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I.
The Bill of Rights
b. The first ten amendments (ratified in 1791) comprise the Bill of Rights. They were written to restrict the powers of the federal government (every state constitution had its own bill of rights). c.
The Bill of Rights was passed at a period of history when British abuses
of the colonists' civil liberties were still a recent and bitter memory.
3.
Cases become particularly difficult when liberties are in conflict (such
as free press versus a fair trial or free speech versus public order) or
where the facts and interpretations are subtle and ambiguous.
2.
The Incorporation Doctrine provides
the rationale for the process by which fundamental freedoms have been applied
against state action through interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment.
b.
It was not until Gitlow
v. New York (1925) that the Court relied on the Fourteenth Amendment
to find that a state government must respect some First Amendment rights.
a. Gitlow was the first step in the judicial development of the incorporation doctrine, the protection of civil liberties from state infringement. The incorporation doctrine is the principle in which the Supreme Court has held that most, but not all, of the specific guarantees in the Bill of Rights limit state and local governments by making those guarantees applicable to the states through the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. b.
Near
v. Minnesota (1931). The first case in which the Supreme Court
found that a state law violated freedom of the press as protected by the
First Amendment. Struck down case imposing prior restraint of articles
dealing with public corruption. Prior restraint refers to a government's
censorship of material before it is published.
b.
Although upholding the Connecticut murder conviction of Frank Palko, the
Supreme Court established that some protections found in the Bill of Rights
are absorbed into the concept of due process as provided for in the Fourteenth
Amendment because they are so fundamental to our notions of liberty and
justice that they cannot be denied by the states. Examples are:
(2) Protection against unreasonable searches and seizures. (Fourth Amendment) (3)
Protection against self-incrimination and the right to counsel and trial
by an impartial jury in a public and speedy trial.
d. At the present time, only the Second, Third, and Seventh Amendments and the grand jury requirement of the Fifth Amendment have not been applied specifically to the states.
B. The First Amendment includes two statements about religion and government, commonly referred to as the "establishment clause" and the "free exercise clause." C. These freedoms sometimes conflict, but establishment and free exercise cases usually raise different kinds of conflict. D.
The "establishment clause" of the First
Amendment provides that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment
of religion." This clause means that the federal government cannot set
up a church; nor can it pass laws that aid one religion, aid all religions,
or favor one religion over another.
2.
Debate still continues over what else the First Congress may have intended
for the establishment clause.
b. Proponents of aid to parochial schools (known as parochiaid) argue that it does not favor any particular religion; opponents claim that the Roman Catholic church gets most of the aid. c.
In Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971), the Supreme Court declared that aid
to church-related schools must:
(2) cannot be used to advance or inhibit religion; and (3)
should avoid excessive government "entanglement" with religion.
e.
School prayer is possibly the most controversial religious issue.
(2) In Engel and Abington, the Court observed that "the place of religion in our society is an exalted one, but in the relationship between man and religion, the State is firmly committed to a position of neutrality." The Supreme Court in Engel held that prayers done as classroom exercises in public schools was unconstitutional. (3) In Santa Fe Independent School District v. Doe (2000) the Supreme Court (in a 6-3 opinion), held that a District's policy permitting student-led, student-initiated prayer at football games violates the Establishment Clause. (4) A majority of the public has never favored the Court's decisions on school prayer. Nonetheless, the Supreme Court has ruled that government aid to church-related schools is permitted when the aid is for a non-religious purpose. (5)
During the 1980s, the Supreme Court upheld the constitutionality of the
displaying of Christmas nativity scenes and Hanukkah menorahs on public
property.
b. In 1965 the Supreme Court ruled that "sincere and meaningful" objection to a war on religious grounds did not require belief in a supreme being. c.
Later the court would send the following messages:
(2)
The Constitution does not permit conscientious objection to particular
wars.
b. Three years later in West Virginia Board of Education v. Barnette, a similar case involving children of Witnesses, the Court held for their refusal since the salute was a "form of utterance," and no official could prescribe what is orthodox in "politics, nationalism, religion, or other matters of opinion." c. In 1972, the Court held that Amish parents could not be forced to violate their faith by sending their children to public school after eighth grade. d. In Sherbert v. Verner, the Court held that a state could not deny unemployment compensation to a woman who refused to take a job requiring that she work, against her beliefs, on the Sabbath. e.
The "free exercise clause" include religions which practice animal sacrifices,
the religious use of peyote and other drugs, refusal to salute the American
flag, and whether Amish children must attend school.
2. Since Everson, more than two-thirds of the states have enacted various kinds of aid to parochial schools, from school lunches to driver education. 3.
In Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971), the Supreme Court declared certain
types of state aid to parochial schools, saying the statute must meet three
tests to pass constitutional muster. The "Lemon
Test" must meet the following criteria:
b. Its primary effect cannot be either to advance or inhibit religion. c.
It cannot foster "excessive governmental entanglement with religion."
5. In 1985, though, the court said that public funds could not be used to pay special education teachers for children in religious schools. 6.
In 1990 in the Mergens case, the Court held that the school could
not use the Constitution to deny a student Bible study group an opportunity
to use facilities after school.
b.
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor noted a distinction between government speech
endorsing religion (which the establishment clause forbids), and private
speech endorsing religion (which free speech and free exercise clauses
protect).
8. In 1994 the Court determined that the creation of a special school district in New York for an orthodox Hasidic Jewish community was a violation of the constitutional separation of church and state. 9.
Later the court concluded that the First Amendment did not permit prayers
at graduation ceremonies because they might persuade or compel a student
to participate in a religious exercise.
2.
They lost some court battles to create a more conservative agenda, but
won others.
b.
Recent Supreme Court rulings brought some lowering of the "wall of separation,"
as when the Court held that religious scenes could be set up on public
property (Lynch v. Donelly, 1984 and County of Allegheny v. American
Civil Liberties Union, 1992).
2. The Supreme Court has consistently maintained that people have an absolute right to believe what they want, but the courts have been more cautious about the right to practice a belief, (but in Wisconsin v. Yoder, 1972, the Court did allow Amish parents to take their children out of school after the eighth grade).
b.
In their attempts to draw the line separating permissible from impermissible
speech, judges have had to balance freedom of expression against competing
values like public order, national security, and the right to a fair trial.
b. Other forms of expression are considered to be action, and are not protected. c.
As a general rule, it is easier for the government to control or limit
action, rather than to attempt to limit or control freedom of expression.
b. Later, in Gitlow v. New York (1925), the Court applied a "bad tendency" test. "Bad tendency" test: A test established by the Supreme Court in which it ruled that some speech could be prohibited if it threatened the overthrow of the government or in other ways injured the public welfare. c. During the New Deal and World War II, the courts shifted back to clear and present danger. d. In a major draft card burning case over the Vietnam War, (United States v. O'Brien, 1968), the Supreme Court did not recognize the practice as a form of symbolic speech as the defendant hoped, saying that a limitless variety of conduct can not be labeled as speech. But see Texas v. Johnson (1989). e.
"Politically Correct" Speech. In R.A.V. v. St. Paul (1992), the
Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional a Minnesota law seeking to prohibit
"hate crimes.""Hate crime" law: A law that seeks to
prohibit speech or action aimed at persons because of their race, religion,
or gender.
(2) In Wisconsin v. Mitchell (1993), the Supreme Court ruled unanimously that states could not impose stiffer sentences on "hate crimes" without violating the First Amendment. The court also ruled that a judge could consider whether a defendant was motivated by racial or religious prejudice.
Prior restraint refers to a government's censorship of material before it is published. Prior to the restraint being exercised, the government must demonstrate a compelling reason for the censorship BEFORE any restraint may be imposed. 2.
There are exceptions to the general doctrine that prohibits prior restraint:
b.
Many argue that government should sometimes limit individual behavior on
the grounds of national security.
(2)
In the famous "Pentagon Papers" case (New York Times v. United
States, 1971) the Supreme Court ruled against prior restraint, which
allowed publication of the papers. The Nixon administration was unable
to obtain an injunction against the Times that would have prohibited
publication of secret documents pertaining to American involvement in the
Vietnam War.
(2)
Brennan further said that obscenity could be judged based on "whether to
the average person, applying contemporary community standards, the dominant
theme of the material taken as a whole appeals to prurient interest."
c.
The practical effect of all of these cases was to remove almost all restrictions
on content as long as the slightest "social value" could be demonstrated.
(2) Whether the work depicts "in a patently offensive way" sexual conduct prohibited by state law. (3)
Whether the work as a whole "lacks serious literary, artistic, political,
or scientific value."
b.
The proper inquiry, White wrote for the majority, is not whether an ordinary
member of the community would find value in the material, but whether a
"reasonable person" would find such value.
b. Pornography could not be banned as discrimination against women as sex objects, but nude dancing does not have First Amendment protection. c. The Court struck down congressional efforts to bar "indecent speech" on dial-a-porn numbers, but upheld the publication of an illustrated version of the President's Commission on Obscenity and Pornography report. d. The courts have consistently ruled that states may protect children from obscenity (Osborne v. Ohio, 1991); adults often have legal access to the same material. e.
The Supreme Court, in Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union (1997),
rules that the Communications Decency Act (Internet) was unconstitutionally
vague.
b.
Conversely, some reputations will be unfairly damaged in the process.
b.
In 1984, General William Westmoreland (former Commander of U.S. troops
is Vietnam) dropped his suit against CBS in return for a mild apology;
he realized that it would be impossible to prove that the network had been
intentionally malicious, even though he was able to show that CBS had knowingly
made factual errors.
2.
Right of high school students to wear black armbands to protest the Vietnam
War was upheld in Tinker
v. Des Moines Independent Community School District (1969).
b. Students don't leave their constitutional rights outside the door when they enter school. c.
The doctrine of symbolic speech is not precise: burning a flag is protected
speech, but burning a draft card is not (Texas
v. Johnson, 1989, and United
States v. O'Brien, 1968).
2.
Although commercial speech is regulated more rigidly than the other types
of speech, the courts have been broadening its protection under the Constitution;
in recent years, the courts have struck down many restrictions (including
restraints against advertising for professional services and for certain
products such as condoms) as violations of freedom of speech.
2.
A licensed station must comply with regulations that include provisions
for a certain percentage of broadcast time for public service, news, children's
programming, political candidates, or views other than those its owners
support.
b. Free speech advocates did little to stem the relentless persecution known as McCarthyism during the "cold war" of the 1950s, when Senator Joseph McCarthy's unproven accusations that many public officials were Communists created an atmosphere in which broad restrictions were placed on freedom of expression. c.
By the 1960s, the political climate had changed:
(2)
Waves of protest over the Vietnam War and unrest over political, economic,
racial, and social issues expanded the constitutional meaning of free speech.
2.
Journalists seek full freedom to cover all trials: they argue that the
public has a right to know.
b. A few states have passed shield laws which gives reporters the right to withhold information from the courts. Shield laws are designed to protect reporters in situations where they need to protect a confidential source; but in most states, reporters have no more rights than other citizens once a case has come to trial. c. The Supreme Court has ruled that (in the absence of shield laws) the right to a fair trial preempts the reporter's right to protect sources and has sustained the right of police to obtain a search warrant to search the files of a student newspaper. A "search warrant" is a document signed by a judicial officer authorizing law enforcement officers to search a specific location. The warrant can be issued only on "probable cause" that the materials to be seized are in the specific location to be search. (p. 120) Most searches in the United States take place without a search warrant and are within common law exceptions to the warrant requirement. Probable cause is said to exist where there are reasonable grounds to make or believe that a crime has occurred or is about to occur and that a particular individual is responsible. d.
The Court has revoked gag orders imposed by lower courts (forbidding the
press to report details of a case), but a 1979 case also permitted a closed
hearing on the grounds that pretrial publicity might compromise the defendant's
right to a fair trial.
(2) The Supreme Court has generally upheld the right of any group no matter how controversial or offensive to peaceably assemble on public property. (3)
A case in point would be a Nazi group's attempt to march through a largely
Jewish community, Skokie, Illinois, in 1977. (Collin v. Smith)
(B)
The Court eventually let stand a lower court ruling that held that Skokie's
ordinance violated the First Amendment. The Supreme Court let stand a lower
court ruling that no community could use its power to grant parade permits
to stifle free expression or freedom of assembly.
(2)
In 1958, the Court ruled that requiring an organization to turn over its
membership lists was an unconstitutional restriction on freedom of association.
(NAACP v. Alabama).
2. In contrast, the majority of the Court held that the First Amendment needs to be balanced. The "balancing test" is a view that First Amendment rights must be balanced against the competing needs of the community to preserve order and to preserve the state. 3. Justice Harlan Fiske Stone placed speech and religion in a "preferred position" to order."Preferred freedoms" are those basic freedoms, such as freedom of speech and religion, which, in the view of some members of the Supreme Court, should take precedence over other needs.
b.
Today, the protections in the Fourth,
Fifth,
Sixth,
and Eighth
Amendments are primarily applied in criminal justice cases.
3.
The Supreme Court's decisions have extended most provisions of the Bill
of Rights to the states as part of the general process of "selective
incorporation."
2.
The history of liberty, according to Justice Felix Frankfurter, "is largely
the history of observance of procedural safeguards."
(2) Procedural
due process is the principle that laws must be administered in a fair manner.
2. Warrants must specify the area to be searched and the material sought in the search. 3.
Since 1914, the courts have used the "exclusionary rule" to prevent illegally
seized evidence from being introduced in the courtroom.Exclusionary
rule: A principle established by the Supreme Court that bars the government,
both federal and state, from using illegally seized evidence in court.
b. Critics of the exclusionary rule argue that its strict application may permit guilty persons to go free because of police carelessness or innocent errors (or "technicalities"). c. In 1969 the Court ruled that police lacking a search warrant must confine their search to the suspect and the immediate surroundings. d.
Automobiles have less protection. Police may search a car without a warrant
if they have "probable
cause" to believe it contains illegal articles. Their search may include
the locked trunk.
(2)
They may search a car and its contents if they lawfully arrest its occupants.
However, unless they witness a crime, police officers cannot arrest a suspect
without probable cause.
(2)
If they are acting on the tip of an informant the officer thinks is reliable.
g.
The Burger
Court made some exceptions to the exclusionary rule. The "Burger
Court" is the description given the United States Supreme Court from 1969
to 1986 (led by Chief Justice Warren Burger). It was expected that the
"Burger Court" would become a conservative court under Warren Burger and
reverse many of the liberal rulings of the earlier Warren Court. The assessment
was incorrect. Some exceptions to the exclusionary rule:
(2) In United States v. Leon (1984) established a "good faith" exception which permitted evidence to be used if the police who seized it mistakenly thought they were operating under a constitutionally valid warrant. (3)
Allowed evidence illegally obtained from a banker to be used to convict
one of his customers.
b. This right applies to congressional hearings and police stations, as well as to courtrooms. c.
Suspects must testify if the government guarantees then immunity
from prosecution.
b. that what they say can be used against them in a court of law; and, c.
that they have a right to have a lawyer present during an interrogation,
and that a lawyer will be provided if the accused cannot afford one.
4.
If law enforcement officials encourage persons to commit crimes (such as
accepting bribes or purchasing illicit drugs) that they otherwise would
not commit (entrapment), convictions for these crimes will be overturned
by the courts.
2. In Gideon v. Wainwright (1963), the Court extended the same right to everyone accused of a felony, ruling that defendants in all felony cases had a right to counsel, and if they could not afford to hire an attorney, one must be provided free of charge. 3.
The Warren
Court heard a number of landmark cases on the rights to trial:
b. He was refused a request to see his lawyer the second time and then confessed to the crime. c.
The Court reversed the Escobedo conviction on the grounds that the
Sixth
Amendment entitles a suspect counsel even during police interrogation
once the "process shifts from investigatory to accusatory."
b.
Critics believe that plea bargaining permits many criminals to avoid deserved
punishment; however, it also saves the state time and money.
3.
Juries traditionally had to be unanimous in order to convict, but the Burger
Court permitted states to use fewer than twelve jurors and to convict with
less than a unanimous vote.
b. In Furman v. Georgia (1972), the Court overturned Georgia's death penalty law because its imposition was "freakish" and "random" in the way it was arbitrarily applied (particularly with regard to factors such as race and income). c. In Woodson v. North Carolina (1976), the Court ruled against mandatory death penalties. d.
Finally, in Gregg
v. Georgia (1976), the Court found that the death penalty is "an
extreme sanction, suitable to the most extreme of crimes."
2. In Griswold, the Connecticut statute was ruled unconstitutional as a violation of marital privacy, a right that could be read into the "intent" of the Constitution. The right to privacy is NOT specifically stated in either the Constitution or the Bill of Rights. 3. Court also says that keeping the police out of the bedroom is "a right of privacy older than the Bill of Rights." 4.
The Supreme Court later expanded the right of privacy to include the right
of unmarried individuals to obtain contraceptives.
2. Supreme Court Justice Harry Blackmun's opinion in Roe v. Wade (1973) followed that of medical authorities in dividing pregnancy into three equal trimesters. 3. In Roe v. Wade (1973), the Court divided pregnancy into three stages. In the first trimester, a woman's right to privacy included an absolute right to an abortion free from state interference. (A state cannot forbid abortions during the first trimester of pregnancy). In the second and third trimesters, the state's interest in the health of the mother gave it the right to regulate abortions in certain cases. 4.
Roe
caused a furor that has never subsided, and numerous state and federal
regulations were passed which prohibited the use of funds for abortions.
b.
The Court has also upheld laws requiring minors to obtain the permission
of one or both parents or a judge before obtaining an abortion; and upheld
a Department of Health and Human Services ruling that provided that family
planning services that received federal funds could not provide women with
any counseling regarding abortions. (former President Clinton lifted the
ban on abortion counseling on his third day in office.)
6.
In 1994, the Supreme Court upheld a Florida state court's order of a 36-foot
buffer zone around an abortion clinic to allow people to enter abortion
clinics. In another 1994 case, the Court decided that abortion clinics
can invoke the federal racketeering law to sue violent anti-abortion protest
groups for damages. In 1994, Congress passed a law making it a federal
crime to intimidate abortion providers or women seeking abortions. In 1997,
the Court also upheld a 15-foot buffer zone. In another case, the Court
decided that abortion clinics can invoke the federal racketeering law to
sue violent anti-abortion protest groups for damages.
2.
Eventually, the Supreme Court affirmed parents' rights to make medical
decisions for their children.
E. In 1997, the Supreme Court ruled in that there is no constitutional right to physician-assisted suicide and that states may prohibit it if they wish. F.
Other right to privacy cases have been decided by the Supreme Court.
2.
Press reporting under the First Amendment often conflicts with a person's
right to be left alone.
b. Since the molestation did not occur, the family sued Life magazine, which published the work. c.
The court said the magazine could not be held liable for an inadvertent
error, only for a "calculated falsehood."
4. In another case, the court held that a man's privacy was not invaded when a television station reported the name of his raped and murdered daughter over the air because the name had been gleaned from public records. 5. In the early 1970s, Congress passed legislation protecting family credit reports, school records, and individual's government files. 6. The Supreme Court has declined to interpret the right to privacy to include the right to engage in homosexual conduct. 7. In Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Health the Supreme Court rules that states can intervene to prevent a comatose person from being removed from life support.
B. The democratic and constitutional components of government can produce conflicts, but they also reinforce one another. C.
Civil liberties and democracy
b. Individual participation and the expression of ideas are crucial components of democracy, but so is majority rule, which can conflict with individual rights. c.
The rights guaranteed by the Fourth,
Fifth,
Sixth,
and Eighth
Amendments protect all Americans; but they also make it harder to punish
criminals.
2. Jus sanguinis (right of blood), which recognizes citizenship based on that of the parents of the child. (Exception: children of high-ranking diplomats from other nations.) 3. Children of American parents who are born overseas also qualify if they meet the legal requirements. 4. Immigrants may be naturalized after living continuously in the United States for five years (or three years, if they are the spouse of a citizen). Children under age eighteen are naturalized when their parents qualify. 5.
No state may deprive a person of citizenship. (This includes those who
left the country to avoid being drafted to serve in Vietnam.) And, according
to various Supreme Court decisions, the Congress may not do so by law.
6. In 1964 the Supreme Court held that naturalized citizens had the same
rights as native-born Americans. In 1967 the Court said that Congress could
not take away a person's citizenship unless he or she relinquished it.
2.
In 1986, to stem the flow of illegals into the United States:
b.
The same law granted legal status to those arriving before January 1, 1982.
4.
Political asylum was still possible if persons were judged to have a "well-founded
fear of persecution" based on race, religion, nationality, or their political
views.
2. In a 1973 case involving the San Antonio Independent School District, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled (5-4) that the Texas system did not violate the Fourteenth Amendment "merely because the burdens or benefits... fall unevenly depending on the relative wealth of the political subdivisions in which citizens live." In 1989, the Texas Supreme Court, in revisiting the issue, ruled unanimously that the system must be changed to handle the "glaring disparities" between rich and poor school districts.
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