Hope everyone had a nice long weekend....
Today the Supreme Court is debating a fascinating case about how far the federal criminal code can be expanded. The Stolen Valor Act makes to falsely claim to have been awarded military honors and decorations. But are such lies covered by the First Amendment? From the Washington Post:
The case has generated huge interest and divided First Amendment
advocates, including the media, and veterans groups, who see the act as a
necessary weapon to discourage what appears to a boomlet of
self-aggrandizers.
According to a brief filed by the Veterans of
Foreign Wars and two dozen veterans groups: “Pretenders have included a
U.S. Attorney, member of Congress, ambassador, judge, Pulitzer
Prize-winning historian and bestselling author, manager of a Major
League Baseball team, Navy captain, police chief, top executive at a
world-famous research laboratory, director of state veterans programs,
university administrator, pastor, candidate for countywide office,
mayor, physician, and more than one police officer.”
“This case is
about theft, not lying in general,” wrote D.C. lawyer Michael T. Morley
in the brief. “Alvarez, and others like him, have misappropriated for
their own benefit an unearned share of the two centuries’ worth of
goodwill and prestige associated with American military awards.”
But
the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 9th Circuit in San Francisco agreed
with Alvarez that the law did not meet the high standard courts must
apply to attempts to restrict speech.
“Saints may always tell the truth, but for mortals living means lying,” Chief Judge Alex Kozinski wrote in response to the government’s request that the decision be reconsidered.
“Without
the robust protections of the First Amendment, the white lies,
exaggerations and deceptions that are an integral part of human
intercourse would become targets of censorship” and set up the
government as “truth police” with the power to punish.
Other
judges have seen it differently. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th
Circuit, in a separate Stolen Valor case, upheld the law’s
constitutionality.
“As the Supreme Court has observed time and
again, false statements of fact do not enjoy constitutional protection,
except to the extent necessary to protect more valuable speech,” U.S.
Circuit Judge Timothy M. Tymkovich wrote for another divided panel.
Gotta love Kozinski....
Tony Mauro has a nice summary of what to look out for in today's argument
here. I will post the argument when it goes online. Should be interesting.