Editor’s note: This post contains coarse language.
Sharing your feelings on Facebook has become a norm — but prosecutors said one man’s posts crossed the line, and now the Supreme Court is stepping in.
The high court on Monday agreed to examine the line between free speech and threatening violence with the case of Anthony Elonis, a Pennsylvania man convicted in 2010 for making threatening communications in a series of gruesome statements he posted publicly on Facebook.
Elonis’s statements — styled as rap lyrics he likened to rapper Eminem’s — included killing his ex-wife, shooting up a kindergarten, blowing up the local sheriff’s office, and attacking a waterpark he had just been fired from for allegedly threatening and sexually harassing a woman colleague, according to court documents. After a visit from the FBI, who had been alerted to the messages by his ex-wife, Tara Elonis, Anthony Elonis posted lyrics fantasizing about killing a woman FBI agent who had visited his home. The case could have widespread implications for free speech rights and public safety — women are subject to a disproportionate amount of harassment on the Internet.
Elonis has defended himself by arguing his statements were not intended as threats, but were protected speech under the First Amendment. Elonis argues that what constitutes a criminal threat depend on whether or not the statement was intended as such by the speaker.









