VAGUENESS AND OVER BREADTH?

in #vagueness6 years ago

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Furthermore, the court states that neither mere rationality nor some intermediate standard of review should be used to judge the constitutionality of a state rule that discriminates against some of its citizens because they have domiciled in the state for less than a year.
The court held that the appropriate standard may be categorical than that articulated in Shapiro, but it is surely no less strict.
The court reasoned that since the right to travel embraces the citizen’s right to be treated equally in her new state of residence, the discriminatory classification is itself a penalty.
The court discussed whether the state may accomplish a legitimate purpose by the discriminatory means it has chosen must appropriately use strict scrutiny.
Furthermore, the court held that there is a fundamental right to travel and to interstate migration within the U.S.
Therefore, the laws that prohibit or burden travel within the United States must meet strict scrutiny.

HOW HAS THE COURT ADDRESSED THE RESTRICTIONS ON FOREIGN TRAVEL?
The court stated that when there is not a fundamental right to international travel only a rational basis test will be used in evaluating restrictions on foreign travel.
The court discussed the classic procedural due process issues concerning kind of notice, the form of hearing the government must provide when it takes a particular action, and the substantive due process.
The court discussed whether the government has an adequate reason for taking a person’s life, liberty, or property. Moreover, such justification depends very much on the level of scrutiny used.
The court stated that it is possible to distinguish procedural and substantive due process based on the remedy sought.
In Daniels v. Williams, 474 U.S. 327 (1986), the court discussed whether procedural due process are violated by analyzing if there been a deprivation of life, liberty, or property without due process of the law.
Here, the plaintiff fell on a prison stairway.
The court reasoned that the liability for negligently inflicted harm is categorically beneath the threshold of constitutional due process.
In Davidson v. Cannon, 474 U.S. 344 (1986), the court stated that the case is attendant to Daniels.
In County of Sacramento v. Lewis, 523 U.S. 833 (1998), the court discussed whether a police officer violates the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of substantive due process by causing death through deliberate or reckless indifference to life in a high-speed automobile chase aimed at apprehending a suspected offender.
The court held that in such circumstances only a purpose to cause harm unrelated to the legitimate object of arrest will satisfy the element of arbitrary conduct shocking to the conscience, necessary for due process violation. Therefore, the plaintiff’s substantive due process rights were not violated.
The court clearly stated that the due process guarantee does not entail a body of constitutional law imposing liability whenever someone cloaked with state authority causes him harm.
Furthermore, the court held the Constitution does not guarantee due care on the part of state officials not exacerbating disorder more than necessary to do their jobs.
The court held that high-speed chases with no intent to harm suspects physically or to worsen their legal plight do not give rise to liability under the Fourteenth Amendment, invoked by an action under Section 1983.

HOW HAS THE COURT ADDRESSED WHEN THE GOVERNMENT’S FAILURE TO
PROTECT A PERSON FROM PRIVATELY INFLICTED HARMS QUALIFIES AS A DEPRIVATION?
In Deshaney v. Winnebago County Dept. of Social services, 489 U.S. 189 (1989), the Supreme Court considered the government’s duty under the Due Process Clause to protect individuals from privately inflicted harms.
The plaintiffs assert a violation of his rights under the Fourteenth Amendment by failing to intervene to protect him against a risk of violence at his father’s hands of which they knew or should have known.
The court stated that nothing in the language of the Due Process Clause itself requires the state to protect the life, liberty, and property of its citizens against invasion by private actors.
The court determined that a special relationship existed because the state knew that Joshua faced a special danger of abuse at his father’s hands, and specifically proclaimed, by word and by deed, its intention to protect him against that danger.
The court reasoned that the state may have been aware of the dangers that Joshua faced in the free world, it played no part in their creation, nor did it do anything to render him any more vulnerable to them. Thus, the State had no constitutional duty to protect Joshua against his father’s violence; its failure to do so though calamitous in hindsight simply does not constitute a violation of the Due Process Clause.
Justice Brennan, Justice Marshall and Blackmun dissenting
The court stated that conceivably children like Joshua are made worse off by the existence of this program when the persons and entities charged with carrying it out fail to do their jobs.
Furthermore, the inaction can be every bit as abusive of power as action.

XVI
HOME AGAIN

[CHORUS]
Painted in the background is the sky stretching far and wide
Rocking in a wicker chair is where I reside
Got a smile on my face, when all the sadness I erase
Drifting off in this atmosphere is my very favorite place
The grass is greenest where there are no shadows in between us
As we sit in the chair without a care laughing as a couple of dreamers
Sitting in the present, and living in the past
History of the future, tomorrow is here at last
[VERSE]
The sun above is shining on my fingers and my toes
Birds are singing, remembering friends and even foes
Leaves are glowing, as the wind is steady blowing
Tiger tails rustle under the duck’s feathers flowing
[CHORUS]
Painted in the background is the sky stretching far and wide
Rocking in a wicker chair is where I reside
Got a smile on my face, when all the sadness I erase
Drifting off in this atmosphere is my very favorite place
The grass is greenest where there are no shadows in between us
As we sit in the chair without a care laughing as a couple of dreamers
Sitting in the present, and living in the past
History of the future, tomorrow is here at last

[VERSE]
The sounds are like a symphony with trumpets in my ear
Melodies of serenity is music with no fear
Looking in my window, I see the reflection of the sun
Dancing with his lovely friend, the moon is sure to come
[CHORUS]
Painted in the background is the sky stretching far and wide
Rocking in a wicker chair is where I reside
Got a smile on my face, when all the sadness I erase
Drifting off in this atmosphere is my very favorite place
The grass is greenest where there are no shadows in between us
As we sit in the chair without a care laughing as a couple of dreamers
Sitting in the present, and living in the past
History of the future, tomorrow is here at last
[VERSE]
Another day has gone without a moan and a twinkle in its eye
Rabbit’s feet take another leap as butterflies sigh up in the sky
Ripples in the water swim without a splash
Wide-mouth bass the river swallows never seem to crash

SECTION P
WHAT HAS THE COURT DETERMINED IS A DEPRIVATION OF LIFE, LIBERTY, OR PROPERTY?
The “rights-privileges” distinction and its demise is distinguished when the government is required to proved due process only if there has been a deprivation of life, liberty, or property.
Until the last thirty years, the Supreme Court narrowly defined what constitutes a liberty or property interest. The court repeatedly held that there was a liberty or a property interest only if there was a “right.” In addition, the court held government-bestowed “privilege” was not a basis for requiring due process.
Professor Charles Reich argued that the rights privileges distinction is an anachronism in an era where people depend on the government for so much that is essential for survival.
The people rely on the government benefits such as education, welfare, social security, licenses, and jobs and thus hold the same place in a person’s life as property traditionally occupied.
Reich contended that the right-privileges distinction should be discarded and that due process should be provided when the government terminates the “new property.”
By the end of the 1960s, this view was accepted by a majority of the Supreme Court as distinguished by Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U.S. 254 (1970).
In Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U.S. 254 (1970), the court discussed whether the Due Process Clause requires that the recipient be afforded an evidentiary hearing before the termination of benefits.
Furthermore, the court discussed the form of hearing and the applicability of welfare benefits.
Justice Black dissenting
In the last half century the U.S., along with many, perhaps most, other nations of the world has moved far toward becoming a welfare state, that is, a nation that for one reason or another taxes its most affluent people to help support, feed, clothe, and shelter its less fortunate citizens. The result is that today more than nine million men, women, and children in the U.S. receiving some kind of state or federally financed public assistance in the form of allowances or gratuities, generally paid to them periodically, usually by the week, month, or quarter. Since these gratuities are paid based on need, the list of recipients is not static, and some people go off the list and others are added from time to time. These ever-changing lists put a constant administrative burden on government and it certainly could not have reasonably anticipated that this burden would include the additional procedural expense imposed by the court today.
The court discussed what constitutes a deprivation of property and when are government benefits, such as jobs or payments to be considered property.
The court strongly determined whether there is a property interest by analyzing the importance of the interest to the individual welfare that may be deemed essential for life.
In Board of Regents v. Roth, 408 U.S. 564 (1972), the court reaffirmed the demise of the rights privileges distinction but used a different approach for determining if there is a property interest.
The court held the requirements of procedural due process apply only to the deprivation of interests encompassed by the Fourteenth Amendment’s protection of liberty and property.
Thus, the right to some kind of prior hearing is paramount when protected interests are implicated .
Moreover, the court stated the range of interests protected by procedural due process is not infinite.
The court rejected the distinction between “rights” and “privileges” that once seemed to govern the applicability of procedural due process rights including things that have been definitively stated.
In Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390 (1923), the court held that the protected interests include the freedom from bodily restraint, the right of the individual to contract, the right to engage in any of the common occupations of life, the right to acquire useful knowledge, the right to marry. In addition, the court held that the protected interests include the right to establish a home and bring up children, the right to worship God according to the dictates of his own conscience, and the right to generally enjoy those privileges long recognized as essential to the orderly pursuit of happiness by free men.
The court stated that there might be cases in which under such circumstances where interests in liberty would be implicated a state refusing to re-employ a person.
The court held that the Fourteenth Amendment’s procedural protection of property is a safeguard of the security of interests that a person has already acquired in specific benefits.
Moreover, a person clearly must have more than an abstract need or desire for the interest in a benefit to have a property interest.
In addition, the court stated that a person must have more than a unilateral expectation of it.
In specific, the court held that a person must have a legitimate claim of entitlement to it. The court defined the purpose of the ancient institution of property to protect those claims that people rely on in their daily lives, reliance that must not be arbitrarily undermined. In addition, the court stated the right to a hearing to provide an opportunity for a person to vindicate those claims is the purpose of the constitution.
In specific, the constitution does not create property interests. Rather, the court defined the dimensions by existing rules or understandings that stem from an independent source such as state law, rules, or understandings that secure certain benefits and that support claims of entitlement to those benefits created where one must look at these terms that created defined interest.
Here, the terms of the respondent’s appointment secured absolutely no interest in re-employment for the next year. In addition, the court held that they supported no possible claim of entitlement to re-employment.
In these circumstances, the respondent surely had an abstract concern in being rehired but he did not have a sufficient property interest requiring the university authorities to give him a hearing after they declined to renew his contract of employment.
The court stated that the Constitution restrains the federal and state governments and governmental agencies from acting arbitrarily with respect to employment opportunities that they either offer or control.
Thus, the court firmly established that absent statutory or contractual controls a government employer, an employer is free to act capriciously or unreasonably with respect to employment practices. Furthermore, the court held that a government employer must act fairly and reasonably.
The court determined that if there is an important benefit regardless of the content of the state law then there exists an entitlement to a property interest. In alternative, the court determined a property interest exists only if the state law creates a reasonable expectation to receipt of a benefit, regardless of the importance of the interest.
In Bishop v. Wood, 426 U.S. 341 (1976), the court concluded that the plaintiff did not have a property interest in his job and that he was not entitled to due process with regard to his termination.
Here, the court stated a city police officer, was considered a “permanent employee” under state law. Nonetheless, the federal district court found that as a matter of state law, the police officer “held this position at the will and pleasure of the city.” This means that the government can avoid a property interest simply by making it clear that it retains the right to fire the individual at will.
In consequence, the court contends that it is a little different from the rights privileges distinction that the court so expressly repudiated in cases like Goldberg and Roth.
After Bishop, the court clarified the issue of what procedures are required is a matter of federal constitutional law to be decided by the courts determining if there is a property right.
The court stated that there was no dispute that the law created a property interest requiring that employees only be terminated if there was “cause.”
The court contended that due process required a pre-discharge opportunity to be heard and that state law could not alter this requirement.
The court stated that it was “settled that the bitter with the sweet approach misconceives the constitutional guarantee” and that the constitution and not the state law determines the procedures to be followed when there is a property interest.
In Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill, 470 U.S. 532 (1985), the court addressed only the question of what procedures are required when there has been a deprivation of life, liberty, or property.
In Loudermill, the court does not overrule or change the holding in Bishop in deciding if there is a property interest in a government job, but the relevant inquiry is the expectations created by the law and customs surrounding the position.
WHAT HAS THE COURT DETERMINED IS A DEPRIVATION OF LIBERTY?
The court contended that there is no doubt that constitutional rights are a liberty interest.
The court determined that “liberty” be based on the importance of the interest at stake. In alternative, the court determined the existence of a liberty interest based on the expectations engendered by the state law.
The court held that both are present in the case law illustrated by determining if a liberty interest is harming to a reputation, and when do prisoners have liberty interests.
WHEN HAS THE COURT DETERMINED THAT REPUTATION AS A LIBERTY INTEREST?
In Goss v. Lopez, 419 U.S. 565 (1975), the court discussed whether harm to reputation is a deprivation of liberty.
The court indicated that reputation is a liberty interest, and found that a property interest exists in students attending school.
Here, several students were temporarily suspended from high school without a hearing either prior to suspension or within a reasonable time thereafter, and enjoining the administrators to remove all references to such suspensions from the student’s record.
The court held that the students were denied due process of law contrary to the Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution.
The court stated that no similar procedure is provided in Section 3313.66 or any other provision of state law for a suspended student.
The court named nine appellees, each of whom alleged that he or she had been suspended from public high school in Columbus for up to ten days with a hearing pursuant to Section 3313.66, filed an action under 42 U.S.C. Section 1983 against the Columbus Board of Education and various administrators of the CPSS.
The court relied on Board of Regents v. Roth (1972) in reasoning that the Fourteenth Amendment forbids the state to deprive any person of life, liberty, or property without due process of law. Protected interests in property are normally not created by the Constitution. Rather, they are created and their dimensions are defined by an independent source such as state statutes or rules entitling the citizen to certain benefits. Here, the appellees plainly had legitimate claims of entitlement to a public education on the basis of state law. Ohio Rev. Code Ann. Sec. 3313.48 and 3313.64 direct local authorities to provide a free education to all residents within five and twenty-one years of age, and a compulsory-attendance law requires attendance for a school year of not less than thirty-two weeks.
The court held that Ohio may not withdraw the right to an education of appellees’ general class on grounds of misconduct absent fundamentally fair procedures to determine if misconduct has occurred.
Moreover, the court contended the state is constrained to recognize a student’s legitimate entitlement to a public education as a property interest protected by the Due Process Clause and may not be taken away for misconduct without adherence to the minimum procedures required by that Clause.
In addition, the Due Process Clause forbids arbitrary deprivations of liberty.
In Wisconsin v. Constantineau, 400 U.S. 433 (1971), the court held that the minimum requirements of the Due Process Clause must be satisfied where a person’s good name, reputation, honor, or integrity is at stake because of what the government is doing to him.
Here, the school authorities suspended the appellees from school for periods of up to ten days based on charges of misconduct. The court held that those charges could seriously damage the students’ standing with their fellow pupils and their teachers as well as interfere with later opportunities for higher education and employment if the charges were sustained and recorded.
The court reasoned that the misconduct occurred immediately collides with the requirements of the constitution because the state claimed right to determine unilaterally and without due process, and thus infringes the Due Process Clause under the Constitution.
The court held that the property interest in educational benefits temporarily denied and the liberty interest in reputation is substantial that the suspensions may not constitutionally be imposed by any procedure the school chooses no matter how arbitrary.
In addition, the court contended the students facing temporary suspension have a qualifying interest protected under the Due Process Clause requiring that the student be given oral or written notice of the charges against him. The court stated if the student denies the charges then an explanation of the evidence the authorities have and an opportunity to present his side of the story in connection with a suspension of ten days or less.
The clause requires the aforementioned rudimentary precautions be taken against unfair or mistaken findings of misconduct and the arbitrary exclusion from school.
The court viewed the student’s interest in education is not infringed by a suspension within the limited period prescribed by Ohio law. Moreover, the court discussed that there may be some arguable infringement, but it is too speculative, transitory, and insubstantial to justify imposition of a constitutional rule.
In Goss, the court expressed that a student’s liberty interest in his or her reputation exists. But in Paul v. Davis the Court rejected such a liberty interest.
In Paul v. Davis, 424 U.S. 693 (1976), the court stated that a number of our prior cases pointed out the frequently drastic effect of the “stigma” which may result from defamation by the government in a variety of contexts. Moreover, the court maintained that this line of cases does not establish the proposition that reputation alone apart from some more tangible interests such as employment is either “liberty” or property” by itself sufficient to invoke the procedural protection of the Due Process Clause.
The court rejected that the liberty interest expressed in Goss exists.
Rather, the court stated that his interest in reputation is simply one of many that the state may protect against injury by virtue of it tort law, providing a forum for vindication of those interests by means of damages action.
In addition, the court contends that any harm or injury to that interest inflicted by an officer of the state does not result in a deprivation of any “liberty” or “property” recognized by state or federal law, nor has it worked any change of respondent’s status as therefore recognized under the state’s laws.
The court held that the interest in reputation asserted in this case is neither “liberty” nor “property” guaranteed against state deprivation without due process of law.
The court held the state did not deprive the respondent of any liberty or property interests protected by the Due Process Clause regardless of the petitioners’ defamatory publications, however seriously they may have harmed the respondents’ reputation. Because the respondent cannot assert a denial of any right afforded to him by the state, there was not a violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Justice Brennan Marshall White concurs in part, dissenting
I have always thought that one of this court’s most important roles is to provide a formidable bulwark against governmental violation of the constitutional safeguards securing in our free society the legitimate expectations of every person to innate human dignity and sense of worth. It is a regrettable abdication of that role and a saddening denigration of our majestic Bill of Rights when the court tolerates arbitrary and capricious official conduct branding an individual as criminal without complying with constitutional procedures designed to ensure the fair and impartial ascertainment of criminal culpability. Today’s decision must surely be a short-lived aberration.
HOW HAS THE COURT ADDRESSED THE LIBERTY INTERESTS FOR PRISONERS?
In Sankin v. Conner, 515 U.S. 472 (1995), the Supreme Court held that regardless of the content of statutes and regulation there is a liberty interest only if there is significant deprivation of freedom that is atypical to the usual conditions of confinement.
WHAT IS THE COURT HISTORY REGARDING THE LIBERTY INTERESTS FOR PRISONERS?
In Morrissey v. Brewer, 408 U.S. 471 (1972), the court held that a liberty interest based on the significance of the interest to the parolee, rather than on the specifics of the state law involved.
In Gagnon v. Scarpelli, 411 U.S. 778 (1973), the court explained that revocation of probation is constitutionally indistinguishable from the revocation of parole.
In Wolff v. McDonnell, 418 U.S. 539 (1974), the court held that a liberty interest existed based on the expectations created by state law rather than based on the significance of the credits for the individual prisoner.
The court stated that prisoners do not have a liberty interest in remaining a minimum as opposed to a maximum-security facility unless the state or federal law clearly creates such an expectation.
The dissenting opinion delivered that a deprivation of liberty occurs when a prisoner is denied important freedoms regardless of the content of statutes or regulations. The majority opinion expressed that a deprivation of liberty occurs if there is the removal of a freedom created by a statute or regulation.
In Mitchum v. Purvis, 650 F.2d 647, 648 (1981), the court discussed whether statutes and rules create a liberty interest.
The Supreme Court focused on the sufficiency of a law or rule.
In Wildinson v. Austin, 549 U.S. 209 (2005), the court relied on the test from Sandin v. Conner, 515 U.S. 472 (1995), placing a prisoner in a “super max” facility that includes solitary confinement for twenty-three hours per day is a deprivation of liberty.
But, the court held that the state’s procedures were sufficient to meet due process.
WHAT PROCEDURES HAS THE COURT REQUIRED TO PROTECT LIBERTY INTERESTS?
When the government must provide due process, it must always supply certain basic safe guards such as notice of the charges or issue, the opportunity for a meaningful hearing, and an impartial decision maker.
The court consistently regarded the aforementioned as the core elements of due process.
In Mullan v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 U.S. 306 (1950), the court held the Due Process Clause minimally requires that the deprivation of life, liberty, or property by adjudication preceded by prompt notice and the opportunity for a hearing appropriate to the nature of the case. The court recognized that many controversies have raged about the cryptic and abstract words of the Due Process Clause, but there is no doubt that at a minimum, even when notice and a hearing are required, there are a multitude of ways for providing them.
In Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319 (1976), the court articulated a balancing test from deciding what procedures are required when there is a deprivation of life, liberty, or property requiring due process.
The court discussed whether the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment requires that prior to the thought of social security disability benefit payments the recipient must be afforded an opportunity for an evidentiary hearing.
In addition, the court stated that procedural due process imposes constraints on governmental decisions depriving individuals of liberty or property interests within the meaning of the due process clause of the fifth or fourteenth amendment.
Moreover, the court maintained that the interest of an individual in continued receipt of these benefits is a statutorily created “property” interest protected by the Fifth Amendment.
Consistently, the court has held that some form of hearing is required before an individual is deprived of a property interest.
The court stated the argument depends upon what process is due prior to the initial termination of benefits pending reviews.
In addition, the court discussed whether the administrative procedures provided are constitutionally sufficient requiring analysis of the governmental and private interests that are affected.
The court’s prior decisions indicate that identification of the specifics dictates of due process generally requires consideration of three distinct factors. First, the private interest that will be affected by the official action should be considered. Second, the risk of an erroneous deprivation of such interest through the procedures used, and the probable value of any addition or substitute procedural safeguards should be considered. Last, the government’s interest, including the function involved and the fiscal and administrative burdens that the additional or substitute procedural requirement would entail.
Moreover, the court emphasized that welfare assistance is given to a person on the merits of sustenance.
The court conceded that the degree of the potential deprivation that may be created by a particular decision is a factor to be considered in assessing the validity of any administrative decision making process.
Here, the court asserted that the potential deprivation is generally likely to be less than in Goldberg v. Kelly, 397 U.S. 254 (1970), although the degree of difference can be overstated.
The court viewed these potential sources of temporary income, there is less reason here than Goldberg to depart from the ordinary principle established by our decisions that something less than evidentiary hearing is sufficient prior to adverse administrative action.
This court reasoned that this is a more sharply focused and easily documented decision than the typical determination of welfare entitlement. But, procedural due process rules are shaped by the risk of error inherent in the truth finding process as applied to the generality of cases not the rear exceptions.
Moreover, the court stated the potential value of an evidentiary hearing or even oral presentation to the decision-maker is substantially less in this context than in Golberg.
In contrast, procedures before the court in Goldberg enable the recipient to “mold” his argument to respond to the precise issues that the decision maker regards as crucial.
The court assessed the final factor to be the public interest.
The court included the administrative burden and other societal cost that would be associated with requiring as a matter of constitutional right an evidentiary hearing upon demand in all cases prior to the termination of disability benefits.
The court determined that due process requires a particular procedural safeguard prior to some administrative decision where financial cost alone is not a controlling weight.
But, the court reasoned that the government’s interest and hence that of the public in conserving scarce fiscal and administrative resources is a factor that must be weighed.
Here, the court contended that prescribed procedures not only provide the claimant with an effective process for asserting his claim prior to any administrative action but also assure a right to an evidentiary hearing as well as to subsequent judicial review before the denial of his claim becomes final.
The court concluded that an evidentiary hearing is not required prior to the termination of disability benefits and that the present administrative procedures fully comport with due process.
Justice Brennan and Marshall concurring stating that it is speculative.
The Mathews test has been praised because it focuses a courts attention on what seem to be the right questions in deciding the nature of the procedural protections.
Mathews requires courts to balance the importance of the interest involved the degree to which the procedure will make a difference and the cost involved the degree to which the procedure will make a difference and the cost to the government.
An expensive trial-type hearing would be out of place for a minor interest in a situation where there is little likelihood of a factual dispute. But, an adversarial hearing is essential despite its expense if there is a fundamental right at stake such as the right of parents to the custody of their children.
The court has enormous discretion in the evaluation of the three factors and particular means to balance them.
Justice Rehnquist remarked that under the Mathews Test, “the balance or simply to ad hoc weighing which depends to a great extent upon how the court subjectively views the underlying interests at stake.
In addition, such multipart balancing inherently provides little constraint on judicial decisions.
Moreover, the court criticized the Mathews Test for giving disproportionate weight to quantifiable variables such as cost.
The court employed the Mathews three-part balancing test firmly established in deciding what procedures are required in government employment.
In Arnett v. Kennedy, 416 U.S. 134 (1974), the Supreme Court, without a majority opinion, ruled that the government could fire a public employee for misconduct without a full hearing prior to termination. The court said that it was sufficient that there was the opportunity for a pre-termination review within the department followed by a post termination hearing.
In Cleveland Board of Education v. Loudermill, 470 U.S. 532 (1985), the court held to apply the Mathews balancing test.
The court concluded that due process was satisfied if the government provided a fired employee both an informal pre-termination proceeding where it was possible to respond to charges and then a later post-termination hearing.
In addition, the court emphasized that the pre-termination proceeding though necessary need not be elaborate.
In Arnett and Loudermill, the court provided the type of compromise that Mathews envisioned. The court recognized the importance of providing a pre-termination hearing to employees. But, acknowledged the costs to the government of doing this. The court compromised in an informal pre-termination proceeding to be followed if necessary be a formal post termination hearing.
HOW HAS THE COURT ADDRESSED FAMILY RIGHTS?
The Supreme Court has been inconsistent in the degree of due process it has required in cases concerning parental rights.
In alternative, the court has stressed the importance of the interest and has required substantial procedural protections in other cases.
The Supreme Court has held that a state must prove by clear and convincing evidence the need to terminate parental rights at a hearing before such rights are terminated
The court also has recognized the right of an individual to deny paternity.
In Little v. Streater, 452 U.S. 1 (1981), the Court held that the government must pay for blood test for indigent defendants in paternity cases.
The court held that the government need not automatically provide an attorney to indigent parents at parental termination proceedings
In Lassiter v. Department of Social Services, 452 U.S. 18 (1981), the court applied the Mathews Test and concluded that the obligation to provide counsel depends on the circumstances of the particular case and is not required in all instances where the government seeks to end parental rights.
The court stated that it had recognized an automatic right to government appointed counsel for indigents only where the litigant may lose his physical liberty if he loses the litigation.
The court replied a “wise public policy “may cause states to provide an attorney for all indigent parents at termination proceedings and those concerning neglect or dependency.
In addition, the court recognized that in some instances the government would be required to appoint counsel where the parent’s interest were at their strongest the States interest were at their weakest and the risks of errors were at their peak.
Furthermore, the Constitution does not require the appointment of counsel in every parental termination proceeding.
In a separate dissenting opinion, Justice Stevens questioned the application of the Mathews balancing test to a fundamental liberty interest outside the property context. He argued that the utilitarian calculus employed under Mathews is ill suited for cases involving basic freedoms. He said that even if the cost to the state were great procedural protections such as the right to counsel in termination proceedings were essential because protecting our liberty from deprivation be the State without due process of the law is priceless.
HOW HAS THE COURT ADDRESSED THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN CONTENT BASED AND CONTENT NEUTRAL LAWS?
The Supreme Court has frequently declared that the very core of the First Amendment is that the government cannot regulate speech based on its content.
The government has no power to restrict expression because of its message, its ideas, its subject matter, or the content.
The court has declared that content-based regulations are presumptively invalid.
Generally, strict scrutiny is used for content-based restrictions.
The courts use intermediate scrutiny for content neutral laws.
XVII
S.I. IS WHY

The eloquent special intelligence moving relevant pieces in the puzzle
Signifying separate sounds without muzzling secret harmonies
Again, the chimes intertwine in the breezy frequencies
Natural notes form on surfaces in simulated shades of rhymes
Curvy boundaries in terrain that is unfamiliar to baron minds
Reminding of times of mental transiting in peaceful centuries
Increasing the possibility of coexisting serenities
Elliptical orbs circling points crowned by the earthy ground
Hybrid views see the majestic beings worthy sound
While selections are perfected in faithful fables
Coincidences seem randomly impossibly stable
Interventions divinely planned with valor and speed
Preventing the crevices from filling with binding hypocrisy
Lattices overlapping with paint for the winding clock to see

SECTION Q
HOW HAS THE COURT DETERMINED THE IMPORTANT DISTINCTION BETWEEN CONTENT-BASED AND CONTENT-NEUTRAL LAWS?
In Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission, 512 U.S. 622 (1994), the court discussed whether the “Must Carry” Act involves content-neutral speech.
The court contended that not every interference with speech triggers the same degree of scrutiny under the First Amendment.
The First Amendment subject to only narrow and well-understood exceptions does not allow government control over the content of messages expressed by private individuals.
The court precedents thus apply the most exacting scrutiny to regulations that suppress disadvantage or impose differential burdens upon speech because of its content.
The regulations that are unrelated to the content of speech are subject to an intermediate level of scrutiny because in most cases they pose a less substantial risk of erasing certain ideas or viewpoints from the public dialogue.
The court stated the principal inquiry in determining content neutrality is whether the government has adopted a regulation of speech because of the [agreement or] disagreement with the message it conveys.
In general, the court held that laws by their terms distinguish favored speech from disfavored speech because of the ideas or views expressed are content-based.
The court addressed the issue of market competition by stating that nothing in the act imposes a restriction penalty or burden because of the views programs or stations the cable operator has selected or will select.
The First Amendment does more than just bar government from intentionally suppressing speech of which it disapproves.
The court applied the intermediate scrutiny by the lower courts.
Justice Kennedy reaffirmed that “a content neutral regulation will be sustained under the First Amendment if it advances important government interests unrelated to the suppression of free speech and does not burden substantially more speech than necessary to further those interests.”
The court reasoned “because the burden imposed by must-carry is congruent to the benefits it affords, we conclude must carry is narrowly tailored to preserve a multiplicity of broadcast stations for the forty percent of American households without cable.”
Some categories of speech are unprotected or less protected by the First Amendment such as incitement of illegal activity obscenity and defamation.
These categories by definition are content based and are exceptions to the usual rule of strict scrutiny for content-based regulations.
A viewpoint restriction does this directly.
A subject-matter restriction on speech can accomplish the same goal. In the 1960s, a law prohibiting speech about the war in Vietnam, a subject-matter restriction, obviously would have had a far greater impact on antiwar speech.
The court has explained that “to allow a government the choice of permissible subjects for public debate would be to allow the government control over the search for political truth.
HOW HAS THE COURT DETERMINED WHETHER A LAW IS CONTENT BASED?
In Boos v. Varry, 485 U.S. 312 (1988), the court held that the foreign embassy prohibiting one entire set of speech violated the constitutional rights afforded under the First Amendment.
The court contended that a law will be found to be content-based and must meet strict scrutiny if it is either a viewpoint or a subject-matter restriction.
In addition, the court reasoned that a viewpoint neutral means that the government cannot regulate speech based on the ideology of the Message.
In Carey v. Brown, 447 U.S. 455 (1980), the court discussed whether the subject-matter neutral means that the government cannot regulate speech based on the topic of the speech.
In Republican Party of Minnesota v. White, 536 U.S. 765 (2002), the court discussed whether the state law requiring judges to speak impartially regarding political statements involved in the judges election.
The court stated that since 1974, they have been subject to a legal restriction which states that a candidate for a judicial office including an incumbent judge shall not announce his or her view on disputed legal or political issues under the Minnesota Code of Judicial Conduct, Canon 5(A)(3)(d)(i)(2000).
The court held that the announce clause both prohibits speech on the basis of its content and burdens a category of speech that is at the core of our First Amendment freedoms’ speech about the qualifications of candidates for public office.

HOW HAS THE COURT ADDRESSED THE PROBLEMS IN APPLYING THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN CONTENT-BASED AND CONTENT-NEUTRAL LAWS?
In City of Renton v. Paytime Theatres inc., 475 U.S. 41 (1986), the court that held the regulation enacted for restraining speech because of its content presumptively violates the First Amendment.
The court discussed whether a permissible purpose for a law prevent it from being deemed content-based even if a content restriction is on the face of the law.
Therefore, the court contended that the ordinance is properly analyzed as a form of time, place, and manner regulation.
Furthermore, the Supreme Court held that a facial content-based restriction will be deemed content neutral if it is motivated by a permissible content neutral purpose.
In alternative, the court concluded that the so-called content neutral time place and manner regulations are acceptable so long as they are designed to serve a substantial government interest and do not unreasonably limit alternative avenues of communication.
HOW HAS THE COURT ADDRESSED THE ISSUE OF VAGUENESS AND OVER BREADTH?
The court stated that laws that regulate speech can be challenged as facially unconstitutional on the grounds that they are unduly vague and overbroad thus the law is entirely invalidated
The court concluded that vagueness and over breadth are powerful doctrines because they can be used to challenge any law regulating speech.
HOW HAS THE COURT ADDRESSED THE ISSUE OF VAGUENESS?
A law is unconstitutionally vague if a reasonable person cannot tell what speech is prohibited and what is permitted.
In part, the vagueness doctrine is about fairness.
In Coates v. City of Cincinnati, 402 U.S. 611 (1971), the court discussed whether picketing labor was constitutionally over breadth because it subjectively “annoyed people.”
The court held that the law is unconstitutionally overbroad if it regulates substantially more speech than the constitution allows it to be regulated and a person to whom the law constitutionally can be applied can argue that it would be unconstitutional as applied to others.
Furthermore, the court concluded that a law be declared unconstitutional on over breadth grounds if the law regulates much more expression than the Constitution allows to be restricted.

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