2024 in Review: Part One
Wokal Distance's Thread Explaining How to Thread the H-1B Needle Between MAGA and...
John Stossel's Video on Expensive Gov't Shams & Fails Is a Maddening MUST...
Talk About DAMNING! TODAY'S New York Post Cover Gives Away Who Was REALLY...
EYE-Opening (Not a Good Way): Dan Crenshaw NUKED By Community Notes After Making...
GOP Rep Connects Dots for CNN Host Waiting for 'Biden Crime Family' Proof...
'Aim Higher, Do BETTER'! Nicole Shanahan's Thread on H-1B Visa Debate an EPIC,...
We Ain't Diggin' It: Larry O'Donnell Wants to Honor Biden With a Named...
SHOCKING NEWS: Data Shows the VAST Majority of Unhappy and Mentally Ill People...
No Lies: Sharyl Attkisson Refuses to Censor the Truth for NewsGuard’s ‘Fact-Checker’
No Regrets: Scott Jennings Doesn’t Hold Back on the Final Days of Biden’s...
Unscientific American: Magazine Preaches Feminist and Transgender Approach to ‘Climate Cha...
Shark Tank Host Wants to Sell Trump on Combining America’s and Canada’s Economies
Color-Coded: Chuck Todd Says Dems Warned Identity Politics Would Cost Latino Votes Two...
Light My Fire: Landmark Famously Featured on The Doors ‘Morrison Hotel’ Album Goes...

DC judge rules that jumping the White House fence does not count as free speech

Considering all of the things that are considered protected speech under the First Amendment, it’s a little surprising to learn that, no, you can’t jump the White House fence and claim free expression.

Advertisement

NBC 4’s Scott MacFarlane reports Thursday that a judge in Washington, D.C., ruled against a Connecticut man who jumped the White House fence on Thanksgiving Day 2015 while wearing an American flag over his shoulders.

Joseph Caputo argued that he entered the White House grounds with the “noble purpose” of “calling attention to various deficiencies in the Constitution.” He has been charged with a misdemeanor count of unlawfully entering restricted government grounds and faces a trial next month.

“There is, after all, no First Amendment right to express one’s self in a nonpublic area like the White House,” the judge determined.

That wasn’t the only White House fence news today. Caputo might have though he was drawing attention to domestic issues, but at least he wasn’t there to collect prize winnings.

Advertisement

He came to D.C. to collect money from the government? That’s not how it works at all.

Ryan Cain, 22, pleaded not guilty on Thursday to a charge of illegal entry.

The Secret Service plans to raise the White House fence another 5 feet in 2018.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos