*Supremes exempt selves from 1st Amendment *

Posted By *Bob Unruh* On 05/16/2016

Without comment, the U.S. Supreme Court justices announced Monday their
decision not to review a case challenging speech restrictions on the
court’s property.

“Shame on the court for making a mockery of the First Amendment and
engaging in a hypocritical double standard that does a grave disservice to
its historic stance on free speech,” said constitutional attorney John W.
Whitehead, president of the Rutherford Institute.
<http://www.rutherford.org>

Whitehead’s group has defended Harold Hodge, who was arrested for holding a
protest sign on the public plaza in front of the court.

Rutherford argues the court has allowed news conferences, protests and even
a wide range of other activities on the site, such as “commercial or
professional films.”

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Hodge challenged the court’s regulations as a violation of the First
Amendment, and District Judge Beryl Howell sided with Hodge.

“The absolute prohibition of expressive activity in the statute is
unreasonable, substantially overbroad, and irreconcilable with the First
Amendment,” Howell wrote. “The court therefore must find the statute
unconstitutional and void as applied to the Supreme Court plaza.”

But Howell’s decision was overturned on appeal, and on Monday, the justices
refused to hear the case, which, according to Whitehead, effectively
exempts the Supreme Court plaza from the First Amendment.

“By failing to right this wrong and refusing to hold itself accountable to
the First Amendment, this Supreme Court has once and for all invalidated
its role as the guardian of the people’s rights,” he said.

When Howell, finding the censorship to be “repugnant” to the Constitution,
struck the regulations, the managers of the court building, with the
cooperation of the justices, imposed new regulations within hours.

The court repeatedly has declined to comment on the case, even though it’s
a constitutional issue that affects the American public on the court’s own
front porch.

A lawsuit still is pending over the creation and imposition of the
subsequent rules, Rutherford said.

The case, Hodge v. Talkin
<http://wnd.com/2016/04/free-speech-fight-gets-personal-for-supremes/>,
focuses on a 60-year-old practice of banning free speech on the court plaza.

“As this case makes clear, free speech is no longer considered an
inalienable right or an essential liberty, even by those government
entities entrusted with protecting it. True free speech tests the limits of
our so-called egalitarian commitment to its broad-minded principles and
does not sit well with those who are easily offended, readily intimidated
or who need everything wrapped in a neat and tidy bow,” Whitehead said as
the case developed.

The First Amendment states: “Congress shall make no law … abridging the
freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to
assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.”

But the Supreme Court’s managers have determined it is “unlawful to parade,
stand, or move in processions or assemblages in the Supreme Court building
or grounds, or to display in the building or grounds a flag, banner, or
device designed to adapted to bring into public notice a party,
organization, or movement.”

Whitehead previously explained <http://wnd.com/?p=2608005> how speech
gradually has been curbed at the plaza.

“Through a series of carefully crafted legislative steps and politically
expedient court rulings, government officials have managed to disembowel
this fundamental freedom, rendering the First Amendment with little more
meaning than the right to file a lawsuit against government officials,”
said Whitehead earlier in the case.

On Jan. 28, 2011, Hodge was holding a three-foot by two-foot sign stating
“The U.S. Gov. Allows Police To Illegally Murder And Brutalize African
Americans And Hispanic People.”

Hodge was handcuffed and arrested. He was accused of violating a law that
makes it “unlawful to display any flag, banner, or device designed to bring
into public notice a party, organization, or movement while on the grounds
of the U.S. Supreme Court.”

“If citizens cannot stand out in the open and voice their disapproval of
their government, its representatives and its policies without fearing
prosecution, then the First Amendment is little more than window-dressing
on a store window – pretty to look at but serving little real purpose,”
said Whitehead.

The appeals court conceded that attorneys and litigants are allowed to use
the plaza for public events such as news conferences and for “commercial or
professional films relating to the court” but said the government still can
exclude those it does not want to have access to the forum.

For example, the judges noted 200 protesters surged up onto the plaza to
protest a Missouri grand jury’s decision not to indict a police officer who
fatally shot a teenager in 2014.

The demonstration went on for 15 minutes, but no arrests were made.

In a commentary, Whitehead explained the Supreme Court already has
“defended the free speech rights of Ku Klux Klan cross-burners, Communist
Party organizers, military imposters, Westboro Baptist Church members
shouting gay slurs at military funerals, a teenager who burned a cross on
the lawn of an African-American family, swastika-wearing Nazis marching
through the predominantly Jewish town of Skokie, abortion protesters and
sidewalk counselors in front of abortion clinics, flag burners, an anti-war
activist arrested for wearing a jacket bearing the words ‘F#@k the Draft,’
high-school students wearing black armbands to school in protest of the
Vietnam War, a film producer who created and sold videotapes of dogfights,
a movie theater that showed a sexually explicit film, and the Boy Scouts of
America to exclude gay members, among others.”

He continued, “Basically, the Supreme Court has historically had no problem
with radical and reactionary speech, false speech, hateful speech, racist
speech on front lawns, offensive speech at funerals, anti-Semitic speech in
parades, anti-abortion/pro-life speech in front of abortion clinics,
inflammatory speech in a Chicago auditorium, political speech in a private
California shopping mall, or offensive speech in a state courthouse.”

But the justices not only refused to hear Hodge’s appeal, but “in doing so,
it also upheld the 60-year-old law banning expressive activity on the
Supreme Court plaza.”

“Mind you, this was the same ban that a federal district court judge
described as ‘unreasonable, substantially overbroad … irreconcilable with
the First Amendment,’ ‘plainly unconstitutional on its face’ and
‘repugnant’ to the Constitution,” he wrote.

But it’s not complicated, he insisted.

“This ban on free speech in the Supreme Court plaza, enacted by Congress in
1949, stems from a desire to insulate government officials from those
exercising their First Amendment rights, an altogether elitist mindset that
views the government ‘elite’ as different, set apart somehow, from the
people they have been appointed to serve and represent.”

URL to article:
*http://www.wnd.com/2016/05/supremes-exempt-selves-from-1st-amendment/
<http://www.wnd.com/2016/05/supremes-exempt-selves-from-1st-amendment/> *


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