Federal Court Blocks State from Enforcing Law Criminalizing Sale of Anti-War Shirts (8/20/2008)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: intake@acluaz.org
PHOENIX, AZ – A federal judge today blocked Arizona from enforcing a new law
that makes it a crime to sell anti-war t-shirts that list troops killed in Iraq.
The permanent injunction striking down the law as unconstitutional ensures that
Flagstaff activist Dan R. Frazier will be able to exercise his First Amendment
rights by continuing to sell t-shirts featuring anti-war messages.
"Today's ruling is great news for free speech," said Frazier. "While the
lawmakers who crafted the Arizona legislation expressed great confidence that
they could stop the sale of my t-shirts, I always knew that the Constitution was
on my side."
On June 28, 2007, the ACLU of Arizona filed a lawsuit challenging an Arizona
law (SB 1014) that prohibited the use of the name of any solider, alive or
deceased, on any item for sale without permission of the soldier or a legal
representative. The law, which was passed unanimously in 2007 by both chambers
in the Arizona Legislature, was specifically intended to prevent Frazier from
selling t-shirts featuring the names of the troops who died in Iraq.
"This is more than a personal victory for Dan Frazier and for what he has had
to go through," said Dan Pochoda, Legal Director of the American Civil Liberties
Union (ACLU) of Arizona, which filed a lawsuit last year challenging the law.
"This is a victory for the free speech rights of all political activists in
Arizona, regardless of how controversial or unpopular their messages may be."
Through his on-line store www.carryabigsticker.com, Frazier
sells three anti-war t-shirts that list the names of the deceased soldiers,
including one with the phrase: "Bush Lied … They Died" and one stating "Support
our Remaining Troops ... Bring the Rest Home Alive." He donates $1 from each of
the t-shirt sales to an organization that benefits families of the fallen
soldiers, and has been doing so since the t-shirts were first manufactured
nearly three years ago.
"Every single Arizona lawmaker should be ashamed of themselves for voting for
a law that attempts to silence political speech," said ACLU of Arizona
cooperating attorney Lee Phillips, an attorney from Flagstaff who served as lead
counsel in the lawsuit. "This should send a message to other government
officials that they cannot deny people their First Amendment rights based on the
content of their messages."
Judge Neil V. Wake of the United States District Court echoed Phillips'
sentiments in his 8-page permanent injunction: "Frazier's T-shirts are
themselves core political speech fully protected by the First Amendment,
notwithstanding the fact that he offers them for sale," he wrote. "His website
is like a streetside table used to disseminate anti-war and political messages
in a variety of ways, including displaying and selling his message-bearing
T-shirts."
Last summer, just one month after the law was passed, a police officer in
Flagstaff called Frazier to notify him that if he didn't stop selling the shirts
he would face criminal charges under the statute. Similar laws were recently
enacted in Florida, Louisiana, Oklahoma, and Texas. Today's decision only
involves a challenge to the Arizona law, however, the First Amendment analysis
would apply to similar enactments by other states or the federal government.
Although the ACLU's lawsuit did not involve a direct challenge to the portion
of the statute granting individuals the right to sue Frazier for damages in
civil court, that provision also will be unenforceable since the entire statute
was declared unconstitutional as applied to Frazier, the ACLU said. The ACLU of
Tennessee, in a separate action, is representing Frazier in civil lawsuit filed
against him by a Tennessee couple whose son was killed in Iraq. The parents of
the soldier are seeking more than $40 billion in damages, according to news
reports.
Other attorneys on the case were Charles Babbitt and Natalie Jacobs, also
with the Law Office of Lee Phillips. The case number is: 07-CV-8040-PHX-NVW.
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