The weight of the state is about to fall on Andrew Cooperrider

We have previously noted the defiance of Andrew Cooperrider to Governor Andy Beshear’s (D-KY) executive order closing all indoor dining. The initial Lexington Herald-Leader article noted that someone called the cops, but the Lexington Police Department was having nothing to do with the situation, Brenna Angel, the LPD spokeswoman, said:

The police department was contacted regarding the situation between Brewed and the Health Department, however, this involved a civil/regulatory matter and not something police could take action on.

Well, the officious little pricks at the Lexington-Fayette County Health Department aren’t going to put up with that!

Lexington health department sues coffee shop for not following Beshear’s orders

By Jeremy Chisenhall | November 27, 2020 | 3:26 PM EST

The Lexington-Fayette County Health Department has filed a lawsuit against the owner of Brewed, a coffee shop that refused to follow Gov. Andy Beshear’s order to stop indoor dining.

The lawsuit calls for a temporary injunction or a temporary restraining order to force the coffee shop to close its indoor dining and drinking options.

Brewed was ordered to shut down Tuesday after health department inspectors found customers dining inside. The shop also allowed patrons to violate the mask mandate, according to the health department. Owner Andrew Cooperrider repeatedly refused to comply.

Several paragraphs further down comes the reasoning:

In its motion for an injunction, the Lexington health department asked a judge to rule that police can enforce the terms of the order, according to court records. Police were called to the shop when Cooperrider refused to close Tuesday, but the issue was considered a civil or regulatory matter, and it wasn’t something the police could take action on.

The case is scheduled for a court hearing Monday, according to court records. Fayette Circuit Judge Thomas Travis will hear the case, according to court records.

Governor Beshear delegated to the state and local health departments the authority to enforce his executive orders. I cannot read his mind, but I suspect it has something to do with a probably well-founded belief that the Commonwealth’s 120 elected county sheriffs would have exactly zero interest in enforcing such dictates.

But, with men with guns and the power to arrest someone out of the picture, men like Mr Cooperrider could successfully resist the orders. Now, the health department is turning to the men with guns.

Most law enforcement in the Commonwealth, from county sheriffs to the small town police departments, would resist such, but Lexington is the commonwealth’s second largest city, and though not wildly left wing like Portland or Philadelphia, is nevertheless run by Democrats; if Judge Travis rules against Mr Cooperrider, the LPD will enforce the ruling.

I did say that this might not work out well for him.

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