Keep your eyes on this incredible couple: (bold and bright) and (reserved and discerning). You can expect impressive appellate and large-scale reform work to come from them in the years ahead . . . and expect writings on the scholarly side as well. Seriously!
In their first appellate filing together, the Hopwoods recently submitted a merit brief in the Fourth Circuit on behalf of the appellee in (4th Cir., no: 19-1457). Plaintiff-appellee Beattie Butler is a former assistant public defender, whose employment was terminated after she filed a grievance concerning prosecutorial misconduct.
Facts as Recounted in Appellee's Brief
Prof. Shon Hopwood
Former Assistant Public Defender, Plaintiff Beattie Butler, witnessed serious misconduct on the part of local prosecutors. These instances of prosecutorial misconduct were so egregious that they led to extraordinary judicial remedies in several cases, such as the suppression of evidence, a mistrial, and a directed verdict. As a member of the state bar, Butler felt ethically compelled to report the misconduct. So he prepared a grievance that he planned to file with the South Carolina Judicial Office of Disciplinary Counsel (âODCâ). But Defendant D. Ashley Pennington, who was the Chief Public Defender and Butlerâs boss, forbade Butler from filing the grievance. When Pennington later discovered that Butler had posted about some of the prosecutorial misconduct on a criminal defense lawyersâ listserv (a sort of online discussion board), he further restrained Butlerâs speech, commanding Butler that he could not speak about any prosecutorial misconduct with the media or on âthe list serve [sic], informal chats with others in and out of the office and in seminars.â
To avoid inevitable retaliation for reporting the misconduct, Butler retained Desa Ballard, a lawyer specializing in legal ethics, to advise him in crafting a grievance. Ballard independently investigated Butlerâs allegations, found them to be troubling, and then filed the complaint with the ODC on her own behalf. The local media covered the filing of Ballardâs grievance and wrote stories about her claims of prosecutorial misconduct.
Butlerâs fears of retaliation were justified. After learning that Ballard had filed the grievance, Pennington terminated Butlerâs employment. In the termination letter, Pennington stated that he fired Butler because Ballard had filed a grievance and that, through the grievance, Butler spoke to the media without Penningtonâs prior approval, both in violation of Penningtonâs prior orders. The termination letter also referenced Butlerâs speech about prosecutorial misconduct to colleagues on a criminal defense lawyersâ listserv.
Ann Marie Hopwood
Appellee's First Amendment Arguments
C. The District Court did not err in finding that Butler presented sufficient evidence of First Amendment prior restraint and retaliation violations
1. There was sufficient proof that Butlerâs speech was about serious law enforcement misconduct and thus was of great public concern.
2. There was sufficient proof that Butlerâs speech had no disruptive impact on the PDâs Office.
3. Butlerâs speech about serious law enforcement misconduct outweighed any alleged disruption.
D. The District Court did not err in rejecting Penningtonâs argument that Butlerâs allegation of termination due to his disability negates his allegation that he was terminated due to speech.
II. Pennington Is Not Entitled to Qualified Immunity in a Case Where the Speech Involved Serious Law Enforcement Misconduct and Little to No Disruption.
A. This Courtâs cases put Pennington on notice that prior restraints require a greater level of disruption before the speech is unprotected.
B. This Courtâs cases put Pennington on notice that speech about serious law enforcement misconduct requires a greater level of disruption before Pennington could terminate Butler for his speech.
C. That this case arises in the context of a public defenderâs office rather than a police department supports the view that Pennington was on notice that the speech here was protected.
â Read the .
â Full disclosure: Shon Hopwood is a former student of mine.
Clement Files Yet Another Cert. Petition in First Amendment Case This Term
continues to make his First Amendment presence known to those who monitor the Supreme Court's cert. pool. His latest filing came recently in . The two issues in the case are:
1. Whether the TCPA's [] prohibition on calls made using an ATDS [automatic telephone dialing system] is an unconstitutional restriction of speech, and if so whether the proper remedy is to broaden the prohibition to abridge more speech.
2. Whether the definition of ATDS in the TCPA encompasses any device that can âstoreâ and âautomatically dialâ telephone numbers, even if the device does not âus[e] a random or sequential number generator.â
Paul Clement
Facts of the Case as Recounted by Ninth Circuit Judge M. Margaret McKeown:
Almost thirty years ago, in the age of fax machines and dial-up internet, Congress took aim at unsolicited robocalls by enacting the Telephone Consumer Protection Act of 1991 (âTCPAâ), 47 U.S.C. § 227. In the decades since, the TCPA has weathered the digital revolution with few amendments. With important exceptions, the TCPA forbids calls placed using an automated telephone dialing system (âATDSâ), commonly referred to as an autodialer.
Noah Duguid claims that Facebook used an ATDS to alert users, as a security precaution, when their account was accessed from an unrecognized device or browser. For unknown reasons, Duguid received the messages despite not being a Facebook customer or user and never consenting to such alerts. His repeated attempts to terminate the alerts were unsuccessful.
Facebook challenges the adequacy of Duguidâs TCPA allegations and, alternatively, claims that the statute violates the First Amendment. We conclude that Duguidâs allegations are sufficient to withstand Facebookâs motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6).
As to the constitutional question, we join the Fourth Circuit and hold that a 2015 amendment to the TCPA, which excepts calls âmade solely to collect a debt owed to or guaranteed by the United States,â is content-based and incompatible with the First Amendment. 923 F.3d 159 (4th Cir. 2019). But rather than toss out the entire TCPAâa longstanding and otherwise constitutional guardian of consumer privacyâwe sever the newly appended âdebt-collection exceptionâ as an unconstitutional restriction on speech.
â (9th Cir., 2019)
The other First Amendment free expression cases Clement has filed this term in the high court are:
(cable operator and First Amendment right to include racial considerations in making editorial determinations)
(religious advertisements)
(campaign finance)
Compelled Subsidy (Seattle's âDemocracy Voucherâ) Challenged in Supreme Court
The case is . The issues raised in the cert. petition to the Supreme Court are:
1. Whether a levy that forces property owners to fund other individualsâ campaign donations implicates the First Amendmentâs compelled-subsidy doctrine.
2. Whether a compelled subsidy of speech should be examined under rational basis review, as the decision below concluded, or whether a higher standard of review is appropriate.
âCounsel of Record: .
â Read the .
Divided Eighth Circuit Strikes Down Missouriâs Lobbying Requirements
Recently a badly divided Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit (sitting en banc, vote: 6-5) handed down its ruling in (2019, no. 17-2654). The following statement of facts is from the majority opinion by Circuit Judge David Stras:
Judge David Stras
Calzone often acts through a nonprofit corporation called Missouri First, Inc. The parties agree that this organization is effectively his alter ego: he is its incorporator, sole officer, president, director, and registered agent. According to Missouri Firstâs charter, it seeks to âeducat[e] and mobiliz[e] the publicâ about matters of civic importance and support various candidates and initiatives. Like Calzone himself, Missouri First spends and receives no money in pursuit of these goals.
According to Missouri, Calzoneâs ties to Missouri First make him a âlegislative lobbyist.â Mo. Rev. Stat. § 105.470(5). As relevant here, this label applies to âany natural person who acts for the purpose of attempting to influenceâ legislative activities and has been âdesignated to act as a lobbyist by any . . . nonprofit corporation, association[,] or other entity.â Id. § 105.470(5)(c). All lobbyists must navigate a maze of legal requirements. . . .
Noncompliance carries severe penalties. In addition to hefty fines, violators face prison timeâup to four years for repeat offenders. See id. §§ 105.473, 105.478, 558.002.1, 558.011.1(5), (7). Anyone can initiate an investigation simply by filing a complaint with the Missouri Ethics Commission. See id. §§ 105.472, 105.966. Calzone has faced two official complaints, including one that resulted in a formal inquiry.Convinced that these restrictions violate his First Amendment free speech and petition rights, Calzone sought a permanent injunction to prevent members of the Missouri Ethics Commission from âenforcing [the law] against [him].â In support of his request for individual injunctive relief, Calzoneâs focus has been on why the restrictions are unconstitutional in light of his particular method of advocacy. He has stressed, for example, that he âdoes not accept money for his activism, nor does he spend money on legislators and legislative staff when he communicates with them about his public policy beliefs.â Suggestions in Support of Plaintiffâs Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order and Preliminary Injunctive Relief at 11.
Judge Rules That the First Amendment Does Not Shield Newspapermen from Prosecution for Former Ownership of Backpage.com
Writing in , Stephen Lemons reported that:
The trial judge in the Lacey and Larkin case has ruled that the First Amendment does not shield the veteran newspapermen from prosecution for their former ownership of Backpage.com."
In a 22-page order filed in federal court in Phoenix on October 24, U.S. District Court Judge Susan Brnovich The judge found that, given the governmentâs charges, the First Amendmentâs guarantee of freedom of speech and freedom of the press do not apply to the ex-owners of the erstwhile online listings Goliath, Backpage.com.Filed earlier this year by attorneys with the law firm of Davis Wright Tremaine (DWT), argues that the millions of adult ads posted on Backpage before it was seized by the FBI in April 2018 were presumptively protected by the First Amendment.
The DWT motion claims the government is making impermissible assumptions of illegality based on vague language in those ads. Also, prosecutors are pursuing a ânovel theory of vicarious liability,â in an attempt to hold the siteâs former owners, veteran newspapermen Michael Lacey and Jim Larkin, and four co-defendants associated with the site, criminally responsible for content posted by third-party users.
However, Brnovich rejected the DWT motion in toto, siding with the government as prosecutors and defense attorneys continue to engage in legal skirmishes leading up to a trial currently scheduled to begin May 5, 2020.
David Boies Sues Alan Dershowitz for Defamation
Over at First Amendment Watch they are that:
On November 7th, famed attorney David Boies filed a defamation suit against Alan Dershowitz, another high-profile lawyer, in New York State Supreme Court.
According to the complaint, Dershowitz, who has been accused by two women of sexually abusing them when they were underage, has publicly and falsely disparaged Boies in the media on nine separate occasions. âIn an effort to distract attention from his own misconduct, Defendant has engaged in a campaign to vilify each of the lawyers who have represented his victims, one of which is Plaintiff,â reads the complaint.
Boies represented Virginia Guiffre (whose maiden name is Roberts) who alleged in a 2014 suit that Jeffrey Epstein âtraffickedâ her to Dershowitz for sex. Dershowitz, who denies the allegations, said in a November 28, 2018 article in the Miami Herald, "'The story was 100 percent categorically made up,â he said, adding that Roberts and her attorneys fabricated the assertion in order to get money from other powerful, wealthy people she alleges she had sex with."
In a December 18, 2018 piece in the New York Daily News, Dershowitz accused Boies of causing another woman, Sarah Ransome, to falsely accuse Dershowitz of sexual assault. "The villain here is David Boies, who is exploiting a crazy woman in order to get revenge against me," Dershowitz told the newspaper.
And on December 19, 2018 in a letter to the editor of the Daily News, Dershowitz wrote that âAttorney David Boies threatened that unless I withdrew a bar complaint I had filed against him for falsely accusing me of sexual misconduct, he would find another woman to accuse me of similar misconduct.â Adding that Boies âhas now found an unbalanced womanâ who "only began to accuse me after meeting Boies."
Boies, who says in the complaint that "defamation lawsuits are ordinarily an undesirable way to respond to public criticism," claims that he has no reasonable alternative, and Dershowitz "essentially challenged" him to sue for defamation.
â Complaint
Other Articles About Recent Defamation Cases
, First Amendment Watch (Nov. 11, 2019)
First Amendment Watch (Nov. 5, 2019)
Ruthann Robson, , Constitutional Law Prof Blog (Nov. 4, 2019)
Abrams at Duke Law: Tradeoffs Americans Make to Protect Freedom of Expression
This from (video link ):
Floyd Abrams, one of the nationâs preeminent advocates of free speech, told Duke Law students on Oct. 22 that his storied career developed through the aligning of interest and opportunity. He urged them to defend the First Amendment rights of those with whom they disagree.
Abrams discussed the state of free speech on campuses, differences between the kinds of speech tolerated in the United States and in other democracies, and other trends concerning free expression in his lunchtime conversation with First Amendment Clinic Supervising Attorney â16. Prior to joining the Duke Law faculty, Ligon worked with Abrams in the litigation practice group at Cahill Gordon & Reindel in New York City, where he has practiced for 56 years and now is senior counsel. . . .
Abrams recalled starting his career at a time of âgreat antipathy toward the press,â when reporters were being subpoenaed to reveal their sources.
âJournalists were telling me they couldnât do their job if they couldnât, at least in certain circumstances, promise confidentiality and mean it,â he said.
âBy a process of being interested in the subject and the fortuity of being around at a time when First Amendment law started really developing in the late 1960s and early 1970s, thatâs what I came to do and be associated with. It was my good fortune that I was around at the right time.â . . .
âThe First Amendment is nothing unless it applies to everybody â it canât be only applicable to or usable by people with one set of political views or political engagement,â Abrams said. âRegardless of its political and often even social impact, it has to be applied with equal vigor.â
Abrams noted that the United States tolerates a far broader range of speech than Canada and most countries in Western Europe. He cited as an example Snyder v. Phelps, the 2011 case in which the Supreme Court ruled 8-1 that even offensive and outrageous speech by members of the Westboro Baptist Church outside a funeral for a soldier could not be the basis for a tort liability claim. Such speech would constitute a crime in many other democracies, he said.
âThe theme of the First Amendment as it has been applied through the years in the courts is that weâre ready to take, and to inflict, a lot of pain for the â hopefully â greater good of living in a freer society and avoiding the risks of governmental involvement in what people say, what theyâre allowed to say, and the like,â Abrams said.
"Eight members of the Court signed on to the proposition that outrageous, mean-spirited, harmful speech such as what was involved there was protected by the First Amendment because, for the most part, we just donât trust the government to get involved in speech, thought, religious, political, et cetera positions and thatâs the way we live.â
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Invite others to take the .
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Acknowledge threats, show their support, highlight great reporting.
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Forthcoming Book on Dissent
Julia Rose Kraut Fellow, "" (Harvard U. Press, July 2020). Abstract:
In this first comprehensive overview of the intersection of immigration law and the First Amendment, a lawyer and historian traces ideological exclusion and deportation in the United States from the Alien Friends Act of 1798 to the evolving policies of the Trump administration.
Beginning with the Alien Friends Act of 1798, the United States passed laws in the name of national security to bar or expel foreigners based on their beliefs and associationsâalthough these laws sometimes conflict with First Amendment protections of freedom of speech and association or contradict Americaâs self-image as a nation of immigrants. The government has continually used ideological exclusions and deportations of noncitizens to suppress dissent and radicalism throughout the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, from the War on Anarchy to the Cold War to the War on Terror.
In Threat of Dissentâthe first social, political, and legal history of ideological exclusion and deportation in the United StatesâJulia Rose Kraut delves into the intricacies of major court decisions and legislation without losing sight of the people involved. We follow the cases of immigrants and foreign-born visitors, including activists, scholars, and artists such as Emma Goldman, Ernest Mandel, Carlos Fuentes, Charlie Chaplin, and John Lennon. Kraut also highlights lawyers, including Clarence Darrow and Carol Weiss King, as well as organizations, like the ACLU and PEN America, who challenged the constitutionality of ideological exclusions and deportations under the First Amendment. The Supreme Court, however, frequently interpreted restrictions under immigration law and upheld the governmentâs authority.
By reminding us of the legal vulnerability foreigners face on the basis of their beliefs, expressions, and associations, Kraut calls our attention to the ways that ideological exclusion and deportation reflect fears of subversion and serve as tools of political repression in the United States.
Collins & Skover's Robotica to be published in Kazakhstan
This news just in (yes, it's true!): (2018) is to be translated and published in the Republic of Kazakhstan.
In response to this news, Professor stated: "It is mind-boggling, but very intriguing, that the former Soviet socialist state is interested in American free speech law and theory."
One of our earlier works, (2013 & 2018), was previously translated and published in the Czech Republic.
What's next? Publication in the Principality of Liechtenstein? Stay tuned!
Forthcoming Scholarly Articles on Campaign Finance Law & Reforms
Eugene D. Mazo, , Pepperdine Law Review (forthcoming 2019)
Lori Ringhand,, Ohio State Law Journal (forthcoming 2019)
Two New Scholarly Articles
Katherine Shaw, , Cornell Law Review (2019)
Kathrine Gutierrez, , UCLA Law Review (In Discourse, 2019)
Book Review Essay: Healy Reviews Chemerinsky & Gillman Book on Campus Speech
Thomas Healy, , Michigan Law Review (2019) (book review of "Free Speech on Campus" by Erwin Chemerinsky & Howard Gillman)
Robert Kerr on Abrams Anniversary
Robert Kerr, , Tulsa World (Nov. 10, 2019)
2019â2020 SCOTUS Term: Free Expression & Related Cases
Pending Petitions
Pending Petitions: Free Speech Related
(motion to file cert. petition with sealed filing )
ĂÛÖÏăÌÒâs summer interns discovered that certainty isnât just a matter of math or metaphysics, but a test of humility â and one that cuts to the core of free speech.