Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Flying the Flag Upside Down, That's a Prosecution!

The Bad Lawyer is a US Army veteran, a child of the Eisenhower era, and a politically centrist guy.  I believe in obeying even laws I disagree with, not taking what's not mine, and reporting and paying taxes.  I fly and American flag, and I am very proud to be an American.  Without a doubt I believe in the ideals of our Constitution.  So this story from the Pittsburgh Trib website about the prosecution of a local man for flying a "flag upside down,"  has me wondering what the hell is going on.  Here's the article by reporter Bobby Kerlick:

"A Butler County district judge issued an arrest warrant Tuesday for a man who failed to show up for a hearing on a charge of flying an upside-down American flag. State police in November charged David M. Rice, 50, of Muddy Creek with committing insults to a national or commonwealth flag after a passing motorist called to report the flag was inverted.  Rice was scheduled for a preliminary hearing this morning before District Judge Clifford Woessner.

The little-used criminal charge is a misdemeanor that experts said exists in a gray area of law, and sparked a federal lawsuit in Eastern Pennsylvania in 2008. Rice said the flag display wasn't intended as a political statement or meant to offend anyone. He said it was windy when he put the flag up.  According to a police affidavit, Rice was irate, yelled profanities and stepped toward a state police officer who knocked on his door about the flag. The trooper pushed him back and arrested him."
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First, you must show up for court.  Not showing up tends to piss off the Judge and will get you arrested.

Secondly, how is this criminal statue constitutional?  The last time I looked at the U.S. Constitution, rights were conferred on citizens, not objects or symbols.  The right of Free Speech is conferred on people not national flags.  Here, we have a guy who claims he was trying to exhibit his national pride by flying a flag, albeit, sloppily--what sort of appropriate criminal justice/state action  supports a shouting, shoving and summons? 

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