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The Supreme Court Of The United States

Essay, Research Paper


The Supreme Court of the United States is the highest court of the judic


ial branch of the United States government. Many of the cases that make it to


the supreme court are based on rights set forth by the Bill of Rights. The Bil


l of Rights is comprised of the first ten amendments to the United States Consti


tution, and is what this nation was founded upon. The first of these amendment


s deals with freedoms given to the people, one of these freedoms being Freedom o


f the Press. This freedom gives organizations the right to print and publish


what they want without being told what they can and can’t publish by the governm


ent. There are of course restrictions to this such as “prior restraint” which i


s the government’s right to censor material beforehand that it does not want pub


lished, because it would compromise national security (Bender, 136). Prior rest


raint was found unconstitutional in the Near v. Minnesota case of 1931. In this


case the court ruled that an injunction to stop publication of a newspaper with


objectionable material was an example of prior restraint and therefore unconsti


tutional (Bender, 136). This became known as the due process clause of the 14th


amendment to the constitution. Another part of Freedom of the Press is the rig


ht for people to be able to read books, and not have books removed from a public


place because certain people feel they are inappropriate (Cantwell, 34).


There are two cases that clearly show these two points, and how the Supr


eme Court used its power to solve them. One of these cases is New York Times Co


mpany v. United States in 1971 which is also k This case shows how the Supreme Court used its position as


the top court to rul


e against the United States executive branch (Bender, 137). Another case is Boa


rd of Education, Island Trees School District v. Pico in 1982. This case had to


do with book censorship in a public high school library by the school board of


that school (Gold, 17).


The Supreme Court has had many cases dealing with free speech, and how t


he government has tried to prevent the people from seeing certain pieces of info


rmation. One such example of the Supreme Court dealing was the New York Times v


. United States case which took place in 1971. This case was brought up by the


United States after top secret documents from the Pentagon, known as the Pentago


n Papers, were leaked to the New York Times and Washington Post (Bender, 132).


These documents contained information about the military presence in Vietnam tha


t the U.S. government felt was a risk to national security if known by its enemi


es, and therefore only 15 copies of these documents were produced. Daniel Ellsb


erg, was a high level Pentagon researcher who had legal access to the documents


because he was involved in compiling and editing the Pentagon Papers. Ellsberg


made a photocopy of these documents and gave them to Neil Sheehan of the New Yor


k Times. Once the Times had these papers, they set a team of reporters to write


articles about the U.S. involvement in Vietnam based on the information contain


ed in the documents. A short time later, the same Daniel Ellsberg gave parts of


the Pentagon Papers to the Washington Post, and that paper wrote articles about


nown as the Pentagon Papers case.


The federal government objected to the publication in daily newspapers o


f these documents which it had deemed top secret. The government claimed that d


istribution of the material in the Pentagon Papers would be damaging to the nati


onal security of the United States and to its soldiers in Vietnam. Therefore th


e government brought legal action against the New York Times and the Washington


Post to stop them from publishing articles about this sensitive material (ACLU).


Representatives of the Times said the federal government’s attempt to st


op the publication of these articles about the Pentagon Papers was an example of


prior restraint. The Times contended that this would be a violation of freedom


of the press, which is guaranteed in the first Amendment. The federal governme


nt’s side of the argument was that the publication of this top secret informatio


n would put the lives of soldiers in danger, and give assistance during wartime


to enemies of the United States (Bender, 139).


This case was argued in front of the Supreme Court on June 26, 1971, a r


ecord of only 17 days after the conflict first arose with the publication of thi


s material, and only 15 days after the first judge heard the case (Zeinert, 43).


The verdict came four days later on June 30, 1971, when the court ruled 6-3 in


The justices in the majority were, Justice Black, Justice Douglas, Justi


ce Brennan, Justice Stewart, Justice White, and Justice Marshall. Each of these


Justices felt that for one reason or another freedom of speech was more importa


nt than national security in this case, although leaving open the option that in


other cases, national security could end up being more important than freedom o


f speech. Justice Douglas wrote “The First Amendment provides that ‘Congress sh


all make no law… abridging the freedom of speech or of the press.’ That leave


s, in my view, no room for governmental restraint on the press.” (Findlaw) Just


ice Brennan thought the government might properly restrain the press in certain


clear emergencies. But the circumstances of this case did not present such an e


mergency, Brennan argued, that there should have been no injunctive restraint.


The government sought the injunction on the grounds that the publication ‘could,


‘ ‘might,’ or ‘may’ damage national security (Findlaw).


The dissenters, Chief Justice Burger, Justice Harlan, and Justice Blackm


un, all lamented the haste with which the case had been decided. They contested


that the press did not deserve absolute protection from prior restraint. Burge


r said that the exception which might permit prior restraint “may be lurking in


these cases and would have been flushed had they been properly considered in the


trial courts, free from the unwarranted deadlaw) Justice Harlan still had many questions which he wanted


answered and woul


d have sent this case back to the lower courts for further hearings, during whic


h time he would have continued the temporary restraining order on the publicatio


n of these materials to remain in effect. Harlan said “he could not believe that


the doctrine prohibiting prior restraints reaches to the point of preventing co


urts from maintaining the status quo long enough to act responsibly in matters o


f such national importance.” (Findlaw)


The Supreme Court decision in this case was a clear defeat for advocates of prio


r restraint under conditions of wartime or other national crisis. The decision


also encouraged the media in their efforts to check federal government officials


or hold them accountable by obtaining and publishing information that the gover


nment wants to keep away from the public’s view.


The debate over freedom of the press is brought up again in the Supreme


Court case of Board of Education, Island Trees v. Pico. This case deals with th


e issue of banned books in a public high school library, and the right to censor


what people can and cannot read. This case began on the night of November 7, 1


975 when two members of the district’s school board walked out of the meeting an


d into the school library. These two school board members, Frank Martin, and th


e school board president Richard Ahrens, went and removed a total of 11 books fr


om the library and other rooms in the school (Gold, 17).


dlines and frenetic pressures.” (Fin


Three months later after a regularly scheduled school board meeting certain scho


ol board members met with the superintendent of the school district, Richard Mor


row. The school board members demanded that these books, which had since been r


eplaced back in the school, be removed again so that the school board members ca


n read them and decide weather they should be kept off the shelves or not. Morr


ow told them that he did not agree with their action, and told them to follow a


policy they had previously agreed upon for reviewing books in times like this.


Nonetheless the books were removed and brought to Morrow’s office, as he still h


oped to get the board members to allow the books to be placed back on the shelve


s (Gold, 22).


The eleven books that had been removed from the school were Slaughterhouse Five


by Kurt Vonnegut; The Fixer by Bernard Malamud; The Naked Ape bye Desmond Morris


; Down These Mean Streets by Piri Thomas; Best Short Stories by Negro Writers, e


dited by Langston Hughes; A Hero Ain’t Nothing but a Sandwich by Alice Childress


; Soul on Ice bye Eldridge Cleaver; A Reader for Writers, edited by Jerome Arche


r; Go Ask Alice, author anonymous; Laughing Boy by Oliver LaFarge; and Black Boy


by Richard Wright (Gold, 13)


These books remained banned, and this issue ballooned in the amount of p


ublicity over it. It got to the point where on January 4, 1977 five students ba


cked by the NYCLU filed a lawsuit against the school board in New York State Sup


reme Court. The five students that filed the suit against the school board were


Steven A. Pico, the president of the senior class; Jacqueline Gold; Russell Rie


ger; Glenn Yarris; as well as Paul Sochinski from the junior high school. Pico,


Rieger, and Gold were on the staff of the school newspaper, the Bulldog (Gold,


37).


In their lawsuit, the students claimed the school board members removed


the nine books because particular passages in the books “offended their social,


political, and moral tastes.” (Zeinert, 67). They said this was not a lawful re


ason for banning the books. The lawsuit went on to claim that the board had vio


lated the students’ First Amendment rights. It asked the court to declare the b


ook removal unconstitutional. It also asked the judge to order the board to ret


urn the books to school, where they had been before the removal (Gold, 40).


After this case made its way through the State court level, which the sc


hool board won, and the federal court level, which the students won, the school


board appealed its case to the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court heard the case


on March 2, 1982 at their building in Washington D.C. Their decision came in on


June 25, 1982 when they voted 5-4 that the school board must replace the books i


t had removed nearly 7 years earlier (Findlaw).


The majority opinion for this case was written by Justice Brennan, who s


aid that there were two questions that needed to be answered in this case. Firs


t, did the First Amendment impose limitations on the school board’s authority to


remove these books? And if it did, did the book ban exceed those imitations? H


is stance was that the First Amendment does limit the school board’s authority t


o remove books from the school. He also argued that although school boards have


control over school curriculum and educational policy, that control must not vi


olate constitutional rights, in this case, the First Amendment. He noted this p


recedent was set in the Barnette case. Along with him, Justices Blackmun, White


, Stevens, and Marshall agreed with the Pico side of this case (Findlaw).


In the dissenting opinion written by Justice Burger he argued that becau


se the books could be found outside the school library, the school board ban did


not prevent the students from reading them. Burger also said that the school w


as also not obligated to provide access to the books, and that there was no diff


erence between removing a book and not acquiring one. The school board has the


full right not to acquire a book for its school’s library, and therefore should


have the full right to remove one. His feeling that the school board should hav


e been victorious was shared by Justices Powell, Rehnquist, and O’Connor (Findla


w).


354

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