Yuma Sun

Lawsuit filed over house mural featuring vulgar Trump quotes

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NEW ORLEANS — A New Orleans resident was unlawfully ordered to remove a large mural featuring infamous Donald Trump quotes from a 2005 “Access Hollywood” recording, according to a lawsuit filed Tuesday.

The mural is, in effect, a partial transcript of the recording that surfaced during the 2016 presidenti­al race. In the recording, the future president is heard boasting about grabbing women’s private parts and describing a woman’s breasts in vulgar terms.

The mural, painted on a fence in a mostly residentia­l area of modest houses, has black letters on a white background. It substitute­s images for some of the words. For instance, instead of the vulgar term Trump used for breasts, it depicts a pair of bare breasts. It is located on the property of New Orleans resident Neal Morris.

The ACLU’s lawsuit says Morris was ordered by the city to remove the mural soon after it was painted in November.

The city’s Nov. 8 memo to Morris, a copy of which is in the court filing, did not mention the mural’s content, but noted that New Orleans’ zoning ordinance doesn’t allow murals in residentia­l zones. The memo added that Morris could be fined or jailed if he didn’t remove it.

The ACLU’s suit argues that the city’s permitting requiremen­ts for murals involve advance government approval “using unspecifie­d standards, by undesignat­ed officials, for an indefinite period of time.” That, and the payment of exorbitant fees, constitute “a multiprong­ed assault on the First and Fourteenth Amendments,” the lawsuit said.

Morris sought informatio­n in October on how to get a permit, but officials “were unable to provide the requested informatio­n,” the suit said.

Mayoral spokesman Craig Belden said city officials are reviewing the lawsuit before deciding how to respond.

The mural is currently covered, Bruce Hamilton, a lawyer for the ACLU Foundation of Louisiana, said Tuesday.

The lawsuit seeks an order prohibitin­g the city from enforcing its muralpermi­tting regulation­s, and a declaratio­n that the rules are unconstitu­tional.

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