Institute for Justice sues DA, sheriff on behalf of Digmon, Fletcher, Fore, Jackson
Atmore News Staff
Institute for Justice (IJ), a nonprofit, public interest law firm that defends First Amendment cases across the U.S., confirmed during a windy press conference held last Wednesday, November 20, outside the federal courthouse in Mobile that the firm had filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of four Escambia County residents who were falsely arrested last year.
The national civil liberties law firm filed a 68-page complaint alleging that Twenty-First Judicial Circuit District Attorney Stephen “Steve” Billy and Escambia County Sheriff Heath Jackson, aided by four deputies, waged a “campaign of retaliation” against Atmore News publisher and co-owner Sherry Digmon, who is also a member of the county school board, along with fellow school board member Cindy Jackson, school system payroll supervisor Veronica “Ashley” Fore, and Atmore News reporter Don Fletcher. The plaintiffs have been dubbed the Atmore Four by IJ.
The legal complaint contends that the DA, sheriff and the deputies — Arthur Odom, Kevin Durden, Matthew Rabern, Steven Dereck Lowry — violated rights guaranteed under at least two amendments to the U.S. Constitution in arresting the four. (Each defendant is being sued “in his individual capacity.”)
The firm issued the following press release upon the filing of the action:
In lower Alabama, four people with deep ties to their community — the co-owner of a smalltown newspaper, her reporter, a school board member, and a school board employee — found themselves in jail, all facing the same unusual criminal charge: sharing grand jury secrets.
Rather than let a political disagreement be settled at the ballot box, a district attorney and sheriff waged a campaign of retaliation resulting in the arrests. Now, the “Atmore Four” are suing with the Institute for Justice over the violation of their constitutional rights.
“Americans must be able to participate in their government without fear that they’ll be labeled as political enemies, investigated, and punished for exposing corruption,” said IJ Attorney Jared McClain. “Sherry, Don, Cindy, and Ashley were just doing their jobs and what they knew was right. But because that got in the way of what the district attorney and sheriff wanted, they ended up in jail. We need the courts to hold government officials responsible when they abuse their power.”
Digmon is the co-owner of Atmore News, which covers a town of 13,000 nestled on the Alabama-Florida border. She also serves on the Escambia County School Board. Don Fletcher is the reporter for Atmore News. Cindy Jackson serves with Sherry on the school board. And Ashley Fore is the payroll supervisor for the Board.
In a plot worthy of a John Grisham novel, last year they were all hauled into jail, in some cases strip-searched, and had their mugshots aired on the local news. They were all charged with felonies that carried three-year prison sentences.
Behind the charges was a scheme by long-time Escambia County District Attorney Stephen Billy to strongarm the Board of Education into renewing the contract of then-School Superintendent Michele McClung.
Both Billy and Jackson injected themselves into the issue, speaking at local GOP meetings and School Board meetings, sending a threatening letter to the Board, and insisting that everyone support McClung or face their “wrath.” Billy insisted that opposing McClung was a criminal act, and he reminded the Board that he controlled the county’s grand jury.
But Sherry, Cindy, and two other Board members refused to renew McClung’s contract, so both votes on the motion failed 4-3. True to his word, Sheriff Jackson got warrants to seize Sherry’s and Cindy’s cell phones and seized Ashley’s phone without a warrant.
The controversy prompted Don to write a story for Atmore News about the seizures. The story mentioned a strange subpoena for payroll records that Billy had sent to the Board and which the sheriff had served to Ashley personally.
Billy would soon claim that the subpoena was a secret grand-jury document, but the document didn’t say so and there wasn’t even a grand jury empaneled.
Unwittingly, the Atmore Four had fallen into Billy’s trap. He used the subpoena as a pretext to punish them and possibly force Sherry or Cindy off the Board. Over a few hours on a Friday in October 2023, Sheriff Jackson’s men rounded up Sherry, Don, and Ashley and booked them into the Escambia County Detention Center. Sherry and Ashley, despite having no criminal record, were strip-searched.
Luckily, the three were able to post bonds after hours and narrowly avoided spending the weekend in jail. Cindy, who had recently undergone surgery, was arrested weeks later on the same charge.
For months, the Atmore Four lived with restrictions on their movements, accumulating attorney bills, and fears of ending up in prison. Billy would have Sherry arrested two more times and started impeachment proceedings against her.
Then, after the board ended the controversy by paying out the rest of McClung’s contract, Billy unexpectedly recused himself from the cases, finally admitting that he had both personal and professional conflicts. The Alabama Attorney General took over the investigation and dropped all charges with prejudice, meaning that they can never be brought again.
While the Atmore Four live with the trauma and expense of fighting bogus charges, there have been no repercussions for the DA or sheriff.
“Throughout this ordeal, and to this day, people ask me if we’re going to ‘let them get away with this,’” said Sherry. “Not only was the injustice blatantly evident to us, but it was evident to the general public as well. Don and I were doing our job as community newspaper reporters. I was upholding my oath as a school board member. Certainly nothing was unlawful about either act.
“However, when someone with a little power disagreed with us, they had us arrested. What an abuse of their oath. No, I don’t want to ‘let them get away with it.’ I don’t want anyone else to go through the seven months I went through until the charges were dropped. I look forward to justice being served in hopes we can keep something like this from happening to someone else.”
The Atmore Four were doing nothing more than their jobs and their civic duty. The U.S. Constitution protects Americans’ rights to speak their minds and to be free from unreasonable searches and arrests. The Four are suing Billy and Sheriff Jackson for violating their First and Fourth Amendment rights.
“In the United States, elected officials, citizens, and journalists must feel free to express differences of opinion, that’s what makes American democracy work,” said IJ Attorney Brian Morris. “But when those in power intimidate and retaliate against their opponents, that strikes at the core of the Constitution.”
Institute for Justice is headquartered in Arlington, Va. and also has offices in Florida, Texas, Arizona and Washington state. The firm represents “everyday people” — free of charge — when the government violates their most important constitutional rights. According to its website, IJ wins nearly three out of every four cases it files, despite the challenges inherent in litigating against the government.
The firm put together an impressive 11-minute video clip that covers the basics of the Atmore Four complaint. The video includes interviews with all four plaintiffs, video of county school board meetings and more. It can be viewed at https://youtu.be/Xiio000 gPg?si=HoNNI2wxi9Utx7Zv.