NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) — Your personalized license plate is a form of “government speech” and therefore can be censored, according to a 3-judge panel of the Tennessee Supreme Court. In late February, ...
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Fellow Tennesseans: We need to have a talk. We recently asked the Tennessee Department of Revenue to send us a list of all the personalized license plates that were rejected in 2024 ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. WASHINGTON – Texas wouldn’t let a critic of President Donald Trump have a custom license plate reading “JAIL 45.” College football ...
Personalized license plates can be a dicey subject that get drivers into trouble. Often they're used to say things that state DMVs don't really think is appropriate, be it speaking out against a ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. Weed references, innumerable puns about butts, and the dreaded "6-7" were among the vanity license tag requests Tennessee drivers ...
Somewhere out there, there is a Tennessean who loves a meme, pop culture reference or profane word so much that they want everyone along their daily commute to see it. Unfortunately for them, the ...
The Tennessee Supreme Court ruled Wednesday that personalized license plates are government speech and not subject to the First Amendment's ban on viewpoint discrimination. At the center of the case ...
A short excerpt from today's long decision by Justice Sarah Campbell in Gilliam v. Gerregano (note that Sarah Martin and I co-filed an amicus brief on the other side in this case, on behalf of Simon ...
After recently being told by the state officials that her personalized license plate was revoked because it is not classified as free speech, a Tennessee woman is appealing the decision to the United ...
WASHINGTON – Texas wouldn’t let a critic of President Donald Trump have a custom license plate reading “JAIL 45.” College football fans in Michigan can’t request a vanity plate that says “OSUSUCKS.” ...
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. — Somewhere out there, there is a Tennessean who loves a meme, pop culture reference or profane word so much that they want everyone along their daily commute to see it. Unfortunately ...