Supreme Court to decide on right to lie about military honors

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WASHINGTON (MCT) — Xavier Alvarez told of playing hockey for the Detroit Red Wings, marrying a Mexican starlet, piloting a helicopter in Vietnam and suffering gunshot wounds while rescuing the American ambassador during the Iran hostage crisis. All were lies.

He got into legal trouble, however, when he stood up at a water board meeting in Pomona, Calif., in 2007 and described himself a retired Marine who had received the Medal of Honor. He joined a number of men who lie about their military service and claim medals they did not win. More than one-third of “Who’s Who” profiles that listed top military honors could not be confirmed through military records, a Chicago Tribune investigation found in 2008.

The Supreme Court will take up Alvarez’s case on Wednesday to decide whether the First Amendment protects not just the freedom of speech, but a right to lie about military honors.

Congress enacted the Stolen Valor Act in 2006 to make it a crime to falsely claim a military honor. And Alvarez, once he was exposed, was convicted and fined $5,000.

But his “everyone lies” defense won at the 9th U S. Circuit of Appeals, which struck down the law on free speech grounds on a 2-1 vote. It would be “terrifying,” said Chief Judge Alex Kozinski, if the government’s “truth police” could go after persons for the “white lies, exaggerations and deceptions that are an integral part of human intercourse.”

The Supreme Court is less likely to extend leniency to people who claim credit for honors they did not win. The justices have not ruled before that “knowingly false” statements are protected by the First Amendment.

And government lawyers point out it was already a crime to lie to a federal agent or to make deliberately false statements on government forms. Moreover, the First Amendment does not shield anyone from being sued for telling malicious lies about another person or for getting money by making fraudulent promises.

In defense of the law, U.S. Solicitor Gen. Donald Verrilli Jr. says it “prohibits a narrow category” of false statements that tarnish the special status of military awards. Medals “convey the nation’s gratitude for acts of valor and sacrifice,” he said, and falsely claiming to have won such a medal is not just an inconsequential “white lie.”

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