Wednesday, November 25, 2020

California can’t enforce a ban on vanity license plates it considers “offensive to good taste and decency” because that violates freedom of speech, a U.S. District Judge ruled


(Above the rim) (thanks Bob!)

 U.S. District Judge Jon Tigar ruled in a case filed in March against Department of Motor Vehicles Director Steve Gordon on behalf of five Californians who were denied permission to put their messages on personalized license plates.

They included a gay man in Oakland who owns Queer Folks Records and wanted to use the word “QUEER” but was refused because the DMV said that might be considered insulting; a fan of the rock band Slayer who was notified that “SLAAYRR” would be considered “threatening, aggressive or hostile” and an Army veteran who wanted to note his nickname and love of wolves with “OGWOOLF” but was refused because the DMV said the OG might be construed as a reference to “original gangster.”

Others were refused because their plates might look or sound like a swear word or might be construed as sexual, according to the judge’s ruling.

Citing U.S. Supreme Court free-speech cases, the judge struck down a DMV standard that said vanity license plate configurations can’t carry “connotations offensive to good taste and decency.”

The judge said the personalized messages were types of personal expression, not “government speech,” and therefore regulations governing them “must be both viewpoint-neutral and reasonable.”


He noted a 2017 U.S. Supreme Court case allowing an Asian American rock band to call itself The Slants in saying that public speech can’t be barred because it may offend some people.

However, Tigar said the DMV probably could be permitted to deny plates that are, for instance, obscene, profane or contain hate speech because they fall outside of First Amendment protections.

 “This is a great day for our clients and the 250,000 Californians that seek to express their messages on personalized license plates each year,” attorney Wen Fa of the Pacific Legal Foundation, which filed the lawsuit, said in a statement. “Vague bans on offensive speech allow bureaucrats to inject their subjective preferences and undermine the rule of law.”

https://www.mercurynews.com/2020/11/25/judge-california-cant-ban-offensive-license-plates/

2 comments:

  1. ABVTHRM = Above The Rim, because basketball. On a related note: I built a motorcycle using an engine built by British John A Prestwich company. The engine has JAP cast into the cam cover in large letters. I registered it in Oregon as a 1936 JAP. Got a title and registration that says 1936 JAP. Then I applied for a vanity plate that said JAP and got a nasty letter from the DMV telling me they don't issue racist plates. But apparently "racist" titles and registrations are ok.

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    1. I know the JAP cyclercar, and have posted about the JAP engine, and the cycle car, 5 times.
      If DMV paper pushers would allow an explanation area so people could elaborate on what their cryptic 7 digit abbreviation meant?
      This would be a better country to live in

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