ROGAN O' HANDLEY V. SHIRLEY WEBER, ET AL, No. 22-15071 (9th Cir. 2023)
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Plaintiff contends that the social media company Twitter Inc. and California’s Secretary of State, Shirley Weber, violated his constitutional rights by acting in concert to censor his speech on Twitter’s platform. He alleged that the Secretary of State’s office entered into a collaborative relationship with Twitter in which state officials regularly flagged tweets with false or misleading information for Twitter’s review and that Twitter responded by almost invariably removing the posts in question. Plaintiff further alleged that Twitter limited other users’ ability to access his tweets and then suspended his account. The district court determined that Twitter’s interactions with state officials did not transform the company’s enforcement of its content-moderation policy into state action.
The Ninth Circuit affirmed the dismissal of Plaintiff’s federal claims against Twitter. The court also affirmed the dismissal of Plaintiff’s claims against Secretary of State Weber because her office did not violate federal law when it notified Twitter of tweets containing false or misleading information that potentially violated the company’s content-moderation policy.
The panel held that Twitter’s content-moderation decisions did not constitute state action because (1) Twitter did not exercise a state-conferred right or enforce a state-imposed rule under the first step of the two-step framework set forth in Lugar v. Edmondson Oil Co, and (2) the interactions between Twitter and the Secretary of State’s Office of Elections Cybersecurity did not satisfy either the nexus or the joint action tests under the second step.
Court Description: Civil Rights The panel affirmed the district court’s order dismissing plaintiff’s federal constitutional claims and declining to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over a state law claim in an action brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging that the social media company Twitter Inc., and California’s Secretary of State, Shirley Weber, violated plaintiff’s constitutional rights by acting in concert to censor his speech on Twitter’s platform. Plaintiff alleged that the Secretary of State’s office entered into a collaborative relationship with Twitter in which state officials regularly flagged tweets with false or misleading information for Twitter’s review and that Twitter responded by almost invariably removing the posts in question. Plaintiff further alleged that, after a state official flagged one of his tweets as false or misleading, Twitter limited other users’ ability to access his tweets and then suspended his account, ostensibly for violating the company’s content-moderation policy. The panel agreed with the district court’s determination that Twitter’s interactions with state officials did not transform the company’s enforcement of its content- moderation policy into state action. The panel held that Twitter’s content-moderation decisions did not constitute state action because (1) Twitter did not exercise a state- conferred right or enforce a state-imposed rule under the first O’HANDLEY V. WEBER 3 step of the two-step framework set forth in Lugar v. Edmondson Oil Co., 457 U.S. 922 (1982); and (2) the interactions between Twitter and the Secretary of State’s Office of Elections Cybersecurity did not satisfy either the nexus or the joint action tests under the second step. The panel concluded that its resolution of this issue was determinative with respect to plaintiff’s claims under § 1983 because each of those claims required proof of state action. Plaintiff’s claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1985 also failed because the test for proving a conspiracy between a private party and the government to deprive an individual of constitutional rights under § 1985 tracked the inquiry under the conspiracy formulation of the joint action test. The panel held that plaintiff had standing to seek injunctive relief against Secretary Weber and that, even though the Secretary was not responsible for Twitter’s content-moderation decisions, state action existed insofar as officials in her office flagged plaintiff’s November 12, 2020, post. Limiting its review to those actions, the panel nevertheless affirmed the district court’s dismissal of plaintiff’s federal claims under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) because the Secretary’s office did not engage in any unconstitutional act. Having properly dismissed plaintiff’s federal claims with prejudice, the district court did not abuse its discretion when it declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over plaintiff’s remaining claim under the California Constitution. 4 O’HANDLEY V. WEBER
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