Judge Rules Rep. Lauren Boebert Can Block People on Her Personal Twitter Account
A federal judge ruled Republican Rep. Lauren Boebert was allowed to block people on her personal Twitter and not her official government account, the Associated Press reported.
Former state Rep. Bri Buentello sued Boebert when she was blocked from Boebert's personal account claiming it was a violation of free speech rights. U.S. District Court Judge Daniel D. Domenico said it did not violate those rights because she was not blocked from Boebert's official government account The Colorado Sun reported.
Domenico said, "Blocking a Twitter user on an account created before she was elected to office is something Ms. Boebert could do before she was in office and could do after she leaves office."
For more reporting from the Associated Press, see below:

Buentello filed her lawsuit in January after she was blocked by Boebert after calling for Boebert's recall following the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.
Buentello's lawyers argued that since Boebert uses her personal Twitter account to share official policy positions, it is unlawful for her to block constituents from seeing the account.
Although Domenico denied in his ruling a preliminary injunction for Boebert to unblock Buentello from the Twitter account, it's not the final ruling on the case.
David Lane, an attorney representing Buentello, said they will make a decision on whether to continue litigating the case this week.
"It is a blow to our freedom of speech when a politician using a platform such as Twitter can block voices of dissent which she disagrees with and the courts won't intervene to stop this First Amendment violation," Lane said.
Boebert has links to the baseless QAnon conspiracy theory and has sought to overturn President-elect Joe Biden's victory. She gained attention for pledging to carry a gun in the Capitol.
Buentello lives in Boebert's district and served a single term in the state House of Representatives before losing a reelection bid last November.
