The Volokh Conspiracy

Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent | Est. 2002

The Volokh Conspiracy

Free Speech

Justice Sotomayor on the Freedom of the Press and the Right to Ask Questions

The Justice largely agrees with Fifth Circuit Judge James Ho's dissenting opinion below, but writes alone in dissenting from the Supreme Court's decision not to consider the case.

|

From Justice Sotomayor's dissent from the denial of certiorari today in Villarreal v. Alaniz, which strikes me as quite persuasive:

Petitioner Priscilla Villarreal is a reporter who was arrested for doing something journalists do every day: posing questions to a public official. Specifically, Villarreal twice texted with a police officer to corroborate information Villarreal already knew about events that had occurred within her community. That officer voluntarily provided the information Villarreal sought, and Villarreal published those facts, consistent with her role as a journalist.

Six months later, Villarreal was arrested for asking those questions. {Villarreal [was accused] of violating Texas Penal Code Ann. §39.06(c), which states that "[a] person commits an offense if, with intent to obtain a benefit …, he solicits or receives from a public servant information that: (1) the public servant has access to by means of his office or employment; and (2) has not been made public." In the 23 years since the statute was enacted, there is no documented arrest in Webb County, let alone conviction, for violating §39.06(c).}

Making matters worse, Villarreal alleges that the arrest followed a months-long effort by a police department and district attorney's office to retaliate against her because they disliked much of her reporting on their activities. Of course, that reporting was often critical of them.

It should be obvious that this arrest violated the First Amendment. Yet the Fifth Circuit held that the officials were entitled to qualified immunity, and now Villarreal is left without a remedy. The Court today makes a grave error by declining to hear this case….

Read More

Free Speech

S. Ct.: Police Had Qualified Immunity for Use of Wristlock on Capitol Sit-In Protester

|

From Zorn v. Linton, decided today in an unsigned per curiam opinion:

On the Governor's inauguration day in Vermont, protesters staged a sit-in at the state capitol. When the capitol closed for the day, police officers told them that they would be arrested for trespassing. They refused to leave. As officers removed the protesters one by one, Sergeant Jacob Zorn asked Shela Linton to stand up and warned her that he would eventually have to use force to remove her. She refused to stand.

Zorn took Linton's arm, put it behind her back, placed pressure on her wrist, and lifted her to her feet. Linton sued Zorn for using excessive force, claiming that the arrest left her with arm injuries and psychological disorders. The Second Circuit held that Zorn was not entitled to qualified immunity. We reverse….

Government officials enjoy qualified immunity from suit under § 1983 unless their conduct violates clearly established law. "A right is clearly established when it is 'sufficiently clear that every reasonable official would have understood that what he is doing violates that right.'" A right is not clearly established if existing precedent does not place the constitutional question "'beyond debate.'"

To find that a right is clearly established, courts generally "need to identify a case where an officer acting under similar circumstances … was held to have violated" the Constitution. The relevant precedent must define the right with a "high degree of specificity," so that "every reasonable official would interpret it to establish the particular rule the plaintiff seeks to apply." Principles stated generally, such as that "an officer may not use unreasonable and excessive force," do not suffice. In short, officers receive qualified immunity unless they could have "read" the relevant precedent beforehand and "know[n]" that it proscribed their specific conduct.

Read More

Free Speech

Journal of Free Speech Law: "Anti-Zionism and Title VI: College and University Responsibility," by David E. Bernstein

|

The article is here; the Introduction:

Since Hamas's October 7, 2023 attack on southern Israel, the start of the subsequent war in Gaza, and an outbreak of campus protests expressing vehement hostility to Israel, dozens of universities across the United States have faced lawsuits, administrative complaints, and federal investigations alleging dereliction of their Title VI duty to protect Jewish students from discrimination. These Title VI claims typically include allegations that universities have been deliberately indifferent to the way actions by anti-Israel protesters have created a severe and pervasive hostile environment for Jewish and Israeli students.

Public attention has focused on perceived hateful speech by anti-Israel protesters. This includes slogans seen as calling for the destruction of Israel (e.g., Arabic chants of "From River to the Sea, Palestine is Arab"); speech that is often interpreted as calls for violence against Israel, Jews, and their supporters (e.g., "Globalize the Intifada" and, in Arabic, "Khaybar Khaybar oh Jews, the army of Muhammad will return"); expressions of support for Hamas in general (e.g., "Glory to the Martyrs") and its October 7 crimes in particular (e.g., flyers that feature paragliders, glorifying the Hamas terrorists who massacred Israelis after flying into Israel on paragliders); and pro-Hamas events on October 7, 2024, the anniversary of the massacre.

Judicial decisions and scholarly commentary have tended to frame the Title VI claims primarily as conflicts over political expression of this sort by anti-Israel protesters. In late 2023, the federal Department of Education advised university officials that in the context of anti-Israel protests, constitutionally protected speech alone can create a hostile environment that universities are obligated to address, albeit without suppressing speech.

Much of the subsequent debate, in courts and otherwise, has been over whether rhetoric widely perceived as antisemitic or as endorsing violence in the abstract can ordinarily support hostile-environment liability without violating the First Amendment. Jewish students' claims should be rejected, some argue, as objections to rhetoric the students find deeply offensive but that is constitutionally protected. A recent attention-getting article asserted that Jewish students' claims may not ordinarily rely—even merely as evidence of an overall hostile campus climate—on campus protesters engaging in such incendiary rhetoric.

This Article argues that prevailing analyses of post-October 7 Title VI claims are incomplete and are often legally mistaken because they ignore or misinterpret a central element of hostile-environment doctrine: context. Hostile-environment law asks whether conduct is so severe, pervasive, and objectively offensive that it effectively denies students access to educational opportunities. This inquiry is contextual and depends on the "constellation of surrounding circumstances."

Read More

Free Speech

Court Refuses to Block Continued Distribution of DOGE Witness Deposition Videos

"[T]he materials at issue concern the conduct of public officials acting in their official capacities, which substantially diminishes any cognizable privacy interest and weighs against restriction."

|

From Authors Guild & Am. Council of Learned Societies v. National Endowment for the Humanities, decided today by Judge Colleen McMahon (D.D.C.):

Defendants … move for entry of a protective order in the aftermath of Plaintiffs' decision to publish on the internet video recordings of four depositions taken during discovery in these consolidated actions. The videos—totaling approximately twenty-five hours of testimony—were posted publicly on YouTube and on the websites of Plaintiffs American Council of Learned Societies and Modern Language Association. The Government objected to their dissemination, particularly in light of reported harassment, even threats, directed at the witnesses and members of their families after the videos were posted.

On March 13, 2026, the Court issued an interim order directing Plaintiffs to remove the videos and to cease further dissemination pending full briefing, argument, and resolution of the dispute. The videos have since been taken down.

The Government now seeks a protective order prohibiting Plaintiffs from republishing the recordings and restricting Plaintiffs' dissemination of any discovery materials that are not filed on the public docket. The Government is correct that the videos are not judicial documents and so carry no presumption of public access.

But they are also not covered by the existing protective order in this case and, absent a court order, could be publicly disseminated by any party in the ordinary course. The issue is therefore whether the Government has carried its burden under Rule 26(c) to justify restricting that dissemination. It has not.

The Government's motion for a new protective order is therefore DENIED….

Read More

Politics

Just on One Day—Last Friday—Six Courts Issued Opinions Noting Fake Cites or Quotes in Briefing

|

Four were state appellate courts and two were district courts. Four involved filings by lawyers, and two by self-represented litigants. All seem likely to have been the result of unchecked use of AI, though I suppose it's possible that there was no AI and the error just came directly from a human.

If you want case names, they are Prososki v. Regan (Neb.), Gentry v. Thompson (E.D. La.), Blair v. Sanctuary Bluff Homeowners Ass'n, Inc. (Ky. Ct. App.), Hessert v. Hessert (Fla. Ct. App.), State v. Coleman (Ohio Ct. App.), and Lopez v. Mead Johnson Nutrition Co. (N.D. Cal.). The hits just keep coming.

And of course many such hallucinated materials aren't spotted by courts, are spotted but not remarked on, or are spotted and remarked on but don't make their way onto Westlaw, where a query I have picks them up. (Most state trial court decisions don't result in any detailed written order, but instead offer just a bottom-line result; and even those that are written often don't get posted on Westlaw.)

Politics

Injunction Against Further Leafletting by Union Organizer at CEO's Front Door

A New Mexico court upholds it, rejecting a First Amendment defense.

|

From Silva-Steele v. Enghouse, decided Thursday by the N.M. Court of Appeals, Judge Jennifer Attrep, joined by Judges Megan Duffy and Katherine Wray:

Defendant Adrienne Enghouse appeals a district court order permanently enjoining her from entering Plaintiff Jamie Silva-Steele's private, residential property. Silva-Steele initiated this case after Enghouse left a flyer, related to unionization efforts, at Silva-Steele's residence….

Before the incident giving rise to the injunction, Enghouse was attempting to unionize the employees of a hospital at which Silva-Steele serves as president and CEO. As part of her organizing activities, Enghouse leafleted Silva-Steele's neighborhood with informational flyers, leaving one at Silva-Steele's front door. {There does not appear to be any dispute that, because Silva-Steele's property was unposted at that time, Enghouse did not trespass on Silva-Steele's property when she left the flyer. The next day, however, Silva-Steele posted non-solicitation signs at her residence.}

In response, Silva-Steele filed a verified application for a restraining order in district court. Silva-Steele alleged in the application that Enghouse had "crossed the line by showing up at [her] house, and leaving … propaganda behind," causing her to "fear for [her] safety and the safety of [her] family." In relevant part, Silva-Steele asked the district court to order Enghouse to stay away from her home….

[At a hearing, c]ounsel for Enghouse admitted that Enghouse would be committing criminal trespass if she reentered Silva-Steele's property. Nevertheless, Enghouse, through counsel, refused to agree not to enter Silva-Steele's property in the future. After the hearing, the district court … found, "Enghouse … refused to acknowledge that the criminal trespass laws prohibit her from entering … Silva-Steele's property and testified that she intended to return to the property in the future." The court concluded, "Immediate and irreparable harm will result from … Enghouse's actions unless she is permanently restrained and enjoined from entering … Silva-Steele's private residential property." The district court thus permanently enjoined "Enghouse from entering the private property of … Silva-Steele for any purpose." …

The court concluded an injunction was authorized, despite the New Mexico Anti-Injunction Act:

Read More

Free Speech

Drag Queen's Right of Publicity Claim Against Netflix's Q-Force Rejected

|

From Hara v. Netflix, Inc., correctly decided by the California Court of Appeal (Justice Lamar Baker, joined by Justice Brian Hoffstadt and L.A. County Superior Court Judge Sanjay Baker):

In this anti-SLAPP appeal, defendants … are the creators and producers of an animated television series titled Q-Force, which is about a group of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, or Queer (LGBTQ) spies {who, "despite being the best in their field, are undervalued due to their sexualities and identities"}. {Gabe Liedman (Liedman), a co-creator, showrunner, writer, and executive producer of Q-Force, publicly stated every character in Q-Force was based on someone in real life in order to ground the series in reality.}

Plaintiff and respondent Lance Hara, a performer using the name Vicky Vox (plaintiff or Vox), filed a complaint alleging she is a "well-known" drag queen in Hollywood and complaining defendants wrongfully used her likeness in Q-Force without her consent…. Vox has a web series, The Vicky Vox Project, that depicts a cartoon-like illustration of Vox….

Defendants allegedly used Vox's likeness in one scene of one of the ten 30-minute episodes of Q-Force. Specifically, the scene takes place during episode 5 of the series, which is titled "WeHo Confidential." It begins with four other characters, including one named Steve, chatting at a table in what appears to be a bar in West Hollywood. During the conversation, Steve says it is time for him to plug back into his community. Shortly thereafter, he calls out to another character, Twink, who is sitting at a different table. As the perspective shifts to show Twink, the side profile of the background character allegedly resembling Vox is visible for approximately one second. The entirety of the character's seated form is then visible for approximately the next ten seconds, along with the seated forms of Twink and three other drag queens. {As Vox's complaint describes it, the background character at issue allegedly shares the following similarities with a photograph taken of Vox inside a bar in West Hollywood: "voluminous red-orange hair styled with a center part, defined, close together eyebrows, cat-eye make-up, face shape, nose structure, full jawline, high cheek bones, full bodied figured, her outfit's color is the same shade and tone of teal, and she is depicted inside a bar in West Hollywood."}

Read More

Free Speech

Parents Aren't Required to "Unquestioningly Accept and Support Their Minor Children's Claims of Transsexual Identity or Preferred Pronouns"

From a termination of parental rights decision by the Ohio Court of Appeals.

|

From the long (>10K-word) opinion in In re S.B., decided Friday by Ohio Court of Appeals Judge Matthew R. Byrne, joined by Judges Robert A. Hendrickson and Robin N. Piper:

Though not stated explicitly, there is some suggestion in the state's brief and in the juvenile court's permanent custody decision that Mother and Father were unfit as parents because they both were initially reluctant to embrace Sara's announcement that she was transgender and/or using male pronouns. We disagree.

There is no requirement in Ohio law that parents must unquestioningly accept and support their minor children's claims of transsexual identity or preferred pronouns. In fact, this issue remains hotly-contested socially, politically, and legally. As an example, the State of Ohio has banned so-called "gender-affirming care" for minors because of the inherent risk of providing such treatments to minors, whose minds are developing and may change. That statute is currently being litigated. Meanwhile, the United States Supreme Court has upheld a similar ban in Tennessee. Quite recently, Justice Barrett, joined by Chief Justice Roberts and Justice Kavanaugh, emphasized that "the doctrine of substantive due process has long embraced a parent's right to raise her child, which includes the right to participate in significant decisions about her child's mental health."

From a best-interest analysis perspective, we see no serious concern presented by Mother's and Father's cautious reactions to Sara's disclosure of her perceived transgender status and preference for male pronouns. This lack of concern is particularly bolstered here, where both Karen and Sara's therapist testified that Sara is struggling with gender identity and sexuality, and Karen explained that Sara tended to "change[ ] her sexuality every four to five weeks." Children who struggle with these issues deserve sober and sensitive guidance, and Ohio law does not require parents unquestioningly to accept whatever their children say about their gender identity or sexuality at that particular moment.

There is also a possible suggestion in the state's brief and in the juvenile court's decision that Mother and Father should be faulted, in a best-interest analysis, for not unquestioningly supporting Sara's turn away from their family's Messianic Judaism. This is also not supported by Ohio law. Parents are free to assist and guide their children in the development of their religious faith…. "[P]arents have a fundamental right to educate their children, including the right to communicate their moral and religious values … and 'direct the religious upbringing of their children.'" …

The court also noted:

Read More

Second Amendment Roundup: Group Self-Defense Against Terrorism

ROTC cadets kill terrorist in shooting at Old Dominion University.

|

On March 12, 2026, Mohamed Bailor Jalloh walked into a classroom at Old Dominion University in Norfolk, Virginia.  He asked twice if it was a ROTC (Reserve Officers' Training Corps) class.  When told that was, he shouted "Allahu Akbar" (God is Greater) and shot the instructor, Lt. Col. Brandon Shah, several times, killing him.  He also shot and wounded two ROTC cadets.  He used a Glock 44 .22 caliber rimfire pistol.

In an instant, "Hero ROTC cadet fatally stabbed ISIS-supporting Old Dominion gunman to prevent more carnage," reported the New York Post.  Other cadets jumped on too, killing Jalloh.  None of the cadets have been identified, which helps protect them from terrorist revenge.

Yet no official source has been cited for the fact that a cadet stabbed Jalloh, and nothing about the knife has been described.

At a news conference the same day, Dominique Evans, special agent in charge of the FBI Norfolk Field Office, stated "I'd like to acknowledge the students, who showed extreme bravery, by constraining the shooter and stopping further loss of life." When asked for more details, she continued, "There were students that were in that room who subdued him and rendered him no longer alive.  I don't know how else to say it.  But they were basically able to terminate the threat.  He was not shot."  No detail was added as to how they "rendered him no longer alive."

Jalloh was a naturalized U.S. citizen born in Sierra Leone.  Jalloh had been a member of the Virginia Army National Guard, but was persuaded not to reenlist after hearing online lectures by Anwar al-Awlaki, a deceased Al-Qaeda leader.  He lived in Nigeria during 2015-16, when he met with Islamic State members and became further radicalized.  Back in the U.S. in 2016, he disclosed to an FBI confidential informant his plan to commit a mass shooting similar to the 2009 Fort Hood massacre, which left 13 dead.  On July 2, 2016, Jalloh bought a rifle from a gun shop in northern Virginia.  The gun shop was obviously cooperating with the FBI, as it secretly rendered the rifle inoperable before transferring it to Jalloh.  The FBI arrested him the next day.

Pleading guilty to attempting to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization, the Islamic State of Iraq and Levant ("ISIL," aka "ISIS"), Jalloh was sentenced to 11 years in prison.  He was released early in 2024 after completing a drug treatment program, although his conviction for terrorism should not have made him eligible for early release.  Nor was there an attempt to denaturalize him or deport him back to Sierra Leone. The probation office was required to visit Jalloh only every six months, the last visit being four months before the shooting.

Read More

AI in Court

Georgia Court Order Apparently Included AI-Hallucinated Cases, Copied from Prosecutor's Proposed Order

|

From CourtTV, discussing the Georgia Supreme Court arguments in an appeal of a murder conviction:

After arguing for the State, Leslie then faced a tough question from Chief Justice Nels S.D. Peterson, who said that in reviewing the trial court's order denying a new trial for Payne, "there are at least five citations to cases that don't exist, and there's at least five more citations to cases that do not support the proposition for which they're cited, including three quotations that don't exist."

Leslie responded that the order she had initially submitted to the court had been revised and took no responsibility for the errant citations. [Chief] Justice Peterson [responded,] "Those nonexistent cases were cited in your initial brief opposing the motion for a new trial."

You can see for yourselves the 33-page order denying a new trial, and the 37-page proposed order from the state; they do indeed appear to include citations to nonexistent cases.

Thanks to Prof. Adam Scales for the pointer.

Free Speech

Elon Musk Wins Defamation Lawsuit Brought by Someone Musk Allegedly Misidentified in X Post

|

From today's Texas Court of Appeals decision in Musk v. Brody, decided by Chief Justice (retired) J. Woodfin Jones, joined by Chief Justice Darlene Byrne and Justice Chari Kelly:

On June 24, 2023, two far-right groups—the Proud Boys and the Rose City Nationalists—tried to disrupt a Pride Night event in Portland, Oregon. The two groups, however, ended up clashing with each other, culminating in a violent confrontation caught on video. Although the Rose City Nationalists had arrived wearing masks, the Proud Boys removed some of their masks, exposing to the camera the faces of two Rose City Nationalists members.

The following day, the video of the brawl circulated widely on social media, becoming a popular topic of discussion. As part of that discussion, some right-wing influencers claimed that the Rose City Nationalists at the event were actually undercover federal agents or left-wing provocateurs posing as neo-Nazis. Several of these influencers tried to identify the two unmasked brawlers. For example, TwitterUser#1 tweeted, "Two unmasked members of Patriot Front. These are either federal agents masquerading as racists - OR-Leftists masquerading as far right. Do you know who these people are?"

Within hours, Twitter users tried to answer that question. Some wrongly identified Brody, then a student at the University of California, Riverside, as one of the unmasked brawlers. The basis for that false identification was apparently a resemblance between Brody and one of the unmasked men. TwitterUser#2 responded with a photo of Brody and a screenshot of a social-media post from Brody's college fraternity, which included a sentence from the post stating that "[a]fter graduation [Brody] plans to work for the government." TwitterUser#2 later posted additional images that included Brody's name and stated that a "member of patriot front is ACTUALLY a political science student at a liberal school on a career path toward the feds." Other Twitter users reposted the TwitterUser#2 posts about Brody.

Read More

Free Speech

First Amendment Precludes Title VI Liability for Harsh Anti-Israel Speech at Art Institute of Chicago

|

A short excerpt from the long decision in Canel v. Art Institute of Chicago, decided yesterday by Judge Georgia Alexakis (N.D. Ill.):

The First Amendment often protects offensive, hateful speech. As the Supreme Court has explained: "[P]reventing speech expressing ideas that offend … strikes at the heart of the First Amendment." It continued: "Speech that demeans on the basis of race, ethnicity, gender, religion, age, disability, or any other similar ground is hateful; but the proudest boast of our free speech jurisprudence is that we protect the freedom to express the thought that we hate." In the university setting, the Supreme Court has stressed that First Amendment protections are especially "[v]ital." See Rosenberger v. Rector & Visitors of Univ. of Va. (1995) ("For the University, by regulation, to cast disapproval on particular viewpoints of its students risks the suppression of free speech and creative inquiry in one of the vital centers for the Nation's intellectual life, its college and university campuses."); Healy v. James (1972) (First Amendment protection "is nowhere more vital than in the community of American schools … The college classroom with its surrounding environs is peculiarly the 'marketplace of ideas,' and we break no new constitutional ground in reaffirming this Nation's dedication to safeguarding academic freedom.").

In balancing Title VI's prohibition of harassment against the First Amendment's protection of speech, courts distinguish between speech on matters of public concern "directed to the community at large through generally accepted methods of communication" and speech that constitutes "targeted, personal harassment" aimed at a particular individual or group of individuals. See Gartenberg v. Cooper Union (S.D.N.Y. 2025); Landau v. Corp. of Haverford College (E.D. Pa. 2025); see also Rodriguez v. Maricopa Cnty. Cmty. Coll. Dist. (9th Cir. 2010) (analyzing the intersection of the First Amendment and a Title VII hostile environment claim and expressing "doubt that a college professor's expression on a matter of public concern, directed to the college community, could ever constitute unlawful harassment")….

The events Canel describes in her second amended complaint—even after being read in the light most favorable to her and with all reasonable inferences drawn in her favor—… represent instances of speech on matters of public concern "directed to the community at large through generally accepted methods of communication." Canel points to flyers criticizing SAIC's response to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and resulting discourse that were thumbtacked in a school hallway. She alleges that students and faculty—herself included—exchanged open letters and petitions sharing their views on the conflict. She describes various social media posts, inviting SAIC students to protests, utilizing slogans associated with the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and depicting posters and signs containing the same. She alleges that students conducted a "walkout," protesting on public streets and chanting slogans using similar language….

Read More

More
Make a donation today! No thanks
Yes! I want to put my money where your mouth is! Not interested
I’ll donate to Reason right now! No thanks
My donation today will help Reason push back! Not today
Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
Yes, I’ll support Reason today! No thanks
Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks
Yes, I’ll donate to Reason today! No thanks