Conspiracy Law's Threat to Free Speech

S. Morrison
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Conspiracy law has been the consistent subject of controversy, but most commentators do not consider its negative effect on freedom of speech. When they do, their concerns focus only on the use of speech as the crime’s actus reus. The use of speech as evidence to prove this actus reus is as important and raises conceptually related issues, so current scholarship tells only half of the story.This Article addresses the use of speech as the actus reus of conspiracy and evidence thereof. It sets forth what I call the All-Purpose Speech Model. I argue that this Model accurately describes the use of speech in conspiracy cases, and thereby reveals threats to free speech not recognized by past approaches to the subject.Current scholarship’s unipolar approach has led some commentators to conclude that conspiracy law poses no threat to freedom of speech. Contrary to the necessary assumptions underlying this conclusion, the All-Purpose Speech Model discounts the operational distinction between agreement, overt act, mens rea, and evidence thereof. It reveals that these elements and evidence in support of them collapse together, becoming homogenized. The result is that speech used as evidence becomes the crime of conspiracy itself. This raises serious concerns for free speech.This Article first provides a factual context by discussing conspiracy issues in terrorism, communism, and narcotics cases. It then sets forth the All-Purpose Speech Model by exploring the intersection between conspiracy law and free speech. Next, it uses Kent Greenawalt’s tripartite typology of speech and the category of speech integral to criminal conduct to establish a new four-part typology that is useful to analyzing the use of speech in conspiracy cases. Finally, it applies this typology to the extant system of speech protection, which includes the familiar concepts of high-value speech, low-value speech, and speech thought to be entirely outside of the First Amendment’s protection.This Article addresses only conspiracy’s threat to principles of freedom of speech. A different, and equally important, inquiry concerns its potential violation of the First Amendment. Recognizing the novelty of its argument and the political, evidentiary, and conceptual challenges of placing conspiracy charge-related speech under First Amendment protection, I reserve that inquiry for later work, so that it may be given the attention it deserves. Nonetheless, I conclude with a tentative foray into Brandenburg-related constitutional questions posed by conspiracy law.
阴谋法对言论自由的威胁
阴谋法一直是争议的主题,但大多数评论家并不认为它对言论自由的负面影响。当他们这样做的时候,他们的关注只集中在使用言语作为犯罪的真实行为上。使用言语作为证据来证明这一事实同样重要,并提出了概念上的相关问题,因此目前的学术研究只讲述了一半的故事。本文论述了言论作为共谋行为的使用及其证据。它提出了我所说的万能语言模型。我认为,这个模型准确地描述了阴谋案件中言论的使用,从而揭示了对言论自由的威胁,而过去的研究方法没有认识到这一点。目前学术界的单极方法导致一些评论家得出结论,阴谋法对言论自由没有威胁。与这一结论背后的必要假设相反,通用言语模型忽略了协议、公开行为、意图和证据之间的操作区别。它揭示了这些元素和支持它们的证据一起坍塌,变得同质化。其结果是,作为证据的言论本身就成了阴谋罪。这引发了对言论自由的严重担忧。本文首先通过讨论恐怖主义、共产主义和毒品案件中的阴谋问题,提供了一个事实背景。然后,通过探索阴谋法与言论自由的交集,提出了通用言论模型。其次,本文利用Kent Greenawalt的言语三分类型和犯罪行为不可或缺的言语范畴,建立了一个新的四分类型,有助于分析阴谋案件中言语的使用。最后,它将这种类型应用于现有的言论保护系统,其中包括我们熟悉的高价值言论、低价值言论和被认为完全不在第一修正案保护范围内的言论。本文只讨论阴谋论对言论自由原则的威胁。另一项不同的、同样重要的调查涉及它是否违反了宪法第一修正案。我认识到其论点的新颖性,以及将与阴谋指控有关的言论置于第一修正案保护之下所面临的政治、证据和概念上的挑战,因此我将这一调查保留到以后的工作中,以便给予它应有的关注。尽管如此,我还是对阴谋法提出的与勃兰登堡有关的宪法问题进行了尝试性的探讨。
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