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OFFE NEWS
POSTED: April 14, 2017
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
April 14, 2017
Judicial Watch Victory: Court Finds Federal Photography Charges against
75-Year Old Los Angeles Veteran Robert Rosebrock Violate First Amendment
Rosebrock to be tried Tuesday, April 18, on Federal charges of purportedly
displaying two four-by-six inch American Flags on Veterans Affairs Center
fence
(Washington, DC) – Judicial Watch today announced that a California U.S.
District Court has ruled that 75-year-old veteran Robert Rosebrock cannot
be prosecuted for taking photographs at the “Great Lawn Gate” entrance
to the Los Angeles National Veterans Park. The court also ruled, however,
that Rosebrock must stand trial on Tuesday, April 18, for purportedly
displaying two four-by-six inch American Flags above a Veterans Affairs
(VA) fence on Memorial Day, May 30, 2016. The rulings were handed down
in U.S. District Court for the Central District of California (United
States of America v. Robert L. Rosebrock (No.CC11, 4920201; 4920202; 6593951)).
The photography-related charges stemmed from allegations that Rosebrock
took photographs of VA police on Memorial Day 2016 and Sunday, June 12,
2016, without VA permission. In rejecting the VA photography charges,
U.S. Magistrate Judge Steve Kim ruled that the regulation, as applied
to the Great Lawn, was not reasonable under even the most lenient First
Amendment standard. The VA attempted to justify its regulation as necessary
to guard against invasive and distracting media activities and protect
veterans’ privacy. The court rejected that claim, finding that if the
VA wanted to protect veterans’ privacy, it would ban all photography,
not just photography for news, commercial, or advertising purposes.
The court also found that the reasons offered by the VA for banning news
photography on the Great Lawn was inconsistent with the numerous non-Veteran
and non-therapeutic uses of the lawn allowed by the VA, which include
using the lawn in the past for the LA Marathon, the San Francisco-Los
Angeles Lifecycle cycling tour and fundraiser, celebrity carnivals/fundraiser,
and parking for a PGA tournament. Rather than dismiss the photography
charges, however, the court gave the VA the opportunity to drop the charges
before Tuesday's trial. If the VA fails to drop the photography charge,
the court will dismiss them.
In addition to the photography charges, Rosebrock was also cited on Memorial
Day 2016 for purportedly displaying the two napkin-sized American Flags
on a fence adjacent to the Great Lawn Gate at the entrance to the Veterans
Park. Rosebrock will be tried on that charge at 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday,
April 18, in Courtroom 23 of the federal courthouse at 312 N. Spring Street,
Los Angeles.
Rosebrock (below), 75, and fellow veterans, have been assembling at the
site nearly every Sunday and Memorial Day since March 9, 2008, to protest
what they believe is the VA’s failure to make full use of the valuable
West Los Angeles property for the benefit and care of veterans, particularly
homeless veterans.
Judicial Watch attorney Sterling E. Norris, a former Los Angeles County
deputy district attorney, and Los Angeles-based defense attorney Robert
Patrick Sticht are representing Rosebrock, who faces up to six months’
imprisonment if found guilty on the flag-hanging charge.
“Now that the court has seen fit to dismiss the dubious photography charges
against Mr. Rosebrock, we hope that it will follow suit and acquit him
of the vindictive flag-hanging charge as well,” said Judicial Watch President
Tom Fitton. “And we still hold out hope that Jeff Sessions’ Department
of Justice will halt this absurd prosecution. No public good can be served
by prosecuting a 75-year-old veteran over posting the American Flag at
the entrance to a park honoring veterans on Memorial Day.”
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