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Here is some good news !The US Court of Appeals has ruled in favor of the Arizona Life Coalition
in the Arizona Life Coalition v Stanton case about speciality license plates. This happened on Jan 28,2008 and is case number
#05-16971, and DC#CV-03-01691-PGR. The Judges on the Court that I want to thank for upholding the First Amendment for
prolifers are: Paul G Rosenblatt, Presiding Judge Kevin Thomas Duffy, sitting from the Southern District,NYC David
R Thompson Richard C Tallman
With the opinion written by Judge Richard Tallman. Also to thank these people for
demanding the First Amendment liberties for prolifers:
Jeffrey A Shafer,attorney
Alliance Defense Fund
Benjamin
Bull of Alliance Defense Fund
Peter A Gentala
Center for Arizona Policy
Arizona Life Coalition
Gary
Paisley
Basically here's what they decided:
a specialty license plate is not a state tax,but payments for
a product [vanity or specialty license plate];
the sale of those is not coerced but voluntary; for the purpose
of citizens paying a set fee to promote and display a cause;
by allowing specialty plates for nonprofits, the state
agreed to provide a public forum in which philanthropic organizations may exercise First Amendment liberties to raise money
for their causes;
the state did not choose the plate or edit it, with the cartoon images of two children nor the words,
"choose life";
Wooley v Maynard 430 US 705 (1997) case of US Supreme Court ruled that messages on license plates are
private speech, not state sponsored speech, because of the connection of the owner or driver of the vehicle, since vehicles
that buy those are privately owned.
The state does not compel anyone to buy a specialty plate.
Specialty plates
still identify the owner of the vehicle and therefore serve the State's interest.
Allowing specialty plates creates
a public forum; and in such a forum speakers cannot be excluded unless there is compelling state interest and exclusion is
narrowly drawn to achieve that.
The test they applied about whether a forum is public or nonpublic is drawn from the
case Sammartano v First Judicial District Court, 303 F 3d 959, 965 (9th Circuit, 2002) that states it depends upon : 1) the
central purpose of the program in which speech in question arises, 2) the degree of editorial control exercised by the
government or private entities over the content; 3) the identity of the literal speaker, 4) who bears responsibility for the
content of the speech. Taking these into consideration, specialty plates do not raise issues of compelled speech, and does
not interfere with the State's need to identify vehicles and their owners, vehicle owners bear the responsibility for the
license plates, not the state, state of Arizona did not choose or edit the message, and the
Arizona Life Coalition
meets all the State requirements for participation in the program for specialty plates as the State agreed, since they did
not raise that issue.
If Governments decided to regulate speech, they must conduct a "traditional First Amendment
analysis". And "consistency in application [of rules set by government] is the hallmark of any policy designed to preserve
the nonpublic status of a forum."
Questions to be decided were: was it "viewpoint discrimination", unreasonable
and in violation of the First Amendment?
quote; "One thing is clear; when the government has chosen to permit discussion
of certain subject matters it may not then silence speakers who address those subject matters from a particular perspective."
Limiting all forms speech on any topic [religious, political etc] is unconstitutional. See Rosenberger case, 515 US
@ 831.
quote:" When the government is plainly motivated by the nature of the message rather than the limitations of
the forum, or a specific risk within that forum, it is regulating a viewpoint rather than a subject matter". and is unconstitutional.
See Choose Life Illinois Inc, 2007 WL 178455, case.
Regulating/prohibiting/controlling speech because it is "controversial'
is viewpoint discrimination and is unconstitutional.
Therefore their decision was that prohibiting the State of Arizona
allowing its citizens to order a "Choose Life " speciality plate is viewpoint discrimination, unreasonable, and in violation
of the First Amendment to the US Constitution, and therefore they ordered that the license plates be produced. 4:18 PM
1/29/2008
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