The Volokh Conspiracy
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The Right to Defy Criminal Demands: Possible Limits on the Right to Defy (Part II)
I've just finished up a rough draft of my The Right to Defy Criminal Demands article, and I thought I'd serialize it here, minus most of the footnotes (which you can see in the full PDF). I'd love to hear people's reactions and recommendations, since there's still plenty of time to edit it. You can also see previous posts (and any future posts, as they come up), here.
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I've shown in earlier posts, I think, that the law at least sometimes expressly or implicitly recognizes a right to defy. But not always, and not everywhere. Let me speculate on a few more particular circumstances that might lead courts and legislatures to reject such a right (whether or not soundly).
[D.] Whether the Defiant Conduct Is Constitutionally Protected
Some of the examples given above involve people insisting on engaging in behavior that is constitutionally protected against government restriction: the abortion clinic refusing to give in to demands to close; the bookstore refusing to give in to demands to stop selling blasphemous books; the speaker refusing the demands of hecklers; Simone Greenway showing romantic affection to Carrie Randall-Evans (indeed, in Greenway's own home); perhaps the Kentucky Fried Chicken employee refusing to turn over property to the robber; or perhaps Celia Diaz letting her niece stay with her. Some might argue that these cases offer the most compelling rationale for a right of defiance, but the right shouldn't extend to cases involving legal but constitutionally unprotected behavior.
Yet I don't think that's right. There might not be a constitutional right, for instance, to sell fur or do animal experimentation for medical research. If the democratic process led to such behavior being outlawed, all of us would have to comply with such legal constraints. But it doesn't follow that the fur store or the medical research facility should have to close—or face legal liability for staying open—when the demands come not from the law but from the lawless. So long as we are doing what we are legally entitled to do, we have an important interest in not having to give in to criminals' demands, and all of us have an important interest in not creating an additional legal incentive for the criminals to make more such demands.
[E.] Unreasonable Defiance / Foreseeable Harm
Of course, many possible restrictions on the right to defy involve situations where defiance is seen as "unreasonable" and the harm stemming from the defiance is "foreseeable": Mabel Ganal and Simone Greenway were accused of unreasonably provoking people (Ganal's husband and Simone's friend's husband); Kentucky Fried Chicken was accused of unreasonably failing to comply with the robber's demands; Daniel McBrayer was accused of unreasonably creating a risk of harm to his abortion clinic's neighbors. Negligence law generally requires unreasonableness and foreseeability for liability, and so does nuisance law.
The criminal cases—disturbing the peace prosecutions of people whose speech provokes violent hecklers, or the loss of the right of deadly self-defense on the part of people who fail to retreat or comply with demands—might likewise have an implicit "unreasonableness" dimension: For instance, the duty to retreat doesn't include a duty to retreat when doing so is unsafe. And in all those cases, the possible consequences of refusal to retreat, comply, or shut up are foreseeable.
One could argue that the right of defiance should extend only to reasonable defiance (including cases where the harm is unforeseeable), as determined by a jury. Or one could argue this at least as to defiance of demands that are backed by a concrete threat of highly likely and imminent violence (as in Kentucky Fried Chicken), rather than just a foreseeable threat of possible future retaliation (as in Touchette or in the abortion clinic case). Indeed, one school of thought in torts cases is that many disputes—normative and not just factual—ought to be resolved through case-by-case balancing by juries. And that was an explicit part of the dissent's argument in Kentucky Fried Chicken v. Superior Court: "the question of whether the restaurant breached [its duty of care] and failed to use due care when its cashier initially refused to comply with the robber's demands is a question for the jury."
But the premise of this article is that refusal to comply with criminals' demands should not be seen as unreasonable, even when it creates or increases a risk of harm (imminent or otherwise). In negligence cost-benefit balancing terms, the costs of taking such a precaution must include the dignitary costs of being forced to subordinate oneself to a criminal's will. And the law should conclude that, as a matter of law, such costs cannot be legally required, rather than just leaving it to case-by-case jury decisionmaking.
Indeed, tort law often recognizes that certain kinds of decisions about duty should be made as a matter of law by judges, rather than left to jury discretion; to quote the Restatement (Third) of Torts, "In exceptional cases, when an articulated countervailing principle or policy warrants denying or limiting liability in a particular class of cases, a court may decide that the defendant has no duty or that the ordinary duty of reasonable care requires modification." This rule supports deciding whether certain kinds of behavior should be immunized from tort liability "as a categorical matter under the rubric of duty, and a court's articulating general social norms of responsibility as the basis for this determination." I have argued throughout this Article that people generally should not be seen as having "responsibility" to obey criminals.
[F.] Special Relationships Creating a Duty to Protect
Of course, in practice people sometimes do feel a moral or personal obligation to comply with criminals' demands, even heinous demands. That is particularly likely, I expect, when people are trying to protect their children; one hears stories, for instance, of mothers even accepting being raped in order to shield their daughters. And, at least when something less awful is at stake, we might expect people to sometimes go along with criminal demands to protect someone with whom they have some special relationship, especially a family relationship.
But whatever one might think is right as a matter of moral obligation, or just personal emotional response, I don't think this extends to a legal obligation. Even a parent, I think, should not be viewed as legally required to comply with criminal demands to protect their child (though I expect that legal pressures would have very little relevance to a parent's decision in such a situation, and emotional reactions would overwhelmingly predominate). And the same is true for other relationships, whatever other legal significance they might have. Store owners may have duties to reasonably protect their business visitors, for instance by hiring guards or putting up security features. But I think the KFC court (and the others it followed) was right to say that this duty to prevent crime doesn't extend to a duty to obey criminals.
Likewise for another kind of special-relationship-based duty, the psychiatrists' duty (recognized in many states) to reasonably protect third parties from foreseeable violent attack by the psychiatrists' patients. The psychiatrist may have a duty to warn the prospective target about the threat from a patient. The psychiatrist may even have a duty to try to get the patient committed. But the psychiatrist shouldn't have a duty to obey the patient's demands; if, for instance, Lawrence Moore (the psychiatrist in Tarasoff) had been told by Prosenjit Poddar (the patient), "I'll kill Tatiana Tarasoff unless you tell me I'm Jesus"—or "I'll kill Tatiana Tarasoff unless you renounce Jesus"—that should not create a legal obligation on Moore to give in to that threat.
The one possible exception might be for people specifically hired to be ransom funders, or perhaps guards, who have expressly contracted to go along with such demands. If a ransom insurance company has agreed to pay ransom in the event of a kidnapping, it has given up its right not to pay (unless, of course, there is a law precluding such ransom insurance, on the theory that allowing ransom insurance encourages kidnappings). Likewise, one can imagine a similar deal for security guards or bodyguards, though again that might be limited by public policy (agreements to hand over property, if that's what it takes to protect the principal, might be enforceable, but agreements to do anything—down to submission to rape or other serious abuse—might not be). But allowing such a contractual obligation, justified by an express promise, shouldn't lead to imposing such obligations as a matter of tort law or criminal law.
[G.] Defiance as Provocation Mitigating Attacker's Guilt
Say Craig makes certain kinds of criminal demands of Danielle, such as that she not leave him or else he'll kill her; she defies those demands; and then he kills her. Some cases would treat Danielle's defiance as a basis for downgrading Craig's crime from murder to voluntary manslaughter. Likewise, some cases have treated such supposed "provocation" as a basis for reducing the sentence for a nondeadly physical attack.
The same has at times been done or proposed with regard to offensive political or religious speech, providing a sort of limited immunity to violent hecklers as an analog to a "heckler's veto." Following the Supreme Court's flagburning decisions, there were calls to sharply decrease punishments for beating someone who burns the American flag. Likewise, in State v. Elbayomy, a judge imposed a reduced punishment on someone who physically attacked a "Zombie Mohammed" who was marching in a Halloween parade, on the grounds that the parader's behavior was blasphemous and therefore provoking.
I'm inclined to think that such downgrading of the punishment should be rejected as a matter of law, and that the victim's defiance of the attacker's criminal demands shouldn't diminish the price that the attacker must pay for making good on the threat (or for attempting to do so). The right to defy criminals' demands should include the right to equal protection of the law from criminals' retaliation for such defiance (whether such a right is framed as a constitutional equal protection right or just as a subconstitutional legal principle). Victoria Nourse has articulated this particularly well with regard to the voluntary manslaughter scenario.
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So long as we are doing what we are legally entitled to do, we have an important interest in not having to give in to criminals' demands, and all of us have an important interest in not creating an additional legal incentive for the criminals to make more such demands.
That, right there, is where it goes off the rails. Whatever that, "interest," actually is, it is not the same as the right to personal self-defense. The right of self-defense legitimately claims constitutional protection. The vague, "interest," EV refers to is legitimately entitled to much less—at most a fair place in the back-and-forth of politics.
Personal self-defense aside, the question of the amount of violence customary to use against alleged criminals must be decided politically. It is not a matter for personal prerogative. The fraught history of modern American race relations stands witness to the pitfalls of doing it otherwise.
Indulge that unfounded conflation, and what results is worse than problematic. After the conflation, little is left to separate a legally inchoate, "interest," from the disciplined and legally bounded right of armed self-defense. By that process, the right of self-defense itself escapes customary definition by legal constraints. It takes on instead the formlessness of the interest with which it has been confused. In that way, self-defense itself can turn monstrous.
Into that unbounded space rush people not merely intent on gun use to defend themselves, but also people bringing grandiose visions about what constitutes proper social order, and how to use arms to make such visions come true. They arrive imagining themselves entitled by right to impose by arms their personal preferences for politics and society—and more to the point, to impose by arms whatever preferences they and similarly armed compatriots may cherish together. If thwarted, they lash back with concerted fury, certain they have suffered encroachments on their rights. It is a pattern so familiar that forthright judgment can scarcely question it.
That conflation is unwise. It is folly to encourage it.
"...the right of defiance should extend only to reasonable defiance (including cases where the harm is unforeseeable), as determined by a jury."
Fuck you and the lawyer rent seeking horse you rode in on. You want lawyer procedures and employment to tell us if we defended ourselves properly. No. We tell you, you vile pro-criminal stinking lawyer profession.
Hey, scumbag, you believe in forecasting. That is a supernatural power attributed to God, in accordance with the Catholic faith. Not even the Medieval church that you scumbags plagiarized believed man could predict the future. Even planetary location has uncertainty. You believe human behavior and its consequences can be predicted. Only behavior that has already occurred is verifiable, like a criminal threat.
You are an idiot, and totally ridiculous. A kid in Life Skills, learning to eat with a spoon, does not share your superstitions.
All lawyer procedures are punitive to crime victims. A trial is far more damaging than surrendering a wallet. That is the intent. Protect, privilege, and empower the client, the violent criminal. That increases crime, which increases lawyer employment. This article is in bad faith by not disclosing its real intent, rent seeking and lawyer employment through complication of very simple scenarios. A violent criminal comes upon a person. That person and all around him have a duty to kill the criminal on the spot.
Completely disagree.
First, Professor Volokh’s distinction between the “lawful” and the “lawless” lacks the objectivity constitutional analysis needs, and ignores the fact that the law has often changed, and often because of protests by the formerly lawless. It further ignores the fact that otherwise law-abiding people can be driven to “lawlessness” by conduct they abhor.
So a state absolutely can provide for an intermediate state - inded, a whole spectrum of intermediate states - where certain conduct is neither completely lawful nor completely lawless. One example of such an intermediate state is you can do it, but only if people around you aren’t really bothered by it.
Aristotle wasn’t an idiot, but his binary conception of logic regularly fails to account for how the real world works. Demanding that there be only two discrete categories, lawful and unlawful, is an example of where Aristotelian thinking leads astray.
Intermediate categories may seem intellectually untidy. But better to have an intellectually untidy society where people with radically different views are able to achieve a modicum of peace than a society where intellectual tidiness leads to civil war.
Intermediate categories are a means of keeping peace between people with radically different views of whether something should be lawful or unlawful, between people who demand to do it and people who are really bothered about it.
The Constitution does NOT demand a world where 50.1% of the population has to jail the other 49.9%, where one side must win completely and the other side must completely lose, so that the jails have to be constantly overflowing with the losers. Paris is worth a mass, and the public peace is worth a little of what Professor Volokh might consider intellectual untidiness.
And frankly it isn’t untidy. Non-binary logic is completely intellectually legitimate.
A state can decide that on certain issues, there is such profound disagreement in society that an intermediate state, where something is neither completely lawful nor completely unlawful, is needed to keep the peace.
That intermediate state can include a spectrum of policy options, both “illegal but” and “legal but.” It can include illegal but enforce only on complaint. It can include illegal but a $5 fine. It can include illegal but a tort rather than a crime. It can include legal but zoning laws put it on the edge of town or in unpopulated areas. It can include legal but determined hecklers get a veto, It can include legal but if someone gets hurt in a scuffle with the hecklers, the party doing it has to pay.
All of these are absolutely permissable policy options. It may not seem fair that 50.1% of the population doesn’t end up getting every thing it bargained far. But I would totally disagree. A society able to reach a live-and-let-live compromise so that nobody gets to do everything they want but nobody is completely a criminal, is actually a fairer society than the one that designates 49.9% of the population fully criminal over that 0.1% difference, lets the winners flaunt it, and bundles up the minority and puts them all in jail.
It’s important to have an expansive concept of rational basis, one that accepts both absolute morals (think sodomy laws) and its opposite, queer (nonbinary) logic based on moral relativism, as potential acceptable alternatives, both rational. And there’s a spectrum of options between those extremes, too.
POST FACTO AND AD HOC POLICYMAKING
Case-by-case judge/jury decisionmaking in effect means that "the law" gets made up after the fact for the occasion, often followed by an appellate second opinion and possible re-judgment, and perhaps even a third one if the case is worth it in high-dollar terms or in the would-be impact of the precedent it may set.
At the systemic/macro level, that's not a good way to allow businesses to order their business operations and conduct in a rational way to limit liability exposure and operate profitably. Not to mention that there is no democratic input when appellate courts render duty/no-duty determinations "as a matter of law" in a single case (and even with retroactive effect extending to similar cases not before the decision-rending tort-policy-fashioning appellate court). At best there might be amicus participation by relevant industry groups when corporate or insurance liability is the issue.
As a general proposition, shouldn't the substance of the law be known beforehand so you (in particular, the rational biz person, as distinguished from impuse- or affect-driven often neither rational nor reasonable private individual) can adjust your behavior (and pre-set policies for your biz operations and employees) with that in mind and avoid/minimize civil and criminal liability?
How is it rational - or fair, for that matter -- for the state (here the the third branch) make up the substance of the law -- civil liability law in particular -- after the occurrence governed by the law (such as robbery in a retail establishment) is a thing of the past and the damages/ injury has been done (employees and/or customers injured or shot)?
Worse if you hire a business lawyer for sound legal advice before anything bad happens on your premises and he/she can't even tell you what the law is because ... well, it's an open question ... or one that's for the jury to decide later on a case-by-case basis.
My criticism of Professor Volokh’s example, noting that Lawrence v. Texas said adultery in a private home could continue to be criminalized and hence a heckler’s veto can be imposed as an intermediate policy option, is comparatively trivial compared to my main point, which is that intermediate policy options between fully legal fully illegal are not only permitted, they are sometimes critically necessary policy options to keeping the peace and enabling radically different people to live together in a society thst’s highly divided about an ethical or moral issue.
Intermediate policy positions, though, are only permitted for things that aren't rights.
That’s not entirely true. The Supreme Court’s line of cases permitting zoning adult businesses and such to outlying areas suggests that some rights are somewhat less equal than, or are at least somewhat less fully protected than, others.
You can’t do the entire gamut of intermediate policy positions. But you can do some.
On the rape issue in particular, there's a class of criminal who enjoys forcing people to have sex with each other. The guy making the threats is at least sometimes criminally liable for rape, and the victims could raise duress as an affirmative defense if charged. I haven't read any stories about civil liability, either for going along with the demand or for refusing to go along with the demand.
Section 230 of the CDA is nothing more than state-sponsored cyber-terrorism. The USA has become a country that uses "neoliberalist" nostrums (like the ones peddled by Eugene Volokh) to harm citizens and encourage cyber-stalking and cyber-terrorism.
According to Eugene Volokh (EV), the USA would be a better nation if:
1. People are allowed to post naked pictures of others online as a form of revenge, because Eugene Volokh views these postings as "valuable free speech."
2. Stalkers should be able to post private information to torment victims and control their lives online, even when the victims have done nothing wrong to the stalkers, and the stalkers are stalking out of mental illness or desire for control. Eugene Volokh views the cyberstalker's crimes as "precious free speech."
3. Maliciously doxing someone for the intent of harassing them online should be legal, and even celebrated, as Eugene Volokh views this as "precious free speech" that the "public just needs to know." No consideration to the victim or the malice of the harasser.
Is this the world you want to live in? Where a total free-for-all occurs online with no legal accountability and no civility? Apparently, Eugene wants it. More likely than not, he is paid by Google to peddle this dangerous "neoliberalism" because he gets paid behind the scenes as a form of bribe by Big Tech.
Eugene Volokh talks a big talk about "Free Speech" but THE GUY CENSORS MY POSTS HERE, he has deleted several of them.
What happened to your FREE SPEECH Volokh? All of a sudden you change the rules when you become called out for your hypocrisy?
I wonder why your posts get censored. Could it be that you're posting identical, off-topic, insulting, potentially libelous statements to multiple pages?
In my state, the "adequate" part of "adequate provocation" means it must be "sufficient to cause complete lack of self-control in an ordinarily constituted person." I would argue that refusal to comply with a criminal demand would not rise to that level.
Also, by making criminal demands, the criminal is making the initial provocation. And in my state, it was ruled that "Schmidt cannot incite a contentious argument and then legitimately argue that Wing-Schmidt's reciprocal provocation should mitigate his culpability." - State v. Schmidt, 824 NW 2d 839 - Wis: Court of Appeals 2012.
Re: "downgrading Craig's crime from murder to voluntary manslaughter"
Why wouldn't the (posited) crime be charged at the appropriate level in the first instance, rather than "downgraded" from a more severe one? Why is the reader supposed to assume the greater culpability level in the first instance as a default?
Answer: Because the loyal reader will recall from earlier intallments in the serialized tales from the dark law, that "Craig" is the consummate Bogeyman: robber, abortion-clinic arsonist, issuer of terroristic threats, not to mention jealous still-husband who won't let his wife find fulfillment in the arms and other body parts of another man. In short: Craig is quite a monster. Evil incarnate and he-gendered, of course.
In any event, in addition to the statutory criteria defining and differentiating levels of offenses, and categories of aggravating and mitigating circumstances, DAs have some discretion, so any professorial prescriptions as to aggressiveness of the charging decisions/practices would have to be directed at the DAs, not judges/courts (except perhaps in the context of litigating issues of lesser included offense and such on appeal and second-guessing the trial court's first-instance adjudication).
More fundamentally, isn't it the function of the legislature to define classes of offenses and set the criteria for what conduct is more reprehensible and/or harmful than other, and the corresponding sentencing ranges? That approach would allow for policymaking informed by prevailing values in the relevant political system (presumably states, for criminal codes, in the US, but national or regional in other systems), and foster greater legitimacy and public acceptance of whatever rules are adopted and then enforced in the criminal justice system.