quaddriver wrote:Sue U wrote:In Florida, incitement to riot is a third-degree felony subject to punishment of up to 5 years in prison. Oh, and in looking up the Florida statute, I came across
this urging exactly the same thing.
Although no specific elements of the offense are defined under the Florida statute, any prohibition would undoubtedly have to comport with the federal Constitutional requirement that the "speech" at issue be an incitement to imminent lawless action. Given the time and distance between the act and the result, I'm not sure he could be convicted on the facts here. But in this age of global media and mass communication it's an interesting question.
yeah, inciting people to riot IN florida, not 5000 miles away....thats a wee bit of a stretch isnt it?
(besides no standard would ever be met, are we then to assume that if 'buying mayonaise' is a cause for riot so says rubato, if you do so in FL you are guilty? please)
The statute makes incitement the crime; it does not require that there even be a riot, let alone that it be in Florida. If someone stood at Florida's border with Georgia and incited a mob standing a few feet away on the Georgia side of the line, would he not be guilty? (BTW, in Georgia incitement to riot is only a misdemeanor.
FYI:
Fla Stat Title XLVI, s 870.01:
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(2) All persons guilty of a riot, or of inciting or encouraging a riot, shall be guilty of a felony of the third degree, punishable as provided in s. 775.082, s. 775.083, or s. 775.084.
Georgia Code 16-11-31:
(a) A person who with intent to riot does an act or engages in conduct which urges, counsels, or advises others to riot, at a time and place and under circumstances which produce a clear and present danger of a riot, commits the offense of inciting to riot.
(b) Any person who violates subsection (a) of this Code section is guilty of a misdemeanor.