Affirmed by published opinion. Chief Judge WILKINSON wrote the opinion, in which Judge MICHAEL and Senior Judge MICHAEL joined.
OPINION
Robin Ficker, a Maryland attorney, and Natalie Boehm, the owner of a direct-mail advertising company, challenged the constitutionality of a Maryland law forbidding lawyers from targeted direct-mail solicitation of criminal and traffic defendants within thirty days of arrest. We agree with the district court that the Maryland ban encroaches impermissibly on First Amendment rights, and we accordingly affirm its judgment.
I.
During its 1996 session, the Maryland General Assembly enacted a new restriction on lawyer advertising, requiring that attorneys wait thirty days after an accident, disaster, criminal charge or traffic charge before mailing out targeted solicitation to victims or arrestees and their relatives. Md.Code Ann., Bus. Occ. & Prof. § 10-605.1(a). The new law went into effect on October 1,1996, with violations punishable by a fine of up to $1,000 and incarceration for up to one year.
Appellees Robin Ficker and Natalie Boehm challenged the constitutionality of those portions of the statute which applied to criminal and traffic defendants.
The district court granted Ficker and Boehm’s motions for summary judgment, ruling that the challenged portions of the statute were unconstitutional. Ficker v. Curran,
II.
The Supreme Court has regularly reaffirmed the protected status of attorney advertising, extending First Amendment coverage to a variety of forms of lawyer advertising embodying a wide range of content. In Bates v. State Bar of Ari
The content of protected advertisements has been as varied as the form. It includes the attorney’s areas of practice, the jurisdictions in which the attorney is licensed, R.M.J.,
Truthful advertising related to lawful activities is entitled to the protections of the First Amendment. But when the particular content or method of the advertising suggests that it is inherently misleading or when experience has proved that in fact such advertising is subject to abuse, the States may impose appropriate restrictions. Misleading advertising may be prohibited entirely. But the States may not place an absolute prohibition on certain types of potentially misleading information---- Even when communication is not misleading, the State retains some authority to regulate. But the State must assert a substantial interest and the interference with speech must be in proportion to the interest served.
The Court has permitted prohibition of an attorney’s right to advertise only in the limited class of circumstances where state interests are strong and the potential harm of nonregulation severe. For example, the Court has permitted prohibition of in-person solicitation of accident victims on the grounds that such solicitation exerts an impermissible pressure not present in public advertisements. Ohralik v. Ohio State Bar Association,
The Court has also ruled that targeted direct-mail solicitation of accident victims and their families in the “immediate aftermath of accidents” is subject to state regulation. In Florida Bar v. Went For It, Inc.,
III.
Against this backdrop, we have little difficulty in concluding that the Maryland law implicates First Amendment interests — perhaps most significantly the interests of criminal and traffic defendants in receiving information about legal representation. Recipients retain an independent First Amendment interest in acquiring such information, even when that information could be obtained by other means. Virginia Pharmacy,
Attorneys, too, have a First Amendment interest — speaking in the commercial marketplace of attorney services. “[W]e may assume that the advertiser’s interest is a purely economic one. That hardly disqualifies him from protection under the First Amendment.” Virginia Pharmacy,
Maryland argues, however, that the infringement on free speech in this case is necessary to advance important governmental interests such as shielding recipients from undue influence or confusion, guarding recipients’ privacy, and protecting the reputation of the legal profession. While we recognize the substantiality of each of these state interests in the abstract, we are not persuaded that the Maryland ban directly and materially advances them. See Central Hudson,
First, as the Supreme Court has already recognized, targeted letters do not carry the same potential for undue influence as in-person solicitation, and such letters are no more likely to overwhelm the judgment of a potential client than an untargeted letter or newspaper advertisement. Shapero,
Neither can Maryland’s asserted interest in protecting the privacy of criminal and traffic defendants from intrusive attorney contact support the abrogation of free speech in this case. The Supreme Court has already explained in Shapero that “a targeted letter [does not] invade the recipient’s privacy any more than does a substantively identical letter mailed at large. The invasion, if any, occurs when the lawyer discovers the recipient’s legal affairs, not when he confronts the recipient with the discovery.”
Maryland next asserts an interest in protecting the reputation and dignity of the legal profession, derivative of its interest in the fair administration of justice. In support of this contention, the Attorney General points to a study conducted by the North Carolina Bar which found that “many” traffic offenders thought targeted direct mail violated their privacy. However, amici Sawyer, Culbertson, and Dummit, three members of the North Carolina bar, offer in reply a different North Carolina survey, with an allegedly larger sample population and smaller margin of error, which shows that a majority of North Carolinians would not object to receiving attorney letters after getting a traffic ticket, and would actually like to receive such letters if they were arrested for driving under the influence or for a small crime. We will not resolve this battle of studies, nor will we credit or discredit state interests based on the shifting sands of polling data, which change according to techniques, sample populations, and even the phrasing of the questions.
Moreover, any negative attitude toward the legal profession that a criminal defendant might have after receiving unwanted mail on day one or twenty-one will not dissipate by day thirty-one. Any disrespect to the legal profession engendered by targeted direct-mail solicitation would not be caused by the timing of the targeted letters, as was the case in Florida Bar, but a general distaste for such solicitation. The Supreme Court has already ruled that attorneys’ targeted direct-mail solicitation is expression worthy of First Amendment protection. Shapero,
TV.
In Florida Bar,
We are unpersuaded. Both the First Amendment interests and the government interests in this case differ markedly from those in Florida Bar, and accordingly dictate a different outcome. First, the Court in Florida Bar rested its conclusion largely on the principle that the privacy of accident victims and wrongful death clients deserves protection in order to provide them with a period to cope with their grief before being asked to redress an emotional loss. Florida Bar,
Second, while accident victims typically have three years in which to file a claim, criminal defendants are subject to a much more accelerated calendar. Defendants can lose rights if unrepresented for thirty days after arrest — the process of hearings and arraignments can be bewildering to someone unschooled in the ways of the law. As the Attorney General acknowledged in his letter to the Governor, a criminal defendant “often must act quickly in order to preserve important rights.” In Maryland, for example, a DWI defendant who refuses to take a blood alcohol test or whose test registers above 0.10 has his driver’s license confiscated at the time of the offense, and must request a hearing if he desires to show cause why his license should not be suspended. Md.Code Ann., Transp. II § 16-205.1(b)(3). If he requests this hearing within ten days of being stopped by the police, the hearing must be scheduled within forty-five days. If he misses the ten-day window, the hearing need not be scheduled within forty-five days, and the defendant faces an extended suspension of his license. The relative urgency of the
Third, a criminal defendant’s privacy concerns differ considerably from those of a potential civil plaintiff. Unlike an accident victim, who can choose to avoid public scrutiny of his private affairs by not filing a suit or by settling quietly, the criminal arrestee is in the legal system involuntarily and has already had his privacy compromised before a solicitation letter is ever sent.
Fourth, unlike a civil litigant, the criminal dr incarcerable traffic defendant enjoys a Sixth Amendment right to counsel. Argersinger v. Hamlin,
The differences between this case and Florida Bar are manifold. Accordingly, we hold that a thirty day ban on attorney advertising to defendants charged with crimes and incarcerable traffic offenses cannot stand.
V.
Our holding is a narrow one. We reiterate the Supreme Court’s admonition that those forms of lawyer solicitation which cross the line into coercion are not protected. See, e.g., Ohralik,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The relevant provision states: "A lawyer may not send a written communication, directly or through an agent, to a prospective client for the purpose of obtaining professional employment if the communication concerns ... a criminal prosecution, or a prosecution of a traffic offense that carries a period of incarceration, involving the person to whom the communication is addressed or the person’s relative, unless the charging document was filed more than 30 days before the date the communication is mailed." Md. Code Ann., Bus. Occ. & Prof. § 10 605.1(a)(2).
. Maryland argues that the Supreme Court relied on polling data in Florida Bar. However, the Court used the data only as confirmation of the fact that the regulation targeted a "concrete, nonspeculative harm" in the "immediate aftermath of accidents,”
