Judge
orders release of US Marine detained for Facebook posts
On
the basis that there was zero reason to detain a retired Marine and
commit him to a medical facility for psychiatric evaluation, a
Virginia judge has demanded that Brandon Raub be released from
custody immediately.
RT,
23
August, 2012
Raub,
26, had his home visited one week earlier by FBI, Secret Service and
local law enforcement agents who expressed concern over a series of
Facebook posts he had made on his public social networking profile.
They detained him without charge and admitted him to a local hospital
for evaluation.
"The
petition is so devoid of any factual allegations that it could not be
reasonably expected to give rise to a case or controversy,"
reads a signed statement by Circuit Judge W. Allan Sharrett, which
was provided to the Richmond Times-Dispatch Thursday afternoon.
Judge
Sharrett adds that he was shocked to find that a magistrate did not
include any grounds at all for holding Raub, who was placed in
custody for a full week without any charges being pressed.
Earlier
in the week, attorneys representing Raub from the Rutherford
Institute attacked the mishandling of the case by suggesting that the
entire ordeal was a war on their client’s constitutional rights.
“This
is not how justice in America is supposed to work — with Americans
being arrested for doing nothing more than exercising their First
Amendment rights, forced to undergo psychological evaluations,
detained against their will and isolated from their family, friends
and attorneys. This is a scary new chapter in our history,”
Rutherford Institute President John W. Whitehead says in a statement
released on Tuesday this week. “Brandon Raub is no different from
the majority of Americans who use their private Facebook pages to
post a variety of content, ranging from song lyrics and political
hyperbole to trash talking their neighbors, friends and government
leaders.”
Days
before he was detained, Raub had made a series of posts that
reportedly worried the authorities. His most recent postings included
critique of the investigation of the September 11, 2001 terrorist
attacks and other messages, such as, “The Revolution will come for
me. Men will be at my door soon to pick me up to lead it” and
“Sharpen up my axe; I'm here to sever heads.
“The
bottom line is his freedom of speech has been violated,” Raub's
mother, Cathleen Thomas, told the Associated Press after her son was
detained. On Thursday, she told the Times-Dispatch that the entire
ordeal has been “phenomenal” and that others could be considered
because, “This could have happened to anyone.”
"This
has never been about anything but freedom of speech…. We're going
to continue to post on Facebook,” Thomas continued, adding that she
considered her son a “true patriot.”
Raub
served in both Iraq and Afghanistan and says he had been considering
reenlisting before last week’s events.
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