What does it mean to make a threat, and under what circumstances can a speaker be convicted for making one? This Note examines these questions in light of Elonis v. United States, a Supreme Court case decided in June 2015. There, the Court held that when a speaker subjectively intends a statement be taken as a threat or knows that it will be taken as a threat, she may be convicted under 18 U.S.C. § 875(c). The Court did not decide whether a speaker who recklessly makes a threat may be convicted under the statute. This Note argues that convicting a reckless speaker would be consistent with both principles of statutory interpretation and the First Amendment. It advocates for this result particularly because it would protect victims of domesti...
Words hurt! Recent news stories about cyber bulling make clear that a word can cause as much pain as...
In Elonis v. United States, decided last term, the Supreme Court vacated a conviction for online thr...
The gloss presents comments on the ruling (issued by the Supreme Court on 14 September 2017, I KZP 7...
This commentary analyzes the Supreme Court case Elonis v. United States where the Court will determi...
The Supreme Court has carved out several exceptions to what qualifies as protected speech under the ...
In spring of 2010, Anthony Elonis’s wife left him, taking their two children with her. Shortly there...
Domestic violence intersects with constitutional, criminal, and civil law in ways that often present...
In these materials, we set out a road map for the task of reforming the jurisprudence of threats and...
Threats of violence, even when not actually carried out, can inflict real damage. As such, state and...
This note analyzes the current circuit split over the application of the “Physical Restraint” senten...
This Note argues that because the generally accepted legal meaning of violence is the use - or the r...
[Excerpt] While the First Amendment to the United States Constitution protects the freedom of expre...
Following the Supreme Court\u27s most recent ruling on the true threats doctrine in Virginia v. Blac...
The First Amendment protects one of our most precious rights as citizens of the United States—the fr...
An alarming number of women are in abusive relationships where violence and threats of violence perv...
Words hurt! Recent news stories about cyber bulling make clear that a word can cause as much pain as...
In Elonis v. United States, decided last term, the Supreme Court vacated a conviction for online thr...
The gloss presents comments on the ruling (issued by the Supreme Court on 14 September 2017, I KZP 7...
This commentary analyzes the Supreme Court case Elonis v. United States where the Court will determi...
The Supreme Court has carved out several exceptions to what qualifies as protected speech under the ...
In spring of 2010, Anthony Elonis’s wife left him, taking their two children with her. Shortly there...
Domestic violence intersects with constitutional, criminal, and civil law in ways that often present...
In these materials, we set out a road map for the task of reforming the jurisprudence of threats and...
Threats of violence, even when not actually carried out, can inflict real damage. As such, state and...
This note analyzes the current circuit split over the application of the “Physical Restraint” senten...
This Note argues that because the generally accepted legal meaning of violence is the use - or the r...
[Excerpt] While the First Amendment to the United States Constitution protects the freedom of expre...
Following the Supreme Court\u27s most recent ruling on the true threats doctrine in Virginia v. Blac...
The First Amendment protects one of our most precious rights as citizens of the United States—the fr...
An alarming number of women are in abusive relationships where violence and threats of violence perv...
Words hurt! Recent news stories about cyber bulling make clear that a word can cause as much pain as...
In Elonis v. United States, decided last term, the Supreme Court vacated a conviction for online thr...
The gloss presents comments on the ruling (issued by the Supreme Court on 14 September 2017, I KZP 7...