lost U.S. Courts of Appeals

Bruni v. City of Pittsburgh

Bruni v. City of Pittsburgh

Summary

A Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, censorship-zone law, similar to a Massachusetts law the U.S. Supreme Court struck down in 2014, prohibits speech and advocacy—including prayer—in painted zones outside medical facility entrances. The city chose to paint and enforce such censorship zones on the public sidewalk outside only two facilities in the entire metropolitan area—Pittsburgh’s two abortion facilities—targeting face-to-face conversations by pro-life sidewalk counselors.

Case Documents

Court
Title
Date
U.S. Supreme Court
11/03/2020
U.S. Supreme Court
04/29/2020
U.S. Supreme Court
04/29/2020
U.S. Supreme Court
04/29/2020
U.S. Supreme Court
03/26/2020
Appellate Court
10/18/2019
Appellate Court
04/13/2018
Trial Court
01/11/2018
Trial Court
11/16/2017
Appellate Court
06/01/2016
Appellate Court
07/27/2015
Appellate Court
05/26/2015
Trial Court
03/26/2015
Trial Court
03/06/2015
Trial Court
09/04/2014

Additional Resources

One-page summary

Case Profiles


John Bursch

John Bursch

Senior Counsel, Vice President of Appellate Advocacy

View Profile

To top