As an unapologetic, nonpartisan defender of the right to free expression, FIRE (Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression) vigorously opposes expanded application of criminal statutes to increase potential liability for speech protected by the First Amendment. While fraud and speech integral to criminal conduct do not enjoy First Amendment protection — the government may, for example, criminalize lying on an insurance claim, or passing a note to a bank teller to commit bank robbery — these exceptions must remain narrow and well-defined in our laws and jurisprudence.
The federal indictment of
former President Trump on charges related to his actions between the 2020
presidential election and President Biden’s inauguration implicates these First
Amendment exceptions and the need for their narrow application.
The
Department of Justice correctly acknowledges that former President Trump had
“every right” under the First Amendment to “speak publicly about the election
and even to claim, falsely, that there had been outcome-determinative fraud
during the election and that he had won.”
But the
indictment argues former President Trump did far more than that. It claims he
violated federal law by using “knowingly false claims of election fraud” to try
to “get state legislators and election officials to subvert the legitimate
election results” and “convince the Vice President to use the Defendant’s
fraudulent electors, reject legitimate electoral votes, or send legitimate
electoral votes to state legislatures for review rather than counting them.”
These actions, DOJ alleges, defrauded the United States and violated 18 U.S. Code § 1512,
which prohibits “corruptly . . . obstruct[ing] . . . or imped[ing] any official
proceeding, or attempt[ing] to do so.”
In the
United States, no one is above the law and everyone is innocent until proven
guilty. It will be up to a jury, in its role as factfinder, to decide whether
former President Trump violated federal law. To convict, a jury must hold DOJ
to its burden of proving beyond a reasonable doubt that former President Trump
(1) knew his election fraud claims were false but repeated them anyway —
“corruptly” — in an attempt to (2) have others ignore their legal duties in
order to (3) prevent certification of the electoral vote.
The First
Amendment’s bar against criminalizing protected speech demands nothing less.
#
More about Fire: The
Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression's mission is to defend and
sustain the individual rights of all Americans to free speech and free thought
— the most essential qualities of liberty. For more information: https://www.thefire.org/
No comments:
Post a Comment