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Wednesday, August 02, 2006

No Vulgar Epithets toward the Court


By a 4-3 margin, the Supreme Court of Michigan has ruled that the First Amendment does not protect "the interests of an officer of the court in uttering vulgar epithets toward the court in a pending case" (decision in PDF format, p. 19) and has therefore sent back a case involving the disciplining of Geoffrey Fieger with instructions to reinstate the reprimand. After seeing a $15 million medical malpractice verdict overturned, Michigan's most prominent plaintiff's lawyer had described the appellate judges who ruled against him as variously "jackasses", "Hitler", "Goebbels" and "Eva Braun", said that he was declaring war on them, said that they could kiss a portion of his anatomy not generally revealed in public, and repeatedly proposed that various objects be employed to assault a similar location on their persons.

Read the rest of the post from
Overlawyered here.

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