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Supreme Court Upholds Ban on Cross Burning, Rejects Free Speech Claim
AP ^ | 4-7-2003

Posted on 04/07/2003 11:57:37 AM PDT by Cagey

WASHINGTON (AP) - The Supreme Court upheld a state ban on cross burning, ruling Monday the history of racial intimidation attached to it outweighs the free speech protection of Ku Klux Klansmen or others who might use it.

A burning cross is a particularly powerful instrument of terror, and government should have the power to stamp out or punish its use as a weapon of intimidation, Justice Sandra Day O'Connor wrote.

The protections afforded by the First Amendment "are not absolute," she wrote.

The court voted 6-3 to uphold the ban, but split 5-4 on the narrower question of whether the law violates the constitutional guarantee of free speech. Justice Clarence Thomas agreed with the broad premise that states may bar cross burning, but did not agree with the court's holding that the law was constitutional on free speech grounds.

Thomas, the court's only black member, said the court didn't even have to consider the First Amendment implications because a state has a right to bar conduct it considers "particularly vicious."

"Just as one cannot burn down someone's house to make a political point and then seek refuge in the First Amendment, those who hate cannot terrorize and intimidate to make their point," he wrote.

At issue was a 50-year-old Virginia law that makes it a crime to burn a cross as an act of intimidation. A lower court ruled the law muzzled free speech.

"While a burning cross does not inevitably convey a message of intimidation, often the cross burning intends that the recipients of the message fear for their lives," O'Connor wrote. "And when a cross burning is used to intimidate, few if any messages are more powerful."

O'Connor was joined by Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist and Justices John Paul Stevens, Antonin Scalia and Stephen Breyer.

Justices Anthony M. Kennedy, David Souter and Ruth Bader Ginsburg dissented on free-speech grounds.

"The symbolic act of burning a cross, without more, is consistent with both intent to intimidate and intent to make an ideological statement free of any aim to threaten," Souter noted.

The Virginia law does not draw enough of a distinction, especially since it explicitly calls cross-burning "prima facia evidence" of an intent to intimidate, Souter wrote for the three.

That provision "has a very obvious significance as a mechanism for bringing within the state's prohibition some expression that is doubtfully threatening though certainly distasteful."

"This is a victory for race relations in America," said Kent Scheidegger, legal director for the Criminal Justice Legal Foundation.

The Supreme Court historically has been protective of First Amendment rights of unsavory or unpopular groups and causes, including the Klan, flag-burners, pornographers and strippers.

More than a decade ago, the court struck down a local law in St. Paul, Minn., that prohibited placing symbols including a burning cross or a swastika on someone else's property out of racial, religious or other bias.

The cross-burning case in Virginia evoked a mostly bygone era in the South, when "nightriders" set crosses ablaze as a symbol of intimidation to blacks and civil rights sympathizers. Virginia and other states tried to outlaw the practice, but the laws have run into trouble on free-speech grounds.

"I respect the First Amendment protection of speech, but burning a cross is never about free speech," Virginia Gov. Mark R. Warner said after the court issued its ruling. "Historically in Virginia, these provocative acts are clearly intended to menace and intimidate African-Americans," he said.

During oral arguments in the case in December, Thomas recalled what he called a centurylong "reign of terror" by the Klan and other white supremacy groups, and called the flaming cross "unlike any symbol in our society."

"The cross was a symbol of that reign of terror," Thomas said in apparent exasperation that a government lawyer was providing only tepid, legalistic justification for the Virginia law.

"My fear is ... that you're actually underestimating the symbolism of, and the effect of, the cross, the burning cross," Thomas said.

The moment was electric, in part because Thomas almost never speaks during the court's oral arguments, and because of his race.

The case began five years ago, with two separate prosecutions.

In one case, two white men in Virginia Beach, Va., ended a night of partying by trying to burn a 4-foot cross in the yard of a black neighbor, James Jubilee. Jubilee later moved his family out of the neighborhood because of concern for their safety.

In the other case, a Pennsylvania man was convicted of burning a 30-foot cross on private land in rural southern Virginia during a 1998 Klan rally.

Lawyers for Virginia told the court the Klan rally was held after whites became angry about mixed-race couples.

In addition to Virginia, anti-cross burning laws are on the books in California, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Montana, North Carolina, South Carolina, South Dakota, Vermont, Virginia, Washington state and the District of Columbia.


TOPICS: Front Page News; Government; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: crossburning; firstamendment
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To: JohnnyZ
That's awesome!

Anyone who can quote Eminem has got to be cool! :D

41 posted on 04/07/2003 4:15:28 PM PDT by BamaGirl
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To: Age of Reason
I'd better be careful when I build my campfire that two logs don't accidentally sit at right angles to each other--that might frighten someone and get me in trouble.

Get real. Intent must be established in a court of law. Read the opinion for crying out loud.

42 posted on 04/07/2003 5:23:30 PM PDT by Sandy
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To: Sandy
Intent must be established in a court of law.

This whole can't-cry-fire-in-a-theater-business is already getting out of hand.

I think people should be allowed to cry fire in a theatre, and if people don't like that, then they can stay out of theaters--and get a life instead.

That way, we will no longer have a slippery slope--which can be more dangerous than a burning theater.

43 posted on 04/07/2003 5:59:01 PM PDT by Age of Reason
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To: Sandy
But, of course, the masses must be placated with bread and circuses, so the powers that be need those theaters to keep the plebians amused and bemused.
44 posted on 04/07/2003 6:01:31 PM PDT by Age of Reason
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To: Cosmo
that perhaps I'm being dogmatically libertarian about all this

LOL

If you think you're being dogmatically libertarian, scroll-down this thread to see my posts 43 and 44!

45 posted on 04/07/2003 6:10:48 PM PDT by Age of Reason
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To: Cagey
"My fear is ... that you're actually underestimating the symbolism of, and the effect of, the cross, the burning cross," Thomas said.

The protections afforded by the First Amendment "are not absolute," she wrote.

I'm glad the ban on cross burning was not overturned and I absolutely love Justice Thomas's wisdom on law. Now I wish someone would place a ban on burning the United States flag here in America. The flag is a symbol of hard-fought-for freedom and I am intimidated and feel threatened when people use their "right of free speech" and burn it!

46 posted on 04/07/2003 6:18:18 PM PDT by arasina (PRAY for our troops, our president, our journalists, the POWs and the innocents!)
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To: BamaGirl
Anyone who can quote Eminem has got to be cool! :D

I agree :) It just came to me . . . a moment of sheer brilliance . . . hey what's a BamaGirl doing in Cali? PdD, I'm guessing?

47 posted on 04/07/2003 6:31:36 PM PDT by JohnnyZ (President of the Ruth Samuelson Fan Club)
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To: Blackyce

The guy with the sign is pro-life? What? What! Oh...

48 posted on 04/07/2003 6:34:24 PM PDT by tuna_battle_slight_return
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To: JohnnyZ
hey what's a BamaGirl doing in Cali? PdD, I'm guessing?

Yeah, just here for school. I went to college on the East Coast, and so I thought I would see what the West side was like. What a disaster! I can't wait to get out of the "Banana Republic!" The only thing good about CA is that it is where FreeRepublic was born! :D

49 posted on 04/07/2003 9:01:02 PM PDT by BamaGirl
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To: Age of Reason
ROTFLMAO!...I'm in a library right now and my neighbor in the next cubicle is looking at me like I'm nuts

FIRE FIRE (insert Beavis inflection)

Feel the gin
50 posted on 04/08/2003 6:04:45 AM PDT by Cosmo (Note to the left: the 1st Ammendment grants me the right to tell you to SHUT THE HELL UP!)
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To: mhking
YEP!

FRee dixie,sw

51 posted on 04/08/2003 8:36:36 AM PDT by stand watie (Resistance to tyrants is obedience to God. : Thomas Jefferson 1774)
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To: mhking
Clarence is the man.

I hear ya!

And a question for those who've determined (from a news article!) that SCOTUS' decision is wrong:   would it not be helpful to supply/post excerpts of the decision, and the points to be debated (not to mention some substantiation for their predispositions)?   That would provide for more interesting reading.   FReegards.

52 posted on 04/08/2003 6:44:59 PM PDT by GirlShortstop
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To: stainlessbanner
You're next!
53 posted on 04/08/2003 7:52:18 PM PDT by mac_truck
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To: farmfriend
Good point, farmfriend.
54 posted on 04/09/2003 6:44:03 AM PDT by stainlessbanner
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To: Kevin Curry
I think cross burning and flag burning is not right. I think with the way cross burning has been used that most people would concider it racial. And flag burning goes even accross the boundaries of being racial because many different races have fought for the freedoms that this nation enjoys so much.
If the flag has no meaning then why do people want to burn it? Because they want to p!ss people off. I guarantee you that if you were to take these people of hatred and disrespect and let them live elsewhere in the world they will learn real fast just how free we really are here and why it means so much to those of us who care. I use to think that we have slowly been losing more and more freedoms until I went overseas and seen just how strict most other countries are. The rights given to us all are there because the people who founded this country did not want to see our country end up like so many others. The flag is a symbol that should be protected by all US citizens because it does not just represent the ones we choose to govern the US but instead it represents all of us. I stand with you in that cross and flag burning does not deserve protection.
55 posted on 06/03/2003 8:51:29 PM PDT by LetsBeReal
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