http://ic.net/~sberaha/baker.html
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
SOUTHERN DIVISION
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Plaintiff,
v. Criminal No. 95-80106
Honorable Avern Cohn
JAKE BAKER and ARTHUR GONDA,
Defendants.
___________________________________/
OPINION
"It is not the policy of the law to punish those unsuccessful threats which it
is not presumed would terrify ordinary persons excessively; and there is so much
opportunity for magnifying or misunderstanding undefined menaces that probably
as much mischief would be caused by letting them be prosecuted as by refraining
from it."
The People v. B. F. Jones, 62 Mich. 304 (1886).
I. Introduction
This is a criminal prosecution under 18 U.S.C. ¤ 875(c). Defendant Jake Baker
(Baker) is charged in a superseding indictment with five counts of transmitting
threats to injure or kidnap another, in electronic mail (e-mail) messages
transmitted via the Internet.[1] Now before the Court is Baker's motion to quash
the superseding indictment.[2] For the reasons that follow, the motion will be
granted.
II. Background
The e-mail messages that form the basis of the charges in this case were
exchanged in December, 1994 between Baker in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and defendant
Arthur Gonda (Gonda), who sent and received e-mail through a computer in
Ontario, Canada. Gonda's identity and whereabouts are unknown. The messages
excerpted in the superseding indictment are drawn from a larger e-mail exchange
between Gonda and Baker began on November 29, 1994, and ended on January 25,
1995. The specific language of the messages excerpted in the superseding
indictment will be discussed in detail below. They all express a sexual interest
in violence against women and girls.
Baker first appeared before a United States Magistrate Judge on a criminal
complaint alleging violation of 18 U.S.C. ¤ 875(c), on February 9, 1995. The
complaint was based on an FBI agent's affidavit which cited language taken from
a story Baker posted to an Internet newsgroup entitled "alt.sex.stories," and
from e-mail messages he sent to Gonda. The story graphically described the
torture, rape, and murder of a woman who was given the name of a classmate of
Baker's at the University of Michigan. The "alt.sex.stories" newsgroup to which
Baker's story was posted is an electronic bulletin board, the contents of which
are publicly available via the Internet. Much of the attention this case
garnered centered on Baker's use of a real student's name in the story.[3] The
e-mail messages exchanged between Gonda and Baker were private, and not
available in any publicly accessible portion of the Internet.[4]
Baker was arrested on the complaint and warrant on February 9, 1995, and
detained overnight. The complaint and warrant is dated the same day. The
following day, February 10, 1995, after holding a hearing a Magistrate Judge
ordered Baker detained as a danger to the community. His detention was affirmed
by a United States District Judge later that day. On March 8, 1995, this Court
held a hearing on Baker's motion to be released on bond, and ordered that a
psychological evaluation of Baker be performed. The psychological evaluation was
received on March 10, 1995. The evaluation concluded that Baker did not pose a
threat, and the Court ordered him released that day.[5]
On February 14, 1995 the government charged Baker with violating 18 U.S.C. ¤
875(c) in a one count indictment based on unspecified communications transmitted
in interstate and foreign commerce from December 2, 1994 through January 9,
1995. Presumably included in the communications was the story Baker posted. On
March 15, 1995, the government charged Baker and Gonda in a superseding
indictment with five counts of violating 18 U.S.C. ¤ 875(c). The story on which
the initial complaint was partially based is not mentioned in the superseding
indictment, which refers only to e-mail messages exchanged between Gonda and
Baker.[6] The government has filed a bill of particulars identifying who it
perceives to be the objects of the allegedly threatening transmissions, as well
as witness and exhibit lists.
Baker, who is named in all five of the superseding indictment's counts, has
filed a motion seeking dismissal of all the counts of the superseding
indictment. He contends that application of 18 U.S.C. ¤ 875(c) to the e-mail
transmissions pushes the boundaries of the statute beyond the limits of the
First Amendment. The government responds that the motion must be denied because
the First Amendment does not protect "true threats," and because whether a
specific communication constitutes a true threat is a question for the jury.
III. The Law
Eighteen U.S.C. ¤ 875(c) reads:
Whoever transmits in interstate or foreign commerce any communication containing
any threat to kidnap any person or any threat to injure the person of another,
shall be fined under this title or imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
The government must allege and prove three elements to support a conviction
under ¤ 875(c): "(1) a transmission in interstate [or foreign] commerce; (2) a
communication containing a threat; and (3) the threat must be a threat to injure
[or kidnap] the person of another." United States v. DeAndino, 958 F.2d 146, 148
(6th Cir.), cert. denied, 112 S. Ct. 2997 (1992). The Court of Appeals for the
Sixth Circuit, like most others, has held that ¤ 875(c) requires only general
intent. Id. at 149. But see, United States v. Twine, 853 F.2d 676 (9th Cir.
1988) (finding a specific intent requirement in ¤ 875(c)).[7] Because ¤ 875(c)
is a general intent crime, intent must be proved by "objectively looking at the
defendant's behavior in the totality of the circumstances," rather than by
"probing the defendant's subjective state of mind." DeAndino, 958 F.2d at 149.
The Sixth Circuit has also held that "a specific individual as a target of the
threat need not be identified." United States v. Cox, 957 F.2d 264, 266 (6th
Cir. 1992). Even so, the threat must be aimed as some discrete, identifiable
group. See id. (involving threat to "hurt people" at a specific bank); United
States v. Lincoln, 589 F.2d 379 (8th Cir. 1979) (involving letters threatening
to kill judges of the Eighth Circuit, under 18 U.S.C. ¤ 876). The threat need
not be communicated to the person or group identified as its target. See United
States v. Schroeder, 902 F.2d 1469, 1470-71 (10th Cir.), cert. denied,, 498 U.S.
867 (1990) (affirming ¤ 875(c) conviction for a threat against people at a post
office made to an Assistant United States Attorney); United States v. Kosma, 951
F.2d 549, 555 (3rd Cir. 1991) (listing cases in which threats against the
President were made to third persons, under 18 U.S.C. ¤ 871).
Because prosecution under 18 U.S.C. ¤ 875(c) involves punishment of pure
speech,[8] it necessarily implicates and is limited by the First Amendment.
Although the Supreme Court has not addressed the constitutionally permissible
scope of ¤ 875(c), it has considered a similar statute concerning threats
against the President, 18 U.S.C. ¤ 871(a),[9] in Watts v. United States, 394
U.S. 705. In Watts, the Supreme Court recognized that:
a statute such as this one, which makes criminal a form of pure speech, must be
interpreted with the commands of the First Amendment clearly in mind. What is a
threat must be distinguished from what is constitutionally protected speech.
Id. at 707. Under Watts, to pass constitutional muster the government must
initially prove "a true 'threat.'" Id. Factors mentioned in Watts as bearing on
whether a specific statement can be taken as a true threat include the context
of the statement, including whether the statement has a political dimension;
whether the statement was conditional; and the reaction of the listeners.
Id.[10] Watts also makes clear that the question of whether a statement
constitutes a true threat in light of the First Amendment is distinct from the
question of the defendant's intent: "whatever the 'willfulness' requirement
implies, the statute initially requires the Government to prove a true
'threat.'" Id.[11]
The distinction between the two questions of whether a statement is a "true
threat" for the purposes of First Amendment limitation, and the intention of the
statement's maker, is important but unfortunately often confused. The confusion
results from too loose a use of the phrase "true threat."
The only extended discussion of the constitutional dimension of the "true
threat" requirement with regard to ¤ 875(c) is found in United States v. Kelner,
534 F.2d 1020 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 429 U.S. 1022 (1976). In Kelner, the
Second Circuit drew on Watts to illuminate the constitutional limits of a
prosecution under ¤ 875(c):
The purpose and effect of the Watts constitutionally-limited definition of the
term "threat" is to insure that only unequivocal, unconditional and specific
expressions of intention immediately to inflict injury may be punished--only
such threats, in short, as are of the same nature as those threats which are . .
. "properly punished every day under statutes prohibiting extortion, blackmail
and assault without consideration of First Amendment issues." Watts, 402 F.2d at
690.
* * *
So long as the threat on its face and in the circumstances in which it is made
is so unequivocal, unconditional, immediate and specific as to the person
threatened, as to convey a gravity of purpose and imminent prospect of
execution, the statute may properly be applied. This clarification of the scope
of 18 U.S.C. ¤ 875(c) is, we trust, consistent with a rational approach to First
Amendment construction which provides for governmental authority in instances of
inchoate conduct, where a communication has become "so interlocked with violent
conduct as to constitute for all practical purposes part of the [proscribed]
action itself."
Kelner, 534 F.2d at 1027 (quoting T. Emerson, The System of Freedom of
Expression, 329 (1970)). Cf. Brandenburg v. Ohio, 395 U.S. 444, 447 (1969) ("the
constitutional guarantees of free speech and free press do not permit a State to
forbid or proscribe advocacy of the use of force or of law violation except
where such advocacy is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action
and is likely to incite or produce such action.")
The government argues that the standard announced in Kelner is "far more
stringent" than the governing standard in the Sixth Circuit. For the Sixth
Circuit "true threat" standard, the government refers the Court to United States
v. Lincoln, 462 F.2d 1368, cert. denied, 409 U.S. 952 (1972). In citing Lincoln
for the "true threat" standard, the government confuses the constitutional "true
threat" requirement with the statutory intent requirement. In relevant part,
Lincoln reads:
This Court therefore construes the willfulness requirement of the statute to
require only that the defendant intentionally make a statement, written or oral,
in a context or under such circumstances wherein a reasonable person would
foresee that the statement would be interpreted by those to whom the maker
communicates the statement as a serious expression of an intention to inflict
bodily harm upon or take the life of the President, and that the statement not
be the result of mistake, duress, or coercion. The statute does not require that
the defendant actually intend to carry out the threat.
Lincoln, 462 F.2d at 1368 (quoting and adopting standard from Roy v. United
States, 416 F.2d 874, 877-78 (9th Cir. 1969)) (emphasis added). Lincoln
addresses the statute's intent requirement, and adopts the Ninth Circuit's
formulation of the intent required.[12] It does not speak to the constitutional
"true threat" requirement imposed by the First Amendment and elucidated in Watts
and Kelner. United States v. Glover, 846 F.2d 339, 343-44 (6th Cir.), cert.
denied, 488 U.S. 982 (1988) and United States v. Vincent, 681 F.2d 462, 464 (6th
Cir. 1982), also cited by the government, quote the same language from Roy and
also address the statutory intent requirement rather than the constitutional
limits of the statute. None of these cases indicate that a different
constitutional standard for prosecution under ¤ 875(c) applies in the Sixth
Circuit than in the Second Circuit.[13]
The confusion between the two requirements is understandable, because the phrase
"true threat" has been used in the context of both requirements. Both the Ninth
and Seventh Circuits have stated that the government must meet the Roy general
intent standard in order to make out a "true threat." Melugin v. Hames, 38 F.3d
1478, 1484 (9th Cir. 1994) (under Alaska statute AS 11.56.510(a)(1)); United
States v. Khorrami, 895 F.2d 1186, 1193 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 986
(1990). That the phrase "true threat" has been used to describe both the
statutory intent requirement and the constitutional "unconditional, unequivocal,
immediate and specific" requirement does not imply that the two requirements are
identical, or that any statement which meets the intent requirement may be
prosecuted under ¤ 875(c) without running afoul of the First Amendment.
Typically, in the cases focussing on the intent requirement, there is no dispute
that the statement satisfies the constitutional standard, and the defendant
seeks dismissal or reversal of his conviction on the ground that he or she
lacked the requisite intent. See, e.g., United States v. Lincoln, 462 F.2d at
1369 ("[a]pellant contends that the statute is violated only when a threat is
uttered with a willful intent to carry it out."); United States v. Hoffman, 806
F.2d 703, 712 (7th Cir. 1986) (concluding that "it was reasonable for the jury
to conclude that Hoffman intended the letter as a serious expression of his
intent to harm the President.") (quoted in Khorrami, 895 F.2d 1186).[14]
Kelner's standard for a prosecution under 18 U.S.C. ¤ 875(c) is not only
constitutionally required, but also is consistent with the statute's legislative
history. The law which was eventually codified as 18 U.S.C. ¤ 875(c) was first
passed in 1932, Pub. L. No. 72-274 (1932), and criminalized use of the mail to
transmit a threat to injure or kidnap any person (or to injure a person's
property or reputation), or to accuse a person of a crime or demand ransom for a
kidnapped person. Id. The communication had to be sent "with intent to extort .
. . money or any thing of value" to fall under the act. Id. A motivating factor
for passage of the 1932 act was the kidnapping of Charles Lindbergh's son, and
the concomitant use of the mail to convey the kidnappers' threats and demands.
H.R. Rep. No. 602, 72d Congress, 1st Sess. (1932).
The act was addressed to the constitutionally unproblematic case, like the
Lindbergh case, identified in Kelner: "where a communication has become 'so
interlocked with violent conduct as to constitute for all practical purposes
part of the [proscribed] action itself.'" Kelner, 534 F.2d at 1027. The act was
modified in 1934, Pub. L. No. 73-231 (1934), as increasingly sophisticated
criminals had taken to using means other than the mail, such as the telephone
and telegraph, to transmit their threats. S. Rep. No. 1456, 73d Congress, 2d
Sess. (1934). As modified, it applied to threats transmitted "by any means
whatsoever," but still required extortionate intent. Pub. L. No. 73-231 (1934).
In 1939 the act, Pub. L. No. 76-76 (1939), was expanded to apply to threats to
kidnap or injure that were not made with extortionate intent. Id. The act's
expansion was prompted by the recognition that many threats "of a very serious
and socially harmful nature" were not covered by the existing law because "the
sender of the threat did not intend to extort money or other thing of value for
himself." H.R. Rep. No. 102, 76th Congress, 1st Sess. (1939). An example of such
a threat mentioned in the in the Report was one directed to a governor,
threatening to blow up the governor's home if certain defendants in a criminal
case were not released. As modified, while an "extortionate" intent was no
longer required, the act was still intended to address threats aimed at
accomplishing some coercive purpose, such as the release of the defendants in
the given example. The modified statute still targets threats which, like the
example, are unlikely to offend the constitutional standard articulated in
Kelner.
Threats aimed at achieving some coercive end remain the typical subject of more
contemporary cases. In Cox, for instance, the defendant's truck was repossessed
while it contained items of his personal property. The defendant telephoned the
bank that had had the truck repossessed and stated "I tell you what, you all
better have my personal items to me by five o'clock today or it[']s going to be
a lot of hurt people there." Cox, 957 F.2d at 265. The threat was designed to
effect the return of the defendant's property, it targeted the people at the
bank, and it was found not to be conditional (in part because his property could
not have been returned by the five o'clock deadline). It falls within Kelner's
requirement of a threat that is "so unequivocal, unconditional, immediate and
specific as to the person threatened, as to convey a gravity of purpose and
imminent prospect of execution." 534 F.2d at 1027.
Similarly, in Schroeder, the defendant had sued the government for denial of
employment preference under a veterans benefit program. 902 F.2d at 1470. After
losing his civil suits, the defendant called an Assistant United States Attorney
and threatened to shoot people at a post office if he did not obtain
satisfaction from the government; he stated that "the government either gives
[him] money or people would get hurt." Id. Schroeder involves an explicitly
extortionate threat aimed at people in post offices. Although the case appears
to strain the constitutional standard, particularly with regard to the
requirement of immediacy, the defendant did not raise a constitutional challenge
on appeal.
While coercive or extortionate threats are paradigmatic subjects of a
prosecution under 18 U.S.C. ¤ 875(c), a threat which is neither coercive nor
extortionate may still satisfy the constitutional test from Kelner; indeed,
Kelner itself involved a non-coercive threat to assassinate the PLO leader
Yasser Arafat. Kelner, 534 F.2d at 1025. See also, DeAndino, 958 F.2d at 146
(regarding threat that defendant was going to "blow [the victim's] brains out,"
and the victim was "going to die.") Nevertheless, a coercive or extortionate
threat is particularly likely to be a constitutionally prosecutable "true
threat" because it is particularly likely to be intimately bound up with
proscribed activity.
Another important factor in analyzing a threat under 18 U.S.C. ¤ 875(c) is the
recipient of the communication in question. As the Sixth Circuit stated in
Lincoln (in the context of ¤ 871(a)), the statutory general intent element
requires that "a reasonable person would foresee that the statement would be
interpreted by those to whom the maker communicates the statement as a serious
expression of an intent to inflict bodily harm" or kidnap a person. 462 F.2d at
1368. Thus in Cox, the Sixth Circuit looked to the reaction of the recipient of
the defendant's telephone call, as well as that of the person to whom the
defendant asked to speak.[15] Cox, 957 F.2d at 266. In Schroeder, the
appropriate focus in considering the defendant's statements is how they would be
interpreted by the Assistant United States Attorney who heard them, and by those
to whom we could foreseeably relay them. A statement which would not be
interpreted by any foreseeable recipient as expressing a serious intention to
injure or kidnap simply is not a threat under the statute. While it is not
necessary that the statement prosecuted under 18 U.S.C. ¤ 875(c) be communicated
to the would-be target of the alleged threat, the statement must be evaluated in
light of foreseeable recipients of the communication.
Evaluating a statement charged under 18 U.S.C. ¤ 875(c) in light of its
foreseeable recipients is consistent with the aims of the statute and the First
Amendment. In the case of a coercive or extortionate threat, the maker of the
statement obviously cannot achieve his or her end if the recipient of the
statement does not take it as expressing a serious intention to carry out the
threatened acts. If the coercive or extortionate threat is likely to be taken
seriously by its recipient, then the threat is "so interlocked with violent
conduct as to constitute for all practical purposes part of the [proscribed]
action itself." Kelner, 534 F.2d at 1027. A communication containing an alleged
non-coercive threat may be regulated consonant with the First Amendment, under
the analysis in R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, ___ U.S. ___, ___, 120 L.Ed.2d 305,
321 (1992), in order to "protect[] individuals from the fear of violence, from
the disruption that fear engenders, and from the possibility that the threatened
violence will occur." If the alleged threat would not be interpreted by its
foreseeable recipients as a serious expression of an intention to do the
"threatened" acts, it does not implicate fear of violence or the disruption that
fear engenders, and does not suggest a real possibility that the "threatened"
violence will occur. The statement thus would not be a "true threat" for the
purposes of the First Amendment.
Whether or not a prosecution under ¤ 875(c) encroaches on constitutionally
protected speech is a question appropriately decided by the Court as a threshold
matter. In the context of the Smith Act, 18 U.S.C. ¤ 2381 et seq., which makes
it a crime knowingly or willfully to advocate the overthrow or destruction of
the United States government by force or violence, the Supreme Court has held
that "[w]hen facts are found that establish the violation of a statute, the
protection against conviction afforded by the First Amendment is a matter of
law" requiring a judicial determination. Dennis v. United States, 341 U.S. 494,
513 (1951) (construing Act as codified at 18 U.S.C. (1946 ed.) ¤ 11, 54 Stat.
671). In the context of ¤ 875(c), the Second Circuit has recognized that "[m]ost
cases are within a broad expanse of varying fact patterns which may not be
resolved as a matter of law, but should be left to a jury," but has said that
where the factual proof of a "'true' threat" is "insufficient as a matter of
law," the indictment is properly dismissed before reaching the jury. United
States v. Carrier, 672 F.2d 300, 306 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 457 U.S. 1139
(1982). Although the government argues that "whether a statement is a true
threat is to be decided by the trier of fact," it recognizes that where "the
language set forth . . . is so facially insufficient that it cannot possibly
amount to a true threat," the Court may properly dismiss the indictment. Id.;
accord Kosma, 951 F.2d at 555; United States v. Gilbert, 884 F.2d 454, 458 (9th
Cir. 1989), cert. denied, 493 U.S. 1082 (1990); United States v. Howell, 719
F.2d 1258, 1260 (5th Cir. 1983), cert. denied, 467 U.S. 1228 (1984); Lincoln,
589 F.2d at 382. Whether the language set forth in the superseding indictment
could possibly constitute a "true threat" must be determined in accord with
Kelner's articulation of the constitutional requirement of a
threat which on its face and in the circumstances in which it is made is so
unequivocal, unconditional, immediate and specific as to the person threatened,
as to convey a gravity of purpose and imminent prospect of execution.
Kelner, 534 F.2d at 1027. Whether or not Baker actually intended to carry out
the actions described in the communications is irrelevant to the constitutional
inquiry.
IV. The Communications
The government characterizes the e-mail dialogue between Gonda and Baker in
December, 1994 as reflecting "the evolution of their activity from shared
fantasies to a firm plan of action." The government's characterization of the
ongoing dialogue suggests that at least some of the counts in the superseding
indictment should be dismissed; messages constituting "shared fantasies" fall
short of the Kelner standard of an unequivocal, unconditional, immediate and
specific threat conveying an imminent prospect of execution and therefore are
not "true threats" unprotected by the First Amendment.
As the Court construes the law as discussed above, the constitutional standard
enunciated in Kelner requires, at the very least, that a statement charged under
¤ 875(c) contain some language construable as a serious expression of an intent
imminently to carry out some injurious act. The language of the statement must
be considered as it would be interpreted by the foreseeable recipients of the
communication containing it. Statements expressing musings, considerations of
what it would be like to kidnap or injure someone, or desires to kidnap or
injure someone, however unsavory, are not constitutionally actionable under ¤
875(c) absent some expression of an intent to commit the injury or
kidnapping.[16] In addition, while the statement need not identify a specific
individual as its target, it must be sufficiently specific as to its potential
target or targets to render the statement more than hypothetical.
Before addressing the specific language quoted in the indictment, several
observations pertain to all of the government's charges. First, all of the
language for which Baker is charged was contained in private e-mail messages he
sent to Gonda. The messages were not available in any publicly accessible part
of the Internet, and there is no allegation that they were ever distributed in
any format, electronic or hardcopy, to anyone other than Gonda. Nothing in these
private messages suggests that they would be further distributed. It is only as
a result of this prosecution and the ensuing publicity that the content of the
messages has been publicly aired.
The focus of the inquiry here, therefore, is how a reasonable person would
expect Gonda to interpret the e-mail messages. Gonda's identity is entirely
unknown; "he" could be a ten year old girl, an eighty year old man, or a
committee in a retirement community playing the role of Gonda gathered around a
computer.[17] All that is known about Gonda is that he used a computer account
based in Ontario, Canada, and that he apparently enjoyed exchanging with Baker
what he referred to in an e-mail message dated January 3, 1995, as "REAL sex
talk" concerning violence against women and girls. The language referred to by
the government clearly does not constitute threats of a coercive or extortionate
nature. It would be patently unreasonable after reading his messages to think
that Baker's communications caused their only foreseeable recipient, Gonda, to
fear violence, or caused him any disruption due to fear of violence. Of the
grounds for prosecution of threats identified in R.A.V., the only one that could
apply here is protection from the possibility that threatened violence will
occur. ___ U.S. at ___, 120 L.Ed.2d at 321.
The government characterizes the communications between Gonda and Baker as
evolving into "a firm plan of action." Section 875(c), though, does not address
planning crimes, per se, but transmitting threats to injure or kidnap. At oral
argument, the government agreed the exchange between Gonda and Baker could be
characterized as an exchange between coconspirators. In order to prove the
existence of a conspiracy, generally, the government must prove an agreement
between two or more people to act together in committing an offense, and also an
overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy. E.g., United States v. Reifsteck,
841 F.2d 701, 704 (6th Cir. 1988); 18 U.S.C. ¤ 371; Sixth Circuit Pattern
Criminal Jury Instructions 3.01A, 3.04. The charges here could not support a
conspiracy prosecution because no overt act is alleged. The only actions
involved in this prosecution are speech--"the outward expression of what a
person thinks in his mind." Vance v. Judas Priest, et al., 1990 WL 130920, *28
(Nev. Dist. Ct. 1990). In an e-mail exchange not quoted in the superseding
indictment,[18] Baker and Gonda discuss sharing their thoughts, a classically
protected activity. Baker had said to Gonda, in part: "I'd love to meet with
you. There's no one else I can share my thoughts with." On November 29, 1994,
Gonda responded in part: "I would really love to meet with you. I find that I am
going insane trying to keep all these thoughts to myself. . . maybe we could
even try to pick up some chicks and share our thoughts with them. . . what do
you think?"
Even if Gonda and Baker were conspiring, it does not follow that they are guilty
of transmitting a threat to injure or kidnap under 18 U.S.C. ¤ 875(c). Section
875(c) is not simply a conspiracy statute minus the overt act requirement. In
order to be constitutionally sanctionable, the statements Baker made must meet
Kelner's "unequivocal, unconditional, immediate, and specific" standard. As
Justice Brandeis wrote:
Fear of serious injury cannot alone justify suppression of free speech. . . To
justify suppression of free speech there must be reasonable ground to fear that
serious evil will result if free speech is practiced. There must be reasonable
ground to believe that the danger apprehended is imminent.
Whitney v. California, 274 U.S. 357, 376 (1927) (Brandeis, J., concurring).[19]
A.
Count I charges Baker and Gonda with transmitting a threat to injure, and quotes
from three e-mail messages. In the first message quoted, dated December 1, 1994,
Baker responds to a message he had received from Gonda:
I highly agree with the type of woman you like to hurt. You seem to have the
same tastes I have. When you come down, this'll be fun!
Also, I've been thinking. I want to do it to a really young girl first. !3 or
14.[20] There innocence makes them so much more fun --- and they'll be easier to
control. What do you think? I haven't read your entire mail yet. I've saved it
to read later, in private. I'll try to write another short phantasy and send it.
If not tomorrow, maybe by Monday. No promises.
On December 2, Gonda responded:
I would love to do a 13 or 14 year old. I think you are right...not only their
innocence but their young bodies would really be fun to hurt. As far as being
easier to control...you may be right, however you can control any bitch with
rope and a gag...once tey are tieed up and struggling we could do anything we
want to them...to any girl. The trick is to be very careful in planning. I will
keep my eye out for young girls, and relish the fantasy...BTW[21] how about your
neighbour at home, youm may get a chance to see her...?...?
The same day, Baker responded:
True. But young girls still turn me on more. Likely to be nice and tight.
Oh.they'd scream nicely too!
Yeah. I didn't see her last time I was home. She might have moved. But she'd be
a great catch. She's real pretty. with nice long legs. and a great girly face
... I'd love to make her cry ...
The bill of particulars identifies the targets of these statements as:
13 and 14-year old girls who reside in Defendant Jake Baker's neighborhood in
Ann Arbor, Michigan, and teen-age girls who reside in Defendant Jake Baker's
neighborhood in Boardman, Ohio.
This Count falls short of the constitutional "true threat" requirement. As an
initial matter, it does not refer to a sufficiently specific class of targets.
The more limited class identified in the bill of particulars is not apparent
from the face of the communications. Nothing in the exchange quoted in Count I
implicitly or explicitly refers to 13 or 14 year old girls in Ann Arbor, nothing
in the exchange identifies Boardman, Ohio (Baker's actual home) as the "home"
referred to, and nothing in the exchange allows one to determine that the
neighbor discussed is a teen-age girl. In reality, the only class of people to
whom the messages can be taken to refer is 13 or 14 year old girls, anywhere.
This class is too indeterminate to satisfy Kelner's requirement of specificity
as to the person threatened, even under the liberal interpretation given the
requirement by some courts. Cf. Schroeder, 902 F.2d at 1470 (targeting people at
an unidentified post office).
As to the content of the messages, Baker's discussing his "tastes" in the first
paragraph of his December 1 message does not involve any identifiable threatened
action. In the second paragraph of the December 1 message, he expresses a desire
"to do it to" a 13 or 14 year old girl. Even assuming that more context would
clarify the phrase "to do it to," the second paragraph also fails to mention an
intention to do anything. Rather, it seeks Gonda's reaction to Baker's desire,
asking: "What do you think?" Discussion of desires, alone, is not tantamount to
threatening to act on those desires. Absent such a threat to act, a statement is
protected by the First Amendment.
As to Baker's message of December 2, the first paragraph again discusses a
predilection toward "young girls," and what it would be like, presumably, "to do
it to" "young girls." It does not mention any intention to act in accordance
with the expressed predilection. The second paragraph responds to Gonda's
question about a neighbor "at home." It says "she'd be a great catch," but
expresses no intention to "catch" her, and indicates a desire to "make her cry,"
but, again, expresses no intention to take any action in accordance with that
desire. It is not constitutionally permissible under Kelner to infer an
intention to act on a desire from a simple expression of the desire. The
intention (whether or not actually held) must itself be expressed in the
statement. Count I fails to meet this standard, and must be dismissed.
B.
Counts II and III are based on the same statement made by Baker in an e-mail
message dated December 9, 1994, and charge Baker with making a threat to kidnap
and a threat to injure, respectively. The statement for which Baker is charged
in the two counts reads:
I just picked up Bllod Lust and have started to read it. I'll look for "Final
Truth" tomorrow (payday). One of the things I've started doing is going back and
re-reading earlier messages of yours. Each time I do. they turn me on more and
more. I can't wait to see you in person. I've been trying to think of secluded
spots. but my knowledge of Ann Arbor is mostly limited to the campus. I don't
want any blood in my room, though I have come upon an excellent method to abduct
a bitch ---
As I said before, my room is right across from the girl's bathroom. Wiat until
late at night. grab her when she goes to unlock the dorr. Knock her unconscious.
and put her into one of those portable lockers (forget the word for it). or even
a duffle bag. Then hurry her out to the car and take her away ... What do you
think?
The bill of particulars identifies the target of the statement as: "Female
college students who lived in Defendant Jake Baker's dormitory at the University
of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Michigan." Apart from concerns about equating Baker's
online persona with his real person, the class of would-be targets here is
identified with sufficient specificity.
Presumably, the government offers this statement as a threat to carry out the
"method to abduct" it describes. Under Kelner, discussion of a method of
kidnapping or injuring a person is not punishable unless the statement includes
an unequivocal and specific expression of intention immediately to carry out the
actions discussed. Baker's e-mail message cannot reasonably be read as
satisfying this standard. As in Count I, the language with which Baker is
charged here lacks any expression of an intention to act, and concludes with a
request for Gonda's reaction: "What do you think?" Discussing the commission of
a crime is not tantamount to declaring an intention to commit the crime. To find
an expression of unequivocal intention in this language would require the
drawing of an inference not grounded in any specific language of the statement
and would exceed the bounds of the First Amendment. Counts II and III must be
dismissed.
C.
Count IV charges Baker and Gonda with transmitting a threat to injure. The Count
is based on a message from Gonda to Baker, and Baker's response. Both e-mail
messages are dated December 10, 1994. Gonda wrote:
Hi Jake. I have been out tonight and I can tell you that I am thinking more and
more about 'doing' a girl. I can picture it so well...and I can think of no
better use for their flesh. I HAVE to make a bitch suffer!
As far as the Teale-homolka killings, well I can think of no tastier
crimes...BTW have you seen any pictures of the girls? You have to see these
cunts! They must have been so much fun...please let me know any details that I
cannot get here. I would love to see what you think about it....
As far as the asian bitch story, there is only one possible ending....
Baker responded:
Are tastes are so similar. it scares me :-) When I lay down at night. all I
think of before I sleep is how I'd torture a bitch I get my hands on. I have
some pretty vivid near dreams too. I wish I could remember them when I get up.
The bill of particulars identifies the target of these statements as:
Women who were the subject of Defendant Jake Baker's E-mail transmissions and
Internet postings, including -- but not limited to -- Jane Doe, whose true name
is known to Defendant Jake Baker and this Honorable Court.
This Count presents the weakest of all the government's charges against Baker.
While the government identifies the class of targets here as women Baker
discussed on the Internet, there is nothing in the language quoted here to so
limit the class. In addition, since Baker's e-mail often refers simply to "a
girl," a class composed of women Baker discussed in his e-mail and stories
essentially is a class composed of any woman or girl about whom Baker has ever
thought. Such a class is obviously not sufficiently specific.
With regard to the content of Baker's communication, Baker's statement here
consists only of an expression of his thoughts before sleeping and of "near
dreams" he cannot remember upon waking. To infer an intention to act upon the
thoughts and dreams from this language would stray far beyond the bounds of the
First Amendment, and would amount to punishing Baker for his thoughts and
desires. Count IV must be dismissed.
D.
Count V charges Baker and Gonda with transmitting a threat to injure. It is
based on an exchange between Gonda and Baker on December 11-12, 1994. On
December 11, Gonda wrote to Baker:
It's always a pleasure hearing back from you...I had a great orgasm today
thinking of how you and I would torture this very very petite and cute south
american girl in one of my classes...BTW speaking of torture, I have got this
great full length picture of the Mahaffy girl Paul Bernardo killed, she is
wearing this short skirt!
The same day, Baker responded:
Just thinking about it anymore doesn't do the trick ... I need TO DO IT.
The next day, Gonda wrote:
My feelings exactly! We have to get together...I will give you more details as
soon as I find out my situation...
Baker responded:
Alrighty then. If not next week. or in January. then definatly sometime in the
Summer. Pickings are better then too. Although it's more crowded.
The bill of particulars identifies the target of these statements, as in Count
IV, as:
Women who were the subject of Defendant Jake Baker's E-mail transmissions and
Internet postings, including -- but not limited to -- Jane Doe, whose true name
is known to Defendant Jake Baker and this Honorable Court.
This Count, too, fails to meet Kelner's constitutional "true threat" standard.
The class of potential targets, as discussed with regard to Count IV, is far too
vague. As to the content of the communications, Baker indicates his "need TO DO
IT." Like his earlier statements, this language indicates a desire to do
something. While use of the word "need" indicates a strong desire, it still
falls short "unequivocal, unconditional and specific expression of intention
immediately to inflict injury," Kelner, 534 F.2d at 1027; "needs" go unmet
everyday. Baker next indicates, at most, an intention to meet Gonda at some
indefinite point in the future--in the next week, month, or several months
later. This statement does not express an unequivocal intention immediately to
do anything. Also, nothing in the language on which the Count is based indicates
any intention to commit specific acts if Baker and Gonda ever were to meet. Like
the preceding four Counts, Count V fails to state a charge under ¤ 875(c) that
can survive a First Amendment challenge, and must be dismissed. This prosecution
presents the rare case in which, in the government's words, "the language set
forth . . . is so facially insufficient that it cannot possibly amount to a true
threat."
V. Coda
This case in its initial stage generated a good deal of public interest.[22] Now
that the case will be concluded by an order rather than by a jury verdict, it is
important to assure the public that such a conclusion is not by fiat. In United
States v. Carrier, 672 F.2d 300, 306 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 457 U.S. 1139
(1982), while the Second Circuit said "that whether words used are a true threat
is generally best left to the triers of fact," it went on to say "[o]nly where
the factual proof is insufficient as a matter of law should the indictment be
dismissed." This is such a case. The communications which form the basis of the
superseding indictment, the many preceding and subsequent communications, the
names of the witnesses and the general nature of their testimony, and the
exhibits are all in the record. All of this evidence, viewed in the light most
favorable to the prosecution, leads to one inevitable conclusion: based on the
applicable rules of law there is no case for a jury because the factual proof is
insufficient as a matter of law. The government's enthusiastic beginning petered
out to a salvage effort once it recognized that the communication which so much
alarmed the University of Michigan officials was only a rather savage and
tasteless piece of fiction. Why the government became involved in the matter is
not really explained in the record.[23]
Baker is being prosecuted under 18 U.S.C. ¤ 875(c) for his use of words,
implicating fundamental First Amendment concerns. Baker's words were transmitted
by means of the Internet, a relatively new communications medium that is itself
currently the subject of much media attention. The Internet makes it possible
with unprecedented ease to achieve world-wide distribution of material, like
Baker's story, posted to its public areas. When used in such a fashion, the
Internet may be likened to a newspaper with unlimited distribution and no
locatable printing press--and with no supervising editorial control. But Baker's
e-mail messages, on which the superseding indictment is based, were not publicly
published but privately sent to Gonda. While new technology such as the Internet
may complicate analysis and may sometimes require new or modified laws,[24] it
does not in this instance qualitatively change the analysis under the statute or
under the First Amendment. Whatever Baker's faults, and he is to be faulted, he
did not violate 18 U.S.C. ¤ 875(c). The case would have been better handled as a
disciplinary matter, as the University of Victoria proceeded in a similar
situation,[25] despite whatever difficulties inhere in such a course.[26] What
the Court said at the conclusion of oral argument bears repeating: "[T]he Court
is very skeptical, and about the best thing the government's got going for it at
this moment is the sincerity of purpose exhibited by [the Assistant United
States Attorneys prosecuting the case]. I am not sure that sincerity of purpose
is either synonymous with a good case under the law, or even the exercise of
good judgment."
_______________________________
AVERN COHN
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE
DATED: June 21, 1995
Detroit, Michigan