Lodi News-Sentinel

Trump’s lawyers defend right to eject protesters

- By David G. Savage

WASHINGTON — Lawyers for President Donald Trump say he had a First Amendment right to urge his supporters to eject “disruptive protesters” from his campaign rallies, including the “right to use reasonable force” to remove those who are not welcome.

The legal claim came in an emergency motion asking a U.S. appeals court in Ohio to throw out a lawsuit filed by three people who said they were roughed up at a Trump rally in Louisville, Ky., in March of last year. A lower court judge declined to do so.

That district court judge said the plaintiffs’ lawsuit “described a chaotic and violent scene in which a crowd of people turned on three individual­s” who were shoved, punched and cursed by Trump’s supporters.

At issue is whether Trump can be held liable for having provoked violence against the protesters. They sued Trump and the Trump campaign, seeking damages for what they alleged was a reckless incitement to violence.

In their new motion, Trump’s lawyers said protesters who “initially purchased tickets and entered the rally in a peaceful manner” may be forcibly removed if they were disruptive.

“It also makes no difference whether the crowd reacted with unlawful violence beyond what Mr. Trump advocated, because the hostile reaction of the crowd does not transform protected speech into incitement,” they said.

In late March, U.S. District Judge David Hale refused to dismiss the lawsuit brought by two women and one man who said they were forced by Trump’s supporters to leave the rally. One of the plaintiffs, a black woman, had held up a “sign depicting Trump’s face on the body of pig,” the lawyers said.

“Trump kept saying, ‘Get them out, get them out,’ and people in the crowd began pushing and shoving the protesters,” said Alvin Bamberger, one of the audience members who were cited in the lawsuit. The plaintiffs called him the “most aggressive.”

The president’s lawyers noted in his defense that Trump also said, “Don’t hurt ‘em. If I say, ‘Go get ‘em,’ I get in trouble with the press, the most dishonest human beings in the world.”

Another of the plaintiffs, a 17-year-old high school student, said he was punched in the stomach by a member of the Traditiona­list Worker Party, which was described as a white nationalis­t group.

Judge Hale did not say the plaintiffs should win the case, but said their complaint was sufficient to proceed toward a trial. “It is plausible that Trump’s directive to ‘get ‘em out of here’ advocated the use of force. (It) is stated in the imperative; it was an order, an instructio­n, a command,” he wrote in his March 31 order.

This week, Trump’s lawyers filed a “writ of mandamus” with the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals asking it to remove the case from Hale. They argued Trump cannot be held liable for “negligentl­y inspiring third parties to engage in violence.”

“Without this court’s interventi­on, this litigation will inflict irreparabl­e harm on the Trump defendants by subjecting them to punitive litigation as the price of exercising their core First Amendment rights,” Washington attorney Michael Carvin wrote.

 ?? MIKE CARDEW/AKRON BEACON JOURNAL ?? Police remove a protester during President Donald Trump’s speech at a Make America Great Again rally at the Covelli Centre in Youngstown, Ohio, on Tuesday.
MIKE CARDEW/AKRON BEACON JOURNAL Police remove a protester during President Donald Trump’s speech at a Make America Great Again rally at the Covelli Centre in Youngstown, Ohio, on Tuesday.

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