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Free Speech

The Babylon Bee Joins The Onion in Decrying an Ohio Law That Makes Parody a Felony

The two fake news organizations want the Supreme Court to review the case of a man who was arrested for making fun of the police.

Jacob Sullum | 11.1.2022 5:10 PM

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Police arrested Anthony Novak for making fun of them. | Institute for Justice
Anthony Novak (Institute for Justice)

The Babylon Bee this week joined The Onion in urging the Supreme Court to defend the First Amendment against an Ohio law that makes parody a felony. The case, which the Institute for Justice is asking the Court to take up, involves Parma resident Anthony Novak, who in 2016 was prosecuted for violating a state law against using a computer to "disrupt, interrupt, or impair the functions of any police, fire, educational, commercial, or governmental operations." Novak supposedly did that by creating a parody of the Parma Police Department's Facebook page.

Among other things, the fake Facebook page included a job notice saying the department "is strongly encouraging minorities to not apply," a warning that Parma had banned food handouts so "the homeless population" would "leave our city due to starvation," and an announcement of "our official stay inside and catch up with the family day," during which anyone venturing outside between noon and 9 p.m. would be arrested. The police department was not amused.

The cops retaliated by investigating Novak, searching his apartment, seizing his electronic equipment, arresting him, and bringing charges that could have sent him to prison for up to 18 months. After a jury acquitted him, Novak filed a federal lawsuit against several officers who were involved in the case, arguing that they had violated his constitutional rights under color of law. But last April, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit ruled that the defendants were protected by qualified immunity, which shields cops from liability unless their alleged misconduct violated "clearly established" law. The appeals court concluded that the cops "reasonably found probable cause in an unsettled case judges can debate," noting that "both the City's Law Director and the judges who issued the warrants agreed with them."

For obvious reasons, the right-leaning Bee, like the left-leaning Onion, is alarmed by the implication that people have no recourse against cops who arrest them for making fun of government agencies. "The Bee is serving a brutal life sentence in Twitter jail as we speak," says its amicus brief in Novak v. City of Parma. "Its writers would very much like to avoid a consecutive sentence in a government-run facility."

The premise of Novak's prosecution was that he had disrupted police operations by prompting calls about his parody to the department's nonemergency line. "Left in the hands of the Sixth Circuit and the Parma PD (and other like-minded law enforcement), the speech-stifling Ohio statute used to go after Mr. Novak empowers state officials to search, arrest, jail, and prosecute parodists without fear of ever being held accountable," the Bee says. "The upshot for The Bee is that, in Ohio at least, its writers could be jailed for many, if not most, of the articles The Bee publishes, provided that someone contacted law enforcement—or another entity 'protected' by [Ohio's law]—to tell them that the articles exist."

Consider the March 3 Bee story headlined "Donut Sales Surge as Police Departments Re-Funded." If someone "had called the Parma Police Department to let them know that The Bee had published the article," the brief suggests, the publication "could have been charged with a felony, its offices searched, and its writers arrested and jailed for days, all without consequence for the parties doing the charging, arresting, jailing, and searching." Likewise if an officer's "passive-aggressive brother-in-law had forwarded the article" to the cop's official email address, thereby "interrupt[ing]" his work.

Given the broad wording of Ohio's law, which refers to "governmental operations" generally, Bee articles about federal agencies, such as its August 12 report on the FBI's search of Mar-a-Lago, also could be treated as grounds for arrest. "Had a caller contacted the FBI field office in Cleveland or Cincinnati" to "express outrage over the suspicious timing of the FBI's raid on Melania Trump's Mar-a-Lago closet and Attorney General Garland's acquisition of a haute couture wardrobe," the Bee notes, that could be the basis for a felony charge in Ohio.

Since Ohio also has criminalized computer-assisted interference with "educational" functions, cops in that state might likewise have found probable cause in a 2020 Bee story headlined "College Athlete Surprised to Learn His School Has Classes." If "a reader called the Office of Academic Affairs at The Ohio State University about the article," the Bee suggests, "that would have been enough for law enforcement" to "arrest The Bee's staff."

Last month the Bee ran a story under the headline "Subway Begins Promotional Offer Where They Will Use Real Meat for a Limited Time." If that article prompted calls to "an Akron Subway franchise," the Bee wonders, couldn't that be construed as interference with "commercial" operations?

In short, the Bee says, "the Sixth Circuit's ruling allows the government to punish vast swaths of constitutionally protected speech." And even if any given gadfly is, like Novak, ultimately acquitted, that does nothing to address the cost, inconvenience, embarrassment, anxiety, and loss of liberty associated with his arrest and prosecution, let alone the chilling effect such an example is apt to have on others.

"The Sixth Circuit's qualified-immunity-on-steroids approach means that state actors can search, arrest, jail, and prosecute 'offenders' like Mr. Novak without fear of ever being held to account themselves," the Bee notes. "Knowledge that they may be searched, arrested, jailed, and prosecuted without recourse is enough to dissuade most would-be speakers, regardless of the potential for ultimate acquittal."

The 6th Circuit cited two reasons why police might have reasonably believed that Novak's spoof did not qualify as constitutionally protected speech: Novak had deleted comments describing the page as fake, which he thought ruined the joke, and he had reposted a police department warning about the ersatz account, which he thought made the joke funnier. Like The Onion, the Bee takes issue with the implication. "Parody shouldn't be stripped of constitutional protection just because it's not clearly labeled as parody," it says. "And requiring that parody be written so as to ensure that the most gullible in our society—the Facebook-using grandmother, the tween TikTok addict, the CNN reporter—don't take it seriously ruins the parody for everyone else."

The Onion described itself as "the single most powerful and influential organization in human history." The Bee is slightly more modest, claiming only to be "quite possibly the most popular source for satire in the history of the world" and describing The Onion as "a cute little upstart." But on the First Amendment issues raised by this case, the two fake news organizations see eye to eye.

"The Onion may be staffed by socialist wackos, but in their brief defending parody to this Court, they hit it out of the park," the Bee says. "Parody has a unique capacity to speak truth to power and to cut its subjects down to size. Its continued protection under the First Amendment is crucial to preserving the right of citizens to effectively criticize the government."

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Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason.

Free SpeechFirst AmendmentFree PressPolice AbuseQualified ImmunityFourth AmendmentSearch and SeizureCriminal JusticeOhioSupreme CourtInstitute for Justice
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  1. A Cynical Asshole   3 years ago (edited)

    “Parody shouldn’t be stripped of constitutional protection just because it’s not clearly labeled as parody,” it says. “And requiring that parody be written so as to ensure that the most gullible in our society—the Facebook-using grandmother, the tween TikTok addict, the CNN reporter—don’t take it seriously ruins the parody for everyone else.” [Emphasis added]

    Zing!

    Never forget, CNN reporters actually believed Jussie Smollett, so I don't think describing them as among "the most gullible in our society" is that far off.

    1. R Mac   3 years ago

      Haha, great.

    2. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

      You should read the Onion's amicus brief. I hope SCOTUS gets the joke.

      1. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   3 years ago

        One should also read the other Babylon Bee amicus brief, the one they did not submit, which supports the government's side.

      2. Union of Concerned Socks   3 years ago

        Whoever wrote the Onion's brief should be nominated to the court.

    3. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

      They were also fooled by the “fired” Twitter “employees “ outside the headquarters.

  2. Unicorn Abattoir   3 years ago

    "Parody shouldn't be stripped of constitutional protection just because it's not clearly labeled as parody,"

    And it's "Up against the wall, Bragg and Heaton"...

    1. Don't look at me!   3 years ago

      Labeling it as parody takes all the fun out of it.

      1. mad.casual   3 years ago

        I was going to say, if the cops really wanted to kill it, the cops would deem it an acceptable form of parody and offer it protection. Women would flock away from it. Just ask The Onion.

  3. Dillinger   3 years ago

    >>the publication "could have been charged with a felony, its offices searched, and its writers arrested and jailed for days

    je suis Charlie.

    1. R Mac   3 years ago

      Luckily they didn’t have not Ashley Biden’s diary.

      1. Dillinger   3 years ago

        the giant yellow letters on their shirts let you know the good guys are on scene.

  4. perlmonger   3 years ago

    OK, I have an idea to deal with inflation.

    We outlaw electronic money creation.

    The economy can still be accounted electronically, I don't want to go back to the dark ages or anything, but the Federal Reserve is no longer allowed to punch up some bits and transfer them to Bank of America or whoever to lend out at prime + some percentage. They have to print them. 1 dollar bills.

    And if Bank of America or JP Morgan Chase or whatever other ninny recipient of Fed largesse at the first at the trough for the money spigot want to get the money that the Fed has printed, they have to ship it, receive it, and store it.

    So, basically, we'd be going back to a reserve currency. Admittedly, it would be a paper reserve currency, not anything more difficult to acquire like gold, but there is some advantage in the volume. It would be really, really annoying to store forty trillion one dollar bills.

    So there's the incentive that the large banks would have to limit the amount of Fed loans they take, because vaults are expensive.

    1. LorettaCarini   3 years ago (edited)

      I quit working at shoprite and now I make $65-85 per/h. How? I'm working online! My work didn't exactly make me happy so I decided to take a chance on something new… after 4 years it was so hard to quit my day job but now I couldn't be happier.

      Here’s what I do............>>> Topcitypay

      1. kevrob   3 years ago

        You're the reason my local grocery is so often out-of-stock on my favorite items! Thanks, buddy!

    2. I, Woodchipper   3 years ago

      i have a better idea. End the fed.

      1. perlmonger   3 years ago

        I mean sure, but that's not going to happen. My big daydream is applying the slightest bit of braking to the bus hurtling towards the cliff. I'm not going to even bother thinking about a retro-rocket. 😉

    3. BestUsedCarSales   3 years ago

      You're describing something akin to fractional reserve banking, I think. Might give you a thread to pull on if you want to investigate your idea further.

  5. Gaear Grimsrud   3 years ago

    I'm guessing Reason might have some exposure here as well considering the fact that it is a parody of a libertarian publication.

    1. sarcasmic   3 years ago

      Exactly. Because true libertarians are Republicans. Anything else is leftist. That's the entire political spectrum right there. Republicans and leftists. That's it.

      1. SQRLSY One   3 years ago (edited)

        “Because true libertarians are Republicans.”

        This is double-true! However, Big Brother ALSO knows that True Followers of the Republican Church are ALSO True Followers of the Election (and Erection) Being Stolen From The Holy Trinity of The TrumptatorShit, Dear Leader Der TrumpfenFuhrer, and Sturmy-unt-Drangy Daniels, Republican Government Almighty dammit!!!

        (Do NOT dispute what I say, 'cause I got it straight from the Amphibian People! See Pepe the Frog!)

      2. BigT   3 years ago

        Sarc not good at parody. That’s a felony.

        1. Sevo   3 years ago

          Losing count; how many things is sarc incapable of doing well?

    2. Union of Concerned Socks   3 years ago

      Meh, I don't think so-- nothing they write is ever funny.

  6. Pear Satirical   3 years ago

    "The two fake news organizations..."
    Dear Lord Sullum, they are satire/parody! CNN is a fake news organization, not the Babylon Bee!

    1. Á àß äẞç ãþÇđ âÞ¢Đæ ǎB€Ðëf ảhf   3 years ago

      He was referring to the Bee and the Onion.

      1. SQRLSY One   3 years ago

        The Bee and the Onion... Aesop's Fables? The Ant and the Grasshopper? The Fox and the Sour Grapes? The Donkey and the Layered Onions? The Fox and The Hedgehog? The Birds and the Bees? What story are you alluding to?

        1. Sevo   3 years ago

          Fuck off and die, spastic asshole.

          1. SQRLSY One   3 years ago

            I thought you muted me, Oh Perfect One? And WHEN are you going to STOP being a hypocrite, and practice what you preach?

            1. Sevo   3 years ago

              Fuck off and die, spastic asshole.

      2. BigT   3 years ago

        Reading comprehension?

  7. LorettaCarini   3 years ago (edited)

    I quit working at shoprite and now I make $65-85 per/h. How? I'm working online! My work didn't exactly make me happy so I decided to take a chance on something new… after 4 years it was so hard to quit my day job but now I couldn't be happier.

    Here’s what I do............>>> Topcitypay

  8. Jefferson's Ghost   3 years ago

    If I recall from my University classes, some dude named Johnny Smith or something had a "modest proposal" dealing with something or other which got him in a bit of hot water. IIRC, parody, and satire (its sibling), are considered by many the highest level of literature. Except in Ohio, apparently.

    1. Spiritus Mundi   3 years ago

      Eating kids and raping locks is a typical Tuesday in some Dem run cities.

    2. Number 2   3 years ago

      Did you mean Jonathan Swift?

      1. BigT   3 years ago

        You really are a number 2

  9. Spiritus Mundi   3 years ago

    The two fake news organizations

    Jesus fucking christ you are such a tool Sullum. Dumb as a hammer.

    1. Sevo   3 years ago

      A raging case of TDS does that to dimwits like Sullum.

  10. Number 2   3 years ago

    “The premise of Novak's prosecution was that he had disrupted police operations by prompting calls about his parody to the department's nonemergency line. “

    If that indeed was the theory of the prosecution, it will restrict a lot more material than simply parody. Any computer based communication that triggers phone calls to the police department would be subject to prosecution.

  11. BigT   3 years ago

    This would be a great SCOTUS case to watch.

    Think the wise Latina will get any of the jokes? Think KBJ will recuse herself? Think we’ll hear Thomas’ famous belly laugh? Think Roberts will find a hidden parodtax?

    1. rloquitur   3 years ago

      "Think the wise Latina will get any of the jokes?"

      "Think the wise [sic] Latina will get any of the jokes." There, I fixed it for you.

  12. Ellis Dee   3 years ago

    "Oh yeah, us too!"
    -Babylon Bee's raison d'etre

    1. mad.casual   3 years ago

      "The Bee has a pointless raison d'etree and my raison d'etre is to point out how pointless theirs is!" - Ellis Dee

    2. Sevo   3 years ago

      They got your number, did they? Good; you deserve it.

  13. John C. Randolph   3 years ago

    Any act of the legislature that violates the first amendment is not a law, it is an attempt at usurpation. It's fine to litigate and strike this down, but without personal consequences for the perps who conspired to violate our civil rights, they'll only keep trying.

    -jcr

    1. rloquitur   3 years ago

      can't blame the legislature for this one--it's on the thug prosecutor for bringing the case. He should be disbarred.

  14. Naime Bond   3 years ago

    The law doesn't make parody a felony in Ohio. A judge followed (upheld) the law and let the issue of whether it was parody go to a jury. We now have a separate lawsuit filed under a different law and cause of action (US Constitution) and the issue is now 'qualified immunity'. The outcome of that case will not change the fact that, the law doesn't make parody a felony in the State of Ohio.

    1. rloquitur   3 years ago

      The law almost certainly wasn't intended to pick this parody website--the prosecutor searched the statute books and decided on this.

      The prosecutor (and the judge for letting this go to a jury) should be disbarred.

  15. MWAocdoc   3 years ago

    Once again, this is not a First Amendment free speech case - it's a qualified immunity tort lawsuit against individual police officers for personal damages. The law against disrupting law enforcement operations using electronic means might be a reasonable law in and of itself even though the egregious abuse of the clear meaning, wording and intent of the law in this case should be reversed and punished. It would be hard to see how that law could be reversed based solely upon its own wording. Obfuscating the issues here will not make things better!

  16. Uomo Del Ghiaccio   3 years ago

    Parody and comedy reveals the stupid things that people do. It allows us to recognize our inconsistencies and oddities. Identification and acknowledgment are key to correcting issues and imperfections. If we can't laugh at ourselves then all is lost.

  17. Libertariantranslator   3 years ago

    Jacob is an excellent reporter, but let's not forget the advice of presidential hopeful Pat Paulsen, "picky, picky, picky". After all, we SAW that a union police officer was arrested, tried and convicted after kneeling on a counterfeiting suspect's throat for 3/20 of an hour in front of crowds of witnesses recording the action on cellphones. I am told he got jail time even, qualified immunity and all! These Iowa cops'll get theirs as soon as the stopwatch shows them kneeling on Novak's throat for 3600 seconds, but not before. Remember, plant leaves are STILL an excuse for robbery and murder under color of law.

  18. The Glibertine Party   3 years ago (edited)

    when Norm MacDonald passed away the entire world population of genuinely funny, politically-Conservative people was reduced by 50%.

    1. The Glibertine Party   3 years ago

      The Pap Pile-on Pee is fucking garbage btw.

      1. Sevo   3 years ago

        Fuck off and die, steaming pile of lefty shit.

    2. Sevo   3 years ago

      When you die, the world will become measurably more intelligent and other than that, no one will notice.
      Except, please make public notice of your grave location, so the rest of us can piss on it.
      Fuck off and die, steaming pile of lefty shit.

  19. TheReEncogitationer   3 years ago

    Here's something fit for either the The Bee or The Onion:

    Kanye West claims he was drugged into being ‘a manageable well-behaved celebrity'
    https://wegotthiscovered.com/celebrities/kanye-west-claims-he-was-drugged-into-being-a-manageable-well-behaved-celebrity/

    So, The Artist Formerly Known As Ye And Eternally Known As Shit blames his good behavior on drugs? And his shrink Dr. Pasternak is threatening to make him a Dr. Zhivago if he doen't take his meds?? All too funny! 🙂

  20. Patricia Morales   3 years ago (edited)

    Google pay 200$ per hour my last pay check was $8500 working 1o hours a week online. My younger brother friend has been averaging 12000 for months now and he works about 22 hours a week. I cant believe how easy it was once I tried it outit..
    🙂 AND GOOD LUCK.:)

    HERE====)> ???.????????.???

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