Las Vegas resident Vem Miller, arrested outside a California rally for former President Donald J. Trump on Saturday, filed a federal lawsuit on Tuesday against the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department. Miller, 49, alleges officers violated his constitutional rights during the arrest. Authorities booked him on misdemeanor charges, including possession of a loaded firearm and a high-capacity magazine.
Miller, a former 2022 Republican candidate for the Nevada Assembly and a Trump supporter, denies any suggestion that he was planning an assassination attempt, calling the accusation “ridiculous.”
The lawsuit, filed in Nevada, claims officers violated Miller’s First Amendment right to free speech and his Fourth Amendment protection against unlawful search and seizure. According to the suit, Miller legally owned the firearms found in his vehicle and had disclosed them to an officer. Officers pulled him over, instructed him to exit his vehicle, handcuffed him, and placed him in a patrol car while they allegedly conducted an illegal search of his vehicle.
Riverside County Sheriff Chad Bianco told the media, “I probably did have deputies that prevented the third assassination attempt.” However, Miller’s lawsuit asserts that the sheriff sought to boost his profile. “Bianco did not miss an opportunity to fabricate allegations against Miller, going on numerous news outlets, claiming to have thwarted a third assassination attempt against Presidential Candidate Donald J. Trump,” it states.
Miller’s attorney, Sigal Chattah, says Miller’s arrest has caused his financial and personal ruin. The suit claims that the Secret Service and Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), informed about the incident, did not view Miller as a threat. The federal agencies confirmed that Trump was never in danger and that no federal arrest was made, although the investigation remains ongoing.