The Western Journal

NY Village Leaves Disabled Vet at Mercy of Thieves, Then Persecutes Him for Trying to Exercise Free Speech

The article discusses a case in Croton-on-Hudson, New York, where disabled Vietnam veteran Leonard Amicola has been sued by local officials after refusing to remove a “Trump is my President” flag from his property. Amicola has displayed various Trump flags for four years despite experiencing vandalism and threats. After one flagpole was stolen, he hung the flag between two trees, which village officials claim violates a “content-neutral” code banning banners. The mayor insists the issue is a matter of code enforcement, not free speech, noting that flags on flagpoles are allowed. The case has drawn national attention on social media, with critics condemning it as government overreach and an attack on First Amendment rights. Amicola’s lawyer may take the case to federal court, raising the broader question of whether municipalities can use code enforcement to restrict political expression, especially after failing to protect property rights.


Governments at every level have many subtle ways to encroach on freedom, not to mention many euphemisms for the encroachment.

For instance, at the local level, officials might refuse to punish property-related crimes. Or, they might describe their own rank censorship as “code enforcement.”

According to News 12 in Westchester, New York, disabled Vietnam veteran Leonard Amicola, a resident of the village of Croton-on-Hudson for 67 years, faces legal action from local officials after refusing to take down his “Trump is my President” flag.

Amicola explained that he has kept a Trump flag of some kind on his property for the last four years.

Unfortunately, he has also had “a few circumstances” of vandalism, as well as threats both to himself and to the flags.

The Vietnam vet moved the current flag to a higher location after he had it stolen off his property. Hence, the flag now hangs between two trees.

Village officials, however — busybodies by nature — have insisted that the flag violates its “content-neutral code.”

Croton-on-Hudson Mayor Brian Pugh, in fact, cited a “longstanding prohibition on banners” and described Amicola’s case as a “straight forward code enforcement matter, not a free speech issue.”

Flying the flag on a flagpole, for instance, would not violate code. But Amicola said that he had the flag on a flagpole when it was stolen.

Former Vice President Kamala Harris won Westchester County by 26 points in the 2024 election, per the Associated Press.

Fortunately, Amicola’s case has garnered national attention thanks to the social media platform X.

Libs of TikTok, a prominent conservative account with more than  4.3 million followers, blasted village officials for their “blatant attack on Free Speech.”

Another X user called it “textbook government overreach.”

Interestingly, Amicola’s lawyer hinted at the possibility of taking his case to federal court.

Indeed, one would love to see the Supreme Court take up the key question involved here. Namely, can a municipality (or any government), under the guise of “code enforcement,” deprive a citizen of free speech, particularly after failing to protect his or her property rights?

Officials in liberal Westchester County might not like the answer.




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