Alison Kareem v. Cuyahoga County Board of Elections, et al.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedJune 3, 2026
Docket1:20-cv-02457
StatusUnknown

This text of Alison Kareem v. Cuyahoga County Board of Elections, et al. (Alison Kareem v. Cuyahoga County Board of Elections, et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alison Kareem v. Cuyahoga County Board of Elections, et al., (N.D. Ohio 2026).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO EASTERN DIVISION

ALISON KAREEM, ) CASE NO. 1:20-cv-02457 ) Plaintiff, ) JUDGE DAVID A. RUIZ ) v. ) ) CUYAHOGA COUNTY BOARD OF ) ELECTIONS, et al., ) MEMORANDUM, OPINION, & ORDER ) ON SUMMARY JUDGMENT Defendants. )

I. INTRODUCTION This case concerns Plaintiff’s facial and/or as applied constitutional challenge to Ohio Revised Code sections 3501.35(A)(4) and 3599.20. Plaintiff describes these statutes as “ballot selfie” laws, a categorization of long-standing prohibitions on displaying election ballots. With fingertip access to smartphone cameras, voters can take pictures of their completed ballots and immediately post them on social media sites. This action and the statutes come under review. Relying upon 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Plaintiff Alison Kareem challenges these Ohio statutes, claiming they violate her First Amendment right to freedom of speech, as incorporated against the states by the Fourteenth Amendment. (R. 1, PageID 10-11). She asserts the laws do not satisfy the requisite level of scrutiny and are overbroad. (Id.). Seeking declaratory and injunctive relief, Plaintiff asks the Court to enjoin the Cuyahoga County Board of Elections (BOE), the Cuyahoga County Prosecuting Attorney Michael O’Malley (O’Malley) (collectively County Defendants), and Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose (the State) from prohibiting ballot selfies. (Id. at 11-12). The Court initially granted summary judgment for Defendants and dismissed the case, finding Plaintiff lacked standing to challenge the laws. (R. 40). Plaintiff appealed, (R. 42), and the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit reversed, holding that Plaintiff satisfied Article III standing requirements. (R. 43). See Kareem v. Cuyahoga Cnty. Bd. of Elections, 95 F.4th 1019 (6th Cir. 2024). The Circuit remanded the case for proceedings on the merits, and the matter is before the Court upon the renewed cross-motions for summary judgment. (R. 46; 02/25/2025 Non Document Order).The Motions have been fully briefed. (R. 24; R. 26; R. 27; R. 30; R. 32; R. 33; R. 34; R. 35; R. 36; R. 37). For the following reasons, the Court grants the Motions of the State (R. 24) and the County Defendants (R. 26) and denies Plaintiff’s Motion (R. 27). II. BACKGROUND FACTS On October 20, 2020, Plaintiff and her brother visited the BOE during its early voting

period. (R. 1, PageID 8-9; R. 27, PageID 524). Before casting her vote, Plaintiff took a photograph of herself and had her brother take a picture of her. (R. 24-2, PageID 204-05). The completed ballot was visible in these pictures. (Id.; R. 1 at 9). She intended to post the picture(s) on social media, hoping to persuade others to vote for the same candidates. (Id.). But because of the laws she now challenges, Plaintiff refrained from doing so. (R. 1 at 9; R. 24-2 at 155, 174; R. 28, PageID 569). Plaintiff has known about the laws banning ballot exposure since 2015. (R. 24-2 at 181-88). At that time, she voted on a statewide ballot initiative to legalize medical marijuana. (Id. at 186-87). She took a picture of her ballot and posted it to her private Facebook account. (Id.). She later learned this could constitute a crime and removed the post. (Id.). She was not sanctioned,

prosecuted, threatened, or even asked to remove the post. (Id. at 186-87, 199, 206-07). The parties agree that election officials throughout Cuyahoga County and the State have informed voters – whether orally, by posting notifications in manuals and written correspondence, or through media and social media outlets – that posting or publication of a ballot selfie, which is a photo of oneself showing a completed election ballot,1 is a crime under Ohio’s election laws. (R. 1 at 4-5; R. 27, PageID 525-26; R. 26-1, PageID 366-70, 374-76, Ex. 4, 5, 6) (citing Election Officials Manual, Chapter 4, § 1.11 (02/03/2021)). In support of her case, Plaintiff quotes a public declaration by the former Director of the County BOE that if he discovered or learned of a person posting a ballot selfie, “[he would] track down that individual, tell them about the law, and ask them to remove it.” (R. 27 at 525-26) (citing R. 26-1 at 838 ¶¶12-15, 392-393, 405, ¶¶11-19; https://www.youtube.com/%20watch?v=awueOPswbGU)). Also in support of her case, Plaintiff points to Spencer Vago, a Strongsville, Ohio City Council candidate, who removed his ballot photo from Facebook upon being informed it was illegal to post the picture. (R. 1 at 7; R. 26-1 at 379-81, 437-39, Ex. 7; R. 26-2, PageID 486-87, 519-20, Ex. 8).

Vago was not charged with any crime, (id.), and Plaintiff is unaware of any person in Ohio, who has been prosecuted for posting a ballot selfie. (R. 26-1 at 197). Finally, Plaintiff points to conflicting opinions of elections officials from other counties on whether such conduct violates the law, asserting the State has “not repudiated or corrected” these declarations. (R. 1 at 7-8) (citing https://www.wtol.com/ article/news/politics/campaign-2020/what-to-know-before-you-vote-in- ohio/512-8f0577a0-5a2f-400d-a058-f2036892dca02 and a Facebook post of the Columbiana County Democratic Women’s Caucus). Plaintiff has not – herself – posted a picture of her ballot. She therefore has not specifically been censored or criminally charged. Plaintiff, however, filed this action motivated by a desire to

1 Ballot selfies - Ballotpedia

2 Page no longer found. post ballot selfies in future elections. As the material facts are largely undisputed, this case comes down to whether these laws do or do not unlawfully infringe upon First Amendment speech rights. III. BASES FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT MOTIONS

A. Summary of Plaintiff’s Motion

Plaintiff argues for a strict scrutiny level of review, arguing the statutes at issue are illegal content-based restrictions on core political speech. (R. 27, PageID 529-31). Vote buying and voter intimidation, she asserts, are not “actual present harm(s),” so interests in preventing such behaviors are not compelling, and less restrictive alternatives to banning ballot exposure already exist in Ohio law. (Id. at 531-34). She further contends the laws fail First Amendment review even under intermediate scrutiny, because in preventing all ballot selfies, “they burden substantially more speech than is necessary.” (Id. at 536-40; R. 33, PageID 628-32, 643-52). B. Summary of the County Defendants’ Motion

The County Defendants do not focus on merit-based claims in their Motion. Instead, they rely on affirmative defenses, particularly Eleventh Amendment immunity, Monell, standing, and a statute of limitations argument. (R. 26, PageID 329-35). But in opposition to Plaintiff’s Motion, they argue intermediate scrutiny applies, and the laws nevertheless satisfy even strict scrutiny because the state still has compelling interests in preventing vote buying and voter intimidation, and the statutes are sufficiently tailored to those interests. (Id. at 335). C. Summary of the State’s Motion

With the standing issues resolved, the State seeks judgment based on Ohio’s history of voter intimidation and corruption, which are the underlying reasons for the laws at issue. (R. 24, PageID 100). The State argues the law is content-neutral because the application does not depend on the message or statement the voter conveys by “exhibiting or displaying the ballot,” and therefore, intermediate scrutiny is the applicable standard of review. (Id. at 102, 116-26). The State additionally asserts the interests of maintaining privacy in elections, free of voter intimidation, coercion, vote buying, and disruption are substantial, when compared to Plaintiff’s claimed First Amendment rights.

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Alison Kareem v. Cuyahoga County Board of Elections, et al., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alison-kareem-v-cuyahoga-county-board-of-elections-et-al-ohnd-2026.