Posted on Mar 27, 2023
Immigration fraud case brings tough First Amendment questions to the Supreme Court
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Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 2
I think this is going to center around the phrases "Integral to Criminal Conduct" or "Inciting Imminent Criminal Conduct" and the word "Fraud".
The Supreme Court has long held that those categories of speech are not protected under the 1st Amendment. Someone telling someone here illegally that they should stay wouldn't be "Integral to Criminal Conduct" the same way someone telling someone "They deserve to pay for what they did!" - Their view in the past has been, "Abstract advocacy of lawbreaking remains protected speech".
Additionally, the Supreme Court has held in the past that, "The government generally can impose liability for false advertising or on speakers who knowingly make factual misrepresentations to obtain money or some other material benefit". This seems to be very applicable to this individual without running afoul of stretching the prohibition of unprotected speech into a much more generalized view.
The Supreme Court has long held that those categories of speech are not protected under the 1st Amendment. Someone telling someone here illegally that they should stay wouldn't be "Integral to Criminal Conduct" the same way someone telling someone "They deserve to pay for what they did!" - Their view in the past has been, "Abstract advocacy of lawbreaking remains protected speech".
Additionally, the Supreme Court has held in the past that, "The government generally can impose liability for false advertising or on speakers who knowingly make factual misrepresentations to obtain money or some other material benefit". This seems to be very applicable to this individual without running afoul of stretching the prohibition of unprotected speech into a much more generalized view.
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