Please
take a moment to visit and log in at the subscriber area, and
submit your city & country location. We will use this information in
future to invite you to any events that we organize in your area.
Danish Supreme Court Acquits Hedegaard
by Ann Snyder • Apr 21, 2012 at
8:24 pm
On April 20, 2012 in a 7-0 decision, the
Danish Supreme Court acquitted Lars Hedegaard of violating Article 266(b),
the infamous "hate speech" provision of the Danish penal code.
Hedegaard's case has been winding its way
through the courts for some time now. Readers will recall that he was
first acquitted
and then retried
and convicted—a decision he appealed
to the country's highest court.
By its plain language,
Article 266(b) requires that for statements to be actionable under the
provision, they must be made "publicly or with the intent of public
dissemination." Finding no such intent to publicly disseminate,
the court concluded there was no basis for convicting him and hence no reason
to remand the case for further proceedings. Thus, the Supreme Court's
decision brings to a close Hedegaard's two-year ordeal.
While congratulations are in order for
Hedegaard in his personal victory and for his lawyer, Karoly NĂ©meth, for his
deft handling of the case, the court's decision leaves Article 266(b)
intact—meaning that this is anything but a decided victory for free
speech. The Supreme Court, unlike the appellate court where Hedegaard
was convicted, merely applied the law as written. Private speech
or speech without the requisite intent to disseminate is protected.
Public remarks, however, on the very same subjects remain fair game under the
law if they are otherwise determined to violate the rather sweeping language
of the provision.
There is also the issue that it is the
process—being dragged through the courts—that is part of the punishment under
provisions like 266(b) and allows for speech-chilling abuse. Finally
acquitted, Hedegaard went through three legal proceedings before being
vindicated. And then there is the uncomfortable fact that he was prosecuted
in the first place given the facts in his case.
In a piece released by the editors of Sappho
(in Danish), Hedegaard is reported to have said:
My personal reaction to more than two years
of fatiguing litigation is to demand written guarantees from people who want
to talk to me. With their signatures they must confirm that nothing be
passed on without my express approval and without me having a chance to vet
it. This goes for whether people are journalists or not. I would
advise everybody to do the same for we all know that the prosecutor lies in
wait.
That is no way to live in a purportedly
"free" society. Article 266(b) and its ilk must be
excised from Western laws once and for all.
This text may be reposted or forwarded so long as it is
presented as an integral whole with complete information provided about its
author, date, place of publication, and original URL.
|
||||
To subscribe to this list, go to http://www.legal-project.org/list_subscribe.php
|
Monday, April 23, 2012
Danish Supreme Court Acquits Hedegaard
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment