Back before the internet made it so easy to find a
celebrity鈥檚 age, a 29-year-old actress landed the role of a 17-year-old
girl鈥攁nd helped propel 鈥淏everly Hills 90210鈥 into a hit TV show in the 1990s.
That was the story actress Gabrielle Carteris听听as she lobbied for a
bill to strip actors鈥 ages from commercial websites used in casting. Now the
president of the Screen Actors Guild, Carteris said she would never have been
able to land the career-making role today because of websites like IMDB.com
that publish actors鈥 ages. In response, lawmakers鈥攕weeping aside First
Amendment concerns that the government doesn鈥檛 have the right to keep anyone
from publishing information such as a birth date鈥攁pproved听, and the governor signed it into law.
That law is now being challenged in federal court with a
lawsuit that says it amounts to unconstitutional censorship. It鈥檚 one of a
handful of policies to come out of the Democratic-controlled Legislature that
limit unfettered speech鈥攕ome of them prompted by pressure from liberal allies
such as the actors鈥 labor union and Planned Parenthood.
And when the state has to defend them, taxpayers wind up
footing the bill.
鈥淭he government tries to restrict speech in order to serve
whatever it sees as important goals,鈥 said Eugene Volokh, a law professor at
University of California, Los Angeles, one of several First Amendment scholars
who signed an听听supporting IMDB.com in its听听over AB 1687.听
鈥淯sually free speech prevails, even against worthy
government goals.鈥
In this case, the 鈥渨orthy鈥 goal was the Legislature鈥檚 desire
to shield actors from being discriminated against as they age. Assemblyman Ian
Calderon, the Whittier Democrat who wrote AB 1687, said his bill does that
without violating the Constitution.
鈥淭he Legislature isn鈥檛 looking to censor anyone or anything
just because we think we can,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about protecting an industry that
is large in this state, that is homegrown to this state, and the folks that
work within it.鈥
A different case Volokh litigated last year, on behalf of a
gun-rights group called the Firearms Policy Coalition, challenged the听听that prohibits
rebroadcasting public video footage of its proceedings 鈥渇or any political or
commercial purpose.鈥 The firearms group wanted to use government video clips in
political ads, and argued that the prohibition infringed on its right to free
speech. The Legislature defended the rule, saying it was meant to keep
lawmakers from grandstanding.
A federal court judge ripped that argument apart in a听听that said the Assembly鈥檚
rule violated the First Amendment.听
鈥淥ne person鈥檚 鈥榞randstanding鈥 is another鈥檚 鈥榩assionate
debate.鈥 In other words, 鈥榞randstanding鈥 is simply 鈥榮peech鈥 by another name.
The State鈥檚 interest in preventing such speech is far from compelling,鈥 wrote
U.S. District Court Judge Morrison England.
The Legislature then听听repealing the prohibition on
rebroadcasting public video footage.
First Amendment concerns were also raised last year as the
Legislature debated a bill inspired by the revelation of secretly recorded
videos of a Planned Parenthood executive. State law already forbids secret
recordings; the bill made it an additional crime to distribute a 鈥渃onfidential
communication with a health care provider.鈥
Lobbyists for the news media feared the bill would inhibit a
free press. Publishers and other First Amendment advocates听听for amendments that prevent news
organizations from being prosecuted for distributing undercover videos they did
not record.
Still, legislative staffers flagged the potential for a
lawsuit in their听, writing that there could be
鈥減otentially significant future costs for litigation鈥 to the extent the
provisions of this measure face constitutional challenges under the First
Amendment.鈥 Nonetheless, the bill was approved and signed into law in
September.
First Amendment advocates in Sacramento expect their
challenges to continue as the media landscape shifts with the evolution of
technology.
鈥淭he internet is a wild west of free speech issues,鈥 said
Nikki Moore, a lawyer for the California Newspaper Publishers Association. 鈥淚
don鈥檛 expect this to be a dying trend.鈥
Case in point: Democratic lawmakers have already听听inspired by the 鈥渇ake news鈥
phenomenon that emerged during presidential campaign. Assembly Bill 155 and
Senate Bill 135 call on education officials to craft lessons teaching students
to discern which online news stories are trustworthy.
Free speech advocates will be watching to see if Democrats鈥
response to the latest liberal听cause celebre听escalates into a
constitutional violation.
听
This article originally appeared at .