Tosa Protest Tickets Dismissed
Nearly two dozen tickets issued to police brutality protesters dismissed on appeal.
Nearly two dozen tickets and cases related to Wauwatosa’s protests during 2020 have been dismissed to date. While not stemming from the city’s October 2020 curfew, the tickets were issued to protesters at other points throughout the year. Many of the tickets, costing hundreds or thousands of dollars, were issued for disorderly conduct, obstructing, resisting an officer, disobeying orders and violating the requirement that protesters register for a special event permit.
The dismissals are part of still ongoing legal actions related to the events of 2020. As Wauwatosa was packed with police brutality protests, hefty citations were increasingly used to discourage demonstrations. By September 2020, many protesters had been mailed tickets ranging from $600-$1300. Some protesters were mailed the tickets, with police records indicating marchers were identified through video. Others were paid house visits by Wauwatosa officers, even some who lived far outside the suburb. Around the same time officers also began laying spike strips in the roads, photographing protesters, journalists and legal observers and calling individuals out by name.
Civil rights attorney Kimberley Motley, who has represented protesters in these cases, feels the tickets were part of a larger strategy. “These tickets, in my opinion, were used as a means to harass and deter people from protesting,” Motley told Wisconsin Examiner. “The tickets were ridiculous and largely, I believe, lacked substantial merit for them to be issued in the first place. Which is why we were happily appealing them for jury trials in a different court that was outside of the city of Wauwatosa.”
Although the tickets were upheld by a Wauwatosa municipal judge, they were appealed in Milwaukee courts. “Pretty much every single ticket that was properly appealed has been dismissed when it was going in front of a different judge, outside of Wauwatosa,” explained Motley. Motley herself was placed on WPD’s list. She feels the dismissals underscore the nature of the tactics used during those tense days and nights. Those whose tickets have been dismissed were all also on the protester list.
Protests in the Milwaukee and Wauwatosa areas endured for over 400 days after the police murder of George Floyd in Minneapolis. None of the tickets or cases that have been dismissed so far occurred during the October 2020 curfew. Lawsuits over the conduct of officers during the curfew remain ongoing, and all tickets issued during those nights are currently stayed. An amended complaint filed in the lawsuit is still awaiting the court’s decision.
Nearly two dozen Wauwatosa protest tickets and cases dismissed was originally published by the Wisconsin Examiner.
More about the 2020 Racial Justice Protests
- Plea Agreement Reached On Long-Pending Sherman Park Unrest Charges Involving Vaun Mayes - Jeramey Jannene - Oct 17th, 2024
- Rep. Ryan Clancy Settles With City Following 2020 Curfew Arrest - Jeramey Jannene - Dec 12th, 2023
- Supervisor Clancy Applauds Settlement in Clancy vs. City of Milwaukee - Ryan Clancy - Dec 12th, 2023
- Tosa Protest Assails Federal Court Decision Exonerating Police - Isiah Holmes - May 9th, 2023
- Wauwatosa ‘Target List’ Trial Begins - Isiah Holmes - May 3rd, 2023
- Shorewood Spitter Found Guilty For 2020 Protest Confrontation - Jeramey Jannene - Apr 20th, 2023
- City Hall: City Will Pay 2020 George Floyd Protester $270,000 - Jeramey Jannene - Feb 14th, 2023
- Tosa Protest Tickets Dismissed - Isiah Holmes - Jul 21st, 2022
- Op Ed: ‘We Need More’ - Charles Q. Sullivan - Mar 4th, 2022
- Milwaukee Officers Circulate “2020 Riot” Coins? - Isiah Holmes - Nov 14th, 2021
Read more about 2020 Racial Justice Protests here