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Mo. court strikes down part of 2008 harassment law

Jonathunder
/
Wikimedia Commons

The Missouri Supreme Court has struck down part of a state harassment law enacted after the suicide of a St. Charles County teenager who was teased over the Internet.

The high court on Tuesday invalidated a 2008 state law defining harassment to cover anyone who "knowingly makes repeated unwanted communication to another person."

The court ruled the law was unconstitutionally broad. It said the law could have prevented teachers from calling on students after pupils asked to be left alone or barred advertisements that urge elected officials to change their stance on controversial issues.

Missouri's law was enacted after media reports about the October 2006 suicide of Megan Meier.

The court let stand another definition of harassment that references the intent to frighten or intimidate.

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