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Internet

SCOTUS Unanimously Rejects Law Banning Sex Offenders From Social Media

The justices say the law's "unprecedented" and "staggering" scope violates the First Amendment.

Jacob Sullum | 6.19.2017 12:00 PM

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N.C. Department of Public Safety

Today the Supreme Court unanimously overturned a North Carolina law that bans registered sex offenders from any "commercial social networking Web site" that is open to minors. With the exception of Neil Gorsuch, who did not participate in the case because he was not on the Court when it was argued, every justice agreed that the law's broad scope cannot be reconciled with the First Amendment.

The case was brought by Lester Packingham, who at the age of 21 had sex with a 13-year-old girl and was convicted of taking indecent liberties with a minor. Eight years later, Packingham beat a traffic ticket and expressed his pleasure on Facebook: "Man God is Good! How about I got so much favor they dismiss the ticket before court even started. No fine, No court costs, no nothing spent….Praise be to GOD, WOW! Thanks JESUS!" That burst of online exultation violated North Carolina's ban on social media use, which covers all registered sex offenders, regardless of whether their crimes involved minors or the internet.

Packingham argued that his conviction violated the First Amendment, and a state appeals court agreed. The North Carolina Supreme Court did not. Siding with Packingham today, the U.S. Supreme Court concludes that the law "burden[s] substantially more speech than is necessary to further the government's legitimate interests."

Writing for the majority, Justice Anthony Kennedy emphasizes the internet's vital importance to freedom of speech. "This case is one of the first this Court has taken to address the relationship between the First Amendment and the modern Internet," he says. "As a result, the Court must exercise extreme caution before suggesting that the First Amendment provides scant protection for access to vast networks in that medium."

Kennedy says North Carolina's law "enacts a prohibition unprecedented in the scope of First Amendment speech it burdens," applying indiscriminately to many kinds of online activity, even when it has nothing to do with contacting minors. "By prohibiting sex offenders from using those websites, North Carolina with one broad stroke bars access to what for many are the principal sources for knowing current events, checking ads for employment, speaking and listening in the modern public square, and otherwise exploring the vast realms of human thought and knowledge," he writes. "These websites can provide perhaps the most powerful mechanisms available to a private citizen to make his or her voice heard….To foreclose access to social media altogether is to prevent the user from engaging in the legitimate exercise of First Amendment rights."

In a concurring opinion joined by John Roberts and Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito notes that the law's broad definition of "commercial social networking Web site" covers not only widely used social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter but also shopping sites such as Amazon and news sites such as The Washington Post. Alito says the law's "staggering reach…makes it a felony for a registered sex offender simply to visit a vast array of websites, including many that appear to provide no realistic opportunity for communications that could facilitate the abuse of children."

The Court's decision in Packingham v. North Carolina not only vindicates the First Amendment but provides a welcome dose of skepticism about sweeping, indiscriminate laws that are supposedly justified by the need to protect children from sexual predators. In this case, as in many others, the law went far beyond that goal, criminalizing a wide range of innocent actions by people classified as sex offenders, most of whom pose no real threat to children.

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NEXT: Kansas' Tax Cut Experiment Was A Predictable Failure

Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason.

InternetSex CrimesSex Offender RegistrySupreme CourtFree Speech
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  1. meister574   8 years ago

    For all the faults the SCOTUS have on other rights, they tend to be very good when in comes to the first amendment.

  2. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   8 years ago

    Is Hit & Run comments section 'social media'?

    1. Chipper Morning, Now #1   8 years ago

      It doesn't matter now, Paul. You are safe. Feel free to keep commenting.

    2. loveconstitution1789   8 years ago

      I identify as a 30 year old going on 17, so lucky for you this decision came out making your visitation of Reason okay.

  3. Necron 99   8 years ago

    What is it, First Amendment Appreciation Day at the Supreme Court?

    1. Crusty Juggler - Elite   8 years ago

      SCOTUS continues to stroke the stimulated shaft of free speech.

      1. Citizen X - #6   8 years ago

        They're gently cupping the balls of liberty.

        1. Crusty Juggler - Elite   8 years ago

          Altio ensures liberty's luscious lumps stay liberally lubricated.

          1. Citizen X - #6   8 years ago

            Kennedy playfully tweaks a nipple.

      2. loveconstitution1789   8 years ago

        Optimal Tip-to-Tip E?ciency
        a model for male audience stimulation
        Dinesh Chugtai and Bertram Gilfoyle
        Mean Jerk Time

    2. albo   8 years ago

      Even 8 blind squirrels can sometimes stumble into two nuts of liberty.

  4. Scarecrow Repair & Chippering   8 years ago

    I wonder how much of this is reaction against social justice warriors and their safe spaces and rejection of even the most basic First Amendment principles. I don't mean the verdicts themselves (8-0, both), but the strong language in the verdicts.

    1. Tony   8 years ago

      Are you talking about the people who recently shut down a production of a Shakespeare play because of content they didn't like?

      1. BearOdinson   8 years ago

        I really don't think you are going to get any arguments for socons here. But, nice deflection.

        1. WakaWaka   8 years ago

          I don't think you'd even find any socons defending the actions of those people. I thought they were those populist right provocateurs. I can't imagine any of them were religiously motivated

          1. BearOdinson   8 years ago

            Actually, I do think you are right. The majority of folks I know who would describe themselves as socially conservative aren't for that kind of nonsense. They may not want to patronize something they don't agree with, but they aren't going to forcibly prevent others from doing it on their own dime.

            (Leaving aside that this is Shakespeare)

      2. Number 7   8 years ago

        well I for one don't think regicide has any place in a decent society.

        1. Regis Flibin   8 years ago

          Me, neither.

          That is, I have no place in a decent society.

      3. Crusty Juggler - Elite   8 years ago

        Are you talking about the people who recently shut down a production of a Shakespeare play because of content they didn't like?

        Yes Tony, there is a Horseshoe Theory-like aspect with the alt-right and social justice warriors.

        1. WakaWaka   8 years ago

          Don't tell Tony he's right, even when he's right. This will just encourage him. I liked you better as a 'lamertarian'

    2. Mickey Rat   8 years ago

      I hope it is annoyance with the idea that because a communication technology did not exist in the late 18th Century then the 1st Amendment does not apply.

  5. GroundTruth   8 years ago

    Maybe the high water mark of the pogrom against sex offenders has finally been reached, and a bit more common sense will start being required in dealing with those who have "paid their debt to society".

    Nice to see a unanimous decision making the headlines once in a while!

    1. loveconstitution1789   8 years ago

      Justice Roberts, Alito and Thomas stated that they still think:
      Because protecting children from abuse is a compelling state interest and sex offenders can (and do) use the inter-net to engage in such abuse, it is legitimate and entirely reasonable for States to try to stop abuse from occurring before it happens.

      They are clearly for sex offender registries too. Crime think and registries are just blatant violations of the Constitution. Really disappointed in Thomas. Roberts and Alito are pro Nanny-State.

      1. Juice   8 years ago

        Really disappointed in Thomas.

        lol, you're not used to that by now? He's not a libertarian.

        1. loveconstitution1789   8 years ago

          He had the occasional gem dissent. I know he's not Libertarian but when the other justice gave legal opinions that clearly violated the Constitution he at least was a dissent of constitutional spirit.

          You cannot constitutionally justify sex registries for people after they have done their criminal sentence. Its like a registry for black people or gun owners. You cannot force people to do things in the name of crime think.

          Another reason why the ObamaCare force you to buy insurance scheme was ridiculous.At least, Thomas dissented to that.

          1. richarddozier@gmail.com   8 years ago

            Thomas tends to support STATES doing whatever they like to do to their citizens. Most of his rulings that I agree with have something to do with upholding state's "rights" (as if states have "rights") when the federal government intrudes upon them than with actual libertarian impulses.

      2. oncefallendotcom   8 years ago

        I'm shocked it was a unanimous decision, especially coming from a John "Registries are no more intrusive than Price Club memberships" Roberts. Since Costco bought them out, does Costco send US Marshals to your door to verify your membership?

    2. mpercy   8 years ago

      Now if we can purge the rolls of people who took a leak in an alley. And also those teenagers who had sex with other teenagers?

  6. BearOdinson   8 years ago

    But what about the children? Isn't anybody fucking thinking of the gods damned children??

    1. mad.casual   8 years ago

      First, NC rewrites the bathroom law to allow men into the women's room and now they make it OK for pedophiles to be on the internet. You'd have to be blind not to see where all this is headed.

      1. Scarecrow Repair & Chippering   8 years ago

        Define 'blind'. It can be from missing or defective eyeballs, covered eyeballs, lights turned out, solar eclipse, or probably nuclear winter. Or death.

        1. Radioactive   8 years ago

          or just willfully squinting real real hard...

          1. Radioactive   8 years ago

            and saying neener, neener neener real loud so you can't hear anything either...

      2. Rich   8 years ago

        You'd have to be blind not to see where all this is headed.

        Pedophile men using the internet in the women's room?

        1. cgr2727   8 years ago

          This is already happening in the bathrooms of every big-box store across the land. It says so right there in the emails my grandmother keeps forwarding me, right below the pictures of kittens.

    2. Some Engineer   8 years ago

      There will soon be plenty of social media users thinking about the children, so no worries.

    3. Radioactive   8 years ago

      I think of the childrezn all the fucking time and how delicious they are esp. with a beurre blanc sauce and nice chianti

  7. Number 2   8 years ago

    Not to be overlooked, but this may be the first time that SCOTUS unabashedly applied First Amendment protections to new technology from the outset. In the 1910s SCOTUS held that the free speech guarantee did not apply to motion pictures because the visual component of films made them "more powerful" than mere words' this remained the law for nearly half a century. And we all know that free speech protections do not apply to broadcast media first because of alleged "scarcity," then because of the alleged "intrusiveness" of radio and TV broadcasts.

    Believe me, there are plenty of people on both sides of the political divide that would have been more than happy to have the Court declare that the internet is also "different" like movies were and broadcasting continues to be. It is great to see the Court unanimously shot that notion down.

    1. Scarecrow Repair & Chippering   8 years ago

      Good point. But they also ruled that copyright didn't apply to player piano rolls, although that may have depended on how Congress wrote copyright laws.

    2. Rich   8 years ago

      In the 1910s SCOTUS held that the free speech guarantee did not apply to motion pictures because the visual component of films made them "more powerful" than mere words'

      Shh. Perhaps the current SCOTUS doesn't know about hypertext yet.

    3. E. Zachary Knight   8 years ago

      Not really. Brown v EMA was the first video game related case to hit the US Supreme Court and they ruled quite handily in favor of First Amendment protections for video games.

      1. Number 2   8 years ago

        Fair point. The comparison is apt because, at the time, there was much talk about the "harm" that video games were allegedly causing for young people, and there were many calls to regulate their content. But it is still reassuring to see the court continuing to enforce First Amendment rights in connection with new technology, and not being blinded by science.

  8. Uncle Jay   8 years ago

    RE: SCOTUS Unanimously Rejects Law Banning Sex Offenders From Social Media
    The justices say the law's "unprecedented" and "staggering" scope violates the First Amendment.

    Damn!
    The SCOTUS had a great opportunity to further erode the First Amendment and blew it.
    Well, better luck next time.

  9. Rhywun   8 years ago

    "what for many are the principal sources for knowing current events, checking ads for employment, speaking and listening in the modern public square [...] These websites can provide perhaps the most powerful mechanisms available to a private citizen to make his or her voice heard"

    I could do without all that hooey in a defense of the First Amendment.

  10. albo   8 years ago

    I'm glad I live in a country where even perverts have rights.

    1. BearOdinson   8 years ago

      Hey Walter, what's a pederast?

      1. Radioactive   8 years ago

        come on over here and I'll demonstrate...

  11. Unicorn Abattoir   8 years ago

    STEVE SMITH agrees with the Supreme Court.

  12. thisbrucesmith   8 years ago

    I don't think this is quite as far-reaching as the media reports coming out now are making this look. Most states I'm aware of don't have social media bans as comprehensive as North Carolina's. This ruling applies only to North Carolina and states that have similar laws already on the books. Other states have different kinds of restrictions that will probably be tested on a case-by-case basis going forward.

    There's also the matter of Facebook's own ban, which covers all convicted sex offenders, whether they're on the registry or not. I suspect that too will be litigated at a later date, and the nuances of the majority and concurring opinions in this case will come into play then.

    1. Mockamodo   8 years ago

      Facebook is not government. Companies can place all of the restriction they wish on employees or customers, or at least they used to be able to back when we still observed the constitution, not so much since Lincoln started the national change from sovereign states into satellites of the great central soviet.

      1. Number 2   8 years ago

        Not if Facebook is deemed a common carrier. From Wikipedia:

        "A common carrier holds itself out to provide service to the general public without discrimination (to meet the needs of the regulator's quasi judicial role of impartiality toward the public's interest) for the 'public convenience and necessity.' A common carrier must further demonstrate to the regulator that it is 'fit, willing, and able' to provide those services for which it is granted authority."

        FB holds itself out as providing service to the general public without discrimination. And as I recall, FB supported regulating ISPs as common carriers because Big Evil Wealthy Corporations shouldn't be allowed to decide who has access to the internet. Shouldn't FB be held to the same standard?

        It's just a point for discussion for now, but something worth considering, especially if supposedly neutral communication platforms are going to start passing judgment over who will and will not be allowed to communicate on their software.

        1. richarddozier@gmail.com   8 years ago

          Excellent points! It appears that such a challenge to Facebook on its policies (of denying access to registered sex offenders) is already being contemplated.

  13. Mockamodo   8 years ago

    Now if they'd just recognize the same about the second amendment. Someone convicted of bigamy in SC, tattooing a minor in Florida or possibly even selling dildos in Alabama can lose their second amendment rights since all are felonies. Hell, just a few years ago here in SC you could lose your second amendment rights for conviction of homosexual sex, or possession of a single marijuana seed.

    1. oncefallendotcom   8 years ago

      "here in SC you could lose your second amendment rights for conviction of homosexual sex, or possession of a single marijuana seed."

      In other words, don't spill your seed in South Carolina.

  14. IMissLiberty   8 years ago

    The alternative would be to tell people that they must bottle-up their emotions and not express them. Frankly, as annoying as such expressions can be, isn't it better to let potential bombers, hate-filled bigots, and others express themselves in print or song? To prohibit such speech is like advocating the removal of rattles from rattlesnakes.

  15. Eman   8 years ago

    This guy sure sounds like he's packing ham.

  16. plusafdotcom   8 years ago

    And there weren't any protests from Atheists about the blatant and repeated references to those fictitious "Supreme Beings" in his rant?

    Terrible!

    /sarc

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