NEW: Providence Sued by ACLU Over Musician's Ability to Play in Public

GoLocalProv News Team

NEW: Providence Sued by ACLU Over Musician's Ability to Play in Public

The ACLU of Rhode Island announced Tuesday that it has sued the City of Providence for "interfering with the exercise of free speech rights on the City’s streets and sidewalks."

The lawsuit was filed on behalf of local street musician Manuel Pombo, who the ACLU says has been arrested once, and "threatened with arrest on numerous other occasions, for playing his saxophone on sidewalks and street corners in Providence."

ACLU's Case

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The ACLU said that Pombo has performed regularly at WaterFire and on public sidewalks outside the Dunkin Donuts Center, PPAC and many other places around the City, and that since the 1990s,has "sporadically been ordered by police officers to stop playing at various locations around the city, and he has always complied to avoid arrest. In recent years, however, the harassment has escalated significantly," sa'd the ACLU in a statement. 

The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court by ACLU RI volunteer attorneys Shannah Kurland and John W. Dineen, challenges the legality of a “permission to perform” license Pombo first obtained from the city Board of Licenses over twenty years ago, which the ACLU says prohibits Pombo from soliciting donations for his performances, lets him to perform solely at the "unbridled discretion of police officers."

The ACLU lawsuit argues that the Board of Licenses’ permitting requirement constitutes an unconstitutional prior restraint of speech, that Pombo cannot be barred from soliciting donations for his performances, and that the complete and arbitrary discretion given police to determine when he can play in public violates Pombo’s free speech and due process rights.

"I have been performing in Providence for over two decades, but the level of police harassment has escalated enormously in the past two years. I love to play the saxophone and I know that it has brought joy to many people," said Pombo. "But I now live in constant fear of being arrested for playing my music, and it takes a physical toll on me.  This is not the way a city that claims to be arts-friendly should treat anybody.”

Kurland added: “It's past time that the City of Providence learns that not only is respecting the Constitution the right thing to do, but that when they fail to train police officers in how the First Amendment works, it costs taxpayers money we could put to much better uses.” 

Two years ago, a federal judge agreed with the ACLU that Providence police violated the free speech rights of a local resident when she was barred from peacefully leafleting on a public sidewalk in front of a building where then-Mayor David Cicilline was speaking. Last year, the ACLU sued the Providence Police Department for "violating the free speech rights of protesters" at a fundraiser in Roger Williams Park for then-Gubernatorial candidate Gina Raimondo.


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