"THREATENING" SPEECH: THE THIN LINE BETWEEN IMPLICIT THREATS, SOLICITATION, AND ADVOCACY OF CRIME
Marc Rohr -
13 Rutgers J.L. & Pub. Pol'y 150 (Fall 2015)
Consider the following hypothetical Internet postings: (1) "I'm going to kill you, Judge X!" (2) "You deserve to die, Judge X! You'd better be careful--I know where to find you!" (3) "Judge X should be shot!" (4) "I urge the next patriot who has the chance to shoot and kill Judge X, without further delay!" (5) "Judge X deserves to die. Here are his home and office addresses." (6) "I will pay $ 10,000 to anyone who takes action leading to the assassination of Judge X."
...
hould there be any difference in how, constitutionally, these statements are treated? I argue, in this article, that there should not be. That argument requires, inter alia, a reconsideration of the Brandenburg test, which--at least in theory--protects some speech that is just as "threatening" to its target as a "true threat." The argument for treating all "threatening" speech consistently will, in addition, have the beneficial effect of denying First Amendment protection to speech such as statement (5), supra, without having to distort the meaning of language by labeling such a statement as an implied "threat."
http://www.rutgerspolicyjournal.org/sit ... 20Rohr.pdf
ISLAMIC TERRORISM: THE LEGAL IMPACT ON THE FREEDOM OF RELIGION IN THE UNITED STATES AND EUROPE
Antonios Kouroutakis - 34 B.U. Int'l L.J. 113 (Spring 2016)
Abstract:
This Article aims to compare the impact of Islamic terrorism after the September 11 attacks on the approaches of the United States and Europe to their laws governing freedom of religion - in particular, focusing on the rights of Muslims in these regions. Looking to a number of post-September 11 cases in the U.S. federal and state courts and the European Court of Human Rights, this Article argues that despite the limitations on Muslims' religious freedoms and the demonstrated favoritism towards existing religious majorities, the post-September 11 cases in the U.S. and in Europe have been largely consistent with the principles and holdings of pre-September 11 precedents. The consistent treatment of Muslims' religious rights post-September 11 may be attributed to a number of factors: the nature of the limitations, namely in exemption cases; the courts' renewed belief that a person's religion does not reflect disloyalty to the country in discrimination cases; the courts' recognition of its self-restraining role in policymaking regarding antiterrorism; or the European doctrine of the "margin of appreciation." Nevertheless, the antiterrorism approaches of the U.S. and EU seem to be more manifest in the policies governing immigration and national security. With the rise of Islamic terrorism, particularly with Al Qaeda and the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria ("ISIS"), security issues have become a priority for the U.S. and EU. The extent to which such antiterrorism policies have been ultra vires and have disproportionally affected Muslim citizens and immigrants is still under scrutiny.
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm? ... id=2608898
BALANCING FREE SPEECH
Alexander Tsesis - 96 B.U.L. Rev. 1 (Jan. 2016)
Abstract:
This article develops a theory for balancing free speech against other express and implied constitutional, statutory, and doctrinal values. It posits that free speech considerations should be connected to the underlying purpose of constitutional governance. When deciding difficult cases involving competing rights, judges should examine (1) whether unencumbered expression is likely to cause constitutional, statutory, or common law harms; (2) whether the restricted expression has been historically or traditionally protected; (3) whether a government policy designed to benefit the general welfare weighs in favor of the regulation; (4) the fit between the disputed speech regulation and the public end; and (5) whether some less restrictive alternative exists for achieving it.
Recent Roberts Court free speech jurisprudence has gone in the opposite direction, becoming increasingly formalistic. Cases dealing with violent video games, cruelty to animals, aggregation of campaign financing, and lies about military achievements have applied a categorical approach that is inadequately contextual. The recently formalized categorical test undervalues important normative considerations and a variety of free speech doctrines.
On the normative side, free speech is not a separate value but one that fits within a sophisticated structure of constitutional law. After developing an ethical theory about the value of speech to representative democracy and discussing it in the context of several balancing doctrines, this article applies the framework to campaign financing legislation and copyright doctrine.
http://www.bu.edu/bulawreview/files/2016/03/TSESIS.pdf
The State of Religious Liberty in Courts
6/22/16 - Douglas Laycock - Cato Institute
http://www.cato.org/multimedia/cato-dai ... rty-courts
THE STRUCTURE OF MODERN FREE SPEECH DOCTRINE: STRICT SCRUTINY, INTERMEDIATE REVIEW, AND "REASONABLENESS" BALANCING
R. Randall Kelso - 8 Elon L. Rev. 291 (2016)
Abstract:
The structure of modern First Amendment free speech doctrine has evolved consistent with the more formalized structure of doctrine under modern Equal Protection and Due Process review. This involves more explicit use of strict scrutiny, intermediate review, “reasonableness” balancing, and minimum rationality review. As discussed in Part II of this article, for regulations of free speech in a public forum or on individual private property, the Court uses strict scrutiny for content-based regulations and intermediate review for content-neutral regulations. As discussed in Part III, for regulations of speech in a government-owned non-public forum, or speech supported by government grants or subsidies, the Court uses strict scrutiny for viewpoint discrimination, and “reasonableness” balancing for subject-matter and content-neutral regulations.
In some cases, certain kinds of speech do not trigger free speech protection at all. As discussed in Part IV, this includes cases of pure government speech or regulations of alleged symbolic speech that is viewed by the Court as involving conduct only. Other kinds of speech, like advocacy of illegal conduct, fighting words, or obscenity, get limited free speech protection: strict scrutiny for viewpoint discrimination, but otherwise no further free speech review, as discussed in Part V. When free speech principles do not apply, there is only then other kinds of constitutional review, such as minimum rationality review under the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses for social or economic regulations not involving fundamental rights.
In addition to these categories of speech, content-based regulations of certain kind of speech in a public forum trigger less than normal strict scrutiny review. As discussed in Part VI, this can involve regulations of commercial speech, speech by government employees on matters of public concern, or alleged tortious speech, such as defamation or invasion of privacy, among others. Special First Amendment free speech doctrines for cases of prior restraints, injunctions, vagueness, substantial overbreadth, and other such matters are discussed in Part VII.
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm? ... id=2668321
STATE OF THE FIRST AMENDMENT
The State of the First Amendment survey, conducted by the Newseum Institute’s First Amendment Center, tests Americans’ knowledge of their core freedoms and samples their opinions on First Amendment issues of the day.
The results of this year’s survey show most Americans favor free speech, even over speech that offends, and support religious liberty, even in the face of terrorism. However, 39 percent of Americans could not name a single First Amendment freedom: religion, speech, press, assembly or petition.
The annual survey, which began in 1997 and this year was conducted in late May, showed that 86 percent of those responding in the national survey favored “protecting speech,” while just 10 percent favored limits aimed at “protecting people from hearing things that offend them.”
There also was strong support for free expression on college campuses: 57 percent said college students should be able to speak freely. The results dropped to 35 percent for students in high school.
Also, a follow-up survey done after the June 12 mass shooting in Orlando showed support for First Amendment protection for all religious faiths, regardless of how extreme or fringe the survey respondents might consider the beliefs of those faiths, actually increased, despite anti-Muslim rhetoric and reports of an ISIS connection that followed the worst mass shooting in U.S. history.
http://www.newseuminstitute.org/first-a ... amendment/
Nice to see that despite apparently widespread ignorance of what the first amendment protects, the creeping anti-speech movement doesn't seem to be taking hold just yet.