Current:Home > MarketsIowa court affirms hate crime conviction of man who left anti-gay notes at homes with rainbow flags -Pinnacle Profit Strategies
Iowa court affirms hate crime conviction of man who left anti-gay notes at homes with rainbow flags
View
Date:2025-04-17 13:18:00
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! (21)
Related
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- How Taiwan beat back disinformation and preserved the integrity of its election
- Hollywood has been giving out climate change-focused awards for 33 years. Who knew?
- Haus Labs Review: How Lady Gaga's TikTok-Viral Foundation, Lip Lacquers and More Products Hold Up
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Bangladesh appeals court grants bail to Nobel laureate Muhammad Yunus in labor case
- In a Steel Town Outside Pittsburgh, an Old Fight Over Air Quality Drags On
- Eileen Gu chooses ‘All of the Above’ when faced with choices involving skiing, Stanford and style
- Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
- Trump praises Texas governor as border state clashes with Biden administration over immigration
Ranking
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Texas attorney general refuses to grant federal agents full access to border park: Your request is hereby denied
- Will other states replicate Alabama’s nitrogen execution?
- Rite Aid to close 10 additional stores: See full list of nearly 200 locations shutting their doors
- As Trump Enters Office, a Ripe Oil and Gas Target Appears: An Alabama National Forest
- FAFSA freaking you out? It's usually the best choice, but other financial aid options exist
- 2 masked assailants attach a church in Istanbul and kill 1 person
- New Orleans thief steals 7 king cakes from bakery in a very Mardi Gras way
Recommendation
Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
Flying on a Boeing 737 Max 9? Here's what to know.
LeBron James outduels Steph Curry with triple-double as Lakers beat Warriors in double-OT
Chiefs are in their 6th straight AFC championship game, and this is the 1st for the Ravens at home
Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
NBA commissioner Adam Silver reaches long-term deal to remain in role through end of decade
A suburban Florida castle with fairy-tale flair: Go inside this distinct $1.22M home
Live updates | UN court keeps genocide case against Israel alive as Gaza death toll surpasses 26,000