Obama signs HR 347 and makes free speech a felony

Lumi

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Obama signs HR 347 and makes free speech a felony

By Rainmaker, on March 13th, 2012


One more piece of legislation approved overwhelmingly, HR 347, which passed the House by a vote of 399-3 and the Senate by unanimous consent before Obama signed it last Thursday, is completely ignored by the MSM AND THE PUBLIC. Since these are our elected officials, perhaps we need new officials?

HR 347 explained:

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/voKh-nahhcE" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>

More from Judge Napolitano:

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Duff Miver

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Fox "News" :facepalm:

Free speech is alive and well. It remains guaranteed by the Constitution.*

You may say what you like, however - the Constitution does not require anyone to hear what you say.

*What Fox "News" fails to understand is that the First Amendment does not protect speech which is intended to mislead and defraud, or to slander. That sort of speech is criminal.

Rock on, Judge Neo-woppo.
 

Skulnik

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Fox "News" :facepalm:

Free speech is alive and well. It remains guaranteed by the Constitution.*

You may say what you like, however - the Constitution does not require anyone to hear what you say.

*What Fox "News" fails to understand is that the First Amendment does not protect speech which is intended to mislead and defraud, or to slander. That sort of speech is criminal.

Rock on, Judge Neo-woppo.

Duff, you're discribing MSNBC.

Nuff Said

:0074
 

Lumi

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Aug 30, 2002
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Fox "News" :facepalm:

Free speech is alive and well. It remains guaranteed by the Constitution.*

You may say what you like, however - the Constitution does not require anyone to hear what you say.

*What Fox "News" fails to understand is that the First Amendment does not protect speech which is intended to mislead and defraud, or to slander. That sort of speech is criminal.

Rock on, Judge Neo-woppo.

Your knee jerk, or whatever it is you jerk? :shrug: reaction whenever the source is Fox, is to discard the information.

So,

Here is something from Arianna:

HR 347 'Trespass Bill' Criminalizes Protest



As I write this op-ed, I primp for the mirror -- looking for the most flattering pose -- for my mug shot. Now, don't get the wrong impression; I haven't been arrested and charged with a federal felony -- yet. Nor is the preparation done in anticipation of a guest stint on "America's Next Top Model" -- but as a common sense reaction to Obama's predictable signing of the latest assault on the Bill of Rights -- namely -- H.R. 347 (and it's companion senate bill S. 1794); aka the "Federal Restricted Buildings and Grounds Improvement Act of 2011." Sounding more like an appropriations bill authorizing monies for federal grounds landscaping -- this bill, better known to those in the DC beltway as the 'Trespass Bill' -- potentially makes peaceable protest anywhere in the U.S. a federal felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

The legislators responsible for bringing this legislative excrement to life are Representative Tom Rooney (R-Fla.) in the House of Representatives and Senator Richard Blumenthal (D-CT.) leading the Senate version.

H. R. 347 makes protest of any type potentially a federal offense with anywhere from a year to 10 years in federal prison, providing it occurs in the presence of elites brandishing Secret Service protection, or during an officially defined 'National Special Security Event' (NSSE). NSSEs , ( an invention of Bill Clinton) are events which have been deemed worthy of Secret Service protection, which previously received no such treatment. Justified through part of 'Presidential Decision Directive 62 in 1998; Bill Clinton created an additional class of special events explicitly under the authority of the U.S. Secret Service.

Past NSSE events included the funerals of Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan, and the national security concern that was Superbowl XXXVI. Other NSSE protected events include the Academy Awards and the 2008 Democratic and Republican National Conventions. I suppose presidential candidates, no matter how insane they may be are deserving as much security protection as Brad and Angelina's sex life. The dangerous part of this 'executive order' lies not in the triviality of a SuperBowl receiving taxpayer funded Secret Service protection -- but in the convenience manufactured for any President desperate to hide deliberations of groups like the G-8, the G-20 and the World Trade Organization. The classification of such events as NSSE -- insures the rich and powerful against any pesky accountability or transparency to the unwashed minions -- namely the US public. HR 347 & S. 1794 insulates such events as the G-8, WTO and presidential conventions against tough questions and politically justified protests.

The House vote tally which took place 02/28/12, was 338 for and 3 against. The three dissenters were Rep.Paul Broun R-Georgia, Rep. Justin Amash R-Michigan and Rep. Keith Ellison D-Minnesota. Rep. Ron Paul was reported earlier as having voted against the bill, but that was based on the original vote conducted 02/28/11. Rep. Ron Paul ABSTAINED on the final vote.

Rep. Amash explains:

... Current law makes it illegal to enter or remain in an area where certain government officials (more particularly, those with Secret Service protection) will be visiting temporarily if and only if the person knows it's illegal to enter the restricted area but does so anyway. The bill expands current law to make it a crime to enter or remain in an area where an official is visiting even if the person does not know it's illegal to be in that area and has no reason to suspect its illegal. (It expands the law by changing "willfully and knowingly" to just "knowingly" with respect to the mental state required to be charged with a crime.​

Amash is correct in noting that the omission of the word "willfully" represents an unfair burden to the citizen. In legalese, this omission creates a situation where anyone can be charged with a federal felony for 'trespassing' on grounds shared by a person or group receiving Secret Service protection (including NSSE's); EVEN IF THE 'TRESPASSER' HAD NO KNOWLEDGE OF SUCH PROTECTED PERSONS BEING PRESENT. In theory, anyplace where there is a protest could also be the setting for mass felony charges against constitutionally protected behavior such as the right to protest.

So, Amash as one of the three dissenters has no problem with criminalizing protest on the 'royal' grounds of the Congress or the White House, or even a hotel hosting a fundraiser where legislative aristocracy are protected by the Secret Service -- his objection lies with the average tourist unwittingly stumbling onto 'hallowed' ground occupied by legally anointed royalty from our government.
This bill can be found in pdf form here.

Rooney's defense ...

Rooney's communication director, Michael Mahaffey dismissed any concerns about civil liberties violations caused by H.R. 347 as..."a whole lot of kerfuffle over nothing. This (HR 347) doesn't affect anyone's right to protest anywhere at any time. Ever."

Mahaffey further added that this bill is nothing more than a benign 'DC-centric update' of Section 1752 of title 18, United States Code, designed to safeguard persons under Secret Service protection. Blandly attributing HR 347 as an extension of that protection to the DC area (where such protections fall under the scope of local trespassing ordinances) -- Mahaffey explained that "... right now it's not a federal violation to jump the fence and run across the White House lawn, this bill makes it a federal violation."

Mahaffey further claimed that this change was requested by the Secret Service itself.

To his credit Mahaffey did answer my inquiry with a carefully worded email, explaining further that this bill only offers consistent protection for those requiring Secret Service details such as the President, Vice-President. (Source: http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/BILLS-112hr347enr/pdf/BILLS-112hr347enr.pdf) Neither Rooney or Mahaffey actually answered my question regarding legal precedent, legal case citations, and associated theories. We are merely supposed to take their word for it.

The problem with Rep. Rooney's response via Michael Mahaffey lies in the very nature of protest. Mahaffey claims that this bill does not trample the constitutionally protected right to protest -- yet the bill itself criminalizes 'disruptive conduct' in such vague terms that a 7th grader disrupting visiting dignitaries receiving Secret Service protection, over any issue -- (no matter how trivial), such as school uniforms -- would be potentially guilty of a federal felony. What Rooney, and so many government elites cynically ignore is the very nature of protest. Protest in its very nature, is intended to disrupt government business as usual, for without such disruption the protest would be as effective as a leaky condom.

Both Amash and Rooney refuse to recognize the constitutionally messy, disruptive right to protest, to petition a government for redress of grievances. Meanwhile, this Congress and this President have established themselves as self-appointed aristocrats and monarchs, with this bill representing a legislative Maginot Line separating Congress, the President and the corporations who appear to own them -- from the rest of us rabble. Amash's offering is tantamount to an obese glutton offering crumbs to the starving -- symbolically empty and useless.

No response has been received by the Senate sponsor of HR 347's companion bill Senate Bill 1794, Senator Blumenthal. In fact, this bill was passed in the Senate by 'unanimous consent,' which is significant in terms of senatorial accountability and transparency. To quote www.govtrack.us:

"... This bill passed in the Senate by unanimous consent. A record of each senator's position was not kept." How very convenient for each senator that their position was never recorded -- anywhere. No accountability and certainly no transparency. Here is the link to the House vote record.

You can contact any member of the U.S. Senate regarding their vote and the lack of transparency on such an important issue.

Though a majority of Senate business is dispensed with using 'unanimous consent' -- it is inherently troubling that our Senators view the dismissal of our basic right to 'peaceably assembly' as inconsequential.

In this age of ever increasing police militarization and shrinking civil liberties both here at home and worldwide; the U.S. government under President Obama has morphed into a third Bush term. No longer content to stonewall the public with empty slogans issuing from 'empty suits' -- the political class has degraded to writing obviously illegitimate 'laws' in a desperate attempt to crush any dissent.

As this bill made its way through the illustrious halls of Congress -- no open discussion was entertained for an entire year. Not a single member of Congress spoke out against this obscenity. Not a single member of Congress alerted the press. Not a single member of Congress contacted legal advocacy groups such as the ACLU, Bill of Rights Defense Committee or the National Lawyer's Guild. The silence deafening -- if not conspiratorial.

Just this past year the President who campaigned on 'hope' and 'change'--announced some galling changes -- with Congress (for the most part) rubber stamping each and every death blow to the Bill of Rights. President Obama has claimed the right to declare anyone a 'terrorist' or 'terrorist sympathizer' based on nothing more than presidential opinion, and order their assassination. No evidence is required -- at least that the public can see. We are told to blissfully 'trust' our public officials even when they are unworthy of such trust. Now our right to protest, to be disruptive -- has been criminalized as a federal felony.

Perhaps Congress and the President will find their inner patriot and reverse this rape of our rights. It could happen. By the way -- can anyone pass the Prozac?
 

Lumi

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Inside that new anti-Occupy bill

HR 347 is drawing fire -- but many of its shameful restrictions already exist


In recent days, there has been a considerable amount of online speculation over a bill that made its way through the House and the Senate last week with little opposition ? HR 347, or the Federal Restricted Buildings and Grounds Improvement Act of 2011. Some have decried it as specifically anti-Occupy legislation with the aim to further curtail First Amendment rights. HR 347 makes it a prosecutable offense to knowingly, and without lawful authority, enter ?(1) the White House or its grounds or the Vice President?s official residence or its grounds, (2) a building or grounds where the President or other person protected by the Secret Service is or will be temporarily visiting, or (3) a building or grounds so restricted due to a special event of national significance.?
This would, of course, include the areas restricted in Chicago for the NATO summit and Camp David for the G-8. However, concerns focusing solely on the passing of HR 347 seem to be a red herring of sorts, as most of its content has long been enshrined into law.
The new bill specifically addresses certain trespassing violations in D.C., which currently do not fall under the remit of federal law (i.e., HR 347 now makes it a federal issue if you trespass onto White House grounds). The only other significant change in the bill is a shift in language, which will make it easier to prosecute those who are found to unlawfully have entered these restricted areas. The law used to say that the person must have entered the area ?knowingly? and ?willfully.? HR 347, however, scrapped the ?willfully,? which essentially now renders it a crime to remain in a restricted area, even if you do not know that it?s illegal for you to be there.
?By striking out ?willfully? they make it easier to prosecute under ?knowingly,?? explained Mara Verheyden-Hilliard, executive director of the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund. She noted with some exasperation that the campaigns focusing energies against HR 347 miss the bigger, ongoing fight for basic free speech and threats to it, as this specific law is only an amendment to laws that were primarily established in 2006. For Verheyden-Hilliard, HR 347 is best understood as the government ?looking at the tools in their arsenal and polishing them up? in time for major, protest-drawing summits and political conventions this year.
This is not to say that free speech issues raised by HR 347′s passage should be ignored, but rather contextualized against a backdrop where protest and dissent are already consistently treated as illegal.

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