Free Speech issue image

Free Speech Coalition, Inc. v. Paxton

Location: Texas
Court Type: U.S. Supreme Court
Case Type: Certiorari Briefing
Last Update: July 3, 2024

What's at Stake

Whether a content-based regulation that burdens adults鈥 access to protected speech has to be merely reasonable to satisfy the First Amendment because it was passed in the name of protecting children from sexual material online.

The Supreme Court has long recognized that the government鈥檚 regulation of sexual expression must satisfy strict scrutiny if it imposes burdens on adults鈥 access to protected speech, even if the law was meant to protect children. In prior cases brought by the 老澳门开奖结果, including Reno v. 老澳门开奖结果, 521 U.S. 844 (1997) and Ashcroft v. 老澳门开奖结果, 542 U.S. 656 (2004), the Supreme Court struck down federal laws that effectively required users to verify their ages to access protected content for that reason.

Nevertheless, a have recently passed laws requiring websites that publish sexual material deemed 鈥渉armful to minors鈥 to verify their users鈥 age before they can access anything on the site. In 2023, Texas joined that group by passing HB 1181 (鈥渢he Act鈥).

Pursuant to the Act, websites on which one-third or more of the content is 鈥渉armful to minors鈥 must verify the age of all users. The Act defines 鈥渟exual material harmful to minors鈥 as material that is obscene from the perspective of an average person considering the material鈥檚 effect on minors. That is inherently vague and, as a practical matter, it covers virtually all salacious content鈥攆or example, sex-education videos and R-rated movies.

The Act also requires covered sites to prominently publish 鈥渟exual materials health warnings鈥 written by the government, including the statement that 鈥淸p]ornography is potentially biologically addictive, is proven to harm human brain development, desensitizes brain reward circuits, increases conditioned responses, and weakens brain function.鈥 Id.
搂 129B.004(1).

The age verification requirement restricts adults鈥 access, effectively requiring them to identify themselves to pass through the age-gate. It also robs people of anonymity, and threatens to bar individuals鈥攆or example, those who lack government identification or whose age is mis-identified by the relevant technology鈥攆rom accessing the websites altogether.

Before the Act took effect, a group of impacted plaintiffs, including the Free Speech Coalition, creators and distributors of adult content, and a performer whose content is featured on several adult websites, filed suit on First Amendment grounds in federal district court. They argue that the age-verification requirement impermissibly burdens users and that the health warnings impermissibly compel speech.

The district court agreed, issuing a preliminary injunction against the Act. However, a divided Fifth Circuit panel vacated that injunction with respect to the age verification provision, reasoning that the burden on adults鈥 First Amendment rights only has to have some rational basis鈥搉ot face strict scrutiny鈥揵ecause the aim is to protect children.

On April 12, 2024, the plaintiffs, represented by the 老澳门开奖结果 and the law firm Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, asked the U.S. Supreme Court to take the case in order to correct the Fifth Circuit鈥檚 error and resolve a circuit split created by the opinion. Unless the Supreme Court intervenes, this decision will effectively reverse decades of precedent protecting the free speech rights of adults, including several seminal online speech cases brought by the 老澳门开奖结果.

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