Now that is awesome! I like where he said it can work both ways! Who knows, maybe more people will strip naked in protest!
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Yahoo/An Oregon judge ruled on Wednesday that stripping naked at the airport to protest the Transportation Security Administration is a protected form of free speech. In other words, if you're protesting the TSA it's OK to show a little T&A.
The Oregonian reports that 50-year-old John E. Brennan was acquitted of an indecent exposure charge stemming from an April 17 incident during which he took off his clothes while standing at a security checkpoint line at Portland International Airport.
The Oregonian reports that 50-year-old John E. Brennan was acquitted of an indecent exposure charge stemming from an April 17 incident during which he took off his clothes while standing at a security checkpoint line at Portland International Airport.
"It is the speech itself that the state is seeking to punish, and that it cannot do," Circuit Judge David Rees said.
Prosecutors in the case argued
that Brennan did not say to airport officials that it was a protest
until after he had stripped and was told police were on their way to the
scene.
Brennan says he stripped after airport screeners asked him to submit to a pat-down inspection.
"I also was aware of the irony of taking off my clothes to protect my privacy," he told the court.
However, Brennan's case doesn't
affect nudity laws in other jurisdictions. But it's certainly possible
that anyone conducting a similar nude airport protest in the future
could cite his case as precedent.
For his part, Brennan said his
nude protest was done to show the TSA "that I know my rights," and to
illustrate his belief that airport screening devices are already
exposing passengers—whether they know it or not.
"They're getting as close to seeing us naked as they can. And we are upping the ante," he told the court. "I wanted to show them it's a two-way street. I don't like a naked picture of me being available."
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