The Volokh Conspiracy

Mostly law professors | Sometimes contrarian | Often libertarian | Always independent

Crime

Naked TSA Checkpoint Guy loses First Amendment challenge to $500 fine

|

From Brennan v. U.S. Dep't of Homeland Sec., decided Tuesday by the Ninth Circuit:

When Transportation Security Administration (TSA) officers at Portland International Airport told John Brennan that he needed to undergo additional security screening because he tested positive for explosives, Brennan, in the middle of a TSA checkpoint, stripped naked. When TSA officers told Brennan to get dressed, he refused—three times. After TSA officers had to close down the checkpoint and surround Brennan's naked body with bins until the police arrived to remove him, the TSA fined Brennan $500 for interfering with screening personnel in the performance of their duties. See 49 C.F.R. § 1540.109 ("No person may interfere with, assault, threaten, or intimidate screening personnel in the performance of their screening duties under this subchapter."). Brennan petitioned for our review. We have jurisdiction under 49 U.S.C. § 46110, and we deny the petition.

Brennan's core contention is that stripping naked in the middle of a TSA checkpoint is expressive conduct protected by the First Amendment. But Brennan fails to carry his burden of showing that a viewer would have understood his stripping naked to be communicative. See Clark v. Cmty. for Creative Non-Violence, 468 U.S. 288, 293 n.5 (1984). Therefore, his conduct is not protected by the First Amendment.

Brennan also argues that his conduct did not violate the TSA regulation and that even if it did, the regulation is too vague to survive challenge under the Due Process Clause. Neither argument has merit. The regulation prohibits "interfer[ing] with … screening personnel in the performance of their screening duties." 49 C.F.R. § 1540.109. A regulation is unconstitutionally vague if it "fails to provide a person of ordinary intelligence fair notice of what is prohibited, or is so standardless that it authorizes or encourages seriously discriminatory enforcement." In making this judgment, we provide "greater tolerance of enactments with civil rather than criminal penalties because the consequences of imprecision are qualitatively less severe."

Brennan's conduct falls squarely within the regulation's "ordinary, contemporary, common meaning." We have long recognized that "'interfere' has such a clear, specific and well-known meaning as not to require more than the use of the word[] … in a criminal statute." In other words, the word has a "settled legal meaning[]." And courts have often defined and applied it, but never in a way that would lead a person of ordinary intelligence to think that he or she could strip naked at a TSA checkpoint and refuse to get dressed, leading to the closure of the checkpoint.

The petition for review is DENIED.

Note that Brennan's Oregon state court prosecution for public nudity ended with an acquittal:

The judge sided with the defense, which cited a 1985 Oregon Court of Appeals ruling stating that nudity laws don't apply in cases of protest.

"It is the speech itself that the state is seeking to punish, and that it cannot do," Circuit Judge David Rees said. [Oregonian, Aimee Green.]

But the Ninth Circuit wasn't bound by this conclusion; state acquittals don't preclude federal claims, and in any event criminal acquittals don't preclude civil claims, which rely on a lower standard of proof. (Remember O.J.?)