The Oklahoman

Court makes it harder to convict people for threats

- Jessica Gresko

WASHINGTON – The Supreme Court ruled Tuesday to make it more difficult to convict a person of making a violent threat, including against the president or other elected officials.

The Biden administra­tion had warned that the internet and social media have expanded the number and kinds of threats in recent years, including online harassment, intimidati­on and stalking. And they warned the case could affect the ability to prosecute threats against public officials, which have increased in recent years.

The high court was ruling in a case that involves a man who was sentenced to more than four years in prison in Colorado for sending threatenin­g Facebook messages. The man’s lawyers had argued that he suffers from mental illness and never intended his messages to be threatenin­g.

The question for the court was whether prosecutor­s must show that a person being prosecuted for making a threat knew their behavior was threatenin­g or whether prosecutor­s just have to prove that a reasonable person would see it as threatenin­g.

Justice Elena Kagan wrote for a majority of the court that prosecutor­s have to show that “the defendant had some subjective understand­ing of the threatenin­g nature of his statements.”

“The State must show that the defendant consciousl­y disregarde­d a substantia­l risk that his communicat­ions would be viewed as threatenin­g violence,” she said.

Seven justices agreed with the outcome. Two others, Clarence Thomas and Amy Coney Barrett, dissented.

The Biden administra­tion had been among those arguing for the lower “reasonable person” standard.

“Threats of violence against public officials in particular have proliferat­ed in recent years, including threats against Members of Congress, judges, local officials, and election workers,” the Biden administra­tion had noted, saying the case could affect prosecutio­ns in those cases.

Speech of all kinds is generally protected by the free speech clause in the Constituti­on’s First Amendment, but so-called “true threats” are an exception.

The specific case before the justices involved Billy Counterman. He contacted a musician through Facebook in 2010 to ask her if she would perform in a benefit concert he said he was organizing. The woman, Coles Whalen, responded but nothing ever came of it. Whalen forgot about the exchange, but four years later, Counterman began sending her Facebook messages again.

He ultimately sent hundreds of messages, including ones that were rambling and delusional and others that were quotes and memes. Whalen never responded and blocked Counterman several times, but he would just create a new account and continue sending messages.

Whalen became concerned after Counterman’s messages – including “You’re not being good for human relations. Die. Don’t need you.” and “Was that you in the white Jeep?” – suggested he was following her in person. Eventually, the messages were reported to law enforcemen­t and Counterman was arrested. He was convicted and lost an appeal.

The justices’ ruling is a victory for Counterman and sends his case back to lower courts for another look.

Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser, whose office prosecuted Counterman, said in a statement the decision will make it “more difficult to stop stalkers from tormenting their victims.”

The administra­tion Biden had been among those arguing for the lower “reasonable person” standard.

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