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Com360: Public Safety

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Bodyguard, courier and other special skills. All jobs considered. National Security: The Pentagon Papers Case New York Times Co v United States (1971) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Com360: Public Safety


1
Com360 Public Safety
2
Clear and Present Danger?
  • The Alien and Sedition Acts of 1798
  • The Espionage Act of 1917
  • The Sedition Act of 1918
  • Japanese Internment Executive Order
  • McCarthyism
  • The Patriot Act?

3
Clear and Present Danger Test
  • The question is whether the words used are of
    such nature as to create a clear and present
    danger that they will bring about the substantive
    evils that Congress has a right to prevent
    (Justice Holmes)

4
Schenck v. United States 1919
  • Facts During World War I, Schenck mailed
    circulars to draftees arguing that the draft was
    a monstrous wrong (but advised only peaceful
    action).
  • Schenck was charged with conspiracy to violate
    the Espionage Act by attempting to cause
    insubordination in the military and to obstruct
    recruitment.

5
Schenck v. United States 1919
  • Question Are Schenck's words and actions
    protected by the First Amendment?
  • Conclusion Schenck is not protected in this
    situation. During wartime, utterances tolerable
    in peacetime can be punished.

6
Abrams v. United States 1919
  • Facts of the Case
  • The defendants printed and distributed leaflets
    denouncing the war and US efforts to impede the
    Russian Revolution.
  • The defendants were convicted for inciting
    resistance to the war effort. They were sentenced
    to 20 years in prison.

7
Abrams v. United States 1919
  • Question Presented
  • Do the amendments to the Espionage Act or the
    application of those amendments in this case
    violate the free speech clause of the First
    Amendment?

8
Abrams v. United States 1919
  • Conclusion No and no. The act's amendments are
    constitutional and the defendants' convictions
    are affirmed. The leaflets are an appeal to
    violent revolution and an attempt to curtail
    production of munitions.
  • Dissent Holmes and Brandeis dissented on narrow
    ground the necessary intent had not been shown.

9
Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969)
  • Clarence Brandenburg was convicted of violating
    Ohio statute for advocating racial strife during
    a televised Ku Klux Klan rally.
  • Did Ohio's criminal syndicalism law, prohibiting
    public speech that advocates various illegal
    activities, violate Brandenburg's right to free
    speech?
  • Does a person have the right to advocate an
    illegal action?

10
Brandenburg v. Ohio (1969)
  • The constitutional guarantees of free speech
    do not permit a State to forbid advocacy of the
    use of force or of law violation except where
    such advocacy is directed to inciting or
    producing imminent lawless action and is likely
    to produce such action

11
Dangerous speech test
  • Previously Bad tendency test
  • dangerous speech exists if there is tendency
    to encourage or cause lawlessness
  • After Brandenburg (incitement test)
  • dangerous speech only if inciting or producing
    imminent lawless action

12
Application of Brandenburg incitement standard
  • Harm Through Imitation
  • Harm From Advice
  • Harm From Advertisement
  • Important Consideration
  • Simple Negligence Test or First Amendment
    Protection?

13
Negligence test
  • The defendant owed a legal duty to use reasonable
    care
  • The legal duty was breached
  • The breach was the proximate cause of the
    resulting injuries

14
Negligence v. First Amendment
  • In free speech cases the negligence test is
    usually insufficient
  • The clear and present danger must be applied
    (Brandenburg incitement standard speech is
    directed to inciting or producing imminent
    lawless action and is likely to produce such
    action)

15
Harm Through Imitation
  • Olivia N. v. NBC (1981)
  • Negligence? Should the NBC know that susceptible
    people might imitate the crime depicted in the
    broadcast
  • 1st Amendment? Was the program directed at
    inciting imminent lawlessness and was likely to
    produce such action?

16
Harm Through Imitation
  • Zamora v CBS (1979)
  • The plaintiffs argued that it was the cumulative
    effects of television violence that caused the
    harm.

17
Harm From Advice
  • The Hit Man case (1997)
  • The books content was so detailed and coldly
    calculating that it became an integral part of
    the crime undeserving of any 1st Amendment shield

18
Harm From Advertisement
  • Soldier of Fortune I (1989)
  • Ex-Marines 67-69 Nam Vets, weapons specialist,
    jungle warfare, pilot, high risk assignments,
    U.S. or overseas
  • Soldier of Fortune II (1993)
  • Gun for Hire professional mercenary desires
    jobs. Vietnam veteran. Discreet and very
    private. Bodyguard, courier and other special
    skills. All jobs considered.

19
National SecurityThe Pentagon Papers Case
  • New York Times Co v United States (1971)
  • Facts of the Case
  • The Nixon Administration attempted to prevent the
    New York Times and Washington Post from
    publishing materials belonging to a classified
    Defense Department study regarding the history of
    United States activities in Vietnam.
  • The President argued that prior restraint was
    necessary to protect national security.

20
National SecurityThe Pentagon Papers Case
  • Question
  • Did the Nixon administration's efforts to prevent
    the publication of what it termed "classified
    information" violate the First Amendment?

21
National SecurityThe Pentagon Papers Case
  • Conclusion 6-3 for New York Times
  • Yes. The government did not overcome the "heavy
    presumption against" prior restraint of the
    press.
  • The vague word "security" should not be used "to
    abrogate the fundamental law embodied in the
    First Amendment."
  • Since publication would not cause an inevitable,
    direct, and immediate event imperiling the safety
    of American forces, prior restraint was
    unjustified.
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