David Justin Freeman
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David Justin Freeman (born December 22, 1984) is a Christian minister, private educator and conservative political activist from the state of Georgia. He has been the teaching pastor at Clarkesville Reformed Baptist Church since 2021, and hundreds of his recorded sermons are available at East Jordan Church Online. Freeman is best-known for his advocacy of free speech and independence of the church from the state. Freeman's teachings have made him a frequent target of police misconduct, most recently in 2024, when he was a victim of excessive force during an arrest for speech crimes. Videos from the incident were made public in season 1 of the documentary series ''The News! with Mr. Pipsqueak''.


Political advocacy

Freeman entered the political world as a precinct chairman in the Hall County Republican Party in 2012, and that year served as a delegate for Hall County to the Georgia Republican Party's State Convention, where he argued in favor of strict constitutional construction regarding a party resolution on the
National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) for Fiscal Year 2012112th Congress, 1st Session, H1540CR.HSE"National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012."/ref> () is a United States federal law which, among other things, specified the bu ...
. The next year, Freeman was voted in as chairman for the Georgia Ninth District of the Republican Liberty Caucus argued that the state party should abide very strictly by its established rules. Freeman also took up a leadership role in the Lanier Tea Party Patriots, where he twice served as a master of ceremonies for their annual tax-day rally. In April 2013, at a Lanier Tea Party meeting, Freeman and Hall County Sheriff Gerald Couch disagreed concerning the constitutionality of federal laws that Freeman claimed overstepped the bounds of the Second Amendment. In the following months he filed several complaints to the Sheriff regarding his deputies speeding in patrol cars during non-emergencies, sometimes under particularly dangerous conditions.Trial Transcript, State of Georgia v. Freeman (2014-SR-5623-Z)


12Stone Church incident

On August 3, 2014, Freeman attended services with his family at 12Stone Church in Flowery Branch, Georgia, where he served as a volunteer minister to youths. On that day, Jason Berry (then pastor at that campus) displayed a video of a Staples commercial that portrayed children as being particularly depressed about returning to school while the parents celebrated. Freeman contended that he was displeased with the display because of youth in the church who had expressed suicidal thoughts in the lead-up to the new school year. In response, Freeman raised his middle finger to Berry. Freeman stated that it was his intention to object without disrupting the service, saying "I believe that I would have been failing in my duty as a minister to the church and God if I had not confronted Jason for what he said, and I believe that I did so in the most appropriate way possible." When the church service had ended, Freeman stood and addressed the crowd: "It is your responsibility to raise your own children, and it is a sin to give them to a godless government."


False arrest, detention, and trial

According to testimony by multiple witnesses at Freeman's later trial, Freeman was arrested at his home by a SWAT team armed with semiautomatic weapons and accompanied by a K9 unit. At trial, the state denied that a SWAT team had been at Freeman's home, but the arresting officer on record, Mike Lusk, had been identified previously in ''The Gainesville Times'' as a member of the Hall County SWAT team. Freeman later claimed in a lawsuit against Hall County Sheriff Gerald Couch that after his arrest he was held nude in solitary confinement, threatened with death, and denied bedding and basic hygienic items (among other abuses) during a three-day stay at the Hall County Detention Center. Two of the officers most closely tied to Freeman's arrest left the Sheriff's office in disgrace shortly thereafter. The sergeant on duty at the time of Freeman's arrest resigned after he was caught having an on-duty affair with a Flowery Branch policewoman. The officer who arrested Freeman was himself arrested for an unrelated "Invasion of Privacy" charge on May 22, 2015 after a GBI investigation and was released on a $10,000 bond. Stephanie Woodard, who had been the solicitor of Hall County and was responsible for the prosecution against Freeman, was ultimately charged with dozens of felonies for making false statements and writings and theft after she was caught spending taxpayer money on personal expenses. The allegations against Woodard included that she had conspired with the Sheriff of Hall County to determine the outcome of cases. Woodard ultimately pleaded guilty to unprofessional conduct and was forced to resign and pay restitution. In May 2015, charges against Freeman for "Obstruction" and "Disrupting a Public Gathering" were dismissed by Hall County State Court Judge Larry Baldwin; Georgia's "Disrupting a Public Gathering" law had been declared unconstitutional in 2006. The state replaced these with a charge of "Disorderly Conduct", with the state alleging that holding up a middle finger and shouting a political opinion in public represented a credible threat to life, limb, and health. Freeman was tried and convicted by a jury on January 11–12, 2016.


Appeals and argument before Supreme Court

On January 18, 2017, Freeman's appeal was transferred by the
Georgia Court of Appeals The Georgia Court of Appeals is the intermediate-level appellate court for the state of Georgia, United States. The court is a single entity with fifteen judges. The judges are assigned into five divisions of three judges each, with the assignm ...
to the Supreme Court of Georgia on the grounds that his free speech arguments raised a constitutional question over which the Court of Appeals did not have jurisdiction. Oral arguments in the case were held on May 15, 2017, with Freeman representing himself, and Daniel SanMiguel representing Hall County. Arguments focused primarily on whether Georgia's disorderly conduct statute is unconstitutionally broad, whether people have a constitutionally protected right to shout in a public place, and whether Freeman's conduct could possibly have violated the statute by representing a reasonable threat of harm. Freeman argued that the words "tumultuous" and "reasonable" are not clearly defined in the law and leave people to guess about their meaning. He also argued that the First Amendment protects ministers to speak controversial messages in their churches. SanMiguel argued that while none of Freeman's actions constituted obscenity or represented a reasonable threat in themselves, the actions taken as a whole represented disorderly conduct in their totality. On October 2, 2017, the court reversed Freeman's disorderly conduct conviction because his conduct could not have violated Georgia's disorderly conduct statute, and because the middle finger is protected speech.


Lawsuit against Hall County sheriff

In August 2016, Freeman filed a suit in the Georgia Northern District court against Hall County Sheriff Gerald Couch and other employees of the Sheriff's Office, alleging that he had been subjected to abuses during his arrest and stay at the Hall County jail. Federal Judge Richard W. Story dismissed the suit without a hearing, stating that "neither a State nor its officials acting in their official capacities are 'persons'... On the contrary, states and their officials, acting in official capacities, are immune from suit."


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Freeman, David American Protestant ministers and clergy Georgia (U.S. state) Republicans American prisoners and detainees Living people 1984 births Protestant religious leaders convicted of crimes Overturned convictions in the United States