Larry Bushart, a 61-year-old former police officer, posted the offending meme last month. In response to a Facebook post about an upcoming vigil for Kirk, Bushart shared an image of President Donald Trump with the quote, “We have to get over it,” which Trump said in January 2024 after a shooting at Iowa’s Perry High School. Text added to the image said, “This seems relevant today.”
Bushart did not elaborate, but the context seems clear: Why should I care about this shooting, when the sitting president said I should “get over” this other shooting?
The image was one of several Bushart posted, and it was far from the most offensive. Still, it certainly feels crass; as people mourned a brutal public murder, Bushart snidely used the occasion to make a partisan political point. But it’s certainly well within the bounds of average social media discourse, and you certainly wouldn’t expect it to bring the attention of the local police.
According to the Perry County Sheriff’s Office website, Bushart was arrested the following morning on a charge of Threats of Mass Violence on School Property and Activities—a class E felony punishable by between one and six years in prison and up to a $3,000 fine. Worse, Bushart’s bail is set at an astonishing $2 million.
Under a Tennessee law that went into effect July 1, anyone posting bond must put up at least 10 percent of the total amount, and bail bondsmen must charge a “premium fee” of at least five percent of the total bond amount. Even just to get out of jail ahead of trial, state law says Bushart would have to pay a bondsman at least $210,000.
Bushart posted the Trump meme “to indicate or make the audience think it was referencing our Perry High School,” Weems told The Tennesseean in a statement. “Investigators believe Bushart was fully aware of the fear his post would cause and intentionally sought to create hysteria within the community.” Weems also told local radio station WOPC the meme “eluded [sic] to a hypothetical shooting at a place called Perry High School.”
This justification is downright laughable. In its entirety, the post consists of a direct quote of a statement by the then-former president about a newsworthy event, with text providing context, plus a four-word phrase added. Bushart didn’t even create the meme: The Tennesseean’s Angele Latham noted it had been “posted numerous times across multiple social media platforms not connected to Bushart going back to 2024.”
Bushart’s arrest would be humorous if it weren’t so serious. He now faces a potential years-long prison sentence for reposting a Facebook meme that doesn’t come anywhere close to qualifying as an exception to the First Amendment. Even if the case gets thrown out, he has already spent two weeks in jail and is set to spend two more months until his first hearing.
Two million dollar bond for this is such a shakedownI’m not a legal eagle, but I really wonder why deprivation of rights under color of law isn’t a crime we see talked about more.
Your precious freedom of speech is so dead, that you can’t even quote your presidents own words anymore…
Due to Trump’s executive orders in 2025, even donating to a GoFundMe to help the guy get bail could be viewed as assisting a terrorist.
Even though the guy is sure to “win”, and so is anyone who donates to help him, this guy has already been in jail for 2 weeks and is looking at a minimum of 2 more months in jail unless he can come up with over $200,000 (half of which he will not get back).
Freedom of speech has been dead for a long time, but now we have moved so far past it, you can’t even see its corpse on the horizon.
So can we call it already? The american experiment is clearly done and the results are not great.
You can link directly to the wikipedia article about malicious prosecution. You don’t need to bring Google into this.
Please edit to remove the Google link. Thanks
Fixed. Thanks to you both for catching my mistake
When you use the Google app and hit share link, you don’t actual share the link but some tracking ridden redirect link to the actual location. I’ve seen some instances in which users said that even Chrome on mobile were to do this when you share, but I haven’t been able to reproduce that so far…
Good thing you have all that second amendment to defend the first.
Cops breaking into homes and killing the homeowners when they try to defend themselves from the person breaking into their house says otherwise.
I already know what will happen to the first guy to use his 2A rights to defend against being kidnapped
Yeah. Just more death.
Still, it certainly feels crass;
No, no it doesn’t
Reminds me a bit of Daniel Baker who posted tweets about defending ourselves from insurrection after Jan 6.
https://theintercept.com/2021/10/16/daniel-baker-anarchist-capitol-riot/
He didn’t even call for defense. He just reblogged a meme somebody else made, in a context where people got easily butthurt and arrested him for something obviously completely unrelated to what he was charged with.
Yeah, it’s agreeable that the fact these were shitposted memes is way worse.



