![]() 11/09/2013 at 10:07 Filed to: drive free or die, license plates, news | ![]() | ![]() |
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) A New Hampshire man told the state's highest court Thursday that denying him a vanity license plate that reads "COPSLIE" violates his political free speech rights.
Reposted from The !!!error: Indecipherable SUB-paragraph formatting!!!
David Montenegro, of Farmington, said he wanted the plate because he feels it epitomizes government corruption.
Lawyers for the New Hampshire Civil Liberties Union, who joined the case, say the current DMV regulation is unconstitutionally vague and vests too much discretion in a person behind a counter. The policy prohibits vanity plates that "a reasonable person would find offensive to good taste."
"So if a person at DMV agrees with the sentiment, he gets the plate?" Chief Justice Linda Dalianis asked during a spirited half-hour of arguments.
"What is good taste?" Justice Carol Ann Conboy asked. "That seems to be the nub of the argument."
Senior Assistant Attorney General Richard Head argued that state workers were right to deny Montenegro the plate in 2010, because the phrase accuses an entire class of people police officers of moral turpitude.
"I don't deny you might get two different decisions from two different people," Head said in response to a question about whether a plate reading "COPS R GR8" would be approved.
Anthony Galdieri, an attorney representing the civil liberties union, argued that an accusation is nothing more than viewpoint.
Justice Gary Hicks questioned how the court could restrict someone's ability to have an opinion. Head replied that Montenegro's plate preference was an allegation, not an opinion.
Gilles Bissonnette, another NHCLU attorney, said "COPSLIE" is political speech that is being regulated and suppressed by the government.
"There's no way to objectively enforce this regulation," Bissonnette said.
After court, Montenegro who last year legally changed his name to "human" said he thought police officers who might pull him over and have to type "COPSLIE" into their computers would amount to "the perfect situational irony." He said he was confident the court would invalidate the DMV provision, despite opening his argument by telling the justices that the only reason the case had reached their level was because of a corrupt judiciary.
He also acknowledged that he had been arrested twice, but would not say what the charges were.
The justices did not indicate when they would rule.
![]() 11/09/2013 at 10:19 |
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After court, Montenegro who last year legally changed his name to "human"
![]() 11/09/2013 at 17:24 |
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This guy lives a town over.
This town is filled with meth heads. Its a shit town. There are 4 cops there. And they are all on drugs.
I say let him get the plate, and he can get the amount of unwanted attention I get.
I'm changing the plate next year, something better mayhaps.
![]() 11/09/2013 at 17:56 |
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Is the unwanted attention you get from the 5-0?
![]() 11/09/2013 at 18:15 |
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Typically.
Some cops love it, I get thumbs up from random state troopers and locals.
Some cops think I'm some punk kid beign an asshole.
Its all in good fun on my end though. I have nothing against cops lol
Next plate might be IH8LAG
or something.
![]() 11/09/2013 at 18:30 |
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IH8LAG, lol.
Nice car, btw.
![]() 11/09/2013 at 18:32 |
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Thank you.
Laundry list of work done to it.
Wasted so much money, and time on that thing..haha