Follow Us

Google appears to take down map showing SCOTUS justice street addresses

Activist group Ruth Sent Us is planning a "walk by" protest to homes of the Supreme Court's six conservative-leaning justices.

Published: May 6, 2022 7:59pm

Updated: May 6, 2022 8:35pm

Google has removed a map displaying the home addresses of U.S. Supreme Court justices which an activist group posted in preparation for a protest march over the court's expected overturn of the landmark abortion precedent Roe v. Wade.

Activist group Ruth Sent Us, which supports the preservation of abortion rights, is planning a "walk by" protest to homes of the Supreme Court's six conservative-leaning justices, three of whom reside in Maryland and three in Virginia.

In the first major leak from the Supreme Court, Politico published a draft majority opinion from Justice Samuel Alito that suggested the court would vote to overturn the landmark decision.

On their website, Ruth Sent Us displayed a map showing the approximate addresses of the justices' homes. As of 8 p.m. EST on Friday, the map is no longer available. Instead, a message from Google appears, stating "This map is no longer available due to a violation of our Terms of Service and/or policies."

Image
Google displays a takedown message
Google displays a takedown message
Screenshot/Ruth Sent Us/Just the News

Mediaite put the takedown at 5 p.m. EST and highlighted earlier controversies surrounding the map. Ruth Sent Us defended the map saying it did not post exact addresses. The outlet asserted, however, that clicking on a directions icon produced two exact street addresses, the veracity of which the outlet did not confirm.

Ruth Sent Us has not commented on the map's takedown as of publication.

The Facts Inside Our Reporter's Notebook

Links

Other Media

    Image
    Google displays a takedown message
    Google displays a takedown message
    Screenshot/Ruth Sent Us/Just the News

Just the News Spotlight