This Article examines the level of First Amendment protection that applies when a defendant-speaker is charged with involuntary manslaughter based on successfully urging a person to commit suicide. The Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts’ February 2019 decision in Commonwealth v. Carter provides a timely analytical springboard. The Article argues that courts should adopt the United States Supreme Court’s test for incitement created a half-century ago in Brandenburg v. Ohio before such speech is deemed unprotected by the First Amendment. It contends this standard is appropriate even in involuntary manslaughter cases where intent to cause a specific result is not required under criminal law. The Article concludes that the Brandenburg test...
The Supreme Court has carved out several exceptions to what qualifies as protected speech under the ...
In Snyder v. Phelps, the Supreme Court ruled that the Westboro Baptist Church had a First Amendment ...
The First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which prohibits any abridgement of fre...
Is it constitutional to hold an individual criminally liable for another’s suicide when words alone ...
In 2017, a Massachusetts court convicted Michelle Carter of manslaughter for encouraging the suicide...
Michelle Carter’s texts instructing her mentally ill online boyfriend to commit suicide offended the...
This Article will explore the possibility of shifting or sharing the liabilitystemming from criminal...
Scholars criticized the manslaughter conviction of Michelle Carter almost as soon as the case was de...
For four decades, the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Brandenburg v. Ohio has been celebrated as a la...
The proliferation of online social networking websites such as MySpace, Facebook, and message boards...
When Paladin Enterprises published Hit Man, a manual about murder for hire, it knew and intended tha...
On March 15, 2011, William Melchert-Dinkel, a Minnesota nurse, was convicted of two counts of assist...
The commentary deals with the deliberate intent a victim of an art. 207 § 3 C.C. crime, who attempts...
This Article examines weaknesses with the United States Supreme Court’s Brandenburg v. Ohio inciteme...
In the United States, full-throated advocacy—even advocacy of violence—is protected by the First Ame...
The Supreme Court has carved out several exceptions to what qualifies as protected speech under the ...
In Snyder v. Phelps, the Supreme Court ruled that the Westboro Baptist Church had a First Amendment ...
The First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which prohibits any abridgement of fre...
Is it constitutional to hold an individual criminally liable for another’s suicide when words alone ...
In 2017, a Massachusetts court convicted Michelle Carter of manslaughter for encouraging the suicide...
Michelle Carter’s texts instructing her mentally ill online boyfriend to commit suicide offended the...
This Article will explore the possibility of shifting or sharing the liabilitystemming from criminal...
Scholars criticized the manslaughter conviction of Michelle Carter almost as soon as the case was de...
For four decades, the Supreme Court\u27s decision in Brandenburg v. Ohio has been celebrated as a la...
The proliferation of online social networking websites such as MySpace, Facebook, and message boards...
When Paladin Enterprises published Hit Man, a manual about murder for hire, it knew and intended tha...
On March 15, 2011, William Melchert-Dinkel, a Minnesota nurse, was convicted of two counts of assist...
The commentary deals with the deliberate intent a victim of an art. 207 § 3 C.C. crime, who attempts...
This Article examines weaknesses with the United States Supreme Court’s Brandenburg v. Ohio inciteme...
In the United States, full-throated advocacy—even advocacy of violence—is protected by the First Ame...
The Supreme Court has carved out several exceptions to what qualifies as protected speech under the ...
In Snyder v. Phelps, the Supreme Court ruled that the Westboro Baptist Church had a First Amendment ...
The First Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which prohibits any abridgement of fre...