Carey v. Brown
United States Supreme Court
447 U.S. 455 (1980)
Relevant factsFree
Protestors (defendants) peacefully picketed on a public sidewalk outside the Chicago mayor's home to protest his opposition to school busing for racial integration, and were convicted under an Illinois statute banning residential picketing except when it involved a labor dispute. They appealed their convictions to the Supreme Court, arguing the statute's labor-dispute exception violated the First Amendment by favoring one type of speech's content over another.
IssueFree
Whether, under the First Amendment, a content-based regulation of speech must be narrowly tailored to achieve a substantial state interest.