U.S. Supreme Court declines to hear Washington COVID-19 speech case
The U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear a case over whether the government can discipline doctors for what they say publicly.
The case, Stockton v. Brown, challenged the Washington Medical Commission and the Washington Attorney General over its COVID-19 information policies.
Two doctors who filed the lawsuit were disciplined by the Washington state government for “unprofessional conduct” after they said vaccines were unsafe, COVID-19 tests are inaccurate and alternative treatments, like ivermectin, are effective, according to a brief filed to the high court.
“Physicians ‘who generate and spread COVID-19 vaccine misinformation or disinformation are risking disciplinary action by state medical boards,'” the Washington attorney general’s office wrote.
The attorney general also argued that the state did not engage in mass harm by disciplining the doctors. They asserted granting relief in the case would open the door to wide-ranging First Amendment challenges.
“The court pointed to ‘strong indicators that the claim is not ripe,’ including that it ‘involves hypothetical, future prosecutions, largely against unnamed and unknown doctors’ engaged in unknown speech and subject to unknown discipline,” lawyers for Washington wrote.
John Stockton, a former NBA player, wrote a letter to the high court on April 6 urging the justices to take up the case. He pointed to Chiles v. Salazar, a case where the Supreme Court upheld a Colorado therapist’s ability to engage in talk therapy for clients with unwanted same-sex desires or gender dysphoria.
Stockton said discipline against the doctors would violate First Amendment protections afforded to medical professionals.
“The state has no legitimate interest in enforcing an unconstitutional program of viewpoint-based discipline against physicians for their public speech,” a lawyer for Stockton wrote.
In a brief order, the nation’s highest court denied the petition and will leave in place a lower court’s order upholding the disciplinary action and COVID-19 information policies.
Latest News Stories
Judge rules against Trump’s freeze on wind energy
Illinois’ new paint fee takes effect, with critics calling it another burden on taxpayers
Pritzker decision looms for energy bill ‘on ratepayers’ backs’
WATCH: Use of National Guard debated in U.S. Senate as Illinois case lingers
Illinois quick hits: Senator’s deferred prosecution deal approved; Indiana Senate votes against new maps
Suspect in Charlie Kirk assassination makes first in-person appearance in court
Pro-life orgs call out FDA, Makary for not fulfilling promise to review abortion drug
Bill to extend enhanced Obamacare subsidies dies in Senate
Judge: CHA lawyers must pay $59K for citing ChatGPT-created cases
Op-Ed: Your kids now belong to the Chicago Teachers Union
Illinois quick hits: Former police chief convicted of bribery; man sentenced for fraud
WATCH: Chicago mayor: ‘Wicked’ people want chaos; critics rip mayor