The Jersey Vindicator
https://jerseyvindicator.org/2026/03/15/bergen-county-man-sues-montvale-mayor-over-facebook-block-citing-free-speech/
Courts
Bergen County Man Sues Montvale Mayor Over Facebook Block, Citing Free Speech
By Steve Janoski - March 15, 2026
[The lawsuit could test when elected officials can block critics on social media and when doing so violates the First Amendment].
[Howard Fredrics poses for a photograph at his home on March 12. Photo by Andres Kudacki for The Jersey Vindicator].
A Bergen County man is accusing a New Jersey mayor
of violating the First Amendment after the mayor blocked him from a Facebook
page used to discuss town business and local policy.
The lawsuit, filed in Bergen County Superior Court,
alleges that Montvale Mayor Mike Ghassali silenced a critic, Howard Fredrics,
by deleting comments and banning him from the page following a series of
disagreements over local issues.
The case highlights a growing legal question across
the country: when elected officials use social media to discuss government
matters, can they block critics who challenge them?
Fredrics, an award-winning composer, sound designer,
and audio engineer who also runs Park Ridge’s local public access TV station,
called the Republican mayor’s move “disappointing” and said he believed
Ghassali would want to hear different opinions, not just those that agree with
him.
“He was absolutely free to say, ‘I disagree, and
here’s why,’” the 63-year-old Fredrics told The Jersey Vindicator. “But it
seems like he doesn’t tolerate dissent”.
Fredrics is being represented by Kathleen
Redpath-Perez of Lawrenceville and Mark Bittner of Mountainside. Redpath-Perez
reinforced that argument in a brief accompanying the March 3 lawsuit.
“Disagreement with government policy is protected
speech”, Redpath-Perez wrote. “A public official may not open a forum for
discussion of official matters and then exclude a critic while permitting
supporters to speak”.
The case tests the bounds of a still-evolving legal
gray area regarding when politicians can block users on social media. Much of
the issue depends on how the official framed the purpose of the account.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in 2024 that an
official who has authority to speak on the state’s behalf and does so on social
media may violate the First Amendment if they ban comments.
But officials also retain a personal right to
comment on public issues. If they are not speaking for the state, they can
block users.
“The Supreme Court emphasized that deciding whether
there’s a First Amendment violation may require a case-by-case, post-by-post
examination”, Ken Paulson of the Free Speech Center at Middle Tennessee State
University wrote on the school’s website. “Public officials can save
themselves, and the courts, time and trouble by maintaining separate accounts
and keeping the content distinct”.
Liza Weisberg, supervising attorney for the American
Civil Liberties Union of New Jersey, said cases like this often hinge on
details. But generally, if a politician uses social media to communicate on
behalf of the government, they cannot censor critics simply because they
disagree.
“When viewpoints are excluded because they’re
disfavored, it really limits the power of public debate”, Weisberg told The
Jersey Vindicator. “It’s our exercise of our First Amendment freedoms that
allows us to hold government officials accountable. As soon as we start
censoring those voices, our democracy suffers”.
Fredrics has argued Ghassali was clearly speaking in
his role as mayor. He cited the use of the town logo, the mayor’s official
email address, and a link to the borough website.
“All of that stuff makes it very official”, Fredrics
said. “The page’s contents are nearly 100% Montvale business”.
Ghassali’s page features an American flag alongside
the Borough of Montvale seal, a link to the borough website, and the mayor’s
official email address. Most posts focus on town events or local political
issues.
The page header describes Ghassali as a “proud mayor
serving his community to the best of his ability”.
Fredrics said Ghassali also maintains a separate
personal Facebook account. In the lawsuit, he asks the court to order the mayor
to unblock him and prevent him from blocking critics in the future.
“It’s the modern equivalent of the public square,
and [Ghassali] is making announcements and pronouncements of official public
policy and decisions”, Fredrics said. “People should feel free to engage when
it is a page run by a public official in his official capacity, which I believe
this was”.
When asked about the issue, Ghassali told The
Vindicator In a March 11 email that he could not comment because he had not
been served with the lawsuit.
But in a March 2025 letter to Fredrics’ attorney,
borough counsel David Lafferty disputed Fredrics’ claims.
“I gather your client has not shared with you what
he actually posted on the Facebook page named ‘Mayor Mike Ghassali,’” Lafferty
wrote. “His comments were both false and argumentative and were taken down for
those reasons”.
The town maintains its own official account, he
added, while Ghassali’s page is a “personal, political social media page” used
to advance the mayor’s political goals.
“It is not intended to be the official social media
page for the Borough of Montvale”, he wrote.
[Howard Fredrics poses for a photograph on March 12.
He has sued Montvale Mayor Mike Ghassali over Ghassali’s decision to block him
from a Facebook page. The move followed several online disagreements]. [Photo
by Andres Kudacki for The Jersey Vindicator].
‘The Window Dressing Of Democracy’
The dispute began in December 2024 during a
still-unexplained wave of drone sightings that flooded the Garden State’s skies
for weeks.
As speculation spread about the drones’ origins,
public officials sought to calm residents who worried that Iran or another
foreign power had invaded U.S. airspace.
Around that time, Ghassali declared an emergency
no-fly zone over Montvale, an affluent town of fewer than 10,000 residents near
the New York border.
The Dec. 13 announcement drew national attention and
several cable news appearances for Ghassali, a longtime Republican politician
who unsuccessfully sought his party’s nomination to challenge U.S. Rep. Josh
Gottheimer in 2020.
Fredrics questioned whether the mayor even had the
authority to issue such a declaration and worried it could prompt someone to
try to shoot down a drone.
“Should some nutcase decide to follow Mayor
Ghassali’s declaration of a ‘No-Fly Zone’ by attempting to bring down one of
these crafts, they could certainly end up causing harm when they crash into
homes, businesses, or onto individuals”, he wrote, according to screenshots
included in the lawsuit.
Fredrics also accused Ghassali of exploiting the
drone panic to boost his political profile.
“This mayor appears to be grandstanding for
political gain, in a quest for higher political office”, Fredrics wrote. “Last
time he tried to run for higher office, he lost. This sort of fearmongering and
blatant disregard for federal law should be reason alone to deny him such an
opportunity”.
A month later, Ghassali posted that Montvale would
raise the American flag to full mast for Donald Trump’s inauguration, even
though the nation was still observing a mourning period following the death of
former President Jimmy Carter.
Fredrics argued that only the president or the
governor could likely make such a declaration.
Later in January 2025, Ghassali posted immigration
statistics that Fredrics again disputed, the lawsuit said.
“He said immigration in general was costing
taxpayers money, and I disagreed with that view”, Fredrics said.
A little more than a month later, Fredrics visited
the mayor’s Facebook page again but discovered he had been blocked.
After several exchanges with borough officials, the
borough attorney informed Fredrics on April 2 that the mayor would not restore
his access.
The lawsuit says Ghassali later added a disclaimer
calling the account his “personal page to share information”.
In September, Ghassali allegedly changed the page’s
category from “government official” to “public service”.
Still, Fredrics said he will continue pursuing the
case.
“You can’t ban a member of the public from coming to
speak before [the Borough Council] because they might disagree with you”, he
said. “This is no different”.
“I think it’s quite dangerous for a public official
to be able to silence the voices of dissent”, he added. “Because then you only
have a single point of view, the one that agrees with that official. And that’s
not really democracy. That’s the window dressing of democracy without true
democratic input from the people”.
[Howard Fredrics poses for a photograph on March 12.
Montvale Mayor Mike Ghassali blocked him from Facebook after he disputed some
facts and positions Ghassali posted about on social media.]
[Photo by Andres Kudacki for The Jersey Vindicator.]
[If this reporting helped you understand something important about New Jersey, consider supporting it.]
[The Jersey Vindicator is an independent, nonprofit
newsroom focused on accountability and transparency. Our reporting is funded by
readers — not corporations, political insiders, or big advertisers.]
[Reader support makes this work possible — and helps ensure it continues.]
[Support our reporting →]
Steve Janoski
Steve Janoski is a multi-award-winning journalist whose work has appeared in the New York Post, USA Today, the Associated Press, The Bergen Record and the Asbury Park Press. His reporting has exposed corruption, government malfeasance and police misconduct
© 2026 The New Jersey Center for Nonprofit Journalism
https://jerseyvindicator.org/2026/03/15/bergen-county-man-sues-montvale-mayor-over-facebook-block-citing-free-speech/
Courts
Bergen County Man Sues Montvale Mayor Over Facebook Block, Citing Free Speech
By Steve Janoski - March 15, 2026
[The lawsuit could test when elected officials can block critics on social media and when doing so violates the First Amendment].
[Howard Fredrics poses for a photograph at his home on March 12. Photo by Andres Kudacki for The Jersey Vindicator].
[Photo by Andres Kudacki for The Jersey Vindicator.]
[If this reporting helped you understand something important about New Jersey, consider supporting it.]
[Reader support makes this work possible — and helps ensure it continues.]
[Support our reporting →]
Steve Janoski is a multi-award-winning journalist whose work has appeared in the New York Post, USA Today, the Associated Press, The Bergen Record and the Asbury Park Press. His reporting has exposed corruption, government malfeasance and police misconduct
© 2026 The New Jersey Center for Nonprofit Journalism









