/PRNewswire/ Juan Monteverde, founder and managing partner at Monteverde & Associates PC, a national securities firm rated Top 50 in the 2018-2020 ISS.
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Although some state and local governments are looking for ways to prohibit abusive, highly offensive speech that is directed toward someone, the First Amendment still protects that speech, unless it is designed to provoke a violent response from a particular person. That’s according to a recent ruling from the United States Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals in
United States v. Bartow, 2021 WL 1877821 (4th Cir. May 11, 2021), in which the court weighed the defendant’s free speech rights against a Virginia statute criminalizing abusive language that is reasonably calculated to provoke a violent response.
NEW YORK, May 15, 2021 /PRNewswire/ Juan Monteverde, founder and managing partner at Monteverde & Associates PC, a national securities firm rated Top 50 in the 2018-2020 ISS. | May 15, 2021
/PRNewswire/ Juan Monteverde, founder and managing partner at Monteverde & Associates PC, a national securities firm rated Top 50 in the 2018-2020 ISS.
/PRNewswire/ Juan Monteverde, founder and managing partner at Monteverde & Associates PC, a national securities firm rated Top 50 in the 2018-2020 ISS.