The Minnesota Supreme Court on Wednesday reversed the cyberbullying conviction of a Scott County high school student, ruling that the state laws under which he was charged are overly broad and impede free speech.
Because the court ruled the laws unconstitutional, the court didn't determine whether the defendant's "unrelenting torrent of cruel tweets" directed at a classmate was protected speech under the First Amendment.
The underpinning of the decision, written by Justice Paul Thissen, is that the state's laws on mail harassment and stalking by mail are written so broadly that they impinge on free speech protected by the U.S. Constitution. The ruling reversed multiple convictions for the juvenile, identified only as A.J.B.
"Obviously, we consider this a pretty big victory three years in the making," said John Arechigo, the defendant's attorney. "It's certainly a win for freedom of speech."
However, Thissen's 41-page ruling states that the mail-harassment law could be narrowly interpreted to allow for prosecution. The high court returned the case to Scott County District Court to determine whether A.J.B. intended to "abuse" the target of the tweets, which would be the sole remaining possibility under which he could be convicted.
The Supreme Court was addressing A.J.B.'s appeal of his Scott County conviction stemming from online activity in March 2016, when the defendant and his friends saw a series of tweets by a male student — identified as M.B. — that referred to girls at their school.
In response, A.J.B. created an anonymous Twitter account. Within three hours, A.J.B. had posted some 40 tweets about M.B., specifically mentioning him by his Twitter handle, the high court said.
"Essentially all of the tweets posted by A.J.B. ... contained cruel and egregious insults," the court said. Insults included a checkerboard of M.B.'s image with a caption reading, "Click the Autistic Child."