Court rules Seattle did not violate free speech in rejecting anti-Israel ad

Posted: March 19, 2015 at 2:52 am

A federal appeals court decided 2-1 Wednesday that a transit agency in the Seattle metropolitan area did not violate free speech rights by refusing to accept an anti-Israel advertisement.

The U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a district judges decision in favor of the King County Metro system, which at first accepted and then rejected an advertisement that called on the U.S. to stop funding Israel.

ISRAELI WAR CRIMES, read the ad, submitted in late 2010 by a group called the Seattle Mideast Awareness Campaign. YOUR TAX DOLLARS AT WORK.

News of the countys approval provoked an uproar. Critics swamped the transit agencys call center with angry emails. Some of the protesters threatened to vandalize or disrupt service if the ad was carried.Others said they feared that the controversy would make the buses unsafe. The controversy attracted international attention.

Two pro-Israeli groups then decided to submit their own ads, which carried images of bloodied bus passengers and a burning bus.

IN ANY WAR BETWEEN THE CIVILIZED MAN AND THE SAVAGE, SUPPORT THE CIVILIZED MAN, one of the pro-Israel ads said.

Photographs of dead and injured bus passengers were left under the door of the Metro Customer Service Center. Scrawled across the pictures, there was a message: NO TO BUS ADS FOR MUSLIM TERRORISTS.

In revoking approval for the anti-Israel ads, the county decided that noadvertising related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict would be permitted. The anti-Israel group challenged the decision as a violation of freedom of speech.

Judge Paul J. Watford, writing for the 9th Circuit, said the county officials genuinely feared that public safety was at risk.

Municipalities faced with the prospect of having to accept virtually all political speech if they accept any regardless of the level of disruption caused will simply close the forum to political speech altogether, said Watford, an Obama appointee.

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Court rules Seattle did not violate free speech in rejecting anti-Israel ad

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