Joshua Rohrer's Lawsuit Against The City of Gastonia
Joshua Rohrer's Lawsuit Against The City of Gastonia
Joshua Rohrer's Lawsuit Against The City of Gastonia
JOSHUA ROHRER,
Plaintiff,
v.
Case No.: ___3:23-cv-00396_________________
Defendants.
INTRODUCTION
homeless and living in Gastonia, North Carolina—experienced one of the worst days of his
life. He was standing on the median of a road with his service dog, Sunshine, smiling and
waving to passing drivers because spreading positive energy helps him cope with the post-
traumatic stress disorder, anxiety, and depression that beset him after his military service.
Even though Mr. Rohrer was not asking drivers for anything, Gastonia police officers
Cierra Brooks and Maurice Taylor III approached him and arrested him under the City’s
forcing Mr. Rohrer against their car and then to the ground and tasing the unthreatening
Sunshine, who ran off and was later killed by a car. Mr. Rohrer was devastated by the death
2. As much as Mr. Rohrer would like to put that day behind him, he can’t:
Over the past year and a half, in retaliation for Mr. Rohrer’s public calls for accountability
for the City and the officers involved, the City has subjected Mr. Rohrer to a relentless
campaign of harassment, abuse, and defamation. This campaign has involved hundreds of
disparaging, false, and taunting public comments by the City through the official Gastonia
Police Department Facebook account, including statements made directly on Mr. Rohrer’s
personal Facebook profile. The City’s comments attack Mr. Rohrer’s character, lie about
what happened that day, and intentionally mislead the public about the fact that the criminal
charges against Mr. Rohrer were dismissed. The City has also encouraged members of the
public to harass Mr. Rohrer online, even after Mr. Rohrer left Gastonia to escape the City’s
abuse. Today, the posts and comments continue, causing Mr. Rohrer immense
3. The City and the individual Defendants are responsible for violating Mr.
Rohrer’s rights under federal and state law, and this complaint seeks damages and
PARTIES
resident of Gastonia. He is a person with disabilities and relies on a service dog. In October
2021, Mr. Rohrer’s service dog was named Sunshine. Sunshine was trained to
accommodate Mr. Rohrer’s physical and mental disabilities, and she was Mr. Rohrer’s
located in Gaston County and organized under the laws of the State of North Carolina. The
City is responsible for the policies, practices, and customs of its Police Department.
At all times pertinent to the material incidents in this complaint, she was acting within the
scope of her employment and under color of law. She is sued in her individual capacity.
7. Defendant Maurice Taylor III was an officer with the Gastonia Police
Department in October 2021. Upon information and belief, he subsequently left the
Department. At all times pertinent to the material incidents in this complaint, he was acting
within the scope of his employment and under color of law. He is sued in his individual
capacity.
Upon information and belief, he has administered the Department’s official Facebook page
since August 2021 and, under color of law, has posted or authorized posting of statements
on behalf of the Department on social media. He is sued in his individual and official
capacities.
Department. Upon information and belief, Defendant Doe posts or authorizes posting of
statements on behalf of the Department on social media under color of law. He is sued in
10. Plaintiff’s claims are brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and the First, Fourth,
and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution, as well as the Americans
§ 794(a).
11. This Court has jurisdiction to hear Plaintiff’s claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C.
§§ 1331, 1343, and 1367. This Court also has jurisdiction under the Declaratory Judgment
12. Venue is proper in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of North
Carolina under 28 U.S.C. § 1391(b)(2) because a substantial part of the acts that gave rise
to this lawsuit occurred in this judicial district. This district is also an appropriate venue
FACTS
13. Mr. Rohrer enlisted in the U.S. Army in 2002, just a few months after he
graduated high school. Mr. Rohrer completed a tour in both Iraq and Kuwait in 2004 and
14. Mr. Rohrer was grateful for the opportunity to serve his country, but the
trauma he experienced during his military service has had long-lasting effects on his health
and wellbeing. Mr. Rohrer lives with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depression,
15. Mr. Rohrer also has a hiatal hernia that causes severe acid reflux when he
16. The U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) prescribed a service dog to
17. In October 2021, Mr. Rohrer’s service dog was Sunshine. At that time, Mr.
relied heavily on her. Her skills included providing Mr. Rohrer deep pressure therapy,
hugging him, and licking his face during his panic attacks; creating a physical barrier
between Mr. Rohrer and others to prevent PTSD episodes triggered by people approaching
him; alerting Mr. Rohrer when people were approaching him from behind or the side;
retrieving items at the ground level that Mr. Rohrer could not reach without triggering his
acid reflux; opening and closing doors; turning lights on and off; reminding Mr. Rohrer to
take his medications because his PTSD impairs his memory; reminding Mr. Rohrer to feed
Sunshine and himself; waking Mr. Rohrer out of nightmares; and crossing the street safely
on her own.
19. Per the VA prescription and applicable state and federal laws, rules, and
regulations, Sunshine was to remain with Mr. Rohrer at all times and never be separated
from him.
20. Sunshine was not required to be leashed in public. See Gaston Cty.
21. Sunshine wore a vest prominently indicating that she was a service animal.
The vest contained two patches expressly identifying her as a service dog and one stating
in walking around the City with Sunshine while interacting with members of the Gastonia
community.
23. Mr. Rohrer often would smile and wave at drivers to convey a message of
Community members were often kind, smiling back and waving at Mr. Rohrer, and people
would chat with him. Sometimes people would bring him or Sunshine food or water and,
occasionally, money. Mr. Rohrer never asked for money or any other donation during these
interactions.
24. He sometimes would stand or walk in the medians of streets, but Mr. Rohrer
Department officers were abusive and cruel to Mr. Rohrer, viewing him as a problem, an
eyesore, or a blemish on the community, and they routinely harassed and mistreated him.
26. For example, on October 9, 2021, Defendant Taylor approached Mr. Rohrer
while Mr. Rohrer was standing on a median and told Mr. Rohrer he was not allowed to
stand there.
27. While they were talking, a car stopped and the driver offered Mr. Rohrer
food for Sunshine and some money, which Mr. Rohrer accepted.
28. Taylor said, “If you don’t move right now, I’m going to take you to jail.”
Taylor again told Mr. Rohrer that he was not permitted to stand there, even though he was
not blocking traffic. But Taylor repeatedly refused to identify any law that prohibited Mr.
Rohrer’s activity, instead saying, “If you want me to show you a statute, cool; but I’m
29. Taylor explained that officers had “received directions that we’re not
supposed to have people in medians, like at the intersections of the highways” and asserted
30. After Mr. Rohrer said that other police officers would smile at him or offer
him money, Taylor responded, “We’re not even supposed to do that, because that’s against
policy.”
31. During this encounter, Taylor inquired about the extent and nature of Mr.
32. The only obstruction of traffic during that encounter was created by Taylor,
who parked his car in the middle of an intersection and blocked an entire lane of traffic.
On Taylor’s way back to his car, another car stopped, blocking the only other lane, and
Officer Taylor talked with the driver about job opportunities with the Police Department,
never once telling the driver they were not permitted to obstruct traffic by stopping a
Defendants Detain Mr. Rohrer for Allegedly Panhandling on October 13, 2021
33. On October 13, 2021, only four days after the incident with Defendant
Taylor described above, an anonymous caller contacted 911 to complain that one or more
people were standing at intersections “using dog[s] to make people feel sorry for them to
give them money.” The dispatcher could not determine whether what the caller was
34. The incident and what followed was captured by multiple police body-worn
cameras.
1
In July 2022, acting on Mr. Rohrer’s petition, a judge ordered the City to release the
body-worn camera videos from officers’ interactions with Mr. Rohrer on October 9 and
13 of 2021. Those videos are available on the City’s website at
https://www.cityofgastonia.com/police-news-release/1876-october-9-and-october-13,-
2021,-body-worn-camera-video-related-to-joshua-rohrer-released.html (also at
https://perma.cc/GS5J-LLQY). The video from October 9, 2021, and October 13, 2021,
marked as “Body-worn camera video – Part One” will be referred to as “BWC Part One,”
and the video from October 13, 2021, marked as “Body-worn camera video – Part Two”
will be referred to as “BWC Part Two.”
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intersection of Cox Road and Gaston Mall Drive and stated that she had received calls
36. After seeing Mr. Rohrer accept a donation from a passing vehicle,
ordinances.
37. Mr. Rohrer disagreed with that characterization of his activity. He argued
that he had not solicited donations from anyone but instead that someone had offered him
38. Mr. Rohrer asked Defendant Brooks if she was really going to issue a
citation to a “disabled veteran who’s living in the woods,” to which she responded in the
affirmative.
arrived on the scene and told Mr. Rohrer that if he continued to insist that he did nothing
wrong, Taylor would separate Mr. Rohrer and Sunshine and give Sunshine to animal
control. Taylor made this threat despite his knowledge that Mr. Rohrer was a disabled
veteran and that Mr. Rohrer’s PTSD was “so severe [he] c[ouldn’t] function without a
40. Defendants Brooks and Taylor both demanded that Mr. Rohrer provide his
identification but did not specify any particular form of identification. Brooks told Mr.
Rohrer that if he did not hand over his identification he would go to jail for “RDO,” a
reference to a state law that makes it a misdemeanor to “willfully and unlawfully resist,
delay or obstruct” a police officer. N.C. Gen. Stat. Ann. § 14-223(a) (2014). A person who
in behavior that is “aggressive or suggestive of violence” is not guilty of this crime. State
41. In response to these demands, Mr. Rohrer handed over his federal veteran
42. Defendants Brooks and Taylor could have readily determined Mr. Rohrer’s
43. Even though Defendant Taylor would later explain that they were simply
trying to identify Mr. Rohrer, Defendants refused to accept Mr. Rohrer’s valid veteran ID
and demanded that Mr. Rohrer produce his state identification (“state ID”) instead.
44. Mr. Rohrer’s state ID was expired and did not contain his correct address.
45. There is no obligation under North Carolina law for a pedestrian to have
state identification.
46. There is no obligation under state law to provide any particular type of
47. Indeed, the U.S. Supreme Court highlighted the risk of arbitrary
enforcement when it held unconstitutional a statute that vested authority in police officers
Lawson, 461 U.S. 352, 358 (1983). And North Carolina law favors veterans’ identifications
to state identifications in some instances. E.g., N.C. Gen. Stat. Ann. § 163-166.16(a)(2)
(providing that electors can use an expired veterans’ identification but not an expired state
identification to vote).
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to comply with the new demand. He opened his wallet, grabbed his state ID, and started to
proffer it to Defendants, while explaining that the state ID was not currently valid.
49. However, Defendants Brooks and Taylor did not wait for Mr. Rohrer to
provide his state ID. After only a few seconds, and while Mr. Rohrer was attempting to
comply, Taylor grabbed Mr. Rohrer, told him he was under arrest for resisting an officer,
and, with Brooks, forced Mr. Rohrer against the patrol car.
50. Defendant Brooks then took over effectuating the arrest, first pressing Mr.
Rohrer into the car and then, after about a minute, throwing him onto the pavement.
51. At no point did Mr. Rohrer physically resist Defendants’ restraints, although
he begged witnesses to help: “Somebody help me. Hey! What are you doing? What are you
doing? Mama! What are you doing? I’m not doing anything. Somebody help me! What are
you doing to me? Why are you all hurting me?” As Defendants restrained him, Mr. Rohrer
continued to sob: “What are you all doing to me? Help me. What are you doing? What are
you doing? I haven’t done anything! I am cooperating. Somebody help me, record this.” A
few minutes later, he exclaimed, “Somebody please help me—they’re trying to kidnap
me.”
52. While this was happening, Sunshine stayed close to Mr. Rohrer but did not
interfere with Defendants. Sensing Mr. Rohrer’s distress, Sunshine paced calmly around
Mr. Rohrer’s feet and then jumped onto the car to be closer to his face, in keeping with her
training.
53. Although Sunshine did not pose any threat to anyone, Defendant Taylor
11
trained, and nonthreatening, said, “I don’t think he’s [sic] going to bite me. I don’t think
55. In response, Defendant Taylor stated, for the first time and with Sunshine
visibly several feet away and facing away from Taylor, “He just bit me.”
56. This was false. Sunshine was nonaggressive throughout the encounter and
did not bite Defendant Taylor or anyone else. 2 Instead, Sunshine exhibited nonthreatening
posture; did not growl, lower her ears, snap, lunge, or give any other indication that she
might be dangerous; and merely walked calmly back and forth in Mr. Rohrer’s vicinity. In
fact, later in the day when discussing the incident with a supervisor, Defendant Taylor
admitted that Sunshine was “a very well-trained dog.” (BWC Part Two at 48:18).
57. While Defendant Taylor continued to point his taser gun at Sunshine,
Sunshine jumped off the car and began to walk away from Taylor on the median.
58. At this point, even though Sunshine posed no threat to anyone, Defendant
59. Injured and in distress from the tasing, Sunshine ran away.
60. Defendant Taylor’s use of the taser to shoot Sunshine destroyed her ability
61. Mr. Rohrer howled in terror: “Why did you taser my dog? Hey ... Someone
help me! What did you do to her? Somebody help me, record this! Help me. No! What did
you do to her?”
2
Although the BWC footage does not show Sunshine at all times during the encounter, at
no time does it show Sunshine biting anyone.
12
Defendants, while Defendant Brooks continued to hold his face against the pavement and
63. Despite Mr. Rohrer’s terror, Defendants Brooks apparently found the
incident funny. When later asked by a supervisor whether Taylor tased Sunshine, Brooks
smiled and laughed while saying, “Yeah, he did.” (BWC Part Two at 45:26).
64. Without Sunshine, Mr. Rohrer became despondent: “I don’t know what they
did with Sunshine. Where’s my dog Sunshine Rae? I need my dog, she’s my medical
device. Where’s my dog? Where’s my dog? Where’s my dog? Where’s my dog? Where’s
my dog? What did y’all do with my dog? Where’s my dog? Why are you doing this to
me?”
medical device. It’s my service dog, man, I need my dog.” (BWC Part Two at 7:02). Mr.
Rohrer reiterated that Sunshine was his medical device and said, “You can’t separate me
Sunshine, Mr. Rohrer cried out: “My dog was running away and you shot her when she
67. Defendants ignored Mr. Rohrer’s pleas to find, protect, or care for Sunshine
and dismissed Mr. Rohrer’s critical need to have access to his service dog in the very
situation in which he required Sunshine the most, i.e., during an extreme event exacerbating
13
Nevertheless, to respond to Mr. Rohrer’s arrest, more than a dozen police cars arrived on
the scene, completely blocking all lanes of traffic in one direction and most of the traffic
69. Mr. Rohrer continued to weep, sob for help, and beg for Sunshine as the
70. The force used during the arrest caused Mr. Rohrer physical injuries,
including a torn meniscus in his knee, a severely sprained lateral collateral ligament, a
blood clot in his leg, and bleeding and contusions on his face. Mr. Rohrer needed to use a
wheelchair and a walker for months after the incident, and Mr. Rohrer continues to suffer
from lasting mobility issues and ongoing leg pain that interfere with his daily life and make
it difficult for him to walk for long distances. Mr. Rohrer’s doctors have recommended that
71. The violent arrest also caused Mr. Rohrer severe mental and emotional
injuries. For instance, he is now afraid of police officers, and begins sweating and shaking
uncontrollably out of fear for his life when he sees officers, blue lights, police cars, badges,
or anything to do with the police. On one occasion when he was a passenger in a car on a
highway, he saw a police car pull up behind the car he was in and he nearly jumped out of
72. The incident also forced Mr. Rohrer to move out of Gastonia and start his
life over in a new community. He avoids Gastonia and anywhere in its vicinity whenever
14
73. People who witnessed the incident were outraged. Civilian eyewitnesses
disputed the false claim made by Defendants Brooks and Taylor that Sunshine attacked
them or that Mr. Rohrer had done anything that would justify his arrest.
74. For example, two witnesses approached, saying that they watched the
incident and asking why Defendants attacked Sunshine and Mr. Rohrer. One witness
explained, “This guy’s been out here for months—his dog never attacked anyone.” Another
driver exclaimed, “All these police for this one guy, that’s a little ridiculous,” to which one
officer falsely claimed that the overwhelming display of force was justified by “that one
guy who’s attacking officers and having his dog bite officers.” (BWC Part Two at 51:00).
75. Rather than seek out information from eyewitnesses to the event, additional
officers who arrived on the scene immediately sought to cover up the incident by pushing
76. Other officers threatened witnesses that if they did not leave the area they
would “put [them] in handcuffs.” As officers bore down on one witness and forced her to
leave, another witness said, “We support you guys, but I might second guess that now.”
77. Another woman called the police department to complain about the
mistreatment of Mr. Rohrer and Sunshine. Defendant Taylor called the number back and
78. Upon information and belief, other individuals who witnessed the event and
15
told Defendant Taylor immediately before the tasing that she did not think Sunshine was
going to bite her, when recounting the incident to another officer, she claimed instead that
Sunshine “was about to bite [her], and Taylor tased it [sic].” (BWC Part Two at 45:23).
The Aftermath
80. Mr. Rohrer was transported to the jail. Upon information and belief, he was
charged with soliciting alms, soliciting from a highway, and two misdemeanor counts of
resisting arrest.
81. During the booking process, Defendants Brooks and Taylor belittled Mr.
82. Taylor at one point said to Mr. Rohrer, “You walk up and down the street
all the time. You’re not disabled; your legs work fine.”
83. Taylor also asserted, “I have a disability rating and I still work; my
[acquaintance] has a rating and he still works. You should have just listened to us and
complied.”
84. At the subsequent bond hearing, Defendants Taylor and Brooks insisted that
Mr. Rohrer’s bond should be increased by claiming that Mr. Rohrer—a homeless
85. The assigned magistrate judge, Magistrate Mark Oakes, set a $3,000 bond
for these minor offenses and imposed a condition that Mr. Rohrer could not use a
bondsperson or support from the community but instead was required to pay the entire
bond amount himself or with funds from immediate family. A bondsman who attempted
to post bail on Mr. Rohrer’s behalf was prohibited from doing so.
16
87. In July 2022, the District Attorney dismissed all charges arising out of the
October 13 incident.
89. Although the police failed to secure Sunshine, they brought Sunshine’s
service jacket to Mr. Rohrer in jail. One of the taser darts was still stuck through the back
end of the vest. However, a patch stating that Sunshine was not to be removed from her
90. When Mr. Rohrer was finally released from jail, he—along with many
91. But Sunshine would never be reunited with Mr. Rohrer. As a result of being
separated from Mr. Rohrer and the trauma inflicted by the tasing, Sunshine—who, prior to
the tasing, was trained to cross the street safely on her own—ran into traffic and was struck
92. Upon learning of Sunshine’s death, Mr. Rohrer experienced a severe mental
health episode and ran head-on into traffic, attempting to end his life.
93. After Mr. Rohrer’s arrest and Sunshine’s death, Mr. Rohrer began seeing a
therapist twice a week and began taking a range of psychiatric medications to address the
17
94. While Mr. Rohrer’s criminal charges were still pending, Defendant Brooks
“Gaston County people in such an uproar about that damn dog getting tased without
knowing the facts but where was the same energy for the Gastonia officers that were
attacked a couple of days ago and almost lost their lives??? I’ll wait.”
96. On October 23, 2021, Defendant Brooks once again discussed the issue on
Facebook, stating that anyone defending Mr. Rohrer and criticizing her sounded “dumb as
hell still talking about that dog incident supporting him,” before stating that Mr. Rohrer
was “clearly in the wrong,” and concluding, “But whatever … Y’all still bothered and I’m
still living, counting down the days until I’m at Mardi Gras.”
97. On October 29, 2021, Magistrate Oakes made a series of public statements
on Facebook in response to the growing outrage over what the police had done to Mr.
Rohrer and Sunshine, implying that he had non-public evidence about the case. His
statements read:
you weren’t even there so what make your opinion worth anything? You are
low information loud mouth too I see
low information loud mouths are always a problem in society. You just
regurgitate what one or two people who weren’t even there are saying. Sheep
you weren’t even there so I’m going to dismiss your lack of knowledge.
Veterans are also required to follow law and ordinances. They don’t get a free
pass. In fact they should be in the front of the line of law abiding citizens
sir I know more about this case than you. I promise. Vets are not above the
law. They must abide by it too. You refuse to acknowledge it I see but the truth
still remains. Play in your own sandbox romper room
18
again low information loud mouth is what you are. You’re too young to
understand the romper room comment obviously. Go change your diaper
98. Magistrate Oakes made these inappropriate comments publicly even though
the criminal case against Mr. Rohrer over which Oakes had presided was still pending, and
he might have been required to preside over additional proceedings in the case in the future.
Upon information and belief, Magistrate Oakes has faced no discipline for the posts and
99. Following his arrest, Mr. Rohrer engaged in a number of First Amendment-
protected activities meant to draw attention to the unconstitutional conduct of the City and
its officers.
100. Mr. Rohrer attended several rallies organized to support him and oppose the
City’s mistreatment of its unhoused population more generally. Mr. Rohrer gave speeches
101. Mr. Rohrer spoke repeatedly before the Gastonia City Council about his
arrest and the tasing of Sunshine, seeking to draw attention to his mistreatment.
102. Mr. Rohrer gave numerous press interviews about his arrest and the tasing
of Sunshine. See, e.g., ‘They Brutalized Me’: Disabled North Carolina Veteran Calls on
Police to Release Video of His Arrest (July 11, 2022), ABC11 Eyewitness News,
https://abc11.com/disabled-veteran-police-brutality-body-cam-nc/12043399; Brandon
Goldner, ‘They Lied’: Gastonia Homeless Veteran Describes Bodycam Video of His Arrest,
19
bodycam-arrest-joshua-rohrer/275-b2a2bd21-c506-4352-9113-bab3ceebc5e6.
103. Mr. Rohrer filed a petition for the release of the body-worn camera footage
of the October 13 incident, which was opposed by the City but was ultimately granted by
104. After the footage was released, Mr. Rohrer shared the footage of his arrest
via various platforms, including YouTube and Facebook. The footage shocked and angered
many members of the public, who offered further support for Mr. Rohrer’s cause.
105. On the day Mr. Rohrer was arrested, one of his supporters established a
campaign on GoFundMe.com to raise money for Mr. Rohrer to help with his court costs,
spread awareness that Sunshine was missing, and garner support for Mr. Rohrer and
Sunshine. After Sunshine was killed, the purpose of the campaign changed to help Mr.
Rohrer afford legal fees, housing costs, groceries, mental health expenses, and a new
service dog.
106. Mr. Rohrer maintains a personal profile on Facebook. 3 After his arrest, he
began to use his personal profile to speak out about the abuse to which he was subjected
and the tasing of Sunshine and to garner support for his cause.
3
Facebook allows users to create several kinds of webpages. Each Facebook user may
create one “personal profile” for their individual use. The owner of the personal profile
may make “posts” on that profile, and other users with access to those posts can append
“comments” to those posts and reply to comments on those posts. Owners of personal
profiles can choose to make their posts available to the general public or accessible only
to their Facebook “friends,” Facebook members with whom they have established
connections. For simplicity, posts, comments, and replies collectively are referred to
herein as “statements.”
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Facebook group titled “Support Joshua Rohrer and Sunshine Rae” as “a place to gather to
show support for Joshua and Sunshine.” 4 After the support group was created, Mr. Rohrer
was added as an administrator of the group. The administrators, moderators, and members
of this group (including Mr. Rohrer) use this page to speak out about Mr. Rohrer’s arrest
and the tasing of Sunshine and to post information about events, including in-person rallies
outside the Gaston County Courthouse followed by participants speaking at the Gastonia
City Council. For instance, the support group has shared information about at least nine
“Rallies for Justice and Compassion” organized by the Libertarian Party of North Carolina
and Pastor Moses Colbert, which were organized to request that the government “show
justice and compassion for [Gastonia’s] homeless population” and to demand justice and
4
Facebook users can also create Facebook “groups” to connect with other users over a
topic. Groups can be public or private. Facebook groups are run by “administrators” and
“moderators” who can set rules for the group and moderate the content permitted to be
posted or commented. Group members can post to the group, which may require
administrator or moderator approval, and can comment on posts and reply to comments
in the group. Facebook groups can create dedicated landing pages for “events,” on which
they can share details about in-person or virtual events and collect RSVPs from other
Facebook users.
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109. The City has created a Facebook page for the Gastonia Police Department
and has obtained recognition from Facebook that this profile is authentic. 5 This Facebook
page purports to represent the City’s position on matters related to the police department.
following the arrest, and the public support Mr. Rohrer received after his arrest, the City
used Gastonia Police Department’s official Facebook page to harass, bully, and defame
Mr. Rohrer.
111. Over the past year and a half, the Department’s Facebook page has posted
hundreds of statements that belittle and disparage Mr. Rohrer and spread false and
misleading information about the incident, often in response to comments by visitors to the
Department’s page. The City’s false, misleading, and disparaging statements are visible to
employee of the City who, upon information and belief, is authorized to speak on behalf of
the City and its Police Department through the Department’s official Facebook page.
employee or employees of the City who, upon information and belief, is authorized to
speak on behalf of the City and its Police Department through the Department’s official
Facebook page.
5
Facebook users who want to use the platform to represent businesses or organizations
can create Facebook “pages.” Other users can follow a page by “liking” the page. Any
Facebook user may publish posts on a publicly accessible Facebook page and comment
on the page’s posts.
22
continues to the time of filing this complaint. Representative examples of the City’s
statements are excerpted below, and Exhibit A provides additional examples, although it
115. Many of these statements are false and defamatory. For example, even
though the October 13 charges against Mr. Rohrer were dismissed without conditions and
Mr. Rohrer pleaded guilty only to unrelated charges that occurred on a different day, the
City and Defendants Goodale and Doe have repeatedly and falsely implied that Mr. Rohrer
116. The City and Defendants Goodale and Doe have repeatedly and falsely
argued that Mr. Rohrer must be guilty because he “accept[ed] a plea deal” relating to the
October 13 incident rather than going to trial. For example, the City wrote: “Why did Mr
Rohrer accept the plea deal he was offered if he felt so strongly about his innocence instead
of going to trial and potentially being found not guilty?” (Comment to January 31, 2023
Facebook post). 7
6
Exhibit A contains accurate screenshots reflecting a sample of statements made by the
City through its official Gastonia Police Department Facebook page relating to this case.
Information relating to third parties has been redacted. Statements marked with a “p” or
“*” indicate that the entire statement has not been included. The City was instructed over
a year ago to preserve all evidence related to this incident, and it has publicly stated that it
has software that preserves all Facebook statements.
7
This complaint includes images of statements by Defendants. The name at the top of the
statement belongs to the author of the statement (here, the City through the official
Gastonia Police Department Facebook page). The blue check mark next to the
Department’s name indicates that the Department’s page has been verified as official by
Facebook. The name at the beginning of the statement belongs to the author of the post or
comment to which the City is replying or to a person the City is tagging in its statement.
In all instances, private individuals’ names have been redacted to protect their privacy,
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the charges and that Mr Rohrer and his private legal team could have challenged the
charges in court but that’s not what they chose to do now was it? Instead they accepted the
plea deal that was offered to him. Perhaps to avoid having an actual court date where
evidence and testimony would have been presented. Who knows why they chose to accept
the deal offered.” (Comment to January 31, 2023 Facebook post). Again, Mr. Rohrer’s did
not plead guilty to any charges arising out of the October 13 encounter with Defendants
118. The City and Defendants Goodale and Doe have posted hundreds of
“the facts say he broke the law and he agreed to a plea deal so apparently
he believes he broke the law as well.” (Comment to November 22, 2022
Facebook post).
except when the original author or tagged Facebook user is Mr. Rohrer and the City is
replying to or tagging him in a statement. The small digital icons that appear at the
bottom right corner of some of these statements are Facebook “reactions,” which allow
readers of those statements to append their reaction to the statement; these reactions
include “like,” “love,” and “haha.” The author of the statement typically does not add a
reaction to their own statement. The citation indicates the time and date of the original
Facebook post under which the screenshotted statement appeared.
24
“Joshua Rohrer you could have had your day in court but accepted the plea
offered.” (Comment to August 17, 2022, 3:26 p.m. Facebook post).
“he was charged with a crime and agreed to a plea deal related to these charges.”
(Comment to August 9, 2022, 9:20 a.m. Facebook post).
“don’t forget that he and his private legal team agreed to the terms of the
plea deal he was offered.” (Comment to April 3, 2023, 9:00 a.m. Facebook
post).
119. Turning the presumption of innocence on its head, the City and Defendants
Goodale and Doe have repeatedly cited the fact that Mr. Rohrer was arrested and charged
as evidence of his guilt and have implied that he was in fact convicted of criminal offenses
25
numerous times in the months since, the City wrote: “[H]e was charged with a crime,
upheld by two grand juries and agreed to a plea deal related to these charges.”
121. In another, the City wrote: “[H]e was charged with a crime in NC, a
magistrate agreed with the charges. Two grand juries concurred with the charges. He
agreed to a plea deal to get into a veterans treatment court. He could have had his day in
court and possibly been found not guilty on all the charges but he chose to accept the deal
that was offered to him and he agreed to go to veterans court.” (Comment to June 21, 2022
Facebook post).
122. Similarly, in a comment to a post on August 9, 2022, the City wrote: “[T]he
NC law he was charged with, the magistrate who set bond, and two grand juries disagree
with your assessment on if he was breaking the law or not. He agreed to a plea deal so as
26
not guilty on all charges, instead he agreed to accept the offer given to him.”
123. In still other statements, the City and Defendants Goodale and Doe have
repeatedly and falsely stated that the charges against Mr. Rohrer arising out of the incidents
in this complaint were “adjudicated,” even though the charges were dismissed and not
resolved by the court. For example, in a comment the City wrote: “[T]he case that we
assume you are referring to is almost 11 months old now, has been adjudicated through the
court process via a plea arrangement, and the officers have been cleared of any wrong
124. In another, the City wrote: “[A]s we have said multiple times. It’s an 18-
month-old closed case where the officers were cleared and charges adjudicated after a plea
deal. The facts are the facts.” (Comment to March 25, 2023, 4:54 p.m. Facebook post).
125. In another, the City wrote: “[One of Mr. Rohrer’s supporters] knew the body
cam wouldn’t be coming out until the charges had been adjudicated one way or the other.
Had Josh[ua] not pled, and had he not had his day in court yet, the video still wouldn’t be
27
system disagrees with your assessment.” (Comment to April 17, 2022, 10:26 a.m.
Facebook post).
127. Through these and other statements, the City and Defendants Goodale and
Doe have falsely stated that the legal system has determined both Mr. Rohrer’s guilt and
conclude that the legal system had determined that Mr. Rohrer was guilty of the charges
arising out of the October 13 incident and/or that Mr. Rohrer agreed to his guilt by pleading
129. But the charges against Mr. Rohrer were dismissed without conditions. No
court has looked at the conduct described in this Complaint and determined that Mr. Rohrer
is guilty. Nor has any court determined whether Defendants acted lawfully.
130. When commenters attempt to correct the City’s false assertions, the City
and Defendants Goodale and Doe double down on their false statements. For example,
when a community member attempted to correct the City by writing, “He didn’t plea In
December regarding those charges and he didn’t plea this time regarding those charges …
he pled to the July charges! So stop trying to claim he took a plea in regards to the 2021
case! He DID NOT!! You dropped THE CHARGES!! There was NOTHING TO PLEA
TO!! He ONLY pled to the July charges. I cannot believe you guys keep twisting this.…”
28
Sept. 12, 2022, 11:58 a.m. Facebook post.) This question implied that the charges must
have incorrectly concluded that Mr. Rohrer pleaded guilty or was found guilty by a court
for charges arising out of the October 13 incident. When commenters express this
misunderstanding, the City does not correct them, even as it assures the public that it is
132. Throughout these statements, the City and Defendants Goodale and Doe
often demean or disparage Mr. Rohrer while stating or implying that the Department has
access to confidential or non-public information about Mr. Rohrer. For example, the City
and Defendants Goodale and Doe have purported to know and share information about
plea negotiations and the details of confidential legal advice that Mr. Rohrer’s attorney
provided to Mr. Rohrer, implying Mr. Rohrer’s guilt. In a comment to a Facebook post of
January 31, 2023, the Department wrote: “Mr Rohrer was offered a plea deal in December
of ’21, he turned down that offer. As trial preparations were being made, that initial plea
29
133. In another comment, the City assured the public that the author was “in the
same courtroom,” implying that the author had particular knowledge that the public should
proceedings, the City and Defendants Goodale and Doe have disclosed and continue to
repeatedly and improperly disclose what they claim are the contents of Mr. Rohrer’s court
file, which has been sealed by operation of law because the charges against him were
135. In other posts, the City and Defendants Goodale and Doe share information
they have obtained about Mr. Rohrer’s unrelated court dates and urge the public to look up
court records for Mr. Rohrer in an attempt to discredit him. For example, in one comment
the City wrote: “[P]erhaps you should ask him about his pending court date in 11 days
which can be found by entering his name in the open source portal below:
30
137. The City and Defendants Goodale and Doe have taunted Mr. Rohrer dozens
of times for not yet filing this civil rights lawsuit, at one point commenting: “If this is such
a clear violation against the Constitution and civil rights, there should have been several
attorneys willing to take this case pro-bono right? But yet, that hasn’t happened. Perhaps
you should ask Mr. Rohrer why [he] hasn’t pursued anything further.” (Comment to
138. Similarly, the City urged a supporter of Mr. Rohrer: “Perhaps you should
ask yourself why no private attorney has taken the case to a civil lawsuit.” (Comment to
139. The City and Defendants Goodale and Doe also post what they claim are
“facts” about the case, but these “facts” are refuted by the video evidence. For example,
the City and Defendants Goodale and Doe have repeatedly claimed that Mr. Rohrer refused
31
from the first time the officers requested a state ID to Mr. Rohrer’s arrest, during which
140. Other statements made by Defendants are simply cruel, arguing that Mr.
Rohrer should feel responsible for Sunshine’s death, blaming him for failing to “control”
Sunshine while he was being forcefully arrested, or blaming him for “forcing” a resident
141. For example, ignoring that Mr. Rohrer had complete control over Sunshine
until Defendants Brooks and Taylor forced Mr. Rohrer against the patrol car and tased
Sunshine, the City tagged Mr. Rohrer to comment: “Joshua Rohrer and we’ve asked you
multiple times what form of control you had over Sunshine. The ADA requires
leash/harness or some other form of control.” (Comment to January 31, 2023, 3:02 p.m.
Facebook post).
142. These posts are all publicly visible. More than 30,000 people follow
Gastonia Police Department’s Facebook page, and thousands of people have seen
Defendants’ statements.
143. In fact, Defendant Goodale has bragged that he has increased engagement
for the City’s Police Department Facebook page over the past two years, see Rick Goodale,
2023), an increase in engagement that appears to be driven largely by the unceasing tirade
32
provocative posts that trigger responses is an intentional social media strategy to increase
views: “The Facebook algorithm prioritizes comments, likes, and shares on posts and
shows posts that have higher engagement to more people. So every comment (like yours),
every like, and every share helps our posts get seen by more people! On to 40,000!”
144. In many of these statements, the City and Defendants Goodale and Doe tag
Mr. Rohrer, notifying Mr. Rohrer that Defendants are writing about him. 8
145. The City and Defendants Goodale and Doe also posted comments directly
on Mr. Rohrer’s personal Facebook profile and the “Support Joshua Rohrer and Sunshine
governmental or law enforcement function. It serves only to demean a citizen who voiced
a legitimate grievance against the City and to deflect responsibility for the officers’ and the
City’s misconduct.
8
A Facebook user can “tag” another user by using the @ symbol followed by the user’s
Facebook account name in a post, comment, or reply. A tag creates a link to the account
of the tagged user. The tagged user also receives a notification that they have been
tagged; the notification comes in the form of a link to navigate to the Facebook statement
in which they were mentioned.
33
Amendment activities, including petitioning for the release of the body-worn camera
footage, speaking with news media, fundraising to help with his expenses, speaking at
rallies, and sharing his own Facebook posts about the incident.
148. In fact, the City and Defendants Goodale and Doe have expressly noted
their dissatisfaction and annoyance with Mr. Rohrer’s and his supporters’ constitutionally
protected activities. The City and Defendants Goodale and Doe have repeatedly suggested
that Mr. Rohrer’s public expressions of grief over the loss of Sunshine are fabricated to
make money. Other times, the City and Defendants Goodale and Doe have complained that
Mr. Rohrer and his supporters have held rallies to support his cause: “[T]his will be their
7th rally they have held at City Council meeting isn’t that correct? This alomst [sic] year
old case is closed and has been for a while.” (Comment to September 14, 2022, 9:28 a.m.
Facebook post).
149. And still further statements explicitly complain about Mr. Rohrer’s speech
on his personal Facebook profile and the support Facebook group and lament that the City
and Defendants Goodale and Doe are no longer able to antagonize Mr. Rohrer directly on
his support group. For example, in a string of comments to a June 21, 2022 Facebook post,
the City repeatedly complained that it was not able to post directly on Mr. Rohrer’s support
page:
“Joshua Rohrer seems a bit one sided that you and/or your supporters tag us on a post
on your private support page and then disable comments so that we can’t respond back
to you.”
34
“Joshua Rohrer or why not let people you and your supporters tag in that private group
allow for the tagged agency to respond to correct inaccurate statements?”
“Joshua Rohrer yes, members of your private group are commenting but those outside
the group that you or someone else tags in a post from that group are unable to respond
to the tags.”
150. Months later, the City remained agitated that it was not able to harass Mr.
Rohrer on his support page, writing, “[S]o in other words, the people who run his page
(which he is also one correct) are also avoiding answering any legitimate questions people
may have about Mr. Rohrer’s actions? Why would that be?” (Comment to January 31, 2023
Facebook post).
35
campaign of harassment as well. For example, in one post the City exhorted its supporters
to “ask Mr. Rohrer what form of control he had over Sunshine ... and ask him why he never
pursued any further action. Hopefully you won’t get blocked from his personal page or
support page like others have when they have asked him questions he doesn’t want to
152. These comments are intended to cause, and have the effect of causing,
supporters of the City to try to access Mr. Rohrer’s Facebook pages and post harassing,
abusive, and defamatory content. The City sometimes thanks its supporters for “helping to
get the correct narrative out there,” as it did in response to one commenter who harassed
Mr. Rohrer on Mr. Rohrer’s pages and has posted numerous maliciously false statements
9
As private individuals, Mr. Rohrer and the other administrators and moderators of the
Support Joshua Rohrer and Sunshine Rae Facebook group have no obligation to allow all
viewpoints to post on their personal profiles and pages and are legally entitled to block
any users from interacting with those webpages. By contrast, government-run Facebook
webpages, such as the Gastonia Police Department page, are public forums and may not
block other Facebook users. See Davison v. Randall, 912 F.3d 666, 687 (4th Cir. 2019),
as amended (Jan. 9, 2019).
36
post).
153. The City and Defendants Goodale and Doe’s campaign of harassment and
defamation have prolonged and exacerbated Mr. Rohrer’s emotional distress arising out of
the October 13 attack and caused him severe emotional distress and psychological injuries.
The relentless campaign was so upsetting to Mr. Rohrer that he became unable to sleep for
monitoring the City’s harassing and defamatory Facebook activity. He became obsessed
with correcting the record and protecting his own name from the Defendants’ defamation,
Mr. Rohrer also gained 100 pounds during this time from overeating due to the stress and
trauma of being forced to relive the event and defend himself and Sunshine from
155. These statements, as well as the October 13 attack, made Mr. Rohrer fearful
of further mistreatment from the City if he stayed in Gastonia. Even after moving out of
Gastonia, Mr. Rohrer still fears the City, which continues to target him through online
37
157. The attack on Mr. Rohrer is just one example of a longstanding campaign
members of the Department’s “Eagle Team.” See Police Abuse of Homeless Splits North
us/police-abuse-of-homeless-splits-north-carolina-city.html.
159. Acting on complaints forwarded from the mayor’s office about the presence
of people experiencing homelessness in the City, the Police Department made it its mission
160. Officers would drive around town looking for people experiencing
homelessness to terrorize. Once they found a person sleeping without shelter, they would
douse them with cooking oil, hot coffee, paint, urine, and other substances.
161. The officers would also beat people experiencing homelessness, jokingly
referring to the beatings as taking them to “ride on Space Mountain.” Id. (internal quotation
marks omitted). The officers gave themselves the nickname “Space Mountain Boys” and
162. When these allegations came to light, the Police Department declined to
bring in outside investigators. Instead, the Department relied only on its internal affairs
unit, which attempted to cover up the misconduct by offering hush money to victims.
38
this day.
165. For example, the City of Gastonia does not have a single homeless shelter
for a population of more than 80,000 people. The only available shelter is run by the
Salvation Army, and then only when the temperature drops below freezing. Indeed, the
City has said in a statement: “Due to city zoning regulations, shelters are not permitted by
right in the city.” See Gastonia Homeless Shelter Operating Out of Church Forced to Shut
news/gastonia-homeless-shelter-operating-out-of-church-forced-to-shut-down.
166. In 2022, the City, citing zoning regulations, prohibited a local church—
homeless shelter by providing overnight housing. The church had been providing shelter
to dozens of unhoused people, and the City’s prohibition forced those former residents to
live outdoors.
167. The situation for unhoused people in Gastonia deteriorated because they had
nowhere to sleep after the church shelter closed, and several of these unhoused individuals
died.
168. After public outcry and many rallies, the City allowed the shelter to reopen.
Upon information and belief, the church allows about 100 people to reside in tents on its
property. Members of the community raised money to purchase two trailers for the church
to use on-site for substance-abuse education and other educational purposes and emergency
housing. Those trailers remained empty and unused while the pastor worked with the City
to get permits for the trailers. Despite these efforts, the City recently fined the church
39
169. Upon information and belief, it is a priority for the City and for the Police
170. For instance, it was one of the Police Department’s goals for the 2022 fiscal
year to “find a solution that would deter the homeless from congregating in open areas that
are visible” to passing motorists and businesses throughout the entire city and especially in
the downtown business areas. See Kara Fohner, Panhandling Charges Against Joshua
https://www.gastongazette.com/story/news/crime/2022/07/06/gastonia-panhandling-
charges-against-homeless-veteran-dismissed/7819050001.
171. And, upon information and belief, the Police Department aggressively
arrests and seeks prolonged detention of people experiencing homelessness for trivial or
fabricated offenses.
172. Indeed, just two months after Mr. Rohrer’s arrest, at the request of the Police
Department, see Gastonia City Council Meeting Minutes (Dec. 7, 2021), at 92,
penalty for panhandling, see Gastonia Ordinance § 6-228(c), even though every court since
affiliated Facebook page that posts mug shots of people arrested, at least 15 different people
were arrested and charged with soliciting alms in January 2023 alone.
40
175. This is consistent with Defendant Taylor’s statement to Mr. Rohrer that
officers had “received directions” and had been “told” to prohibit homeless people from
panhandling and that officers offering kindness to homeless people like Mr. Rohrer was
“against policy.”
176. Plaintiff restates and re-alleges all preceding paragraphs as if fully set forth
herein.
178. Mr. Rohrer’s presence on the median, his smiling and waving at vehicles,
Moreover, asking for help and seeking a donation is constitutionally protected speech.
179. Gastonia Ordinance § 5-17 makes it a crime to “to ask, beg, solicit, or offer
to work for money or any other thing having value,” in a variety of situations, including by
any street or highway, including the shoulders or median strip but excluding sidewalks,
and to solicit or accept contributions from the occupants of any stopped vehicle.”
41
are content-based and are presumptively unconstitutional. See Reed v. Town of Gilbert, 576
U.S. 155, 163–64 (2015). In fact, since Reed, every court to have considered laws that on
their face target panhandling or soliciting donations has found them to be content-based
and unconstitutional. E.g., Rodgers v. Bryant, 942 F.3d 451, 454, 457 (8th Cir. 2019)
linger “for the purpose of asking for anything as charity or a gift”); Norton v. City of
Springfield, 806 F.3d 411, 413 (7th Cir. 2015) (concluding that anti-panhandling ordinance
violated the Constitution); Mass. Coal. for the Homeless v. City of Fall River, 158 N.E.3d
856, 859, 867 (Mass. 2020) (striking down state law criminalizing signaling a vehicle “for
S.W.3d 331, 333 (Ky. 2017) (striking down law prohibiting begging or soliciting).
Ordinance §§ 5-17 and 6-228 do not withstand intermediate scrutiny, as pre-Reed Fourth
Circuit precedent makes clear. E.g., Reynolds v. Middleton, 779 F.3d 222, 225 (4th Cir.
2015) (holding, pre-Reed, that city law making it a crime to “[s]olicit contributions of any
nature from the drivers of motor vehicles or passengers therein on highways located within
the county” did not satisfy intermediate scrutiny); accord, e.g., Brewer v. City of
Albuquerque, 18 F.4th 1205, 1210–11, 1217, 1245 (10th Cir. 2021) (finding
unconstitutional under intermediate scrutiny a city law that prohibited pedestrians from
(1) congregating within six feet of a highway entrance or exit ramp; (2) occupying a median
less than 6 feet across on a street with a speed limit over 30 miles per hour; and
42
Portland, 802 F.3d 79, 92–93 (1st Cir. 2015) (upholding permanent injunction against law
panhandling laws, Mr. Rohrer would have been free to stay on the median; he would not
have been subject to the unlawful force that he encountered; and Sunshine would still be
alive.
184. As Defendant Taylor told Mr. Rohrer, the City instructed its officers to
aggressively enforce anti-panhandling laws. And the City recently stated that it is
continuing to arrest and charge people with violating its unconstitutional anti-panhandling
laws.
185. Plaintiff restates and re-alleges all preceding paragraphs as if fully set forth
herein.
186. Defendants Brooks and Taylor violated Mr. Rohrer’s Fourth Amendment
right to be secure in his person against unreasonable seizure when they used objectively
187. The body-worn camera footage shows that Defendants Brooks and Taylor
forced Mr. Rohrer into the hood of the patrol car and that Brooks subsequently pushed Mr.
Rohrer to the pavement. In doing so, Defendants used more force than was reasonably
necessary to arrest Mr. Rohrer, who was suspected only of minor misdemeanors, was not
posing a threat to anyone, and was neither forcefully resisting arrest nor attempting to flee.
43
reasonableness analysis “requires careful attention to the facts and circumstances of each
particular case, including the severity of the crime at issue, whether the suspect poses an
immediate threat to the safety of the officers or others, and whether he is actively resisting
188. The Fourth Circuit has held that this kind of gratuitous force during the
arrest of a nonthreatening individual gives rise to a Fourth Amendment violation. See, e.g.,
Young v. Prince George’s County, 355 F.3d 751, 757–58 (4th Cir. 2004) (holding that a
jury could find force used during arrest excessive in violation of the Fourth Amendment
where officer threw the nonthreatening, though armed, plaintiff “head-first to the ground”).
189. Defendants’ excessive force directly and proximately caused bodily injury
to Mr. Rohrer—including damage to his face, a torn meniscus, a severely sprained lateral
collateral ligament, and a blood clot in his knee—as well as pain, suffering, and mental
distress. The physical injuries that Mr. Rohrer incurred have led to lasting mobility issues
and ongoing leg pain that make it difficult for him to walk for long distances and interfere
190. Upon information and belief, Defendants used excessive force pursuant to
the City’s policy or custom of hostility and unwarranted force during interactions with
homeless individuals.
191. Further, the City has ratified the officers’ actions by endorsing and
defending them on the Gastonia Police Department’s official Facebook page and
confirming that their actions were taken pursuant to Police Department policy. See
Starbuck v. Williamsburg James City Cnty. Sch. Bd., 28 F.4th 529, 534 (4th Cir. 2022)
44
with the purpose of municipal liability under Section 1983” because “it holds the
municipality liable for its own decision to uphold the actions of subordinates.”).
192. Plaintiff restates and re-alleges all preceding paragraphs as if fully set forth
herein.
secure in his effects against unreasonable seizure when he unreasonably seized Mr.
194. The Fourth Circuit, like other circuits to have considered the question, has
held that privately owned dogs are “effects” within the meaning of the Fourth Amendment.
See Altman v. City of High Point, 330 F.3d 194, 203–04 (4th Cir. 2003). And they are
“seized” when there is “some meaningful interference with [the owner’s] possessory
interests.” Id. at 204 (citing United States v. Jacobsen, 466 U.S. 109, 113 (1984)). To
whether the amount of force used on the dog was necessary under the circumstances. See
195. The body-worn camera footage demonstrates that tasing Sunshine was not
necessary. She was not behaving in a threatening manner or acting aggressively. Cf.
Altman, 330 F.3d at 205 (explaining that an interest in protecting citizens from truly
dangerous dogs may justify officers’ force). Rather, she was trying to comfort Mr. Rohrer,
as she was trained to do. Contrary to Defendant Taylor’s false claims on the body-worn
45
that she did not break through his boot or cause him any harm. While Taylor claimed he
was concerned for Defendant Brooks’s safety when he tased Sunshine, that concern was
not reasonable. Taylor knew Sunshine was a well-trained service dog that frequently
interacted with the public; Taylor could observe that Sunshine was exhibiting calm and
nonthreatening posture throughout Mr. Rohrer’s arrest; and, right before Taylor tased
Sunshine, Brooks could be heard calmly observing: “I don’t think he’s [sic] gonna bite
me.” Moreover, Defendants’ subsequent behavior belies any suggestion that they viewed
Sunshine as dangerous, because, upon information and belief, neither they nor any other
officers made any attempt to secure Sunshine after she was tased and ran away toward a
unreasonable. See LeMay v. Mays, 18 F.4th 283, 288 (8th Cir. 2021) (concluding that it
would be an unreasonable seizure under the Fourth Amendment if officers shot and injured
two service dogs who “presented no imminent danger and were not acting aggressively”).
interfered with Mr. Rohrer’s possession of Sunshine and directly and proximately caused
Mr. Rohrer severe pain, suffering, and mental distress. Moreover, Taylor’s actions
ultimately resulted in Sunshine’s death: If not for the damage and trauma caused by the
tasing, Sunshine, who was exceptionally well trained and knew how to cross streets safely,
never would have run into oncoming traffic and been killed. This tragedy was a foreseeable
result of Officer Taylor’s unreasonable decision to tase Sunshine. To this day, Mr. Rohrer
46
198. The City has ratified Defendant Taylor’s unreasonable seizure of Sunshine
by repeatedly endorsing and defending the tasing on the Gastonia Police Department’s
official Facebook page. See Starbuck, 28 F.4th at 534. For example, in response to a
comment from a member of the community that the City could not “justify tasing a dog
because your officer lied about getting bit,” the City responded that “the court and
department policy felt it was justified.” (Comment to January 31, 2023, 3:02 p.m. Facebook
post).
199. Plaintiff restates and re-alleges all preceding paragraphs as if fully set forth
herein.
200. The actions of the Defendants described herein violate Title II of the
Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). Title II provides that “no qualified individual with
denied the benefits of the services, programs, or activities of a public entity, or be subjected
to discrimination by any such entity.” 42 U.S.C. § 12132. A public entity must “make
necessary to avoid discrimination on the basis of disability, unless the public entity can
47
201. The actions of the Defendants likewise violate Section 504 of the
Rehabilitation Act, which provides that “[n]o otherwise qualified individual with a
disability ... shall, solely by reason of her or his disability, be excluded from the
participation in, or be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any
202. The City of Gastonia receives federal funds, bringing it within the ambit of
the Rehabilitation Act. For example, in fiscal year 2020, the City of Gastonia received
$48,645 in direct funding from the Edward Byrne Memorial Justice Assistance Grant
program. 10
that substantially limits one or more major life activities of such individual”; “a record of
§ 12102(1). This definition of disability must “be construed in favor of broad coverage of
individuals under this [Act], to the maximum extent permitted by the terms of this chapter.”
individual to perform a major life activity as compared to most people in the general
population,” and it need not “prevent,” or even “significantly or severely restrict, the
10
See Bureau of Justice Assistance, U.S. Dep’t of Justice, 2020 North Carolina Local
JAG Allocations, https://bja.ojp.gov/sites/g/files/xyckuh186/files/media/document/fy20-
jag-local-allocations-nc.pdf.
48
204. Mr. Rohrer’s PTSD, panic attack disorder, and hiatal hernia are
impairments that substantially limit his ability to perform numerous major life activities,
including working, caring for himself, performing manual tasks, bending, sleeping,
concentrating, and thinking. See 42 U.S.C. § 12102(2)(A). Indeed, PTSD is explicitly listed
under the ADA implementing regulations as a disability that “substantially limits brain
205. Mr. Rohrer is also a qualified individual with a disability because he has a
record of having such an impairment, see 42 U.S.C. § 12102(1)(B): He has been formally
diagnosed with service-connected PTSD, he has an official rating of being nearly 100
percent disabled on a permanent basis, and the VA prescribed him a service dog, Sunshine,
206. Moreover, Defendant Taylor was aware of Mr. Rohrer’s disabilities and
regarded Mr. Rohrer as disabled, see 42 U.S.C. 12102(1)(C), because Mr. Rohrer had told
him on October 9, 2021, that he was nearly 100 percent disabled on a permanent basis and
that his “PTSD is so severe that [he] can’t function without a service dog.”
207. Defendant Brooks was aware of Mr. Rohrer’s disabilities and regarded Mr.
Rohrer as disabled because she responded affirmatively when Mr. Rohrer asked her if she
was going to write a ticket to a “disabled veteran who’s living in the woods.”
49
disabilities and regarded Mr. Rohrer as disabled because Mr. Rohrer was accompanied by
209. The City of Gastonia is a “public entity” under the ADA, defined as “any
State or local government” or “any department, agency, special purpose district, or other
Under the ADA, public entities are responsible for the discriminatory actions of their
employees.
210. Police work involving the public, including stops, seizures, investigations,
and arrests, are programs, services, or activities within the meaning of Title II. See
Seremeth v. Bd. of Cnty. Comm’rs Frederick Cnty., 673 F.3d 333, 338 (4th Cir. 2012)
211. There are three ways to violate Title II of the ADA: “(1) intentional
discrimination or disparate treatment; (2) disparate impact; and (3) failure to make
reasonable accommodations.” A Helping Hand, LLC v. Baltimore County, 515 F.3d 356,
362 (4th Cir. 2008). Defendants committed both the first and third of these violations.
accommodations during the provision of law enforcement services in light of Mr. Rohrer’s
program.” Koon v. North Carolina, 50 F.4th 398, 406 (4th Cir. 2022). Reasonable
50
the arrest without any use of force, using crisis intervention techniques, declining to
handcuff Mr. Rohrer, and ensuring that Mr. Rohrer had access to Sunshine throughout the
214. The arrest involved no exigent circumstances, such as threats to the officers’
during his arrest. Instead, Defendants offered no accommodations, much less reasonable
ones, when they abruptly decided to arrest Mr. Rohrer, shouted at him continuously
throughout the arrest, forced him into the hood of the patrol car, pushed him to the
pavement, and handcuffed him. These aggressive tactics instead exacerbated his disability.
separated Mr. Rohrer from Sunshine—whom they knew Mr. Rohrer required to “function”
in light of his PTSD—and tased her, causing her to run away and become permanently
substantial risk that their failure to accommodate Mr. Rohrer’s disabilities during his arrest
would violate Mr. Rohrer’s rights under the ADA. They had been directly told that Mr.
Rohrer was disabled, that his PTSD was so severe that he could not function without his
service dog, and that he had been deemed nearly 100 percent disabled on a permanent basis,
and he was accompanied by a service animal with visible patches identifying her as such.
51
219. Defendant City’s violations of Title II of the ADA caused Mr. Rohrer to
suffer physical pain and suffering, physical injuries, mental pain and suffering, and the loss
220. Plaintiff restates and re-alleges all preceding paragraphs as if fully set forth
herein.
treatment on account of his disability. See A Helping Hand, 515 F.3d at 362.
222. Defendants Brooks and Taylor exhibited animus toward Mr. Rohrer on
223. For example, one of Defendant Brooks’s first actions upon arriving at the
scene was to threaten to separate Mr. Rohrer from his service animal and call animal control
224. Later, while Mr. Rohrer was handcuffed on the ground and crying for
Sunshine, Defendant Brooks laughed when she recounted how Defendant Taylor had tased
225. While Mr. Rohrer was being booked at the jail, Defendants Brooks and
Taylor both belittled Mr. Rohrer for his disability and for being unable to work on account
of his disability.
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227. Defendant City is liable for Defendant Brooks and Taylor’s disparate
228. Defendant City’s violations of Title II of the ADA caused Mr. Rohrer to
suffer physical pain and suffering, physical injuries, mental pain and suffering, and the loss
229. Plaintiff restates and re-alleges all preceding paragraphs as if fully set forth
herein.
230. The Constitution prohibits the government from taking adverse action
against a person for the exercise of their First Amendment rights. E.g., Nieves v. Bartlett,
231. Mr. Rohrer’s media appearances, social media posts, and petition for the
release of body-worn camera footage are all constitutionally protected under the First
Amendment.
Defendants City, Goodale, and Doe have intentionally or recklessly made many false,
confidential, cruel, and demeaning statements about Mr. Rohrer on the official Gastonia
Police Department Facebook page. Among other things, the daily barrage and high volume
of these posts, the specific targeting of Mr. Rohrer, and the fact that they reveal confidential
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233. These statements are widely read and have harmed Mr. Rohrer’s reputation,
COUNT IX – DEFAMATION
Defendants City, Goodale, and Doe
234. Plaintiff restates and re-alleges all preceding paragraphs as if fully set forth
herein.
235. North Carolina’s Declaration of Rights provides that “every person shall be
held responsible for” abusive speech, § 14, and that “every person for an injury done him
in his ... reputation shall have remedy by due course of law,” id § 18. Under North Carolina
law, there are three types of defamation: “(1) publications obviously defamatory which are
called libel Per se; (2) publications susceptible of two interpretations one of which is
defamatory and the other not; and (3) publications not obviously defamatory but when
which are termed libels Per quod.” Arnold v. Sharpe, 251 S.E.2d 452, 455 (N.C. 1979).
236. Using the official, public Gastonia Police Department Facebook page,
Defendants City, Goodale, and Doe have published numerous false and defamatory
statements about Mr. Rohrer, including false claims of criminality, false claims that he
pleaded guilty to conduct arising out of the October 13 incident, and false statements about
the October 13 incident that are refuted by the video footage. Defendants knew these
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publications that, in context, were intended to be, and were, reasonably interpreted by
information about Mr. Rohrer based on misconceptions that Defendants had propagated,
Goodale and/or Doe pursuant to their official job duties for the City.
240. Defendants have no governmental immunity for these social media posts.
241. Because of these statements, Mr. Rohrer suffered emotional distress, loss of
242. Plaintiff restates and re-alleges all preceding paragraphs as if fully set forth
herein.
243. North Carolina provides a cause of action for “(1) extreme and outrageous
conduct (2) which is intended to cause and does cause (3) severe emotional distress to
another.” Clark v. Clark, 867 S.E.2d 704, 715 (N.C. Ct. App. 2021).
about Mr. Rohrer, and encouraging their followers to target Mr. Rohrer with similar
messages, Defendants’ extreme campaign of harassment falls outside the bounds tolerated
by a decent society.
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emotional distress, including triggering a depressive episode with suicidal ideation and
246. Plaintiff demands a jury trial on each and every claim related to which a
Plaintiff respectfully requests that this Court enter judgment in his favor and:
6) Grant any further such relief that the Court may deem just and proper.
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Shelby Calambokidis*
Elizabeth R. Cruikshank*
Amy Marshak*
Joseph W. Mead*
Seth Wayne*
INSTITUTE FOR CONSTITUTIONAL ADVOCACY AND
PROTECTION
Georgetown University Law Center
600 New Jersey Ave., N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20001
(202) 661-6728
[email protected]
[email protected]
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