TRAVIS SEALS; ALI BERGERON v. BRANDON MCBEE; ET AL.
No. 17-30667
United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
August 3, 2018
Before SMITH, WIENER, and WILLETT, Circuit Judges.
JEFF LANDRY, Attorney General, State of Louisiana, Intervenor–Appellant. Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Louisiana
I.
In December 2014, Seals and Ali Bergeron were arrested for conduct not specifically reflected in the record. Any charge was ultimately dismissed or refused by the district attorney (“DA“). It appears that a neighbor accused Seals and Bergeron of aggravated assault, and the police responded. According to Seals, he was pepper-sprayed and verbally objected to the arrest, threatening “to make lawful complaints” about the officers’ conduct. According to the officers, Seals violently resisted and “repeatedly made threats of physical harm.”1 Ultimately, those disputes are immaterial.
Seals and Bergeron filed a complaint against the arresting officer—Brandon McBee—in September 2016, claiming malicious prosecution, conspiracy, and a
The district court held a hearing to sort through standing. Plaintiffs admitted that the DA had stated he had no intention of charging them at that time. But plaintiffs maintained the DA could still prosecute Seals. Louisiana reiterated that the DA has not brought charges but has never disputed that Seals made threats, was arrested, and could be prosecuted under
The district court granted plaintiffs’ motion, finding standing and declaring
II.
The core case-or-controversy requirement of
Moreover, because plaintiffs seek injunctive relief, they must show that “there is a real and immediate threat of repeated injury.” City of L.A. v. Lyons, 461 U.S. 95, 102 (1983) (quoting O‘Shea v. Littleton, 414 U.S. 488, 496 (1974)). Past injury alone is insufficient; plaintiffs must establish a “real or immediate threat that [they] will be wronged again.” Id. at 111.
Finally, “each element of
Plaintiffs repeatedly assert that the requirements of standing are relaxed in the
Seals was arrested in connection with making some form of threats to the police—thus he appears to have violated
Whether the government disavows prosecution is a factor in finding a credible threat of prosecution.9 Yet that is only one factor among many—for example, in Humanitarian Law Project, 561 U.S. at 15–16, the Court found standing because there was a history of enforcement, and the government would not disavow prosecution.10 And in United Farm Workers, 442 U.S. at 302, after asking whether the parties were “sufficiently adverse,” the Court found standing because, even though the plaintiffs had not yet violated the statute and the statute had never been applied, the government would not disavow prosecution if plaintiffs engaged in their intended course of action. Id. Significantly, in neither case had a plaintiff been arrested in connection with violating the statute. After all, “we [do] not require . . . that the plaintiff bet the farm, so to speak.” MedImmune, 549 U.S. at 129.
Seals‘s position mirrors that of the plaintiffs in United Farm Workers. He already bet the farm. And when he violated
This conclusion reflects the fundamental purpose of standing: “to ensure . . . the federal courts are devoted to those disputes in which the parties have a concrete stake.” Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc., 528 U.S. 167, 191 (2000). Seals plainly has a concrete stake in this litigation because the DA can change his mind and prosecute him. Plaintiffs “should not be required to await and undergo a criminal prosecution as the sole means of seeking relief.”12 We apply that principle here: Seals is not required to live under the specter of prosecution for violating a potentially unconstitutional law with nothing more than a non-committal promise as protection.13
III.
We turn to whether
A.
The parties dispute the reach of
The state, however, contends that
We accept the gloss proposed by Louisiana. Although not explicit, Louisiana caselaw strongly suggests that
Then, in State v. Smith, 212 So. 2d 410, 411−12 (La. 1968), the court was faced with a vagueness challenge to Louisiana‘s bribery statute. The court found the law constitutional, reasoning in part that “the gist of [bribery] is that it tends to corrupt.” Id. at 413. “Bribery must be committed with a corrupt intent, that is, the intent is corrupt when it is to influence official action to obtain a result which the party would not be entitled to as a matter of right.” Id. at 415. (emphasis, citation, and internal quotations omitted).
Thus, Louisiana caselaw can easily be read to say that
Yet we can narrow
Finally, Louisiana‘s reliance on its caselaw proves to be a double-edged sword. As plaintiffs note, the Louisiana Court of Appeals has upheld the conviction of a defendant who violated
It follows that, properly understood,
B.
Plaintiffs insist that
It is true that, by criminalizing “threats,” the statute regulates content. And, as Louisiana rightly contends,
That is not to say that a state has carte blanche when dealing with unprotected speech. It may not, for example, regulate only certain kinds of unprotected content based on a criterion that involves protected content—e.g., a law prohibiting only true threats involving particular political ideas. See id. at 385–86.22 Nor may the government proscribe unprotected content through a regulation that simultaneously encompasses a substantial amount of protected content, “judged in relation” to the unprotected content. See Stevens, 559 U.S. at 472–73; Black, 538 U.S. at 364–67. Either sort of regulation is a kind of content-based regulation that is constitutionally suspect. The former is subject to “strict scrutiny“; the latter, “overbreadth.”
C.
Evaluating an overbreadth challenge requires exploring a statute‘s constitutional and unconstitutional applications. According to Louisiana,
Such threats are constitutionally protected. The decision in NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware Co., 458 U.S. 886 (1982), is instructive. There, a group of black citizens demanded that public officials desegregate public schools and hire black policeman lest the black community engage in boycotts of private businesses; when their demands were not met, the boycotts began. Id. at 899–900. Such speech was constitutionally protected even though obviously threatening. Id. at 911–13. Moreover, a speech during the boycott contained strong language referencing breaking necks and committing other acts of violence; nevertheless, the Court found the speech protected. Id. at 927–29. Yet on its face,
Louisiana reminds us that a statute may be struck as overbroad only if its overbreadth is ”substantial, not only in an absolute sense, but also relative to the statute‘s plainly legitimate sweep.” Williams, 553 U.S. at 292. And the state notes that overbreadth is “strong medicine that is not to be casually employed.” Id. at 293 (citation and internal quotations omitted). We agree, but here the statute sweeps so broadly, encompassing any number of constitutionally protected threats, such as to boycott communities, to run against incumbents, and to sue police officers. Hence, it is overbroad.
A survey of analogous caselaw supports that conclusion. In City of Houston v. Hill, 482 U.S. 451, 455 (1987), the Court was faced
Similarly, in Wilson, 405 U.S. at 519, 528, the Court struck a Georgia statute that prohibited any “opprobrious words or abusive language, tending to cause a breach of the peace.” Georgia courts had not limited the statute to fighting words or speech that would immediately cause violence; thus the law swept in protected speech and was overbroad. Id. at 524–25. Finally, in Lewis v. City of New Orleans, 415 U.S. 130, 132 (1974), the Court was faced with a Louisiana statute that penalized cursing or using “obscene or opprobrious language toward or with reference to any member of the city police while in the actual performance of his duty.” Again, the Court found overbreadth because the statute extended beyond true threats or speech that would immediately breach the peace. Id. at 133.
D.
Louisiana offers more replies but none with merit. We examine each.
1.
Louisiana claims that plaintiffs have failed to prove there have been unconstitutional applications of
2.
The state contends that
In CISPES, 770 F.2d at 470 & n.2, 475, we upheld
Neither is Hicks availing. There, defendants were convicted under
Moreover, in Hicks, id. at 970, there was only a low risk that the statute would transgress constitutional limitations. As we recognized, Section 1472 criminalized intimidation only on airplanes—a “special context of . . . pressurized vessels routinely carrying hundreds of passengers and traveling at speeds of up to 600 miles per hour and 40,000 feet above the ground.” Id. at 971–72. Accordingly, even assuming the law was content-based or reached protected speech, it withstood strict scrutiny. Id.; see also Petras, 879 F.3d at 167.
The same cannot be said for
3.
Louisiana maintains that
The state relies on Hicks, 980 F.2d at 971, which held that the airplane intimidation statute (Section 1472) was a time, place, and manner restriction. But as we noted in Petras, 879 F.3d at 166 n.19, “[i]t is a close call whether Hicks‘s” time, place, and manner conclusion is still valid given cases like Reed. The only reason why Section 1472 could still be considered a time, place, and manner restriction is because it regulated any intimidation—defined as words and conduct that place one in fear—that interferes with a flight crew‘s duties. Hicks, 980 F.2d at 965, 971–72. As we explained in Petras, 879 F.3d at 166 n.19, that may be a time, place, and manner restriction because any combination of words and conduct may be intimidating on an airplane—the word “intimidation,” so defined, may not have any content insofar as a mountain (or someone shouting gibberish) might be “intimidating” in the sense that it causes fear. But that analysis would not apply to laws that target unprotected speech, such as true threats. As explained above, the fact that a statute regulates true threats does not mean it is wholly content-neutral, but only that it discriminates based on constitutionally unprotected content. See R.A.V., 505 U.S. at 383–85; Black, 538 U.S. at 361–62. Therefore, it would be improper to characterize such a statute as a time, place, and manner restriction.
A fortiori,
The judgment is AFFIRMED.
