Monday, March 8, 2010

SCOTUS to Enter Phelps Fray


The Supreme Court, taking on the emotionally charged issue of picketing protests at the funerals of soldiers killed in wartime, agreed Monday to consider reinstating a $5 million damages verdict against a Kansas preacher and his anti-gay crusade. This was one of three newly granted cases. The others test the constitutionality of background checks for workers who work for the government under contract, rather than as regular employees, and a case testing the right to sue in state court when a child is injured or dies after receiving a vaccine. All of the cases will come up for review in the Court’s next Term, opening Oct. 4.

The funeral picketing case (Snyder v. Phelps, et al., 09-751) focuses on a significant question of First Amendment law: the degree of constitutional protection given to private remarks made about a private person, occurring in a largely private setting. The family of the dead soldier had won a verdict before a jury, but that was overturned by the Fourth Circuit Court, finding that the signs displayed at the funeral in western Maryland and later comments on an anti-gay website were protected speech. The petition for review seeks the Court’s protection for families attending a funeral from “unwanted” remarks or displays by protesters.


In March four years ago, Marine Lance Corporal Matthew A. Snyder was killed while serving in Iraq. His family arranged for a private funeral, with Christian burial, at St. John’s Catholic Chruch in Westminster, Md. When word of the planned funeral appeared in the newspapers, the Rev. Fred W. Phelps, Sr., pastor of Westboro Baptist Church in Topeka, Kan., who has gained notoriety in recent years by staging protests at military funerals, decided to stage a demonstration at the Maryland funeral. In response to such protests, some 40 states have passed laws to regulate funeral demonstrations.

The Rev. Phelps’ church preaches a strongly anti-gay message, contending that God hates America because it tolerates homosexuality, particularly in the military services. The church also spreads its views through an online site, www.godhatesfags.com. When the Snyder funeral occurred, the Rev. Phelps, two of his daughters and four grandchildren staged a protest nearby. They carried signs with such messages as “God Hates the USA,” “America is doomed,” “Matt in hell,” “Semper fi fags,” and “Thank God for dead soldiers.” The demonstration violate no local laws, and was kept at police orders a distance from the church. After the funeral, the Rev. Phelps continued his protest over the Snyder funeral on his church’s website, accusing the Snyder family of having taught their son irreligious beliefs.

The soldier’s father, Albert Snyder, sued the Rev. Phelps, his daughters and the Westboro Church under Maryland state law, and won a $5 million verdict based on three claims: intrusion into a secluded event, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and civil conspiracy. (The verdict included $2.9 million for compensatory damages and $2.1 million for punitive damages; the punitive award had been reduced from $8 million by the trial judge.) The Fourth Circuit Court overturned the verdict, concluding that the protesters’ speech was protected by the First Amendment because it was only a form of hyperbole, not an assertion of actual facts about the soldier or his family. While finding that the Phelps’ remarks were “utterly distasteful,” the Circuit Court said they involved matters of public concern, including the issue of homosexuality in the military and the political and moral conduct of the United States and its citizens.

In Albert Snyder’s appeal, his lawyers argued that the Supreme Court’s protection of speech about public issues, especially the Justices’ 1988 decision in Hustler Magazine v. Falwell, does not apply “to private individuals versus private individuals.” If it does apply, the petition said, “the victimized private individual is left without recourse.” The Circuit Court decision, it added, encourages private individuals to use hyperbolic language to gain constitutional protection “even if that language is targeted at another private individual at a private, religious funeral.”

Even if the Hustler decision does apply to the kind of remarks at issue, the petition asserted, the case also raises the issue of whether those who attend a funeral are like a “captive audience” and thus need protection against intruders who were not invited.

In another case bearing on claims of privacy, the Court Monday added to its decision docket a case involving the broad issue of whether the Constitution protects a “right of informational privacy” — that is, a form of Fifth Amendment protection against government demands for personal information. The Supreme Court mentioned such a right in a 1977 decision, and has seldom mentioned it since. A group of workers employed by California Institute of Technology, and working under contract at Caltech’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory outside of Pasadena, won a court order against some of the government demands for information about their private lives — part of background checks similar to the security reviews that regular federal employees often undergo.

The National Aeronautics and Space Administration took the issue to the Supreme Court in NASA v. Nelson, et al. (09-530). The petition argued that the lower court ruling not only jeopardizes the government’s authority to get information about contract employees, but also about its capacity even to demand information from its own agencies’ employees. “The ramifications of the decision below are potentially dramatic,” the petition contended.

In the third newly granted case, Bruesewitz, et al., v. Wyeth, Inc., et al. (09-152), the Court will be reviewing the scope of a 1986 federal law that sought to bar all state-court damages lawsuits claiming that vaccines given to children caused injury or death because of a design defect, and that a safer alternative was available but was not used. The appeal by a Philadelphia family for themselves and their disabled daughter contended that the Third Circuit Court ruled that the 1986 law only bars state court claims where the harmful side-effects were unavoidable. They argued that all such claims are barred, whether the side-effects were avoidable or not.

The Court agreed to hear the Bruesewitz case after asking for the U.S. Solicitor General’s views on the underlying legal issue. The SG urged that the Court grant review of this case, rather than another pending on the same issue (08-1120).

33 comments:

JacobKirksey8 said...

Based on what we have learned in class, the bill of rights are rights that were given to the citizens to protect them from government? Correct? Well, then this also goes in reverse. These people aren't speaking out against the government, but other citizens, in which different principles apply such as "life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness" perhaps? So the government has the obligation to protect these funeral families or whatever from these protesters because they are obviously causing harm to them. Now....let's say that these protesters we protesting a bill proposed by the House about DADT, then LET THE CHAOS AND legal DESTRUCTION BEGIN! Because then that is protesting the government, which is allowed. Essentially, the senators can get their feelings hurt over a badly written bill by protesters, but families do not deserve the emotional scarring that these protests are engendering. I think that the Supreme Court will see it that way to.

Fernando Salazar 3rd said...

I feel that this whole thing is a little ridiculous. While we all have our right to free speech, it is curtailed to where this infringes on the rights of others, and clearly the picketing at this soldier's funeral caused emotional distress.

RobertDuran4 said...

I think that the Reverend has a right to free speech but I also think that he cannot try to inflict emotional or physical harm. Even though the Reverend's actions were unacceptable I think he is protected under the First Amendment. But I think that he may still be able to be sued for intruding into a secluded event.

phillipcammack3 said...

Can those kids even read the signs they hold?

Anonymous said...

i think its sad that a man cant be buried in peace. what they did was tacky and disrespectful to the dead solider and his family. bottom line is he fought for or country and died for our country. :(

Anabel Reid 4 said...

This story is incrediably sad.First off, what those people did to that family while they were trying to hold a funeral for there son (who fought for those peoples' freedom to speak with out being persecuted....by the way)is ridiculous! Secondly, I am not sure what type of Christians these people are calling themselves! Yes, God distinctly says that homosexuality is a sin, but he also says that gossip and crude language are as well(just examples)... and I think we are all guilty of SOME form of sin! I want to know if this rev. and his followers actually believe in the same Jesus Christ that I believe in.... the one that teaches us to forgive and to love! I am embarassed by how these poeple acted while they were trying to wear the name of Christ! For the rest of us who bear the name of Christ, I want to say sorry for what these people are saying and how they are treating these families. I pray that this family knows that MANY people appreciate what their son did for our country.

Jennifer said...

I absolutely agree that these protests are "utterly distateful", especially at a funeral. I think they are out of line in SO many ways, but my going into detail does nothing more than their rants that do nothing beyond stirring disagreement and rage. Maybe that's all they want anyway. Whether or not the constitution applies, I don't know, but if only out of compassion for hurting families, I hope these protests will end, under the law or otherwise.

Sarah Steinmeier Period 8 said...

While the Phelps clan acted inappropriately in this circumstance, it will be interesting to see what the Supreme Court rules on this controversial case. A ruling against Phelps will undoubtedly set off other extremist groups demanding their equal right to free speech. I fear that the informational privacy case and the vaccination case will be overshadowed by Snyder v. Phelps, et al., although these cases may have more bearing on the average American's daily life.

Katharine Glasheen 3rd said...

hahahahahahaha. really? www.godhatesfags.com? that's ultra tacky. Pretty presumptious to say that God hates anyone.

"There are plenty of good reasons for fighting, but no good reason ever to hate without reservation, to imagine that God Almighty Himself hates with you, too." <-- from one of my favorite books

anyway. yeah, this preacher guy is completely crazy... but i still think that people have to have a right to protest and assemble where they want to, since it's a first amendment right. It's really unfortunate that the families of the soldiers have to deal with this, but maybe a good alternative would be to have the military funerals on private property where the protesters wouldn't be able to come right to their doorstep. :?

MichaelHarper1 said...

First off the issue of protests staged at the funerals of military personnel is one very near to my heart. I won't go into what i really think about said protests but I do believe that the protests are legally wrong. To invade the most private of functions is legally and morally indefensible. The rights of the deceased should be protected under the law. Next contractors working for the government should absolutely undergo the same background checks as government employees. Just because you're a contractor doesn't mean you are'nt working on sensitive projects. If there is any chance of subversion on a project then you have to undergo a background check. Lastly, Lawsuits involving vaccines are generally unavoidable tragedies that marr a life saving practice of child inoculation. Some people will invariably have horrible reactions to vaccines, it's the same with all medicines. That does'nt mean that people should sue or be allowed to sue the developers and administers of vaccines.

BrittanyBurks 8th said...

I think that anyone that has the nerve to protest at a funeral is a disgrace to our society. Regardless of the sexual orientation of the decesed the fact is the soldier gave their life to protect the freedom of our country. The family has already lost their child why should they be forced to endure protesting too.

AllieHogan8 said...

The Snyder v. Phelps seems to be a very gray area of the First Amendment of the degree of constitutional protection given to private remarks made about a private person. I can see how they have the right of freedom of speech and protest, but under the circumstances, Phelps was very disrespectful and just outright rude. I think Phelps took the issue way too far.

ChrisJohnston3 said...

whether its constitutional or not putting up protest signs like that at a funeral is just sick and wrong. It's a funeral they should have a little respect and if they want to protest then they can do it somewhere else.

Mr. P said...

So are you guys saying that if someone says something that is causes "emotional distress" then it's "not" protected speech?

Anything, then, could be argued as emotionally distressing speech.

So where should the limits on speech be? We have laws against libel and slander but does this issue apply here?

BethanyRatliff3 said...

Yes, we all have the right to the freedom of speech...but this is ridiculous and crosses the line. The 'free speech' in question here is unnacceptable and is causing emotional harm to the family of the passed soldier. It was totally innapropriate and this soldier died for this country and deserves respect.

KiaRahnama4 said...

where does this phelps guy get the nerve? you know these people make me sick. what the constitution protects is a freedom of "speech" that means it protects your honest opinion which is not offensive to anyone. that means you can say that homosexuality is a sin, no problem, but you cant use slander. as long as your language is pure, than your speech and opinion is safe. it just makes me sad that these people get the tribune to talk.

WendyKissko1st said...

Sure, there are controversial issues our country needs to work out, and probably won't ever agree on. Hatefully protesting and disrespecting a dead soldier, however, is not the way to go about fixing anything. Go to a higher source to voice your frustrations instead of a grieving family, because the soldier died so that we can have the freedom to protest in the first place.

NadiaSari-Sarraf4 said...

The fact that these people would protest at a funeral is truly unbelievable. I also really don't understand how people who claim to be such faithful Christians and followers of God, can be so hateful to people that they don't even know. The amount of hypocracy that some people can have really astounds me.

Anonymous said...

Legally, i do not assume that freedom of speech that is deemed distressful that it should not be protected speech. The protesters, in my opinion did not break the law.
But ethically, the act is extremely distasteful and heartless, in respect to the man's honor, his family's grief, and the sanctity of burial.

JamesD'Cruz3 said...

You NEVER NEVER EVER attempt to disgrace a soldier who died for your freedom! enough said.

katie.pattillo8 said...

i think protesting at a funeral is extremely rude. No matter the circumstances.

Lakendra Mitchell 8th period said...

This is really really sad. I cannot believe that did this at this soldier's funeral. This is so disrespectful to the soldier and his family. Yeah you have freedom of speech or whatever but this was just down right unacceptable i don't think they would want someone to do this at their funeral or their love ones funeral.
:(

Laura Xu 8th said...

As offensive as Reverend Phelps' protests are, I do not think that he will be punished. I, however, personally believe that he should be, but his right to free speech is protected by the First Amendment. It is very unfortunate for the Snyder family that they cannot hold a funeral in peace, and Phelps should feel extremely guilty about that. However, I think that guilt will be the extent of his punishment.

SOC3 said...

I don't care what your religious beleifs are or what your stance is on the whole gay issue, you should at least have the respect and decency for another human and their family during their time of mourning. Protesting during his funeral was unneseccary, inconsiderate, and should not have been permitted. I understand the constitutional rights of free speedch but they should also have the right of privacy for their dead soldiers funeral.

KateKobza8 said...

I think Phelps’ intrusion on the Snyder family’s funeral was disrespectful and offensive. I also believe that Rev. Phelps’ actions were libel. Through the Reverend’s signs and remarks he insulted and harmed Corporal Snyder and his family’s reputation as well as the US Military.

davidgutierrez3 said...

That preacher man needs a talking to. He obviously doesn't preach about respect and personal privacy. I'm all for free speech and protesting but I hate it when people take for granted and just abuse the crap out of it. Have common sense people, jeeze.

EthanEarl3 said...

Westboro Church is a disgrace to Christianity. I remember when they came to Lubbock to protest at the funeral of one of the Velez brothers, it took a group of bikers revving their engines at full throttle to cover up the sound of their hate speech so the family couldn't hear. In my opinion, their protests go beyond controversial to outright obscenity, which according to our book isn't protected by the First Amendment (which I'm guessing is based on previous cases). But then the all-too-subjective definition of obscenity is called into question. However, I believe the right to privacy (which is guaranteed in the Ninth Amendment) was very clearly violated here. I personally would be surprised if the Supreme Court rules in favor of Phelps.

NicolasBandini1 said...

The reverend is free to voice his opinion, but come on, it's a funeral. I think the reverend deserved to be sued for every penny. Freedom of speech should only be tolerated until it gets downright rude and disrespectful. for example, If the reverend were to say his opinion on his website and on his own time, thats fine, but he crossed the line when he went to a friggin funeral to do it

timothyyoes4 said...

I agree that although what he did was way outta bounds i still think that under the first amendment protects him. It did not cause physical bodily harm so therefore he should be under the rights. im not saying what he did was right but that he is protected.

CaitlinCampagna4 said...

I do believe that people have the right to freedom of speech; however, expressing themselves in such a hurtful way at someone’s funeral is just out right rude. People need to have the common decency to be respectful, especially at a soldier’s funeral, someone that fought for you to have the rights you have.

SamanthaDeLaCerda3 said...

These people are going through a death in the family, they do not need religious protestors to soil the memory of their sons death, with statements like "thank god for dead soldiers". Regardless of what some may think these men and women are giving their loves up for, they shoul honored.

Mario Parras-8th said...

This is ridiculous. Yes, freedom of speech is protected, but when someone defends your rights by giving up their own life, you shouldn't bring emotional distress to the table.

ClaudiaTorres1 said...

i really dont think this is right, i think since this man died for our country he should be able to die peacfully. i think the Reverend is protected under the first amendment and is able to express his freedom of speech. I just hope that the family can cope and recooperate during this time.