Jackson County library sued after banning patron

By Mitchell Banks | The Tribune
For The Republic

SEYMOUR — The American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana announced it has filed a lawsuit against the Jackson County Public Library.

Filed on behalf of Richard England, the lawsuit comes after library officials issued a lifetime ban against the 68-year-old Seymour man for sharing an anti-Trump poem, which he contends is a violation of his First Amendment right of free speech.

The lawsuit was filed Tuesday in the New Albany Division of the Southern District of Indiana federal court.

Library officials said they were unaware of the lawsuit until being contacted by The Seymour Tribune.

In the complaint, England contends he left a poem he wrote called “The Red Mean,” which criticized then-President Donald Trump, at the circulation desk at the Jackson County Public Library in Seymour on or about Nov. 16, 2020.

He said he had planned on giving the poem to an employee he thought would enjoy it, but they weren’t at the library at the time, so England left the poem in a basket on the circulation desk that also contained face masks for customers.

In a news release, the ACLU of Indiana alleges the poem “was not vulgar, threatening, obscene or otherwise inappropriate.”

When he returned home, England said he had a voicemail from the Seymour Police Department saying he was banned from the library for the rest of his life and if he returned, he would be arrested for criminal trespassing.

England contacted the library after receiving the voicemail, and the circulation manager told him, “We don’t do politics at the library,” according to the lawsuit.

In addition to England contending his First Amendment rights are being violated by the ban, he also says he was not afforded notice of the ban and an opportunity to be heard prior to its issuance, which violates the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment to the Constitution.

For the complete story, see Monday’s Republic.