‘The government should never silence the speech of a citizen just because an audience dislikes what it’s hearing’
By Bob Unruh

One major city’s scheme that allowed a Christian pastor to be arrested, twice, because crowds in the streets were triggered to hostility by his words has been struck down.
The demise of Seattle’s “heckler’s veto” agenda comes in a consent order that was entered this week in a case brought by First Liberty Institute on behalf of Pastor Matthew Meinecke.
“Meinecke was censored and arrested on two separate occasions in 2022 for simply reading the Bible to others because his gospel-oriented message triggered hostile reactions from activists,” the legal team explained.
But now in the order, which affirms a “complete victory” for the pastor, Judge Barbara J. Rothstein has granted Meinecke “permanent injunctive relief from the unconstitutional police policy, compensatory damages for the wrongful arrests, and nominal damages for the constitutional violations, along with reasonable attorney fees and expenses,” the institute reported.
“This result is only fitting. The government should never silence the speech of a citizen just because an audience dislikes what it’s hearing,” explained Nate Kellum, senior counsel. “Pastor Meinecke is thrilled to put this case behind him and get back to sharing the gospel on the streets of Seattle.”
The fight erupted just a little over two years ago when Meinecke traveled to the downtown Seattle area to read his Bible aloud, hold up a sign, and hand out literature to those who wanted it.
The events first happened at a pro-abortion rally.
“Despite his evangelistic and peaceful intent, some individuals in the crowd, including Antifa members, did not receive the message well. They took Meinecke’s Bible away from him, ripped out pages from it, knocked Meinecke down, and took one of his shoes,” the institute confirmed.