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FIREfiles amicus brief asking Tennessee to stay in its lane on vanity plates
When you spot a clever vanity license plate, who do you credit for its wit: the carâs owner, or the state that stamped out the letters and numbers?
According to a state court in Tennessee, the message on the vanity plate represents the speech of the government, not the car owner. As a result, the court said, the First Amendment doesnât apply at all, and the state can reject any plate that authorities decide is contrary to ââ â whatever that means.
Both of these conclusions are wrong, and FIREhas filed a âfriend of the courtâ brief on appeal to explain that these plates share messages of car owners (not their governments) and that what amounts to âgood tasteâ or âdecencyâ is hopelessly subjective, allowing authorities to censor any message they donât like.
The case arises from a license plate featuring online slang. Leah Gilliam has had the same license plate for 11 years. In December 2010, she applied for a license plate that reflects both her interest in astronomy and gaming: â69PWNDU.â According to Gilliamâs lawyers, â69â references the 1969 moon landing and is not a sexual reference, whereas âPWNDUâ is slang â to have originated from a chess game in 1935 â commonly used among gamers to mean âownedâ or, in this case, âowned you,â in the context of playing a video game.
Gilliam drove with this vanity license plate without incident until May 2021, when someone tattled to the Tennessee Department of Revenueâs chief of staff about it. (Pause for a moment and consider whether the government is speaking if someone else has to tell the government what it said.) Within a month, the Department of Revenue sent Gilliam a letter stating that it had deemed the license plate offensive. Her options: turn in the license plate, or face âthe threat of immediate criminal liability, a fine, and up to 30 days in jail.â
Rather than calling for the state to intervene when they see a vanity plate they dislike, people should just change lanes.
Gilliam selected a third option: she sued to prevent the state from taking action against her, asking a court to declare unconstitutional the Tennessee law that allows state officials to deny vanity license plates that are âoffensive to good taste and decency.â
But a three-judge panel rejected Gilliamâs lawsuit, concluding that vanity plates are actually government speech, on government property â the license plate. Were that correct, itâs a crucial distinction, as the First Amendment doesnât place a limit on what the government says, but instead limits what restrictions it can place on what others say. So if the government tells its spokesperson to say one thing and the spokesperson instead says another, the spokesperson wonât have a First Amendment case if they lose their job.
But, as ĂÛÖÏăÌÒâs amicus brief argues, vanity license plates are intended, and widely understood, to facilitate other peoplesâ messages, not those of their government. Thatâs why, for example, Tennessee encourages drivers to use vanity plates to share â.â (Other states, like and , encourage drivers to âexpress yourselfâ or âshow the world what you think, who you are or almost anything else.â) This is important because, as the recent Supreme Court decision in Shurtleff v. City of Boston clarified, the proper analysis is not whether the government owns the property, but whether the message conveyed âwould be understood to be the governmentâs ownâ message.
In light of this test, the lower courtâs opinion â which issued before the decision in Shurtleff came down â is flatly wrong.
But a three-judge panel rejected Gilliamâs lawsuit, concluding that vanity plates are actually government speech, on government property â the license plate.
Because the vanity plates are not the government speaking, the First Amendment imposes limits on what restrictions states can impose on vehicle ownersâ messages. Wherever that line may be drawn, a standard of âgood taste and decencyâ wonât cut it. As ĂÛÖÏăÌÒâs amicus brief explains, vague definitions like these give officials free reign to censor any speech they â or some member of the public â might dislike.
As ĂÛÖÏăÌÒâs research into restrictions on license plates reveals, unfettered discretion for officials to police the license plates of others often leads to arbitrary decisions and vague enforcement.
Take, for example, Nathan Kirk, an Alabama gun store owner who received a letter demanding that he because of its âobjectionable language . . . offensive to the peace and dignity of the State of Alabama.â (That âlanguageâ was apparently the letter F, not the acronym referencing âLetâs Go Brandonâ â itself a coded reference to the words âFuck Joe Bidenâ). After enough people complained, he got his plate back, with an apology for the trouble. And states frequently ban references to the letter F â whether itâs about Biden, Trump, or .
A Michigan driver was not so fortunate. Michigan, like many states, has a prohibition on plates âused to disparage or promote or condone hateâ against âany type of business, group or persons.â In other words, an attempt to limit so-called âhate speech.â And which group did this driver offend? Police.
After someone complained about the plate â an acronym for âAll Cops Are Bastardsâ â to Michiganâs Secretary of State, officials launched an investigation to determine the real meaning of the plate. The driver argued that it really meant âAll Cats Are Beautiful,â but Michigan disagreed and .
Unsurprisingly: many states restrict plates that criticize law enforcement, like when New Hampshire blocked ââ but gave the green light to âGR8GOVT.â
These are just a few of the examples ĂÛÖÏăÌÒâs amicus brief recounts in explaining that the First Amendment requires that states avoid the potential abuse of discretion from the officials and allow individuals to decide what may appear on their license plates, especially when the state invites them to do so â as Tennessee has.
Rather than calling for the state to intervene when they see a vanity plate they dislike, people should just change lanes.
Leah Gilliam is represented by attorney , and FIREby attorney of Spicer Rudstrom, PLLC.
FIRE defends the rights of students and faculty members â no matter their views â at public and private universities and colleges in the United States. If you are a student or a faculty member facing investigation or punishment for your speech, . If youâre faculty member at a public college or university, call the Faculty Legal Defense Fund 24-hour hotline at 254-500-FLDF (3533). If youâre a college journalist facing censorship or a media law question, call the Student Press Freedom Initiative 24-hour hotline at 717-734-SPFI (7734).
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