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Student鈥檚 nuke joke sparks meltdown at University of Utah
The 鈥溾 is supposed to be the sole purview of the president of the United States 鈥 but the University of Utah police department decided to give that phrase a brand new meaning by a student for making an obvious joke about a nuclear reactor and the university football team.
According to a university , the university鈥檚 police department arrested 21-year-old University of Utah student Meredith Miller on Sept. 21 for posting 鈥渋f we don鈥檛 win today, I鈥檓 detonating the nuclear reactor on campus,鈥 on Yik Yak, a social media app where students can post messages anonymously.
The university police chief Jason Hinojosa justified the arrest by saying the university has 鈥渁 zero-tolerance policy for these kinds of threats.鈥
鈥淚n the age that we鈥檙e living in, we have to take every threat seriously,鈥 Hinojosa added. The department Miller had 鈥渒nowledge of the nuclear reactor鈥 on campus and attended class in the same building as the reactor. (Utah is one of more than two dozen universities with nuclear reactors on their campuses.)
The police traced the post to Miller, who admitted writing it, and booked her into the Salt Lake County Jail. The police Miller that same night after her bail at $5,000. She now one charge of making terroristic threats.
But as FIREwrote to the Salt Lake County district attorney today, the school and its police department have made a Chernobyl-sized mistake.
While police departments should take every true threat seriously, they cannot violate students鈥 rights to free expression by arresting them for making jokes. The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that while 鈥溾 are a category of unprotected speech, they are very narrowly defined with a high bar for imposing punishment or liability.
As the Court held in Virginia v. Black (2003), a true threat is a statement by which 鈥渢he speaker means to communicate a serious expression of an intent to commit an act of unlawful violence to a particular individual or group of individuals.鈥 Likewise, in Watts v. United States, the Court held that an alleged threat to assassinate the president was actually protected political hyperbole, and that whether a statement is a true threat depends on factors such as the context of the statement, the conditional nature of the statement, the reaction of the listeners, and the extent to which a speaker employs obvious hyperbole or a similar rhetorical flourish.
As we note in our letter, some federal courts have held that for speech to constitute a true threat, the analysis hinges on whether the speaker subjectively intended to threaten, rather than asking what a reasonable person would understand in hearing a potentially threatening statement. Plus, if the university really took her threat that seriously, why release Miller so quickly after arresting her?
Miller鈥檚 joke about having a nuclear-sized reaction to her team鈥檚 win record is not all that unusual. Sports fans and commentators are to hyperbole, and watching elite athletes perform commonly to extreme emotional levels. Even regular sports occurrences鈥攍ike home runs or long passes鈥攁re commonly described as 鈥渂ombs,鈥 鈥渂ullets,鈥 鈥渟hots,鈥 or 鈥渕issiles.鈥
Because there appears to be insufficient evidence Miller made a true threat, FIREhas asked the DA not to charge her with any crime. We鈥檒l also continue to monitor the situation to ensure the university, in its own right, does not investigate or punish Miller.
(And for what it鈥檚 worth, the University of Utah did win the game by a score of 35-7 over San Diego State.)
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