Using “John Doe” pseudonyms, they sued over whether the investigation into their activities should be made public. The Washington State Supreme Court ruled in February that they can be identified and that they haven’t shown that public release of their names violates their right to privacy. The state supreme court denied reconsideration earlier this month and lawyers for the four officers submitted a petition to the U.S. Supreme Court, asking that the names remain protected during their legal challenge.

Four officers who attended events in the nation’s capital on the day of an insurrection claimed they are protected under the state’s public records law. They say they did nothing wrong and that revealing their names would violate their privacy.

  • mosiacmango@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    They have been leaked. It happened pretty much instantly after people found out.

    Officer #1: Alexander Everett

    Officer #2: Caitlin Rochelle

    Officer #3: Jason Marchione

    Officer #4: Sgt. Scotty Bach

    Officer #5: Vice detective Michael Settle

    Officer #6: Jacob Briskey

    This is just some complex legal maneuvering for lawsuits from the traitor cops.

    • barneypiccolo@lemm.ee
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      2 days ago

      I love it when the Streisand Effect hammers evil people. I didn’t know about these four traitors before, but I do now, and now I want them fired.

      If they can’t be fired, I want them to be surrounded by a giant, vicious crowd, as they beat the everloving shit out of these traitors for hours.

    • peoplebeproblems@midwest.social
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      2 days ago

      Well of course it did.

      But I don’t understand how clearing the names can protect them from lawsuits - doesn’t being a cop pretty much protect them from consequences anyway?