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Tag: FWC biologist

  • Attorneys for FWC defend firing biologist over Charlie Kirk post

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    Disputing allegations that they violated First Amendment rights, Florida wildlife officials Thursday argued that a federal judge should reject a request to reinstate a biologist who was fired because of a social-media post after the murder of conservative leader Charlie Kirk.

    Attorneys for Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission Executive Director Roger Young and Melissa Tucker, a division director, said the agency fired Brittney Brown on Sept. 15 to “prevent foreseeable disruption, reputational harm and loss of public trust. The agency did not police ideology; it protected credibility central to its mission.”

    “The First Amendment does not shield public employees from the consequences of speech that undermines the effectiveness, credibility or public trust on which their agencies depend. … Even if the post had some political dimension, FWC’s (the agency’s) interest in maintaining credibility and neutrality far outweighs any minimal expressive value,” the officials’ attorneys wrote.

    Brown, who worked for the commission studying shorebirds and seabirds in the area of Tyndall Air Force Base in the Panhandle, filed a lawsuit Sept. 30 alleging that her firing violated First Amendment rights.

    The lawsuit said Brown was fired after reposting on her personal Instagram account a post from an account called “@whalefact.” The post said, “the whales are deeply saddened to learn of the shooting of charlie kirk, haha just kidding, they care exactly as much as charlie kirk cared about children being shot in their classrooms, which is to say, not at all,” according to the lawsuit.

    Brown’s attorneys on Oct. 3 filed a motion for a preliminary injunction that asked U.S. District Judge Mark Walker to reinstate her to her job and to prevent retaliation by the agency. In addition to alleging First Amendment violations, the motion said Brown’s post did not disrupt Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission operations.

    “Plaintiff made her social media post on her personal phone while she was on vacation,” the motion said. “That political post had nothing to do with plaintiff’s job responsibilities. After all, she is a wildlife biologist, not a public information officer. In addition, plaintiff did not identify herself as an FWC employee in her post; the post itself had nothing to do with FWC or its operations; and her Instagram profile made no reference to FWC as her employer or otherwise.”

    The document filed Thursday by attorneys for Young and Tucker was a response to the motion for a preliminary injunction. Walker has scheduled a Nov. 10 hearing on the motion.

    Kirk, who led the conservative group Turning Point USA, was assassinated Sept. 10 during an appearance at Utah Valley University. After Brown made the repost on Sept. 14, Libs of TikTok, a conservative social-media account, shared a screenshot and called for her firing, according to the lawsuit. She was fired the next day.

    Brown worked for the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission for about seven years, according to the lawsuit. A copy of her Sept. 15 termination letter included in the lawsuit indicated she had an “Other Personal Services” position, a classification that does not include some of the protections that other employees receive.


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    The local case took on a statewide angle when Uthmeier in September publicly bashed Orlando Democratic State Attorney Monique Worrell

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    Jim Saunders, News Service of Florida
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  • FWC biologist sues after she was fired a over Charlie Kirk post – Orlando Weekly

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    A biologist has filed a federal lawsuit challenging her firing by the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission because of a post on a personal social-media account after the murder of conservative leader Charlie Kirk.

    Brittney Brown, who worked for the commission studying shorebirds and seabirds in the area of Tyndall Air Force Base in the Panhandle, alleges in the lawsuit that her firing on Sept. 15 — five days after Kirk was shot during an appearance at a Utah university — violated her First Amendment rights.

    “In the wake of the killing of Charlie Kirk on September 10, 2025, many individuals and groups posted visceral reactions to social media that covered a range of perspectives and beliefs,” said the lawsuit, filed by attorneys from the American Civil Liberties Union Foundation of Florida and longtime First Amendment lawyer Gary Edinger. “Most people on social media almost certainly encountered speech they found despicable, no matter where they fall on the political spectrum. That is the nature of a democracy where free speech is protected. And just as political violence has no place in a just society, the unbridled trampling of constitutional protections has no place either.”

    The lawsuit said Brown was fired after reposting on her Instagram account a post from an account called “@whalefact.” The post said, “the whales are deeply saddened to learn of the shooting of charlie kirk, haha just kidding, they care exactly as much as charlie kirk cared about children being shot in their classrooms, which is to say, not at all,” according to the lawsuit.

    Libs of TikTok, a conservative social-media account, shared a screenshot of Brown’s repost on Sept. 14 and called for her firing, according to the lawsuit. She was fired the next day.

    The Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission said in a Sept. 15 post on X that it had been “made aware of a deeply troubling incident involving an FWC employee who shared a social media post that made light of the assassination of Mr. Kirk. The comments and actions of this individual are not in line with the FWC, our values, or our mission. We have a zero-tolerance policy towards the promotion of violence and hate, and we will not stand for such behavior. Upon learning of the social media post, FWC leadership took swift action, terminating the individual,” according to a copy of the commission post included in the lawsuit.

    But the lawsuit, filed in U.S. district court in Tallahassee, said Brown made the repost while on vacation on a “purely private” Instagram account. The lawsuit names as defendants commission Executive Director Roger Young and Melissa Tucker, a division director described as Brown’s “ultimate supervisor.”

    “Plaintiff’s political statement does not condone Mr. Kirk’s killing; nor does it call for further violence,” the lawsuit said. “Mr. Kirk was a public figure widely known for his controversial political views, and his death is a matter of public concern.”

    The lawsuit alleged, “Instead of supporting plaintiff’s First Amendment rights, and those of other dissenting individuals, defendants rushed to capitulate to the Libs of TikTok heckler’s veto and make a political example of Brown.”

    Kirk, who led the conservative group Turning Point USA, was assassinated during an appearance at Utah Valley University.

    Brown worked for the Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission for about seven years, according to the lawsuit. A copy of her Sept. 15 termination letter included in the lawsuit indicated she had an “Other Personal Services” position, a classification that does not include some of the protections that other employees receive.


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    The case alleges she she presented a certificate to a student that said he was the most likely to ‘become a dictator’

    The lawsuit said she was fired after reposting on her Instagram account a post from an account called ‘@whalefact’

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    Jim Saunders, News Service of Florida
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