Current:Home > MyIowa court affirms hate crime conviction of man who left anti-gay notes at homes with rainbow flags -InvestTomorrow
Iowa court affirms hate crime conviction of man who left anti-gay notes at homes with rainbow flags
View
Date:2025-04-25 09:00:18
The Iowa Supreme Court affirmed the hate crime conviction Friday of a man who posted hand-written notes at homes with rainbow flags and emblems, urging them to “burn that gay flag.”
The majority rejected the claim by Robert Clark Geddes that his conviction for trespassing as a hate crime violated his free speech rights. But a dissenting justice said a hate crime conviction wasn’t appropriate since it wasn’t clear if the people displaying the symbols were actually associated with the LGBTQ+ community.
As the court noted, the rainbow flag has come to symbolize support for LGBTQ+ rights. The majority said the state statute in question does not criminalize speech, but rather conduct with a specific intent — trespassing because the property owners or residents had associated themselves with a protected class.
“The individuals’ display of the LGBTQ+ flag or flag decal on their own properties was an exercise of First Amendment rights; the defendant’s surreptitious entry onto those properties to post his harassing notes was not,” the court said.
Handwritten notes turned up in June of 2021 taped to the front doors of five renters and homeowners in the town of Boone who displayed rainbow flags or decals. All said, “burn that gay flag.” One contained additional anti-gay slurs. The recipients told police they found the notes “alarming, annoying, and/or threatening,” according to the decision.
Based on surveillance video from some of the homes, police identified Geddes as the man who left the notes, and he acknowledged posting them. He was charged with five counts of trespassing as a hate crime. He was later convicted and was sentenced to up to two years of probation.
On appeal, Geddes argued prosecutors failed to prove he targeted persons who were LGBTQ+ or had a connection with them. He said his conviction therefore violated his free speech rights.
Iowa’s hate crime law requires that the victim was targeted because of their “race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin, political affiliation, sex, sexual orientation, age, or disability,” or because of their ”association with” people in those categories.
In his dissent, Justice Matthew McDermott said there was no evidence in the record that the recipients of Geddes’ notes were members of the LGBTQ+ community or whether he believed they were, nor whether any of the residents had an “association with” an actual person in those protected classes. He noted that the Legislature chose the words “association with” rather than “solidarity with” when it wrote the hate crime law.
“As a symbol, a flag doesn’t independently create or express actual association with particular persons,” McDermott wrote, adding that, “Not everyone who displays a pirate flag is associated with actual pirates.”
Geddes’s attorney Ashley Stewart said they were disappointed in the decision.
“We should all be concerned with protecting the free marketplace of ideas under the First Amendment even if the ideas are minority opinions,” Stewart wrote in an email. “Iowa’s hate crime statute requires the victim be associated with a targeted group. We agree with the dissent that the mere display of a flag on a home does not meet the criteria.”
Jane Kirtley, a First Amendment expert at the University of Minnesota, said the dissenting justice may have a valid point. When hate crimes are so tied to expression, she said, the particular facts of the case matter. She agreed that there might not be enough facts in the record to establish whether Geddes’ actions violated the hate crimes law, given its use of the vague term “association with.”
“Words matter,” Kirtley said in an interview. “Legislatures can write with greater precision. Judges are reluctant to read things into ambiguous language, and rightly so.”
veryGood! (35926)
Related
- Everything Simone Biles did at the Paris Olympics was amplified. She thrived in the spotlight
- TGL pushes start date to 2025 due to recent stadium issue
- How Mark Wahlberg’s Kids Are Following in His Footsteps
- Colman Domingo’s time is now
- Brianna LaPaglia Reveals The Meaning Behind Her "Chickenfry" Nickname
- Cease-fire is the only way forward to stop the Israel-Hamas war, Jordanian ambassador says
- Rosalynn Carter’s tiny hometown mourns a global figure who made many contributions at home
- Ukrainians who fled their country for Israel find themselves yet again living with war
- 51-year-old Andy Macdonald puts on Tony Hawk-approved Olympic skateboard showing
- 2 people killed in shooting outside an Anchorage Walmart
Ranking
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- Paris Hilton Says She and Britney Spears Created the Selfie 17 Years Ago With Iconic Throwback Photos
- Nearly 1,000 Rohingya refugees arrive by boat in Indonesia’s Aceh region in one week
- 10 years later, a war-weary Ukraine reflects on events that began its collision course with Russia
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Supreme Court declines appeal from Derek Chauvin in murder of George Floyd
- What causes a cold sore? The reason is not as taboo as some might think.
- What you need to know about Emmett Shear, OpenAI’s new interim CEO
Recommendation
51-year-old Andy Macdonald puts on Tony Hawk-approved Olympic skateboard showing
The Excerpt podcast: Rosalynn Carter dies at 96, sticking points in hostage negotiations
Michigan continues overhaul of gun laws with extended firearm ban for misdemeanor domestic violence
Robert Pattinson Is Going to Be a Dad: Revisit His and Pregnant Suki Waterhouse’s Journey to Baby
What polling shows about Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, Harris’ new running mate
Closer than we have been to deal between Hamas and Israel on hostage release, White House official says
Boston Bruins forward Lucic to be arraigned on assault charge after wife called police to their home
911 call center says its misidentified crossing before derailment of Chicago-bound Amtrak train