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Supreme Court

SCOTUS Misses a Chance To Protect Peaceful Protesters

Under a legal theory endorsed by the 5th Circuit, Martin Luther King Jr. could have been liable for other people’s violence.

Jacob Sullum | 4.17.2024 12:01 AM

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Martin Luther King Jr. leads a March 1968 protest in Memphis | University of Memphis Libraries
Martin Luther King Jr. leads a March 1968 protest in Memphis (University of Memphis Libraries)

In his last protest march, Martin Luther King Jr. led a parade of demonstrators down Beale Street in Memphis, lending his support to striking sanitation workers. After a few young black men started breaking storefront windows, the indiscriminate police response killed one suspected looter and injured dozens of protesters.

Under a legal theory blessed by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, King could have been held liable for the unanticipated harm that ensued from that March 1968 protest, even though he neither directed nor advocated vandalism or violence. On Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to review that decision, which threatens to chill the exercise of First Amendment rights by exposing protest leaders to crushing civil liability based on conduct beyond their control.

The case involves a lawsuit that blames Black Lives Matter leader DeRay Mckesson for the injuries that a police officer suffered during a 2016 demonstration in Baton Rouge after someone hurled "a piece of concrete or a similar rock-like object" that struck him in the head. Last June, a divided 5th Circuit panel allowed that lawsuit to proceed on the theory that Mckesson "negligently" organized a protest on the street outside police headquarters when it was "reasonably foreseeable for the police to respond, and violence to ensue."

That ruling flies in the face of First Amendment principles that the Supreme Court reaffirmed less than two weeks later. In Counterman v. Colorado, which involved a man who had sent hundreds of alarming Facebook messages to a local musician, the Court held that mere negligence was not enough to hold him criminally liable for "true threats."

In this context, Justice Elena Kagan said in the majority opinion, the appropriate standard is recklessness, meaning "the defendant consciously disregarded a substantial risk that his communications would be viewed as threatening violence." That more demanding standard is necessary, she explained, because a negligence test, which does not require an awareness of risk, was apt to "chill protected, non-threatening speech."

Kagan noted that "our incitement decisions demand more" than recklessness. "When incitement is at issue, we have spoken in terms of specific intent," she wrote, recognizing that "incitement to disorder is commonly a hair's breadth away from political 'advocacy.'"

Even when someone endorses unlawful conduct, the Court held in 1969, their speech is constitutionally protected unless it is both "directed" at inciting "imminent lawless action" and "likely" to do so. The Court applied that principle in a 1982 case involving a largely peaceful but sometimes violent boycott of white merchants in Claiborne County, Mississippi, that the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People launched in 1966.

Unlike Mckesson, boycott leader Charles Evers had endorsed violence, saying, "If we catch any of you going in any of them racist stores, we're gonna break your damn neck." The Court nevertheless ruled that Evers could not be sued for damages suffered by white business owners.

Under these precedents, dissenting 5th Circuit Judge Don Willett thought, it is clear that Mckesson cannot be held responsible for someone else's violence. He warned that the majority's "novel 'negligent protest' theory of liability" would "reduce First Amendment protections for protest leaders to a phantasm, almost incapable of real-world effect."

Such a rule, Willett said, "would have enfeebled America's street-blocking civil rights movement, imposing ruinous financial liability against citizens for exercising core First Amendment freedoms." He cited King's 1968 march in Memphis as an example.

There is still time to heed Willett's warning. As Justice Sonia Sotomayor noted when the Supreme Court turned away Mckesson's appeal, that decision "expresses no view about the merits" of his First Amendment claim, which the lower courts can now consider in light of Counterman.

"It is disappointing that the Court did not take the opportunity to bring this case to an end," said David Goldberg, Mckesson's lawyer. "But I am confident that the Court eventually will consider and repudiate this dangerous rule of law."

© Copyright 2024 by Creators Syndicate Inc.

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NEXT: Most Justices Seem Skeptical of Charging Capitol Rioters With Obstructing an Official Proceeding

Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason. He is the author, most recently, of Beyond Control: Drug Prohibition, Gun Regulation, and the Search for Sensible Alternatives (Prometheus Books).

Supreme CourtFirst AmendmentProtestsFree SpeechBlack Lives MatterPoliceLouisianaLitigationLiabilityCivil DisobedienceViolenceCriminal Justice
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  1. R Mac   2 years ago

    "Under a legal theory blessed by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, King could have been held liable for the unanticipated harm that ensued from that March 1968 protest, even though he neither directed nor advocated vandalism or violence."

    I'm gonna be honest, I've got the day off tomorrow. Gonna spend the day cutting down and dragging around trees, so I'm a bit buzzed tonight. But I feel like there's a more recent example of this principle that Sullum has taken the complete opposite side of. I don't want to accuse him of being a complete fucking hypocrite without evidence, so I'll entertain the possibility that I'm confusing him with someone else. I'll revisit this tomorrow. Any clarity in the meantime would be helpful.

    1. Get To Da Chippah   2 years ago

      Pretty sure that's (D)ifferent.

    2. JesseAz   2 years ago

      Your memory is correct.

      That section of the brief is highly misleading in some respects, minimizing the recklessness of Trump’s pre-riot speech and his inexcusable dereliction of duty after the assault on the Capitol began.

      https://reason.com/2024/01/19/trumps-supreme-court-brief-rebuts-the-claim-that-he-engaged-in-insurrection/

      I say that as someone who thought Trump richly deserved his second impeachment, which was provoked by his reckless behavior before and during the riot.

      https://reason.com/2023/12/21/was-the-capitol-riot-an-insurrection-and-did-trump-engage-in-it/

      1. MasterThief   2 years ago

        My recollection is that he published dozens of articles taking the complete opposite position regarding Trump, J6, and anybody vaguely on the right. So many "the walls are closing in" articles about bullshit novel lawfare against them

        1. JesseAz   2 years ago

          He has a few articles a year ago where he admits Trump is likely not guilty based on the cases cited here, but he always forcefully denounces Trump. In this case the BLM leader called for violence and blocking traffick, yet no forceful denunciation.

          But most recently Sullum has not been mentioning the legal standard for incitement in regards to Trump. And definitely not strongly defending it as not incitement like here.

  2. JeremyR   2 years ago

    The big difference is that MLK advocated peace and racial equality, BLM advocates violence and racial hatred

    1. Rev Arthur L kuckland   2 years ago

      Mlk pushed for Marxism and to turn the US blacks into a Soviet bloc. He succeeded

    2. Graf Fuddington von Fuddrick   2 years ago

      BLM is also blatantly Marxist.

  3. Brett Bellmore   2 years ago

    I forget the name of the legal principle that, if you're engaged in crime, you're responsible for anything negative that happens in the commission of the crime, regardless of whether you yourself did it. Even the police shooting one of your accomplices gets charged as you committing homicide, doesn't it?

    There's a strong element of that in the immediate case, because the protest was illegally organized, obstructing a highway. In fact, I'm pretty sure this actually came up in the 5th circuit ruling... "Here, the negligence theory of which Doe seeks to avail himself is tailored to prohibiting unlawful conduct and does not restrict otherwise legitimate expressive activity"

    It's questionable whether the legal result would have been the same in the case of an entirely legal protest, rather than one that was deliberately organized to be done in an unlawful manner.

    1. XM   2 years ago

      This is my thinking as well.

      The 1A does not allow for civil disobedience. If you organized a sit in in school without permission, you need to be like King or Ghandi and face your consequences peacefully. You don't whine and moan about your 1A rights when cops come to arrest you.

    2. StevenF   2 years ago

      In the case of the BLM "protests" which were planned riots, the organizers explicitly PROMOTED violence.

    3. freedomwriter   2 years ago

      Did MLK have permits? Things never change. You block streets or parks and people hate you then and now.

      Being held accountable for other peoples actions is an afront to the human species.

  4. Mickey Rat   2 years ago

    What if the protesters are only mostly peaceful?

    1. MasterThief   2 years ago

      But fiery!

    2. TrickyVic (old school)   2 years ago

      Depends. How close to politicians is it?

    3. Vernon Depner   2 years ago

      Blocking a road is not peaceful.

  5. Incunabulum   2 years ago

    Now do Trump.

  6. mad.casual   2 years ago

    Under a legal theory blessed by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, King could have been held liable for the unanticipated harm that ensued from that March 1968 protest, even though he neither directed nor advocated vandalism or violence.

    Under a narrative advanced by Jacob Sullum, Martin Luther King Jr. was nothing but a race baiting political grifter looking to capitalize on black people’s racial grievances, steal their money, and spend it on his own lavish lifestyle.

    Excuse me, but I have trouble seeing an essential difference between what [Chris] Kyle Martin Luther King, Jr. did in Iraq Memphis and what Adam Lanza Patrisse Cullors did at Sandy Hook Elementary School in L.A. – Sheldon Richman Jacob Sullum

    The more you retards try to change…

  7. mad.casual   2 years ago

     

    Dr Jordan B Peterson @jordanbpeterson
    https://twitter.com/jordanbpeterson/status/1634570293107732481

    It’s a sin to take the Lord’s name in vain: what does that mean? To justify your political/instrumental beliefs by tying them falsely to the divine substrate. That’s exactly what the “Christian” “social justice” advocates do: equate Marxism of the lowest form with Christianity.

    BLM Protestors in 2023 are just as, if not more oppressed than their Civil Rights Era peers. Sure Jacob.

  8. Social Justice is neither   2 years ago

    Gee Jacob, you’ve been all for collective punishment when it comes to the J6 protest so why the full throated defense of organized criminal activity (blocking traffic) in support of the BLN riots and secession activities? Good to see repressive tolerance in action you evil marxist propagandist.

  9. jimc5499   2 years ago

    Well there should be a bunch of Congresscritters getting sued then.

  10. justme   2 years ago

    yes we all have a right to legally, peacefully protest but you're just going to look like an ass. in every protest i've seen the people all look like fools who aren't going to persuade anyone of anything good. i think 90% of people protesting are low iq morons.

    1. Jefferson Paul   2 years ago

      Don't forget the paid agitators bussed in from out of state.

  11. Graf Fuddington von Fuddrick   2 years ago

    Another shit article from the dull witted Marxist dupe Sullum. It must be a day ending in ‘Y’.

  12. Vernon Depner   2 years ago

    Blocking the streets is "lawless action".

  13. XM   2 years ago

    I like Sullum and other writers of this publication. Even when I disagree with them. But honestly, they're no better than Breitbart when it comes to certain ideology. Their bias comes through in the tone and language of the article.

    When social media platform that control 90% of all information flow can hinder content despite the user arguably not violating TOS, they throw their hands in the air saying "private companies, what can we do". They'll express some obligatory concerns over speech in some muted manner.

    But when a leader of a violent organization stages an illegal street takeover, suddenly any effort to hold him accountable is "chilling" to free speech. Really? Parents can't sue protest organizers who convince their kids to chain themselves on bridges? If the cop didn't get hurt, Mckesson would have gotten off or endured a slap on the wrist or worse, just like gazillions of other left wing protesters.

    Donald Trump is being prosecuted for the government for supposedly inciting a riot. J6 didn't lead to the ruination of the nation like BLM's cursed influence. Why didn't Sullum invoke allusions of MLK in that case? Why did he choose to indirectly ennoble a racist rabble rouser who was part of the movement that perhaps eroded more civil liberties than post 9/11 America?

    BLM openly aligned themselves with Hamas. No, it's not just one chapter. They hate white people and Jews. Their acolytes hunt cops. They TELL you this. As far as I'm concerned, any time BLM plans a protest, the local law enforcement should be put on high alert. It's no different than the KKK and neo nazis planning a rally somewhere. If they limit their antics on public grounds, leave them. If they start taking over highways, then the top levels are liable.

  14. Flaco   2 years ago

    How is it possible to write this story without mentioning a certain former president facing similar accusations? It's kind of a famous case.

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