- Is sleeping in the park speech? Maybe, but Court treats this as TPM regulation
- Court upholds the regulation, TPM Analysis:
- Law must be content-neutral
- Same as saying must be aimed at “conduct” component from O’Brien
- If not content neutral → Strict Scrutiny applies
- Here, was content-neutral b/c applied no matter why people were wanting to sleep in the park → universally applied
- Time: at night
- Place: at the park
- Manner: Sleeping
- Narrowly tailored to further a substantial government interest
- And leaves open ample alternative channels for communication
Other TPM Example Cases
- Kovacs (sound trucks)
- Banned trucks with loud sound ads on them at night in certain neighborhoods. → Court upheld restriction bc applied to ALL sound trucks
- Heffron (pamphlets v booth at state fair);
- Minnesota state fair case. Man wanted to pass out pamphlets at fair. Fair had regulation on specific area within fair where pamphlets could be passed out. → Court held law was constitutional regulation on place
- Grayned (anti-noise law);
- Frisby (residential picketing);
- Ward (rock concert);
- Hill (abortion picketing);
- but see Gilleo (striking down ban on most yard signs)
Secondary Effects (Type of TPM Restriction)
- Renton v. Playtime Theaters: law banned porn theatres from being within certain distance of any residential zone, school, church, etc.
- Is law content based or neutral?
- Ordinance only applies to certain type of content, but purpose of ordinance is not about restraining content itself (communicative effect)
- Certain effects come with the location of these theatres
- Property values in these residential zones plummet, safety threats for having perverts near schools
- Thus, law IS content based on its face, but is aimed at secondary effects of the speech (content neutral in its purpose) → apply intermediate scrutiny (ONE EXCEPTION TO GENERAL RULE THAT CONTENT BASED LAWS TRIGGER STRICT SCRUTINY)
- gov. Int. in protecting property values and school kids etc.
- Secondary effects here are significant
- (aimed at secondary effects, not speech itself)
- Ask- is justification for the restriction unrelated to the communicative impact of the speech?
- still allows for reasonable alternative avenues of communication
- Even though only 5% of city was left available here!!!!
Summary of Content Based vs. Content Neutral Content-based Restrictions Summary
- Core axiom: Government may not regulate, punish, or discriminate against speech because of its content
- Content-based restrictions trigger strict scrutiny (w/ few exceptions):
- Johnson: expressive conduct, but regulation aimed at speech component
- Police Dep’t of Chicago v. Mosely: law made exception based on content (p. 885)
- Reed v. Town of Gilbert: content-based outdoor sign law— reconcile with Renton??
- Content-based that doesn’t trigger SS (Exceptions)
- Content-based categories of unprotected speech (but not VP)
- Content-based regulations aimed at “secondary effects” of speech
- Content-based regulations based on speaker identity or subject matter (not viewpoint) in limited public forums
- Content-based regulations on commercial speech
- Types of content-based restrictions:
- subject matter
- viewpoint
Content-neutral Restrictions Summary
- Content-neutral regulations trigger intermediate scrutiny:
- Regulation on conduct component of expressive conduct —O’Brien
- Content-neutral time, place, manner restrictions—Clark and cases/examples
- Content-based regulations that are aimed at secondary effects of speech (not primary communicative effects)— Renton ➡ Law was content-based on its face, BUT content neutral in its purpose
Government Regulations on Certain Types of Speech Protected or Not Protected Cont.
Speech that Incites Violence or Illegal Action
- Doctrinal development goes on for awhile, not recording that bs on the powerpoint
- Brandenburg v. Ohio: Klan member gets on TV to announce a rally, says “if these things don’t change in this country we’ll be violent”. Convicted under statute barring “advertising sabotage, violence, or unlawful methods of terrorism”
- Court develops modern standard, incitement test: Government may prohibit/punish advocacy that is directed to inciting / producing imminent lawless action AND is likely to produce such action.
- Since this test was not met, speech is protected and goes under S.S.
- “Imminent” is key word
- This is why D gets off, rally talked about on TV wasn’t for months and wasn’t indicating the march would be violent
- Ie- Wallace says Government needs to be overturned →protected speech
- Wallace says same but then says to go home and get guns, we’re about to storm into the Capitol in Raleigh → sufficiently imminent (just might fail on likely to incite part)
- “Likely to incite” ie- protects crazy person passing out pamphlets that nobody would take seriously
- Words have to actually be directed towards inciting or producing such lawless action
- Holder v. Humanitarian Law Project: upheld law barring supporting terrorism groups under this theory
- Based on strong government interest in combatting terrorism
- Statute was content based but still overcame strict scrutiny
True Threats vs. Hate Speech
- R.A.V. v. St. Paul: D burns cross in black people front yard, convicted under ordinance that outlawed racist conduct that reasonably leads to anger, alarm, or resentment of others (fighting words)
- Thus, ordinance punished communicative act, even though category unprotected speech → viewpoint content based
- Law banned racist fighting words but not other types
- Can’t punish some fighting words but not others b/c of viewpoint
- No Gov. int. b/c compelling interest could have been achieved without viewpoint distinctions (no government interest in viewpoint discrimination)
- Gov. doesn’t have to outlaw ALL fighting words, just can’t single some out based on viewpoint expressed by those words
- Note- D should have been prosecuted for trespass, arson, threats, etc.
- Note- Penalty enhancement at sentencing for racial hatred is fine if based on conduct being racially motivated
- Wisconsin v. Mitchell: Enhanced punishment in OK for bias-motivated conduct. Black guys jumped a white boy after seeing Mississippi Burning. D intentionally selected white victim bc of his race. → Court held that the statute allowing for increased punishment due to racially motivated conduct was Constitutional
- Rule : Gov. allowed to punish for CONDUCT that’s hateful/racially motivated as opposed to hateful SPEECH which gov. cannot punish for.
- Hateful speech (protected) v. hateful conduct (not protected)
- VA v. Black: consolidated cased: 1) cross burned in black family’s yard; 2) cross burned at klan meeting
- VA argues that law outlawing cross burning is per se true threat exception
- Court: No, not per se true threat
- States may ban cross burning with intent to intimidate
- True Threat Rule = Threat of violence directed at person(s) with intent to cause fear of serious bodily harm or death
- Cross burning is not always a true threat, context matters
- When done in private klan meeting isolated from all others → probs not a threat → protected under 1A
- No doubt that burning a cross on a black family’s yard is a true threat → not protected under 1A
- True threats are typically directed at certain people or groups of people