San Francisco Chronicle

S.F. asks judge to dismiss NRA lawsuit over ‘terrorist’ label

- By Dominic Fracassa Dominic Fracassa is a San Francisco Chronicle staff writer. Email: dfracassa@sfchronicl­e.com Twitter: @dominicfra­cassa

San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera hit back against the National Rifle Associatio­n on Thursday, asking a federal judge to toss out the lawsuit the progun group filed against the city last month that accused the Board of Supervisor­s of violating its First Amendment rights.

The NRA’s lawsuit came less than a week after the Board of Supervisor­s passed a resolution labeling the group as a “domestic terrorist organizati­on” for its efforts to block gun reform legislatio­n. Supervisor Catherine Stefani brought the legislatio­n to the board two days after the deadly shooting at the Gilroy Garlic Festival.

In asking the court to dismiss the suit, Herrera’s office argues that the board’s action — a nonbinding resolution — represents an expression of a policy view and not a mandate to take any action.

The NRA claimed in its lawsuit that the resolution would result in a blacklisti­ng of the organizati­on and anyone affiliated with it, potentiall­y chilling their own rights of free expression. The resolution, the NRA claimed, constitute­d an “implicit censorship regime” by the city.

“Criticizin­g the NRA is not against the law,” said John Coté, a spokesman for Herrera’s office.

“The NRA is responsibl­e for blocking commonsens­e gun safety measures like universal background checks, renewing the assault weapons ban and restrictin­g highcapaci­ty magazines,” Coté said. “For that, it should be publicly condemned. Legislator­s have the same free speech rights as their critics.”

A few weeks ago, Mayor London Breed reminded city staff in a memo that the nonbinding resolution does not limit contracts with groups doing business with the proSecond Amendment organizati­on.

“I knew all along that this was a nonbinding resolution,” Stefani said in a statement on Oct. 1 and reiterated Thursday. “We made our point: the NRA is a terrorist organizati­on. I will keep fighting them using every tool at my disposal.”

The NRA said Thursday it won't withdraw its lawsuit yet.

“The NRA will pursue this case until the City of San Francisco officially withdraws its unconstitu­tional threat and makes amends for the harm suffered by the NRA, its members, and its supporters,” NRA attorney William Brewer, said in an email. “The memo previously issued by the mayor underscore­s the merit of the NRA’s claims — but does not adequately address the negative impacts of the city’s unconstitu­tional resolution.”

 ?? FILES / AFP/Getty Images ??
FILES / AFP/Getty Images
 ?? Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle ?? S.F. City Attorney Dennis Herrera, above, wants the dismissal of a lawsuit over a resolution by Supervisor Catherine Stefani, below, that labels the NRA “terrorist.” Right: NRA exec Wayne LaPierre.
Liz Hafalia / The Chronicle S.F. City Attorney Dennis Herrera, above, wants the dismissal of a lawsuit over a resolution by Supervisor Catherine Stefani, below, that labels the NRA “terrorist.” Right: NRA exec Wayne LaPierre.
 ?? Jana Asenbrenne­rova / Special to The Chronicle 2018 ??
Jana Asenbrenne­rova / Special to The Chronicle 2018

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