Monday, June 17, 2013


DC: Ban on protests in plaza struck down

"In a case that brings free speech protections literally to the very steps of the US Supreme Court, a federal judge in Washington has struck down as unconstitutional a statute that allowed police to arrest anyone attempting to deliver a message of protest on the wide marble plaza outside the high court’s elegant front entrance. US District Judge Beryl Howell declared the 60-year-old law in violation of free speech protections and thus void as applied to the court’s plaza."

The decision puts in doubt a long tradition at the high court of police forcing demonstrators to confine their picketing, chanting, and sign waving to the relatively narrow public sidewalk in front of the court.

Source

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Violating the First Amendment rights of people on the steps of the Supreme Court? Wow! That's the kind of thing that starts revolutions.

Anonymous said...

I pine for the days when it was patriotic to be a detractor of the administration.

Amazing how much freedom we can lose in 5 years, isn't it!

Decent is only patriotic when a Republican is in the white house apparently!