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Gregory Lee Johnson is an American activist and former member of the Revolutionary Communist Party. He is best known for his involvement in the 1984 Supreme Court case Texas v. Johnson, in which the Court ruled that burning the American flag was protected under the First Amendment. Johnson was born in Richmond, Indiana in 1956. He attended Indiana University, where he became involved in the Revolutionary Communist Party. In 1984, Johnson burned an American flag outside of the Dallas City Hall in protest of the Reagan administration's policies. He was arrested and charged with desecration of a venerated object, a felony in Texas. Johnson appealed his conviction to the Supreme Court, which ruled in his favor in 1989. The Court held that Johnson's burning of the flag was a form of symbolic speech protected by the First Amendment. The decision was controversial, and sparked a nationwide debate about the limits of free speech. Johnson has since become an advocate for free speech and civil liberties. He has spoken at numerous universities and events, and has written several books on the subject. He currently resides in Austin, Texas.

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Occupation Activist
Age 67 years old
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Birthplace Richmond, Indiana, United States
Nationality United States

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Gregory Lee Johnson Height, Weight & Measurements

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Gregory Lee Johnson Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is Gregory Lee Johnson worth at the age of 67 years old? Gregory Lee Johnson’s income source is mostly from being a successful Activist. He is from United States. We have estimated Gregory Lee Johnson's net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

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Timeline

2016

On 20 June 2016, Johnson and Revolution Club members were arrested after burning the United States flag at the 2016 Republican National Convention, but the charges were unclear. In June 2019, the City of Cleveland agreed to pay Johnson $225,000 because his 2016 arrest had been determined to have violated his free speech rights.

2011

On 14 October 2011, Johnson was arrested after he and two others chained themselves to the front doors of the headquarters of the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation in Sacramento, California. The three were protesting in support of a hunger strike being conducted by Pelican Bay State Prison inmates.

2009

Throughout 2009, Johnson, who during his Supreme Court case was a client of American civil rights attorney William Kunstler, promoted the film William Kunstler: Disturbing the Universe, a documentary that premiered at the 25th Sundance Film Festival.

2006

The failed federal legislation triggered many unsuccessful efforts to pass an amendment to the United States Constitution banning flag desecration, including one attempt during the two weeks in October 1989 between the passage of the Flag Protection Act of 1989 and its taking effect, and another just eleven days after the United States v. Eichman ruling. The most recent attempt to send a flag desecration amendment to the states for ratification failed in the United States Senate by one vote on 27 June 2006.

1990

The consolidated cases of Shawn Eichman, David Blalock, and Scott Tyler eventually reached the Supreme Court with Eichman as the named respondent in United States v. Eichman (1990), which was argued together with the case United States v. Haggerty (1990). Mark Haggerty, Jennifer Campbell, Darius Strong and Carlos Garza were also charged with having violated the Flag Protection Act of 1989 outside a Seattle, Washington post office just a few minutes after the law went into effect on 28 October. The Supreme Court handed down its decision on United States v. Eichman on 11 June 1990, ruling 5-4 in favor of Eichman, Haggerty, and the other respondents, and striking down the Flag Protection Act of 1989.

1989

The State of Texas asked the Supreme Court of the United States to hear the case. Attorneys David D. Cole and radical civil rights activist William Kunstler acted as Johnson's lawyers. In 1989, the Supreme Court handed down a controversial 5-4 decision in favor of Gregory Johnson, holding that Johnson's conviction for flag desecration was inconsistent with the First Amendment. The Court's decision invalidated laws against flag desecration in force in forty-eight of the fifty states.

In response to the Supreme Court decision in Texas v. Johnson, the United States Congress enacted legislation outlawing the desecration of the flag, which then-President George H. W. Bush allowed to pass into law without his signature. The Flag Protection Act of 1989 went into effect at midnight on 28 October 1989.

On 30 October, Gregory Johnson joined Shawn Eichman, David Blalock, and Scott Tyler on the steps of the United States Capitol in Washington, D.C., where they set fire to three American flags while chanting "burn, baby, burn." The four protestors were arrested and spent the night in jail. The next day, Eichman, Blalock, and Tyler were charged with violating the Flag Protection Act of 1989, demonstrating without a permit, and disorderly conduct. However, the United States Attorney's Office declined to file charges against Johnson, claiming that there was insufficient evidence to prosecute him. Johnson declared that the government's decision not to charge him was an "act of cowardice" and a "miscarriage of justice," and stated that he was outraged.

1984

At the time of his arrest for flag desecration in Dallas, Johnson was a resident of Atlanta, Georgia, and had traveled to Dallas to protest at the 1984 Republican National Convention.

On 22 August 1984, Johnson participated in a political demonstration called the "Republican War Chest Tour" in Dallas, Texas to protest the policies of several Dallas-area businesses and of the Ronald Reagan presidential administration. The demonstration was timed to coincide with the 1984 Republican National Convention being held in downtown Dallas. During the demonstration, approximately one hundred protestors marched in the streets, chanted slogans, and staged anti-nuclear weapons and anti-war die-ins at various corporate offices. Some protestors vandalized businesses by spray-painting building walls and knocking over potted plants and ashtrays. Johnson did not take part in the vandalism, but took an American flag that had been seized from a flagpole at one of the buildings by another protestor.

1971

His family returned to the United States in 1971. In 1973, he dropped out of high school and joined the United States Merchant Marine, which took him to Panama and Mexico, where he observed American sociopolitical and economic influence. After moving to Tampa, Florida in 1976, he joined the Revolutionary Communist Youth Brigade, the youth arm of the Revolutionary Communist Party, USA.

1969

Johnson was born in Richmond, Indiana. His father spent several years of Gregory's childhood in prison. His mother, Sally, was a supporter of the civil rights movement who married a staff sergeant in the United States Army. Johnson grew up in a racially mixed, low-income neighborhood of Richmond. In 1969, he moved with his family to an American military base in West Germany, where he was influenced by growing opposition to the Vietnam War among Vietnam War draftees.

1956

Gregory Lee "Joey" Johnson (born 1956) is a political activist affiliated with the Revolutionary Communist Party USA. His burning of the flag of the United States in a political demonstration during the 1984 Republican National Convention in Dallas, Texas, in violation of a Texas law prohibiting flag desecration, led to his role as defendant in the landmark United States Supreme Court case Texas v. Johnson (1989).