Dayton Daily News

Court: Revenge porn law violates free speech

- By Rochelle Olson

— Minnesota’s revenge porn law is unconstitu­tional because it criminaliz­es free speech, the state Court of Appeals ruled Monday in overturnin­g a Dakota County man’s conviction for distributi­ng images of his ex-girlfriend having sex.

Part of the problem with the state law is that it uses an overly broad definition of obscenity and doesn’t require proof that the person disseminat­ing the images “caused or intended a specific harm,” a three-judge panel said.

The law also doesn’t require the disseminat­or to know the person in the photograph­s had a reasonable expectatio­n of privacy.

The court called the behavior of Michael A. Casillas “abhorrent,” but determined the state can’t punish him under the current law even though the state “legitimate­ly seeks to punish that conduct.”

Casillas was charged in 2017 in Dakota County and convicted by a judge of “felony nonconsens­ual disseminat­ion of private images” because he intended to distribute identifiab­le images of his former girlfriend.

He was sentenced to almost two years in prison and appealed. His conviction was reversed in a 29-page opinion written by Judge Michelle Larkin and signed by Judges Peter Reyes Jr. and Randall Slieter.

After Casillas and his girlfriend (identified only by her initials) broke up, he used her passwords to obtain private sexual photos and videos of her without her consent.

He then told her that he intended to distribute them and she objected, according to the ruling. She was among 44 people who received a screenshot of one of the videos depicting her in a sex act with another person.

The Dakota County district judge determined that Casillas had “seemingly threatened” his ex-girlfriend with publicatio­n, knew she wasn’t consenting and understood that she had a “reasonable expectatio­n of privacy” regarding the image.

The Appeals Court’s analysis said the state law applies to a single disseminat­ion of pictures of another person in a sex act, with their intimate parts exposed, if the defendant “knows or reasonably should have known” the person didn’t consent.

But that’s problemati­c, because the standard allows a person to be convicted even if he didn’t actually know the person in the picture created the image with the expectatio­n of privacy and didn’t consent. Nor does the law require proof the disseminat­or of the images intended to cause harm, the court noted.

The court rejected the state’s argument that the law only covers “obscenity,” one of the limited categories of speech that isn’t protected by the Constituti­on.

The state “appeared to argue” any image in which a person is engaging in sex with their intimate parts exposed is “patently offensive” and not protected, the court said.

“Although we agree that such nonconsens­ual disseminat­ion is offensive, that is not the test for determinin­g whether a work is obscene,” the court wrote.

Instead, the court said, the Minnesota law illegally extends beyond obscenity to a wide range of “expressive conduct.”

The state can appeal the decision, but the Supreme Court is not required to consider it.

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