US Supreme Court backs man who sent female musician flood of unwanted
messages
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[June 28, 2023]
By John Kruzel
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday threw out the
stalking conviction of a Colorado man who sent a barrage of unwanted
messages to a female musician in a case involving constitutional free
speech protections, ruling that prosecutors had not shown he understood
the "threatening nature" of his words.
The 7-2 decision, authored by liberal Justice Elena Kagan, vacated a
lower court's ruling that had rejected defendant Billy Counterman's
claim that his messages to Denver singer-songwriter Coles Whalen were
protected under the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment. Whalen said he
sent thousands of disturbing and threatening messages over two years to
her personal and public Facebook accounts, some suggesting he had seen
her in public.
The First Amendment prohibits the government from enacting laws
"abridging the freedom of speech," but the Supreme Court previously has
held that true threats are excluded from such constitutional protection.
Kagan wrote that the First Amendment "requires proof that the defendant
had some subjective understanding of the threatening nature of his
statements." 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."
Counterman had a history of making violent threats to women and was on
supervised release from one such federal conviction during the two years
he continuously messaged Whalen. He was found guilty in a 2017 trial of
stalking Whalen and sentenced to 4-1/2 years in prison as he pursued his
First Amendment appeal.
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.
John Elwood, an attorney for Counterman, hailed the court's recognition
that "the First Amendment requires proof of mental state before it can
imprison a person for statements that are perceived as threatening."
"Free speech is too important to imprison people for statements that are
at most negligent," Elwood added.
The Colorado stalking law did not require proof of a speaker's
subjective intent to intimidate. It defines stalking in part as
communication that "would cause a reasonable person to suffer serious
emotional distress" - known as an "objective" legal standard.
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News media gather outside the front of
the U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington, U.S. September 30,
2022. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/File Photo
Counterman contended that prosecutors should be required to prove a
speaker's specific intent to threaten before stripping offending
speech of its constitutionally protected status.
The ruling did not go that far, saying prosecutors need only show
that a speaker acted recklessly, meaning the person is "aware that
others could regard his statements as threatening violence and
delivers them anyway."
Whalen has described the messages from Counterman, which came to her
starting 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.
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.
George Washington University Law School professor Mary Anne Franks,
who filed a brief in the case on behalf of First Amendment scholars,
lamented Tuesday's decision.
"It is deeply disappointing that the Supreme Court has chosen not
only to allow stalkers to act with impunity, but to do so on the
basis that stalking is free speech protected by the First
Amendment," Franks said. "In doing so, they have sentenced victims
of stalking to potentially lifelong sentences of terror, as well as
increasing their risk of being killed by their stalkers."
Brian Hauss, a lawyer with the American Civil Liberties Union,
praised the Supreme Court for affirming that "inadvertently
threatening speech cannot be criminalized."
"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.
(Reporting by John Kruzel; Editing by Will Dunham)
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