On Aug. 16,
2012, Chesterfield County, Virginia police, Secret Service and FBI agents
arrived at Brandon Raub’s home, asking to speak with him about his Facebook
posts. Mr. Raub, a decorated Marine who has served tours in Iraq and
Afghanistan, uses his Facebook page like millions of other Americans, to post items
and comments, including his political opinions.
Without
providing any explanation, levying any charges or reading him his rights, law
enforcement officials handcuffed Mr. Raub and transported him to police
headquarters, then to John Randolph Medical Center, where he was forcibly
detained in a psychiatric ward for a week against his will.
For having
the temerity to express his opinions Mr. Raub was kept in custody for an
evaluation based on the opinion of one Michael Campbell, a psychotherapist
hired by local law enforcement that had never interviewed Mr. Raub, but somehow
felt he was capable of determining that the former Marine might be a danger. Psychiatrists
at the mental institution, however, found nothing wrong with him.
According to
The Rutherford Institute, which is representing the former Marine, in a hearing
on Aug. 20 government officials pointed to the Facebook posts as the reason for
incarceration. While Mr. Raub stated that the Facebook posts were being read
out of context, a Special Justice ordered that he be held up to 30 more days
for psychological evaluation and treatment. But Circuit Court Judge Allan Sharrett
ordered his immediate release a short time later because the concerns raised by
the officers were “so devoid of any factual allegations that it could not be
reasonably expected to give rise to a case or controversy.”
When the government’s
case came before U.S. District Judge Henry Hudson in Richmond, Va., he dismissed
it.
Mr. Raub
then sued the officers for taking him into custody without sufficient cause and
for his subsequent mistreatment. A request by the offending officers to dismiss
the case against them has been rejected.
“Brandon
Raub’s case exposes the seedy underbelly of a governmental system that
continues to target military veterans for expressing their discontent over
America’s rapid transition to a police state,” said John W. Whitehead,
president of The Rutherford Institute.
“While such
targeting of veterans and dissidents is problematic enough, for any government
official to suggest that they shouldn’t be held accountable for violating a
citizen’s rights on the grounds that they were unaware of the Constitution’s
prohibitions makes a mockery of our so-called system of representative
government. Thankfully, Judge Hudson has recognized this imbalance and ensured
that Brandon Raub will get his day in court,” he said.
Judge Hudson
has ordered limited discovery allowing Rutherford to demand what information
federal and local authorities knew about Mr. Raub before he was detained for a
mental evaluation.
The
Institute called the decision a victory for free speech and the right to be
free from wrongful arrest and presented facts indicating that the involuntary
commitment violated Mr. Raub’s rights under the First and Fourth Amendments of
the U.S. Constitution.
The
complaint alleges that the attempt to label Mr. Raub as “mentally ill” and his
subsequent involuntary commitment was a pretext designed to silence speech
critical of the government.
A Richmond
Times-Dispatch story noted: “Much of the information about Raub’s alleged
mental condition was developed after his arrest and emergency mental
assessment, but [Judge] Hudson notes in the opinion [allowing the suit against
law enforcement officials] that “there is no indication that any defendant was
aware of the specific contents of (emails and statements Raub was making)
before Raub’s arrest."
Attorneys from
The Rutherford Institute charge the seizure and detention were the result of a
federal government program code-named “Operation Vigilant Eagle” that involves
the systematic surveillance of military veterans who express views critical of
the government, according to information on the Institute’s Web site.
Of “Operation
Vigilant Eagle” the Wall Street Journal reports that “the Federal Bureau of
Investigation [in 2009] launched a nationwide operation targeting white
supremacists and ‘militia/sovereign-citizen extremist groups,’ including a focus
on veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan, according to memos sent from bureau
headquarters to field offices,” and that “a similar warning was issued … by the
Department of Homeland Security.”
So, the FBI and Homeland Security view military veterans who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan like white supremacists and extremist groups, and then on flimsy or non-existent evidence, take them into custody and confine them for mental evaluation?
It will be interesting to see how the government and these agents defend their action at trial.
So, the FBI and Homeland Security view military veterans who have served in Iraq and Afghanistan like white supremacists and extremist groups, and then on flimsy or non-existent evidence, take them into custody and confine them for mental evaluation?
It will be interesting to see how the government and these agents defend their action at trial.
Many,
perhaps most Americans, are well served by state and local law enforcement that
behave within the law and respect the privacy and freedom
of those they serve until evidence is presented warranting arrest. However,
those who initiated and carried out the persecution of Brandon Raub, including
the psychotherapist, deserve to be strongly disciplined and perhaps fined and criminally
charged for their illegal and unconstitutional behavior, and when the case is
resolved, maybe they will be.
Such a resolution
would likely get the attention federal officials who improperly unleash the
force of government against innocent citizens, and restore respectful treatment
of citizens by the government that exists to serve them.
Cross-posted from Observations
Cross-posted from Observations
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