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From 2014 to 2016, petitioner Billy Counterman sent hundreds of Facebook messages to C. W., a local singer and musician. The two had never met, and C. W. did not respond. In fact, she tried repeatedly to block him, but each time, Counterman created a new Facebook account and resumed contacting C. W. Several of his messages envisaged violent harm befalling her. Counterman's messages put C. W. in fear and upended her daily existence: C. W. stopped walking alone, declined social engagements, and canceled some of her performances. C. W. eventually contacted the authorities. The State charged Counterman under a Colorado statute making it unlawful to "[r]epeatedly . . . make[ ] any form of communication with another person" in "a manner that would cause a reasonable person to suffer serious emotional distress and does cause that person . . . to suffer serious emotional distress." Colo. Rev. Stat. §18-3-602(1)(c). Counterman moved to dismiss the charge on First Amendment grounds, arguing that his messages were not "true threats" and therefore could not form the basis of a criminal prosecution. Following Colorado law, the trial court rejected that argument under an objective standard, finding that a reasonable person would consider the messages threatening. Counterman appealed, arguing that the First Amendment required the State to show not only that his statements were objectively threatening, but also that he was aware of their threatening character. The Colorado Court of Appeals disagreed and affirmed his conviction. The Colorado Supreme Court denied review.
Held: The State must prove in true-threats cases that the defendant had some subjective understanding of his statements' threatening nature, but the First Amendment requires no more demanding a showing than recklessness. Pp. 4-14.
(a) The First Amendment permits restrictions upon the content of speech in a few limited areas. Among these historic and traditional categories of unprotected expression is true threats. True threats are "serious expression[s]" conveying that a speaker means to "commit an act of unlawful violence." Virginia v. Black,
(b) In this context, a recklessness standard--i.e., a showing that a person "consciously disregard[ed] a substantial [and unjustifiable] risk that [his] conduct will cause harm to another," Voisine v. United States,
(c) The State prosecuted Counterman in accordance with an objective standard and did not have to show any awareness on Counterman's part of his statements' threatening character. That is a violation of the First Amendment. P. 14.
497 P. 3d 1039, vacated and remanded.
Kagan, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Roberts, C. J., and Alito, Kavanaugh, and Jackson, JJ., joined. Sotomayor, J., filed an opinion concurring in part and concurring in the judgment, in which Gorsuch, J., joined as to Parts I, II, III-A, and III-B. Thomas, J., filed a dissenting opinion. Barrett, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which Thomas, J., joined.
Opinion of the Court
600 U. S. ____ (2023)
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543, pio@supremecourt.gov, of any typographical or other formal errors.
No. 22-138
BILLY RAYMOND COUNTERMAN, PETITIONER v.
COLORADO
on writ of certiorari to the court of appeals of colorado
[June 27, 2023]
Justice Kagan delivered the opinion of the Court.
True threats of violence are outside the bounds of First Amendment protection and punishable as crimes. Today we consider a criminal conviction for communications falling within that historically unprotected category. The question presented is whether the First Amendment still requires proof that the defendant had some subjective understanding of the threatening nature of his statements. We hold that it does, but that a mental state of recklessness is sufficient. The State must show that the defendant consciously disregarded a substantial risk that his communications would be viewed as threatening violence. The State need not prove any more demanding form of subjective intent to threaten another.
I
From 2014 to 2016, petitioner Billy Counterman sent hundreds of Facebook messages to C. W., a local singer and musician. The two had never met, and C. W. never responded. In fact, she repeatedly blocked Counterman. But each time, he created a new Facebook account and resumed his contacts. Some of his messages were utterly prosaic ("Good morning sweetheart"; "I am going to the store would you like anything?")--except that they were coming from a total stranger. 3 App. 465. Others suggested that Counterman might be surveilling C. W. He asked "[w]as that you in the white Jeep?"; referenced "[a] fine display with your partner"; and noted "a couple [of] physical sightings." 497 P. 3d 1039, 1044 (Colo. App. 2021). And most critically, a number expressed anger at C. W. and envisaged harm befalling her: "Fuck off permanently." Ibid. "Staying in cyber life is going to kill you." Ibid. "You're not being good for human relations. Die." Ibid.
The messages put C. W. in fear and upended her daily existence. She believed that Counterman was "threat[ening her] life"; "was very fearful that he was following" her; and was "afraid [she] would get hurt." 2 App. 177, 181, 193. As a result, she had "a lot of trouble sleeping" and suffered from severe anxiety. Id., at 200; see id., at 194-198. She stopped walking alone, declined social engagements, and canceled some of her performances, though doing so caused her financial strain. See id., at 182-183, 199, 201-206, 238-239. Eventually, C. W. decided that she had to contact the authorities. Id., at 184.
Colorado charged Counterman under a statute making it unlawful to "[r]epeatedly . . . make[ ] any form of communication with another person" in "a manner that would cause a reasonable person to suffer serious emotional distress and does cause that person . . . to suffer serious emotional distress." Colo. Rev. Stat. §18-3-602(1)(c) (2022). The only evidence the State proposed to introduce at trial were his Facebook messages.1
Counterman moved to dismiss the charge on First Amendment grounds, arguing that his messages were not "true threats" and therefore could not form the basis of a criminal prosecution. In line with Colorado law, the trial court assessed the true-threat issue using an "objective 'reasonable person' standard." People v. Cross, 127 P. 3d 71, 76 (Colo. 2006). Under that standard, the State had to show that a reasonable person would have viewed the Facebook messages as threatening. By contrast, the State had no need to prove that Counterman had any kind of "subjective intent to threaten" C. W. In re R. D., 464 P. 3d 717, 731, n. 21 (Colo. 2020). The court decided, after "consider[ing] the totality of the circumstances," that Counterman's statements "r[o]se to the level of a true threat." 497 P. 3d, at 1045. Because that was so, the court ruled, the First Amendment posed no bar to prosecution. The court accordingly sent the case to the jury, which found Counterman guilty as charged.
The Colorado Court of Appeals affirmed. Counterman had urged the court to hold that the First Amendment required the State to show that he was aware of the threatening nature of his statements. Relying on its precedent, the court turned the request down: It "decline[d] today to say that a speaker's subjective intent to threaten is necessary" under the First Amendment to procure a conviction for threatening communications. Id., at 1046 (quoting R. D., 464 P. 3d, at 731, n. 21). Using the established objective standard, the court then approved the trial court's ruling that Counterman's messages were "true threats" and so were not protected by the First Amendment. 497 P. 3d, at 1050. The Colorado Supreme Court denied review.
Courts are divided about (1) whether the First Amendment requires proof of a defendant's subjective mindset in true-threats cases, and (2) if so, what mens rea standard is sufficient. We therefore granted certiorari. 598 U. S. ___ (2023).
II
True threats of violence, everyone agrees, lie outside the bounds of the First Amendment's protection. And a statement can count as such a threat based solely on its objective content. The first dispute here is about whether the First Amendment nonetheless demands that the State in a true-threats case prove that the defendant was aware in some way of the threatening nature of his communications.2 Colorado argues that there is no such requirement. Counterman contends that there is one, based mainly on the likelihood that the absence of such a mens rea requirement will chill protected, non-threatening speech. Counterman's view, we decide today, is the more consistent with our precedent. To combat the kind of chill he references, our decisions have often insisted on protecting even some historically unprotected speech through the adoption of a subjective mental-state element. We follow the same path today, holding that the State must prove in true-threats cases that the defendant had some understanding of his statements' threatening character. The second issue here concerns what precise mens rea standard suffices for the First Amendment purpose at issue. Again guided by our precedent, we hold that a recklessness standard is enough. Given that a subjective standard here shields speech not independently entitled to protection--and indeed posing real dangers--we do not require that the State prove the defendant had any more specific intent to threaten the victim.
A
"From 1791 to the present," the First Amendment has "permitted restrictions upon the content of speech in a few limited areas." United States v. Stevens,
"True threats" of violence is another historically unprotected category of communications. Virginia v. Black,
Yet the First Amendment may still demand a subjective mental-state requirement shielding some true threats from liability. The reason relates to what is often called a chilling effect. Prohibitions on speech have the potential to chill, or deter, speech outside their boundaries. A speaker may be unsure about the side of a line on which his speech falls. Or he may worry that the legal system will err, and count speech that is permissible as instead not. See Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc. v. Hepps,
That kind of "strategic protection" features in our precedent concerning the most prominent categories of historically unprotected speech. Gertz,
The same idea arises in the law respecting obscenity and incitement to unlawful conduct. Like threats, incitement inheres in particular words used in particular contexts: Its harm can arise even when a clueless speaker fails to grasp his expression's nature and consequence. But still, the First Amendment precludes punishment, whether civil or criminal, unless the speaker's words were "intended" (not just likely) to produce imminent disorder. Hess v. Indiana,
The same reasoning counsels in favor of requiring a subjective element in a true-threats case. This Court again must consider the prospect of chilling non-threatening expression, given the ordinary citizen's predictable tendency to steer "wide[ ] of the unlawful zone." Speiser,
The reasoning--and indeed some of the words--came straight from this Court's decisions insisting on a subjective element in other unprotected-speech cases, whether involving defamation, incitement, or obscenity. No doubt, the approach in all of those cases has a cost: Even as it lessens chill of protected speech, it makes prosecution of otherwise proscribable, and often dangerous, communications harder. And the balance between those two effects may play out differently in different contexts, as the next part of this opinion discusses. But the ban on an objective standard remains the same, lest true-threats prosecutions chill too much protected, non-threatening expression.
B
The next question concerns the type of subjective standard the First Amendment requires. The law of mens rea offers three basic choices. Purpose is the most culpable level in the standard mental-state hierarchy, and the hardest to prove. A person acts purposefully when he "consciously desires" a result--so here, when he wants his words to be received as threats. United States v. Bailey,
Among those standards, recklessness offers the right path forward. We have so far mostly focused on the constitutional interest in free expression, and on the correlative need to take into account threat prosecutions' chilling effects. But the precedent we have relied on has always recognized--and insisted on "accommodat[ing]"--the "competing value[ ]" in regulating historically unprotected expression. Gertz,
Using a recklessness standard also fits with the analysis in our defamation decisions. As noted earlier, the Court there adopted a recklessness rule, applicable in both civil and criminal contexts, as a way of accommodating competing interests. See supra, at 7-8. In the more than half-century in which that standard has governed, few have suggested that it needs to be higher--in other words, that still more First Amendment "breathing space" is required. Gertz,
It is true that our incitement decisions demand more--but the reason for that demand is not present here. When incitement is at issue, we have spoken in terms of specific intent, presumably equivalent to purpose or knowledge. See Hess,
That standard, again, is recklessness. It offers "enough 'breathing space' for protected speech," without sacrificing too many of the benefits of enforcing laws against true threats. Elonis,
III
It is time to return to Counterman's case, though only a few remarks are necessary. Counterman, as described above, was prosecuted in accordance with an objective standard. See supra, at 3. The State had to show only that a reasonable person would understand his statements as threats. It did not have to show any awareness on his part that the statements could be understood that way. For the reasons stated, that is a violation of the First Amendment.
We accordingly vacate the judgment of the Colorado Court of Appeals and remand the case for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Opinion of Sotomayor, J.
600 U. S. ____ (2023)
No. 22-138
BILLY RAYMOND COUNTERMAN, PETITIONER v. COLORADO
on writ of certiorari to the court of appeals of colorado
[June 27, 2023]
Justice Sotomayor, with whom Justice Gorsuch joins as to Parts I, II, III-A, and III-B, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment.
When the government seeks to punish speech based on its content, the First Amendment typically imposes stringent requirements. This ensures that the government, even when pursuing compelling objectives, does not unduly burden our Nation's commitment to free expression. "From 1791 to the present, however, the First Amendment has permitted restrictions upon the content of speech in a few limited areas." United States v. Stevens,
"True threats" are one such category, and there is a tradition of criminalizing threats stretching back centuries. This includes punishing single utterances based on the message conveyed. One paradigmatic example of this would be writing and mailing a letter threatening to assassinate the President. Such laws are plainly important. There is no longstanding tradition, however, of punishing speech merely because it is unintentionally threatening. Instead, this Court's precedent, along with historical statutes and cases, reflect a commonsense understanding that threatening someone is an intentional act. As to what intent is needed, "[t]raditionally, one intends certain consequences when he desires that his acts cause those consequences or knows that those consequences are substantially certain to result from his acts." Tison v. Arizona,
Today, unfortunately, the Court unnecessarily departs from this traditional understanding. That is not to say that I disagree with the Court on everything. Far from it. I join the Court's conclusion that some subjective mens rea is required in true-threats cases. I also agree that in this particular case, where petitioner was prosecuted for stalking that involved threatening statements, a mens rea of recklessness is amply sufficient. Where I part ways with the Court is that I would not reach the distinct and more complex question whether a mens rea of recklessness is sufficient for true-threats prosecutions generally. Further, requiring nothing more than a mens rea of recklessness is inconsistent with precedent, history, and the commitment to even harmful speech that the First Amendment enshrines. I therefore respectfully concur only in part and in the judgment.
I
As an initial matter, I do not believe that this Court should reach the question whether recklessness is sufficient for true-threats prosecutions. A key conceptual distinction is helpful for explaining why. On the one hand, there are statements that are objectively threatening. In some cases, such statements can be punished because they fall into the unprotected category of "true threats." Yet such statements can also be punished if they fall into another category of unprotected speech, such as speech integral to criminal conduct. Or they might warrant less First Amendment protection for other reasons. On the other hand, there is the question of what constitutes the well-defined and longstanding category of unprotected true threats. It is with this latter question that I do not see the need to address whether a mens rea of recklessness is sufficient across the board.
First, the courts below did not address whether recklessness was sufficient to prosecute true threats and neither of the actual parties have advocated a recklessness standard. Colorado disclaimed the idea that recklessness was required, and petitioner asserted, correctly, that recklessness had not been raised under traditional principles of party presentation. The briefing on recklessness consists almost entirely of a few pages of an argument in the alternative at the tail end of an amicus brief filed by the United States.
Second, because petitioner was prosecuted for stalking involving threatening speech, this case does not require resort to the true-threats exemption to the First Amendment.
True-threats doctrine covers content-based prosecutions for single utterances of "pure speech," which need not even be communicated to the subject of the threat. Watts v. United States,
This is not such a case, however. Petitioner was convicted for "stalking [causing] serious emotional distress" for a combination of threatening statements and repeated, unwanted, direct contact with C. W. 497 P. 3d 1039, 1043 (Colo. App. 2021).1 This kind of prosecution raises fewer First Amendment concerns for a variety of reasons. Stalking can be carried out through speech but need not be, which requires less First Amendment scrutiny when speech is swept in. See, e.g., Rumsfeld v. Forum for Academic and Institutional Rights, Inc.,
Given this, prosecuting threatening statements made as part of a course of stalking does not squarely present the hardest questions about the mens rea required to prosecute isolated utterances based solely on their content.2 True-threats doctrine came up below only because of the lower courts' doubtful assumption that petitioner could be prosecuted only if his actions fell under the true-threats exception. I do not think that is accurate, given the lessened First Amendment concerns at issue. In such cases, recklessness is amply sufficient. And I would stop there. There is simply no need to reach out in this stalking case to determine whether anything more than recklessness is needed for punishing true threats generally.
II
Lest there be any doubt, the First Amendment stakes around the definition of "true threats" are high indeed. The First Amendment's mantle covers speech that is "vituperative, abusive and inexact." Watts,
The risk of overcriminalizing upsetting or frightening speech has only been increased by the internet. Our society's discourse occurs more and more in "the 'vast democratic forums of the Internet' in general, and social media in particular." Packingham v. North Carolina,
Without sufficient protection for unintentionally threatening speech, a high school student who is still learning norms around appropriate language could easily go to prison for sending another student violent music lyrics, or for unreflectingly using language he read in an online forum. "[A] drunken joke" in bad taste can lead to criminal prosecution. Perez v. Florida,
Many of this Court's true-threats cases involve such charged political speech. See Black,
The burdens of overcriminalization will fall hardest on certain groups. A jury's determination of when angry hyperbole crosses the line will depend on amorphous norms around language, which will vary greatly from one discursive community to another. Juries' decisions will reflect their "background knowledge and media consumption." Minnesota Voters Alliance v. Mansky, 585 U. S. ___, ___ (2018) (slip op., at 17). "[S]peakers whose ideas or views occupy the fringes of our society have more to fear, for their violent and extreme rhetoric, even if intended simply to convey an idea or express displeasure, is more likely to strike a reasonable person as threatening." United States v. White, 670 F. 3d 498, 525 (CA4 2012) (Floyd, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). Members of certain groups, including religious and cultural minorities, can also use language that is more susceptible to being misinterpreted by outsiders. And unfortunately yet predictably, racial and cultural stereotypes can also influence whether speech is perceived as dangerous. See, e.g., A. Dunbar, C. Kubrin, & N. Scurich, The Threatening Nature of "Rap" Music, 22 J. Psychol. Pub. Pol'y & L. 281, 281-282, 288-290 (2016).
On the other hand, the internet has also made stalking and harassment even easier. Stalking can be devastating and dangerous. See Brief for First Amendment Scholars as Amici Curiae 7-8. Lives can be ruined, and in the most tragic instances, lives are lost. Ibid. Harassers can hide behind online anonymity while tormenting others. This happens in the context of intimate relationships and it happens with strangers. Overly constraining our society's ability to respond to stalking would come at a real cost. For the reasons given, however, a mens rea standard for true threats would not hinder stalking prosecutions. See supra, at 3-5.
Even isolated threatening speech can do real harm. Such speech not only disrupts lives, it can silence the speech of others who become afraid to speak out. A mens rea requirement would not, however, present an uncommon or insurmountable barrier to true-threats prosecutions.3 Nonetheless, under such a standard, there will be some speech that some find threatening that will not and should not land anyone in prison.
III
These high First Amendment stakes are further reason for caution when delineating the boundaries of what constitutes a true threat. In undertaking that analysis, the Court and I part ways on the order of operations. The Court begins by defining true threats as all objectively threatening speech, entirely independent of whether the speaker intended to be threatening, ante, at 6, and the lead dissent agrees, post, at 2-3 (opinion of Barrett, J.). The Court gets there by relying on this Court's interpretation of the word "threat" in a federal statute. Ante, at 6 (citing Elonis v. United States,
Respectfully, I see the analysis differently. The first step in the analysis should instead be to ask about the scope of the well-defined and narrow category of "true threats" as a constitutional matter. This Court has already warned about the danger of creating new categories of "unprotected speech" exempt from the ordinary First Amendment framework for balancing our society's commitment to free expression with other interests. Stevens,
Thus, the Court must first ask whether there is a long-standing tradition of punishing inadvertent threats as "true threats." This Court's prior definition of the word "threat" in a federal statute, looking primarily to dictionaries, Elonis,
A
A natural place to begin, one might think, would be with this Court's most recent decision involving the First Amendment, mens rea, and true threats. Yet to read the Court's decision, one would have little idea that in a seminal 2003 decision, this Court held that a threat conviction could not stand because of an insufficient mens rea requirement. See Black,
In Black, the Court confronted the constitutionality of a Virginia statute that prohibited burning a cross with intent to intimidate. Only part of the decision in Black is contained in a five-Justice majority opinion. The other relevant parts of the decision were written by the Members of that majority, who split into a four-Justice plurality and Justice Scalia's partial concurrence in judgment.
The majority explained why a prohibition on cross burning with intent to threaten was constitutional, beginning by defining the category of true threats. " 'True threats,' " the majority explained "encompass those statements where the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence." Id., at 359 (emphasis added). However, "[t]he speaker need not actually intend to carry out the threat," as true threats also include intimidation alone. Id., at 359-360. And "[i]ntimidation in the constitutionally proscribable sense of the word is a type of true threat, where a speaker directs a threat to a person or group of persons with the intent of placing the victim in fear of bodily harm or death." Id., at 360 (emphasis added).
To the extent the Virginia statute covered intentionally threatening cross burning, it was thus tailored to cover only true threats. Critically, however, the statute also provided that " '[a]ny such burning of a cross shall be prima facie evidence of an intent to intimidate.' " Id., at 348. In other words, the all-important intent requirement could be satisfied by the mere conduct itself.
Consistent with the majority's definition of true threats, both the plurality and Justice Scalia agreed that the lack of a sufficient intent requirement meant that a conviction under the statute could not stand. Id., at 367, 379. For the plurality, the intent requirement was "the very reason why a State may ban cross burning" because it "distinguish[ed]" between the constitutionally unprotected true threat of burning a cross with intent to intimidate and "cross burning [as] a statement of ideology." Id., at 365-366.4 For Justice Scalia, the "plurality [was] correct in all of this." Id., at 372 (opinion concurring in part, concurring in judgment in part, and dissenting in part). There was a constitutional need for a distinction between cross burning " 'intended to intimidate' " and cross burning as " 'a statement of ideology.' " Ibid. The plurality and Justice Scalia only parted ways as to whether to hold that the statute was "facially invalid," id., at 367 (plurality opinion), or just that the jury instructions made it unclear "whether the jury has rendered its verdict (as it must)" with sufficient consideration of "intent to intimidate," id., at 380 (opinion of Scalia, J.) (emphasis added).
The through-line is not hard to discern. First, unprotected true threats include a subjective mens rea requirement. Id., at 360 (majority opinion). Second, as a result, "Virginia's statute does not run afoul of the First Amendment insofar as it bans cross burning with intent to intimidate." Id., at 362 (majority opinion). Third, a conviction could not stand if it had categorically dispensed with that intent requirement, id., at 365-366 (plurality opinion), or if the jury had insufficiently considered "intent to intimidate," id., at 380 (opinion of Scalia, J.).
In sum, all five Justices in the Black majority agreed that a true-threats prosecution could not stand under the First Amendment without a sufficient subjective mens rea requirement.5
B
In defining true threats as "statements where the speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence," id., at 359, the Court in Black echoed the traditional understanding of threats. Historically, threat crimes covered the same kind of subjectively threatening speech Black invoked.
In reviewing this history, it is also vital to keep in mind the nature of the inquiry. Removing speech from normal First Amendment scrutiny is a major shift in the balance of expression and public interest that our Constitution generally strikes. The inquiry is therefore whether there is a "long-settled tradition" of prohibiting inadvertently threatening speech. Stevens,
There was a long tradition of crimes for threatening another person in order to extort them. See, e.g., 1796 N. J. Laws §57, p. 108. Colorado and the United States admit that this core category of threat crimes required intent.
Even beyond that, a subjective mens rea remained a key component of threat offenses. An 18th-century English statute made it a capital offense to "knowingly send any letter . . . threatening to kill or murder any of his Majesty's subject or subjects" or to threaten arson. 27 Geo. II, c. 15, in 21 Eng. Stat. at Large 184 (1754). A leading treatise explained that the statute was "levelled against such whose intention it was [to] obtain their object by creating terror in [the victim's] mind." 2 W. Russell & D. Davis, Crimes & Misdemeanors *1845 (emphasis added).
Consistent with this, defendants were convicted of "knowingly, wilfully, and feloniously" sending threatening letters. Rex v. Tyler, 1 Mood. 428, 168 Eng. Rep. 1330 (1835); Rex v. Paddle, Russ. & Ry. 484, 168 Eng. Rep. 910 (1822) (indictment for "knowingly, unlawfully, wickedly, and feloniously" sending a threatening letter); see also King v. Girdwood, 1 Leach 142, 168 Eng. Rep. 173 (1776) (indictment for "feloniously" sending a threatening letter). " '[K]nowingly and wilfully' effecting any result applies to those who know that the acts performed will have that effect, and perform them with the intention that such shall be their operation." 12 American and English Encyclopaedia of Law 522-524 (J. Merrill ed. 1890); see also J. Boag, Imperial Lexicon of the English Language 530 (1850) (defining "felonious" as "with the deliberate purpose to commit a crime").
The necessary mens rea could sometimes be inferred from the content of the letter, but could be rebutted by other evidence. See King v. Philipps, 6 East 464, 475, 102 Eng. Rep. 1365, 1369 (1805). Courts thus considered "the threat intended to be made by the prisoner" and "what he meant by what he had written" in determining whether he had violated the statute. Regina v. Hill, 5 Cox 233, 235 (Crim. Cas. 1851); see also King v. John and Mary Hammond, 1 Leach 444, 446, 168 Eng. Rep. 324, 325 (1787) (describing the offense of sending a threatening letter "to the party whose fears the threat it contains was calculated to alarm").
Threat laws in the United States were of a piece. Some state laws about threats expressly required maliciousness. See Me. Rev. Stat., Tit. 12, ch. 154, §26 (1840); 1884 La. Acts No. 64, §1, p. 86. Courts more generally emphasized the importance of a mens rea requirement. See, e.g., State v. Benedict, 11 Vt. 236, 239 (1839). The North Carolina Supreme Court, for example, singled out threats as quintessential examples of offenses where it is "necessary" to prove the "intent of the particular letter." State v. Murphy, 84 N. C. 742, 743-744 (1881). And where state statutes may have been silent on intent to threaten, courts read such requirements in. See Commonwealth v. Morton, 140 Ky. 628, 631, 131 S. W. 506, 507-508 (1910) (letter must be "calculated to alarm, disturb, intimidate, or injure"); see also State v. Stewart, 90 Mo. 507, 512, 2 S. W. 790, 792 (1887) (jury instruction requiring that " 'defendant intended to threaten' ").
Leading treatises also explained the importance of mens rea. See 25 American and English Encyclopaedia of Law 1071 (C. Williams ed. 1894) (when there is a question as to "whether or not the letter contains the threat alleged, the intent is a question for the jury"); see also 2 R. Anderson, Wharton's Criminal Law and Procedure §803, pp. 659-660 (1957) (threats must be "intended to put the person threatened in fear of bodily harm"); 2 J. Bishop, Commentaries on the Criminal Law §1201, p. 664 (6th ed. 1877) ("The intent, both under the unwritten law and under the statutes, must be evil").
Against that backdrop, I return to the inquiry at hand: whether there is a "long-settled" or "well-established" history of prosecuting inadvertently threatening speech. There is no line of cases or pattern of statutes affirmatively stating that an objective standard is sufficient.
C
Put together, Black and the history point to an intent requirement. When Black defined and analyzed true threats in terms of intent, there is no reason to think the Court used intent to mean anything less than its traditional definition of purpose or knowledge. See, e.g., Tison,
As to the history, it is true that over time courts have often used a wide variety of terms to describe mental states. See, e.g., Morissette v. United States,
D
The Court, eschewing Black and history, instead reaches its result based on the need for a "buffer zone" drawn by analogy to other categories of unprotected speech. Ante, at 4. For the reasons above, I do not think we can leap ahead to this question. With that caveat, I agree with the Court that precedent in other areas of unprotected speech and concerns about chilling support a subjective mens rea requirement for true threats. Yet these same chilling concerns only further buttress the conclusion that true threats should be limited to intentionally threatening speech. Indeed, in the concurrence by Justice Marshall that the Court invokes, ante, at 9-10, he advocated "requir[ing] proof that the speaker intended his statement to be taken as a threat," based on concerns about punishing "pure speech." Rogers,
1
Speech inciting harm is the closest cousin to speech threatening harm. Both incitement and threats put other people at risk, and both "sprin[g] from [Justice] Holmes's 'clear and present danger' test." G. Blakey & B. Murray, Threats, Free Speech, and the Jurisprudence of the Federal Criminal Law, 2002 B. Y. U. L. Rev. 829, 1069 (2002). Like true threats, incitement's scope is defined in terms of both intention and effect, covering speech "[1] intended to produce, and [2] likely to produce, imminent disorder." Hess v. Indiana,
Despite their similar nature and source, the Court today draws a hard line between the two. Incitement requires " 'inten[t].' " Ante, at 8. While for threats, the speaker need only be "aware that others could regard his statements as threatening violence and delive[r] them anyway." Ante, at 11 (internal quotation marks omitted). The Court justifies this asymmetry by the idea "that incitement to disorder is commonly a hair's-breadth away from political 'advocacy,' " ante, at 13, and the lead dissent says much the same, post, at 7 (opinion of Barrett, J.). These opinions offer little basis for distinguishing threats on this ground, as this Court's own cases show time and again how true-threats prosecutions sweep in political speech. See Black,
Take the seminal incitement case NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware Co.,
Under a recklessness rule, Claiborne would have come out the other way. So long as Evers had some subjective awareness of some risk that a reasonable person could regard his statements as threatening, that would be sufficient. It would be quite troubling indeed to adopt a rule rendering this Court's admirable defense of the First Amendment wrongly decided. Nor is Claiborne the only example. The foundational incitement case, Brandenburg v. Ohio,
These concrete examples illustrate a more general principle. Speech inciting imminent and dangerous unlawful activity will reasonably be threatening to those who would be harmed by that illegality. In all such cases, whether seminal decisions by this Court or guilty pleas that barely see the inside of a courtroom, the Court's decision effectively downgrades to recklessness the mens rea required for incitement of unlawful force; prosecutors could now simply charge such offenses as true threats. This is particularly worrisome because the standard for recklessness decreases the lower the "social utility" of the conduct. 1 W. LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law §5.4(f ) (3d ed. 2018). That is a troubling standard for juries in a polarized nation to apply in cases involving heated political speech. This collateral damage can be avoided, however, if intent to threaten is understood as part of a true threat, just like intent to incite is part of incitement.
2
While obscenity is a step further afield of true threats and incitement, examination of this Court's obscenity case law further supports an intent requirement for prosecutions of true threats.
The Constitution " 'requires proof of scienter' " in part " 'to compensate for the ambiguities inherent in the definition of obscenity.' " Hamling v. United States,
Specifically, the Court has held that a "knowledge" mens rea is sufficient for obscenity: "It is constitutionally sufficient that the prosecution show that a defendant had knowledge of the contents of the materials he distributed, and that he knew the character and nature of the materials." Hamling,
The considerations that drove this Court to approve a higher mens rea for obscenity apply here as well. With obscenity, the ambiguity comes partly from the reliance on " 'contemporary community standards' " to define what is obscene. Hamling,
3
Finally, the Court relies heavily upon this Court's framework for defamation. Specifically, the Court analogizes to the "reckless disregard" standard for defamation of public figures or punitive damages for certain claims involving private figures. New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
Yet while civil defamation may be "the best known and best theorized example" of unprotected speech, ante, at 8, the same does not go for criminal prosecution of defamation. It is true that this Court in 1964 invalidated a prosecution for criminal libel for failing to apply the Sullivan standard, which covers "only those false statements made with a high degree of awareness of their probable falsity." Garrison v. Louisiana,
If the Court were correct that the Sullivan standard is the appropriate analogy, however, then this standard should guide how to analyze recklessness in true-threats prosecutions. The generic formulation of recklessness requires that an individual disregard a relatively unspecified level of risk that the harm in question will occur. See Borden, 593 U. S., at ___ (plurality opinion) (slip op., at 5). Within that potentially broad range, Sullivan provides a more definite and demanding level of risk, reflecting the First Amendment concerns at stake. The Court has "made clear that the defendant must have made the false publication with a high degree of awareness of probable falsity or must have entertained serious doubts as to the truth." Harte-Hanks Communications, Inc. v. Connaughton,
For similar reasons, after today's ruling, future courts grappling with how to articulate the appropriate level of recklessness in true-threats cases would be well served to consult the Sullivan standard. The equivalent to Sullivan for true threats would require a high degree of awareness that a statement was probably threatening or serious doubts as to the threatening nature of the statement. This could avoid the chilling that would arise from a more amorphous and easily satisfied standard.
4
This Court's various frameworks for unprotected speech do not speak with one voice, as perhaps befits the First Amendment. The above survey does not, however, give reason to depart from the traditional understanding of true threats. To the contrary, this case law supports keeping true threats within their traditional bounds. Incitement similarly requires intent. The same chilling concerns that have led this Court to approve a knowledge requirement for obscenity are present with true threats. And to the extent the civil defamation context is relevant, at the very least, it points to a precise and demanding form of recklessness.10
IV
Maintaining true threats doctrine within its traditional boundaries will guard against the overcriminalization of a wide range of political, artistic, and everyday speech based on its content alone. This does not mean that unintentionally threatening communications are exempt from regulation, far from it. As explained above, there are far fewer First Amendment concerns with stalking laws that punish repeated, targeted, unwanted conduct and accompanying speech. For that reason, recklessness is quite sufficient. As to true threats, intent is neither an unusual nor an insurmountable bar. "[C]ourts and juries every day pass upon knowledge, belief and intent . . . having before them no more than evidence of . . . words and conduct, from which, in ordinary human experience, mental condition can be inferred." American Communications Assn. v. Douds,
* * *
I agree with the Court's conclusion that the First Amendment requires a subjective mens rea in true-threats cases, and I also agree that recklessness is amply sufficient for this case. Yet I would stop there, leaving for another day the question of the specific mens rea required to prosecute true threats generally. If that question is reached, however, the answer is that true threats encompass a narrow band of intentional threats. Especially in a climate of intense polarization, it is dangerous to allow criminal prosecutions for heated words based solely on an amorphous recklessness standard. Our society has often concluded that an intent standard sets a proper balance between safety and the need for a guilty mind, even in cases that do not involve the First Amendment. Surely when the power of the State is called upon to imprison someone based on the content of their words alone, this standard cannot be considered excessive. Because I part ways with the Court on this score, I respectfully concur only in part and in the judgment.
Thomas, J., dissenting
600 U. S. ____ (2023)
No. 22-138
BILLY RAYMOND COUNTERMAN, PETITIONER v. COLORADO
on writ of certiorari to the court of appeals of colorado
[June 27, 2023]
Justice Thomas, dissenting.
I join Justice Barrett's dissent in full. I write separately to address the majority's surprising and misplaced reliance on New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
I am far from alone. Many Members of this Court have questioned the soundness of New York Times and its numerous extensions. See, e.g., Berisha, 594 U. S., at ___-___ (Gorsuch, J., dissenting from denial of certiorari) (slip op., at 5-8); Coughlin v. Westinghouse Broadcasting & Cable, Inc.,
Barrett, J., dissenting
600 U. S. ____ (2023)
No. 22-138
BILLY RAYMOND COUNTERMAN, PETITIONER v. COLORADO
on writ of certiorari to the court of appeals of colorado
[June 27, 2023]
Justice Barrett, with whom Justice Thomas joins, dissenting.
Billy Counterman was convicted under a Colorado law that prohibits true threats. As everyone agrees, the statute requires that the speaker understand the meaning of his words. Ante, at 4, n. 1. The question is what more the First Amendment requires. Colorado maintains that an objective standard is enough--that is, the government must show that a reasonable person would regard the statement as a threat of violence. Counterman, however, argues that the First Amendment requires a subjective test--that is, the speaker himself must intend or know the threatening nature of the statement.
It should be easy to choose between these positions. True threats do not enjoy First Amendment protection, and nearly every other category of unprotected speech may be restricted using an objective standard. Nonetheless, the Court adopts a subjective standard, though not quite the one advanced by Counterman. The Court holds that speakers must recklessly disregard the threatening nature of their speech to lose constitutional protection. Because this unjustifiably grants true threats preferential treatment, I respectfully dissent.
I
Since the founding, the First Amendment has allowed the government to regulate certain "areas of speech" "because of their constitutionally proscribable content." R. A. V. v. St. Paul,
The nature of a true threat points to an objective test for determining the scope of First Amendment protection: Neither its "social value" nor its potential for "injury" depends on the speaker's subjective intent. Chaplinsky,
II
The Court agrees that "[t]he existence of a threat depends not on 'the mental state of the author,' but on 'what the statement conveys' to the person on the other end." Ante, at 6. And it acknowledges that "[w]hen the statement is understood as a true threat, all the harms that have long made threats unprotected naturally follow." Ibid. Nonetheless, the Court holds Colorado's statute unconstitutional. Why? Because the Court installs a prophylactic buffer zone to avoid chilling protected speech--a buffer zone that protects true threats unless the speaker "consciously disregarded a substantial risk that his communications would be viewed as threatening violence." Ante, at 1, 4-5. That reasoning is flawed.
A
The Court's first error is awarding true threats "pride of place among unprotected speech." Elonis v. United States,
Start with fighting words--a category of unprotected speech that the Court skips past. Fighting words are "personally abusive epithets" that are "inherently likely to provoke violent reaction." Cohen v. California,
The Court similarly overlooks the category of "false, deceptive, or misleading" commercial speech. Zauderer v. Office of Disciplinary Counsel of Supreme Court of Ohio,
Or take obscenity, which we have long held is "not protected by the freedoms of speech and press." Roth v. United States,
In an effort to bolster its position, the Court floats a different standard for obscenity laws, asserting that "the First Amendment demands proof of a defendant's mindset to make out an obscenity case." Ante, at 8. By "mindset," the Court apparently means that the defendant must have some awareness that an average person would consider the materials obscene. But the Court draws this conclusion from cases rejecting a strict liability standard--for example, we have held that the proprietor of a bookstore cannot be liable for possessing an obscene book unless he knew what was in it. Smith v. California,
The Court leans hardest on defamation law, but its argument depends on a single, cherry-picked strand of the doctrine. Yes, New York Times Co. v. Sullivan requires public figures and public officials to show "actual malice" on a defamation claim, and we have defined "actual malice" as "knowledge that [the statement] was false" or "reckless disregard of whether it was false or not."
Sullivan's rationale does not justify a heightened mens rea for true threats. Because true threats are not typically proximate to debate on matters of public concern, the Court's newly erected buffer zone does not serve the end of protecting heated political commentary. Nor can public figures use counterspeech in the public square to protect themselves from serious threats of physical violence. And perversely, private individuals now have less protection from true threats than from defamation--even though they presumably value their lives more than their reputations. See Gertz,
I will give the Court this much: Speakers must specifically intend to incite violence before they lose First Amendment protection. Brandenburg v. Ohio,
In sum, our First Amendment precedent does not set a "baseline ban on an objective standard." Ante, at 10. Precedent does more than allow an objective test for true threats; on balance, it affirmatively supports one.
B
The Court's analysis also gives short shrift to how an objective test works in practice. Two key features of true threats already guard against the risk of silencing protected speech. Thus, there is no need to go further and adopt the Court's heightened standard.
First, only a very narrow class of statements satisfies the definition of a true threat. To make a true threat, the speaker must express "an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence." Black,
Second, the statement must be deemed threatening by a reasonable listener who is familiar with the "entire factual context" in which the statement occurs. State v. Taveras, 342 Conn. 563, 572, 271 A. 3d 123, 129 (2022). This inquiry captures (among other things) the speaker's tone, the audience, the medium for the communication, and the broader exchange in which the statement occurs.3 Each consideration helps weed out protected speech from true threats.
Our decision in Black illustrates the point. There, the Court considered a Virginia law that prohibited cross burning " 'with the intent of intimidating any person or group of persons.' "
The Black plurality's reasoning can be boiled down to the following insight: When context is ignored, true threats cannot be reliably distinguished from protected speech. The reverse also holds: When context is properly considered, constitutional concerns abate. See, e.g., Watts v. United States,
One more point: Many States have long had statutes like Colorado's on the books. See Brief for Illinois et al. as Amici Curiae 16-17. Before we took this case, the vast majority of Courts of Appeals and state high courts had upheld these statutes as constitutional. So objective tests are effectively the status quo today, yet Counterman still struggles to identify past prosecutions that came close to infringing on protected speech. Tr. of Oral Arg. 28-30. The silence is telling.
C
So is the silence in the historical record. Since 1791, true threats have been excluded from the "speech" protected by the First Amendment. R. A.V.,
For starters, he produces no evidence directly addressing the meaning of the First Amendment--nothing from state ratifying conventions, political commentary, or even early debates about efforts to regulate threats in ways that might threaten speech. That is not surprising at the federal level, because the Federal Government did not prohibit threats until the early 20th century. Elonis,
That void notwithstanding, the state threat statutes are the evidence on which Counterman seizes. He argues that they imposed a subjective mens rea, demonstrating that the founding generation thought that threats could be punished on no less. But as Justice Thomas has already discussed in detail, this is incorrect. See id., at 760-765. Rather than a subjective mens rea, these statutes used an objective standard resembling Colorado's.
Even if they did require a heightened mens rea, though, these statutes would not carry the day for Counterman. The enactment of a statute against the backdrop of a free speech guarantee tends to show that the legislature thought the statute consistent with that guarantee. Thus, if the question were whether such statutes violated the First Amendment, their existence would be evidence to the contrary. But the question here is whether a subjective intent requirement is the constitutional floor. And because the legislature is always free to exceed the floor, the enactment of legislation does not necessarily reflect the legislature's view of the constitutional minimum.
At the end of the day, then, the best historical case for Counterman does not add up to much. He is plainly not asking the Court to enforce a historically sanctioned rule, but rather to fashion a new one.
D
Even if a subjective test had a historical pedigree, the Court's chosen standard of recklessness certainly does not. Where does recklessness come from? It was not raised by the parties. Only the Solicitor General noted this possibility--and briefly at that. Brief for United States as Amicus Curiae 28-31. Nor did the courts below address recklessness; indeed, very few courts (of the many that have taken up the question) have settled on recklessness as the constitutional floor for true threats. See, e.g., State v. Mrozinski, 971 N. W. 2d 233, 243-245 (Minn. 2022); In re J. J. M., 265 A. 3d 246, 269-270 (Pa. 2021). Still, the Court adopts recklessness as "the right path forward." Ante, at 11. Its rationale is, at best, unclear.
The Court begins by acknowledging the " 'competing value[s]' " of "free expression" on one hand, and "profound harms . . . to both individuals and society" on the other. Ante, at 11-12. But why do these considerations point to recklessness? A knowledge or purpose standard would allow more free expression, so maybe we should go higher. See ante, at 16 (Sotomayor, J., concurring in part and concurring in judgment) ("chilling concerns only further buttress the conclusion that true threats should be limited to intentionally threatening speech"). An objective standard would cause less harm to victims, so perhaps lower is better. The optimal balance strikes me as a question best left to the legislature, which could calibrate the mens rea to the circumstance--for example, higher for the criminal context and lower for the civil. See Brief for Illinois et al. as Amici Curiae 28-30 (States "have a range of policy reasons for using subjective standards for penalizing threats of violence" and many "choose to require proof of a speaker's subjective mental state" in some situations but not others).
Nor does our First Amendment precedent buttress the Court's preferred standard. A recklessness requirement currently applies only to public-figure defamation claims. Incitement to violence calls for more. Fighting words, private-figure defamation, false commercial speech, and obscenity require less. I fail to see why, of all these categories of unprotected speech, public-figure defamation is the best analog for true threats. The reality is that recklessness is not grounded in law, but in a Goldilocks judgment: Recklessness is not too much, not too little, but instead "just right."
III
Some may find Colorado's statute harsh, and the Court's decision seems driven in no small part by the heavy hammer of criminal punishment. See ante, at 12; ante, at 14-15, 20-21 (opinion of Sotomayor, J.). While an objective test is "a familiar feature of civil liability in tort law," the " 'conventional requirement for criminal conduct' " is " 'awareness of some wrongdoing.' " Elonis,
But this case is about the scope of the First Amendment, not the interpretation of a criminal statute. Accordingly, the Court's holding affects the civil consequences for true threats just as much as it restricts criminal liability. And the civil context underscores the danger of adopting a Sullivan-style buffer zone for true threats.
Consider, for example, threat victims who seek restraining orders to protect themselves from their harassers. See, e.g., United States v. Elonis, 841 F. 3d 589, 593 (CA3 2016) (defendant's wife sought a restraining order after he wrote on Facebook, "I'm not going to rest until your body is a mess, soaked in blood and dying from all the little cuts"). Civil orders can also keep individuals away from particular geographic areas. Imagine someone who threatens to bomb an airport, State v. Johnston, 156 Wash. 2d 355, 358-359, 127 P. 3d 707, 708-709 (2006), or "shoot up [a] courthous[e]," State v. Draskovich, 2017 S. D. 76, ¶3, 904 N. W. 2d 759, 761. The speaker might well end up barred from the location in question--for good reason. Yet after today, such orders cannot be obtained without proof--not necessarily easy to secure--that the person who issued the threat anticipated that it would elicit fear. See Tr. of Oral Arg. 92-93.
The government can also opt to counteract true threats by means of civil enforcement actions. For instance, 18 U. S. C. §248 prohibits "threat[s] of force" against any person "obtaining or providing reproductive health services" or "seeking to exercise the First Amendment right of religious freedom at a place of religious worship." The statute imposes a range of civil penalties, and it allows enforcement suits by both private persons and government officials. See, e.g., United States v. Dillard, 795 F. 3d 1191, 1196-1197 (CA10 2015) (Government brought §248 action after defendant warned a health provider, "[y]ou will be checking under your car everyday--because maybe today is the day someone places an explosive under it"); McCullen v. Coakley,
In addition, employers and school administrators often discipline individuals who make true threats. Consider the student who was expelled after "draft[ing] two violent, misogynic, and obscenity-laden rants expressing a desire to molest, rape, and murder" his ex-girlfriend. Doe v. Pulaski Cty. Special School Dist., 306 F. 3d 616, 619 (CA8 2002) (en banc). Or the one who was suspended after " 'talking about taking a gun to school' to 'shoot everyone he hates.' " D. J. M. v. Hannibal Public School Dist. No. 60, 647 F. 3d 754, 758 (CA8 2011); Lovell v. Poway Unified School District, 90 F. 3d 367, 369, 372-373 (CA9 1996) (similar); Haughwout v. Tordenti, 332 Conn. 559, 561-562, 211 A. 3d 1, 3-4 (2019) (similar). True threats can also be expressed by a parent, a teacher, or an employee in another context altogether. See, e.g., Taveras, 342 Conn., at 567-569, 578, 271 A. 3d, at 126-128, 133 (parent); Smith v. New York City Dept. of Ed., 109 App. Div. 3d 701, 702-703, 972 N. Y. S. 2d 221, 222 (2013) (teacher); Diggs v. St. Louis, 613 S. W. 3d 858, 862, 864 (Mo. App. 2020) (correctional officer).
Barring some reason why the speech receives lesser constitutional protection, e.g., Mahanoy Area School Dist. v. B. L., 594 U. S. ___, ___-___ (2021) (slip op., at 4-5), the Court's new rule applies to all of these situations. That can make all the difference in some cases. A delusional speaker may lack awareness of the threatening nature of her speech; a devious speaker may strategically disclaim such awareness; and a lucky speaker may leave behind no evidence of mental state for the government to use against her. The Court's decision thus sweeps much further than it lets on.
* * *
The bottom line is this: Counterman communicated true threats, which, "everyone agrees, lie outside the bounds of the First Amendment's protection." Ante, at 4. He knew what the words meant. Those threats caused the victim to fear for her life, and they "upended her daily existence." Ante, at 2. Nonetheless, the Court concludes that Counterman can prevail on a First Amendment defense. Nothing in the Constitution compels that result. I respectfully dissent.
The statute Counterman was charged with violating is titled a "stalking" statute and also prohibits "[r]epeatedly follow[ing], approach[ing], contact[ing], [or] plac[ing] under surveillance" another person. §18-3-602(1)(c). But the State had no evidence, beyond what Counterman claimed, that he actually had followed or surveilled C. W. For example, C. W. had never noticed anything of that kind. So the prosecution based its case solely on Counterman's "[r]epeated[ ] . . . communication[s]" with C. W. Ibid.
A preliminary clarification may be useful, concerning the difference between awareness of a communication's contents and awareness of its threatening nature. Everyone agrees, again, that the State must prove the former--and Colorado law appears to hold as much. See Colo. Rev. Stat. §18-3-602(1)(c); Brief for Respondent 18. So, for example, if a defendant delivers a sealed envelope without knowing that a threatening letter is inside, he cannot be liable for the communication. So too (though this common example seems fairly preposterous) if a "foreigner, ignorant of the English language, who would not know the meaning of the words," somehow manages to convey an English-language threat. Elonis v. United States,
The concurrence relies on Virginia v. Black,
The dissent, in urging an objective standard here, reads the obscenity decisions as requiring merely that the defendant know "what the material depicts" (as a speaker must know a communication's contents). Post, at 5-6 (opinion of Barrett, J.) (relying on Hamling,
The dissent's use of two other First Amendment categories--fighting words and false commercial speech--to support an objective test also falls flat. See post, at 3-4 (opinion of Barrett, J.). This Court has not upheld a conviction under the fighting-words doctrine in 80 years. At the least, that doctrine is today a poor candidate for spinning off other First Amendment rules. False commercial speech is also a poor analog, though for different reasons. Put aside that the line of cases the dissent invokes has never been listed among the historically unprotected categories of speech. See, e.g., United States v. Stevens,
Just to complete the mens rea hierarchy, the last level is negligence--but that is an objective standard, of the kind we have just rejected. A person acts negligently if he is not but should be aware of a substantial risk--here, that others will understand his words as threats. See Borden, 593 U. S., at ___ (plurality opinion) (slip op., at 5). That makes liability depend not on what the speaker thinks, but instead on what a reasonable person would think about whether his statements are threatening in nature. See Elonis,
Our obscenity decisions are of no help in this inquiry, because the Court has never determined the precise mens rea needed to impose punishment. In arguing to the contrary, the concurrence relies mainly on Hamling. Post, at 18-19 (opinion of Sotomayor, J.). But if the dissent is wrong in saying that Hamling (and other obscenity decisions) allowed an objective inquiry, see supra, at 9, n. 4, the concurrence is wrong in suggesting that it required use of a purpose or knowledge standard. As to the concurrence's claim, Hamling held only that a statute with that standard was "constitutionally sufficient."
The dissent accuses the Court of making a "Goldilocks judgment" in favoring a recklessness standard. Post, at 13 (opinion of Barrett, J.). But in law, as in life, there are worse things than being "just right."
The statute of conviction applies to someone who "[r]epeatedly follows, approaches, contacts, places under surveillance, or makes any form of communication with another person . . . in a manner that would cause a reasonable person to suffer serious emotional distress and does cause that person . . . serious emotional distress." Colo. Rev. Stat. §18-3-602(1)(c) (2022).
For these reasons, stalking prosecutions that do not rely on the content of communications would raise even fewer First Amendment concerns.
Intent requirements are common, including for incitement that results in actual violence, not just the threat of it. See infra, at 15-17. For that reason there are longstanding frameworks for determining when someone is not guilty by reason of insanity, and when delusions do (and do not) defeat a showing of intent. See, e.g., 1 W. LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law §§7.1(a), (b) (3d ed. 2018); 2 id., §9.2.
The lead dissent asserts that the Black plurality's decision was based on how the statute " 'ignore[d] all of the contextual factors that are necessary to decide whether a particular cross burning' was covered by the statute." Post, at 9 (opinion of Barrett, J.) (quoting
According to the Court today and the lead dissent, however, Black somehow managed not to say anything about the First Amendment mens rea requirement for true-threats prosecutions--while striking down a true-threat conviction under the First Amendment for an insufficient mens rea requirement. On this reading, Black only discussed intent because "the statute involved in the case required a showing of intent." Ante, at 6, n. 3; post, at 9, n. 4 (discussion of intent was "a reference to the statutory requirements for a conviction, not the constitutional requirements"). This puzzling interpretation does not explain why an illusory mens rea requirement in a Virginia law would pose any First Amendment problems if the Amendment did not impose a mens rea requirement of this kind. After all, "[w]hy would the First Amendment care how a jury goes about finding an [intent] element that is a matter of indifference to the Amendment?" United States v. Heineman, 767 F. 3d 970, 980 (CA10 2014). The obvious answer, from Black's reasoning to its holding, is that such a mens rea requirement was necessary for the statute to target true threats.
Nor is this limited to decisions by this Court. Threats cases sweep in political speech. See, e.g., State v. Taylor, 379 N. C. 589, 590, 866 S. E. 2d 740, 744 (2021). Incitement cases can sweep in nonpolitical speech. See, e.g., Rice v. Paladin Enterprises, Inc., 128 F. 3d 233, 264, n. 11, 267 (CA4 1997). And still other cases show how incitement and threats can often go hand in hand. See, e.g., State v. Caroll, 456 N. J. Super. 520, 544-545, 196 A. 3d 106, 120-121 (App. Div. 2018).
Analogously, the Court's civil defamation case law recognizes that heightened liability can require a heightened mens rea; even as to nonpublic figures, a higher standard must be met for punitive damages in certain cases. See, e.g., Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc.,
The Court has held, however, that recklessness is sufficient for child pornography. See Osborne v. Ohio,
There is a further safeguard in obscenity cases. Something is obscene if "taken as a whole, [it] lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value." Ashcroft v. American Civil Liberties Union,
The lead dissent headlines its analysis by pointing to this Court's case law on "fighting words." Post, at 3-4 (opinion of Barrett, J.). This is an unlikely candidate for a broader theory of the First Amendment. For "nearly three-quarters of a century . . . the Court has never . . . upheld a fighting words conviction" and "[t]he cumulative impact of [the Court's] decisions is to make it unlikely that a fighting words law could survive." E. Chemerinsky, The First Amendment 1094 (6th ed. 2019). It is not hard to see why such convictions would be unlikely to pass First Amendment muster; the leading case involved a Jehovah's Witness distributing literature who was arrested for breach of the peace for calling a public official a " 'damned Fascist.' " Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire,
Indeed, the Colorado Legislature considered these very harms when it enacted the statute at issue here. The statutory findings explain that stalking, harassment, and threats have "an immediate and long-lasting impact on quality of life as well as risks to security and safety of the victim and persons close to the victim." Colo. Rev. Stat. §§18-3-601(1)(f), 18-3-602(1) (2022). So the legislature passed the statute to "encourag[e] and authoriz[e] effective intervention" before the covered conduct could "escalate into behavior that has even more serious consequences." §18-3-601(2).
The Court also cites Elonis v. United States, ante, at 8, 9, n. 4, which Counterman argues puts a "gloss" on obscenity doctrine, Tr. of Oral Arg. 6-7. While Elonis briefly discusses the necessary mens rea for a conviction under a federal obscenity statute, it does so only in dicta.
Colorado's test provides a good example. Juries must apply the following nonexhaustive factors to determine whether a statement is a true threat: "(1) the statement's role in a broader exchange, if any, including surrounding events; (2) the medium or platform through which the statement was communicated, including any distinctive conventions or architectural features; (3) the manner in which the statement was conveyed (e.g., anonymously or not, privately or publicly); (4) the relationship between the speaker and recipient(s); and (5) the subjective reaction of the statement's intended or foreseeable recipient(s)." People in the Interest of R. D., 464 P. 3d 717, 721-722 (Colo. 2020).
As Justice Sotomayor emphasizes, ante, at 10, n. 4, the plurality said that context informs "whether a particular cross burning is intended to intimidate,"
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No. 22-138
Argued: April 19, 2023
Decided: June 27, 2023
Court: United States Supreme Court
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