dc.description | Thesis (M.A.L.S.)--Georgetown University, 2009.; Includes bibliographical
references. This thesis examines the legal and social implications of a single website,
www.WhosARat.com, and by extension probes wider challenges to the fledgling state of First
Amendment law in the age of the Internet.; In its very name and Internet address, the website
WhosARat.com poses the question "Who's A Rat?" and claims to answer it, with
the names and other personal information of hundreds of individuals who are believed to be
cooperating with law enforcement in criminal investigations and prosecutions. It claims to
serve a valuable social end, based on the premise that government informants (called
"snitches" where they are reviled) are unreliable, and that defendants have
a fundamental, constitutionally-protected right to learn the information that is being offered
against them in a criminal proceeding, and who is providing it.; Federal law enforcement
officials, however, argue that for its chilling effect on witness cooperation, at a minimum
WhosARat.com hamstrings law enforcement in investigating crimes. At worst, they say, it will
lead to violence against willing cooperators and their families. The result is a classic clash
of law and order and free speech, but in virtually uncharted territory of Internet
communication. The website raises basic questions that could have profound implications in the
wired age: is WhosARat.com's transmission of information that could threaten individual safety
and undermine criminal prosecutions, entitled to longstanding First Amendment protection? Does
the instant and global transmission of this material online alter the traditional standard for
assessing whether speech is proscribed--based on a real and immediate threat to safety--and
thus call for a fundamental re-thinking of the legal definition of incitement as it applies to
the Internet?; This thesis relies on published accounts in newspapers and magazines, and on
documents from the U.S. Justice Department, to describe the genesis of WhosARat.com and its
context within a long history of anti-snitching campaigns. It will explain how the website
poses a special challenge to law enforcement because of its content and reach, and because of
longstanding speech protections guaranteed by the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. A
close review of the evolution of these safeguards with respect to Internet threats will show
that this area of the law is in its infancy, and will demonstrate the challenges to applying
traditional standards of free speech to online communication. As a result, individual
confrontations between online speakers and law enforcement may serve as defining tests of
First Amendment protections in the Internet age. WhosARat.com is one of these instances.; In
the absence of evidence that WhosARat.com threatens bodily harm, or incites likely, imminent
lawless action, an analysis of the website and First Amendment law suggests that -- for the
moment at least -- it may operate on the Internet frontier without fear of government
interference. Furthermore, as troubling as it may sound, one might reasonably conclude that a
person may have to be hurt or killed, as a result of material posted on WhosARat.com, before
the government is legally justified in trying to shut the website down, on grounds that its
content poses a threat to individual or public safety. | en |