Joseph Brown v. Jeffrey Kemp

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 13, 2023
Docket21-1042
StatusPublished

This text of Joseph Brown v. Jeffrey Kemp (Joseph Brown v. Jeffrey Kemp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joseph Brown v. Jeffrey Kemp, (7th Cir. 2023).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 21-1042 JOSEPH BROWN, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants, v.

JEFFREY L. KEMP, et al., Defendants-Appellees. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin. No. 3:17-cv-00549-wmc — William M. Conley, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED SEPTEMBER 27, 2021 — DECIDED NOVEMBER 13, 2023 ____________________

Before ROVNER, HAMILTON, and KIRSCH, Circuit Judges. HAMILTON, Circuit Judge. Different constitutional rights collide in this case. Article I, section 26 of the Wisconsin Con- stitution protects the right to hunt. The First Amendment to the United States Constitution protects freedom of speech. Since 1990, Wisconsin has had a special statute making it a crime to harass hunters in various ways. The Wisconsin legis- lature amended the so-called “hunter harassment law” effec- tive in 2016 in a way that raises First Amendment issues. The 2 No. 21-1042

amended law makes it a crime to interfere intentionally with a hunter by “maintaining a visual or physical proximity” to the hunter, by “approaching or confronting” the hunter, or by photographing, videotaping, audiotaping, or otherwise re- cording the activity of the hunter. Wis. Stat. § 29.083(2)(a)(7) (2016). The three plaintiffs here oppose hunting. Plaintiffs have observed hunters on public land and have sometimes approached and confronted them. Plaintiffs have also photo- graphed and filmed hunters’ activities, and plaintiffs intend to continue all these activities. Plaintiffs assert that the prohi- bitions of subsection (2)(a)(7) violate the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the United States Constitution. In this pre-enforcement challenge, the district court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment. The dis- trict court found that plaintiffs lack standing to bring an as- applied challenge to subsection (2)(a)(7) and that their facial constitutional challenges fail on the merits. Brown v. Kemp, 506 F. Supp. 3d 649, 651 (W.D. Wis. 2020). We reverse and remand. Part I lays out relevant facts and procedural history. Part II begins our analysis by parsing the statutory text to focus the constitutional issues. Part III explains that plaintiffs have standing to bring both their as-applied and facial challenges prior to formal enforcement efforts because subsection (2)(a)(7) has been used to harass and intimidate them and has caused them to refrain from engaging in activity protected by the First Amendment. On the merits, Part IV explains that the clauses of subsection (2)(a)(7) are unconstitutionally vague and/or overbroad. Finally, Part V explains that subsection (2)(a)(7) discriminates against speech and expressive activity based on viewpoint and that defendants have not offered jus- tifications for the provision that satisfy strict scrutiny. No. 21-1042 3

I. Factual & Procedural Background A. Facts Plaintiffs are members of or associated with Wolf Patrol, an organization that opposes hunting and monitors and doc- uments hunting activities on public lands throughout Wis- consin to ensure that hunters comply with state regulations. Plaintiffs also seek to educate the public about hunting in Wis- consin. Plaintiff Joseph Brown, a professor at Marquette Uni- versity, opposes wolf hunting. He makes documentary films to further debate. He has been filming wolf hunters and Wolf Patrol’s monitoring activities for several years as part of a doc- umentary film about the pros and cons of wolf hunting in Wisconsin. Working with volunteers with Wolf Patrol, he has amassed over 300 hours of documentary video of hunting in Wisconsin. Plaintiff Stephanie Losse is an environmental and animal- rights advocate and Wolf Patrol volunteer. She monitors hunting activities for illegal and inhumane conduct and takes photographs and videos of hunting activities to use in educa- tional materials for the public. Plaintiff Louis Weisberg is a journalist who has a professional interest in documenting and reporting on hunting in Wisconsin. Weisberg advocates on behalf of Wisconsin wolves and bears and, through his work, provides an outlet for organizations like Wolf Patrol to share with the public their perspective on issues related to hunting. After subsection (2)(a)(7) of the amended hunter harass- ment law took effect in 2016, plaintiffs Brown and Losse had a number of encounters with hunters and law enforcement officers, including repeated stops for questioning by law en- forcement and harassment by hunters, in the course of 4 No. 21-1042

plaintiffs’ monitoring and documenting activities, including photographing and filming of hunting. All activities relevant to this case have occurred on public lands where both hunters and plaintiffs were legally entitled to be present. While monitoring hunters on Wisconsin public lands, plaintiff Losse has been stopped by hunters who have accused her of harassment and called law enforcement to the scene. Losse testified that despite her best efforts to comply with the hunter harassment law, she and her colleagues are “regularly stopped and questioned by sheriff’s deputies, state police, and DNR officers.” On one occasion, a hunter stepped out into the road to stop a Wolf Patrol vehicle that Losse was rid- ing in and told her that “there’s a law in the state now that [you] can’t be in the area.” On another occasion, in 2015, a Polk County sheriff’s deputy told Losse that she would be cited for violating the hunter harassment law even before the amendments on photography and video recordings took ef- fect. The deputy did not issue the citation because he experi- enced technical difficulties when trying to prepare one. In other words, Losse was taken right to the brink of an enforce- ment action against her for protected activity. Plaintiff Brown too has had encounters with both hunters and law enforcement that have also gone to the brink of an enforcement action against him. Hunters, seeing Professor Brown and Wolf Patrol filming, have “become irate,” ap- proached Brown, and demanded that he and the film crew hand over their footage. Hunters have confronted Brown and Wolf Patrol monitors, surrounding them, using their vehicles to prevent Brown and the others from passing through public roads, and detained them “for hours at a time” while waiting for law enforcement to arrive. During these confrontations, in No. 21-1042 5

addition to “yelling” and “name-calling,” hunters have threatened Brown and the Wolf Patrol monitors. One hunter told Brown (incorrectly) that he “cannot legally videotape a hunt in Wisconsin.” Brown believes, quite reasonably, that this was a reference to the new subsection (2)(a)(7) in the law. He also claims that hunters have, during these encounters, as- serted to him and to the Wolf Patrol that they, the hunters, were themselves “officer[s] of the law.” Regardless of Brown’s account of the statements directed to him, it is undisputed that hunters have repeatedly told Brown that they cannot be photographed and that hunters have repeatedly referred to the hunter harassment law when speaking to law enforce- ment officers responding to their calls for help in stopping Brown from continuing to film and observe them. Plaintiffs’ standing and claims in this case are not based, however, on hunters’ misstatements or exaggerations of the law. Law enforcement officers have also “many times” stopped Brown and Wolf Patrol members he has been work- ing with to ask them why they were “making multiple passes through an area.” On one occasion, “the responding officer questioned [Brown] and the Wolf Patrol members for over an hour,” taking that time to “explain[ ]” the hunters’ concerns and to obtain information about Brown and the Wolf Patrol members’ activities.

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