures being used at City Council (eliminating evening sessions, cutting back public comment time, banning discussion of individual consent agenda items without the express consent of a city council member). In response,on several occasions I raised my hand in a psuedo-Nazi salute, suggesting my strong disapproval of Council action and my belief that the Council was acting in a repressive manner. On one of these occasions did my behavior interrupt the business of the Council. (Unless its business was ensuring that the public remain benignly passive throughout.) As attorney David Beauvais describes and the video below shows, I was punished for what seemed to me to be clearly First Amendment-protected activity. Seven years after the incident, it appears our rights aren't what they used to be. Although, attorneys Beauvais and Wells have said they'll be appealing the case to a broader en banc panel to overturn the decision. Here is Beauvais's analysis: http://davidbeauvais.blogspot.com/2009/11/bad -first-amendment-decision.html as well as a video of the "crime" (for which I was never charged, much less prosecuted). -----End Forward----- Text of decision: -------------- FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ROBERT NORSE, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. CITY OF SANTA CRUZ; CHRISTOPHER KROHN, individually and in his official capacity as Mayor of the City of Santa Cruz; TIM No. 07-15814 FITZMAURICE; KEITH A. SUGAR; D.C. No. EMILY REILLY; ED PORTER; SCOTT  CV-02-01479-RMW KENNEDY; MARK PRIMACK, individually and in their official OPINION capacities as Members of the Santa Cruz City Council; LORAN BAKER, individually and in his official capacity as Sergeant of the Santa Cruz Police Department; STEVEN CLARK, Defendants-Appellees.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of California Ronald M. Whyte, District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted June 12, 2009âSan Francisco, California Filed November 3, 2009 Before: Mary M. Schroeder, Diarmuid F. OâScannlain and A. Wallace Tashima, Circuit Judges. Opinion by Judge Schroeder; Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge Tashima 14795 COUNSEL David Beauvais, Oakland, California, for the plaintiff- appellant. 14797NORSE v. CITY OF SANTA CRUZ Kathleen Wells, Santa Cruz, California, for the plaintiff- appellant. George J. Kovacevich, Santa Cruz, California, for the defendants-appellees. OPINION SCHROEDER, Circuit Judge: Plaintiff-Appellant Robert Norse was ejected from two meetings of the Santa Cruz City Council, one in 2002 and one in 2004. He filed this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action against the City and its Mayor and Council members alleging violation of his First Amendment rights. In a 2004 unpublished, non- precedential disposition, we unanimously upheld the validity of the Council rules that were being enforced at the time of the ejections. Norse v. City of Santa Cruz, No. 02-16446, 2004 WL 2757528 (9th Cir. Dec. 3, 2004) (âNorse Iâ), at *1. The rules authorize removal of âany person who interrupts and refuses to keep quiet . . . or otherwise disrupts the pro- ceedings of the Council.â We observed that the rules are materially similar to the regulations we upheld in White v. City of Norwalk, 900 F.2d 1421 (9th Cir. 1990). Id. A majority of us, however, reversed and remanded the dis- trict courtâs dismissal on the pleadings, holding that there was no way of assessing the reasonableness of the Mayorâs actions, particularly his action in ordering Norseâs 2002 ejec- tion after Norse gave a Nazi salute to protest the Mayorâs administration of the Councilâs rules. Id. at *2. On remand, the district court ruled that the Mayor acted reasonably in ordering both of Norseâs ejections, because Norse was supporting the conduct of persons in the meeting who were causing a disruption. Our consideration of the case 14798 NORSE v. CITY OF SANTA CRUZ has been delayed because of the difficulty in obtaining the factual record underlying the district courtâs rulings. This record consists principally of the video tapes of the two epi- sodes in question, so the underlying facts are not disputed. There is no doubt that ordering Norseâs ejection in 2004 was a reasonable application of the rules of the Council. The vid- eotape shows that Norse was engaged in a parade about the Council chambers protesting the Councilâs action, and his conduct was clearly disruptive. With respect to the March 12, 2002 meeting, the behavior that prompted Norseâs ejection was his giving a Nazi salute in support of a disruptive member of the audience who had refused to leave the podium after the presiding officer ruled that the speakerâs time had expired, and that the portion of the Council meeting devoted to receiving oral communications from the public had ended. Two members of the audience in the rear were creating a disruption. When the Mayor told the speaker at the podium that her time had expired, the speaker was visibly unhappy with the ruling, and Norse directed a Nazi salute in the presiding officerâs direction. The salute was obviously intended as a criticism or condemnation of the rul- ing. The Mayor had resumed Council business by reading announcements and did not notice Norseâs Nazi salute until another Council member called the Mayorâs attention to it. The district court accurately described the proceedings, as portrayed on the video, as follows: Since he was reading, [the Mayor] did not notice Norseâs gesture but within seconds council member Fitzmaurice called his attention to the fact that Norse had made a Nazi salute. . . . [The Mayor], . . . as the presiding officer in charge of running the meeting, was suddenly faced with a meeting that had been interrupted by an offended council member. [The Mayor] had just finished dealing with two disruptive 14799NORSE v. CITY OF SANTA CRUZ members of the public, at least one of whom Norse was supporting with his salute. [The Mayor] also knew that two Council members in the previous months had expressed to Norse their abhorrence of his Nazi gestures which reasonably suggests that Norse intended his salute at the March 12, 2002 meeting to be disruptive. Further, Norse had begun to verbally challenge Fitzmauriceâs comments. Under those circumstances, the district court found that the Mayorâs action in evicting Norse from the chambers was rea- sonable, and that the Mayor and council members were all entitled to qualified immunity. [1] Our well-settled law gives great discretion to presiding officers in enforcing reasonable rules for the orderly conduct of meetings. In Kindt v. Santa Monica Rent Control Board, 67 F.3d 266, 269 (9th Cir. 1995), we upheld the Santa Monica Rent Control Boardâs action in ejecting a speaker several times because his conduct disrupted the orderly processes of meetings. We have long recognized that First Amendment rights of expression are more limited during a meeting than in a public forum, as, for example, a street corner. See White, 900 F.2d at 1425. Thus, we reaffirmed in Kindt what we said in White, that a council âdoes not violate the first amendment when it restricts public speakers to the subject at hand,â and that a chair of a meeting may stop a speaker âif his speech becomes irrelevant or repetitious.â Kindt, 67 F.3d at 270 (quoting White, 900 F.2d at 1425). [2] Government officials performing discretionary func- tions are entitled to qualified immunity where they reasonably believe their actions to be lawful. Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 202 (2001). The interpretation and the enforcement of rules during public meetings are highly discretionary func- tions. See White, 900 F.2d at 1426 (â[T]he point at which speech becomes unduly repetitious or largely irrelevant is not 14800 NORSE v. CITY OF SANTA CRUZ mathematically determinable. The role of a moderator involves a great deal of discretion.â). [3] Our law is also clear, however, that discretion is not unlimited, and that rules may not be enforced in order to sup- press a particular viewpoint. See White, 900 F.2d at 1426. A majority of us remanded this case years ago because, on the basis of the pleadings alone, Norseâs ejection after the salute may have been on account of a viewpoint that was contrary to that of the Council. Now, on the basis of the undisputed factual record of the videotaped proceedings, it is clear that the salute was in protest of the chairâs enforcing the time limi- tations and in support of the disruption that had just occurred in the back of the meeting room. We agree with the district court that the ejection was not on account of any permissible expression of a point of view. Norse was protesting the good faith efforts of the Chair to enforce the Councilâs rules, which we have already determined were valid, in order to maintain order. See Norse I, 2004 WL 2757528, at *1. [4] Accordingly, we agree with the district court that the defendants did not violate Norseâs constitutional rights. In addition, even if, in retrospect, we were to hold that Norseâs First Amendment rights were violated, it would not have been clear to a reasonable person in the Mayor and Councilâs posi- tion that the ejection was unlawful, given the difficult circum- stances and threat of disorder that was presented by the disruptions. [5] We also agree with the district court that Norseâs refusal to comply with the ejection order established probable cause for his arrest. Even if the ejection itself violated Norseâs rights, there would have been no basis for a reasonable police officer to believe that Norse was defying anything other than a lawful order. The Rules of the Body provided that the Ser- geant at Arms âshall carry out all orders and instructions of the Presiding Officer.â Our decision in Grossman v. City of Portland, 33 F.3d 1200 (9th Cir. 1994), relied upon by the 14801NORSE v. CITY OF SANTA CRUZ district court, fully supports granting qualified immunity to arresting officers who have probable cause to believe that valid rules have been violated. [6] In sum, the salute had little to do with the message con- tent of the speaker whose time had expired. Rather, it was a condemnation of the efforts of the Mayor to enforce the rules of the meeting. The Council member who called the salute to the Mayorâs attention could reasonably have interpreted it as intended to support and to further the disruption that had just been occurring in the room. Officers presiding over public meetings are not required to condone conduct fostering dis- ruption of a meeting. The district court correctly ruled that the individual defendants were entitled to immunity when they reasonably acted on the belief that disruptive behavior was occurring and was fostered by the Nazi salute. [7] Because the individual defendants were reacting reason- ably to the specific situations that confronted them in both 2002 and 2004, and because the rules of the body they enforced were constitutionally valid, there is no basis for municipal liability. See White, 900 F.2d at 1424-25; Kindt, 67 F.3d at 271-72. AFFIRMED. TASHIMA, Circuit Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part: In a proceeding akin to summary judgment, on the date set for the commencement of a jury trial, the district court held as a matter of law that defendants were entitled to qualified immunity from liability. It held, first, that plaintiff âs First Amendment rights had not been violated, and, second, even if they were, those rights were not clearly established. Two incidents are at issue in this case, one in 2002 and the other 14802 NORSE v. CITY OF SANTA CRUZ in 2004, both involving plaintiff Norseâs ejection from meet- ings of the Santa Cruz City Council. I agree that Norseâs con- duct at the 2004 meeting, as a matter of uncontroverted fact, was disruptive. I therefore concur in the portion of the major- ity opinion affirming the district courtâs dismissal of that claim. 1 I disagree, however, with the majorityâs holding âthat the defendants did not violate Norseâs constitutional rightsâ i n ejecting him from the 2002 Council meeting. Maj. op. at 14801 (agreeing with the district court so holding). While it is clear under our case law that local public offi- cials conducting public meetings can restrict speech at such meetings according to subject matter, duration, and method, see Kindt v. Santa Monica Rent Control Bd., 67 F.3d 266, 272 (9th Cir. 1995); White v. City of Norwalk, 900 F.2d 1421, 1425-26 (9th Cir. 1990), it is equally clear that public officials may not restrict speech according to the viewpoint of the speaker, see id. at 1425. In order to avoid any constitutional problems, in a prior appeal, we construed the rules of the Santa Cruz City Council âto proscribe only disruptive con- duct.â See Norse v. City of Santa Cruz, 118 F. Appâx 177, 1 78 (9th Cir. 2004) (âNorse Iâ).2 That limitation on what condu ct the Council rules proscribe is the law of the case. Yet, the record supports the inference that the Mayor and members of the City Council excluded Norse from the 2002 meeting because they disagreed with the views he expressed by giving his silent Nazi salute.3 1 I also agree with the majority that, whether or not there was probable cause for Norseâs arrest at the 2002 meeting, the police officer (w ho was acting as Sergeant at Arms for the Council meeting), acted reasonably in carrying out the direct orders of the Presiding Officer (i.e., the Mayor) in ejecting Norse from the meeting. 2 This narrowing construction was necessary because the Council rules authorized, inter alia, the âremoval . . . of any person who uses âlanguage tending to bring the council or any council member into contempt . . . .â â Norse I, 118 F. Appâx at 178 (quoting the Council rules). 3 The district courtâs qualified immunity ruling was based primarily on viewing a video, which we have also viewed. No witnesses were called or 14803NORSE v. CITY OF SANTA CRUZ It is uncontroverted that Norseâs Nazi salute lasted only a second or two and, in the course of rendering that salute, Norse uttered no word or other sound â he was silent. It is also undisputed that the Council permits silent, visual speech, such as the displaying of signs at its meetings, so long as such speech does not block the view of or otherwise interfere with other meeting attendees. Thus, the salute comported with the Councilâs rule permitting silent, non-verbal messages at the Council meeting. That it was not, itself, disruptive, is evi- denced by the fact that the Mayor was not even aware of it â he continued with his reading of announcements â until Councilmember Fitzmaurice called his attention to it. And, as the video demonstrates, no member of the audience reacted to Norseâs silent salute. Drawing all reasonable inferences in Norseâs favor, as we must, I submit that there is no way to conclude that, as a matter of law, Norseâs conduct in render- ing a fleeting, silent Nazi salute was disruptive. In fact, a close reading of the majority opinion shows that it does not hold that Norseâs conduct was, itself, disruptive. Thus, there was no justification for the Mayor to eject Norse from the meeting for being disruptive. On the contrary, the record clearly supports the inference that Norse was ejected from the 2002 meeting because the Mayor and Council dis- agreed with (and intensely and overtly disliked) his view- point. The portion of the district courtâs ruling quoted by the majority admits as much. First, the district court noted that the Mayor was âsuddenly faced with a meeting that had been interrupted by an offended council member.â4 Maj. op. at 14799 (emphasis added). It then notes the Councilâs hostility subject to cross-examination. The district court purported to make no find- ings of fact, something it was not authorized to do because a jury trial had been demanded and was about to commence. Thus, the evidence on which the district courtâs and the majorityâs ruling were based i s uncontroverted (and untested). What remains controverted, however, are the reasonable inferences that a fact finder can draw from this evidence. 4 Note that the âinterruption,â or disruption, is caused, not by Norse, but by the council member. 14804 NORSE v. CITY OF SANTA CRUZ to Norseâs viewpoint. â[The Mayor] also knew that two Coun- cil members in the previous months had expressed to Norse their abhorrence of his Nazi gestures . . . .â Id. Further, as the district court also noted, when Norse made his Nazi salute gesture at past Council meetings, he was warned that Council members found the gesture to be offensive and that he would be removed from the meeting if he engaged in such conduct again. Thus, there is ample evidence in the record to support a finding that Norse was removed because of his viewpoint â because Council members detested being characterized as act- ing Nazi-like. The majority attempts to elide the point by sidetracking the issue. It says that Norseâs action was âin support of the d is- ruption that had just occurred . . . .â Maj. op. at 14801. That the Mayor was acting âin good faithâ to âenforce th e Council rules . . . .â Id. That Norseâs Nazi salute âcould reasonably have [been] interpreted [ ] as intended to support and to fur- ther the disruption that had just been occurring the room.â Id. at 14802 But Norseâs speech cannot be suppressed because of the actions of others. See Tinker v. Des Moines Indep. Cmty. Sch. Dist., 393 U.S. 503, 508 (1969) (holding that black arm- bands worn by high school students in protest of the Vietnam war were not disruptive, and that they could not be suppressed on account of the fact that the armbands might cause others to react in disruptive ways). Nor is Norseâs intent relevant, so long as his speech comports with the Councilâs rules, as it did. In sum, the district court erred in holding as a matter of law that the Mayor and Councilâs action in ejecting Norse from the 2002 meeting for rendering a silent Nazi salute did not violate his First Amendment rights. It could do so only by drawing all inferences against Norse, as the majority does. Alternatively, the majority further holds that âeven if, in retrospect, we were to hold that Norseâs First Amendment rights were violated, it would not have been clear to a reason- able person in the Mayor and Councilâs position that the ejec- tion was unlawful . . . .â Maj. op. at 14801. This holding also 14805NORSE v. CITY OF SANTA CRUZ is just plain wrong. Our case law had clearly established by 1990, twelve years before the 2002 Council meeting, that speech at a municipal meeting could not be suppressed unless it was actually disruptive. See White, 900 F. 2d at 1424. That this was the law of the circuit was confirmed five years later, in 1995, in Kindt, 67 F.3d at 270. Just as importantly, our First Amendment jurisprudence on the limited public fora of municipal meetings is in accord with decades-old, clearly- established Supreme Court case law that speech in such fora cannot be âprohibited â âmerely because public offi cials dis- approve the speakerâs view.â â â U.S. Posta l Serv. v. Council of Greenburgh Civic Assâns, 453 U.S. 114, 132 (1981) (quot- ing Consol. Edison Co. v. Pub. Serv. Commân, 447 U.S. 530, 536 (1980) (quoting Niemotko v. Maryland, 340 U.S. 268, 282 (1951) (Frankfurter, J., concurring in result))); see also Perry Educ. Assân v. Perry Local Educatorsâ Assân, 460 U.S. 37, 46 (1983) (noting that the State may regulate speech at a limited public forum âas long as the regulation on speech is reasonable and not an effort to suppress expression merely because officials oppose the speakerâs viewâ). Thus, this F irst Amendment principle that the Mayor and City Council vio- lated (and the majority ignores) has been the law of the land for over a half century. As I noted earlier, the district courtâs procedure in granting judgment to defendants on qualified immunity was akin to a summary judgment proceeding.5 That being the case, we are required to draw every reasonable inference in favor of the opposing party, here Norse. But the majority does exactly the opposite. First, the majority âagree[s] with the district court that the ejection was not on account of any permissible expression of a point of view.â Maj. op. at 14801. But this 5 The district court never specified what procedure it was following, only that it was holding a âhearingâ to resolve the issue o f qualified immu- nity. Neither does the majority acknowledge the district courtâs unusual procedure, nor indicate what legal standard applied to that procedure, nor what standard of review it is applying. 14806 NORSE v. CITY OF SANTA CRUZ view rejects the reasonable inference that the Mayor was act- ing to enforce the Councilâs stated âabhorrence of [Norse âs] Nazi gesture.â The majority also agrees with the district courtâs view âthat Norse intended his salute . . . to be di srup- tive.â Id. at 14800. This, too, is an inference drawn against Norse. And again, the majority infers that â[t]he Council member who called the salute to the Mayorâs attention could reasonably have interpreted it as intended to support and to further the disruption that had just been occurring [by others] in the room.â Id. at 14802. But why, at this stage, should such an inference be drawn against Norse? All these are issues of controverted fact which should have been submitted to the jury â the trier of fact. From all this, the majority concludes that âit would not have been clear to a reasonable person in the Mayor and Councilâs position that the ejection was unlawful, given the difficult circumstances and threat of disorder that was pre- sented by the disruptions.â Id. at 14801. I have viewed the same video of the 2002 Council meeting on which the major- ity bases its conclusion, and to conclude that the circum- stances were âdifficultâ and that there was a âthre at of disorder,â as the majority does, is hyperbolic, to say the least. Most reasonable persons would conclude, after viewing the same video, that this meeting was no more âdifficultâ or âdis- orderlyâ than any other small-town Council meeting. In any event, this too is a question of fact. But, even if the majorityâs âfindingsâ are taken at face value, the threat of disruptio n by others does not excuse the denial of Norseâs clearly estab- lished First Amendment rights. As the Supreme Court has reminded us, âin our system, undifferentiated fear or appre- hension of disturbance is not enough to overcome the right to freedom of expression.â Tinker, 393 U.S. at 508. If the reasonable inferences are drawn in favor of Norse, as should have done in this summary-judgment-like proceeding, Norse was deprived of his First Amendment right silently to protest the Councilâs action by his Nazi salute because the 14807NORSE v. CITY OF SANTA CRUZ Mayor and Council carried out their previously voiced threat â that Norse would be removed from the meeting if he engaged in rendering his Nazi salute again. Whatâs more, this law has been clearly established for decades. There is nothing ambiguous or âiffyâ about this aspect of First Amendment law. No reasonable local public official could believe that he could lawfully remove a member of the public from a public meeting because he found that personâs silent speech to be abhorrent or personally offensive. I respectfully dissent from that portion of the majority opin- ion which grants the Mayor and Council members qualified immunity from liability on Norseâs First Amendment claim for being ejected from the 2002 Council meeting. Because the law was clearly established and the evidence supports the inference that the Mayor and Council members acted to sup- press speech they found to be abhorrent and offensive, even though it was not disruptive, it was error to grant qualified immunity to defendants as a matter of law. I would reverse the grant of qualified immunity as to the 2002 meeting and remand this claim for trial. 14808 NORSE v. CITY OF SANTA CRUZ[ Auf dieses Posting antworten ]
