Tennessee Star editor headed to court after publishing school shooter’s journal writings
The editor-in-chief of the Tennessee Star has been ordered to appear Monday before the judge overseeing the Nashville Covenant School mass shooting case after the Star published a series of stories detailing writings from the shooter’s journals.
Law enforcement has resisted the Star’s efforts through a lawsuit to release the journal publicly, including those writings identified by Metro Nashville Police as a manifesto.
Tennessee Chancery Court Judge l’Ashea Myles ordered Michael Patrick Leahy, who also serves as CEO of Star News Digital Media, publisher of The Tennessee Star and other news sites across the US, to appear for a show cause hearing Monday to determine whether The Star violated any court orders related to publishing news stories on the shooter’s writings.Â
Audrey Elizabeth Hale, a biological female who identified as a male, shot and killed three childrenđ and three school staff in March 2023, prior tęŚo being shot and killed by đ responding police officers.
“Yes, I intend to appear in court on Monday at 11 am, along with my attorneys, Nick Barry with America First Legal and Daniel Horwitz, a nationally recognized First Amendment attorney based here in Nashville,” Leahy told The Center Square Sunday.
Leahy says he faces contempt charges and possible jail time for  detailing Hale’s writings after exclusively obtaining about 80 pages of the documents from a source. Leahy and The Tennessee Star have pursued public release of the documents to, at this point, no avail.
Among other detaiđŻls on the writings,  that Hale felt socęŚially isolated and unable to live independently.Â
“In this densely written, undated entry spread over two pages, Hale wrote about mental health issues with her ‘brain,’ which she  to her purported autism diagnosis and decision to identify as a transgender man despite being a biological female,” The Star reported.
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Former acting US Assistant Attorney General Jeff Clark , after Leahy wasđ ordered to appear in court, that the news outlet had a First Amendment right to publish the stories.
“This is what the free press is for,” Clark wrote. “It’s not designed to coddle the trans movement or keep secrets that could get people killed through ignorance. … (What’s) going on in America? It’s like a slice of the state judiciary across multiple States has lost its collective mind.”