Appellant, The Florida Star, is a newspaper which publishes a
"Police Reports" section containing brief articles describing local
criminal incidents under police investigation. After appellee
B.J.F. reported to the Sheriff's Department (Department) that she
had been robbed and sexually assaulted, the Department prepared a
report, which identified B.J.F. by her full name, and placed it in
the Department's pressroom. The Department does not restrict access
to the room or to the reports available there. A Star
reporter-trainee sent to the pressroom copied the police report
verbatim, including B.J.F.'s full name. Consequently, her name was
included in a "Police Reports" story in the paper, in violation of
the Star's internal policy. Florida Stat. § 794.03 makes it
unlawful to "print, publish, or broadcast . . . in any instrument
of mass communication" the name of the victim of a sexual offense.
B.J.F. filed suit in a Florida court alleging,
inter alia,
that the Star had negligently violated § 794.03. The trial
court denied the Star's motion to dismiss, which claimed, among
other things, that imposing civil sanctions on the newspaper
pursuant to § 794.03 violated the First Amendment. However, it
granted B.J.F.'s motion for a directed verdict on the issue of
negligence, finding the Star
per se negligent based on its
violation of § 794.03. The jury then awarded B.J.F. both
compensatory and punitive damages. The verdict was upheld on
appeal.
Held: Imposing damages on the Star for publishing
B.J.F.'s name violates the First Amendment. Pp.
491 U. S.
530-541.
(a) The sensitivity and significance of the interests presented
in clashes between First Amendment and privacy rights counsels the
Court to rely on limited principles that sweep no more broadly than
the appropriate context of the instant case, rather than to accept
invitations to hold broadly that truthful publication may never be
punished consistent with the First Amendment or that publication of
a rape victim's name never enjoys constitutional protection. One
such principle is that,
"if a newspaper lawfully obtains truthful information about a
matter of public significance, then state officials may not
constitutionally punish publication of the information, absent a
need to further a state interest of the highest order."
Smith v. Daily Mail Publishing Co., 443 U. S.
97,
443 U. S.
103.
Page 491 U. S. 525
Applied to the instant case, the
Daily Mail principle
commands reversal. Pp.
491 U. S.
530-536.
(b) The Star "lawfully obtain[ed] truthful information." The
actual news article was accurate, and the Star lawfully obtained
B.J.F.'s name from the government. The fact that state officials
are not required to disclose such reports or that the Sheriff's
Department apparently failed to fulfill its § 794.03
obligation not to cause or allow B.J.F.'s name to be published does
not make it unlawful for the Star to have received the information,
and Florida has taken no steps to proscribe such receipt. The
government has ample means to safeguard the information that are
less drastic than punishing truthful publication. Furthermore, it
is clear that the news article generally, as opposed to the
specific identity contained in it, involved "a matter of public
significance": the commission, and investigation, of a violent
crime that had been reported to authorities. Pp.
491 U. S.
536-537.
(c) Imposing liability on the Star does not serve "a need to
further a state interest of the highest order." Although the
interests in protecting the privacy and safety of sexual assault
victims and in encouraging them to report offenses without fear of
exposure are highly significant, imposing liability on the Star in
this case is too precipitous a means of advancing those interests.
Since the Star obtained the information because the Sheriff's
Department failed to abide by § 794.03's policy, the
imposition of damages can hardly be said to be a narrowly tailored
means of safeguarding anonymity. Self-censorship is especially
likely to result from imposition of liability when a newspaper
gains access to the information from a government news release.
Moreover, the negligence
per se standard adopted by the
courts below does not permit case-by-case findings that the
disclosure was one a reasonable person would find offensive, and
does not have a scienter requirement of any kind. In addition,
§ 794.03's facial underinclusiveness -- which prohibits
publication only by an "instrument of mass communication" and does
not prohibit the spread of victims' names by other means -- raises
serious doubts about whether Florida is serving the interests
specified by B.J.F. A State must demonstrate its commitment to the
extraordinary measure of punishing truthful publication in the name
of privacy by applying its prohibition evenhandedly to both the
small-time disseminator and the media giant. Pp.
491 U. S.
537-541.
499 So. 2d 883, reversed.
MARSHALL, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
BRENNAN, BLACKMUN, STEVENS, and KENNEDY, JJ., joined. SCALIA, J.,
filed an opinion concurring in part and concurring in the judgment,
post, p.
491 U. S.
541.
Page 491 U. S. 526
WHITE, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which REHNQUIST, C.J.,
and O'CONNOR, J., joined.
JUSTICE MARSHALL delivered the opinion of the Court.
Florida Stat. § 794.03 (1987) makes it unlawful to "print,
publish, or broadcast . . . in any instrument of mass
communication" the name of the victim of a sexual offense.
[
Footnote 1] Pursuant to this
statute, appellant The Florida Star was found civilly liable for
publishing the name of a rape victim which it had obtained from a
publicly released police report. The issue presented here is
whether this result comports with the First Amendment. We hold that
it does not.
I
The Florida Star is a weekly newspaper which serves the
community of Jacksonville, Florida, and which has an average
circulation of approximately 18,000 copies. A regular feature of
the newspaper is its "Police Reports" section.
Page 491 U. S. 527
That section, typically two to three pages in length, contains
brief articles describing local criminal incidents under police
investigation.
On October 20, 1983, appellee B.J.F. [
Footnote 2] reported to the Duval County, Florida,
Sheriff's Department (the Department) that she had been robbed and
sexually assaulted by an unknown assailant. The Department prepared
a report on the incident which identified B.J.F. by her full name.
The Department then placed the report in its pressroom. The
Department does not restrict access either to the pressroom or to
the reports made available therein.
A Florida Star reporter-trainee sent to the pressroom copied the
police report verbatim, including B.J.F.'s full name, on a blank
duplicate of the Department's forms. A Florida Star reporter then
prepared a one-paragraph article about the crime, derived entirely
from the trainee's copy of the police report. The article included
B.J.F.'s full name. It appeared in the "Robberies" subsection of
the "Police Reports" section on October 29, 1983, one of fifty-four
police blotter stories in that day's edition. The article read:
"[B.J.F.] reported on Thursday, October 20, she was crossing
Brentwood Park, which is in the 500 block of Golfair Boulevard,
enroute to her bus stop, when an unknown black man ran up behind
the lady and placed a knife to her neck and told her not to yell.
The suspect then undressed the lady and had sexual intercourse with
her before fleeing the scene with her 60 cents, Timex watch and
gold necklace. Patrol efforts have been suspended concerning this
incident because of a lack of evidence.
Page 491 U. S. 528
In printing B.J.F.'s full name, The Florida Star violated its
internal policy of not publishing the names of sexual offense
victims."
On September 26, 1984, B.J.F. filed suit in the Circuit Court of
Duval County against the Department and The Florida Star, alleging
that these parties negligently violated § 794.03.
See
n 1,
supra. Before
trial, the Department settled with B.J.F. for $2,500. The Florida
Star moved to dismiss, claiming,
inter alia, that imposing
civil sanctions on the newspaper pursuant to § 794.03 violated
the First Amendment. The trial judge rejected the motion. App.
4.
At the ensuing day-long trial, B.J.F. testified that she had
suffered emotional distress from the publication of her name. She
stated that she had heard about the article from fellow workers and
acquaintances; that her mother had received several threatening
phone calls from a man who stated that he would rape B.J.F. again;
and that these events had forced B.J.F. to change her phone number
and residence, to seek police protection, and to obtain mental
health counseling. In defense, The Florida Star put forth evidence
indicating that the newspaper had learned B.J.F.'s name from the
incident report released by the Department, and that the
newspaper's violation of its internal rule against publishing the
names of sexual offense victims was inadvertent.
At the close of B.J.F.'s case, and again at the close of its
defense, The Florida Star moved for a directed verdict. On both
occasions, the trial judge denied these motions. He ruled from the
bench that § 794.03 was constitutional because it reflected a
proper balance between the First Amendment and privacy rights, as
it applied only to a narrow set of "rather sensitive . . . criminal
offenses." App. 18-19 (rejecting first motion);
see id. at
32-33 (rejecting second motion). At the close of the newspaper's
defense, the judge granted B.J.F.'s motion for a directed verdict
on the issue of negligence, finding the newspaper
per se
negligent based upon its
Page 491 U. S. 529
violation of § 794.03.
Id. at 33. This ruling left
the jury to consider only the questions of causation and damages.
The judge instructed the jury that it could award B.J.F. punitive
damages if it found that the newspaper had "acted with reckless
indifference to the rights of others."
Id. at 35. The jury
awarded B.J.F. $75,000 in compensatory damages and $25,000 in
punitive damages. Against the actual damages award, the judge set
off B.J.F.'s settlement with the Department.
The First District Court of Appeal affirmed in a three-paragraph
per curiam opinion. 499 So. 2d 883 (1986). In the paragraph devoted
to The Florida Star's First Amendment claim, the court stated that
the directed verdict for B.J.F. had been properly entered because,
under § 794.03, a rape victim's name is "of a private nature
and not to be published as a matter of law."
Id. at 884,
citing
Doe v. Sarasota-Bradenton Florida Television Co.,
436 So. 2d 328, 330 (Fla.App.1983) (footnote omitted). [
Footnote 3] The Supreme Court of
Florida denied discretionary review.
The Florida Star appealed to this Court. [
Footnote 4] We noted probable jurisdiction, 488
U.S. 887 (1988), and now reverse.
Page 491 U. S. 530
II
The tension between the right which the First Amendment accords
to a free press, on the one hand, and the protections which various
statutes and common law doctrines accord to personal privacy
against the publication of truthful information, on the other, is a
subject we have addressed several times in recent years. Our
decisions in cases involving government attempts to sanction the
accurate dissemination of information as invasive of privacy have
not, however, exhaustively considered this conflict. On the
contrary, although our decisions have without exception upheld the
press' right to publish, we have emphasized each time that we were
resolving this conflict only as it arose in a discrete factual
context. [
Footnote 5]
The parties to this case frame their contentions in light of a
trilogy of cases which have presented, in different contexts, the
conflict between truthful reporting and state-protected privacy
interests. In
Cox Broadcasting Corp. v. Cohn, 420 U.
S. 469 (1975), we found unconstitutional a civil damages
award entered against a television station for broadcasting the
name of a rape-murder victim which the station had obtained from
courthouse records. In
Oklahoma Publishing
Page 491 U. S. 531
Co. v. Oklahoma County District Court, 430 U.
S. 308 (1977), we found unconstitutional a state court's
pretrial order enjoining the media from publishing the name or
photograph of an 11-year-old boy in connection with a juvenile
proceeding involving that child which reporters had attended.
Finally, in
Smith v. Daily Mail Publishing Co.,
443 U. S. 97
(1979), we found unconstitutional the indictment of two newspapers
for violating a state statute forbidding newspapers to publish,
without written approval of the juvenile court, the name of any
youth charged as a juvenile offender. The papers had learned about
a shooting by monitoring a police band radio frequency, and had
obtained the name of the alleged juvenile assailant from witnesses,
the police, and a local prosecutor.
Appellant takes the position that this case is indistinguishable
from
Cox Broadcasting. Brief for Appellant 8.
Alternatively, it urges that our decisions in the above trilogy,
and in other cases in which we have held that the right of the
press to publish truth overcame asserted interests other than
personal privacy, [
Footnote 6]
can be distilled to yield a broader First Amendment principle that
the press may never be punished, civilly or criminally, for
publishing the truth.
Id. at 19. Appellee counters that
the privacy trilogy is inapposite, because in each case the private
information already appeared on a "public record," Brief for
Appellee 12, 24, 25, and because the privacy interests at stake
were far less profound than in the present case.
See, e.g.,
id. at 34. In the alternative, appellee urges that
Cox
Broadcasting be overruled and replaced with a categorical rule
that publication of the
Page 491 U. S. 532
name of a rape victim never enjoys constitutional protection.
Tr. of Oral Arg. 44.
We conclude that imposing damages on appellant for publishing
B.J.F.'s name violates the First Amendment, although not for either
of the reasons appellant urges. Despite the strong resemblance this
case bears to
Cox Broadcasting, that case cannot fairly be
read as controlling here. The name of the rape victim in that case
was obtained from courthouse records that were open to public
inspection, a fact which JUSTICE WHITE'S opinion for the Court
repeatedly noted. 420 U.S. at
420 U. S. 492
(noting "special protected nature of accurate reports of
judicial proceedings") (emphasis added);
see also
id. at
420 U. S. 493,
420 U. S. 496.
Significantly, one of the reasons we gave in
Cox
Broadcasting for invalidating the challenged damages award was
the important role the press plays in subjecting trials to public
scrutiny and thereby helping guarantee their fairness.
Id.
at
420 U. S.
492-493. [
Footnote
7] That role is not directly compromised where, as here, the
information in question comes from a police report prepared and
disseminated at a time at which not only had no adversarial
criminal proceedings begun, but no suspect had been identified.
Nor need we accept appellant's invitation to hold broadly that
truthful publication may never be punished consistent with the
First Amendment. Our cases have carefully eschewed reaching this
ultimate question, mindful that the future may bring scenarios
which prudence counsels our not resolving anticipatorily.
See,
e.g., Near v. Minnesota ex rel. Olson, 283 U.
S. 697,
283 U. S. 716
(1931) (hypothesizing "publication of the sailing dates of
transports or the number and location of troops");
see also
Garrison v. Louisiana, 379 U. S. 64,
379 U. S.
72,
Page 491 U. S. 533
n. 8,
379 U. S. 74
(1964) (endorsing absolute defense of truth "where discussion of
public affairs is concerned," but leaving unsettled the
constitutional implications of truthfulness "in the discrete area
of purely private libels");
Landmark Communications, Inc. v.
Virginia, 435 U. S. 829,
435 U. S. 838
(1978);
Time, Inc. v. Hill, 385 U.
S. 374,
385 U. S. 383,
n. 7 (1967). Indeed, in
Cox Broadcasting,
Page 491 U. S. 534
we pointedly refused to answer even the less sweeping question
"whether truthful publications may ever be subjected to civil or
criminal liability" for invading "an area of privacy" defined by
the State. 420 U.S. at
420 U. S. 491.
Respecting the fact that press freedom and privacy rights are both
"plainly rooted in the traditions and significant concerns of our
society," we instead focused on the less sweeping issue
"whether the State may impose sanctions on the accurate
publication of the name of a rape victim obtained from public
records -- more specifically, from judicial records which are
maintained in connection with a public prosecution and which
themselves are open to public inspection."
Ibid. We continue to believe that the sensitivity and
significance of the interests presented in clashes between First
Amendment and privacy rights counsel relying on limited principles
that sweep no more broadly than the appropriate context of the
instant case.
In our view, this case is appropriately analyzed with reference
to such a limited First Amendment principle. It is the one, in
fact, which we articulated in
Daily Mail in our synthesis
of prior cases involving attempts to punish truthful
publication:
"[I]f a newspaper lawfully obtains truthful information about a
matter of public significance, then state officials may not
constitutionally punish publication of the information, absent a
need to further a state interest of the highest order."
443 U.S. at
443 U. S. 103.
According the press the ample protection provided by that principle
is supported by at least three separate considerations, in addition
to, of course, the overarching "
public interest, secured by the
Constitution, in the dissemination of truth.'" Cox
Broadcasting, supra, at 420 U. S. 491,
quoting Garrison, supra, at 379 U. S. 73
(footnote omitted). The cases on which the Daily Mail
synthesis relied demonstrate these considerations.
First, because the
Daily Mail formulation only protects
the publication of information which a newspaper has "lawfully
obtain[ed]," 443 U.S. at
443 U. S. 103,
the government retains ample means of safeguarding significant
interests upon which publication may impinge, including protecting
a rape victim's anonymity. To the extent sensitive information
rests in private hands, the government may under some circumstances
forbid its nonconsensual acquisition, thereby bringing outside of
the
Daily Mail principle the publication of any
information so acquired. To the extent sensitive information is in
the government's custody, it has even greater power to forestall or
mitigate the injury caused by its release. The government may
classify certain information, establish and enforce procedures
ensuring its redacted release, and extend a damages remedy against
the government or its officials where the government's mishandling
of sensitive information leads to its dissemination. Where
information is entrusted to the government, a less drastic means
than punishing truthful publication almost always exists for
guarding against the dissemination of private facts.
See, e.g.,
Landmark Communications, supra, at
435 U. S. 845
("[M]uch of the risk [from disclosure of sensitive information
regarding judicial disciplinary proceedings] can be eliminated
through careful internal procedures to protect the confidentiality
of Commission proceedings");
Oklahoma Publishing, 430 U.S.
at
430 U. S. 311
(noting trial judge's failure to avail himself of the opportunity,
provided by a state statute, to close juvenile hearing to the
public, including members of the press, who later broadcast
juvenile defendant's name);
Cox Broadcasting, supra, at
420 U. S. 496
("If there are privacy interests to be protected in judicial
proceedings, the States must respond by means which
Page 491 U. S. 535
avoid public documentation or other exposure of private
information"). [
Footnote 8]
A second consideration undergirding the
Daily Mail
principle is the fact that punishing the press for its
dissemination of information which is already publicly available is
relatively unlikely to advance the interests in the service of
which the State seeks to act. It is not, of course, always the case
that information lawfully acquired by the press is known, or
accessible, to others. But where the government has made certain
information publicly available, it is highly anomalous to sanction
persons other than the source of its release. We noted this anomaly
in
Cox Broadcasting:
"By placing the information in the public domain on official
court records, the State must be presumed to have concluded that
the public interest was thereby being served."
420 U.S. at
420 U. S. 495.
The
Daily Mail formulation reflects the fact that it is a
limited set of cases indeed where, despite the accessibility of the
public to certain information, a meaningful public interest is
served by restricting its further release by other entities, like
the press. As
Daily Mail observed in its summary of
Oklahoma Publishing,
"once the truthful information was 'publicly revealed' or 'in
the public domain,' the court could not constitutionally restrain
its dissemination."
443 U.S. at
443 U. S.
103.
A third and final consideration is the "timidity and
self-censorship" which may result from allowing the media to be
punished for publishing certain truthful information.
Cox
Broadcasting, supra, at
420 U. S. 496.
Cox Broadcasting noted this concern with overdeterrence in
the context of information made public through official court
records, but the fear of excessive
Page 491 U. S. 536
media self-suppression is applicable as well to other
information released, without qualification, by the government. A
contrary rule, depriving protection to those who rely on the
government's implied representations of the lawfulness of
dissemination, would force upon the media the onerous obligation of
sifting through government press releases, reports, and
pronouncements to prune out material arguably unlawful for
publication. This situation could inhere even where the newspaper's
sole object was to reproduce, with no substantial change, the
government's rendition of the event in question.
Applied to the instant case, the
Daily Mail principle
clearly commands reversal. The first inquiry is whether the
newspaper "lawfully obtain[ed] truthful information about a matter
of public significance." 443 U.S. at
443 U. S. 103.
It is undisputed that the news article describing the assault on
B.J.F. was accurate. In addition, appellant lawfully obtained
B.J.F.'s name. Appellee's argument to the contrary is based on the
fact that under Florida law, police reports which reveal the
identity of the victim of a sexual offense are not among the
matters of "public record" which the public, by law, is entitled to
inspect. Brief for Appellee 17-18, citing Fla.Stat. §
119.07(3)(h) (1983). But the fact that state officials are not
required to disclose such reports does not make it unlawful for a
newspaper to receive them when furnished by the government. Nor
does the fact that the Department apparently failed to fulfill its
obligation under § 794.03 not to "cause or allow to be . . .
published" the name of a sexual offense victim make the newspaper's
ensuing receipt of this information unlawful. Even assuming the
Constitution permitted a State to proscribe
receipt of
information, Florida has not taken this step. It is, clear,
furthermore, that the news article concerned "a matter of public
significance," 443 U.S. at
443 U. S. 103, in the sense in which the
Daily
Mail synthesis of prior cases used that term. That is, the
article generally, as opposed to the specific identity contained
within it, involved a
Page 491 U. S. 537
matter of paramount public import: the commission, and
investigation, of a violent crime which had been reported to
authorities.
See Cox Broadcasting, supra, (article
identifying victim of rape-murder);
Oklahoma Publishing Co. v.
Oklahoma County District Court, 430 U.
S. 308 (1977) (article identifying juvenile alleged to
have committed murder);
Daily Mail, supra, (same);
cf.
Landmark Communications, Inc. v. Virginia, 435 U.S.
435 U. S. 829
(1978) (article identifying judges whose conduct was being
investigated).
The second inquiry is whether imposing liability on appellant
pursuant to § 794.03 serves "a need to further a state
interest of the highest order."
Daily Mail, 443 U.S. at
443 U. S. 103.
Appellee argues that a rule punishing publication furthers three
closely related interests: the privacy of victims of sexual
offenses; the physical safety of such victims, who may be targeted
for retaliation if their names become known to their assailants;
and the goal of encouraging victims of such crimes to report these
offenses without fear of exposure. Brief for Appellee 29-30.
At a time in which we are daily reminded of the tragic reality
of rape, it is undeniable that these are highly significant
interests, a fact underscored by the Florida Legislature's explicit
attempt to protect these interests by enacting a criminal statute
prohibiting much dissemination of victim identities. We accordingly
do not rule out the possibility that, in a proper case, imposing
civil sanctions for publication of the name of a rape victim might
be so overwhelmingly necessary to advance these interests as to
satisfy the
Daily Mail standard. For three independent
reasons, however, imposing liability for publication under the
circumstances of this case is too precipitous a means of advancing
these interests to convince us that there is a "need" within the
meaning of the
Daily Mail formulation for Florida to take
this extreme step.
Cf. Landmark Communications, supra,
(invalidating penalty on publication despite State's expressed
interest in nondissemination,
Page 491 U. S. 538
reflected in statute prohibiting unauthorized divulging of names
of judges under investigation).
First is the manner in which appellant obtained the identifying
information in question. As we have noted, where the government
itself provides information to the media, it is most appropriate to
assume that the government had, but failed to utilize, far more
limited means of guarding against dissemination than the extreme
step of punishing truthful speech. That assumption is richly borne
out in this case. B.J.F.'s identity would never have come to light
were it not for the erroneous, if inadvertent, inclusion by the
Department of her full name in an incident report made available in
a pressroom open to the public. Florida's policy against disclosure
of rape victims' identities, reflected in § 794.03, was
undercut by the Department's failure to abide by this policy.
Where, as here, the government has failed to police itself in
disseminating information, it is clear under
Cox Broadcasting,
Oklahoma Publishing, and
Landmark Communications that
the imposition of damages against the press for its subsequent
publication can hardly be said to be a narrowly tailored means of
safeguarding anonymity.
See supra at
491 U. S.
534-535. Once the government has placed such information
in the public domain, "reliance must rest upon the judgment of
those who decide what to publish or broadcast,"
Cox
Broadcasting, 420 U.S. at
420 U. S. 496,
and hopes for restitution must rest upon the willingness of the
government to compensate victims for their loss of privacy and to
protect them from the other consequences of its mishandling of the
information which these victims provided in confidence.
That appellant gained access to the information in question
through a government news release makes it especially likely that,
if liability were to be imposed, self-censorship would result.
Reliance on a news release "is a paradigmatically routine newspaper
reporting techniqu[e]."
Daily Mail, 443 U.S. at
443 U. S. 103.
The government's issuance of such a release, without qualification,
can only convey to recipients that the
Page 491 U. S. 539
government considered dissemination lawful, and indeed expected
the recipients to disseminate the information further. Had
appellant merely reproduced the news release prepared and released
by the Department, imposing civil damages would surely violate the
First Amendment. The fact that appellant converted the police
report into a news story by adding the linguistic connecting tissue
necessary to transform the report's facts into full sentences
cannot change this result.
A second problem with Florida's imposition of liability for
publication is the broad sweep of the negligence
per se
standard applied under the civil cause of action implied from
§ 794.03. Unlike claims based on the common law tort of
invasion of privacy,
see Restatement (Second) of Torts
§ 652D (1977), civil actions based on § 794.03 require no
case-by-case findings that the disclosure of a fact about a
person's private life was one that a reasonable person would find
highly offensive. On the contrary, under the
per se theory
of negligence adopted by the courts below, liability follows
automatically from publication. This is so regardless of whether
the identity of the victim is already known throughout the
community; whether the victim has voluntarily called public
attention to the offense; or whether the identity of the victim has
otherwise become a reasonable subject of public concern -- because,
perhaps, questions have arisen whether the victim fabricated an
assault by a particular person. Nor is there a scienter requirement
of any kind under § 794.03, engendering the perverse result
that truthful publications challenged pursuant to this cause of
action are less protected by the First Amendment than even the
least protected defamatory falsehoods: those involving purely
private figures, where liability is evaluated under a standard,
usually applied by a jury, of ordinary negligence.
See Gertz v
Robert Welch, Inc., 418 U. S. 323
(1974). We have previously noted the impermissibility of
categorical prohibitions upon media access where important First
Amendment interests are at stake.
See
Globe
Page 491 U. S. 540
Newspaper Co. v. Superior Court of Norfolk County,
457 U. S. 596,
457 U. S. 608
(1982) (invalidating state statute providing for the categorical
exclusion of the public from trials of sexual offenses involving
juvenile victims). More individualized adjudication is no less
indispensable where the State, seeking to safeguard the anonymity
of crime victims, sets its face against publication of their
names.
Third, and finally, the facial underinclusiveness of §
794.03 raises serious doubts about whether Florida is, in fact,
serving, with this statute, the significant interests which
appellee invokes in support of affirmance. Section 794.03 prohibits
the publication of identifying information only if this information
appears in an "instrument of mass communication," a term the
statute does not define. Section 794.03 does not prohibit the
spread by other means of the identities of victims of sexual
offenses. An individual who maliciously spreads word of the
identity of a rape victim is thus not covered, despite the fact
that the communication of such information to persons who live
near, or work with, the victim may have consequences as devastating
as the exposure of her name to large numbers of strangers.
See Tr. of Oral Arg. 49-50 (appellee acknowledges that
§ 794.03 would not apply to "the backyard gossip who tells 50
people that don't have to know").
When a State attempts the extraordinary measure of punishing
truthful publication in the name of privacy, it must demonstrate
its commitment to advancing this interest by applying its
prohibition evenhandedly, to the small-time disseminator as well as
the media giant. Where important First Amendment interests are at
stake, the mass scope of disclosure is not an acceptable surrogate
for injury. A ban on disclosures effected by "instrument[s] of mass
communication" simply cannot be defended on the ground that partial
prohibitions may effect partial relief.
See Daily Mail,
443 U.S. at
443 U. S.
104-105 (statute is insufficiently tailored to interest
in protecting anonymity where it restricted only newspapers,
not
Page 491 U. S. 541
the electronic media or other forms of publication, from
identifying juvenile defendants);
id. at
443 U. S. 110
(REHNQUIST, J., concurring in judgment) (same);
cf. Arkansas
Writers' Project, Inc. v. Ragland, 481 U.
S. 221,
481 U. S. 229
(1987);
Minneapolis Star & Tribune Co. v. Minnesota Comm'r
of Revenue, 460 U. S. 575,
460 U. S. 585
(1983). Without more careful and inclusive precautions against
alternative forms of dissemination, we cannot conclude that
Florida's selective ban on publication by the mass media
satisfactorily accomplishes its stated purpose. [
Footnote 9]
III
Our holding today is limited. We do not hold that truthful
publication is automatically constitutionally protected, or that
there is no zone of personal privacy within which the State may
protect the individual from intrusion by the press, or even that a
State may never punish publication of the name of a victim of a
sexual offense. We hold only that, where a newspaper publishes
truthful information which it has lawfully obtained, punishment may
lawfully be imposed, if at all, only when narrowly tailored to a
state interest of the highest order, and that no such interest is
satisfactorily served by imposing liability under § 794.03 to
appellant under the facts of this case. The decision below is
therefore
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
The statute provides in its entirety:
"Unlawful to publish or broadcast information identifying sexual
offense victim. -- No person shall print, publish, or broadcast, or
cause or allow to be printed, published, or broadcast, in any
instalment of mass communication the name, address, or other
identifying fact or information of the victim of any sexual offense
within this chapter. An offense under this section shall constitute
a misdemeanor of the second degree, punishable as provided in
§ 775.082, § 775.083, or § 775.084."
Fla.Stat. § 794.03 (1987).
[
Footnote 2]
In filing this lawsuit, appellee used her full name in the
caption of the case. On appeal, the Florida District Court of
Appeal
sua sponte revised the caption, stating that it
would refer to the appellee by her initials, "in order to preserve
[her] privacy interests." 499 So. 2d 883, 883, n. (1986).
Respecting those interests, we, too, refer to appellee by her
initials, both in the caption and in our discussion.
[
Footnote 3]
In
Doe v. Sarasota-Bradenton Florida Television Co.,
436 So. 2d at 329, the Second District Court of Appeal upheld the
dismissal on First Amendment grounds of a rape victim's damage
claim against a Florida television station which had broadcast
portions of her testimony at her assailant's trial. The court
reasoned that, as in
Cox Broadcasting Corp. v. Cohn,
420 U. S. 469
(1975), the information in question "was readily available to the
public, through the vehicle of a public trial." 436 So. 2d at 330.
The court stated, however, that § 794.03 could
constitutionally be applied to punish publication of a sexual
offense victim's name or other identifying information where it had
not yet become "part of an open public record" by virtue of being
revealed in "open, public judicial proceedings."
Ibid.,
citing Fla.Op.Atty.Gen. 075-203 (1975).
[
Footnote 4]
Before noting probable jurisdiction, we certified to the Florida
Supreme Court the question whether it had possessed jurisdiction
when it declined to hear the newspaper's case. 484 U.S. 984 (1987).
The State Supreme Court answered in the affirmative.
530 So. 2d
286, 287 (1988).
[
Footnote 5]
The somewhat uncharted state of the law in this area thus
contrasts markedly with the well mapped area of defamatory
falsehoods, where a long line of decisions has produced relatively
detailed legal standards governing the multifarious situations in
which individuals aggrieved by the dissemination of damaging
untruths seek redress.
See, e.g., New York Times Co. v.
Sullivan, 376 U. S. 254
(1964);
Garrison v. Louisiana, 379 U. S.
64 (1964);
Henry v. Collins, 380 U.
S. 356 (1965);
Rosenblatt v. Baer, 383 U. S.
75 (1966);
Time, Inc. v. Hill, 385 U.
S. 374 (1967);
Greenbelt Cooperative Publishing
Assn., Inc. v. Bresler, 398 U. S. 6 (1970);
Monitor Patriot Co. v. Roy, 401 U.
S. 265 (1971);
Time, Inc. v. Pape, 401 U.
S. 279 (1971);
Rosenbloom v. Metromedia, Inc.,
403 U. S. 29
(1971);
Gertz v. Robert Welch, Inc., 418 U.
S. 323 (1974);
Herbert v. Lando, 441 U.
S. 153 (1979);
Hutchinson v. Proxmire,
443 U. S. 111
(1979);
Dun & Bradstreet, Inc. v. Greenmoss Builders,
Inc., 472 U. S. 749
(1985);
Philadelphia Newspapers, Inc. v. Hepps,
475 U. S. 767
(1986);
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.
S. 242 (1986).
[
Footnote 6]
See, e.g., Landmark Communications, Inc. v. Virginia,
435 U. S. 829
(1978) (interest in confidentiality of judicial disciplinary
proceedings);
Bates v. State Bar of Arizona, 433 U.
S. 350 (1977) (interest in maintaining professionalism
of attorneys);
Nebraska Press Assn. v. Stuart,
427 U. S. 539
(1976) (interest in accused's right to fair trial);
Virginia
Pharmacy Bd. v. Virginia Citizens Consumer Council, Inc.,
425 U. S. 748
(1976) (interest in maintaining professionalism of licensed
pharmacists);
New York Times Co. v. United States,
403 U. S. 713
(1971) (interest in national security);
Garrison, supra,
(interest in public figure's reputation).
[
Footnote 7]
We also recognized that privacy interests fade once information
already appears on the public record, 420 U.S. at
420 U. S.
494-495, and that making public records generally
available to the media while allowing their publication to be
punished if offensive would invite "self-censorship and very likely
lead to the suppression of many items that . . . should be made
available to the public."
Id. at
420 U. S.
496.
[
Footnote 8]
The
Daily Mail principle does not settle the issue
whether, in cases where information has been acquired
unlawfully by a newspaper or by a source, government may
ever punish not only the unlawful acquisition, but the ensuing
publication as well. This issue was raised, but not definitively
resolved, in
New York Times Co. v. United States,
403 U. S. 713
(1971), and reserved in
Landmark Communications, 435 U.S.
at
435 U. S. 837.
We have no occasion to address it here.
[
Footnote 9]
Having concluded that imposing liability on appellant pursuant
to § 794.03 violates the First Amendment, we have no occasion
to address appellant's subsidiary arguments that the imposition of
punitive damages for publication independently violated the First
Amendment, or that § 794.03 functions as an impermissible
prior restraint.
See Smith v. Daily Mail Publishing Co.,
443 U. S. 97,
443 U. S.
101-102 (1979).
JUSTICE SCALIA, concurring in part and concurring in the
judgment.
I think it sufficient to decide this case to rely upon the third
ground set forth in the Court's opinion,
ante at 540 and
this page: that a law cannot be regarded as protecting an
interest
Page 491 U. S. 542
"of the highest order,"
Smith v. Daily Mail Publishing
Co., 443 U. S. 97,
443 U. S. 103
(1979), and thus as justifying a restriction upon truthful speech,
when it leaves appreciable damage to that supposedly vital interest
unprohibited. In the present case, I would anticipate that the rape
victim's discomfort at the dissemination of news of her misfortune
among friends and acquaintances would be at least as great as her
discomfort at its publication by the media to people to whom she is
only a name. Yet the law in question does not prohibit the former
in either oral or written form. Nor is it at all clear, as I think
it must be to validate this statute, that Florida's general privacy
law would prohibit such gossip. Nor, finally, is it credible that
the interest meant to be served by the statute is the protection of
the victim against a rapist still at large -- an interest that
arguably would extend only to mass publication. There would be
little reason to limit a statute with that objective to rape alone;
or to extend it to all rapes, whether or not the felon has been
apprehended and confined. In any case, the instructions here did
not require the jury to find that the rapist was at large.
This law has every appearance of a prohibition that society is
prepared to impose upon the press, but not upon itself. Such a
prohibition does not protect an interest "of the highest order."
For that reason, I agree that the judgment of the court below must
be reversed.
JUSTICE WHITE, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE and JUSTICE O'CONNOR
join, dissenting.
"Short of homicide, [rape] is the
ultimate violation of
self.'" Coker v. Georgia, 433 U.
S. 584, 433 U. S. 597
(1977) (opinion of WHITE, J.). For B.J.F., however, the violation
she suffered at a rapist's knifepoint marked only the beginning of
her ordeal. A week later, while her assailant was still at large,
an account of this assault -- identifying by name B.J.F. as the
victim -- was published by The Florida Star. As a result, B.J.F.
received harassing phone calls, required mental health counseling,
was forced to move from
Page 491 U. S. 543
her home, and was even threatened with being raped again. Yet
today the Court holds that a jury award of $75,000 to compensate
B.J.F. for the harm she suffered due to the Star's negligence is at
odds with the First Amendment. I do not accept this result.
The Court reaches its conclusion based on an analysis of three
of our precedents and a concern with three particular aspects of
the judgment against appellant. I consider each of these points in
turn, and then consider some of the larger issues implicated by
today's decision.
I
The Court finds its result compelled, or at least supported in
varying degrees, by three of our prior cases:
Cox Broadcasting
Corp. v. Cohn, 420 U. S. 469
(1975);
Oklahoma Publishing Co. v. Oklahoma County District
Court, 430 U. S. 308
(1977); and
Smith v. Daily Mail Publishing Co.,
443 U. S. 97
(1979). I disagree. None of these cases requires the harsh outcome
reached today.
Cox Broadcasting reversed a damages award entered
against a television station, which had obtained a rape victim's
name from public records maintained in connection with the judicial
proceedings
Page 491 U. S. 544
brought against her assailants. While there are similarities,
critical aspects of that case make it wholly distinguishable from
this one. First, in
Cox Broadcasting, the victim's name
had been disclosed in the hearing where her assailants pleaded
guilty; and, as we recognized, judicial records have always been
considered public information in this country.
See Cox
Broadcasting, supra, at
420 U. S.
492-493. In fact, even the earliest notion of privacy
rights exempted the information contained in judicial records from
its protections.
See Warren & Brandeis, The Right to
Privacy, 4 Harv.L.Rev. 193, 216-217 (1890). Second, unlike the
incident report at issue here, which was meant by state law to be
withheld from public release, the judicial proceedings at issue in
Cox Broadcasting were open as a matter of state law. Thus,
in
Cox Broadcasting, the state law scheme made public
disclosure of the victim's name almost inevitable; here, Florida
law forbids such disclosure.
See Fla.Stat. 794.03
(1987).
These facts -- that the disclosure came in judicial proceedings,
which were open to the public -- were critical to our analysis in
Cox Broadcasting. The distinction between that case and
this one is made obvious by the penultimate paragraph of
Cox
Broadcasting:
"We are reluctant to embark on a course that would make
public records generally available to the media but would
forbid their publication if offensive. . . . [T]he First and
Fourteenth Amendments will not allow exposing the press to
liability for truthfully publishing information
released to the
public in official court records. If there are privacy interests to
be protected in judicial proceedings, the States must respond by
means which avoid public documentation or other exposure of private
information. . . . Once true information is disclosed in
public court documents open to public inspection, the
press cannot be sanctioned for publishing it."
Cox Broadcasting, supra, at
420 U. S. 496
(emphasis added).
Cox Broadcasting stands for the proposition that the
State cannot make the press its first line of defense in
withholding private information from the public -- it cannot ask
the press to secrete private facts that the State makes no effort
to safeguard in the first place. In this case, however, the State
has undertaken "means which avoid [but obviously, not altogether
prevent] public documentation or other exposure of private
information." No doubt this is why the Court frankly admits that
"
Cox Broadcasting . . . cannot fairly be read as
controlling here."
Ante at
491 U. S.
532.
Finding
Cox Broadcasting inadequate to support its
result, the Court relies on
Smith v. Daily Mail Publishing
Co. as its
Page 491 U. S. 545
principal authority. [
Footnote
2/1] But the flat rule from
Daily Mail on which the
Court places so much reliance --
"[I]f a newspaper lawfully obtains truthful information . . .
then state officials may not constitutionally punish publication of
the information, absent a need to further a state interest of the
highest order"
-- was introduced in
Daily Mail with the cautious
qualifier that such a rule was "suggest[ed]" by our prior cases,
"[n]one of [which] . . . directly control[led]" in
Daily
Mail. See Daily Mail, 443 U.S. at
443 U. S. 103.
The rule the Court takes as a given was thus offered only as a
hypothesis in
Daily Mail: it should not be so uncritically
accepted as constitutional dogma.
More importantly, at issue in
Daily Mail was the
disclosure of the name of the perpetrator of an infamous murder of
a 15-year-old student.
Id. at
443 U. S. 99.
Surely the rights of those accused of crimes and those who are
their victims must differ with respect to privacy concerns. That
is, whatever rights alleged criminals have to maintain their
anonymity pending an adjudication of guilt -- and after
Daily
Mail, those rights would seem to be minimal -- the rights of
crime victims to stay shielded from public view must be infinitely
more substantial.
Daily Mail was careful to state that the
"holding in this case is narrow. . . .
there is no issue here
of privacy."
Id. at
443 U. S. 105
(emphasis added). But in this case, there is an issue of privacy --
indeed, that is the principal issue -- and therefore, this case
falls outside of
Daily Mail's "rule"
Page 491 U. S. 546
(which, as I suggest above, was perhaps not even meant as a rule
in the first place).
Consequently, I cannot agree that
Cox Broadcasting, or
Oklahoma Publishing, or
Daily Mail requires -- or
even substantially supports -- the result reached by the Court
today.
II
We are left, then, to wonder whether the three "independent
reasons" the Court cites for reversing the judgment for B.J.F.
support its result.
See ante at
491 U. S.
537-541.
The first of these reasons relied on by the Court is the fact
"appellant gained access to [B.J.F.'s name] through a government
news release."
Ante at
491 U. S.
538.
"The government's issuance of such a release, without
qualification, can only convey to recipients that the government
considered dissemination lawful,"
the Court suggests.
Ante at
491 U. S.
538-539. So described, this case begins to look like the
situation in
Oklahoma Publishing, where a judge invited
reporters into his courtroom, but then tried to forbid them from
reporting on the proceedings they observed. But this case is
profoundly different. Here, the "release" of information provided
by the government was not, as the Court says, "without
qualification." As the Star's own reporter conceded at trial, the
crime incident report that inadvertently included B.J.F.'s name was
posted in a room that contained signs making it clear that the
names of rape victims were not matters of public record, and were
not to be published.
See 2 Record 113, 115, 117. The
Star's reporter indicated that she understood that she "[was not]
allowed to take down that information" (
i.e., B.J.F.'s
name) and that she "[was] not supposed to take the information from
the police department."
Id. at 117. Thus, by her own
admission the posting of the incident report did not convey to the
Star's reporter the idea that "the government considered
dissemination lawful;" the Court's suggestion to the contrary is
inapt.
Page 491 U. S. 547
Instead, Florida has done precisely what we suggested, in
Cox Broadcasting, that States wishing to protect the
privacy rights of rape victims might do: "respond [to the
challenge] by means which
avoid public documentation or
other exposure of private information." 420 U.S. at
420 U. S. 496
(emphasis added). By amending its public records statute to exempt
rape victims names from disclosure, Fla.Stat. § 119.07(3)(h)
(1983), and forbidding its officials from releasing such
information, Fla.Stat. § 794.03 (1983), the State has taken
virtually every step imaginable to prevent what happened here. This
case presents a far cry, then, from
Cox Broadcasting or
Oklahoma Publishing, where the State asked the news media
not to publish information it had made generally available to the
public: here, the State is not asking the media to do the State's
job in the first instance. Unfortunately, as this case illustrates,
mistakes happen: even when States take measures to "avoid"
disclosure, sometimes rape victims' names are found out. As I see
it, it is not too much to ask the press, in instances such as this,
to respect simple standards of decency and refrain from publishing
a victim's name, address, and/or phone number. [
Footnote 2/2]
Page 491 U. S. 548
Second, the Court complains that appellant was judged here under
too strict a liability standard. The Court contends that a
newspaper might be found liable under the Florida courts'
negligence
per se theory without regard to a newspaper's
scienter or degree of fault.
Ante at
491 U. S.
539-540. The short answer to this complaint is that,
whatever merit the Court's argument might have, it is wholly
inapposite here, where the jury found that appellant acted with
"reckless indifference towards the rights of others," 2 Record 170,
a standard far higher than the
Gertz standard the Court
urges as a constitutional minimum today.
Ante at
491 U. S.
539-540. B.J.F. proved the Star's negligence at trial --
and, actually, far more than simple negligence; the Court's
concerns about damages resting on a strict liability or mere
causation basis are irrelevant to the validity of the judgment for
appellee.
But even taking the Court's concerns in the abstract, they miss
the mark. Permitting liability under a negligence
per se
theory does not mean that defendants will be held liable without a
showing of negligence, but rather that the standard of care has
been set by the legislature, instead of the courts. The Court says
that negligence
per se permits a plaintiff to hold a
defendant liable without a showing that the disclosure was "of a
fact about a person's private life . . . that a reasonable person
would find highly offensive."
Ante at
491 U. S. 539.
But the point here is that the legislature -- rejecting popular
sentiment -- has determined that disclosure of the fact that a
person was raped is categorically a revelation that reasonable
people find offensive. And as for the Court's suggestion that the
Florida courts' theory permits liability without regard for whether
the victim's identity is already
Page 491 U. S. 549
known, or whether she herself has made it known -- these are
facts that would surely enter into the calculation of damages in
such a case. In any event, none of these mitigating factors was
present here; whatever the force of these arguments generally, they
do not justify the Court's ruling against B.J.F. in this case.
Third, the Court faults the Florida criminal statute for being
under-inclusive: § 794.03 covers disclosure of rape victim's
names in "
instrument[s] of mass communication,'" but not other
means of distribution, the Court observes. Ante at
491 U.S. 540. But our cases
which have struck down laws that limit or burden the press due to
their underinclusiveness have involved situations where a
legislature has singled out one segment of the news media or press
for adverse treatment, see, e.g., Daily Mail (restricting
newspapers and not radio or television), or singled out the press
for adverse treatment when compared to other similarly situated
enterprises, see, e.g., Minneapolis Star & Tribune Co. v.
Minnesota Comm'r of Revenue, 460 U. S. 575,
460 U. S. 578
(1983). Here, the Florida law evenhandedly covers all
"instrument[s] of mass communication," no matter their form, media,
content, nature, or purpose. It excludes neighborhood gossips,
cf. ante, at 491 U.S.
540, because presumably the Florida Legislature has
determined that neighborhood gossips do not pose the danger and
intrusion to rape victims that "instrument[s] of mass
communication" do. Simply put, Florida wanted to prevent the
widespread distribution of rape victims' names, and therefore
enacted a statute tailored almost as precisely as possible to
achieving that end.
Moreover, the Court's "underinclusiveness" analysis itself is
"under-inclusive." After all, the lawsuit against the Star which is
at issue here is not an action for violating the statute which the
Court deems under-inclusive, but is, more accurately, for the
negligent publication of appellee's name.
See App. to
Juris. Statement A10. The scheme which the Court should review,
then, is not only § 794.03 (which, as
Page 491 U. S. 550
noted above, merely provided the standard of care in this
litigation), but rather the whole of Florida privacy tort law. As
to the latter, Florida does recognize a tort of publication of
private facts. [
Footnote 2/3] Thus,
it is quite possible that the neighborhood gossip whom the Court so
fears being left scot-free to spread news of a rape victim's
identity would be subjected to the same (or similar) liability
regime under which appellant was taxed. The Court's myopic focus on
§ 794.03 ignores the probability that Florida law is more
comprehensive than the Court gives it credit for being.
Consequently, neither the State's "dissemination" of B.J.F.'s
name, nor the standard of liability imposed here, nor the
underinclusiveness of Florida tort law requires setting aside the
verdict for B.J.F. And as noted above, such a result is not
compelled by our cases. I turn, therefore, to the more general
principles at issue here to see if they recommend the Court's
result.
III
At issue in this case is whether there is any information about
people, which -- though true -- may not be published in the press.
By holding that only "a state interest of the highest order"
permits the State to penalize the publication of truthful
information, and by holding that protecting a rape victim's right
to privacy is not among those state interests of the highest order,
the Court accepts appellant's invitation,
see Tr. of Oral
Arg. 10-11, to obliterate one of the most noteworthy legal
inventions of the 20th century: the tort of the publication of
private facts. W. Prosser, J. Wade, & V. Schwartz, Torts
951-952 (8th ed.1988). Even if the Court's opinion does not say as
much today, such obliteration will follow inevitably from the
Court's conclusion here. If the First Amendment prohibits wholly
private persons
Page 491 U. S. 551
(such as B.J.F.) from recovering for the publication of the fact
that she was raped, I doubt that there remain any "private facts"
which persons may assume will not be published in the newspapers or
broadcast on television. [
Footnote
2/4]
Of course, the right to privacy is not absolute. Even the
article widely relied upon in cases vindicating privacy rights,
Warren & Brandeis, The Right to Privacy, 4 Harv.L.Rev. 193
(1890), recognized that this right inevitably conflicts with the
public's right to know about matters of general concern -- and that
sometimes the latter must trump the former.
Id. at
214-215. Resolving this conflict is a difficult matter, and I fault
the Court not for attempting to strike an appropriate balance
between the two, but rather fault it for according too little
weight to B.J.F.'s side of equation, and too much on the other.
Page 491 U. S. 552
I would strike the balance rather differently. Writing for the
Ninth Circuit, Judge Merrill put this view eloquently:
"Does the spirit of the Bill of Rights require that individuals
be free to pry into the unnewsworthy private affairs of their
fellowmen? In our view, it does not. In our view, fairly defined
areas of privacy must have the protection of law if the quality of
life is to continue to be reasonably acceptable. The public's right
to know is, then, subject to reasonable limitations so far as
concerns the private facts of its individual members."
Virgil v. Time, Inc., 527 F.2d 1122, 1128 (1975),
cert. denied, 425 U. S. 998
(1976).
Ironically, this Court, too, had occasion to consider this same
balance just a few weeks ago in
United States Department of
Justice v. Reporters Committee for Freedom of Press,
489 U. S. 749
(1989). There we were faced with a press request, under the Freedom
of Information Act, for a "rap sheet" on a person accused of
bribing a Congressman -- presumably a person whose privacy rights
would be far less than B.J.F.'s. Yet this Court rejected the
media's request for disclosure of the "rap sheet," saying:
"The privacy interest in maintaining the practical obscurity of
rap sheet information will always be high. When the subject of such
a rap sheet is a private citizen and when the information is in the
Government's control as a compilation, rather than as a record of
'what the government is up to,' the privacy interest . . . is . . .
at its apex, while the . . . public interest in disclosure is at
its nadir."
Id. at
489 U. S.
780.
The Court went on to conclude that disclosure of rap sheets
"categorical[ly]" constitutes an "unwarranted" invasion of privacy.
Ibid. The same surely must be true -- indeed, much more so
-- for the disclosure of a rape victim's name.
I do not suggest that the Court's decision today is a radical
departure from a previously charted course. The Court's
Page 491 U. S. 553
ruling has been foreshadowed. In
Time, Inc. v. Hill,
385 U. S. 374,
385 U. S.
383-384, n. 7 (1967), we observed that -- after a brief
period early in this century where Brandeis' view was ascendant --
the trend in "modern" jurisprudence has been to eclipse an
individual's right to maintain private any truthful information
that the press wished to publish. More recently, in
Cox
Broadcasting, 420 U.S. at
420 U. S. 491,
we acknowledged the possibility that the First Amendment may
prevent a State from ever subjecting the publication of truthful
but private information to civil liability. Today we hit the bottom
of the slippery slope.
I would find a place to draw the line higher on the hillside: a
spot high enough to protect B.J.F.'s desire for privacy and peace
of mind in the wake of a horrible personal tragedy. There is no
public interest in publishing the names, addresses, and phone
numbers of persons who are the victims of crime -- and no public
interest in immunizing the press from liability in the rare cases
where a State's efforts to protect a victim's privacy have failed.
Consequently, I respectfully dissent. [
Footnote 2/5]
[
Footnote 2/1]
The second case in the "trilogy" which the Court cites is
Oklahoma Publishing Co. v. Oklahoma County District Court,
430 U. S. 308
(1977).
See ante at
491 U. S.
530-531. But not much reliance is placed on that case,
and I do not discuss it with the degree of attention devoted to
Cox Broadcasting or
Daily Mail.
As for the support
Oklahoma Publishing allegedly
provides for the Court's result here, the reasons that distinguish
Cox Broadcasting and
Daily Mail from this case
are even more apt in the case of
Oklahoma Publishing.
Probably that is why the Court places so little weight on this
middle leg of the three.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The Court's concern for a free press is appropriate, but such
concerns should be balanced against rival interests in a civilized
and humane society. An absolutist view of the former leads to
insensitivity as to the latter.
This was evidenced at trial, when the Florida Star's lawyer
explained why the paper was not to blame for any anguish caused
B.J.F. by a phone call she received, the day after the Star's story
was published, from a man threatening to rape B.J.F. again. Noting
that the phone call was received at B.J.F.'s home by her mother
(who was babysitting B.J.F.'s children while B.J.F. was in the
hospital), who relayed the threat to B.J.F., the Star's counsel
suggested:
"[I]n reference to the [threatening] phone call, it is sort of
blunted by the fact that [B.J.F.] didn't receive the phone call.,
Her mother did. And if there is any pain and suffering in
connection with the phone call, it has to lay in her mother's
hands. I mean, my God, she called [B.J.F.] up at the hospital to
tell her [of the threat] -- you know, I think that is tragic, but I
don't think that is something you can blame the Florida Star
for."
2 Record 154-155. While I would not want to live in a society
where freedom of the press was unduly limited, I also find
regrettable an interpretation of the First Amendment that fosters
such a degree of irresponsibility on the part of the news
media.
[
Footnote 2/3]
See, e.g., Cape Publications, Inc. V. Hitchner, 514 So.
2d 1136, 1137-1138 (Fla.App.1987);
Loft v. Fuller, 408 So.
2d 619, 622 (Fla.App.1981).
[
Footnote 2/4]
The consequences of the Court's ruling -- that a State cannot
prevent the publication of private facts about its citizens which
the State inadvertently discloses -- is particularly troubling when
one considers the extensive powers of the State to collect
information. One recent example illustrates this point.
In
Boettger v. Loverro, 555
A.2d 1234 (Pa.1989), police officers had lawfully "tapped" the
telephone of a man suspected of bookmaking. Under Pennsylvania law,
transcripts of the conversations intercepted this way may not be
disclosed. 18 Pa.Cons.Stat. § 5703 (1988). Another statute
imposes civil liability on any person who "discloses" the content
of tapped conversations. § 5725. Nonetheless, in a preliminary
court hearing, a prosecutor inadvertently attached a transcript of
the phone conversations to a document filed with the court. A
reporter obtained a copy of the transcript due to this error, and
his paper published a version of the remarks disclosed by the
telephone tap. On appeal, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania upheld
a civil liability award of $1,000 against the paper for its
unlawful disclosure of the contents of the phone conversations,
concluding that individuals' rights to privacy outweighed the
interest in public disclosure of such private telephone
communications.
Boettger, supra, at 1239-1240.
The Court's decision today suggests that this ruling by the
Pennsylvania Court was erroneous. In light of the substantial
privacy interest in such communications, though,
cf. Katz v.
United States, 389 U. S. 347
(1967), I would strike the balance as the Pennsylvania Supreme
Court did.
[
Footnote 2/5]
The Court does not address the distinct constitutional questions
raised by the award of punitive damages in this case.
Ante
at
491 U. S. 541,
n. 9. Consequently, I do not do so either. That award is more
troublesome than the compensatory award discussed above.
Cf. Note, Punitive Damages and Libel Law, 98 Harv.L.Rev.
847 (1985).