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- Mitchell v. Wisconsin
- Why Mitchell v. Wisconsin Sucked
-
- On June 11, 1993, the United State Supreme Court upheld Wisconsin╣s
- penalty enhancement law, which imposes harsher sentences on criminals
- who │intentionally select the person against whom the crime...is
- committed..because of the race, religion, color, disability, sexual
- orientation, national origin or ancestry of that person.▓ Chief
- Justice Rehnquist deliverd the opinion of the unanimous Court. This
- paper argues against the decision, and will attempt to prove the
- unconstitutionality of such penalty enhancement laws.
- On the evening of October 7, 1989, Mitchell and a group of young
- black men attacked and severely beat a lone white boy. The group had
- just finished watching the film │Mississippi Burning▓, in which a
- young black boy was, while praying, beaten by a white man. After the
- film, the group moved outside and Mitchell asked if they felt │hyped
- up to move on some white people▓. When the white boy approached
- Mitchell said, │You all want to fuck somebody up? There goes a white
- boy, Go get him.▓ The boy was left unconscious, and remained in a
- coma for four days. Mitchell was convicted of aggravated battery,
- which carries a two year maximum sentence. The Wisconsin jury,
- however, found that because Mitchell selected his victim based on
- race, the penalty enhancement law allowed Mitchell to be sentenced to
- up to seven years. The jury sentenced Mitchell to four years, twice
- the maximum for the crime he committed without the penalty enhancement
- law.
- The U.S. Supreme Court╣s ruling was faulty, and defied a number of
- precedents. The Wisconsin law is unconstitutional, and is essentially
- unenforceable. This paper primarily focuses on the constitutional
- arguments against Chief Justice Rehnquist╣s decision and the statute
- itself, but will also consider the practical implications of the
- Wisconsin law, as well as a similar law passed under the new federal
- crime bill (Cacas, 32). The Wisconsin law and the new federal law are
- based on a model created by the Anti- Defemation League in response to
- a rising tide of hate-related violent crimes (Cacas, 33). Figures
- released by the Federal Bureau of Investigation show that 7,684 hate
- crimes motivated by race, religion, ethnicity, and sexual orientation
- were reported in 1993, up from 6,623 the previous year. Of those
- crimes in 1993, 62 percent were racially motivated (Cacas, 32).
- Certainly, this is a problem the nation must address. Unfortunately,
- the Supreme Court of the United States and both the Wisconsin and
- federal governments have chosen to address this problem in a way that
- is grossly unconstitutional.
- │Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion,
- or prohibiting the free exercise therof; or abridging the freedom of
- speech, or of the press; or the right of the people to peaceably
- assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.▓
- The most obvious arguments against the Mitchell decision are those
- dealing with the First Amendment. In fact, the Wisconsin Supreme
- Court ruled that the state statute was unconstitutional in their
- decision, which the U.S. Supreme Court overruled. The Wisconsim
- Supreme Court argued that the Wisconsin penalty enhancement statute,
- │violates the First Amendment directly by punishing what the
- legislature has deemed offensive thought.▓ The Wisconsin Court also
- rejected the state╣s argument │that the statute punishes only the
- îconduct╣ of intentional selection of a victim▓. The Court╣s
- contention was that │the statute punishes the îbecause of╣ aspect of
- the defendant╣s selection, the reason the defendant selected the
- victim, the motive behind the selection.▓ The law is in fact a
- direct violation of the First Amendment, according to the Wisconsin
- Supreme Court, which said │the Wisconsin legislature cannot
- criminalize bigoted thought with which it disagrees.▓
- │If there is a bedrock principal 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▓. The Supreme Court was heard to utter such noble
- phrases as recently as 1989, in Texas v. Johnson. Unfortunately these
- idealistic principles seem to have been abandoned during Wisconsin v.
- Mitchell.
- Clearly, Mitchell╣s act of assaulting another human is a punishable
- crime, and no one could logiacally argue that the First Amendment
- protects this clearly criminal action. However, the state╣s power to
- punish the action does not remove the constitutional barrier to
- punishing the criminal╣s thoughts (Cacas, 337). The First Amendment
- has generally been interpreted to protect the thoughts, as well as the
- speech, of an individual (Cacas, 338). According to the Court╣s
- majority opinion in Wooley v. Maynard, a 1977 case, │At the heart of
- the First Amendment is the notion that an individual should be free to
- believe as he will, and that in a free society one╣s beliefs should be
- shaped by his mind and his conscience rather than coerced by the
- state.▓
- Another componet of Mitchell╣s First Amendment argument against the
- penalty enhancement law, was that the statute was overbroad, and might
- have a │chilling effect▓ on free speech. Mitchell contended that with
- such a penalty enhancement law, many citizens would be hesitant to
- experess their unpopular opinions, for fear that those opinions would
- be used against them in the future.
- In Abrams v. United States, Justice Holmes, in his dissent, argued
- that │laws which limit or chill thought and expression detract from
- the goal of insuring the availability of the broadest possible range
- of ideas and expression in the marketplace of ideas▓.
- Chief Justice Rehnquist, however, rejects the notion that the
- Wisconsin statute could have a chilling effect on speech. │We must
- conjure up a vision of a Wisconsin citizen suppressing his unpopular
- bigoted opinions for fear that if he later commits an offense covered
- by the statute, these opinions will be offered at trial to establish
- that he selected his victim on account of the victim╣s protected
- status, thus qualifying him for penalty enhancement... This is too
- speculative a hypothesis to support Mitchell╣s overbreadth claim.▓
- However, a legitimate argument certainly exists that the logical next
- step would be to examine the conversations, correspondence, and other
- expressions of the accused person to determine whether a hate motive
- prompted the crime, if a criminal╣s sentence is being considered for
- penalty enhancement (Feingold, 16). How can Rehnquist argue that
- this will not cause a chilling effect?
- Rehnquist denies this chilling effect exists under penalty
- enhancement laws such as Wisconsin╣s, but one must consider how
- Rehnquist would rule if the penalty enhancement did not cover
- something, such as racism, that he finds personally repugnant. The
- recent attempt at │political correctness▓ differs only slightly from
- the Red Scare of the 1950╣s. The anti-communists claimed and the
- politically correct ideologists claim to have good intentions (The
- Road to Hell...).Unfortunately, these two groups infringed upon the
- rights of the minority in their quest to mold the htoughts of others
- into ideas similar to their own.
- How would Rehnquist rule if the statute called for enhanced penalties
- for persons convicted of crimes while expressing Communist ideas? Or
- what if the criminal was Mormon, and the majority found those
- religious views morally repugnant? Could Rehnquist also justify
- suppressing the religious freedoms found in the First Amendment, as
- well as its free speech clause, if they were found to be as
- reprehensible as racism by the general public? The United States
- Supreme Court is granting selective protection of First Amendment
- rights, in Mitchell v. Wisoconsin, and is yielding to political
- pressure to suppress bigoted views.
- Mitchell╣s second constitutional argument is that the statute
- violates the Foruteenth Amendment as well as the First. The
- Foruteenth Amendment contains the │equal protection clause▓, which
- states that no state shall │deny to any person within its jurisdiction
- the equal protection of the laws▓. The Wisconsin statute punishes
- offenders more seriously because of the views they express, and
- punishes more leniently those whose motives are of an │acceptable▓
- nature (Gellman, 379). This seems to be a clear violation of the
- Fourteenth Amendment, but again, Rehnquist (and the entire Supreme
- Court), sees things quite diiferently.
- Rehnquist argues that, │The First Amendment... does not prohibit the
- evidentiary use of speech to establish the elements of a crime and to
- prove motive or intent▓. Motive, however, is used to establish guilt
- or innocence, and is not in itself a crime. Undeniably, however,
- those that express bigoted views are punished more severely than those
- who do not.
- Rehnquist, however, never specifically mentions the Fourteenth
- Amendmeent because they were not developed by Mitchell and fell
- outside of the question on which the Court granted certiorari.
- Rehnquist also argues that │Traditionally, sentencing judges have
- considered a wide variety of factors in addition to evidence bearing
- on guilt in determining what sentences to impose on a convicted
- defendant... The defendant╣s motive for committing the offense is one
- important factor.▓
- This is a compelling argument, but I would argue this practice is
- itself of questionable constitutionality, in that it allows the
- sentencing judge to exercise excessive discretionary judgement based
- on his view as to what constitutes acceptable and unacceptable
- motives. However, even if this practice is held to be constitutional,
- surpassing the existing maximum penalty with an additional statute
- that specifically lists bigotry as an unacceptable motive, certainly
- qualifies as being the same as imposing an additional penalty for
- unpopular beliefs.
- To illuatrate the dangers inherent in laws such as Wisconsin╣s
- penalty enhancement statute, we need only examine Texas v. Johnson, a
- 1989 Supreme Court case. The state╣s flag desecration statute was
- ruled unconstitutional by the Court. However, using Rehnquists logic
- in Mitchell, the state of Texas could have easily achieved their goal
- by prohibiting public burning, a legitimate exercise of their police
- power, and enhancing the penalty for those convicted of violating the
- statute if they did so in in opposition to the government (Gellman,
- 380). Therefore, penalty enhancement laws such as Wisconsin╣s give
- the government too much power to excessively punish what it deems
- unacceptable.
- Clearly, when the legislature enacts penalty enhancement laws with
- the intent of suppressing unpopular ideas, the state violates both the
- First and the Fouteenth Amendments. The state interferes with an
- individual╣s right to free speech by suppressing ideas not supported
- by the government, and fails to provide equal protection to all its
- citizens when it punishes an act more severely when committed by an
- individual whose opinions are not shared by the state. Mitchell v.
- Wisconsin is a clear example of majority will infringing upon minority
- rights, and proves that the BIll of Rights works well, except in the
- instances when it is most needed.
- There are probably more Supreme Court cases that favor Wisconsin╣s
- position than there are that support Mitchell╣s argument. However,
- many of these rulings are of questionable constitutionality
- themselves. Two cases arguably support Rehnquist╣s position, but the
- Supreme Court has traditionally ignored the first of rulings, and the
- second has been misinterpreted.
- In Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire, Justice Murphy wrote what has become
- known as the │fighting words doctrine▓. Chaplinsky was a Jehova╣s
- Witness in a predominantly Catholic town. He distributed leaflets to
- a hostile crowd, and was refused protection by the town╣s marshall.
- Chaplinsky then referred to the marshall as a │god damn racketeer and
- a damn fascist▓, for which he was convicted of breaching the peace.
- Justice Murphy╣s opinion argued that certain speech, including that
- which is lewd, obscene, profane, or insulting, is not covered by the
- First Amendment.
- According to Murphy, │There are certain well-defined and narrowly
- limited classes of speech, the prevention and punishment of which has
- never been thought to raise any Constitutional problem. These include
- the lewd and obscene, the profane, the libelous, and the insulting or
- îfighting╣ words- those which by their very utterance inflict injury
- or tend to incite an immediate breach of the peace.▓
- Under Chaplinky, bigoted remarks would probably qualify as îfighting╣
- words. However, the courts have generally been reluctant to uphold
- the îfighting╣words doctrine, and the Supreme Court has never done so
- (Gellman 369,370). Even if today╣s Court were to consider Chaplinsky
- valid, Mitchell╣s comments, though racial in nature, would be
- difficult to classify as bigoted. In fact, Constitutional
- considerations aside, the biggest problem with penalty enhancement
- laws such as Wisconsin╣s, is classifying and prosecuting an incident
- as hate-motivated (Cacas, 33). At what point can we be certain the
- victim was selected based on race, religion, or sexual orientation?
- Another more pressing problem is police unwillingness to investigate a
- crime as hate-motivated (Cacas, 33). Certainly, the difficulting in
- determining whether a crime is hate-motivated is one of the reasons
- police are hesitant to pursue crimes as hate-motivated, and
- illustrates yet another reason why such statutes should not exist.
- Consider the following FBI guidelines to help determine whether a
- crime is hate-motivated (Cacas, 33):
- 1. a substantial portion of the community where the crime occurred
- perceives that the incident was bias-motivated;
- 2. the suspect was previously involved in a hate crime; and
- 3. the incident coincided with a holiday relating to, or a date of
- particular significance to, a racial, religious, or ethnic/national
- origin group
- These guidelines certainly fail to offer any exact or definitive
- system with which to classify crimes as hate-motivated.
- Another case which is cometimes cited as a precedent to support
- rulings such as Wisconsin v. Mitchell, is U.S. v. O╣Brien. O╣Brien
- had burnt his draft card to protest the draft and the Vietnam War,
- despite a law specifically forbidding the burning of draft cards.
- The Supreme Court ruled that the statute did not differentiate between
- public and private draft card burnings, and was therefore not a
- government attempt to regulate symbolic speech, but a
- constitutionality legitimate police power. The Court ruled that there
- is no absolutist protection for symbolic speech.
- Under O╣Brien, the government may regulate conduct which incidentally
- infringes upon First Amendment rights, as long as the government
- interest is │unrelated to the suppression▓ of belief or expression.
- However, when states enact laws such as the Wisconsin statute, the
- state is not regulating conduct despite its expressive elements, but
- is penalizing conduct because of its expressive elements (Gellman,
- 376). Therefore, a more accurate interpretation of O╣Brien, would be
- that it actually supports an argument against the Court╣s ruling in
- WIsconsin, and is not a precedent to support Rehnquist╣s decision.
- Possibly more important, and certainly more recent, is the precedent
- established in R.A.V. v. St. Paul, a 1992 case. This case involved a
- juvenille who was convicted under the St. Paul Bias-Motivated Crime
- Ordinance for burning a cross in the yard of a black family that lived
- across the street from the petitioner. Justice Scalia delivered the
- opinion of a unanimous Court, but the Court was divided in its
- opinions for overturning the St. Paul statute.
- Scalia argued that the city ordinance was overbroad, because it
- punished nearly all controversial characterizations likely to arouse
- │resentment▓ among defined protected groups, and under-inclusive,
- because the government must not selectively penalize fighting words
- directed at some groups while not prosecuting those addressed to
- others, which is where the problem lies in the logic of the Mitchell
- decision. Though Rehnquist argued that Wisconsin v. Mitchell did not
- overturn R.A.V. v. St. Paul, │If a hate speech law that enumerated
- some categories is invalid because, in Justice Antonin Scalia╣s
- opinion in St. Paul, îgovernment may not regulate use based on
- hostility- or favoritism- toward the underlying message involved,╣ how
- can a hate crime law be upheld that increases the penalty for crimes
- motivated by some hates but not those motivated by other hates?▓ In
- other words, if the St. Paul statute is determined to be
- under-inclusive, how can we include every conceivable hate within the
- context of any statute.
- │To be consistent, legislature╣s must now include other categories,
- including sex, physical characteristics, age, party affiliation,
- anti-Americanism or position on abortion.▓(Feingeld, 16)
- More interesting (and Constitutional) than the majority opinion in
- R.A.V. v. St. Paul, is the concurring opinion written by Justice
- White, with whom Justice Blackmun and Justice O╣Connor join.
- White writes, │Although the ordinance as construed reaches egories of
- speech that are constitutionally unprotected, it also criminalizes a
- substantial amount of expression that- however repugnant- is shielded
- by the First Admendment... Our fighting words cases have made clear,
- however, that such generalized reactions are not sufficient to strip
- expression of its constitutional protection. The mere fact that
- expressive activity causes hurt feelings, offense, or resentment does
- not render the expression unprotected... The ordinance is therefore
- fatally overbroad and invalid on its face...▓
- Rehnquist argues that whereas the │ordinance struck down in R.A.V.
- was explicitly directed at expression, the statute in this case is
- aimed at conduct unprotected by the First Amendment▓. Nevertheless,
- had Mitchell not stated, │There goes a white boy; go get him▓, his
- sentence would not have been enhanced, he would have instead received
- the maximum sentence of two years in jail for his crime, instead of
- four. Therefore, the Wisconsin statute does not only punish conduct,
- as Justice Rehnquist suggests, but speech as well.
- The Wisconsin v. Mitchell decision cannot simply be viewed as one
- that does harm to racists and homophobics. There are much broader
- costs to society than the quieted opinions of an ignorant few.
- First, laws which chill thought or limit expression │detract from the
- goal of insuring the availability of the broadest possible range of
- ideas and expressions in the marketplace of ideas.▓ Second, the
- Mitchell ruling not only affects eveyone╣s free speech rights with a
- general constriction of the interpretation of the First Amendment, but
- the ruling makes way for further constrictions. Third, penalty
- enhancement laws place the legislature in the position of judging and
- determining the quality of ideas, and assumes that the government has
- the capacity to make such judgements. Fourth, without the expression
- of opinions generally deemd unacceptable by society, society tends to
- forget why those opinions were deemed unacceptable in the first place.
- (More specifically, nothing makes a skinhead seem more stupid than
- allowing him to voice his opinion under the scrutiny of a national
- television audience.) Finally, when society allows the free
- expression of all ideas, regardless of its disdain for those ideas, it
- is a sign of strength. So when a society uses all its power to
- suppress ideas, it is certainly a sign of that society╣s weakness
- (Gellman, (381-385).
- The United States Supreme Court╣s unanimous decision in Wisconsin v.
- Mitchell is incorrect for a number of reasons. Constitutionally, the
- decision fails to comply with the freedom of speech guaranteed in the
- First Amendment, and the guarantee to all citizens of equal protection
- under the laws, listed in the Fourteenth Amendment. The decision also
- arguably overturns R.A.V. v. St. Paul, and suggests that the Court may
- be leaning towards a new îfighting words doctrine╣, where unpopular
- speech equals unprotected speech. The decision also damages societ as
- a whole in ways that are simply immeasureable in their size, such as
- those listed in the preceding paragraph. Wisconsin v. Mitchell is a
- terribly flawed Supreme Court decision, which one can only hope will
- be overturned in the very near future.
- │The freedom to differ is not limited to things that do not matter
- much. That would be a mere sahdow of a freedom. The test of its
- substance is the right to differ as to things that touch the heart of
- the existing order.
- │If there is any fixed star in our constitutional constellation, it
- is that no official, high or petty, can prescribe what shall be
- orthodox in politics, nationalism, religion or other matters of
- opinion...▓ -Justice Jackson in W.V. Board of Education. v.
- Barnette
-
-
-
- Bibliography
- Cacas, Samuel. │Hate Crime Sentences Can Now Be Enhanced Under A New
- Federal Law.▓ Human Rights 22 (1995): 32-33
- Feingold, Stanley. │Hate Crime Legislation Muzzles Free Speech.▓ The
- National Law Journal 15 (July 1, 1993): 6, 16
- Gellman, Susan. │Sticks And Stones.▓ UCLA Law Review 39 (December,
- 1991): 333-396
- Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire
- R.A.V. v. St. Paul
- Texas v. Johnson
- U.S. v. O╣Brien
- Wisconsin v. Mitchell
- Wooley v. Maynard
- W.V. State Board of Education v. Barnette