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Constitutional Rights
Rights in the original Constitution No bills of attainder No ex post facto laws Writ of habeas corpus
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Constitutional Rights and the States
The Bill of Rights placed limits on the powers of the national government (“Congress shall make no law. . .”) States made to comply with the rights in the Bill of Rights through “selective incorporation” under the Due Process Clause of the 14th Amendment, one right at a time
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Freedom of Speech Belief, speech and action Historical tests
Clear & Present Danger Test Absolute Position Balancing Test “Preferred Position”
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Nonprotected Speech LIBEL NY Times v. Sullivan (1964)
“actual malice” for public officials (and later public figures)
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Nonprotected Speech OBSCENITY Obscenity vs. Pornography
“I know it when I see it” Miller v. California (1973) and the “community standards” test
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Nonprotected Speech FIGHTING WORDS COMMERCIAL SPEECH
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Other Constitutional Concerns
Prior Restraints Vagueness Freedom of Assembly Time, place, and manner restrictions Content & Viewpoint Neutrality
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First Amendment: Freedom of Religion
“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, nor prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” Establishment Clause Free Exercise Clause
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Establishment Clause Everson v. Board of Education (1947): “wall of separation” Lemon v. Kurtzman (1971) Law/program must have secular purpose; Neither advances nor inhibits religion; And avoids “excessive entanglement”
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Free Exercise Clause Reasonable government interest
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