useapen
2024-03-19 09:35:55 UTC
A majority of the Supreme Court appeared on Monday to embrace arguments by
the National Rifle Association that a New York State official violated the
First Amendment by trying to dissuade companies from doing business with
it after a deadly school shooting.
The dispute, which began after a gunman opened fire in 2018 at Marjory
Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., was one of two cases on
Monday that centered on when government advocacy crosses a line to violate
the Constitutions protection of free speech.
After the shooting, which killed 17 students and staff members, Maria
Vullo, then a superintendent of the New York State Department of Financial
Services, said banks and other insurance companies regulated by her agency
should assess whether they wanted to continue providing services to the
N.R.A.
The gun rights group sued, accusing Ms. Vullo of unlawfully leveraging her
authority as a government official.
It was a campaign by the states highest political officials to use their
power to coerce a boycott of a political advocacy organization because
they disagreed with its advocacy, said David D. Cole, the national legal
director for the American Civil Liberties Union, who argued on behalf of
the N.R.A., adding that the officials actions had cost the group
millions of dollars.
The lawyer for the New York officials, Neal K. Katyal, pushed back,
arguing that state officials were performing their ordinary duties. We
think that it was an exercise of legitimate law enforcement, he said.
Solicitor General Elizabeth B. Prelogar, in a friend-of-the-court brief,
described some of the N.R.A.s claims as plausible, namely that Ms. Vullo
may have crossed a constitutional line by coercing regulated entities to
terminate their business relationships with the N.R.A. in a bid to stifle
the groups advocacy.
But the solicitor general urged the court to reject some of the N.R.A.s
broader arguments, claiming that they would threaten to condemn
legitimate government activity if applied in other, more typical
circumstances.
During oral argument, Ephraim McDowell, assistant to the solicitor
general, drew a distinction between the N.R.A. case and another heard
earlier in the day, on a push by Republican-led states to curb the Biden
administrations efforts to crack down on what it viewed as misinformation
on social media. That case, Murthy v. Missouri, met with a rocky reception
by the justices.
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Like the Murthy case, the N.R.A. argument centered on the line between
coercion and persuasion by government officials. Where to draw that line
appeared to be front and center for the justices.
Theres considerable overlap obviously with the first case, Chief
Justice John G. Roberts Jr. said. Could you articulate what the
significant differences are between your position in this case and the
offices position in the prior case?
Mr. McDowell replied: There are no differences as to the legal
principles. The difference here is that there is a specific coercive
threat.
He was referring to an allegation by the N.R.A. that Ms. Vullo met
privately with the organizations insurance partners and demanded that one
of them, Lloyds of London, stop providing insurance to gun groups,
especially the N.R.A.
Mr. McDowell urged the justices to hinge the First Amendment analysis on
the Lloyds meeting.
Its just a straightforward way of resolving this case, he said.
After Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh repeated to Mr. Katyal that he understood
the government to be arguing that the meeting itself is enough for a
First Amendment violation, he pushed back, contending that the New York
officials were engaged in normal plea bargaining.
If that meeting is enough, Justice Kavanaugh, every meeting, every plea
negotiations enough, Mr. Katyal said. Thats literally what they are.
Theyre done in secret, behind a closed door, to use their insidious
language. Thats the natural give-and-take.
He added that both Ms. Vullo and the governor of New York at the time,
Andrew M. Cuomo, have said things about the N.R.A., but theres nothing
that ties that give-and-take from the Lloyds meeting to the feelings
about the N.R.A.
The case, N.R.A. v. Vullo, No. 22-842, arrived at the Supreme Court after
a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit,
in New York, ruled against the N.R.A., prompting it to petition the
justices for review.
In asking the court to hear the case, the N.R.A. cited what it described
as Ms. Vullos enormous regulatory power. It added that she applied
pressure tactics including back-channel threats, ominous guidance
letters and selective enforcement of regulatory infractions. The
organization warned of the wide-ranging consequences of a ruling against
it, saying that siding with Ms. Vullo would open the door to other
government officials making similar pleas about other hot-button issues
like abortion and the environment.
Ms. Vullo has pushed back against the claim that she undermined the First
Amendment.
In 2017, the Department of Financial Services opened an investigation into
an insurance product known as Carry Guard, which provided coverage for
various issues arising from the use of a firearm, such as personal injury
and criminal defense.
The program was brokered, serviced and underwritten by insurance companies
and included the N.R.A.s name, logo and endorsement.
The Department of Financial Services, which regulates more than 1,400
companies and more than 1,900 financial institutions, concluded that Carry
Guard violated state insurance law, in part, by providing liability
coverage for injury from the wrongful use of a firearm. The department
entered into consent decrees with the insurance groups and imposed civil
penalties.
In February 2018, after the Parkland shooting, the department re-evaluated
the implications of regulated entities relationships with gun-promotion
organizations, according to legal filings for Ms. Vullo.
That spring, the department issued two memos, one to insurance companies
and another to financial institutions, titled Guidance on Risk Management
Relating to the N.R.A. and Similar Gun Promotion Organizations.
The memos encouraged regulated institutions to review any relationships
they have with the N.R.A. or similar gun promotion organizations,
suggesting that they act promptly in the interest of public health and
safety.
The same day, Mr. Cuomo released a statement explaining that he had
directed the department to press insurance companies and other financial
institutions in the state to review any relationships they may have with
the National Rifle Association and other similar organizations.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/18/us/politics/supreme-court-nra-free-
speech.html
the National Rifle Association that a New York State official violated the
First Amendment by trying to dissuade companies from doing business with
it after a deadly school shooting.
The dispute, which began after a gunman opened fire in 2018 at Marjory
Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., was one of two cases on
Monday that centered on when government advocacy crosses a line to violate
the Constitutions protection of free speech.
After the shooting, which killed 17 students and staff members, Maria
Vullo, then a superintendent of the New York State Department of Financial
Services, said banks and other insurance companies regulated by her agency
should assess whether they wanted to continue providing services to the
N.R.A.
The gun rights group sued, accusing Ms. Vullo of unlawfully leveraging her
authority as a government official.
It was a campaign by the states highest political officials to use their
power to coerce a boycott of a political advocacy organization because
they disagreed with its advocacy, said David D. Cole, the national legal
director for the American Civil Liberties Union, who argued on behalf of
the N.R.A., adding that the officials actions had cost the group
millions of dollars.
The lawyer for the New York officials, Neal K. Katyal, pushed back,
arguing that state officials were performing their ordinary duties. We
think that it was an exercise of legitimate law enforcement, he said.
Solicitor General Elizabeth B. Prelogar, in a friend-of-the-court brief,
described some of the N.R.A.s claims as plausible, namely that Ms. Vullo
may have crossed a constitutional line by coercing regulated entities to
terminate their business relationships with the N.R.A. in a bid to stifle
the groups advocacy.
But the solicitor general urged the court to reject some of the N.R.A.s
broader arguments, claiming that they would threaten to condemn
legitimate government activity if applied in other, more typical
circumstances.
During oral argument, Ephraim McDowell, assistant to the solicitor
general, drew a distinction between the N.R.A. case and another heard
earlier in the day, on a push by Republican-led states to curb the Biden
administrations efforts to crack down on what it viewed as misinformation
on social media. That case, Murthy v. Missouri, met with a rocky reception
by the justices.
Editors Picks
This Treasure Hunters Latest Find? A 1,000-Year-Old Viking Sword.
A Seals Spray Adds a Chapter to the Science of Spitting
The Conflict at the Heart of the Galliano Documentary
Like the Murthy case, the N.R.A. argument centered on the line between
coercion and persuasion by government officials. Where to draw that line
appeared to be front and center for the justices.
Theres considerable overlap obviously with the first case, Chief
Justice John G. Roberts Jr. said. Could you articulate what the
significant differences are between your position in this case and the
offices position in the prior case?
Mr. McDowell replied: There are no differences as to the legal
principles. The difference here is that there is a specific coercive
threat.
He was referring to an allegation by the N.R.A. that Ms. Vullo met
privately with the organizations insurance partners and demanded that one
of them, Lloyds of London, stop providing insurance to gun groups,
especially the N.R.A.
Mr. McDowell urged the justices to hinge the First Amendment analysis on
the Lloyds meeting.
Its just a straightforward way of resolving this case, he said.
After Justice Brett M. Kavanaugh repeated to Mr. Katyal that he understood
the government to be arguing that the meeting itself is enough for a
First Amendment violation, he pushed back, contending that the New York
officials were engaged in normal plea bargaining.
If that meeting is enough, Justice Kavanaugh, every meeting, every plea
negotiations enough, Mr. Katyal said. Thats literally what they are.
Theyre done in secret, behind a closed door, to use their insidious
language. Thats the natural give-and-take.
He added that both Ms. Vullo and the governor of New York at the time,
Andrew M. Cuomo, have said things about the N.R.A., but theres nothing
that ties that give-and-take from the Lloyds meeting to the feelings
about the N.R.A.
The case, N.R.A. v. Vullo, No. 22-842, arrived at the Supreme Court after
a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit,
in New York, ruled against the N.R.A., prompting it to petition the
justices for review.
In asking the court to hear the case, the N.R.A. cited what it described
as Ms. Vullos enormous regulatory power. It added that she applied
pressure tactics including back-channel threats, ominous guidance
letters and selective enforcement of regulatory infractions. The
organization warned of the wide-ranging consequences of a ruling against
it, saying that siding with Ms. Vullo would open the door to other
government officials making similar pleas about other hot-button issues
like abortion and the environment.
Ms. Vullo has pushed back against the claim that she undermined the First
Amendment.
In 2017, the Department of Financial Services opened an investigation into
an insurance product known as Carry Guard, which provided coverage for
various issues arising from the use of a firearm, such as personal injury
and criminal defense.
The program was brokered, serviced and underwritten by insurance companies
and included the N.R.A.s name, logo and endorsement.
The Department of Financial Services, which regulates more than 1,400
companies and more than 1,900 financial institutions, concluded that Carry
Guard violated state insurance law, in part, by providing liability
coverage for injury from the wrongful use of a firearm. The department
entered into consent decrees with the insurance groups and imposed civil
penalties.
In February 2018, after the Parkland shooting, the department re-evaluated
the implications of regulated entities relationships with gun-promotion
organizations, according to legal filings for Ms. Vullo.
That spring, the department issued two memos, one to insurance companies
and another to financial institutions, titled Guidance on Risk Management
Relating to the N.R.A. and Similar Gun Promotion Organizations.
The memos encouraged regulated institutions to review any relationships
they have with the N.R.A. or similar gun promotion organizations,
suggesting that they act promptly in the interest of public health and
safety.
The same day, Mr. Cuomo released a statement explaining that he had
directed the department to press insurance companies and other financial
institutions in the state to review any relationships they may have with
the National Rifle Association and other similar organizations.
https://www.nytimes.com/2024/03/18/us/politics/supreme-court-nra-free-
speech.html