The Volokh Conspiracy
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FIRE's and My Amicus Brief on Connecticut's "Racial Ridicule" Law
FIRE has the details, though you can also read the full brief (written by FIRE's Adam Steinbaugh and me, with many thanks to our excellent local counsel Zachary Phillipps of Wofsey Rosen Kewskin & Kuriansky, LLP). I've been writing about this law since 2010, so I'm especially pleased to have been involved in this case, where I hope the law will finally be cut back. Here's a long excerpt from FIRE's summary, written by Adam Steinbaugh:
Connecticut's "racial ridicule" statute (Gen. Stat. § 53-37) [enacted in 1917] provides:
Any person who, by his advertisement, ridicules or holds up to contempt any person or class of persons, on account of the creed, religion, color, denomination, nationality or race of such person or class of persons, shall be guilty of a class D misdemeanor.
By its plain terms, the law only applies to an "advertisement" of some sort…. But that's not how police and prosecutors in Connecticut treat the law in practice. In 2019, for example, police at the University of Connecticut tracked and arrested several students for "playing a game" in which they uttered vulgar, transgressive words at a progressively louder volume—starting with "penis" and later replacing it with "nigger"—while walking through a parking lot. They weren't saying the words to anyone in particular, and the only way people learned what the students were saying was when someone turned up the volume on a cell phone recording.
The university's police launched an 11-day investigation using drivers' licenses, the surveillance cameras, WiFi phone access data, and card swipe data to figure out who the students were. When police identified them, the students were arrested and charged with violating the "racial ridicule" law.
What were the students advertising? Nothing. Still, they were being arrested under this law. This raised the question: Who else was?
This year, to learn how police were actually applying the law, FIRE undertook a broader search for records, expanding on similar requests first issued by Professor Volokh. The records we found—all of which are included in the brief—demonstrate that the UConn students do not represent a one-off example of police and prosecutors applying the law outside the context of advertisements. In fact, of the dozens of arrests, charges, and convictions we documented, none had anything to do with commercial advertisements.
Instead, as our brief explains, Connecticut law enforcement agencies regularly use the law to arrest people for spoken race-based insults and remarks, especially when those remarks are directed at police officers.
Those charged under the law are often homeless or mentally ill. Many arrests involve people already being arrested for something else and hurling insults at the arresting officers, who stack the "racial ridicule" charge on top. As our brief explains:
For example, the East Hartford Police Department has repeatedly charged people with violating § 53-37 for disparaging its white officers. One white officer wrote that he was "highly offended" when an arrestee "stated out loud" that the arresting officers were "crackers," and explained in the police report that "cracker" is "a term used to ridicule or disparage a Caucasian person." One subject was charged with violating § 53-37 for calling his arresting officers "white pigs," "white pussy cops," and "white bitches." And an "intoxicated" and "belligerent" detainee was charged with violating the statute because she responded to booking questions with "Fuck you bitch as[s] nigga cracker" and "Suck yo daddys cock and choke on it you bald headed cracker." Similarly, another man was charged because he "used racially offensive and derogatory language" during the booking process, calling the officer a "cracker."
Of course, § 53-37 is not limited to insults directed at white officers. In New Britain, a man was charged because, while being booked, he repeatedly referred to an officer as "nigger." In Manchester, a man was charged for calling a police officer a "black ass nigger fucking cop." And in Vernon, a man was charged under the law because he yelled "[f]uckin' Nigger" while resisting arrest.
As advocates for free expression often warn, subjective limitations on "hate speech" can—and in Connecticut have been—utilized to protect the powerful, sometimes against members of minority groups the laws are ostensibly designed to protect..
Law enforcement's interpretation of the "racial ridicule" statute violates the First Amendment. While some instances of hateful expression may be criminalized because they fall into a category of unprotected speech—like "fighting words" or "true threats"—there is no "hate speech" exception to the First Amendment.
And insults directed at police officers are especially unlikely to amount to unprotected "fighting words"—that is, words in a face-to-face encounter likely to cause an immediate breach of the peace—because police are expected to have the mettle to endure insults without responding with violence….
In 2021, attorney Mario Cerame—who defended the UConn students—filed a federal lawsuit of his own challenging the constitutionality of the "racial ridicule" statute, pointing out that its interpretation meant that he could be arrested for making off-color jokes among friends. The state responded with bombast, arguing that the notion that the law could reach noncommercial speech was "imaginary, implausible," "illusory, unfounded, and not credible," "completely absurd," "implausible," and a "farce."
Well, not if you ask the police enforcing the law, or the people they arrest.
Because the federal court was uncertain about how the state interprets the law, it used a procedure—called "certifying" a question—to ask the Connecticut Supreme Court what the law means by "advertisement."
Our amicus brief demonstrates to the Connecticut Supreme Court that Cerame has a point about how the law has been interpreted and urges the court to clarify that the law's use of "advertisement" means—at least—that it does not reach noncommercial speech. That would go a long way toward putting police on notice that the law doesn't authorize them to arrest people for insulting them.
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The "penis" game was current when I was in college. It stopped after a guy I knew responded to a whispered "penis" by standing up in the dining hall and yelling "penis!" loudly.
The federal court docket is here: https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/60887280/cerame-v-lamont/
The trial court judge asked the Supreme Court of Connecticut, "this law has been incorrectly applied, right?" Except not in the form of a leading question. If the Supreme Court of Connecticut says the law is limited to commercial speech the federal case may be dismissed for lack of standing because the plaintiff is not facing a threat of prosecution. Which is probably a loss as far as section 1983 is concerned but a win for free speech.
"Let's censor people!"
"Sounds good!"
"Oh noes! They're using our law to prosecute us!"
Do you see a problem with that?
Note to EV:
What is going on with the "reply" and "edit" features?
Neither seem to be working properly.
Queen: It was Univ of CT students arrested -- FIRE defends students, too.
Probably around the time they changed their name to Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression.
Isn't it about time for Rev. Artie to show up and clutch his pearls about how Volokh Conspiracy is now zero days since it last uttered a repugnant racial epithet?
The state responded with bombast, arguing that the notion that the law could reach noncommercial speech was "imaginary, implausible," "illusory, unfounded, and not credible," "completely absurd," "implausible," and a "farce."
Well, not if you ask the police enforcing the law, or the people they arrest.
Because the federal court was uncertain about how the state interprets the law, it used a procedure—called "certifying" a question—to ask the Connecticut Supreme Court what the law means by "advertisement."
This was a mistake on the part of the district judge. She should have taken the state at its word, and entered a declaratory judgment that the statute only applies to commercial advertisements and entered a permanent injunction enjoining state officials from prosecuting outside that scope.
By expressing uncertainty, she has now opened the door to a qualified immunity defense by officers who arrested people engaged in non-commercial speech. "See, even a federal judge was unsure what the statute meant."
Yes, defending individual infringement of rights not aimed at students is so terrible. Who do they think they are, the ACLU of the 1970s?
(And, yeah, the Reply function is messed up.)
Nice to see FIRE is stepping into the void ACLU left when they decided only progressive causes their staff liked were worth defending.
Yes, because all "cons" are a single cabal with the same opinions.
And what is not good is that most of the left has abandoned the rigorous defense of free speech that the ACLU stood for in the 1970s.
No doubt, the ACLU has traveled a long way from Skokie
Queen almathea: "When did FIRE start branching out to actions outside of educational institutions?"
You sound annoyed...
Bored Lawyer:
Since a QI defense almost certainly already existed for prior/already-existing arrests, the trial judge doesn’t give up much if anything by this certification statement. Whereas having the certainty of an on-point state S.Ct. decision will unambiguously cut off prospective QI defenses at the knees. So on balance, while your suggestion might also have worked, either route seems acceptable to me.
Queen almathea:
VERY annoyed...
And you know with certainty that the monolith that makes up whatever “cons” means in your brain wasn’t in support of the ACLU as to Skokie? After all, the ACLU’s actions benefited Nazis and we know that cons are all Nazis. All of the weird cross currents on that subject might be plugging the political filter that influences how you handle information.
Or we could talk about today, when it’d your team that is shitting all over free speech, but I suppose you’d rather not.
In the meantime the corrupt CT cops can't be sued because of QI.
An advertisement is a public notice.
The students were obviously advertising their lewdness and rudeness.
Nothing is wrong with ridicule unless it rises to the bar of fighting words, defamation, etc.
I regularly ridicule the depravity and the actions of a Zionist anti-Jew. Off the Internet, I do stand-up political insult and ridicule comedy.
I recently published some of my material on Facebook. Here it is.
Here's a recipe for Israeli falafel that a decent ethical human being can truly love.
1. Obtain a trash compactor,
2. Add 10 lbs of canned garbanzo beans,
3. Add 1 vicious bloodthirsty racial supremacist Zionist colonial settler anti-Jew.
4. Press the on switch.
5. Bring the Israeli falafel to the nearest zoo, which has an exhibit of omnivores like wolves, coyotes, wild dogs, bears, boars, pigs, or chimpanzees.
6. Feed the Israeli falafel to a large omnivore.
[I should explain to my Palestinian and Arab friends that I'm expert at satirical Jewish insult humor. Don Rickles has nothing on me. A depraved racial supremacist Zionist anti-Jew is almost too easy a target for this type of comedy shtick.]
See What are some great recipes for Israeli falafel? I want to make it at home.
Question: As I understand it, U-Conn also had concurrent student disciplinary proceedings for the arrested students.
What happens to those when this statute gets tossed?
In other words, now that the speech has been ruled "protected."
I was in college then and remember those times very well, Queen Smug.
Good to know you’re such a staunch defender of free speech. Oh, but wait!! You’ve defended the current Democratic campaign against free speech. Repeatedly. I guess your commitment to principle depends on the color of the jersey in the ox that’s getting voted.
"Any person who, by his advertisement, ridicules or holds up to contempt any person or class of persons, on account of the creed, religion, color, denomination, nationality or race of such person or class of persons, shall be guilty of a class D misdemeanor."
So an ad for a CRT class is a class D misdemeanor in CT.
Far out.
I also note that CT seems to have dodged the bullet on sex/gender, unless they stretch the definition of "creed" as far as the definition of "advertisement".
I don't know what every conservative thought about the ACLU in the 1980's.
I do know that George H.W. Bush used the phrase "card-carrying member of the ACLU" as a slur against Dukakis in 1988, which he repeated often.
I'm going to go out on a limb here and say I think that means the ACLU was generally quite unpopular with Republicans then. Indeed, the "card-carrying" business carries more than a hint of suggesting the group was a Communist organization.
So let's not hear tut-tutting from the right about the sad decline of the ACLU from its previous lofty position. It's bullshit.
Zarniwoop -- Except the State in response to the federal suit asserted it was ridiculous to interpret the statute as reaching anything other than commercial speech. That obviates any reliance on the statute. How can a policeman arrest someone on an interpretation of a criminal law that the State itself has labelled absurd?
But after the federal court acted, the same policeman can point to her uncertainty to support a QI defense.
Bigots have rights, too.
And no greater defender than the Volokh Conspiracy.
Rev. Arthur L. Kirkland:
"The trouble with fighting for human freedom is that one spends most of one's time defending scoundrels. For it is against scoundrels that oppressive laws are first aimed, and oppression must be stopped at the beginning if it is to be stopped at all." (H. L. Mencken)
Speaking of scoundrels: I find your repeated attacks against Christians despicable. But I'd totally defend your right to keep making them.
'For it is against scoundrels that oppressive laws are first aimed'
This sounds like someone who doesn't know how opression actually works. Were Jim Crow laws first aimed at 'scoundrels?' Were Nazi anti-Jewish laws first aimed at 'scoundrels?' Maybe I'm doing Mencken an injustice, but it sounds like the sort of thing said by people who prefer to defend scoundrels than the actual people laws are aimed at.
"This sounds like someone who doesn’t know how opression actually works. ... Were Nazi anti-Jewish laws first aimed at ‘scoundrels?’ "
In the eyes of the Nazis, yes.
Bernard, I definitely remember that the ACLU has generally always been a bogeyman for the right. I don’t remember specific reactions to the Skokie thing though.
People with strong political views are frequently not too concerned about the rights of people they don’t like, and the right has certainly never been immune to that attitude bb
I’ve always been sympathetic to the ACLU because I’ve always been sympathetic to civil rights, and I think it’s a shame that they’ve decided that there are some rights they’ll no longer defend.
Some of us were actually members of the ACLU in the 1970s.
Queen, WTF are you even babbling about? You explicitly defended Almost Truth Minister Whackadoodle.
And I have no idea what “con talking point” you’re imagining that fooled me. I don’t look at “con” sites so I don’t know what their talking points are.
Back to the naughty list for you.
Nige,
"Were Nazi anti-Jewish laws first aimed at ‘scoundrels?’"
The Nazis also passed laws against Communists. Communists are scoundrels, are they not?
Some of us were actually members of the ACLU in the 1970s.
I know. Some.
That was supposed to be a reply to queenie.
Yes, Nige, Jim Crow laws and Nazi anti-Jewish laws were first aimed at "scoundrels".
Jim Crow started by following up on the exception in the 13th amendment by passing further restrictions on felons, and implementing chain gangs, before moving on to poll taxes and literacy tests (moving from scoundrels/felons to poor/illiterate before going after all blacks everywhere.
The Nazis started by going after the scoundrel usurers, which is a great way (from their point of view) to associate every wealthy Jew with a Christian sin, seizing their property, well before they started building the camps.
The Law for the Restoration of the Professional Civil Service of April 7, 1933 excluded Jews and the “politically unreliable” from civil service. The Nazi government began to outlaw opposition political parties in June. The Nazi government outlawed the German Social Democratic Party on June 23, 1933.
The conservative critics of the ACLU in the 1980s — the people who used "card carrying member of the ACLU" as an epithet — were not mostly complaining about the ACLU's pro-free-speech stance — though these conservatives were generally not friends of free speech, either. (Ask flag burners, for one obvious example.)
These conservatives were more upset about the ACLU's positions on (1) the separation of church and state, and (2) the Bill of Rights as applied to criminal defendants.
Maybe the lack of a working reply feature is a good thing. It certainly seems to have reduced SarcastrO and Nige comments, although the Queen is soldiering on.
Between their wholesale abrogation of the 2nd Amendment and their desire to punish criticism of any favored group, the left is truly made up of evil fascists.
'Yes, Nige, Jim Crow laws and Nazi anti-Jewish laws were first aimed at “scoundrels”'
This is a good point, though it glosses over the degree to which the group targeted for oppression are painted as and treated as criminals and scoundrels. The 'ok groomer' crowd should really reflect on that.
elnurmamedrafiev:
You know what kind of criticism bothers leftists more than anything else? Criticism of them (and their insane policies).
It is because their policies are so fucking insane that they need to (1) disarm us, and (2) shut us up. Then they'll be free to set up heaven on earth (for our benefit!).
Is the left full of SCOUNDRELS, Ed?
Nige:
Am I preventing you from spewing your sick grooomer crap? Not unless you're doing it to a captive audience -- my kids!
Nige:
Hmmm... Well, I suppose it's possible that some are just misguided.
But you're still missing the point. Even if I believe that every single leftist is an out-and-out scoundrel, I still don't want to suppress / censor them. Let them air their ideas, however insane; I'll point out how insane they are; hopefully enough people will see that I'm right and they're wrong.
'Am I preventing you from spewing your sick grooomer crap?'
No more than I'm preventing you from spewing yours.
'hopefully enough people will see that I’m right and they’re wrong.'
Last couple of elections suggest not.
@Queen almathea
I am the plaintiff. I need to correct and provide context to your defense of the ACLU-CT, here, because they have not been an ally.
On October 27, 2019, David McGuire, Executive Director of the CT affiliate stated that he believed the UConn students should be punished for their speech:
"As a public institution, UConn bears a constitutional responsibility to ensure students of color have equal access to education, which means equal access to a learning environment where they are safe,'' McGuire said. "To date, the school has not taken the steps necessary to fulfill that obligation, and until its internal disciplinary process is complete, it remains to be seen whether the school will take adequate action to hold the two arrested students accountable.”
This is from the October 27, 2019 Hartford Courant article on the case. As a result of this statement, I withdrew my membership from the ACLU-CT. I had supported them since law school. I had written amicus briefs and volunteered there. This statement hurt me deeply.
They certainly do some good work, but on offensive speech, they are not especially helpful. They haven't litigated or filed an amicus in an offensive speech case in more than 10 years. It used to be an outstanding institution that I defended, that when people would say bad things about the ACLU generally I would say, "not my affiliate." The culture has changed. They aren't what they once were.
I felt I needed to correct your statements because they are isolated from the practical reality in my little super-blue 8 county state where I can confidently count strong 1A lawyers on one hand.
I am very grateful to Eugene Volokh and Adam Steinbaugh at FIRE not just for their amicus brief, but for their support throughout the case.
The CT statute was probably written to be overly broad.
In 1900 the phrase "commercial advertisement" was commonly used like this example from the Interstate Medical Journal.
It's perfectly reasonable to ask the Court to narrow the interpretation of the statute.
"Mario, that comment is about UConn internal discipline not the CT criminal statute in the OP."
The students were punished under the statute in the OP as well as administratively. Same speech, same incident. Speech not protected according to the ED.
I don't think the distinction is so tidy in context, and even if it were, I suppose I fail to grasp why this would absolve the ED? This ED says punishment of this protected speech is appropriate, and the same speech was the subject of a criminal prosecution under the statute in the OP. If the speech isn't protected, then the statute would be valid as-applied yeah?
@Jonathan Affleck
“It’s perfectly reasonable to ask the Court to narrow the interpretation of the statute.”
You're not wrong, but I don’t think there is a rational gloss that would pass constitutional muster under RAV. Maybe you do?
Thus I argue (in part) the CTSC should deny the certification as improvidently granted as the statute is not susceptible to a narrowing gloss that would save its constitutionality. It’s a bigger ask, but I’m just representing myself. The State is arguing for a narrowing gloss anyhow (solely to attack standing).
In Massachusetts we have criminal group libel. Group libel is a harmful lie against a group while criminal libel is associated with an intent to breach the peace.
I toy with the idea of a legal attack on Zionists because Zionists have been group-libeling Palestinians since the 1880s in order to legitimize, to normalize, and to justify
----
Dolus specialis of genocide meets the bar of intent to breach peace.
SCOTUS has never declared criminal group libel unconstitutional. See Beauharnais v. Illinois, 343 U.S. 250 (1952). The CT statute seems to be an attempt to criminalize group libel with a lower bar. If the CT statute is narrowed to criminal group libel in commercial advertising, it would have a substantial likelihood of passing Constitutional muster.
Queen: University students were arrested by university police for conduct which happened on campus. Not sure how that's "outside of educational institutions".
This gloss might work.
The word "breach" might have to be qualified by the adjective "imminent".
The state court should interpret the statute, which is all it was asked to do. The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts once answered certified questions and added in dicta that the conduct in question appeared to be protected by the First Amendment. The First Circuit took the hint.
@Jonathan Affleck
I really appreciate your genuine and thoughtful post. I was back and forth on it a bit, but it still seems to me to fall afoul of RAV as viewpoint discrimination concerning unprotected speech?
I assume you mean R.A.V. v. St. Paul 505 U.S. 377 (1992), which found a Minnesota law to be too content specific. In Virginia v. Black, 538 U.S. 343 (2003),
1. emphasized the threat aspect the Virginia law was constitutional and
2. declared the inference element of the statute to be unconstitutional.
Is 18 U.S. Code § 1091(c) unconstitutional? I ask because my father's cousin, who worked at the JNF, participated in an internal NY JNF special working group that from Dec 1946 through Dec 1947 methodically planned the legal, logistical, and PR aspects of the genocide that Zionist militias started in Dec 1947. The PR included group defamation, which is intended to normalize, to justify, and to legitimize genocide against Palestinians. Genocide is an international capital crime without a statute of limitations. The 1946 Nuremberg Tribunal, which included US military judges, sentenced Julius Streicher to death by hanging for genocide incitement, which included normalization, justification, and legitimization of genocide, which was directed against Jews and other groups. The Tribunal executed the sentence in October 1946. The international community instituted a ban on genocide in Dec 1946 (hence the JNF special working group) and made this ban jus cogens.
If there is any group defamation, which should be considered criminal, group defamation for the purpose of genocide incitement should be a Constitutionally valid example of criminal group defamation.
First, why should it matter?
Second, you seem to have missed where the first clients were students arrested at a university for playing a game in university parking lots.
They announced this earlier this year.