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U.S. Supreme Court Punts on the Case of a Journalist Arrested for Asking Questions

3/24/2026

 

Priscilla Villarreal v. Alaniz

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Can police arrest a journalist simply for asking questions? The U.S. Supreme Court on Monday declined to say “no.”

The plight of journalist Priscilla Villarreal began with her arrest in 2017, with Laredo, Texas, police clearly out to use the law to punish her. She was followed throughout the booking process by police officers, who humiliated her by jeering and snapping pictures of her during the booking process.

What was Villarreal’s crime? She had asked questions.

Under the moniker “La Gordiloca,” Villarreal has amassed a large following for her coverage of events in Laredo on her Facebook page. Her reporting has long irked local officials, from live-streaming Laredo Police Department officers choking an arrestee, to criticizing the Webb County District Attorney for not charging a relative with a crime, despite evidence that the relative had abused animals.

Following up on two stories – a Border Patrol agent who had committed suicide, and family involved in a fatal car crash – Villarreal confirmed the names of these victims with a Laredo Police Department officer before reporting them. Months later, she was charged under a Texas statute forbidding the “misuse of official information.” This law held that it was illegal to solicit information from a public official to obtain a “benefit.”

Under this rubric, any journalist could be charged for seeking to obtain the “benefit” of a scoop.

After a national outcry, these absurd and abusive charges were dropped. But what about the thuggish behavior of the Laredo Police Department? It is often said in law that a right without a remedy is no right at all. Villarreal filed a civil rights lawsuit against the police, seeking damages for her clearly unconstitutional mistreatment.

Villarreal won her case before the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, only to lose on appeal before the full bench. That court held that the doctrine of qualified immunity, a judge-created doctrine that shields officials from being held liable for constitutional violations, protected the Laredo police. This shield applies unless officials violate “clearly established law.”

Did that not happen?

When the U.S. Supreme Court refused to grant certiorari in Villarreal’s case, the Laredo Police Department got off scot-free. The First Amendment suddenly became not quite as clearly established as we thought it was.

“It should be obvious that this arrest violated the First Amendment,” Justice Sonia Sotomayor wrote in a dissent, calling the Court’s refusal to take up the case “a grave error.”

Judge James Ho, in Villarreal’s initial win, wrote for the court that “if the First Amendment means anything, it surely means that a citizen journalist has the right to ask a public official a question, without fear of being imprisoned.”
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We have seen time and again, from the raid of a newspaper by police in Kansas, to arbitrary arrests of people peacefully filming ICE officers, a growing appetite to arrest reporters for doing their jobs. It is only a matter of time before an even more egregious abuse of the First Amendment brings a new test to the doctrine of qualified immunity.

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