Free speech wins
ACLU of
Rhode Island
In a victory against retaliatory lawsuits, the Weekapaug Fire District filed a motion dismissing Westerly resident Caroline Contrata from a lawsuit regarding a highly contentious shore access dispute in the town.
The ACLU of
Rhode Island had joined the case to represent Contrata, who was being sued for
monetary damages by the District in what the ACLU argued was a SLAPP
(“Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation”) suit intended to chill her
from exercising her freedom of speech about this dispute. The ACLU had sought
her dismissal from the case under the SLAPP statute.
In
December, the Fire District filed this suit in Superior
Court against more than 20 defendants, including the Attorney
General and the Town of Westerly, for seeking a determination from
the Coastal Resources Management Council that a strip of land along the
beach at Weekapaug is not purely private.
Contrata,
who had moved to intervene in the proceedings before the CRMC, was the
only private individual being sued in the case. In defending Contrata, ACLU of
RI cooperating attorney Michael Rubin had argued in a court filing last month
that the only reason she was named in the complaint was because she “had the
temerity to ask the CRMC to designate a tract that is universally
acknowledged as a roadway … as a public right-of-way.”
The
ACLU called the dismissal of Contrata from the suit before it proceeded further
a victory validating her right to petition the government without retaliation.
In
response to the Fire District’s actions, Contrata said today: “With the help
of the ACLU, we achieved success in the court case. Now, I can get back
to the merits of the Spring Avenue right-of-way case that is before the CRMC.”
Attorney
Rubin added: “I am glad that this local governmental district relented in the
case of this brave citizen, Caroline Contrata.”
ACLU
of RI executive director Steven Brown said: “The ACLU is very pleased that the
Fire District reconsidered its decision to sue Ms. Contrata and has dismissed
her from this lawsuit. We commend Ms. Contrata for standing up to the District
to vindicate her rights and the rights of others.”
A
copy of the District’s motion dismissing Contrata from the case, alongside the
ACLU’s memo to dismiss and the Fire District’s initial complaint, can be
found here.