The deputy didn’t like what he saw. One crude bumper sticker on a 23‑year‑old’s car turned a routine traffic stop into a constitutional showdown.
Minutes later, handcuffs clicked, a camera rolled, and a young
Floridian was booked like a criminal—for four bold words on vinyl. In a country already arguing over speech, this arrest lit a fresh, furious deba… Continues…
Dillon Shane Webb was driving through Lake City, Florida, when a sheriff’s deputy spotted a decal on his rear window: “
I EAT ASS.” The deputy called it obscene and claimed it violated the state’s disorderly conduct laws.
Webb refused to remove or alter the sticker, calmly insisting he had a
First Amendment right to display it. Moments later, he was arrested, his car searched, and he was taken to jail over a joke
a court would likely deem protected speech.
Within days, the charges were dropped and the sheriff’s office quietly backed away. But the damage was done: a night in jail,
a mugshot, and a chilling message about who decides what’s “acceptable” speech.
Webb later sued, arguing that no officer should have the power to punish expression simply
because it offends. His case became a sharp, uncomfortable snapshot of America’s ongoing struggle over where free speech ends—and government overreach begins.