Defiance: North Carolina Sheriffs and District Attorneys Begin Pushing Back on Governor's Stay at Home Orders

AP Photo/Matt Rourke
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Protesters demonstrate at the state Capitol in Harrisburg, Pa., Monday, April 20, 2020, demanding that Gov. Tom Wolf reopen Pennsylvania’s economy. (AP Photo/Matt Rourke)
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While it’s true that North Carolina technically began phase one of Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper’s “reopen” plan late last week, it really hasn’t felt like a reopen plan – and that’s for good reason:

It’s not one.

Don’t take my word for it – see for yourself:

Some sheriffs and district attorneys across the state have decided Cooper’s orders preventing indoor church gatherings and most small businesses from reopening have gone on long enough – and are pushing back:

Here’s the letter Johnston County Sheriff Bizzell wrote explaining his position:

Johnston County is one of those areas of North Carolina that should be given more latitude to reopen in a more aggressive way than how Gov. Cooper says should be done statewide, and here’s why:

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Craven County Sheriff Chip Hughes has taken a similar position to Bizzell’s:

He wrote a statement on Facebook detailing his position on the issue:

https://www.facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=3054063214680081&id=924347354318355

As it is for Johnston County, the case numbers for Craven County make the case for allowing them to deviate from the official statewide plan:

In Polk County, the district attorney has said he will not prosecute any business owner who reopens, and is discouraging local law enforcement officers from arresting them:

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WLOS also reported that Columbus Police Chief Scott Hamby told them he gave the barbershop owner featured in their piece “two verbal warnings, but will not do anything further.”

Randolph County District Attorney Andrew Gregson is pushing back, too:

“As it relates to religious worship the governor’s order gives preferential treatment to secular gatherings, particularly retail shopping” Gregson says in the letter.

Gregson says his oath of office says he bears the burden of supporting and defending the U.S. and N.C. Constitutions. He says the order cannot survive strict scrutiny under constitutional analysis and violates both constitutions.

“I cannot prevent charges from being brought against someone exercising religious beliefs in Randolph County, but I can and will do what I believe the Constitution requires when charges are brought. As I advised law enforcement in March, it is my opinion that the arrest or charge for violating the governor’s order is an unconstitutional act” Gregson says in closing.

As I’ve previously written, questions have been asked by state Republican leaders as to the ever-evolving metrics Cooper and health officials at the county and state levels are using to make determinations on changes to the state’s stay at home orders including the phased reopening plan.

Not only are those questions not being answered beyond the canned “out of an abundance of caution” response, but daring to even ask them in the first place leads to Orwellian-esque responses from state Democratic leaders who take the troubling “just trust us” approach when it comes to state-level decisions about people’s lives and livelihood.

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All that said, one Twitter user has figured out a way to possibly resolve the church gatherings issue that could go a long way towards bridging the divide:

Heh.

Gov. Cooper is holding his daily Wuhan coronavirus press briefing at 3pm ET today. Will be interesting to see if he gets asked about any of these developments and if so, how he responds. If history is a reliable indicator, his responses will not go over well with reopen proponents, and with local leaders who have no desire to arrest people who simply want to go to church, and to be able to work.

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