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Protests, Parades and Public Assemblies - Key Constitutional Principles and Recent Developments Robert E. Hagemann Charlotte Senior Assistant City Attorney.

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Presentation on theme: "Protests, Parades and Public Assemblies - Key Constitutional Principles and Recent Developments Robert E. Hagemann Charlotte Senior Assistant City Attorney."— Presentation transcript:

1 Protests, Parades and Public Assemblies - Key Constitutional Principles and Recent Developments Robert E. Hagemann Charlotte Senior Assistant City Attorney March 17, 2005

2 What We’ll Cover l Major Legal Concepts l Charlotte’s Ordinance l Miscellaneous Issues

3 Major Legal Concepts l Forum Analysis l Time, Place and Manner l Prior Restraint

4 Forum Analysis l Traditional Public Forum -streets, sidewalks, and parks -“have immemorially been held in trust for the use of the public, and, time out of mind, have been used for purposes of assembly, communicating thoughts between citizens, and discussing public questions” Hague v. CIO, 307 U.S. 496, 515 (1939)

5 Forum Analysis (cont.) l Designated (limited) Public Forum –property government has voluntarily opened up for expressive activity –treated the same as traditional public forum

6 Forum Analysis (cont.) l Non-Public Forum –may be reserved for its intended purposes –regulation on speech must be reasonable and not an effort to suppress because officials oppose the speaker’s view

7 Time, Place, and Manner l content-neutral l serve a significant government interest l narrowly tailored l leave reasonable alternative avenues of communication

8 Prior Restraint l no unbridled discretion l decision within specified and reasonably short period of time l provide for prompt judicial review

9 Thomas v. Chicago Park District, 534 U.S. 316 (2002) l permit requirement for public assembly, parade, picnic, or other event of 50+ in a public park l 14 day review l administrative appeal with judicial review on certiorari

10 Thomas (cont.) l 13 grounds for denial including: –would present an unreasonable danger to health or safety l Petitioners claimed that all of the Freedman prior restraint doctrine applies – including deadline for judicial review and burden of going to court on the government

11 Thomas (cont.) l not directed at communicative activity l not subject-matter censorship l licensor not authorized to pass judgment on content l does not invoke the “procedural requirements” of the prior restraint doctrine

12 Thomas (cont.) l but even content-neutral TPM restrictions can be used to stifle speech l still need adequate standards to guide the permitting official’s decision and to enable effective judicial review l standards are adequate

13 City of Littleton v. Z.J. Gifts D-4, L.L.C., 541 U.S. 774 (2004) l does “prompt judicial review” mean prompt “access” or prompt “decision”? l prompt decision l satisfied by ordinary rules of judicial review

14 Charlotte’s Ordinance l development and presentation of the proposal l reaction by the public and elected officials l lessons learned

15 Charlotte’s Ordinance (cont.) l Picketing –less than 50 – no notice, no permit, just follow the rules –50 or more – 48 hour advance notice if organizer know or should have known

16 Charlotte’s Ordinance (cont.) l Public Assemblies and Parades –30 day advance application with exceptions –Thomas-like permitting criteria –costs and fees – administrative cost of processing application and reimbursement for policing street closures, internal security, and med tech – Stonewall criteria

17 Charlotte’s Ordinance (cont.) l administrative appeal –quasi-judicial appeal hearing w/in 5 days –review on certiorari in Superior Court – City will do everything in its power to expedite

18 Miscellaneous Issues l other city property and forum analysis l fees, insurance, indemnification and unbridled discretion l First Amendment rights of attendees and spectators

19 Questions?


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