• @BeegYoshi@lemm.ee
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    3311 months ago

    Completely insane ruling. Wild that Kagan went across the aisle for this.

    the First Amendment requires proofs of mental state

    So I guess it’s basically impossible to convict anyone of anything involving speech? If I yell “fire” in a crowded theater, how can you prove I wasn’t having a delusion that there was a fire? Maybe there was an explosion in the movie and I was so immersed I thought it was real!

    Dude had previous convictions and spent years doing this harassing, it’s not like this was an isolated mental break. Truly insane.

    • @socphoenixOP
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      3211 months ago

      I am struggling to figure out how anyone could be convicted of stalking under this ruling. Some of his texts even involves death threats!

      • GuyDudeman
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        711 months ago

        I would say that he did demonstrate that he was insane, and therefore should be confined to a mental health institution.

        • Nepenthe
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          11 months ago

          But that’s the thing. Are they going to…put him in a mental institution? Because he desperately needs to be in a good one. I would be much more ok with this ruling if he were. I’m getting the sense he’s going back to society where he will behave totally normally from now on.

          • dismalnow
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            111 months ago

            That’s not THE thing. That’s A thing that is related, sad, and irrelevant to how the Supreme Court operates.

            Fwiw, Colorado is making great sides in redirecting mentally ill from law enforcement toward social services. Tons of room for improvement, but they’re wholly separate things, systemically.

          • GuyDudeman
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            111 months ago

            I sincerely doubt they would just release him to the general population.

      • dismalnow
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        111 months ago

        You can demonstrate intent without an admission, and it doesn’t require intent to get a conviction for harassment. Stalking is different.

    • @pick_and_click@beehaw.org
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      2511 months ago

      Yeah, the fact that he sent messages over multiple years, opened various accounts after the artist blocked him, and was actively messaging her about seeing her in public is pretty cut-and-dry stalking. Death threats are damning as well. Sure, he might not be mentally stable, but that shouldn’t give him a pass for reprehensible and dangerous behavior.

      • Gaywallet (they/it)M
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        11 months ago

        To be clear, I do not agree with the ruling, but the ruling was on whether this was a federal or a civil matter. I think the government should strongly prevent clear harassment and reasonable threats of violence, but the supreme court decided that threats or words are not enough in this case. I think it’s particularly two-faced, especially in light of threats of violence being used regularly to prosecute minorities and identify potential terrorists, but threats of violence directed towards a single person in the context of years of harassing behavior and a known pattern of behavior were apparently not enough.

        If I had to guess, the court was wary of allowing any potential attacks to the 1st amendment, as they have been want to do in the past - a famous example of this in (somewhat) recent history is when the supreme court held that the 1st amendment was more important than the stolen valor act passed just a few years earlier. The ruling doesn’t particularly surprise me, nor does Kagan swapping sides because in the US we have a strong free speech identity and free speech limitations in terms of harassment has almost never been ruled on (one might make the argument that virginia v. black might be one such case, but that’s a case of racially motivated hate speech which is not quite analogous here).

      • Widget
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        111 months ago

        Seems like the actual issue was that the law in question would let him be convicted even if he wasn’t doing these things and just being a nuisance. It’s not that he’s innocent, it’s that the law used is itself illegal.

    • GuyDudeman
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      811 months ago

      This guy, given his behavior, should absolutely be in a facility where he can’t do any harm.

      However - I have known a few people with Tourette’s over the years, and can absolutely say that mental state and abilities should play a factor in whether or not something that’s done would violate the law.

      Yelling “fire” in a crowded theater may not be something someone with tourette’s can control. If that causes a stampede and people get trampled, that’s not their fault, in my opinion.

      • @BeegYoshi@lemm.ee
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        411 months ago

        The point I’m making is that the “fire” is a classic example of speech that isn’t protected in the US, but with this ruling there’s no way to prove intent. So what if I sat down and continued watching the movie afterwards? I just got over the delusion. And someone with tourette’s would probably apologize, try to calm people down, or even avoid a theater altogether. I’m pretty sure that someone with a peanut allergy can’t sue a peanut farm if they go visit and sample the produce; if you know there’s an extra danger for you specifically in performing an activity then you are responsible.

        Not to mention tourette’s could never cause targeted, violent, electronic-message based harassment either. This is a focused, intentional action.

        • GuyDudeman
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          411 months ago

          In this particular case, I believe the accused should be an inpatient at a mental health facility, especially because of the violent threats that were made. There is no way he should be allowed to walk free and continue doing this to people.

          In the case of someone with Tourette’s yelling “Fire! Titties! Fire!” in a crowded theater and causing a stampede - they are still not responsible, nor would they be ruled responsible for any deaths that occur, and that’s 100% correct in my view.

        • effingjoe
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          11 months ago

          I don’t how it will affect your overall stance, but the “Yelling fire in a crowded theater” (aka, “clear and present danger”) test, which comes from Schenck v. United States, was overturned in 1979 with the case Brandenburg v. Ohio, which gave us the “Imminent Lawless Action” test, instead. This test requires:

          • intent to speak, and
          • imminence of lawlessness, and
          • likelihood of lawlessness

          Yelling fire in a crowded theater is only illegal if it meets that test-- all three requirements-- on a case by case basis.

      • updawg
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        111 months ago

        In that instance, I would say that they probably should have known the potential risks involved with putting themself in that situation.

        • GuyDudeman
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          211 months ago

          So you’re saying that people with disabilities should be excluded from society?

    • Neato
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      11 months ago

      Seems like the ruling was correct. Colorado’s law seems too easy to convict.

      Lawyers for the state responded that it was enough to look at the words in question, how they were conveyed and the response they elicited. The speaker’s subjective intent, they said, does not matter.

      Threats have to have intent. I agree this case the defendant was likely guilty of making threats. But the SCOTUS was overturning the case on the grounds of the Colorado law. Not judging the defendant specifically. At least that’s how the above poster’s excerpts from Kagan’s decision and the 2 dissents from Barrett and Thomas read.

  • @fuser@quex.cc
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    1311 months ago

    Among Counterman’s communications to Whalen were messages that read: “Was that you in the white Jeep?” and “You’re not being good for human relations. Die. Don’t need you.” Others used expletives.

    Whalen said the messages eventually left her paralyzed with fear and anxiety, causing her to cancel shows and turn down career opportunities, and leading her to apply for a concealed handgun permit and sleep with a light on.


    The Supreme Court marshal asks state officials to act on protests at justices’ homes

    https://www.npr.org/2022/07/03/1109614708/protests-at-homes-of-supreme-court-justices

    In a series of letters sent over the weekend, the marshal of the U.S. Supreme Court called on officials in Maryland and Virginia to “enforce” state and local laws that, she wrote, “prohibit picketing outside of the homes of Supreme Court Justices.”

    “For weeks on end, large groups of protesters chanting slogans, using bullhorns, and banging drums have picketed Justices’ homes in Virginia,” Marshal Gail Curley wrote to Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin. “This is exactly the kind of conduct that Virginia law prohibits.”

    Curley sent similar letters to Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan, along with several Maryland and Virginia county officials.

    Curley’s requests come after weeks of protests and picketing outside the homes of the court’s conservative justices in the Maryland and Virginia suburbs of Washington, D.C. The protests began in May after a draft leaked of the justices’ eventual decision to overturn Roe v. Wade.

  • Shambling Shapes
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    11 months ago

    This one is going to require some poking around at other resources and summaries from legal minds greater than mine. I am baffled by the explanation laid out in this article.

    This may be the most direct Catch-22 situation I’ve seen outside fiction novels, but with shitty stalkers. The stalker can’t be convicted unless he’s intending to threaten. He can’t be considered threatening if he doesn’t admit to being threatening. So as long as he says he didn’t mean to threaten, despite literally telling the victim to die, he can’t be convicted.

  • HelixDab
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    511 months ago

    Justice Amy Coney Barrett, in a dissent to the ruling joined by fellow conservative Justice Clarence Thomas, wrote that the decision “unjustifiably grants true threats preferential treatment.”

    …What the fuck? Am I taking crazy pills? In what fucking world do Thomas and Barrett advocate for a sane and rational approach to anything?

    • @socphoenixOP
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      311 months ago

      Turns out the Writer’s Guild strike affected the real world’s script too… the scabs currently working on the script of life are very confused about how things are supposed to go.

    • sickmatter
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      111 months ago

      Perhaps they’ve become self aware and want to appear like legitimate judges?

    • HopingForBetter
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      111 months ago

      Thomas has probably been experiencing a similar situation lately, so he’s likely eager to rule against it.

    • Maeve
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      111 months ago

      That’s what I was thinking. What universe did I step into?

    • dismalnow
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      111 months ago

      Because they didn’t. They want to stifle speech, and imprison dissenters

      The law didn’t require any proof of intent, so I could have claimed harassment - say as an online shop owner - from people who were upset that I ripped them off and kept emailing me.

      Now that the law is nulled, Colorado will have to rewrite it to ensure that the reason they were sending me nastygrams is examined.

    • updawg
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      11 months ago

      Barrett has actually been surprisingly reasonable in many recent rulings. In this case, though, she was, strangely, writing against the free speech protections that conservatives have been trying to use with anti-LGBT hate speech. Here are some excerpts from the NYT article:

      “The state must show that the defendant consciously disregarded a substantial risk that his communications would be viewed as threatening violence,” [Kagan] wrote. “The state need not prove any more demanding form of subjective intent to threaten another.”

      Justice Kagan acknowledged that “true threats,” like libel, incitement, obscenity and fighting words, are not protected by the First Amendment. But she said the risk of chilling protected speech warranted imposing an added burden on prosecutors.

      “The speaker’s fear of mistaking whether a statement is a threat; his fear of the legal system getting that judgment wrong; his fear, in any event, of incurring legal costs — all those may lead him to swallow words that are in fact not true threats,” she wrote.

      Lawyers for the state responded that it was enough to look at the words in question, how they were conveyed and the response they elicited. The speaker’s subjective intent, they said, does not matter.

      Justice Kagan analyzed the question by examining how the Supreme Court had treated other categories of unprotected speech, notably libel. Noting that public figures must show at least reckless disregard of the truth — meaning subjective awareness of probable falsity — to prevail in libel cases, she said something similar was required in true-threats prosecutions.

      Justice Clarence Thomas issued a brief dissent that repeated his call to reconsider New York Times v. Sullivan, the landmark 1964 libel decision interpreting the First Amendment to make it hard for public officials to prevail in libel suits.

      “It is thus unfortunate,” he wrote, “that the majority chooses not only to prominently and uncritically invoke New York Times, but also to extend its flawed, policy-driven First Amendment analysis to true threats, a separate area of this court’s jurisprudence.”

      In a second dissent, Justice Amy Coney Barrett, joined by Justice Thomas, wrote that an objective standard was sufficient in true-threats prosecutions.

      “The bottom line is this,” she wrote, quoting phrases from Justice Kagan’s opinion. “Counterman communicated true threats, which, ‘everyone agrees, lie outside the bounds of the First Amendment’s protection.’ He knew what the words meant. Those threats caused the victim to fear for her life, and they ‘upended her daily existence.’ Nonetheless, the court concludes that Counterman can prevail on a First Amendment defense. Nothing in the Constitution compels that result.”

      Justice Barrett suggested that Justice Kagan’s position in the new case, Counterman v. Colorado, No. 22-138, was unprincipled.

      “The reality,” she wrote, “is that recklessness is not grounded in law, but in a Goldilocks judgment: Recklessness is not too much, not too little, but instead ‘just right.’”

      Responding in a footnote, Justice Kagan said she was not offended. “In law, as in life," she wrote, “there are worse things than being “just right.’”

  • iAmTheTot
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    311 months ago

    Holy shit. Supreme Court just declared open season on women.

    • updawg
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      111 months ago

      No, they declared Colorado’s law is bad. This was a decision written by a liberal woman, joined by the other two liberal justices and four of the conservative ones. They do not have it out for women.

      • iAmTheTot
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        311 months ago

        They essentially said that the messages he sent were covered under the first amendment. Have you read the messages he sent?

        • Arthur_Leywin
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          211 months ago

          Among Counterman’s communications to Whalen were messages that read: “Was that you in the white Jeep?” and “You’re not being good for human relations. Die. Don’t need you.” Others used expletives.

          Counterman, citing mental illness and delusions, argued that his messages were not intended to be threatening and were thus protected speech.

          Not the guy you responded to but god damn… I can’t see that message being interpreted as anything BUT a threat. All I gotta do is declare insanity I guess.

          • iAmTheTot
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            111 months ago

            Those were some of the most tame, to be honest.

            Counterman told two of the women that “people in this position that I’m in right now have been [known] to have gone and killed people. Take nine millimeters and blow their heads off and shit like that. * * * I know where you’re all living.”13 He told another woman that he “ha[d] all your addresses and guess what? You ever heard of a letter bomber? Guess what I’ll be comin at ya with kerosene.”14

            Also

            In March 2011, a grand jury indicted Counterman for violating the federal criminal-threat statute again. 17 This time he was charged with leaving a woman a voicemail saying: “I’m coming back to New York by the way, OK? Maybe this month in March OK. I may be coming back his month or next month. I don’t know which. I’m looking forward to meeting up with you. I will rip your throat out on sight.”18

            Source

            The man had also repeatedly made new accounts to continue messaging women after they blocked him. Multiple times.

      • Jo
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        111 months ago

        AFAICT they’ve said that Colorada’s law is bad because it does not require intent. Which means they consider any stalker to be innocent as long as they can claim they’ve grown up in a society which never taught them that harassing women is bad. Which all of them can.

  • pizza_rolls
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    211 months ago

    He had a history of doing this with multiple women, and was brazen enough to take it to the supreme court. This is definitely going to continue and escalate

  • @A1kmm@lemmy.amxl.com
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    11 months ago

    I think the Reuters article possibly distorts this a bit.

    Actual decision.

    Firstly, it is not an acquittal, it is certiorari and it vacates and remands, meaning that it sets precedent for lower courts as to what a legal standard is, removes the existing judgement of the lower court, and sends it back to the lower court to decide on the new standard. So this isn’t automatically the end of the case, and doesn’t necessarily mean eventual acquittal for the appellant, it just means he gets another go under a slightly different legal standard (while setting the precedent for future cases).

    Counterman was convicted on the basis that his communications met this law: “[r]epeatedly . . . make[ ] any form of communication with another person” in “a manner that would cause a reasonable person to suffer serious emotional distress and does cause that person . . . to suffer serious emotional distress”, and the prosecution argued it doesn’t matter if he didn’t know that it would be threatening.

    The new test is: “The State must prove in true-threats cases that the defendant had some subjective understanding of his statements’ threatening nature, but the First Amendment requires no more demanding a showing than recklessness”.

    So it will likely go back to court in Colorado, and this time the prosecutors will have to prove he was reckless as to whether or not his conduct was threatening (even if that was not the intent), but he could still be convicted if they show it does. Remember he said things like: “Die. Don’t need you”, and implied he had seen her in public, continued this conduct after being blocked four times, and according to the Reuters article, had previous convictions. So to get acquitted, the court / jury would need to consider all that (plus any evidence about his mental health etc… presented) and decide there is reasonable doubt he was reckless about the possibility his conduct might be threatening.

    The US Supreme Court have made some shocking partisan judgements, but this one is not along partisan lines, and is being made out to be more unreasonable than it actually is.

  • @Neuron@lemm.ee
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    211 months ago

    IANAL, but can read, and I think many people here are totally missing what this ruling actually says and doesn’t say. It says the standard that Colorado used in this man’s trial was too loose and would theoretically allow for conviction of protected speech. They did not say the speech in this case was definitely protected. They did not say it wasn’t threatening. It’s quite possible that if Colorado now chooses to retry the case that a jury would still decide he was guilty under the stricter standard too, but they have to retry him with a trial and jury working under that stricter standard, so that the overly loose law can’t be used to theoretically restrict protected speech under the first ammendment in the future. The supreme court just corrected the standard Colorado was using and kicked it back to them, they did not exonerate the guy unless Colorado chooses not to try him again. The headlines are all being written to be extra inflammatory and misleading.

    Just to take it to an extreme and make it extra simple, let’s say we pass a law that says, you are guilty of murder if you are anywhere vaguely near where someone was killed. A guy is caught on video clearly murdering someone. They take him to court and tell the jury in their official jury instructions, if this man was vaguely near where the murder occurred he is guilty. They of course find him guilty. Supreme court steps in and says, wait, sure he’s probably guilty, but the standard you had the jury judging him by was ridiculous, that can’t be the standard for a murder conviction, and would probably result on infringement of multiple constitutional rights if you keep using that standard. Do a new trial with a better standard.

  • Arthur_Leywin
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    211 months ago

    The craziest part is that it was a 7-2 decision. It wasn’t even fucking close 💀

  • Nepenthe
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    11 months ago

    Among Counterman’s communications to Whalen were messages that read: “Was that you in the white Jeep?” and “You’re not being good for human relations. Die. Don’t need you.” Others used expletives. . . .

    . . . . Whalen has described the messages from Counterman, which came to her over a two-year span beginning in 2014, as life-threatening and life-altering. She never responded to Counterman during this time and blocked his Facebook account at least four times, prompting him to continue messaging her from other platforms or through new Facebook accounts he created. . . .

    “In a world rife with misunderstandings and miscommunications, people would be chilled from speaking altogether if they could be jailed for failing to predict how their words would be received. The First Amendment provides essential breathing room for public debate by requiring the government to demonstrate that the defendant acted intentionally or recklessly,” Hauss said.

    Well, it’s good that we have safeguards for those who sit on their phone wrong and thereby unintentionally create block-evading accounts on multiple platforms. Guy really went to jail and it was all two solid years of misunderstandings. /s

    I’m hearing harassment officially can’t be prosecuted, if we’re turning a blind eye to that degree. A lot of people are going to be emboldened by this, like they already took the law seriously anyway.

    Like, yeah, a friend of mine nearly or actually got run off the road several times because the perpetrator wanted to date his gf, but maybe the would-be murderer was just a really bad driver. It was a notoriously dangerous road for both of them to be on ¯\_ (ツ) _/¯

    The saddest part of this is I’m more shocked the CO police did something about it. Over here, they refused even a restraining order until we could show them a physical crime, which…you know, would kinda be too late.

  • ParkingPsychology
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    211 months ago

    If you read it, it becomes clear that the issue is that Colorado wrote a stalking law that is in conflict with the first amendment. Something that can easily be corrected going forward, if it hasn’t been corrected already.

    So he was convicted in Colorado, but the proof for that conviction was not good enough for a federal court.

    • dreadgoat
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      111 months ago

      Lots of comments here not understanding the role of the Supreme Court.

      The stalker was not being judged here, the state that convicted him was, and they failed the test. The Court’s decisions is that the law Colorado wrote, as written, could too easily be used to stifle free speech, as just about any “misunderstanding” could then be classified as a threat if the state court decides so. Ergo, anyone prosecuted under said law potentially had their rights violated, so there is no reasonable recourse but to forgive them. They could be re-tried for their crimes, but we also have laws against Double Jeopardy, so if the state already played all their cards then basically they fucked up and a potentially dangerous man will go free due to the state’s incompetence.

  • BurnTheRight
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    11 months ago

    Does this mean people are allowed to stalk supreme court “justices” now? It sounds like they are legalizing stalking.

    • FaceDeer
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      111 months ago

      To play devil’s advocate, I think they’re making a ruling that’s analogous to the murder/manslaughter distinction. Murder (as is commonly defined) requires the prosecution to prove intent, whereas that’s not required for manslaughter charges.

      Obviously, it’s possible to prove intent in some cases because people do get convicted of murder sometimes. They’re saying the same thing here - it’s okay to convict someone for this kind of speech if you can prove their intent was harmful. But the speech equivalent of “manslaughter”, where you haven’t proven intent, is constitutionally protected.

      I can see ways that this as a good ruling, frankly. I can imagine situations where someone says something that can be interpreted as a threat but that really and truly was “just a joke” or some other such misunderstanding, and I would not want that to result in a conviction.

      • admiralteal
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        111 months ago

        But proving criminal intent does not require you be able to hold up a magic mirror that reflects the inner thoughts of the person’s soul.

        Mens rea in the law is something you can establish. Certain actions a person takes imply intent and that’s adequate for the criminal justice system. This isn’t being flippant; often the entire purpose of the trial is to establish the criminal intent in a case where the actual facts (actus reus) are not really in dispute.

        Colorado’s law is defective because it didn’t require establishing mens rea. And while some kinds of crime do not require criminal intent, because this particular crime conflicts with the first amendment, the level of scrutiny on the statute is much higher.

        The outcome here should be that Colorado corrects its defective law to close the loophole.

        • FaceDeer
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          111 months ago

          Yeah, I think we’re in agreement. I brought up the murder analogy because it often does require intent to be proven and prosecutors do manage to find ways to prove intent in those cases. Magic mirrors are clearly not a necessity for this.

    • Remillard
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      11 months ago

      If I understand right, this is a clarification (of sorts) to the standard of “true threat”. Ken White covers a lot of first amendment speech issues and has a very good explanation here: https://popehat.substack.com/p/supreme-court-clarifies-true-threats

      So. To the practitioner, or to the internet tough-talker, what does this mean? It means that the law of the land, at least 7-2, is that a threat is only outside the protection of the First Amendment if:

      • A reasonable person, familiar with the context, would interpret the threat as a sincere statement of intent to do harm, and
      • The speaker was reckless about whether the threat would be taken sincerely — that is, they “consciously disregarded a substantial risk” that it would be taken seriously.
  • SimulatedKnave
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    111 months ago

    They allow recklessness (so you don’t have to prove intent, you just have to prove that they saw the risk and did it anyway, which I suspect would definitely happen somewhere around the third FB account).

    The guy was prosecuted under an objective standard - so basically, if most people think they were threats, they were threats. That’s a very high standard for a criminal conviction.

    Kagan makes some extremely reasonable points about how the distinction between hardcore political advocacy and incitement to crime is pretty damn narrow, so you have to insist on at least a recklessness standard. She’s right, and so are the other ones who joined her.

  • @BeegYoshi@lemm.ee
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    011 months ago

    Why are you shifting this argument so far? I never claimed the guy had tourette’s, and I never said this guy shouldn’t be insitutionalized. This is a completely irrelevant example.