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GARY EDWARDS, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
CITY OF COEUR D' ALENE; KOOTENAI COUNTY COMMISSIONERS;
PIERCE CLEGG, Sheriff, in his official capacity as Sheriff of
Kootenai County; STEVE JUDY, in his official capacity as Mayor
of Coeur D' Alene; NANCY SUE WALLACE, in her official capacity
as City Council President of Coeur D' Alene; DICK WHITE, Sheriff'
s Deputy, in his official capacity as agent of Kootenai County;
BEN WOLFFINGER, Captain, in his official capacity as an agent
of Kootenai County' s Sheriff' s Department; JOHN DOE, Government
Agent, in his official capacity; JANE DOE, Government Agent,
in her official capacity, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 00-35537
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
D.C. No. CV-99-00131-N-EJL
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District
of Idaho Edward J. Lodge, District Judge, Presiding Argued and
Submitted July 19, 2001--Bozeman, Montana Before: Harry Pregerson,
A. Wallace Tashima, and Sidney R. Thomas, Circuit Judges.
COUNSEL
Bryan J. Brown, American Family Assn. Law Center, Tupelo,
Mississippi, for the plaintiff-appellant.
Susan P. Weeks, Lukins & Annis, Coeur d' Alene,
Idaho, for the defendants-appellees.
Filed August 21, 2001
PREGERSON, Circuit Judge:
This case involves a lawsuit brought by Gary Edwards
("Edwards" ) challenging the constitutionality of Ordinance
2920(1)(D), which was enacted by the City of Coeur d' Alene,
Idaho ("the City" ). Coeur d' Alene, Id., Code §
9.52.050. Edwards asserts that the ordinance, which prohibits
the carrying of signs attached to wooden or plastic handles during
parades and public assemblies, abridges his right to free speech
under the First and Fourteenth Amendments.[FOOTNOTE 1] The district
court rejected Edwards' s challenge and granted summary judgment
for the City after finding that the ordinance was a valid "time,
place, and manner" restriction on speech. We have jurisdiction
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and now reverse.
I.
FACTS and PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On July 18, 1998, the Aryan Nations conducted a march
through the downtown area of the City. Edwards was arrested by
a Kootenai County sheriff' s deputy as he protested the march
carrying a sign that read "Stop the Nazis Now." The
arrest occurred after Edwards was asked to surrender the wooden
handle and wooden slat supports of his sign and refused to do
so. At the time, no City law banned the use of sign supports.
Edwards' s arrest was an alleged violation of Idaho Code §
18-705, which criminalizes resisting and obstructing a peace
officer in the discharge of his duties.
On April 1, 1999, Edwards filed a motion in federal
district court against the City and Kootenai County seeking preliminary
and permanent injunctive relief.[FOOTNOTE 2] Specifically,
Edwards alleged that the deputy sheriff who arrested him was
applying the City' s "zero tolerance for weapons" policy
in violation of Edwards' s right to free speech, due process,
and equal protection.[FOOTNOTE 3] Edwards asked the district
court to grant injunctive relief based on his fear that the City
would employ its "zero tolerance" policy in the future
to violate his constitutional rights. The City did not respond
to Edwards' s motion.
On May 21, 1999, the district court granted Edwards'
s motion for temporary injunctive relief against the City. The
court ruled that:
Defendant City shall not enforce any policies against Plaintiff'
s carrying of signs with handles at any future City events unless
said policy is duly enacted by the City' s elected representatives,
constitutes reasonable time, place and manner restrictions addressing
symbolic protest and sign construction, and is applied in an
even-handed fashion after being duly proclaimed as the law.
Three days later, the City enacted Ordinance 2920.[FOOTNOTE
4] Coeur d' Alene, Id., Code § 9.52.050. Section 1
of Ordinance 2920 consists of five subsections: A, B, C, D, and
E.[FOOTNOTE 5] Section 1(A) provides that "[i]t shall be
unlawful for any person to have in his possession or to have
in any vehicle any weapon while participating in or attending
a parade or public assembly." Section 1(B) outlaws the possession
of a weapon "within 1,000 feet of the perimeter of a parade
or public assembly," unless the person possesses the weapon
"in his private dwelling or place of business." Id.
Section 1(C) exempts from the provisions of the ordinance "[m]embers
of any United States Military Veteran' s organizations."
[FOOTNOTE 6]
Section 1(D) states:
Placards or signs may be carried [during parades and public
assemblies] subject to the following limitations. Placards or
signs may be worn or carried but shall not be affixed to any
wooden, plastic or other type of support. Nor shall the placards
or signs themselves be constructed of any hard material, such
as wood, hard plastic or metal. No signs shall be draped or affixed
to any City property.
(emphasis added).
Section 1(E) provides definitions for key terms in the
ordinance, including: parade,[FOOTNOTE 7] public assembly,[FOOTNOTE
8] law enforcement officer,[FOOTNOTE 9] and weapon.[FOOTNOTE
10] A violation of Ordinance 2920(1) is a misdemeanor punishable
by a maximum fine of $300 or a prison sentence of up to six months.
On June 16, 1999, Edwards filed an amended complaint
in federal district court seeking preliminary injunctive relief
against the enforcement of Section 1(D) of Ordinance 2920. In
his complaint, Edwards stated that he had been arrested on July
18, 1999 for refusing to surrender the wooden handle of his sign
while protesting against the Aryan Nations March and that he
was "fearful that if he again takes his sign to an Aryan
Nations protest . . . he will be arrested" pursuant to Ordinance
2920. Edwards argued that the threat posed by the ordinance was
immediate because the City had granted the Aryan Nations a permit
to hold a parade in the City on September 4, 1999. Two days later,
Edwards amended his complaint to include a facial challenge to
the constitutionality of Ordinance 2920.
On August 17, 1999, the district court granted Edwards'
s request for preliminary injunctive relief against the enforcement
of Ordinance 2920. The court concluded that "the exemption
provided by subsection C to ' [m]embers of any United States
Military Veteran' s organizations' most likely renders Ordinance
2920, section 1(D), constitutionally infirm. It is beyond doubt
that a governmental entity cannot favor one group over another
when it regulates First Amendment expression." The City
then agreed to strike the veteran' s exemption in Section 1(C)
from the ordinance.
Reiterating his claims that Ordinance 2920 was unconstitutional
under the First and Fourteenth Amendments, Edwards moved for
summary judgment. On June 2, 2000, the district court denied
Edwards' s motion and granted summary judgment sua sponte for
the City. The district court found that the City had "conceded
to remedying the flaw" in the ordinance by striking the
veteran' s exemption in Section 1(C). The district court stated
that, while picketing was a form of speech protected by the First
Amendment, Section 1(D)' s regulation of picketing was a valid
time, place, and manner restriction. Specifically, the court
found that Section 1(D) of the ordinance was content neutral,
narrowly tailored to serve a substantial government interest
in public safety, and allowed for ample alternative channels
of communication. The district court further found that the ordinance
was not unconstitutionally vague. Edwards appeals.[FOOTNOTE 11]
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review de novo the district court' s grant of summary
judgment to determine whether there are any genuine issues of
material fact and whether the district court correctly applied
the relevant substantive law. Lopez v. Smith, 203 F.3d
1122, 1131 (9th Cir. 2000) (en banc).
III.
SECTION 1(D) of ORDINANCE 2920 IS NOT A
VALID TIME, PLACE, and MANNER
RESTRICTION OF SPEECH
The First Amendment provides that "Congress shall
make no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech, or of the
press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and
to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."
U.S. Const. amend. I. It is well established that peaceful picketing
and parading are forms of expressive communication protected
by the First Amendment. Carey v. Brown, 447 U.S. 455,
466-67 (1980) (observing that "picketing . . . has always
rested on the highest rung of the hierarchy of First Amendment
values . . . ." ) (internal quotations omitted); Hurley
v. Irish-American Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Group of Boston,
515 U.S. 557, 568-69 (1995) (marching in a parade is expressive
conduct protected by the First Amendment).
Section 1(D) of Ordinance 2920 bans the attachment of
"any wooden, plastic or other type of support" to signs
carried during parades and public assemblies in the City' s streets.
Because the ordinance clearly regulates picketing -- which takes
place in a public forum, often occurs during a parade or public
assembly, and traditionally involves the use of signs with "supports"
-- the ordinance necessarily regulates expressive activity protected
by the First Amendment. Carey, 447 U.S. at 466-67; Hague
v. CIO, 307 U.S. 496, 515 (1939); NAACP v. City of Richmond,
743 F.2d 1346, 1355 (9th Cir. 1984).
Time, Place, and Manner
Although picketing is protected under the First Amendment,
the State may pass laws to regulate it, provided that the laws
are reasonable "time, place and manner" restrictions
that "may be necessary to further significant governmental
interests." City of Chicago v. Mosley, 408 U.S. 92,
99 (1972) (citations omitted). Specifically, an ordinance imposing
time, place, and manner limitations on picketing in city streets
is constitutional if: (1) it is content neutral; (2) it is narrowly
tailored to serve a significant government interest; and
(3) it leaves open ample alternative means of communication.
Frisby v. Schultz, 487 U.S. 474, 481 (1988) (citations
and internal quotations omitted). If the ordinance fails to satisfy
any one of these three prongs, it is unconstitutional.
1. Content Neutrality[FOOTNOTE 12]
"The principal inquiry in determining content neutrality,
in speech cases generally and in time, place, or manner cases
in particular, is whether the government has adopted a regulation
of speech because of disagreement with the message it conveys."
Ward v. Rock Against Racism, 491 U.S. 781, 791 (1989)
(citation omitted). An ordinance is content-neutral if it can
be "justified without reference to the content of the regulated
speech[.]" Clark v. Community for Creative Non-Violence,
468 U.S. 288, 293 (1984).
The district court found that the Coeur d' Alene City
Council enacted Ordinance 2920 as part of a larger goal of "maintaining
peace during a parade or public assembly." Specifically,
the City sought to prevent injury to its citizens, which might
occur if parade participants and protestors used their sign handles
as weapons to inflict injury on others.
We agree that the ordinance does not regulate by reference
to speech and that it is not discriminatory on its face.[FOOTNOTE
13] The ordinance does not single out any particular person or
group based on viewpoint, but instead applies to all signholders
equally.[FOOTNOTE 14]
Section 1(D) of the ordinance imposes a flat ban on
the carrying of "any wooden, plastic or other type
of support" attached to signs carried during parades and
public assemblies. Coeur d' Alene, Id., Code § 9.52.050
(emphasis added). The language of Section (1)(D) -- specifically,
the use of the word "any" to modify "support,"
and its listing of sign support materials to include all "type[s]"
-- indicates that the ban applies to every sign handle, regardless
of what the sign says or who is carrying it. Because there is
no evidence that the ordinance is designed to "favor some
viewpoints or ideas at the expense of others," City of
Los Angeles v. Taxpayers for Vincent, 466 U.S. 789, 804 (1984),
and because it was enacted to combat an evil unrelated to speech,
One World Family Now v. City of Honolulu, 76 F.3d 1009,
1012 (9th Cir. 1996), the ordinance is content-neutral.
2. Narrowly Tailored
The City bears the burden of demonstrating that Ordinance
2920 advances a "substantial governmental interest"
and that it is "narrowly tailored" to prevent "no
more than the exact source of the ' evil' it seeks to remedy."
Frisby, 487 U.S. at 485; Bay Area Peace Navy v. United
States, 914 F.2d 1224, 1227 (9th Cir. 1990). The district court
described the City' s goal in enacting a ban on sign supports
as "prevent[ing] rigid-support materials used on signs from
being used as weapons and turned upon police officers, marchers,
or other demonstrators," and characterized this interest
as substantial.
There is no doubt that the City has a substantial interest
in safeguarding its citizens against violence. See, e.g.,
Hill v. Colorado, 530 U.S. 703, 715 (2000) ("It is a traditional
exercise of the States' ' police powers to protect the health
and safety of their citizens.' ") (quoting Medtronic,
Inc. v. Lohr, 518 U.S. 470, 475 (1996)). But the fact that
the City has a substantial interest in public safety does not
end the inquiry. The City must also show that Ordinance 2920(1)(D)
is narrowly tailored to advance that interest.[FOOTNOTE 15] Specifically,
the First Amendment demands that municipalities provide "tangible
evidence" that speech-restrictive regulations are "necessary"
to advance the proffered interest in public safety. Bay Area
Peace Navy, 914 F.2d at 1227. See also Mosley, 408 U.S. at
100-01 (1972) ("[W]e reject the city' s argument that .
. . it may prohibit all nonlabor picketing because, as a class,
nonlabor picketing is more prone to produce violence than labor
picketing. Predictions about imminent disruption from picketing
involve judgments appropriately made on an individualized basis,
not by means of broad classifications . . . ." ); United
States v. Griefen, 200 F.3d 1256, 1261 (9th Cir. 2000) (finding
that "an actual threat [of violence] posed by the protestors
and the appellants clearly existed" thus justifying the
government' s interest in closing off a designated area of national
forest); Project 80' s, Inc. v. City of Pocatello, 942
F.2d 635, 638 (9th Cir. 1991) (rejecting city' s proffered interest
in public safety after finding that "there is little evidence"
in the record that the ordinances banning door-to-door solicitation
actually protected citizens from crime).
The City relies on our decision in Foti v. Menlo
Park, 146 F.3d 629 (9th Cir. 1998), to argue that Ordinance
2920(1)(D) is narrowly tailored to advance its interest in public
safety. But Foti provides only superficial support for
the City' s position. In Foti, abortion protestors brought
a First Amendment challenge to a city ordinance that regulated
picketing on public property by limiting the size of picket signs
to "three square feet in area." Id. at 634 n.3.
The protestors argued that the limitation on the size of the
signs they could carry constrained their ability to communicate
their message in the most effective way. Id. at 640-42.
The city countered that the size regulation was necessary to
promote a substantial interest in "traffic safety."
Id. at 640.
In Foti, we examined closely the city' s assertion
that the regulation promoted its interest in traffic safety:
"[The picketers] demonstrate within several yards of a bus
stop. A bus must pull to the side of the street, allow passengers
to board and disembark, and safely merge with oncoming traffic.
Extremely large or numerous picket signs nearby could well interfere
with bus' s operation or with pedestrian circulation on the sidewalk."
Id. at 640-41. We then analyzed whether the ordinance'
s regulation of the size and number of picket signs posed a significant
burden on the appellants' ability to communicate their message,
and concluded that it did not. Id. at 641. Specifically,
we found that there was "substantial evidence that pedestrians,
a substantial portion of [the protestors' ] intended audience,
could see and read their three square foot signs," and thus
that the regulation' s burden on speech was "minimal."
Id. at 642. In reaching the opposite conclusion in this
case, we think it is important to point out why Foti is
distinguishable.
In determining that a sufficient nexus existed between
the city' s proffered interest in traffic safety and its regulation
of picket signs, the Foti court was able to rely upon
empirical evidence. In this case, however, the record reveals
little factual support for the City' s claim that Ordinance 2920'
s complete ban on sign supports is necessary to advance the goal
of preventing violence against police officers, paraders, and
protestors.[FOOTNOTE 16] The City does not cite any parade or
public assembly prior to the passage of the ordinance in which
Coeur d' Alene citizens used sign handles as instruments of violence.[FOOTNOTE
17]
In fact, the only evidence in the record regarding the
origin of the ordinance' s ban on sign supports consists of Edwards'
s legal challenge to his 1998 arrest, which predated the ordinance
by roughly eight weeks.[FOOTNOTE 18] As stated above, on the
date of Edwards' s arrest, the City had no law banning the carrying
of signs with handles. Although Edwards was arrested after he
refused to surrender the wooden handle of his sign, his act of
holding the sign itself was not the basis for the arrest. Rather,
it was Edwards' s refusal to stop holding the sign that was deemed
illegal. Ruling for Edwards in that action, the district court
stated: "Defendant City shall not enforce any policies against
Plaintiff' s carrying of signs with handles at any future City
events unless said policy is duly enacted by the City' s elected
representatives . . . ."
Ordinance 2920, which specifically prohibits the carrying
of signs "affixed to any . . . type of support," became
law three days after the district court ruled in Edwards' s favor.
The wording of the ordinance, combined with the timing of its
enactment, suggests that the City' s primary intent was to provide
a legal predicate for future arrests of picketers similarly situated
to Edwards rather than to prevent a clear threat to the public
safety.
The lack of empirical evidence supporting the ordinance'
s sign support ban would be less problematic if the impact on
speech were negligible. But the ordinance' s total ban on sign
supports has an undeniable impact on the manner in which a signholder
communicates with the public. As explained more fully below,
without access to sign handles, signholders in parades and public
assemblies cannot hoist their signs in the air so that the messages
are visible above a crowd. The ordinance also makes it much more
difficult to display larger, heavier signs and banners. And,
as Edwards points out, the classic image of a picketer -- dating
back to the early days of labor protests -- is of an individual
holding aloft a sign-bearing standard. Because social, economic,
and political protests are commonly associated with picket signs
attached to handles, the ordinance' s ban precludes an important
communicative aspect of public protest.
Moreover, while the City need not employ the least restrictive
alternative in promoting its interest in public safety, "if
there are numerous and obvious less-burdensome alternatives to
the restriction on [protected] speech, that is certainly a relevant
consideration in determining whether the ' fit' between ends
and means is reasonable." City of Cincinnati v. Discovery
Network, Inc., 507 U.S. 410, 418 n.13 (1993); see also
Project 80' s, 942 F.2d at 638 (stating that "restrictions
which disregard far less restrictive and more precise means are
not narrowly tailored" ); Students Against Apartheid
Coalition v. O' Neil, 660 F. Supp. 333, 339-40 (W.D. Va.
1987) (holding that regulations prohibiting students from constructing
and maintaining on-campus shanties to protest apartheid were
not narrowly tailored to serve University' s interest in protecting
campus' s "esthetic integrity" because the shanties
did no damage to campus buildings and lawns). A sampling of ordinances
employed by other cities regulating picketing at parades and
public assemblies demonstrates that less restrictive alternatives
to Ordinance 2920 are readily available.
For example, a Los Angeles ordinance safeguards its
citizens against violent outbursts during "any demonstration,
rally, picket line or public assembly" by requiring all
sign supports to be "one-fourth inch or less in thickness
and two inches or less in width." Los Angeles, Ca., Muni.
Code § 55.07. While the Los Angeles ordinance does have
an impact on expressive conduct, it uses less restrictive means
than Ordinance 2920.[FOOTNOTE 19] The ordinance makes parades
and large public gatherings safer by banning materials that are
most likely to become dangerous weapons without depriving the
city' s residents of the opportunity to parade or protest with
"traditional" picket signs.
A similar ordinance is in effect in Charlotte, North
Carolina. Under the Charlotte ordinance, individuals seeking
to picket peacefully may use placards attached to sign supports,
provided that the sign supports "shall not exceed forty
(40) inches in length, must be made of wood, shall not exceed
three-fourths (3/4) of an inch in diameter at any point, and
must be blunt at each end." Charlotte, N.C. Code §
15-26(a)(3).
This small sampling of ordinances provides examples
of less drastic ways in which municipalities can balance the
safety interests of the public and the free speech rights of
picketers. By regulating the length, width, composition, and
sharpness of sign supports, city lawmakers can reduce the risk
of serious injury to citizens during parades and public assemblies
without banning the use of the "traditional" picket
sign altogether. Viewed in this context, Ordinance 2920(1)(D)'
s flat ban on all sign supports burdens substantially more speech
than is necessary, and the City provides little empirical evidence
suggesting that such stringent measures are necessary to advance
its interest in public safety. For these reasons, we conclude
that Ordinance 2920(1)(D) does not meet the second prong of the
time, place, and manner test because it is not narrowly tailored
to further the City' s interest in public safety.
3. Alternative Means of Communication
If an ordinance effectively prevents a speaker from
reaching his intended audience, it fails to leave open ample
alternative means of communication. Heffron v. Int' l
Soc' y for Krishna Consciousness, Inc., 452 U.S. 640, 654 (1981)
("The First Amendment protects the right of every citizen
to ' reach the minds of willing listeners and to do so there
must be opportunity to win their attention.' ") (quoting
Kovacs v. Cooper, 336 U.S. 77, 87 (1949)). The City argues
that Ordinance 2920(1)(D) permits Edwards to convey his message
through alternative channels. In support of this argument, the
City argues in its brief that under the ordinance, Edwards is
free to "hand out leaflets, carry signs (without supports
and made of non-rigid materials), sing, shout, chant, perform
dramatic presentations, solicit signatures for petitions and
appeal to passersby."
It is not clear, however, that Edwards could employ
any of the communicative methods listed above effectively to
"reach the minds of willing listeners and . . . win their
attention." Heffron, 452 U.S. at 654 (internal quotation
marks omitted). As a general rule, parades and public assemblies
involve large crowds and significant noise. While some of these
mass gatherings are less populated and more orderly than others,
it is often difficult to see more than a few feet in any direction,
or to hear anyone who isn' t standing nearby. These circumstances
make it difficult for individual protestors or participants to
convey their messages to the broad audience they seek to attract.
The City' s assertion that Edwards could transmit his
message effectively by shouting, singing, holding a sign in his
hands, or leafletting lacks force in the context of a march or
parade, where individual voices cannot be heard above the din,
and "dramatic performances" and hand-held signs are
easily swallowed up by the crowd. Signs attached to supports
such as poles or sticks are effective tools by which to overcome
the communication problems endemic to these types of situations.
A sign that can be hoisted high in the air projects a message
above the heads of the crowd to reach spectators, passersby,
and television cameras stationed a good distance away.
Because there is no other effective and economical way
for an individual to communicate his or her message to a broad
audience during a parade or public assembly than to attach a
handle to his sign to hoist it high in the air, Section 1(D)
of Ordinance 2920 prevents Edwards from reaching his intended
audience. We conclude, therefore, that Ordinance 2920(1)(D) also
does not comport with the third prong of the time, place, and
manner test because it does not allow for ample alternative means
of communication.
CONCLUSION
We reverse the district court' s grant of summary judgment
to the City with respect to Edwards' s challenge to the constitutionality
of Ordinance 2920(1)(D)' s ban on sign supports. Section 1(D)'
s ban on sign supports is an invalid time, place, and manner
restriction on speech because it is not narrowly tailored to
serve the City' s interest in public safety and it fails to leave
open ample, alternative channels of communication to picketers.
Accordingly, we REVERSE and REMAND to the district court with
instructions to enter a permanent injunction against the enforcement
of Section 1(D) of the ordinance.
::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: FOOTNOTE(S):::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
FN1. Edwards also challenges the constitutionality
of Ordinance 2920(1)(D) on the grounds that it is void for vagueness.
See Grayned v. City of Rockford, 408 U.S. 104, 108 (1972)
("Vague laws may trap the innocent by not providing fair
warning." ). Because we reverse on the ground that the regulation
is an invalid time, place, and manner restriction, we do not
reach the merits of Edwards' s void for vagueness challenge.
FN2. On May 11, Edwards' s claims against Kootenai
County were dismissed with prejudice.
FN3. Edwards later amended his complaint to remove
his claim that the City had promulgated an unconstitutional "zero
tolerance for weapons" policy that resulted in his arrest.
Edwards also dropped his claim for damages against the City.
FN4. Ordinance 2920 amended and effectively replaced
Ordinance 2914. Ordinance 2914 was enacted on May 4, 1999, following
Edwards' s arrest and the initiation of his lawsuit against the
City. The two Ordinances are identical with respect to Section
1(D) -- the provision challenged here.
FN5. Ordinance 2920 contains four other sections, enumerated
below, none of which are at issue in this appeal. Section 2 provides
that "[a]ll ordinances and parts of ordinances in conflict
with this ordinance are hereby repealed." Section 3 provides
that "[n]either the adoption of this ordinance nor the repeal
of any ordinance shall, in any manner, affect the prosecution
for violation of such ordinance committed prior to the effective
date of this ordinance." Section 4 provides that "[t]he
provisions of this ordinance are severable and if any provision,
clause, sentence, subsection, word or part thereof is held illegal,
invalid, or unconstitutional or inapplicable to any person or
circumstance, such illegality, invalidity or unconstitutionality
or inapplicability shall not affect or impair any of the remaining
provisions, clauses, sentences, subsections, words or parts of
this ordinance or their application to other persons or circumstances."
Section 5 provides that the ordinance shall take effect upon
its passage and publication.
FN6. Section 1(C) also exempts "[l]aw enforcement
officers; [o]fficers and soldiers of the United States Armed
Forces and the Idaho National Guard and United States Reserve
Officer Training Corp cadets."
FN7. "Parade" is defined as, inter alia,
"any dash, demonstration, march, marathon, meeting, motorcade,
parade, procession, public assembly, race, rally, or like activity
consisting of persons, animals, or vehicles or a combination
thereof upon the street within the City that interferes with
or has a tendency to interfere with the normal flow or regulation
of traffic upon the streets."
FN8. "Public Assembly" is defined as "any
meeting, demonstration, rally or gathering of more than twenty-five
(25) persons for a common purpose as a result of prior planning
that interferes with or has a tendency to interfere with the
normal flow or regulation of pedestrian or vehicular traffic
or occupies any street. A ' public assembly' for purposes of
this section shall include the time period beginning one (1)
hour prior to the beginning of the public assembly and shall
conclude one (1) hour after the end of the public assembly. For
purposes of this section, ' public assembly' shall not include
a group of more than two persons assembled together as part of
an otherwise lawfully certified weapons education program."
FN9. "Law Enforcement Officer" is defined
as "any court personnel, sheriff, constable, peace officer,
state police officer, correctional, probation or parole official,
prosecuting attorney, city attorney, attorney general, or their
employees or agents, or any other person charged with the duty
of enforcement of the criminal, traffic or penal laws of this
state or any other law enforcement personnel or peace officer
as defined in chapter 51, title 19, Idaho Code."
FN10. "Weapon" is defined as "any pistol,
rifle, shotgun or other firearms of any kind whether loaded or
unloaded, air rifle, air pistol, explosive, blasting caps, knife,
hatchet, ax, slingshot, blackjack, metal knuckles, mace, iron
buckle, baseball bat, ax handle, chains, crowbar, hammer, stick,
pole, or other club or bludgeon or any other instrumentality,
customarily used or intended for probable use as a dangerous
weapon."
FN11. Edwards also filed a motion in district court
seeking preliminary relief from the district court' s June 2,
2000 order granting summary judgment to the City. Edwards sought
to enjoin the June 2, 2000 order so that he could protest an
Aryan Nations march, scheduled for July 16, 2000, using a "traditional"
picket sign. The district court denied Edwards' s motion on July
14, 2000.
FN12. In his opening brief, Edwards argues that his
First Amendment challenge extends to Ordinance 2914, which was
effectively replaced by Ordinance 2920. Because it is clear that
Ordinance 2920 was intended to supercede Ordinance 2914, we consider
only Edwards' s challenge to the constitutionality of Ordinance
2920. See, e.g., MacDonald v. City of Chicago, 243 F.3d
1021, 1025 (7th Cir. 2001) (finding that enactment of second,
superseding ordinance renders moot all claims arising out of
the first ordinance).
FN13. The district court struck the exemption for veterans
contained in Section 1(C) of the ordinance, which arguably would
have permitted veterans to carry signs with handles. Edwards
had also argued before the district court that the ordinance
was not content neutral because Section 1(E) exempted "lawfully
certified weapons education program[s]" from its definition
of "parades" and "public assemblies." The
district court rejected this argument, and Edwards does not renew
it on appeal.
FN14. On appeal, Edwards challenges for the first time
the portion of Section 1(C) providing that "[l]aw enforcement
officers . . . soldiers of the United States Armed Forces and
the Idaho National Guard and . . . United States Reserve Officer
Training Corp cadets" are "exempted from the provisions"
of Ordinance 2920 that ban the carrying of weapons, sign supports,
and signs made of specified materials. Because Edwards did not
raise this challenge below, he has waived it. In any case, it
is highly probable that an exemption permitting law enforcement
officers to carry weapons during parades and public assemblies
would pass constitutional muster. See, e.g., Raleigh,
N.C., Code § 12-1060(d) (exempting law enforcement officers
from prohibition against possession of firearms and dangerous
weapons during parades).
FN15. The City is not required to show, however, that
Ordinance 2920 represents the least restrictive means of attaining
this goal. One World Family Now, 76 F.3d at 1014.
FN16. The City argues in its brief that "the district
court had deposition testimony before it that demonstrators had
turned their ' traditional' picket signs against officers at
the Aryan parade that occurred after the enactment of the
ordinance in an attempt to hit them." (emphasis added).
The City refers to Coeur d' Alene Chief of Police David Scates'
s description, in his deposition testimony, of a newsclip that
shows "someone carrying a flag on some type of . . . wood,
who was swinging it . . . toward two officers." Scates stated
that neither officer was hit and no report of the incident was
made. This description, if accurate, may or may not tend to support
the City' s claim that the sign-handle banning provision of the
ordinance advances its interest in public safety. If the object
being swung was a flagpole, it is not regulated by the ordinance,
which regulates fixtures attached to signs and placards, not
fixtures attached to flags. It is certainly true that the City
is not required to wait until individuals are seriously injured
by sign handles during a parade or public assembly before it
may regulate how signs are constructed. But it is equally true
that proof that the City' s public safety interest is well-taken
does not justify the enactment of a flat ban on all sign handles
carried during parades and public assemblies, regardless of height,
width, weight, and composition, particularly when the carrying
of flagpoles is not barred or their size regulated.
FN17. Indeed, the record indicates the opposite. In
his deposition, City Police Captain Ken Timmons was asked if,
prior to the enactment of Ordinance 2920, the City police had
"had a problem with persons marching in parades with weapons."
He replied, "I don' t think so." Captain Timmons was
then asked, "[h]ave you ever had a problem with a police
officer being struck by a counterdemonstrator at a parade or
public assembly with a stick, let' s say?" He responded,
"[n]ot that I recall."
FN18. In his deposition, Chief of Police Scates was
asked whether the arrest of Edwards for refusing to surrender
his sign during his protest of the Aryan Nations march -- which
occurred prior to the enactment of the ordinance -- was valid.
He replied, "Well, I' ll tell you the same thing I' ve told
everyone else since the day I heard about it. It' s absolutely
a farce."
FN19. Los Angeles Ordinance § 55.07, which was
adopted by the Los Angeles City Council because of "several
incidents where a number of police officers were injured at demonstrations
by two-inch by two-inch wooden sign poles," has survived
a constitutional challenge on First Amendment grounds. People
v. Dury, 152 Cal.App.3d Supp. 23, 26-27 (1983) (upholding
the ordinance as a valid time, place, and manner regulation of
expressive conduct).
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