1 ST AMENDMENT; FREE SPEECH AND FREEDOM OF THE PRESS ELIZABETH MANWILL MIA MAY RAMI KHALAF MATT MARTY.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
DATE: APRIL 9, 2013 TOPIC: FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION AIM: HOW IS THE FREEDOM OF EXPRESSION PRESENTED IN THE FIRST AMENDMENT? DO NOW: INCORPORATION DOCTRINE.
Advertisements

Obscenity Obscenity Defamation Defamation Hate Speech Hate Speech Boundaries of Free Speech.
First Amendment Rights. Freedom of Speech Freedom of Expression Absolutely Protected Speech Prior Restraint (PR) Void for Vagueness Least Drastic Means.
Obscenity – is anything that treats sex or nudity in an offensive or lewd manner, violates recognized standards of decency, and lacks serious literary,
Miller vs. California By tyler bundies. What freedom was uestioned? Is obscenity protected by the first amendment? Does the first amendment give you the.
Landmark Cases.
Freedom of Speech. Purpose for Freedom of Speech: To guarantee to each person a right of Free expression, in the Spoken and the Written word, and by all.
Obscenity. Obscenity: An overview We know it is not protected, but… The problem comes in defining obscenity. What is it? Where is it found? Who should.
MODERN PRIOR RESTRAINTS CHAPTER 3 Communications Law. COMM 407, CSU Fullerton.
SECTION 1 Freedom of Speech and Press Discuss the meaning and importance of each of the rights guaranteed under the Bill of Rights and how each is secured.
1 st Amendment. Freedom of Religion The Establishment Clause – “Congress shall make no law respecting the establishment of religion…” – Lemon v. Kurtzman.
Freedom of Speech and Freedom of Assembly. The Purpose of Freedom of Speech 1 to guarantee to each person a right of free expression, in the spoken and.
Obscenity is not protected by the 1 st amendment.
Freedom of Speech AMERICAN GOVERNMENT. Civil Liberties Civil liberties are: ◦Individual legal and Constitutional protections against the government ◦American.
CIVIL LIBERTIES. THE POLITICS OF CIVIL LIBERTIES Civil liberties: protections the Constitution provides individuals against the abuse of government power.
Civil Liberties. The Politics of Civil Liberties Civil liberties: protections the Constitution provides against the abuse of government power State ratifying.
Freedom of Expression Laura Lantrip Alina Mihelin.
Civil Liberties and Public Policy. The Bill of Rights– Then and Now Civil Liberties – Definition: The legal constitutional protections against the government.
Freedom of Speech Congress shall make no law… abridging the freedom of speech”.
ET: What Would You Decide? DIRECTIONS: On a clean sheet of paper, place a heading in the upper- right corner. Read the brief case synopsis and then answer.
New York Times vs. The United States
Freedom of EXPRESSION.
Jennifer Koch Civics and Economics Block 2.   Official Name: New York Times Company vs. Sullivan  Case Heard: January of 1964  Case Decided: March.
Supreme Court Case Story Project George Doyle. Island Trees School District Board of Education v. Pico The board of education ordered certain books deemed.
MEDIA LAW Obscenity – Pornography and Censorship.
MILLER VS CALIFORNIA By Justin Lacks. THE ISSUE Marvin Miller worked for a company that dealt with "adult" material In an attempt to advertise their product,
Freedom of Speech. 1 st Amendment The essential, core purpose of the 1 st Amendment is self-governance. It enables people to obtain information from.
American Government Chapter 19 Section 3. Freedom of Speech 1 st and 14 th Amendments Guarantees spoken and written word liberty Ensures open discussion.
New York Times v. Sullivan (1963) By: Carmen Vaca.
Freedom of Speech and Press. The Big Idea While the 1st and 14th Amendments gives Americans the right to express ideas freely, the Constitution and the.
1. What are some freedoms that we have in our daily lives as US citizens? 2. Can your freedoms ever be taken away or limited? (explain!)
Texas v. Johnson What are the facts of the case? What is the constitutional issue before the US Supreme Court? What was the Supreme Court’s ruling.
Freedom of Speech and the Press Whatever happened to freedom of speech?
Freedom of the Press Freedom of Assembly, Association, and Petition Unit 6: Civil Liberties and Civil Rights, Lesson 2 How has the Supreme Court expanded.
Freedom of Speech.
Texas vs. Johnson Argued: March 21, 1989 Decided: June 21, 1989 By: Garialdy De Jesus.
TEXAS VS. JOHNSON 1989 By: Nick Limon Aliah Medina 7 th.
“Were it left for me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without government, I should not hesitate a moment.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Longman. Civil Liberties and Public Policy Chapter 4  1 st Amendment Edwards, Wattenberg, and Lineberry.
Constitutional Review The truth your founding fathers never told you!
Freedom of Expression Free Speech Free Press Assembly and Petition.
Texas vs. Johnson and Tinker vs. Des Moines By Emily Franklin.
A Crash Course in Press Law For the High School Press.
US Government: Civil Rights & Civil Liberties Supreme Court Case Project By: Meadow Noonan.
Chapter Five Civil Liberties. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.5 | 2 The Politics of Civil Liberties Civil liberties: protections.
Baker v. Carr Facts  Charles Baker was a Republican who lived in Shelby County, Tennessee who argued that although the Tennessee Constitution requires.
Freedom of Speech: First Amendment “The test of democracy is freedom of criticism.” ~David Ben-Gurion.
COURT CASE BRIEFINGS XAVIER CUMMINS MICHAEL VIZZI CHRISTIAN DALUSUNG ALYSSA NEWSOM.
Freedom of Speech and Press 1 st Amendment Forms of (Speech) Expression Spoken Written Symbolic.
1 st Amendment /Speech What are some limits on speech? What are some types/examples of speech that can be punished/made illegal?
1. Vagueness and Overbreadth: Laws governing free speech must be clear and specific. > Laws that unnecessarily prohibit too much expression are considered.
LIBS100 March 23, 2005 First Amendment Library Bill of Rights.
Group Three: Lyli, Jerica, Jen, & Chris. → Petitioners: Two Atlanta, Georgia movie theaters. ― Those involved: The movie theaters owners and managers.
Aim: What are the landmark First Amendment cases of the 20 th Century? Do Now: What does the First Amendment protect?
Freedom of Speech Press, Assembly, Petition
Presented by Ika Novita Dewi, MCS
Texas Vs Johnson.
Landmark Freedom of Speech Cases
By Katherine Ramirez & Alicia reta
FREEDOM OF SPEECH.
What is Obscenity?.
Free Speech and Free Press
Limits to the Freedom of Speech
Unit 2 Civil Rights and Civil Liberties.
Ap u.s. government & politics
Texas v Johnson Decided 1989.
Warm Up – February 13 Read the article on Engel v. Vitale that is on my website under today’s date and answer the following questions: 1. Who was Steven.
Texas v. Johnson, 491 U.S. 397 (1989) Alysha Gerba.
Freedom of Speech “Freedom of speech and expression is the heart of a democratic society.”
Texas v. Johnson (1989) 491 U.S. 397 Morgan Fraley Pd. 7/8.
Presentation transcript:

1 ST AMENDMENT; FREE SPEECH AND FREEDOM OF THE PRESS ELIZABETH MANWILL MIA MAY RAMI KHALAF MATT MARTY

MILLER V. CALIFORNIA JANUARY 19, 1972

MAIN POINTS Miller conducted mass mailing campaign of advertising the sale of “adult” material (porn) Miller was convicted of violating California statute prohibiting the distribution of obscene material Unwilling recipients of Miller’s brochures complained to police initiating legal proceedings Miller’s attorney argued this case fell under the First Amendment’s freedom of expression

QUESTION What was the courts decision and why?

OUTCOME 5-4 decision the court held the obscene material does not fall under First Amendment Protection Court modified the test for obscenity established in Roth V. United States and Memoirs V. Massachusetts Average person applying contemporary community standards would fine work taken as a whole appeals to the prurient interest Whether the work depicts or describes in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law Whether the work taken as a whole lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value

TEXAS V. JOHNSON NUMBER MARCH 20, 1989

MAIN POINTS Gregory Lee Johnson burned an American flag in front of Dallas City Hall Argued a means of protest against Reagan administration policies Johnson was tried and convicted under Texas law outlawing flag desecration Sentenced one year in jail and $2,000 fine Texas court of Criminal appeals reversed the conviction Case was then taken to the Supreme Court

QUESTION What was the courts decision and why?

OUTCOME 5-4 decision court held that Johnsons burning of the flag was protected under the first amendment Court found his actions fell into category of expressive conduct and a distinctively political nature

NEW YORK TIMES V. US 1873 JUNE 25, 1971

MAIN POINTS Nixon admin trying to prevent New York Times and Washington post from publishing classified material belonging to Defense Department Study regarding history of US activity in Vietnam Nixon argued Prior Restraint Court held that gov did not overcome the prior restraint of the press

QUESTION What was the courts decision and why?

OUTCOME 6-3 decision argued that the vague word “security” should not be used to abrogate the laws embodied in the first amendment. Agreed that the publication would not cause any immediate or direct danger safety of American forces, prior restraint was unjustified

NEW YORK TIMES COMPANY V. SULLIVAN 39 JANUARY 5,1964

MAIN POINTS Full page add stating the arrest of MLK Junior was part of campaign to destroy King’s efforts to integrate public facilities and to promote blacks to vote Sullivan filed a libel action against the newspaper He stated that the allegations against Montgomery police defamed him personally Sullivan did not have proof that he was harmed due to this ad but the defense claimed that the evidence in the ad were not truthful He won a $500,000 judgement

QUESTION What was the courts decision and why?

OUTCOME 7-2 decision court held that the first amendment protects the publication of all statements, even false ones Only when the statements are created with mal intent are they not protected under the first amendment Under this new standard Sullivan's case collapsed

CITATIONS Miller v. California. (n.d.). Oyez. Retrieved May 8, 2016, from Texas v. Johnson. (n.d.). Oyez. Retrieved May 8, 2016, from New York Times Company v. United States. (n.d.). Oyez. Retrieved May 3, 2016, from New York Times Company v. Sullivan. (n.d.). Oyez. Retrieved May 7, 2016, from