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Gonzalez v. Trevino

No. 22-1025 SCOTUS · Decided Decided SCOTUS
Cert Granted: Oct 13, 2023 Argued: Mar 20, 2024 Decided: Jun 20, 2024

Case Overview

Sylvia Gonzalez was elected to Castroville, Texas city council and immediately circulated a petition calling for removal of the city manager: allied with the opposing mayor. Within months she was arrested on a charge of mishandling a petition collected during a city council meeting: a charge no one in the county had ever been prosecuted for. She sued for retaliatory arrest under the First Amendment. The Supreme Court ruled 6-3 in June 2024 that Nieves v. Bartlett allows narrow exceptions where a plaintiff shows objective evidence that others who committed the same offense were not prosecuted.


The Conclusion

**The Supreme Court held 6-3 that retaliatory arrest claims survive Nieves v. Bartlett if a plaintiff shows objective evidence that others committed the same offense without prosecution.** Gonzalez, arrested for circulating a petition calling for removal of the city manager, could advance her First Amendment retaliation claim on that showing.

CourtSupreme Court of the United States
FiledNov 17, 2022
Judge -
CL Statusactive
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No circuit court data for this case.

Cert GrantedOct 13, 2023
Statusactive
Filed (CL)Nov 17, 2022
View on CourtListener →
SCOTUS TMR-b4ffb3d5 Jul 13, 2026
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