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    <title>Antonyuk v. Nigrelli</title>
    <description><![CDATA[A lawsuit challenging New York&amp;rsquo;s Concealed Carry Improvement Act]]></description>
    <link>https://knightcolumbia.org/cases/antonyuk-v-nigrelli</link>
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      <title><![CDATA[Knight Institute, Gun Owners’ Associations Urge Second Circuit to Block NY Gun Law’s Social Media Disclosure Requirement]]></title>
      <link>https://knightcolumbia.org/content/knight-institute-gun-owners-associations-urge-second-circuit-to-block-ny-gun-laws-social-media-disclosure-requirement</link>
      <description><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">NEW YORK&mdash;The Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University today filed an amicus brief in the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals arguing that a part of New York&rsquo;s Concealed Carry Improvement Act that requires applicants to register their social media handles with the government is unconstitutional. The brief does not take issue with the remainder of the act but argues that the registration requirement imposes a significant and unjustified burden on individuals&rsquo; First Amendment rights. In addition to the Knight Institute, five gun owners&rsquo; associations that advocate for safe and responsible gun ownership signed on as amici. Though the groups disagree about other parts of the act, they are united in the view that the social media requirement is unconstitutional and invites discrimination.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">&ldquo;While New York plainly has a legitimate interest in regulating concealed carry, its regulations must conform to the First Amendment, and this particular provision of New York&rsquo;s new gun law does not,&rdquo; said Anna Diakun, staff attorney at the Knight Institute. &ldquo;Not only has the state failed to demonstrate that the social media registration requirement will actually further its goals, but it has also failed to acknowledge its costs: It will have a profound impact on the right to speak anonymously and associate privately online, and it will invite discrimination by licensing officials.&rdquo;</span></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Under New York&rsquo;s gun law, applicants for concealed carry permits must turn over to the state a list of social media accounts used in the past three years, including applicants&rsquo; pseudonymous accounts, thereby directing the state to a vast number of personal posts, pictures, and likes, across an unlimited number of social media platforms.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Amici, including the Asian Pacific American Gun Owners Association, the DC Project Foundation, the Liberal Gun Club, the National African American Gun Association, Inc., Operation Blazing Sword&ndash;Pink Pistols, and the Knight Institute, argue that the social media provision chills concealed-carry applicants&rsquo; constitutionally protected speech and conditions their ability to get a permit on their willingness to give up their rights to speak anonymously and associate privately online. Moreover, the groups highlight that these harms will be exacerbated for members of marginalized communities whose members already have particular reasons to distrust law enforcement and fear the government&rsquo;s scrutiny of their online lives.&nbsp;</span></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">&ldquo;The state&rsquo;s dragnet social media registration requirement goes far beyond what is necessary, and will set a dangerous precedent for broad intrusions on individuals&rsquo; First Amendment rights,&rdquo; said Katie Fallow, senior counsel at the Knight Institute. &ldquo;If the New York law is allowed to stand, one can easily imagine the government imposing these requirements in any number of other situations.&rdquo;</span></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Read today&rsquo;s brief <a href="https://knightcolumbia.org/documents/3jn1wsmhfn">here</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">Lawyers on the case, in addition to Diakun and Fallow, include Stacy Livingston, for the Knight Institute.</span></p>
<p><span style="font-weight: 400;">For more information, contact: Adriana Lamirande, <a href="mailto:adriana.lamirande@knightcolumbia.org">adriana.lamirande@knightcolumbia.org</a>.&nbsp;</span></p>]]></description>
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      <pubDate>Wed, 08 Feb 2023 00:00:00 -0800</pubDate>
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      <title><![CDATA[New York’s Gun Law Goes Too Far: Requiring concealed-carry applicants to register their social media accounts is unconstitutional]]></title>
      <link>https://knightcolumbia.org/content/new-yorks-gun-law-goes-too-far-requiring-concealed-carry-applicants-to-register-their-social-media-accounts-is-unconstitutional</link>
      <description><![CDATA[<p class="default__StyledText-sc-1wxyvyl-0 hnShxL body-paragraph">Last spring, 10 people were killed in a racially motivated mass killing at a predominantly Black grocery store in Buffalo. It was the 198th mass shooting of the year, with 450 to follow before the year was out. Acts of mass violence like these shake the foundations of our society, making people fearful when they shop for groceries, attend church, or go to school. They can also make people less willing to exercise important First Amendment rights&mdash;including the right to dissent, to assemble publicly, and to protest&mdash;because they do not feel safe doing so.</p>
<p class="default__StyledText-sc-1wxyvyl-0 hnShxL body-paragraph">Just months after the Buffalo massacre, and days after the U.S. Supreme Court <a href="https://www.supremecourt.gov/opinions/21pdf/20-843_7j80.pdf" target="_blank" rel="noopener">struck down</a>&nbsp;New York&rsquo;s longstanding concealed-carry law, New York passed a replacement&nbsp;<a href="https://www.nysenate.gov/legislation/bills/2021/S51001" target="_blank" rel="noopener">law</a>. Most of the law&rsquo;s new requirements are well-founded; the state has a strong interest in regulating access to guns, and limits on concealed-carry can serve important First Amendment values by facilitating peaceful engagement in civic life and public discourse.</p>
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<p class="default__StyledText-sc-1wxyvyl-0 hnShxL body-paragraph">But one of the new law&rsquo;s provisions undermines those same values. Anyone applying for a concealed-carry license must provide the state with a list of all of their social media accounts used in the last three years, so that the state can assess whether they have &ldquo;good moral character.&rdquo;</p>
<p class="default__StyledText-sc-1wxyvyl-0 hnShxL body-paragraph">A federal appeals court will consider the constitutionality of New York&rsquo;s concealed-carry law, including this social media registration requirement, today. That provision, however well-intentioned, is misguided and violates the First Amendment.</p>
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<p class="default__StyledText-sc-1wxyvyl-0 hnShxL body-paragraph">This dragnet collection of social media information by the government has a chilling effect on applicants&rsquo; exercise of their right to speak and associate with others online. The statute requires a list of all &ldquo;social media accounts&rdquo;&mdash;a broad term that includes platforms like Goodreads, MyFitnessPal, LinkedIn, and countless others that are unlikely to shed light on whether applicants are likely to harm themselves or others.</p>
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<p class="default__StyledText-sc-1wxyvyl-0 hnShxL body-paragraph">Disclosing those accounts will, however, expose a wealth of personal information to government scrutiny. Faced with the knowledge that the government is watching, many will censor what they say, not knowing how it might be interpreted. They may also stop engaging on social media with controversial individuals or groups&mdash;think Black Lives Matter, pro- or anti-abortion groups, or gun advocacy organizations. These harms are even greater for people who use pseudonyms on their social media accounts to protect their privacy or out of fear of retaliation, and who will be forced to give up their right to speak anonymously online in exchange for a license.</p>
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<p class="default__StyledText-sc-1wxyvyl-0 hnShxL body-paragraph">The state has not demonstrated that the social media registration requirement meaningfully assists in predicting acts of violence. Looking backward and suddenly seeing signs is one thing; predicting the future is another. And there is reason to doubt that someone seeking to commit violence will in fact apply for a concealed-carry license (including because those under 21 years old are ineligible), actually provide all their social media accounts, and not delete any public posts about their intentions on those accounts.</p>
<p class="default__StyledText-sc-1wxyvyl-0 hnShxL body-paragraph">Importantly, there is no need for this kind of dragnet social media registration requirement because the state can ask for social media account information in individual cases, if the circumstances merit such review: the law allows licensing officers to request any &ldquo;reasonably necessary&rdquo; additional information.</p>
<p class="default__StyledText-sc-1wxyvyl-0 hnShxL body-paragraph">Instead of weeding out those likely to commit violence, the registration requirement is more likely to inject bias into the process. Licensing officers&rsquo; political, religious, and social views may warp their perceptions, leading them to disproportionately disqualify applicants from marginalized communities. (A similar&nbsp;<a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/04/us/california-racial-bias-gary-bryant-diallo-jackson.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener">concern</a>&nbsp;underpins recent efforts to limit the use of rap lyrics in criminal proceedings.) At the same time, language barriers, a lack of cultural context, and the risk of misinterpreting sarcasm and hyperbole all make the likelihood of misunderstandings high.</p>
<p class="default__StyledText-sc-1wxyvyl-0 hnShxL body-paragraph">If allowed to stand, this law won&rsquo;t be the last time we&rsquo;re forced to hand over intimate and wide-ranging information in exchange for the ability to exercise our rights. The federal government is&nbsp;<a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/02/us/us-visa-application-social-media.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener">already</a>&nbsp;collecting social media handles from visa applicants from other countries&mdash;nearly 15 million a year&mdash;under a requirement put in place by the Trump administration. (The Knight Institute, where I work, has challenged the visa requirement&rsquo;s constitutionality in court.) One can easily envision a future in which such demands are routine, whether it is for a concealed-carry license or a driver&rsquo;s license.</p>
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<p class="default__StyledText-sc-1wxyvyl-0 hnShxL body-paragraph">Preventing gun violence is among the most urgent priorities in the United States today. But this is not the way to achieve it. The appeals court should recognize the heavy costs and only speculative benefits of the social media registration requirement, and put a stop to its enforcement.</p>
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      <pubDate>Mon, 20 Mar 2023 00:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
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