OFF THE WIRE
Vehicles travel north from San Diego to Los Angeles along Interstate
Highway 5 in California December 10, 2013. (REUTERS/Mike Blake)
A federal judge in Missouri ruled this week held that drivers have a
First Amendment right to flash their headlights to warn other motorists
of nearby police and speed traps.
The order by U.S. District Judge Henry E. Autrey in St. Louis on
Monday stems from a lawsuit filed by Ellisville resident Michael Elli.
In 2012, Elli flashed his headlights to warn oncoming vehicles of a
radar set up by police in the town of Ellisville.
A flash of headlights is a common way motorists communicate to
oncoming drivers of either a dangerous situation or the presence of
police — in essence, a warning to slow down.
An officer saw the flash and pulled over Elli, who could have faced a
fine of up to $1,000 if convicted. Elli, was accused of "[f]lashing
lights on certain vehicles . . . warning of RADAR ahead," according to
court papers obtained by The Wall Street Journal.
He faced a fine up to $1,000 in addition to points on his license, according to the report.
The city later dropped the charge, but the American Civil Liberties
Union sued on Elli's behalf anyway, claiming the arrest violated his
First Amendment right to free speech.
Ellisville City Attorney George Restovich said the city changed the
policy after the case went to court and no longer pulls over people for
flashing headlights.
"The reality is that the injunction doesn't change the way the city has been operating for the past 12 months," Restovich said.
At a hearing on the lawsuit last year, Ellisville officials made the
case that flashing headlights could interfere with a police
investigation. But Autrey said in his ruling that the flashing of
headlights "sends a message to bring one's driving in conformity with
the law — whether it be by slowing down, turning on one's own headlamps
at dusk or in the rain, or proceeding with caution."
“The chilling effect of Ellisville’s policy and custom of having its
police officers pull over, detain, and cite individuals who are
perceived as having communicated to oncoming traffic by flashing their
headlamps and then prosecuting and imposing fines upon those individuals
remains, regardless” of the city’s decision to change its policy, the
judge wrote, according to The Wall Street Journal.
Tony Rothert, legal director of the ACLU’s Missouri chapter told the
Journal's Law Blog that the judge's ruling is a civil rights victory for
motorists.
"When someone is communicating in a public street, [he is] expressing
[himself] in a way that’s protected by the First Amendment,” Rothert
said. "Unless there is a strong reason why the government should be
allowed to censor that speech, the police shouldn’t be stopping or
prosecuting people because of the content of their speech."
The Associated Press contributed to this report.