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First Amendment doesn't cover badgering a suicidal teen into killing himself, court rules

The Supreme Judicial Court today rejected claims by Michelle Carter that urging her suicidal boyfriend, in both text messages and on the phone, to finish himself off are covered by the First Amendment.

The ruling means Carter will have to serve a 15-month jail sentence for her role in the death of Carter Roy in 2014. It's the second ruling by the state's highest court in her case - in the first, the justices ruled she could be tried for his death.

Carter's lawyers argued, among other things, that her conviction in 2017 violated her rights to free speech under the First Amendment and the equivalent section of the Massachusetts state constitution, by punishing her for the contents of her texts over several days urging Roy to follow his thoughts of suicide to the end, and for the phone call in which she convinced him to get back in the pickup truck he'd rigged to fill with carbon monoxide after he had second thoughts.

In its ruling, the state's highest court said that crimes can be committed through speech and that the First Amendment has long been held to have exemptions for speech that causes or is part of a criminal act.

[N]o constitutional violation results from convicting a defendant of involuntary manslaughter for reckless and wanton, pressuring text messages and phone calls, preying upon well-known weaknesses, fears, anxieties and promises, that finally overcame the willpower to live of a mentally ill, vulnerable, young person, thereby coercing him to commit suicide.

The court explained further:

The crime of involuntary manslaughter proscribes reckless or wanton conduct causing the death of another. The statute makes no reference to restricting or regulating speech, let alone speech of a particular content or viewpoint: the crime is "directed at a course of conduct, rather than speech, and the conduct it proscribes is not necessarily associated with speech" (quotation and citation omitted). Commonwealth v. Johnson, 470 Mass 300, 308 (2014). The defendant cannot escape liability just because she happened to use "words to carry out [her] illegal [act]." Id. at 309, quoting United States v. Barnett, 667 F.2d 835, 842 (9th Cir. 1982). See Giboney v. Empire Storage & Ice Co., 336 U.S. 490, 502 (1949) (upholding conviction for speech used as "essential and inseparable part" of crime). ...

As the Supreme Court has explained, "From 1791 to the present . . . the First Amendment has permitted restrictions upon the content of speech in a few limited areas . . . which have never been thought to raise any constitutional problems," including "speech integral to criminal conduct" (quotations and citations omitted). Stevens, 559 U.S. at 468-469. We do not apply the narrow tailoring required by strict scrutiny in these contexts but rather determine whether the speech at issue falls within these "well-defined and narrowly limited classes of speech" (quotation and citation omitted). Brown v. Entertainment Merchants Ass'n, 564 U.S. 786, 804 (2011). Thus, there is nothing in the prosecution or conviction of the defendant in the instant case, or the prior involuntary manslaughter cases in the Commonwealth involving verbal criminal conduct, to suggest that the First Amendment has been violated in any way. The only verbal conduct punished as involuntary manslaughter has been the wanton or reckless pressuring of a vulnerable person to commit suicide, overpowering that person's will to live and resulting in that person's death. We are therefore not punishing words alone, as the defendant claims, but reckless or wanton words causing death. The speech at issue is thus integral to a course of criminal conduct and thus does not raise any constitutional problem.

The court dismissed the claim that by punishing Carter for her messages, it would be limiting other discussions that would be covered under the First Amendment, such as about euthanasia and the end of life:

[E]ven if we were to apply strict scrutiny to the verbal conduct at issue because it might implicate other constitutionally protected speech regarding suicide or the end of life, we would conclude that the restriction on speech here has been narrowly circumscribed to serve a compelling purpose. As we explained in Carter I, 474 Mass. at 636, and reemphasize today, this case does not involve the prosecution of end-of-life discussions between a doctor, family member, or friend and a mature, terminally ill adult confronting the difficult personal choices that must be made when faced with the certain physical and mental suffering brought upon by impending death. Nor does it involve prosecutions of general discussions about euthanasia or suicide targeting the ideas themselves. See Texas v. Johnson, 491 U.S. 397, 414 (1989) ("If there is a bedrock principle underlying the First Amendment, it is that the government may not prohibit the expression of an idea simply because society finds the idea itself offensive or disagreeable"). Nothing in Carter I, our decision today, or our earlier involuntary manslaughter cases involving verbal conduct suggests that involuntary manslaughter prosecutions could be brought in these very different contexts without raising important First Amendment concerns. See Commonwealth v. Bigelow, 475 Mass. 554, 562 (2016) ("In considering the First Amendment's protective reach, critical to the examination is the context and content of the speech at issue" [quotation omitted]). We emphasize again, however, that the verbal conduct targeted here and in our past involuntary manslaughter cases is different in kind and not degree, and raises no such concerns. Only the wanton or reckless pressuring of a person to commit suicide that overpowers that person's will to live has been proscribed. This restriction is necessary to further the Commonwealth's compelling interest in preserving life. Thus, such a prohibition would survive even strict scrutiny.

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Comments

Her jail term starts today

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Not 15 months. Hope she does the hardest time possible.

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More like death sentence. Honestly I would never apply "two wrongs making a right," (especially since it is actually, two wrongs don't make a right.) but in this case, I feel maybe she should try death too, and in her words "go for it." Since she pressured them.

Or a life sentence might be better, you know, to make her feel as bleak as possible, to the point of getting pressured, just like she did her that poor soul, as in her words yet again.
(It would be indirect death if she got a life sentence too, you know, just like how she indirectly caused her boyfriend's death. What goes around comes around, and 10x more painful.

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Only the wanton or reckless pressuring of a person to commit suicide that overpowers that person's will to live has been proscribed.

The way this decision is phrased, the content of the speech and the context of the speech isn't relevant, it's only how the victim reacts to it that determines whether the crime of manslaughter has been committed.

I guess in this case it makes sense, but would the legal eagles here on Uhub mind opining on whether they think it's a good general precedent? To play devil's advocate, it seems silly to me that if one of the fine denizens of the comment section tells me to jump in front of a bus and I do, then it's manslaughter, but if I tell him to engage in anatomically impossible acts then it's just trolls being trolls.

My own honest take on this is that she should have been prosecuted for harassment. If it's not possible to be prosecuted for harassment on behalf of a deceased victim, we ought to change the law to allow it for cases like this. Harassment is a crime already, no need to split First Amendment hairs over it. Yes?

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If you look up the court cases related to original conviction, IIRC a factor of standard for the (common law) crime of involuntary manslaughter is basically if the person doing things, or a reasonable average person, could expect the outcome. So telling you to jump in front of a bus would not constitute a crime since one would have no reason to expect you to actually do it, but doing so to a person you know to be mentally disabled and with mental abilities of a 2 year old very well might.

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The ruling is probably based on her instructing him to get back into the car once he got out the first time after having second thoughts. At that point it wasn't passive harassment, it was specific instructions for which she had reason to think he'd obey.

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You might enjoy reading/listening to the book Homo Deus.

One of the author's points is that in today's secular, humanist society, hurting other people's feelings has become the measurement for bad behavior. 1000 years ago, you had a God that would judge you as good or bad. What makes your actions "bad" is that they broke God's rules. Today what makes your actions bad is that they make someone else feel bad.

This case is an example of that.

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1000 years ago, encouraging someone else to commit suicide would have been considered "bad behavior" and "breaking God's rules" in most societies.

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The difference between murder and attempted murder is in the way that the victim reacts to it, too,

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While I find Miss Carter's words abhorrent, this is a waste of much needed space in Framingham women's prison and a dangerous slippery slope for free speech. Unless she plans to volunteer at the suicide hotline, I doubt she will reoffend. If anything, a civil case for wrongful death, if that.

I once saw a good show on PBS (possibly Frontline) about "suicide vacations." An older American man had been diagnosed with a serious illness and decided to go to Europe with his wife and family where they enjoyed a great vacation, knowing that at the end of the vacation he would ask doctors to hand him a lethal dose of medication and peacefully kill himself. As I recall, the family encouraged him all week and at the end, said something like "we love you but you can go now." Other than Europe, what's the difference?

In the local case, depression is a serious, oft fatal illness and medical treatment had failed him. Miss Carter knew his wishes and respected them. What's next, manslaughter for the "Mean Girls" and boys who pick on a kid who eventually kills himself? How about Sen. Warren lying about the boy in the MAGA hat from Covington Catholic? If he kills himself, are her words to blame?

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For your last question

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Fish, your premises are all basede on shit, which makes your questions impossible to answer. Work on that intellectual honesty thing. Or, y'know, don't. You see perfectly fine with yourself as a bullshitter.

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Euthanasia (and the difficult discussions a family might have around deciding on that course of action) is specifically addressed in the ruling. Thanks for the long recap of an old PBS show tho

also if Liz Warren were in a close enough relationship with MAGA Boy to text him to get back in his idling poison-truck, that would in itself be concerning

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