Waikato Times

Ex-sheriff sued over detention at airport

- –AP

UNITED STATES: A man detained at a Milwaukee airport after he shook his head at a former sheriff on his flight told a federal jury yesterday that the exlawman’s mocking Facebook posts afterward terrified him and he believed he would be harmed for complainin­g about what happened.

Daniel Black at one point became teary-eyed on the witness stand, saying he would never file another complaint against an elected official because the incident left him so rattled, and that he filed the lawsuit last year because he needed ‘‘someone to say this is wrong’’.

Former sheriff David Clarke and Black, 25, were boarding a flight from Dallas to Milwaukee on January 15 last year – the day Clarke’s beloved Dallas Cowboys were facing the Green Bay Packers in the NFL playoffs. The sheriff was clad in Dallas gear without his trademark cowboy hat, and Black said he didn’t immediatel­y recognise him because of that.

Black said he asked Clarke if he was Milwaukee County’s sheriff, according to his lawsuit, and when Clarke said yes, Black shook his head disapprovi­ngly.

Black said he made the gesture because Clarke was supporting a rival team.

But Clarke responded by calling deputies to the airport to detain and question Black. He was not arrested or cited, but Black and his lawyers argue that Clarke’s actions – particular­ly his social media taunts – chilled Black’s right to free speech.

‘‘I felt guilty, I felt scared, that I had a target on my back,’' Black testified, recalling one post in particular on the sheriff’s official Facebook site.

Clarke wrote on Facebook: ‘‘Cheer up, snowflake ... if Sheriff Clarke were to really harass you, you wouldn’t be around to whine about it.’'

Black said hateful messages on social media followed, and he began to think someone would hurt him.

Black’s federal lawsuit alleges Clarke retaliated with the posts because Black complained to his office about the plane incident.

Clarke was not at the civil trial. His lawyers said Black did TV interviews after the encounter and didn’t appear scared.

‘‘Far from being chilled, he was encouraged and he enjoyed it,’' defence lawyer Charles Bohl said. He described the case as ‘‘an unfriendly internet spat between two people who apparently don’t like each other very much’'.

Black wants a jury to award him a compensati­on amount that they choose for emotional distress and other damages, as well as attorneys’ fees.

Clarke resigned last August to join a political action committee that supports US President Donald Trump.

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