Fort Worth

Feds weigh probe after Fort Worth street preachers claim free speech violations

The West Front of U.S. Supreme Court on June 29, 2026.
The West Front of U.S. Supreme Court on June 29, 2026. Getty Images

The Justice Department is weighing whether to launch an investigation into the Fort Worth Police Department’s handling of an event at Trinity Pride Fest in June that prompted the department to give officers a refresher on First Amendment rights.

On June 27, Fort Worth PD officers cited a person for disorderly conduct after street preachers were speaking into bullhorns near Trinity Pride in Fort Worth’s Near Southside neighborhood.

Videos posted on Facebook and X show the street preachers speaking with police officers when one of the preachers asks if someone can be cited for misgendering a transgender person.

“We’re talking gray area right now,” an officer responds. “I don’t believe I would cite that for offensive language.”

In another video, posted on X, an officer is speaking with two street preachers. “Are you really going to ticket us for offensive speech?” one of the street preachers asks the officer in the video.

“Yes, absolutely,” the officer says before saying, “it’s called disorderly conduct.”

The department confirmed to the Star-Telegram on July 2 that officers would be receiving a refresher on the First Amendment.

On July 10, Harmeet Dhillon, assistant attorney general for the Department of Justice’s Civil Rights Division, posted about the incident on X.

“Troubling,” Dhillon wrote. “Our @CivilRights team is on it.”

Now, the Justice Department has sent a letter to the Fort Worth City Attorney.

The letter calls for the city to submit records detailing FWPD’s First Amendment policy, training materials, accountability records, which will be used to decide if the Civil Rights Division will “take further former action.”

“Government actors cannot discriminate against viewpoints or restrict peaceful free speech just because it may be offensive,” a statement accompanying the letter reads.

Fort Worth police did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Tuesday.

A spokesperson for the city of Fort Worth said that the City Attorney’s office is working with the police department to address the DOJ’s request.

This story was originally published July 14, 2026 at 1:07 PM.

Emily Holshouser
Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Emily Holshouser is a local news reporter at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
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