Table of Contents
FAN 224: Case in Progress — The Man Who Was Criminally Cited for Filming in a Federal Park
Gordon Price is a music store owner and part-time independent filmmaker; he lives and works in Yorktown, Virginia. Last year, Price and a colleague released an independent feature film about a York County stretch of road that has long been the subject of rumors of hauntings and the location of unsolved murders.
The film is entitled It premiered at the in Newport News, Virginia. About 250 people attended the premiere, which received press coverage. Later, it was presented at other venues in Hampton and Yorktown, Virginia. The film also received some local TV news attention.
→ Enter the Police (from the Motion to Dismiss): "In December 2018, two officers of the U.S. Park Service came to Price’s music store and issued a citation for failure to obtain a commercial filming permit pursuant to 36 C.F.R. § 5.5(a). Price asked the officers why his film was treated differently from numerous videos of paranormal activity from the same locations that appear on YouTube or the news interview he gave that appeared on WTKR, and was told the other activities were covered by the First Amendment, and the distinction turned on the commercial nature of his film."
→&Բ;Defendant Contests Citation: Though Mr. Price was originally without counsel, the Magistrate urged him to secure counsel in light of a possible First Amendment claim. After Price obtained counsel, his lawyer filed a motion to dismiss the violation notice, (ECF No. 9), arguing that the statutory provision commanding the Secretary of the Interior to require and establish reasonable fees for such permits, , violates the First Amendment's free speech protections on its face and as applied to the Defendant.
→&Բ;Excerpt from Defendant's Motion to Dismiss: "The statutes do not define what constitutes 'commercial filming activities,' and leave it to various agencies that administer the Act to implement the law through their respective rules and directives. By requiring a special-use permit for certain types of photography, the Act expressly singles out activity protected by the First Amendment for a type of licensing requirement Constitutional concerns were acknowledged as the legislation was being considered, but the bill was adopted anyway.
In implementing the law, the Department of the Interior ('the Department') observed that its purpose was to authorize the government 'to collect a ‘fair return’ for the use of lands for commercial filming and certain still photography activities,' and that it establishes no such requirements for filming or photography deemed 'non-commercial.' Commercial Filming and Similar Projects and Still Photography Activities, , 52089 (2013) ('Commercial Filming and Similar Projects'). It made clear that, under the statutory mandate, '[t]he basis for requiring a permit for commercial filming is the commercial nature of the project,' not potential damage to, or disruption of federal land, and under the law, '[t]here is no basis for an exclusion based on crew size or amount of equipment.'"
→&Բ;The Prosecutor Who Joined in the Motion to Dismiss: "The Government, though disputing Defendant's analysis of § 100905(a)(l)'s constitutionality, also moved to dismiss the violation notice with prejudice. (ECF No. 19.) According to the Government, pursuing the matter further would not be in 'the interests of justice.'"
→ Not So Fast! The Defendant's Response: "This case is now in an unusual posture where both the government and Defendant Gordon M. Price are asking for the same thing: dismissal of the citation for an alleged violation of 36 C.F.R. § 5.5(a) for commercial filming on federal land without a permit.
The government was perfectly content to investigate Mr. Price’s filmmaking activities, send U.S. Park Police to his place of business, issue a citation, compel his appearance in court, and preclude his ability to plead 'no contest.' However, now that Mr. Price has obtained counsel and argued that these actions violate the First Amendment, we have reached an Emily Litella moment, where the government simply says 'never mind.' . . . . For the reasons set forth below, this Court should grant the requested relief of dismissing the citation (as all agree), but should not do so without issuing conclusions of law regarding the government’s system of prior restraint and unconstitutional fees. . . ."
→&Բ;Magistrate's order (09-12-19): "In support of his earlier Motion to Dismiss, Price attested that he desired to continue filming on federal property governed by the challenged regulation but has refrained from doing so.
The Government is hereby ORDERED to reply on or before September 26, 2019, to Defendant's contention that the court has jurisdiction to entertain his constitutional challenges notwithstanding both parties' request that the court dismiss the pending violation notice with prejudice."
→ The case is United States v. Price (D.Ct., E. Dist., VA, Case No. 4:19-po-180).
→&Բ;Magistrate Presiding Over Case: .
→&Բ;Counsel for the Defendant: .
Arizona Supreme Court: Calligraphers Cannot be Compelled to Write Custom Wedding Invitations
This from Dale Carpenter over at :
[T]he Arizona Supreme Court concluded that calligraphers cannot be compelled to personally write custom wedding invitations for marriages to which they object. While there's a lot to be said about future application of precedents like this to anti-discrimination law, I was glad to see the court distinguish cases involving expansive claims to "free speech" rights for blanket refusals to provide floral arrangements and wedding venues. Indeed, under the Arizona opinion, most of the goods and services commonly provided for weddings would not be "speech" (or would at most involve conduct with an expressive component) and therefore would not be constitutionally immunized from anti-discrimination law.
→ Case: (AZ, Sept. 16, 2019)
→ Amicus Brief:
Defense: Espionage Act Charges Violate First Amendment
This from over at the Washington Post:
A former National Security Agency contractor accused of leaking classified information on drone warfare is arguing that his actions are protected under the First Amendment, in a challenge to the Espionage Act that has implications for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
Related
- Floyd Abrams, , Dallas Morning News (Aug. 21, 2019)
$10 Million Defamation Lawsuit Against MSNBC & Rachel Maddow
The from :
A San Diego-based media organization, One America News Network (OAN), has filed a libel lawsuit in the United States District Court for the Southern District of California against MSNBC talk show host Rachel Maddow for saying it “literally is paid Russian propaganda.”
The lawsuit refers to a July 22 show in which Maddow discussed a report published in The Daily Beast that highlighted the fact that Kristian Rouz, a reporter at OAN, also wrote for Sputnik News, a Russian government-owned news outlet.
“In this case, the most obsequiously pro-Trump right-wing news outlet in America really literally is paid Russian propaganda,” she said on the show. “Their on-air U.S. politics reporter is paid by the Russian government to produce propaganda for that government.”
The suit alleges that Maddow’s statements were “utterly and completely false” and “intended to malign and harm OAN.”
“OAN is not paid by the Russian government. In fact, OAN has taken no money outside the Herring family whatsoever. None of OAN’s content comes from the Russian government,” the complaint reads. OAN is owned and operated by Herring Networks, which is solely owned by members of the Herring family.
While OAN admits that Rouz has written for Sputnik, the lawsuit argues that Maddow’s reporting was inaccurate because Rouz was only a freelancer for the Russian news organization, and he was allowed to chose the topics and viewpoints of the articles he wrote for Sputnik News, which were mainly about “various topics in global economics and international finance.”
→ Continued
→ Complaint
Sixth Circuit: Tennessee Billboard Act Ruled Unconstitutional
The case is (6th Cir., Sept. 11, 2019). In an opinion by a Sixth Circuit panel unanimously ruled that the is unconstitutional. Petitioner William Thomas owned a billboard on a vacant lot and posted a sign on it supporting the 2012 U.S. Summer Olympics Team. Tennessee ordered him to remove it because the state had denied him a permit and the sign did not qualify for the exception, given that there were no activities on the lot to which the sign could possibly refer. Thomas sued, claiming that this application of the Billboard Act violated the First Amendment. The Sixth Circuit panel sustained that claim.
In analyzing the issue before the court, Judge Batchelder declared:
Textually, the Billboard Act is a blanket, content-neutral prohibition on any and all signage speech except for speech that satisfies an exception; here, the on-premises exception. In this way, Tennessee favors certain content (i.e., the excepted content) over others, so the Act, “on its face,” discriminates against that other content. See , (2011). The fact that this content-based aspect is in the exception to the general restriction, rather than the restriction itself, does not save it from this analysis.
Later in her opinion, she added:
Tennessee cites language from [] that the law in question there "depend[ed] entirely on the communicative content of the sign," for its argument that Reed means that a law is content-based only if it “depends entirely” on the content of a message. But that language was a factual statement describing the defendant’s municipal code, not part of Reed’s analysis or holding. In any event, the Supreme Court has repeatedly held that laws combining content-based and content-neutral factors are nonetheless content-based.
There is much more in Judge Batchelder's learned opinion that addresses a variety of Reed issues raised by the state in its defense of the Billboard Act.
→Mr. Thomas was represented by and , with amicus support from and , among others.
9th Circuit: Montana’s Robocall Law Violates First Amendment
This from David Hudson at :
Montana’s law prohibiting different types of robocall telemarketing violates the First Amendment, a federal appeals court has ruled.
The appeals court determined that the law was a on speech that was not drafted with sufficient precision to satisfy First Amendment review.
The law prohibits automated telephone calls for the following purposes:
- Offering goods or services for sale;
- Conveying information on goods or services in soliciting sales or purchases;
- Soliciting information;
- Gathering data or statistics;
- Promoting a political campaign or any use related to a political campaign. . . .
[T]he appeals court also determined the law was not . The appeals court determined that the law was impermissibly underinclusive, because it regulated only five different types of robocalls: "By singling out only five topics of robocalling for regulation – including messages related to political campaigns – the Robocall Statute leaves consumers open to an unlimited proliferation of robocalls on other topics."
→ Case: .
Paul Clement Files Cert. Petitions in Two First Amendment Cases
Also Counsel in Second Amendment Case (cert. granted)
The Free Speech Project: Upcoming Event
- Title: Social Media & the First Amendment
- Date: September 23, 2019 @ 7 PM
- Location: Gaston Hall, Georgetown University, Washington, DC
Participants
- Moderator: , Georgetown University
- Panelist: , Knight Institute
- Panelist: , New York Times
- Panelist: , U.S. Naval Academy
- Panelist: , Facebook
- Panelist: , New York Times
Soon-to-be-Released: Norton on Government Speech
- Helen Norton, (Cambridge University Press, Oct. 3, 2019). Abstract:
When we discuss constitutional law, we usually focus on the constitutional rules that apply to what the government does. Far less clear are the constitutional rules that apply to what the government says. When does the speech of this unusually powerful speaker further constitutional values, and when does it instead violate our constitutional rights and liberties? More specifically, when does the government’s expression threaten liberty or equality? And under what circumstances does the Constitution prohibit our government from lying to us?
In The Government’s Speech and the Constitution, Professor Helen Norton investigates the variety and abundance of the government’s speech, from early proclamations and simple pamphlets, to the electronic media of radio and television, and ultimately to today’s digital age. This enables us to understand how the government’s speech has changed the world for better and for worse, and why the government’s speech deserves our attention—and at times our concern.
- Advance Praise
In The Government's Speech and the Constitution, Helen Norton offers the most comprehensive, thoughtful, and insightful analysis of the constitutionality of government speech ever written. This expansive conception of government speech has been largely unexplored in our scholarly literature, and Norton unpacks these complex issues in an exceptionally original and illuminating manner.
—Geoffrey R. Stone, Edward H. Levi Distinguished Professor of Law, The University of Chicago
A thoughtful, nuanced, and accessible book on a complex and important topic. Norton takes her readers on a rich and rewarding tour of the forms that government speech can take, of the often murky and contested line between government speech and private speech, and of the wide range of constitutional doctrines that shape the legal parameters of government speech.
—Heidi Kitrosser, Robins Kaplan Professor of Law, University of Minnesota Law School
Maryland Law Review Symposium
- by Robert Chesney & Danielle Keats Citron
- by Mary Anne Franks & Ari Ezra Waldman
- by Thomas E. Kadri
- by Jessica Silbey & Woodrow Hartzog
New "Clear & Present Danger" Podcast
When Paris became the capital of the High-Enlightenment around the mid-eighteenth century, the Old Regime monarchy created a Maginot Line of overlapping pre- and post-publication censorship. This system was intended to ensure that good books were encouraged and privileged while bad books that attacked the monarchy and Catholic orthodoxy or morals were kept out of circulation or suppressed.
"So to Speak": Two New Podcasts
1: Kevin Williamson’s ‘The Smallest Minority’
In this episode of So to Speak: The Free Speech Podcast, journalist joins us to discuss his new book, “.” Williamson is the roving correspondent for National Review and co-host of the podcast .
2: 'Coddling' One Year Later
One year ago this week, "" was published.
On [this] episode of So to Speak: The Free Speech Podcast, we sit down with ݮƵAPP President & CEO Greg Lukianoff, who co-authored the book with Jonathan Haidt, to reflect on what’s changed — or hasn’t changed — in the intervening year.
In the News & Opinions
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- , WBAY TV (Sept. 16, 2019)
- , NRA-ILA (Sept. 15, 2019)
- Justin Chan, , AOL (Sept. 14,2019)
- Aaron Mackey, , EFF (Sept. 13, 2019)
- Paul Detrick, , Reason.com (Sept. 11, 2019)
2019–2020 Term: Free Expression & Related Cases
Pending Petitions
Pending Petitions: Free Speech Related
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