Tennessee man jailed over Charlie Kirk post wins $835,000 settlement
Source: AP
By R.J. RICO
Updated 8:01 AM CDT, May 20, 2026
Leer en español
Tennessee officials will pay $835,000 to settle a lawsuit filed by a man who was jailed for more than a month over a Facebook post he made about the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk.
While many people across the U.S. lost their jobs over social media comments about Kirks death, Larry Busharts case stood out as a rare instance in which such online speech led to criminal prosecution. The 61-year-old retired police officer spent 37 days behind bars before authorities dropped the felony charge against him in October.
During his time in jail, Bushart lost his postretirement job and missed his wedding anniversary and the birth of his granddaughter, according to a federal lawsuit Bushart filed in December against Perry County, its sheriff and the investigator who obtained the arrest warrant.
I am pleased my First Amendment rights have been vindicated, Bushart said in a statement announcing the settlement Wednesday. The peoples freedom to participate in civil discourse is crucial to a healthy democracy. I am looking forward to moving on and spending time with my family.
Read more: https://apnews.com/article/charlie-kirk-facebook-arrest-tennessee-bushart-b8c5808d77f47a2d93497d12cf0daf84
UpInArms
(55,450 posts)What they did was a travesty I guess the MAGAts just dont understand the constitution and bill of rights
Walleye
(45,590 posts)Response to UpInArms (Reply #1)
blue-wave This message was self-deleted by its author.
Quiet Em
(3,052 posts)https://apnews.com/article/charlie-kirk-facebook-arrest-tennessee-bushart-b8c5808d77f47a2d93497d12cf0daf84
RazorbackExpat
(966 posts)over his comment about a "burning Bush", which was a reference to a famous Bible story, when George the Lesser was occupying the White House?
Quiet Em
(3,052 posts)geez
twodogsbarking
(19,453 posts)Walleye
(45,590 posts)They are still fighting a Civil War against it. World War III shouldnt scare us as much as Civil War II
Attilatheblond
(9,327 posts)That is Snowflake taken to subversion of First Amendment by local authorities. Glad they have to pay up.
Blues Heron
(9,067 posts)mwmisses4289
(4,804 posts)Now that he has set the example, maybe all the others who were harassed, fired, jailed or otherwise had their first amendment rights trampled over their ck comments will follow suit.
OGBuzz
(706 posts)Every federal worker dismissed by Musk's DOUCHE Gang should be making a claim immediately. And when "1776" runs out, Elmo is worth $850,000,000,000.
Justice matters.
(10,108 posts)They did not commit crimes for the mob boss, and most importantly, they WILL not in the future.
AllaN01Bear
(29,843 posts)Statelawdog
(2 posts)The district attorney should have interceded in this case within hours not weeks. Their inaction to stop this obvious violation of civil rights borders on being unethical. The shame is that the individual officers are not being held personally responsible for the money damages. Either an insurance company or the taxpayers are on the hook. Not the individuals responsible.
BaronChocula
(4,815 posts)when it comes to accountability among their own. It's part of why red states come in dead last on so many things.
Hassin Bin Sober
(27,502 posts)fujiyamasan
(2,088 posts)The Grand Illuminist
(2,067 posts)It was an open and shut case for the plaintiff.
Pompoy
(271 posts)They made stuff up.
ColoringFool
(1,176 posts)58Sunliner
(6,428 posts)erronis
(24,614 posts)And only the taxpayers who actually pay taxes. Not the rich ones who can get out of them.
orleans
(37,253 posts)so he doesn't end up paying taxes that will be paying his settlement.
and i hope all those kirk obsessives / magats are thrilled as shit and think it's totally worth it to be paying that settlement out of their own pockets. ha. ha.
The Grand Illuminist
(2,067 posts)If he stayed the course, he would have had a lot more, plus taxes taken out, legal documentation of liability and accountability.
The Grand Illuminist
(2,067 posts)Settlement was done to protect accountability.
OldBaldy1701E
(11,639 posts)Until there are some firings/impeachments, as well as some jail time for those who actively did this...
Well, there is no justice in Perry County.
Which, some of us already knew.
(Our old pickup was from Perry County. It had a Perry County plate on it when we got it. The owners lived there at the time. They moved soon after... of course...)
Grins
(9,547 posts)RVN VET71
(3,226 posts)I would also like to see those yokels fined whatever the law allows and never be allowed to work for any government agency or contractor again. Christian-Nationalists should be given no quarter in meting out their punishment.
Martin68
(28,111 posts)LetMyPeopleVote
(182,614 posts)In America, we do not jail people for political speech, retired officer Larry Bushart said in his complaint against Tennessee law enforcement.
Man jailed 37 days for Charlie Kirk social media post wins 5,000 settlement - MS NOW apple.news/Al57T18aHRZO...
— (@oc88.bsky.social) 2026-05-20T18:47:48.675Z
https://www.ms.now/deadline-white-house/deadline-legal-blog/larry-bushart-jailed-charlie-kirk-social-media-post-settlement
News of a more traditional settlement came Wednesday in an unrelated case with a tangential Trump connection, stemming from one of the lawsuits filed by people punished for their speech in the wake of conservative activist Charlie Kirks assassination last year.
The $835,000 settlement came in a case brought by Larry Bushart. He sued Tennessee law enforcement officials who arrested him over a social media post following Kirks killing. Bushart, a retired law enforcement officer himself, was jailed for 37 days before his baseless charge was dropped.....
It is clearly established that the First Amendment prohibits government officials from arresting people for protected political speech, Busharts lawyers wrote in his complaint alleging violations of the First and Fourth Amendments against Perry County, Weems and Morrow. The complaint said he filed the suit to vindicate his constitutional rights and to deter Sheriff Weems, Investigator Morrow, and similarly situated officials from future misconduct.
A joint statement accompanying the settlement said that Without admitting fault or liability on the part of the defendants, Perry Countys insurer has agreed to pay Mr. Bushart $835,000 in exchange for dismissing his complaint.....
Bushart said hes pleased my First Amendment rights have been vindicated and that The peoples freedom to participate in civil discourse is crucial to a healthy democracy. I am looking forward to moving on and spending time with my family.
Charlie Kirk was NOT a saint and criticism of Kirk is allowed under the First Amendment. This sheriff who made this arrest is an idiot.
LetMyPeopleVote
(182,614 posts)Larry Bushart sued the government after spending 37 days jailed for posting a meme following Charlie Kirks assassination. He has now won an $835,000 settlement.
Link to tweet
https://www.ms.now/opinion/charlie-kirk-meme-first-amendment-free-speech
Bushart participated in a Facebook discussion following Charlie Kirks assassination. He posted a meme quoting Donald Trumps comment from the day after a 2024 shooting at Perry High School in Iowa: We have to get over it.
The sheriff and his investigator knew at the time of Busharts arrest that the meme referenced a 2024 shooting in Iowa. But that didnt stop them from arguing that Bushart was threatening, a year later, to shoot up Perry County High School in Perry County, Tennessee. Nor did it matter that the meme simply isnt a threat on its face and cant reasonably be read as one.
After the sheriff admitted that he knew all along that Bushart wasnt threatening the local school, the district attorneys office dropped the criminal charge and released Bushart from jail on Oct. 29, 2025.
With the help of our organization, the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression, Bushart sued to vindicate his First Amendment rights. This week, FIRE announced a settlement under which Bushart will receive $835,000 in exchange for dismissing his complaint.
The First Amendment presumptively protects all speech, carving out a few limited, narrow categories of unprotected speech. True threats serious expressions of an intent to commit unlawful violence are unprotected. But the Supreme Court has long held that political hyperbole is not an unprotected true threat. ....
Free speech and heated political rhetoric in particular is essential to a free society. For one, majority rule in a democracy is only legitimate if minority voices have been able to make their case. For another, free flowing political speech acts as a check against consolidated political power. And free speech acts as a safety valve for dissent, offering a crucial alternative to violence.
Alarmingly, a December 2025 FIRE survey found that 9 out of 10 undergraduates believe that words can be violence and this was after the Charlie Kirk assassination, an extreme and tragic example of the sharp difference between words and violence. When officials bring meritless prosecutions against the Larry Busharts and James Comeys of the world, they risk blurring that line even further.
Busharts meme and Comeys seashells are not threats of violence not even close. By pretending otherwise, government officials in both cases betrayed fundamental First Amendment law and free speech values. From a historical perspective, this is not surprising, but it is disappointing. Law enforcement must do better, and Americans must hold them accountable when they fail to respect the Constitution.