The Tennessee Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that personalized license plates are government speech and not subject to the ...
The Tennessee Supreme Court has issued an opinion stating vanity license plates in the state are not protected under the ...
Unfortunately, it appears that Gilliam has lost the good fight… at least for now. The Supreme Court of Tennessee recently ...
Tennessee Supreme Court rules personalized license plates are government speech, not protected by the First Amendment.
In a lengthy court battle, the Tennessee Supreme Court has ruled against a Nashville woman's custom license plate.
P ersonalized license plates can be a dicey subject that get drivers into trouble. Often they're used to say things that state DMVs don't really think is appropriate, be it speaki ...
The statement comes after the TN Supreme Court rejected a First Amendment challenge to Tennessee’s personalized license plate ...
The Tennessee Supreme Court this week issued an opinion in Leah Gilliam v. David Gerregano, Commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Revenue et al., rejecting a First Amendment challenge to ...
The court issued the unanimous opinion in Leah Gilliam v. David Gerregano, Commissioner of the Tennessee Department of Revenue. According to the court record, Gilliam's personalized license plate ...
Tam fame): For over a decade, Leah Gilliam's vehicle displayed a personalized license plate that read "69PWNDU." The State eventually revoked the plate after deeming the message offensive.
At the center of the case was plaintiff Leah Gilliam's personalized Tennessee license plate, "69PWNDU," which she held for more than a decade before the state revoked it in 2021 on the grounds ...
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