Public employees can sue, claiming their civil rights were violated, as long as their employers thought a constitutional right was in play, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Tuesday.
The decision was a victory for a New Jersey man, Jeffrey Heffernan, who was a police officer in Paterson, New Jersey, when the mayor was running for re-election.
Heffernan was demoted after city officials mistakenly assumed he was campaigning for a candidate who was running against the mayor.
The officials thought he went to the campaign headquarters of the mayor’s opponent to pick up and later display a campaign sign. But Heffernan said he went there to get the sign for his bedridden mother and had no intention of campaigning for the opponent.
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Heffernan sued, claiming he was punished for engaging in constitutionally protected speech. The city said, what speech? If he wasn’t campaigning, he wasn’t doing anything protected by the Constitution. The lower courts agreed with the city.
But by a 6-2 vote, the Supreme Court reversed those rulings.









