Las Vegas Review-Journal

Making fun of the police is not a crime

- JACOB SULLUM Jacob Sullum is a senior editor at Reason magazine. Follow him on Twitter: @Jacobsullu­m.

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Na Supreme Court brief it filed last week, The Onion claims it was founded in 1756 and has “a daily readership of 4.3 trillion.” The brief describes The Onion as “the single most powerful and influentia­l organizati­on in human history,” with interests in shipping, strip mining, deforestat­ion and animal testing as well as journalism.

The case that prompted The Onion’s brief is no less ridiculous than the satirical website’s patently prepostero­us puffery. Last April, a federal appeals court said a man could not sue police officers who had arrested him for making fun of them because they could have reasonably thought their petty vendetta was consistent with the First Amendment.

The spoof of the Parma, Ohio, police department’s Facebook page that Anthony Novak created in 2016 was not subtle. It included a job notice that said the department “is strongly encouragin­g minorities to not apply,” a post advertisin­g a police abortion van for teenagers, a warning that Parma had made giving homeless people food a crime so they would “leave our city due to starvation” and an announceme­nt of “our official stay inside and catch up with the family day,” during which anyone venturing outside between noon and 9 p.m. would be arrested.

Novak’s parody, which was online for just 12 hours, prompted 11 calls to the police department’s nonemergen­cy line.

Based on that reaction, Novak was arrested and prosecuted for violating a broadly worded state law against using a computer to “disrupt, interrupt, or impair” police services — a felony punishable by up to 18 months in prison.

A jury promptly acquitted Novak. But after Novak sued seven police officers for violating his First Amendment rights, the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the defendants were protected by “qualified immunity,” which shields cops from liability unless their alleged misconduct violated “clearly establishe­d” law.

The 6th Circuit cited two reasons why police might have reasonably believed that Novak’s spoof did not qualify as constituti­onally protected speech. Novak had deleted comments describing the page as fake, which he thought ruined the joke, and he had reposted a police department warning about the ersatz account, which he thought made the joke funnier.

But even if a few especially credulous or inattentiv­e people were fooled, the Institute for Justice notes in its petition asking the Supreme Court to review the 6th Circuit’s decision, that would not matter under the First Amendment. As the appeals court itself noted at an earlier stage of the case, “the law requires a reasonable reader standard, not a ‘most gullible person on Facebook’ standard.”

The court initially recognized that “the First Amendment does not depend on whether everyone is in on the joke.” The Onion amplifies that point in its brief supporting Novak’s petition, saying, “a reasonable reader does not need a disclaimer to know that parody is parody.”

That approach, The Onion explains, would rob parody of its rhetorical power. The technique relies on first “tricking people into thinking it’s real,” then revealing the joke by piling absurdity on absurdity.

What’s obvious to most (but not all) Onion readers is not obvious enough under the 6th Circuit’s understand­ing of qualified immunity. That would be funny if the implicatio­ns for freedom of speech were not so serious.

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