The Minnesota Supreme Court upheld the state's revenge porn law on Wednesday, ruling that sharing nude images of a person without their consent is not constitutionally protected free speech.
The order reverses an earlier order by the state Court of Appeals, which struck down the 2016 law which made it a crime to publish, sell or disseminate private explicit images and videos without the person's consent.
That means outstanding cases that were on hold for about a year can now be prosecuted.
"The fact that we will see justice in some of [the cases] in the future because of this ruling is such great news," said Rep. John Lesch, DFL-St. Paul, the bill's chief author. "To have [the law] come through and be vindicated by the Supreme Court today is one of my greatest legislative accomplishments in the past 18 years, if not the greatest."
The government has a "compelling" interest in legislating what has become commonly known as "revenge porn," and has narrowly defined the parameters to avoid violating First Amendment rights, the Supreme Court wrote in its unanimous opinion.
The challenge to the state law followed the 2017 Dakota County conviction of Michael Anthony Casillas, who was found guilty of felony nonconsensual dissemination of private sexual images for sending a video of his ex-girlfriend having sex with another man to 44 people and for posting it online.
Casillas was sentenced to nearly two years in prison. He initially asked the district court to dismiss the case against him, arguing that the law was too broad and violated his constitutional rights. The court rejected the motion.
The Minnesota Court of Appeals later reversed his conviction and ruled that the law uses an overly broad definition of obscenity and doesn't require proof that the person disseminating the images "caused or intended a specific harm."