CAPFlyer, you got some of that right, and of course you're entitled to your opinion on some other points. Factually, however, what the court found was that:
(1) Lying about having received military decorations IS punishable as fraud or defamation if it meets the other critera for being fraud or decoration. There is no need to outlaw lying about a particular subject matter to enforce these laws.
(2) Lying about having received military decorations is not a serious problem outside of the areas, such as fraud, where it is already illegal. It may cause emotional offense to some, but free speech rights almost always trump that amorphous type of harm. There is no evidence that it harms the prestige of those who really were decorated, any more than the same defendant's lies about having played hockey for the Detroit Red Wings harm the prestige of the Red Wings. In most cases of lying there is no legally cognizable harm to the public at large, or really to anyone. Being deceived, without more, is not being harmed.
(3) The law didn't have enough limits and criteria -- that was its problem. If you claimed you won a medal to a woman at a bar to get her to sleep with you, that was a federal crime. If you whispered it to your 8-year-old grandson, federal crime. The court suggested that a more limited statute might be constitutional.
(4) The govt is required to consider less restrictive alternatives before legislating a content-based restriction on speech. Anyone with a smartphone can check the veracity of someone's claim to have been received the MoH in minutes, anytime, anywhere. The court pointed out that the govt could make this even easier by posting an official database rather than people having to check private databases. Anyway, in today's information age, anyone making a false claim of this kind is unmasked almost immediately, as this defendant was.
(5) The decision sticks with precedent in that the constitution hasn't permitted content-based restrictions on speech unless it seems very likely to injure people in a material way (e.g. child porrnn, with its potential for commercial exploitation of kids, even kidnapping, slavery etc.) or incite physical violence (e.g. fighting words).
As the court said, the govt has an interest in protecting the honor of those who fought for the country, but it must do so in ways consistent with the freedoms for which they fought.
August
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