Village Inn decision demands overturning
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There has been much discussion during the war on terrorism about
whether new government policies infringe on Americans’ basic
Constitutional rights. Last month a much clearer, and therefore much
more chilling, attack on those rights occurred during a much smaller
war raging on Balboa Island.
This fight is one that could happen almost anywhere. On one side
is a Balboa Island homeowner, Anne Lemen. On the other is her
neighbor, the Village Inn. She claims the restaurant/bar is far too
noisy, far too late into the night and that the inn’s new owners, the
Toll family, have changed the establishment from a relatively quiet,
locals-mostly spot to a nightclub for non-islanders.
The Tolls, in return, say Lemen has harassed customers and wrongly
videotaped patrons at the inn.
Their battle, as so many do in America, escalated to the point
that it ended up in court. And an Orange County Superior Court judge
ruled in late August that Lemen cannot make false statements about
the Village Inn, make contact with the restaurant’s employees or
videotape the business from within 50 feet, except from her own
property (which happens to be 10 feet away).
Setting aside all the specifics of this dispute -- talking not at
all about whether Lemen has harassed customers or employees of the
Village Inn or if the new owners have created a nuisance that needs
to be curbed or shut down -- this injunction was wrong. It was wrong
for one fundamental reason: the First Amendment.
The First Amendment, the initial Constitutional freedom Americans
enjoy, guarantees Lemen the right to give her opinion of the Village
Inn, as it guarantees the same to the Village Inn’s owners and all
U.S. citizens. And this decision trampled unnecessarily on her
rights.
There are other legal recourses for the Village Inn owners to
pursue. Libel and slander laws exist so particular, improper
statements can be punished and so the First Amendment will not be
besieged as it has been in this case. The case is a perfect example
of what is known in free speech legal jargon as “prior restraint,”
that is a muzzle of her speech by the courts before the speech even
occurs.
Therefore, this is a decision that deserves the appeal Lemen and
her attorney have filed. It is one that demands to be overturned.
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