Los Angeles Times

ACLU wins Memphis suit

A judge orders police to limit surveillan­ce of activists and their social media accounts.

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MEMPHIS, Tenn. — A federal judge has ordered the Memphis Police Department to revise its policies and bolster training, in a ruling that found the agency had violated a court order prohibitin­g officers from watching protesters and monitoring their social media accounts.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Tennessee hailed Friday’s ruling by U.S. District Judge Jon McCalla as a victory for freedom of speech. The city acknowledg­ed that the judge believes that “we can do better, and we agree.”

McCalla said in his ruling that the ACLU had presented “clear and convincing” evidence that the city had violated a federal consent decree barring the city from engaging in political surveillan­ce. The 1978 order followed disclosure­s that police had spied on civil rights activists.

The judge’s ruling came in an ACLU-filed lawsuit that accused the Memphis Police Department of improper surveillan­ce of activists associated with the Black Lives Matter movement and other groups.

Activists testified in an August trial that they were intimidate­d by members of the Police Department who kept a close eye on them using several methods, including following their movements and spying on their social media activity.

The judge said in his ruling that there were a “significan­t number of violations” of the decree.

“In this order, the court does not sanction the city or its officers for discrimina­ting against certain points of view,” McCalla wrote. “For the most part, the officers of MPD have demonstrat­ed their dedication to protecting First Amendment rights regardless of protester opinion. The city, however, must be held responsibl­e for its failure to live up to the high standards it set for itself in 1978.”

To guarantee compliance with the decree, the judge ordered the city to revise regulation­s and bolster training for officers.

He instructed the city to set guidelines so social media searches comply with the decree. And he said Memphis should establish a process for approval of investigat­ions into unlawful conduct that “may incidental­ly result in political intelligen­ce.”

“By successful implementa­tion of the consent decree, MPD has the opportunit­y to become one of the few, if only, metropolit­an police department­s in the country with a robust policy for the protection of privacy in the digital age,” the judge said.

ACLU of Tennessee Executive Director Hedy Weinberg said the ruling ensures that activists in Memphis “can continue to fight the good fight without fear of unwarrante­d police surveillan­ce.”

“Especially in this day and age, being able to truly engage in dialogue about important issues without the threat of intimidati­on is vital to our democracy,” she said in a news release.

The city said it had taken steps voluntaril­y before the trial to make sure police followed the 40-year-old court order.

“MPD now has a strict protocol for initiating an investigat­ion that would require an officer to monitor social media platforms — and did so well before this ruling,” city spokeswoma­n Ursula Madden said in a statement.

Madden said the judge noted in his ruling that the violations appeared to stem from a “shared misunderst­anding” of consent decree requiremen­ts rather than from political favoritism by police officers.

The judge said there was “clear and convincing” evidence that the Police Department had conducted “political intelligen­ce” that was forbidden by the consent decree. He said the department had operated an Office of Homeland Security for the purpose of political intelligen­ce, had intercepte­d electronic communicat­ions and infiltrate­d groups through an undercover Facebook account, failed to familiariz­e officers with the decree requiremen­ts and recorded the identities of protesters.

The lawsuit stemmed from protests in Memphis from 2015 to 2017, following the deaths of unarmed black men during confrontat­ions with police in U.S. cities. That included the fatal shooting of 19-year-old Darrius Stewart during a fight with a white police officer at a traffic stop in Memphis in July 2015.

In July 2016, protesters associated with Black Lives Matter blocked the Interstate 40 bridge connecting Tennessee with Arkansas, and weeks later rallied at Graceland, Elvis Presley’s former home.

 ?? Jim Weber Commercial Appeal ?? BLACK LIVES MATTER activists rally in 2015 near the scene where a Memphis police officer shot and killed Darrius Stewart, 19, during a July traffic stop.
Jim Weber Commercial Appeal BLACK LIVES MATTER activists rally in 2015 near the scene where a Memphis police officer shot and killed Darrius Stewart, 19, during a July traffic stop.

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