danielahorwitz

About Daniel Horwitz

Daniel A. Horwitz is a graduate of Cornell University and Vanderbilt Law School. He has been recognized by the American Bar Association as one of the top 40 young lawyers in the United States, and the Nashville Post has repeatedly recognized him as one of the “Best of the Best” lawyers in Nashville. Horwitz law's practice consists primarily of First Amendment law and speech defense, appellate litigation, constitutional, post-conviction and innocence litigation, campaign finance and election law, criminal record expungement, and personal injury representation of victims of crime. If you would like to purchase a consultation from Horwitz, you can do so here.

Smyrna Man Sued Over Chicken Suit Protest Prevails Against Auto Mechanic’s Defamation Lawsuit

A “Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation” (a SLAPP-suit) filed by Jonathan Gilbert—a Smyrna auto mechanic—against Horwitz Law, PLLC client Daylan Langford is now dismissed with prejudice under the Tennessee Public Participation Act, the Circuit Court for Rutherford County, Tennessee has ruled.  The court also

Tennessee Supreme Court Grants Review of the Nashville Banner’s Application to Appeal Trial Court Order Refusing to Unseal Judicial Incompetency Records

The Tennessee Supreme Court will hear the Nashville Banner’s appeal seeking to unseal judicial records that may shed light on claims that Davidson County Criminal Court Judge Cheryl Blackburn—who suffered a stroke in 2021—is incompetent.  The Tennessee Supreme Court’s order granting the Nashville Banner’s

By |2024-11-24T19:34:26-06:00November 22nd, 2024|Uncategorized|

Legal Remedies Available to Victims of “Revenge Porn” and Other Non-Consensual Pornography in Tennessee

By Daniel A. Horwitz: I.  Introduction[1] In 2016, Tennessee enacted a new law criminalizing the “unlawful exposure” of certain sexually explicit, private images: a form of sexual abuse commonly known as “revenge porn.”[2]  Tennessee’s “unlawful exposure” law supplemented a pre-existing criminal statute that prohibited

By |2024-11-19T12:11:49-06:00November 14th, 2024|Daniel Horwitz, Litigation, Whitepapers|

Intermediate Scrutiny for October 25, 2024

October 12–October 25, 2024 Realtor files malicious prosecution lawsuit against Defendant who filed an ethics complaint against Realtor, which the Tennessee Real Estate Commission resolved as: “CLOSED/NO ACTION.” Because filing an ethics complaint is presumptively protected petitioning activity, Defendant petitions to dismiss Realtor’s lawsuit

By |2024-11-04T00:48:44-06:00October 25th, 2024|Intermediate Scrutiny|
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