Statements (18)
| Predicate | Object |
|---|---|
| gptkbp:instanceOf |
gptkb:United_States_Supreme_Court_case
|
| gptkbp:arguedDate |
1972-03-20
|
| gptkbp:citation |
405 U.S. 518
|
| gptkbp:concurringOpinionBy |
gptkb:Justice_Stewart
gptkb:Justice_Douglas |
| gptkbp:country |
gptkb:United_States
|
| gptkbp:date |
1972-06-26
|
| gptkbp:decidedBy |
gptkb:Supreme_Court_of_the_United_States
|
| gptkbp:docketNumber |
70-5002
|
| gptkbp:heldBy |
Georgia's statute prohibiting 'opprobrious words or abusive language' was unconstitutionally vague and overbroad under the First Amendment.
|
| gptkbp:legalSubject |
gptkb:First_Amendment
freedom of speech |
| gptkbp:majorityOpinionBy |
gptkb:Justice_Brennan
|
| gptkbp:overruledLaw |
Georgia Code Ann. § 26-6303
|
| gptkbp:relatedTo |
gptkb:Chaplinsky_v._New_Hampshire
|
| gptkbp:bfsParent |
gptkb:fighting_words_doctrine
|
| gptkbp:bfsLayer |
7
|
| https://www.w3.org/2000/01/rdf-schema#label |
Gooding v. Wilson
|