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Stories tagged with “Andrew Shirvell

LGBT

Jury Orders Gay-Bashing Former Assistant AG Andrew Shirvell To Pay $4.5 Million To Victim

Andrew ShirvellA jury sided with an openly gay former University of Michigan student government president in his defamation suit against Andrew Shirvell, the former assistant Michigan attorney general who was fired for mounting a vicious campaign of anti-gay harassment against him. The jury agreed with plaintiff Chris Armstrong on all counts and awarded him a $4.5 million judgment.

The Associated Press reports Shirvell remained unrepentant:

Shirvell, who was representing himself, said the jury award was “grossly excessive” for what was “clearly protected speech … and activity.”

“This should have been thrown out,” he said, adding that he plans to appeal. “Juries give short shrift to First Amendment rights.”

Shirvell says, as he is now unemployed, “there’s no way” he “could possibly ever pay such a judgment.” Armstrong had offered to drop the case in exchange for a simple apology and retraction, but Shirvell refused, reportedly calling the offer disingenuous.

This ruling should send a message to bullies like Shirvell that free speech does not give carte blanche to harass, defame, and stalk.

LGBT

Michigan’s Gay-Bashing Former Assistant AG Andrew Shirvell Testifies ‘No Hatred’ In His Heart

Andrew ShirvellAndrew Shirvell, who was fired from his position as assistant attorney general in Michigan for a campaign of anti-gay harassment against the then-student government president at the University of Michigan, told a federal court Wednesday that he had “no hatred in his heart” for his target. A jury will now decide whether Shirvell’s actions constituted defamation and caused emotional damage.

Former Michigan Student Assembly president Chris Armstrong, the first openly gay president of the University of Michigan’s student government, filed suit last May against Shirvell, claiming “defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, abuse of process, invasion of privacy, and stalking.” His complaint requested at least $25,000 in compensatory and exemplary damages, as well as an injunction against future wrongdoing.

According to the Detroit Free Press:

Shirvell questioned himself on the witness stand for more than an hour Wednesday, trying to convince the jury he was upset by Armstrong’s push for gender-neutral housing at U-M. Shirvell graduated in 2002.

“My blog was political speech,” Shirvell testified. “I viewed my blog as a movement to get Mr. Armstrong to resign. I personally felt Mr. Armstrong was too radical for the position.”

Shirvell accused Armstrong of pursuing a “radical homosexual agenda” during his tenure as student body president. Under cross-examination, though, he conceded he had focused his attention solely on Armstrong, ignoring numerous other student group who had also pushed the housing policy.

A Shirvell suit against Armstrong was dismissed in April.

NEWS FLASH

Michigan Civil Service Commission Upholds Firing Of Assistant AG Over Anti-Gay Bullying | A state hearing officer upheld the 2010 firing of Andrew Shirvell, an assistant attorney general in Michigan, who harassed the student government president at the University of Michigan because he is gay. William Hutchens of the Michigan Civil Service Commission said Shirvell was justly dismissed after engaging in “hate speech” and “physical and mental harassment.” The student government president — Chris Armstrong — has since launched a scholarship fund for victims of anti-gay bullying.

LGBT

Michigan Civil Rights Commission Condemns Deputy AG For Anti-Gay Hate Speech

Since April, Michigan’s assistant attorney general Andrew Shirvell has been engaging in a bizarre internet campaign against Chris Armstrong, an openly gay student assembly president at the University of Michigan. Shirvell has attacked Armstrong’s “radical homosexual agenda” and has published posts on his blog “Chris Armstrong Watch” with photoshopped pictures of Armstrong with rainbow flags and swastikas.

On Tuesday, despite Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox’s efforts to defend Shirvell on First Amendment grounds, the Michigan Civil Rights Commission passed a resolution publicly condemning Shirvell and calling on Cox to support hate crimes legislation:

AND WHEREAS, such conduct should never be tolerated from anyone, let alone a public official responsible for representing all people equally.

AND WHEREAS, the Commission recognizes that the Attorney General is now taking disciplinary action, which the Commission hopes will result in the removal of this individual from an important public position. [...]

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT the Commission calls upon the Attorney General to immediately and publicly disclose the specific role(s) and responsibility(ies) of Assistant Attorney General Shirvell as it relates to the evaluation, execution and/or disposition of pending legislation, amicus briefs, and/or all other matters within the jurisdiction of the Office of the Attorney General, including but not limited to the issues of hate crime (bias motivated crime), bullying, and Elliott Larsen civil rights protections.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED THAT the Commission calls upon the Attorney General as Michigan’s chief law enforcement officer to join with the Michigan Sheriffs Association, the Michigan Association of Chiefs of Police, the Michigan State Police and the Prosecuting Attorneys Association of Michigan in their support of the hate crime bill that has already been passed by the Michigan House of Representatives.

Shirvell, who “has been on administrative leave since late September and will face a discipline hearing upon his return,” has maintained the legitimacy of his campaign against Armstrong, saying, “I don’t have any hate in my body at all.”

Justice

Why The First Amendment Doesn’t Protect Anti-Gay Harasser Andrew Shirvell

Anti-Gay Michigan Official Andrew Shirvell

Anti-Gay Michigan Official Andrew Shirvell

After spending much of the week refusing to discipline an assistant attorney general who launched a bizarre harassment campaign against the first openly-gay president of the University of Michigan student body, Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox (R) finally announced today that his subordinate would face a disciplinary hearing:

Cox spokesman John Sellek said, however, Andrew Shirvell will be the subject of a disciplinary hearing after he returns to work at an undetermined future date. . . .

Cox said he hadn’t earlier read all of Shirvell’s blog, “Chris Armstrong Watch,” which dogs Armstrong, the 21-year-old, openly gay president of U-M’s student government and accuses him of “anti-Christian behavior,” “mocking God,” promoting homosexuality and trying “to recruit your sons and daughters” into the gay lifestyle.

“I’m at fault here,” Cox said. “I’ve been saying for weeks that (Shirvell’s) been acting like a bully, that his behavior is immature, but it’s after-hours and protected by the First Amendment.”

Cox’s prior assertion that Shirvell enjoys First Amendment protection was always a little bizarre.  While the First Amendment does provide a fairly robust shield to public employees who engage in political advocacy during their time off, it should not apply to someone who engages in a public campaign of harassment and stalking a single individual because of their sexual orientation.

In Rankin v. McPherson, the Supreme Court established that even the most awful forms of speech on a matter of public concern cannot themselves be the sole basis for firing a public employee.  In that case, a clerical official in a local police station was fired after she commented to a co-worker that if someone tries to assassinate President Reagan again, she hopes they “get him.”  The Supreme Court deemed this to be protected speech, despite the inexcusable nature of the comment.  But that is hardly the entirety of the Court’s analysis.

As Rankin makes clear, “the manner, time, and place of the employee’s expression are relevant, as is the context in which the dispute arose.”  Most significantly for Shirvell’s case, statements which publicly discredit a government agency are much more likely to be firing offenses:

Nor was there any danger that McPherson had discredited the office by making her statement in public. McPherson’s speech took place in an area to which there was ordinarily no public access; her remark was evidently made in a private conversation with another employee. There is no suggestion that any member of the general public was present or heard McPherson’s statement. Nor is there any evidence that employees other than Jackson who worked in the room even heard the remark. Not only was McPherson’s discharge unrelated to the functioning of the office, it was not based on any assessment by the Constable that the remark demonstrated a character trait that made respondent unfit to perform her work.

Unlike the fired employee in Rankin, Shirvell has gone out of his way to publicize his views.  He launched a hate blog attacking a gay undergraduate student, did multiple press interviews and even appeared on prime time TV news.  Gay Michiganders should worry about the kind of justice Shirvell would advocate for on their behalf, and all Michiganders should worry that their legal interests are being advanced by an obviously unstable individual.

To be clear, just like the First Amendment protects inexcusible verbal attacks on President Reagan, it also permits state employees to hold anti-gay views and to express those views in most settings.  When a single state employee reasonably causes the state’s residents to doubt the competence and the motivations of an agency, however, that agency has the right to let him go.

Politics

Michigan’s Gay-Bashing Assistant AG Andrew Shirvell Takes Leave Of Absence

andrew-shirvellMichigan’s Assistant Attorney General Andrew Shirvell has gained national attention recently for his bizarre crusade to smear Chris Armstrong, an openly gay student assembly president at the University of Michigan. Shirvell operates a website dedicated solely to attacking Armstong’s “radical homosexual agenda” and has called the student “Satan’s representative” and a “privileged pervert.” Armstrong is even seeking a restraining order against Shirvell because of “several instances where Shirvell showed up at his home or other places he was at to protest against him.”

Shirvell told CNN host Anderson Cooper this week that he believes he has done nothing wrong. “I don’t have any hate in my body at all,” he said. And although the state’s Attorney General Mike Cox conceded that Shirvell is a “bully,” he refuses to discipline him. The Detroit News reported this morning that Cox had suspended Shirvell, but the paper has since pulled the story. Shirvell instead is reportedly taking a voluntary leave of absence:

Michigan Assistant Attorney General Andrew Shirvell has taken a voluntary leave of absence after generating national attention over a controversial blog that ridicules and denounces the University of Michigan’s student body president.

Joy Yearout, a spokeswoman for Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox, said this morning that media reports saying Cox suspended Shirvell were inaccurate.

“If I was still Attorney General and Andrew Shirvell worked for me, he would have already been fired,” Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm (D) tweeted yesterday. In its article that has been pulled, the Detroit News reported that Cox fired back at Granholm for the tweet. “I don’t know why she’s so freaking irresponsible. … she went to Harvard Law School,” Cox said. “The civil service rules are a huge shield for free speech and she knows that.” (Legal experts have said that Cox has a case to dismiss Shirvell.)

Michigan Attorney General candidate David Leyton issued a statement calling on his opponent to join him in pushing Cox to reprimand Shirvell. “This type of conduct is unbecoming of the attorney general’s office,” he said. “I am asking Bill Schuette to set aside partisan politics and join me in demanding that Mike Cox fire his bullying lackey.” And as of this morning, nearly 9,000 Facebook users had joined the “Fire Andrew Shirvell” Facebook group.

Politics

Michigan’s Assistant AG Harrassing Gay Student: ‘I Don’t Have Any Hate In My Body At All’

“For nearly six months, Andrew Shirvell, an assistant attorney general for the state of Michigan, has waged an internet campaign against” Chris Armstrong, who is the openly gay student assembly president at the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor.

Shirvell maintains a blog called Chris Armstrong Watch where he regularly berates Armstrong and complains about what he calls the “homosexual lifestyle.” The blog even features mocked up graphics Shirvell has created of Armstrong, including one where the assistant attorney general has written “racist elitist liar” on a picture of Armstrong’s face. Additionally, the assistant AG has even demonstrated outside Shirvell’s home and allegedly stalked him on Facebook.

Last night, CNN’s Anderson Cooper invited Shirvell on his show to talk about his crusade against the student assembly president. Shirvell told Cooper that his campaign is “nothing personal against Chris” and likened his harassment to a political campaign. At one point, Cooper asked Shirvell if he considers himself a bigot. Shirvell responded, “Absolutely not. I’m a Christian citizen exercising my First Amendment rights. I have no problem that Chris is homosexual. I have a problem that he’s advancing a very radical agenda.” He later continued, “The real bigot here is Chris Armstrong, I don’t have any hate in my body at all”:

COOPER: Do you consider yourself a bigot?

SHIRVELL: Absolutely not. I’m a Christian citizen exercising my first amendment rights. I have no problem with the fact that Chris is homosexual, I have a problem that he’s advancing a very radical agenda.

COOPER: I bring up the bigot question because Merriam Webster’s dictionary defines bigot as a person obstinately or intolerantly devoted to his or her prejudices…labeling a student a Nazi, picketing his house, it seems to make you appear intolerant at the very least. It seems you hate this guy because he’s gay.

SHIRVELL: Well, Anderson, that’s your spin on it. The real bigot here is Chris Armstrong. I don’t have any hate in my body at all.

Watch it:

“Mr. Shirvell’s personal opinions are his and his alone and do not reflect the views of the Michigan Department of Attorney General,” said a statement provided by Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox’s office. “But his immaturity and lack of judgment outside the office are clear.” Cox is also considering legal action against Shirvell.

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