This habeas corpus appeal involves an unusual first amendment challenge to the constitutionality of the appellant’s incarceration. Lawrence Shackelford was convicted in state court of violating Miss.Code Ann. § 97-29-45, the Mississippi telephone harassment statute, which provides in pertinent part:
(1) It shall be unlawful for any person or persons:
(b) to make a telephone call, with intent to terrify, intimidate, or harass, and threaten to inflict injury or physical harm to any person at the called number or to his property.
Shackelford admitted to placing a telephone call to Otha Richardson, his former supervisor, and stating that the next time Richardson came by Shackelford’s car lot he would be “toting an ass whipping.” The parties to the conversation gave differing versions of the events leading up to the call, but these differences are not relevant to the issue presented in this appeal. Shackelford objected to the trial judge’s proposed instruction on the elements of the crime, contending that constitutional limitations on the state’s power to punish speech prevented conviction unless the jury found that the words led to an immediate danger of harm. His proposed instruction would have prevented the jury from convicting for the mere use of words “unless there was some great, clear and present danger of some injury” accompanying the words. The judge refused his instruction, telling the jury “you don’t have to prove [the defendant has] the power and it is imminent.” The jury found Shackelford guilty of the offense. Shackelford was given a two year suspended sentence, two years of probation, and fined. The Mississippi Supreme Court affirmed the conviction without opinion.
Shackelford v. State,
Shackelford then filed a petition for ha-beas corpus in the district court 1 raising the same first amendment claim he made in state court. He contended that the jury instructions were erroneous because the jury could not, consistent with the first amendment, convict unless they found that the words were likely to incite immediate harm. A magistrate issued a report and recommendation that the petition be denied, which the district court adopted. We affirm.
Shackelford argues that “pure speech cannot be made criminal, absent a showing of some imminent danger or a threat of some imminent breach of the peace,” and that absent the instruction the conviction does not comport with first amendment limitations on a state’s ability to punish speech. Shackelford is correct that, under some circumstances, the first amendment permits speech to be punished only if the words themselves are “directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and [are] likely to incite or produce such action.”
Brandenburg v. Ohio,
*938
S.Ct. 1780, 1786-87,
As speech strays further from the values of persuasion, dialogue and free exchange of ideas the first amendment was designed to protect, and moves toward threats made with specific intent to perform illegal acts, the state has greater latitude to enact statutes that effectively neutralize verbal expression.
Watts v. United States,
The notion that some expression may be regulated consistent with the first amendment ... starts with the already familiar proposition that expression has special value only in the context of “dialogue”: communication in which the participants seek to persuade, or are persuaded; communication which is about changing or maintaining beliefs, or taking or refusing to take action on the basis of one’s beliefs ... It is not plausible to uphold the right to use words as projectiles where no exchange of views is involved.
L. Tribe,
American Constitutional Law,
§ 12-8 at 836-37 (2d ed. 1988). The theory that the first amendment permits regulation of speech which does not in any sense contribute to the values the first amendment was designed to advance stems from the Court’s well-known identification in
Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire,
Our view of the level of scrutiny due Shackelford’s threat receives support from the Supreme Court’s treatment of the threat in
Watts.
In that case, a young man who had just participated in an antiwar rally in Washington, D.C. joined a discussion on police brutality, where he was overheard saying, “[i]f they ever make me carry a rifle the first man I want to get in my sights is L.B.J.”
Id.
In
United States v. Kelner,
We do not face the difficulty encountered in
Watts
and
Kelner
of a somewhat ambiguous intent requirement in the statute.
Kelner
solved this difficulty by equating the
Watts
requirement of a “true threat” with “a requirement of proof of specific intent to execute the threat,” because a specific intent requirement ensures that only those threats “which are so unambiguous and have such immediacy that they convincingly
express
an
intention
of being carried out” are punished.
Kelner,
The Mississippi courts have not interpreted the reach of § 97-29-45, except to say that the words “I want you,” standing alone, do not constitute threatening language.
Sanders v. State,
Although it is unclear from his petition whether Shackelford also contends that the Mississippi telephone harassment statute is unconstitutionally overbroad, he adverts to the possibility that the statute is “facially unconstitutional.” We therefore consider — and reject — the possibility that the statute is overbroad. A statute that legitimately punishes some speech but which might be construed to inhibit a substantial amount of protected speech may be unconstitutionally overbroad.
New York v. Ferber,
The Court has made clear that facial challenges of this sort can succeed only if there is a significant imbalance between the protected speech the statute should not punish and the unprotected speech it legitimately reaches: “[Ojverbreadth of a statute must not only be real, but substantial as well, judged in relation to the statute’s plainly legitimate sweep.”
Broadrick v. Oklahoma,
Shackelford has not suggested that a broad range of protected speech might im-permissibly fall within the ambit of the Mississippi statute. One certainly could conjure up prosecutions for telephone *941 threats made with intent to harass to, for example, a department store complaint department, but we have difficulty believing that the question whether there truly was a threat in those circumstances could go to the jury. The kind of harassing, abusive and threatening language uttered over the telephone that numerous states and Congress have found worthy of proscription seems clear enough that hypothetical unconstitutional applications of the Mississippi statute cause us little concern. 5
Shackelford was prosecuted under a statute which is facially constitutional, and his conviction for uttering a threat does not offend the first amendment. Therefore, the district court’s denial of habeas corpus relief is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Although there is no indication in the record that Shackelford pursued any avenues of state coliateral relief, the state in its answer to the petition for habeas corpus conceded that Shack-elford had exhausted all state remedies and that "further return to the state court on these issues would be futile.”
. The prosecution proceeded under 18 U.S.C. § 875(c), which prohibits the "transmi[ssion] in interstate commerce of any communication containing ... any threat to injure the person of another ....”
. The judge instructed the jury that they should convict only if they found that Shackelford "ma[d]e a telephone call to Otha Richardson with the intent to terrify, intimidate or harass, and threaten[ed] to inflict injury and physical harm to the said Otha Richardson ...”
. Although
Broadrick
involved expressive conduct, rather than pure speech, the Court in
New York v. Ferber,
. Shackelford was prosecuted under a statute which is facially constitutional, and his conviction for uttering a threat does not offend the first amendment. We recognize, of course, that this statute might be applied in an unconstitutional manner, and nothing in our ruling today forecloses a constitutional challenge to a prosecution for speech which is constitutionally protected. We hold only that the statute is not overbroad and therefore is constitutional on its face.
