Andrew Hess v. Oakland Cnty., Mich.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 5, 2026
Docket25-1784
StatusPublished

This text of Andrew Hess v. Oakland Cnty., Mich. (Andrew Hess v. Oakland Cnty., Mich.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrew Hess v. Oakland Cnty., Mich., (6th Cir. 2026).

Opinion

RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b) File Name: 26a0131p.06

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

┐ ANDREW HESS, │ Plaintiff-Appellant, │ │ v. > No. 25-1784 │ │ OAKLAND COUNTY, MICHIGAN; KAREN MCDONALD, │ Oakland County Prosecutor, Oakland County, │ Michigan; MICHAEL J. BOUCHARD, Oakland County │ Sheriff, Oakland County, Michigan; MATTHEW │ PESCHKE, Sergeant, Oakland County Sheriff’s Office, │ Oakland County, Michigan, │ Defendants-Appellees. │ ┘

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan at Detroit. No. 2:25-cv-10665—Gershwin A. Drain, District Judge.

Argued: March 19, 2026

Decided and Filed: May 5, 2026

Before: BOGGS, READLER, and DAVIS, Circuit Judges. _________________

COUNSEL

ARGUED: Robert Joseph Muise, AMERICAN FREEDOM LAW CENTER, Ann Arbor, Michigan, for Appellant. Zachary C. Larsen, CLARK HILL PLC, Lansing, Michigan, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Robert Joseph Muise, AMERICAN FREEDOM LAW CENTER, Ann Arbor, Michigan, for Appellant. Robert N. Dare, CLARK HILL PLC, Lansing, Michigan, for Appellees. No. 25-1784 Hess v. Oakland Cnty., Mich. Page 2

_________________

OPINION _________________

BOGGS, Circuit Judge. In December 2023, Andrew Hess attended an election recount conducted in an office at the Oakland County, Michigan, courthouse. He raised allegations of ballot-box tampering to the county’s director of elections, Joseph Rozell. Unsatisfied with Rozell’s assurances, Hess exited the recount room and entered the lobby of the courthouse, where he said “hang Joe for treason” to a fellow member of the public. Although Hess was allowed to remain at the recount, Oakland County prosecutors charged him with a felony months later under Michigan’s terrorist-threat statute based on that comment. Hess’s charge was dismissed after the Michigan Court of Appeals, in a different case, held the state’s terrorist-threat statute facially unconstitutional. Hess then filed a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 suit in the Eastern District of Michigan, including a claim that the attempted prosecution violated his First Amendment rights.

The Michigan Supreme Court reversed the Court of Appeals, however, and state-court litigation continues to define the boundaries of the terrorist-threat statute’s constitutionality. That reversal revived the possibility that Oakland County could prosecute Hess under the terrorist-threat statute after all. Seeking to forestall this possibility, Hess requested one of the most dramatic remedies in a federal court’s arsenal: a preliminary injunction against a threatened criminal prosecution by a separate sovereign. The district court denied his motion. We agree with Hess that he is likely to succeed on the merits of his claim that his “hang Joe for treason” statement constituted protected speech, not a true threat. But because the threatened prosecution targets only his past speech, as opposed to his future speech, and because state-court procedures afford expeditious opportunities to litigate a First Amendment defense, he has failed to show irreparable harm. We therefore affirm the denial of his requested preliminary injunction.

I

A

We recite the facts based on the record presented to the district court, drawing primarily on police reports and testimony from preliminary hearings in Hess’s state prosecution. No. 25-1784 Hess v. Oakland Cnty., Mich. Page 3

The 2023 local elections in Royal Oak, Michigan, included a ballot question about whether to adopt ranked-choice voting to elect certain municipal positions. A close tally prompted a recount, supervised by Oakland County Director of Elections Joseph Rozell. The recount occurred on December 15, 2023, at the Oakland County Courthouse. Andrew Hess attended the recount, having been “selected as an observer,” according to Rozell. (Rozell did not specify who selected Hess as an observer, or under what procedures.) R. 12-2, PageID 126. Other county employees, sheriff’s officers, and members of the public also were present. R. 23, PageID 522.

Hess and Rozell had met before. In late 2022, Hess attended the Oakland County recount for two state constitutional propositions. Hess, along with two other individuals, confronted Rozell during the recount to request changes to ballot-examination procedures. When Rozell declined, citing state law, Hess “demanded” that sheriff’s officers arrest Rozell “for interfering with the conduct of the recount.” Officers declined to take any action, and Rozell resumed supervising the recount without further incident. R. 12-2, PageID 112–13, 118–121.

Hess and Rozell would not meet again until the December 2023 recount, when Hess alleged that someone had tampered with one of the ballot boxes. Rozell’s confirmation that the ballot box had remained within the county’s chain of custody did not assuage Hess’s concerns, prompting Hess to tell Rozell: “Treason is going to look very good on you.” Id. at PageID 128. Rozell later would testify that Hess “seemed agitated when I told him that we were going to move forward with the recount,” but Rozell did not seek Hess’s arrest or removal. Id. at PageID 130, 156–57. Hess remained at his observer’s table, and Rozell walked away. Id. at PageID 128. Shortly afterwards, one of the county’s attorneys relocated to a restricted-access table in the recount room, leading Hess to question why the attorney “gets to be there, but I don’t.” Id. at PageID 129. Once again Rozell dismissed Hess’s objection, and the conversation ended. Ibid.

At some point following these interactions, but while the recount continued, Hess exited the recount room and entered the lobby, where Kaitlyn Howard was on duty as a receptionist. The doors between the lobby and the recount room remained open. Id. at PageID 170–71. It appears that only three people were in the lobby at this time: Hess, Howard, and a third No. 25-1784 Hess v. Oakland Cnty., Mich. Page 4

individual who Howard recognized as Braden Giobachi,1 a member of the public who frequently contacted the Oakland County elections office. Id. at PageID 172–73. Rozell remained in the recount room, as did all members of the Board of Canvassers. Id. at PageID 142, 185. Howard alleged that she overheard Hess tell the third individual “[h]ang Joe for treason” in what a prosecutor stipulated as a “normal conversational tone.” Id. at PageID 172–74. According to Howard, Giobachi responded, “[t]hat’s too much.” Id. at PageID 176. No other witness to this exchange has emerged.

Hess returned to the recount room. Howard refrained from taking immediate action, explaining that she “couldn’t leave [her] position at the front desk” because she “was the only one guarding it.” Id. at PageID 176. Although Howard would concede that she did not perceive “any imminent harm” and that Hess had not directed his comment toward her, Howard eventually reported Hess’s comment to Sheriff’s Officer Lee Van Camp because she did not “take kindly to that kind of behavior or language.” Id. at PageID 178–181.

Officer Van Camp asked Hess to speak with him in the lobby. Hess agreed and nodded when the officer asked whether he had said “hang Joe for treason.” Hess explained that “all [he] did was accuse [Rozell] of a crime” and that hanging is the penalty for treason. R. 16-3, PageID 249. Officer Van Camp allowed Hess to reenter the recount room, where Hess addressed Rozell during a public-comment period. Hess concluded by stating: “what is the penalty for treason[?] I’ll let somebody else tell you what it is.” R. 16, PageID 221. Hess then departed the premises voluntarily; neither Rozell nor any official ever requested Hess’s removal. R. 12-2, PageID 156– 60.

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Andrew Hess v. Oakland Cnty., Mich., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrew-hess-v-oakland-cnty-mich-ca6-2026.