Category Archives: Law: Free Speech

Italy Censors Web Site for Showing Pope in Nazi Uniform

Robert's Stochastic thoughts brings first word of a very interesting incident in Italy. In his translation (slightly cleaned up here):

The magistrate Marco Patarnello has ordered the [temporary] preventive seizure of the site indymedia [http://italy.indymedia.org] for vilification of the Catholic faith and of the Pope. The prosecutor Salvatore Vitello requested this action, since an investigation by the DIGOS [police specialized in crimes against national security] revealed that there were montaged photos on the site showing Pope Benedict XVI in a Nazi military uniform.

In the leading leftist site, the Pope was called a “Nazi” and criminally insulted with insults in Spanish. Indymedia belongs to the Brazilian firm Imc, so the prosecutor has decided to make an official request that foreign judges take note of the act.

There's more at the site.

Internet lawyers will of course be waiting to hear what Joel Reidenberg has to say about this one. (Joel is the author of a very influential paper arguing that France had every right to try to stop Yahoo's US servers sending ads for Nazi memorabilia into France, and that US courts should not be shy about helping out.)

Posted in Law: Free Speech | 3 Comments

As Granfalloons Go, It’s a Good One

Here's today's quiz question. It's a doozy.

What do the following people and organizations have in common?

Hint: The above is the full list of persons and entities that have this particular thing in common.

Answer below.

Continue reading

Posted in Law: Free Speech | 1 Comment

Blame the Parents

Several of the liberal blogs I read are in a lather about a recent poll showing that high school students don't really grasp the import of the First Amendment. In this, they are following the lead of the Knight Foundation, which conducted the survey as a part of $1 million research project, and issued the results under the scare headline Survey Finds First Amendment Is Being Left Behind in U.S. High Schools.

And, yes, the statistics are not so good.

  • Nearly three-fourths of high school students either do not know how they feel about the First Amendment or admit they take it for granted.
  • Seventy-five percent erroneously think flag burning is illegal.
  • Half believe the government can censor the Internet.
  • More than a third think the First Amendment goes too far in the rights it guarantees.

Both the foundation and the blogs I read conclude that this indicts high school civics education. And since I think high school civics classes tend to be awful, I can see why this is easy to believe.

Trouble is, these views of the First Amendment are not so different from what their parents say when surveyed. So it's just as likely that the kids get this stuff at home.

Consider this analysis of the First Amendment Center's eighth annual survey of adults' views of the First Amendment,

One theme persists over the eight years that the First Amendment Center has conducted the State of the First Amendment survey: In the minds of many Americans, there is a troubling disconnect between principle and practice when it comes to First Amendment rights and values.

Americans in significant numbers appear willing to regulate the speech of those they don’t like, don’t agree with or find offensive. Many would too casually breach the wall between church and state. There is, in these surveys, solid evidence of confusion about, if not outright hostility toward, core First Amendment rights and values.

If more than a third of teen respondents think the government should censor more, they are not that different from their parents, as the First Amendment survey reports that four in ten adults “believe the press has too much freedom.”

It's old news that many Americans don't have a knee-jerk reaction in favor of free speech. That is why the First Amendment is so important. Not only does it protect me against the censors, but it serves an educational and indeed an exaltative role. Fewer people tend to support “weakening the First Amendment” than agree people should not have the right to speak freely. And so it has been for a long time.

Posted in Law: Free Speech | 3 Comments

A Real Good Start

There's an old, old joke that goes,

Q: what do you call it when a ship with 800 lawyers aboard sinks?

A: A good start.

Here's why people tell jokes like that:

CNN.com – Pair arrested for telling lawyer jokes – Jan 12, 2005

Did you hear the one about the two guys arrested for telling lawyer jokes?

It happened this week to the founders of a group called Americans for Legal Reform, who were waiting in line to get into a Long Island courthouse.

“How do you tell when a lawyer is lying?” Harvey Kash reportedly asked Carl Lanzisera.

“His lips are moving,” they said in unison.

While some waiting to get into the courthouse giggled, a lawyer farther up the line Monday was not laughing.

He told them to pipe down, and when they did not, the lawyer reported the pair to court personnel, who charged them with disorderly conduct, a misdemeanor.

“They just can't take it,” Kash said of lawyers in general. “This violates our First Amendment rights.”

Reading between the lines of the rest of the story, it sounds as if they might indeed have been somewhat overloud and disorderly for a courthouse. But even so…

Posted in Law: Free Speech | 1 Comment

The EU Needs a First Amendment

If this Daily Telegraph story is to be believed, and I think from other reading that it's basically correct as far as it goes, then the EU has a serious press freedom problem. But I admit I'm not as familiar with the relevant EU and ECHR case law as I'd like.

In EU judges end human rights law for press, Ambrose Evans-Pritchard writes that,

The European Court has quietly brushed aside 50 years of international case law in a landmark judgment on press freedom, ruling that Brussels does not have to comply with European human rights codes.

In a judgment with profound implications for civil liberties, Euro-judges backed efforts by the European Commission to obtain the computers, address books, telephone records and 1,000 pages of notes seized by Belgian police – on EU instructions – from Hans-Martin Tillack, the former Brussels correspondent of Germany's Stern magazine.

It is a test case of whether the European Court will adhere to the democratic freedoms and liberal principles upheld for the last half-century by Europe's top rights watchdog, the non-EU Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, or whether it will pursue a more authoritarian line as it grows in power.

Mr Tillack had written a series of hard-hitting exposes of EU fraud and skulduggery, relying on inside sources. By obtaining his archive of investigative files amassed over five years, the commission can identify key sources and “burn” a generation of EU whistleblowers.

He was arrested by the Belgian police in March and held incommunicado for 10 hours for allegedly bribing an official to obtain internal EU documents.

The action was requested “urgently” by the EU's anti-fraud office, which claimed Mr Tillack was about leave for America. In fact, he was moving back to Hamburg.

Leaked anti-fraud office documents have since shown that the allegation was concocted over dinner between two commission spokesmen.

Mr Tillack filed a lawsuit at the European Court with the backing of the International Federation of Journalists to block commission access to his records.

The federation pleaded that the EU's attempt to identify a journalist's sources in that fashion was a “flagrant violation” of press protection established over decades in European Convention law.

If the commission is allowed to sift through his records, it would render investigative journalism “virtually impossible” in Brussels.

Mr Tillack's lawyers cited extensive case law, including the case of “Goodwin v UK” in 1996, ruling that the protection of sources was the cornerstone of a free press and “genuine democracy”.

The human rights court ruled against Luxembourg last year that identifying a source of leaks did not constitute a “pressing social need” that could justify a breach of Article 10 on press freedom.

But the EU's Court of First Instance ruled against Mr Tillack last week on the grounds that the case was a strictly Belgian matter.

Euro-judges accepted commission claims that it played no role in the arrest of Mr Tillack, even though leaked anti-fraud office documents show it orchestrated the raid from the beginning.

I think I can understand why an EU court would be reluctant to issue what appears to amount to an injunction against an ongoing Belgian criminal proceeding, even if the applicant claims that the Belgian authorities are acting as a laundry for corrupt EU officials. From this distance, though, it doesn't really matter to me whether the fundamental flaw is in Belgian law, or in the EU's unwillingness to impose on Belgian authorities. What seems strange to me is that this sort of massive shopping expedition in a journalist's notes is allowed.

Note that I see this as distinct from compelling a journalist to testify about a crime the journalist has personally witnessed or participated in. In those cases, I think a journalist has the same obligation as any other citizen. That's an easy case. (Conversely, I don't think journalists should have to testify about hearsay relating to crimes, including post-hoc confessions by people who claim they did a crime.)

The hardest case, in my view, is in a particularized leak investigation relating to a specific classified document. If the leak was of a classified document, then the journalist may be the only source of information as to the identity of the person who provided the information in violation of law. At that point we have the clash between whistleblowing and rule of law. To date, the courts in the US at least have come down for the latter (cf. the Plame case), and I'm not prepared to say that's wrong.

But there is a big difference between a particularized effort to compel testimony as the identity of a source when all other ways to get the information have failed, and the Hans-Martin Tillack matter, which appears to be a very broad attempt to seize all of a journalist's notes—and one based on trumped-up claims to begin with.

Posted in Law: Free Speech | 2 Comments

US Sued for Blocking International Editing

Almost a year ago I blogged the US Treasury export control rules being used to prevent publishers from editing certain foreign manuscripts.

I'm happy to report that a group of publishers are (finally) suing to end curbs on editing. They deserve to win.

Posted in Cryptography, Law: Free Speech | 1 Comment