United States v. Elven Swisher , 811 F.3d 299 ( 2016 )


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  •                    FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,                No. 11-35796
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    D.C. Nos.
    v.                     1:09-cv-00055-BLW
    1:07-cr-00182-BLW-1
    ELVEN JOE SWISHER,
    Defendant-Appellant.                 OPINION
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Idaho
    B. Lynn Winmill, Chief District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted En Banc
    September 9, 2015—San Francisco, California
    Filed January 11, 2016
    Before: Sidney R. Thomas, Chief Judge and Stephen
    Reinhardt, Alex Kozinski, M. Margaret McKeown, Marsha
    S. Berzon, Richard R. Clifton, Jay S. Bybee, Sandra S.
    Ikuta, N. Randy Smith, Jacqueline H. Nguyen and Paul J.
    Watford, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Ikuta;
    Dissent by Judge Bybee
    2                  UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    SUMMARY*
    Criminal Law
    Reversing the denial of a motion under 28 U.S.C. § 2255,
    the en banc court held that the reasoning in United States v.
    Alvarez, 
    132 S. Ct. 2537
    (2012), invalidating on First
    Amendment grounds a statute prohibiting lying about being
    awarded military medals, also applied to 18 U.S.C. § 704(a)
    (2002 ed.), a provision of the Stolen Valor Act that previously
    criminalized the unauthorized wearing of such medals.
    The en banc court held that the defendant’s challenge to
    his conviction under § 704(a) was not barred by Teague v.
    Lane, 
    489 U.S. 288
    (1989), because Alvarez was a decision
    holding that a substantive federal statute did not reach certain
    conduct, and thus could be applied retroactively. In addition,
    the government waived a procedural default defense based on
    the defendant’s failure to raise his constitutional claim at trial
    or on direct appeal.
    The en banc court held that § 704(a) regulated speech
    because wearing a medal conveys a message. The court held
    that § 704(a) was a content-based restriction of false symbolic
    speech because its purpose was to stop a particular message:
    the misappropriation or distortion of the message of valor
    conveyed by a medal. Accordingly, the tests applicable to
    content-neutral regulations did not apply.
    *
    This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
    been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                     3
    Considering the intermediate-scrutiny standard set forth
    in Justice Breyer’s concurring opinion in Alvarez, the en banc
    court interpreted § 704(a) as proscribing unauthorized
    persons from wearing military medals for the purpose of
    falsely communicating that they have been awarded such
    medals. The court held that this narrowing interpretation
    diminished the extent to which § 704(a) endangered First
    Amendment values, but the statute lacked limiting features
    such as a requirement of proof of specific harm to identifiable
    victims. Accordingly, under Justice Breyer’s test, § 704(a)
    created a significant risk of First Amendment harm. The en
    banc court concluded that the government had a compelling
    interest in enacting § 704(a), but there were other, less
    restrictive ways of achieving those objectives.
    The en banc court concluded that § 704(a) failed Justice
    Breyer’s intermediate scrutiny test, and therefore also failed
    under the Alvarez plurality’s exacting scrutiny test.
    The en banc court overruled United States v. Perelman,
    
    695 F.3d 866
    (9th Cir. 2012), to the extent inconsistent with
    this opinion.
    Dissenting, Judge Bybee, joined by Judges N.R. Smith
    and Watford, wrote that the defendant’s conduct was not a
    form of speech entitled to the same protection as the speech
    in Alvarez, and that he would uphold the constitutionality of
    § 704(a) under Justice Breyer’s intermediate-scrutiny
    analysis.
    4                      UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    COUNSEL
    Joseph Theodore Horras, Boise, Idaho, for Defendant-
    Appellant.
    John M. Pellettieri (argued), Attorney, Appellate Section;
    Leslie R. Caldwell, Assistant Attorney General; Sung-Hee
    Suh, Deputy Assistant Attorney General, United States
    Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., for Plaintiff-
    Appellee.
    OPINION
    IKUTA, Circuit Judge:
    This appeal requires us to determine whether the
    reasoning in United States v. Alvarez, 
    132 S. Ct. 2537
    (2012),
    which invalidated a statute prohibiting lying about being
    awarded military medals, see 18 U.S.C. § 704(b) (2011 ed.),1
    also applies to a statute criminalizing the unauthorized
    1
    The then-applicable provision read:
    Whoever falsely represents himself or herself, verbally
    or in writing, to have been awarded any decoration or
    medal authorized by Congress for the Armed Forces of
    the United States . . . shall be fined under this title,
    imprisoned not more than six months, or both.
    18 U.S.C. § 704(b) (2011 ed.).
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                           5
    wearing of such medals, see 18 U.S.C. § 704(a) (2006 ed.).2
    We hold that it does, and therefore reverse the district court.3
    2
    The provision read in full:
    Whoever knowingly wears, purchases, attempts to
    purchase, solicits for purchase, mails, ships, imports,
    exports, produces blank certificates of receipt for,
    manufactures, sells, attempts to sell, advertises for sale,
    trades, barters, or exchanges for anything of value any
    decoration or medal authorized by Congress for the
    armed forces of the United States, or any of the service
    medals or badges awarded to the members of such
    forces, or the ribbon, button, or rosette of any such
    badge, decoration or medal, or any colorable imitation
    thereof, except when authorized under regulations made
    pursuant to law, shall be fined under this title or
    imprisoned not more than six months, or both.
    18 U.S.C. § 704(a) (2002 ed.).
    Before we agreed to rehear this case en banc, § 704(a) was amended
    to remove the word “wears” from the list of prohibited actions with
    respect to decorations and medals authorized by Congress. See 18 U.S.C.
    § 704(a) (2013 ed.). That is, § 704(a) no longer prohibits the conduct for
    which Swisher was convicted. Because Swisher was convicted under the
    prior version of the statute, however, the case is not moot. See Carafas v.
    LaVallee, 
    391 U.S. 234
    , 239 (1968) (holding that a challenge to a criminal
    conviction is not moot when the defendant continues to face adverse
    consequences from the conviction).
    3
    Swisher’s other claims were previously addressed in an unpublished
    memorandum disposition. United States v. Swisher, 585 F. App’x 605
    (9th Cir. 2014). We agree with the three-judge panel’s reasons for
    rejecting Swisher’s other arguments, and we adopt them as our own.
    6               UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    I
    Defendant Elven Joe Swisher enlisted in the United States
    Marine Corps on August 4, 1954, a little over a year after the
    Korean War ended. In August 1957, he was honorably
    discharged from the Marine Corps into the reserves. Upon
    discharge, Swisher was given a DD-214 discharge document,
    a typewritten form that provided his name, education, type of
    discharge, last duty assignment, last date of service, and
    similar information regarding his military service. The form
    required a listing of Swisher’s “decorations, medals, badges,
    commendations, citations and campaign ribbons awarded or
    authorized.” In the authenticated copy of Swisher’s original
    DD-214, the term “N/A” (not applicable) is written in the
    field.
    In 2001, more than forty years after his discharge,
    Swisher filed a claim for service-related Post-Traumatic
    Stress Disorder (PTSD). In his application, Swisher claimed
    he suffered from PTSD as a result of his participation in a
    secret combat mission in North Korea in August or
    September 1955. Along with his application, Swisher
    provided a self-published narrative that described the North
    Korea operation. According to the narrative, Swisher was
    wounded in battle, and subsequently presented with a Purple
    Heart by an unnamed captain who visited him in the hospital.
    The same captain told him he was “entitled to and should
    wear the National Defense Medal, Korean War Service
    Medal and the Korean War U.N. Service Medal and
    Ribbons.” Swisher claims he also received a Silver Star and
    a Navy Commendation Medal and Ribbon with a Bronze
    “V.”
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                           7
    After reviewing Swisher’s application for PTSD benefits
    and the accompanying narrative, the VA denied the claim
    because Swisher failed to provide corroborating evidence
    beyond his own statement that his PTSD was service
    connected.
    Swisher appealed the denial and submitted a photocopy
    of a second DD-214, which included the typewritten
    comment that “[t]his document replaces the previously issued
    transfer document” and “[c]hanges and additions have been
    verified by Command.” The new form stated that Swisher
    had received the Silver Star, Navy and Marine Corps Medal
    with Gold Star, Purple Heart, and Navy and Marine Corps
    Commendation Medal with Bronze “V.” Based on this
    information, the VA reversed its previous decision in July
    2004, ruled that Swisher’s PTSD was a compensable
    disability, and granted Swisher a total of $2,366 a month in
    benefits.4
    About a year later, the VA received information from the
    military personnel division that the replacement DD-214 was
    fraudulent. In July 2006, after further investigation
    confirmed that the DD-214 was forged, the VA reversed its
    determination that the PTSD was service connected and
    required Swisher to pay back the PTSD benefits that he had
    received.
    4
    Swisher’s claim that he was awarded a Purple Heart became a key
    issue in a criminal trial involving defendant David Hinkson, who was on
    trial for solicitation of murder. See United States v. Hinkson, 
    585 F.3d 1247
    , 1254–57 (9th Cir. 2009) (en banc). The parties agreed that any
    evidence related to the Hinkson trial would be excluded from Swisher’s
    trial.
    8                 UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    In July 2007, a grand jury indicted Swisher for four
    violations of federal law: (1) wearing unauthorized military
    medals in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 704(a); (2) making false
    statements to the VA regarding his military service,
    disabilities, and honors, in an effort to obtain benefits in
    violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(2); (3) forging or altering his
    certificate of discharge, also in an effort to obtain benefits, in
    violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(3); and (4) theft of
    government funds, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 641.
    During the one-week trial, Lieutenant Colonel Elaine
    Hensen, the assistant head for the Military Awards Branch at
    Headquarters Marine Corps, discussed her review of the
    Marine Corps files and her determination that the files
    contained no record of Swisher receiving or being awarded
    the Purple Heart or any other medal or award. The
    government also introduced Exhibit 67, a photograph
    showing Swisher and another man in Marine Corps League
    uniforms.5 In the photograph, Swisher is wearing several
    military medals and awards, and shaking hands with a person
    in civilian garb. The parties stipulated that the photograph
    was authentic. Lt. Col. Henson testified that the photograph
    showed Swisher wearing the Silver Star, Navy and Marine
    Corps Ribbon, Purple Heart, Navy and Marine Corps
    Commendation Medal with a Bronze “V,” and UMC
    Expeditionary Medal. She reiterated that there was nothing
    “in the United States Marine Corps’ files . . . to substantiate
    Mr. Swisher’s entitlement to wear any of those awards.” In
    addition, Jeffrey Shattuck, the head of the Records
    Correspondence Section for the Personnel Management
    5
    The Marine Corps League is a Congressionally chartered veterans
    organization that has its own Marine-related uniforms. See 36 U.S.C.
    §§ 140101–04.
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                    9
    Support Branch of the Marine Corps, outlined in detail the
    numerous indicia of fraud on Swisher’s replacement DD-214
    that Swisher had used to verify his awards.
    At the conclusion of the trial, the jury found Swisher
    guilty on all counts. The court imposed a below-guidelines
    sentence of 12 months and one day, with a three-year term of
    supervised release. We affirmed Swisher’s conviction and
    sentence on appeal. United States v. Swisher, 360 F. App’x
    784 (9th Cir. 2009).
    Swisher subsequently challenged his conviction through
    a motion under 18 U.S.C. § 2255 and claimed that his
    conviction for wearing the medals violated the First
    Amendment under the reasoning of the Ninth Circuit’s
    intervening decision in United States v. Alvarez, 
    617 F.3d 1198
    (9th Cir. 2010). The district court denied the motion and
    an appeal followed. See United States v. Swisher, 790 F.
    Supp. 2d 1215, 1245–46 (D. Idaho 2011); United States v.
    Swisher, 
    771 F.3d 514
    (9th Cir. 2014).
    While Swisher’s appeal was pending, the Supreme Court
    affirmed our decision in Alvarez, and held that § 704(b)
    unconstitutionally infringes upon speech protected by the
    First Amendment. See United States v. Alvarez, 
    132 S. Ct. 2537
    (2012). Nevertheless, we subsequently distinguished
    Alvarez, and held that § 704(a) survived First Amendment
    scrutiny. United States v. Perelman, 
    695 F.3d 866
    , 871–72
    (9th Cir. 2012) (as amended). Bound by Perelman, a three-
    judge panel rejected Swisher’s constitutional challenge to
    § 704(a). 
    Swisher, 771 F.3d at 524
    . In his petition for
    rehearing, Swisher argued that § 704(a) was unconstitutional
    under the reasoning set forth in Alvarez and asked us to
    10              UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    overrule our contrary decision in Perelman. We took the case
    en banc to reconsider this issue.
    II
    We review de novo a district court’s denial of relief to a
    federal prisoner under 28 U.S.C. § 2255. United States v.
    Aguirre-Ganceda, 
    592 F.3d 1043
    , 1045 (9th Cir. 2010).
    Section 2255 is a substitute for habeas corpus relief for
    federal prisoners, see Davis v. United States, 
    417 U.S. 333
    ,
    343 (1974), and allows a petitioner to file a motion to
    “vacate, set aside or correct” the petitioner’s conviction or
    sentence “upon the ground that the sentence was imposed in
    violation of the Constitution or laws of the United States, or
    that the court was without jurisdiction to impose such
    sentence, or that the sentence was in excess of the maximum
    authorized by law, or is otherwise subject to collateral
    attack,” 28 U.S.C. § 2255(a).
    In evaluating a § 2255 motion, we are not constrained by
    28 U.S.C. § 2254(d), which precludes federal courts from
    granting habeas relief to a state prisoner with regard to any
    claim adjudicated on the merits unless the adjudication
    “resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an
    unreasonable application of, clearly established” Supreme
    Court precedent, or “resulted in a decision that was based on
    an unreasonable determination of the facts in light of the
    evidence presented in the State court proceeding.” Section
    2255 does not have a similar restriction on review of claims
    by federal prisoners.
    Although Swisher’s challenge to his conviction is based
    on a Supreme Court decision decided after his conviction
    became final, we are not barred from considering his claim.
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                   11
    Teague v. Lane, 
    489 U.S. 288
    (1989), generally precludes the
    application of “new constitutional rules of criminal
    procedure” to cases that “have become final before the new
    rules are announced.” Bousley v. United States, 
    523 U.S. 614
    , 619–20 (1998) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    While Teague is applicable in the § 2255 context, see United
    States v. Sanchez-Cervantes, 
    282 F.3d 664
    , 667–68 (9th Cir.
    2002), Teague does not bar the retroactive application of
    decisions holding “that a substantive federal criminal statute
    does not reach certain conduct,” 
    Bousley, 523 U.S. at 620
    .
    Alvarez is a substantive decision of that sort.
    Nor does Swisher’s failure to raise his constitutional
    claim at trial or on direct appeal prevent us from reviewing
    his claim. Although federal prisoners are generally barred
    from raising claims on collateral review that they could have
    raised on direct appeal, see 
    Bousley, 523 U.S. at 621
    , the
    government can waive a procedural default defense by failing
    to raise it, see United States v. Barron, 
    172 F.3d 1153
    ,
    1156–57 (9th Cir. 1999) (en banc). Here, the government
    failed to raise the procedural default on appeal and does not
    dispute that it is waived.
    III
    To address Swisher’s arguments, we begin with a review
    of the reasoning in Alvarez and our subsequent interpretation
    of Alvarez in Perelman.
    A
    Alvarez considered the appeal of a defendant who was
    convicted under § 704(b) for introducing himself at a public
    meeting with a series of lies, including the false statement
    12               UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    that “[b]ack in 1987, I was awarded the Congressional Medal
    of 
    Honor.” 132 S. Ct. at 2542
    (Kennedy, J., plurality
    opinion). The defendant challenged his conviction on the
    ground that § 704(b) was invalid under the First Amendment.
    
    Id. He won
    on appeal, and the government petitioned for
    certiorari. 
    Id. Because §
    704(b) criminalized specific statements based
    on their falsity, the government did not dispute that the statute
    imposed a content-based restriction on speech. Rather, the
    government argued that false statements had “no First
    Amendment value in themselves,” 
    id. at 2543,
    and so were
    protected “only to the extent needed to avoid chilling fully
    protected speech,” 
    id. The Supreme
    Court rejected the
    government’s argument, and agreed that § 704(b) violated the
    First Amendment. 
    Id. The Court
    could not, however, agree
    on the appropriate level of scrutiny for the sort of lies targeted
    by § 704(b). 
    Id. at 2548
    (Kennedy, J., plurality opinion),
    2552 (Breyer, J., concurring).
    Justice Kennedy, writing for four Justices, held that
    § 704(b) was subject to the “most exacting scrutiny.” 
    Id. at 2548
    (Kennedy, J., plurality opinion) (quoting Turner Broad.
    Sys., Inc. v. FCC, 
    512 U.S. 622
    , 642 (1994)). In reaching this
    conclusion, the plurality rejected the government’s argument
    that false statements had “no First Amendment value” and
    merited protection “only to the extent needed to avoid
    chilling fully protected speech.” 
    Id. at 2543.
    While
    conceding that “content-based restrictions on speech have
    been permitted” for certain historical categories of speech, 
    id. at 2544,
    the plurality concluded that the “Government has not
    demonstrated that false statements generally should constitute
    a new category of unprotected speech.” 
    Id. at 2547.
    Nor did
    the plurality agree with the government’s argument that
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                    13
    § 704(b) was analogous to regulations on false speech “that
    courts generally have found permissible,” such as laws
    prohibiting a false statement made to a Government official,
    laws punishing perjury, and prohibitions on falsely claiming
    to speak on behalf of the government. 
    Id. at 2545–46.
    These
    examples, the plurality determined, were confined to
    circumscribed contexts. 
    Id. at 2546.
    Certain statutes
    prohibiting impersonation of a government official, for
    instance, “protect the integrity of Government processes,
    quite apart from merely restricting false speech,” and may be
    limited to “maintain[ing] the general good repute and dignity
    of . . . government . . . service itself.” 
    Id. at 2546
    (quoting
    United States v. Lepowitch, 
    318 U.S. 702
    , 704 (1943)
    (alterations in original)). The plurality concluded that these
    types of permissible speech regulations did not encompass the
    “sweeping, quite unprecedented reach” of § 704(b). 
    Id. at 2547.
    Having concluded that false statements of the sort
    proscribed in § 704(b) constituted protected speech, the
    plurality subjected the statute to “exacting scrutiny,” which
    required that (1) the government have a compelling interest;
    (2) “the Government’s chosen restriction on the speech at
    issue be actually necessary to achieve its interest,” and
    (3) “[t]here must be a direct causal link between the
    restriction imposed and the injury to be prevented.” 
    Id. at 2549
    (internal quotation marks omitted). Applying this test
    to § 704(b), the plurality held that the statute served a
    compelling government interest in protecting “the integrity of
    the military honors system,” 
    id. at 2548,
    but the statute’s
    restriction was not “actually necessary” because the
    government’s interest could be satisfied by counterspeech,
    including a “Government-created database [that] could list
    Congressional Medal of Honor winners.” 
    Id. at 2549
    –51.
    14               UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    Further, the government had not shown “[t]he link between
    the Government’s interest in protecting the integrity of the
    military honors system and the Act’s restriction on the false
    claims of liars,” because it failed to support “its claim that the
    public’s general perception of military awards is diluted by
    false claims.” 
    Id. at 2549
    . Accordingly, the plurality
    concluded that § 704(b) violated the First Amendment. 
    Id. at 2551.
    Justice Breyer concurred in the judgment on the ground
    that § 704(b) “works disproportionate constitutional harm”
    under his formulation of intermediate scrutiny. 
    Id. at 2556
    (Breyer, J., concurring). In his concurrence, Justice Breyer
    stated that to determine whether a statute violates the First
    Amendment, the Court generally examines “the fit between
    statutory ends and means.” 
    Id. at 2551.
    In conducting a
    review of a governmental enactment under this standard, a
    court must (1) take “account of the seriousness of the
    speech-related harm the provision will likely cause”;
    (2) consider “the nature and importance of the provision’s
    countervailing objectives,” and (3) weigh “the extent to
    which the provision will tend to achieve those objectives, and
    whether there are other, less restrictive ways of doing so.” 
    Id. In applying
    this test to § 704(b), Justice Breyer first
    considered the “speech-related harm” caused by this
    enactment. 
    Id. at 2551–52.
    Justice Breyer interpreted
    § 704(b) as “criminalizing only false factual statements made
    with knowledge of their falsity and with the intent that they
    be taken as true.” 
    Id. at 2552–53.
    He acknowledged that
    regulation of false statements “endangers First Amendment
    values” less than other restrictions, 
    id. at 2553,
    and noted that
    “many statutes and common-law doctrines make the utterance
    of certain kinds of false statements unlawful,” 
    id. at 2253–54.
                    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                    15
    But in Justice Breyer’s view, such statutes and doctrines work
    less speech-related harm because they typically “narrow the
    statute to a subset of lies where specific harm is more likely
    to occur.” 
    Id. at 2555.
    For instance, laws punishing fraud,
    defamation, or intentional infliction of emotional distress
    generally “requir[e] proof of specific harm to identifiable
    victims,” and statutes prohibiting the impersonation of a
    public official “may require a showing that, for example,
    someone was deceived into following a ‘course [of action] he
    would not have pursued but for the deceitful conduct.’” 
    Id. at 2554
    (alteration in original) (quoting 
    Lepowitch, 318 U.S. at 704
    ). Other similar laws specify “that the lies be made in
    contexts in which a tangible harm to others is especially
    likely to occur,” such as laws punishing perjury or lying to a
    government official, or trademark statutes which are “focused
    upon commercial and promotional activities that are likely to
    dilute the value of a mark.” 
    Id. Finally, statutes
    prohibiting
    false claims of terrorist attacks or other lies about crimes or
    catastrophes, are limited to false statements that “are
    particularly likely to produce harm,” and generally require
    proof of foreseeability of substantial public harm. 
    Id. According to
    Justice Breyer, § 704(b) lacked these
    narrowing features because it was not limited to a subset of
    lies causing specific harm to identifiable victims, or to a
    specific context where foreseeable harm to others is likely to
    occur. 
    Id. at 2555–56.
    Because “[f]alse factual statements
    can serve useful human objectives” in a variety of contexts
    and “the threat of criminal prosecution” could have a chilling
    effect and could encourage or permit selective prosecution for
    political ends, 
    id. at 2553,
    Justice Breyer concluded that
    § 704(b) “risks significant First Amendment harm,” 
    id. at 2555.
    16               UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    Having reached this conclusion, Justice Breyer then
    turned to consider “the nature and importance of the
    provision’s countervailing objectives,” 
    id. at 2551,
    and
    concluded that § 704(b) has a “substantial countervailing
    objective” because “[i]t seeks to protect the interests of those
    who have sacrificed their health and life for their country,”
    and is aimed at avoiding dilution of “the country’s
    recognition of that sacrifice in the form of military honors,”
    
    id. at 2555.
    Finally, Justice Breyer turned to his third prong,
    consideration of “the extent to which the provision will tend
    to achieve those objectives, and whether there are other, less
    restrictive ways of doing so.” 
    Id. at 2551.
    Here, Justice
    Breyer concluded that it was “possible substantially to
    achieve the Government’s objective in less burdensome
    ways.” 
    Id. at 2555.
    According to Justice Breyer, Congress
    could enact a more limited statute that adopted some of the
    narrowing strategies used in other statutes and common law
    doctrines punishing false speech, such as (1) requiring a
    showing that the false statements caused a specific harm,
    (2) requiring that the lies be made in a context “where such
    lies are most likely to cause harm,” or (3) focusing on the
    more important military awards that Congress most values.
    
    Id. at 2555–56.
    Such a more narrowly tailored statute could
    be combined with “information-disseminating devices,” such
    as “an accurate, publicly available register of military awards,
    easily obtainable by political opponents.” 
    Id. at 2556
    .
    Because the government failed to explain why a more limited
    statute along with a method for providing more accurate
    information would not “significantly reduce the threat of First
    Amendment harm while permitting the statute to achieve its
    important protective objective,” Justice Breyer concluded that
    “the statute as presently drafted works disproportionate
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                    17
    constitutional harm” and “so violates the First Amendment.”
    
    Id. B In
    analyzing the constitutionality of § 704(b), Alvarez did
    not directly address the closely related section of the Stolen
    Valor Act, § 704(a), which is before us here. We first had
    occasion to consider a constitutional challenge to that section
    in United States v. Perelman, decided two months after the
    Supreme Court issued its opinion in Alvarez. 
    695 F.3d 866
    .
    Before considering the applicability of Alvarez, Perelman
    considered the defendant’s overbreadth challenge to § 704(a).
    Perelman rejected this argument by construing the statute
    narrowly as criminalizing only the unauthorized wearing of
    medals “when the wearer intends to deceive.” 
    Id. at 870
    (emphasis omitted).
    Perelman then considered whether § 704(a), as construed,
    would survive First Amendment scrutiny. Although the
    Alvarez plurality had applied “exacting scrutiny” to § 704(b),
    Perelman did not use this analytic framework because
    § 704(a) did not criminalize speech, but rather criminalized
    “the harmful conduct of wearing a medal without
    authorization and with intent to deceive.” 
    Id. at 871.
    Perelman reasoned that “[e]ven if we assume that the
    intentionally deceptive wearing of a medal contains an
    expressive element—the false statement that ‘I received a
    medal’—the distinction between pure speech and conduct
    that has an expressive element separates this case from
    Alvarez.” 
    Id. Because, in
    Perelman’s view, § 704(a)
    criminalized conduct, it was more akin to the impersonation
    statutes discussed in Alvarez, or statutes prohibiting “the
    18               UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    unauthorized wearing of military uniforms.” 
    Id. at 872
    (citing Schacht v. United States, 
    398 U.S. 58
    (1970)).
    Presumably because of its determination that § 704(a)
    primarily criminalized conduct, but without further analysis,
    Perelman applied the test set forth in United States v.
    O’Brien, 
    391 U.S. 367
    , 377 (1968) (upholding the conviction
    of a draft protester under a content-neutral law prohibiting
    knowing destruction of draft 
    cards). 695 F.3d at 872
    .
    Applying O’Brien’s three-part test, Perelman first held that
    the government had “a compelling interest in ‘preserving the
    integrity of its system of honoring our military men and
    women for their service and, at times, their sacrifice.’” 
    Id. (quoting Alvarez,
    617 F.3d at 1216).               Second, the
    government’s interests were “unrelated to the suppression of
    free expression” because the statute “does not prevent the
    expression of any particular message or viewpoint.” 
    Id. And third,
    “the incidental restriction on alleged First Amendment
    freedoms” was “no greater than is essential to the furtherance
    of that interest,” because, “even if § 704(a) is not the most
    effective mechanism, in at least some measure it promotes the
    goals of maintaining the integrity of the military’s medals and
    preventing the fraudulent wearing of military medals.” 
    Id. at 872
    –73. Accordingly, Perelman rejected the defendant’s
    facial First Amendment challenge to § 704(a). 
    Id. at 873.
    IV
    Perelman based its conclusion that § 704(a) did not
    violate the First Amendment on two grounds. First,
    Perelman distinguished between written or spoken speech on
    the one hand and expressive conduct on the other. 
    Id. at 871.
    Second, Perelman implicitly determined that expressive
    conduct is per se subject to scrutiny under the test set forth in
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                    19
    O’Brien. 
    Id. at 872
    . Our reconsideration of Perelman
    requires us to review both these issues regarding the First
    Amendment framework for analyzing communicative
    conduct.
    A
    The First Amendment provides that “Congress shall make
    no law . . . abridging the freedom of speech.” U.S. Const.
    amend. I. While “[t]he First Amendment literally forbids the
    abridgment only of ‘speech,’” the Supreme Court has “long
    recognized that its protection does not end at the spoken or
    written word.” Texas v. Johnson, 
    491 U.S. 397
    , 404 (1989).
    A message “delivered by conduct that is intended to be
    communicative and that, in context, would reasonably be
    understood by the viewer to be communicative,” Clark v.
    Cmty. for Creative Non-Violence, 
    468 U.S. 288
    , 294 (1984),
    is symbolic speech that falls “within the scope of the First and
    Fourteenth Amendments.” 
    Johnson, 491 U.S. at 404
    ; see
    also Nunez v. Davis, 
    169 F.3d 1222
    , 1226 (9th Cir. 1999)
    (“Non-verbal conduct implicates the First Amendment when
    it is intended to convey a ‘particularized message’ and the
    likelihood is great that the message would be so understood.”
    (quoting 
    Johnson, 491 U.S. at 404
    )). For instance, “the
    wearing of an armband for the purpose of expressing certain
    views is the type of symbolic act that is within the Free
    Speech Clause of the First Amendment” and is “closely akin
    to ‘pure speech.’” Tinker v. Des Moines Indep. Cmty. Sch.
    Dist., 
    393 U.S. 503
    , 505 (1969). Similarly, the Court has
    “recognized the expressive nature of . . . a sit-in by blacks in
    a ‘whites only’ area to protest segregation,” 
    Johnson, 491 U.S. at 404
    (citing Brown v. Louisiana, 
    383 U.S. 131
    ,
    141–42 (1966)), and “of the wearing of American military
    20                 UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    uniforms in a dramatic presentation criticizing American
    involvement in Vietnam,” 
    id. (citing Schacht,
    398 U.S. 58
    ).
    While the Court has rejected the notion that “an
    apparently limitless variety of conduct can be labeled
    ‘speech’ whenever the person engaging in the conduct intends
    thereby to express an idea,” 
    O’Brien, 391 U.S. at 376
    , there
    is no doubt that the use of recognized symbols, such as
    emblems or flags, constitutes symbolic speech, 
    Johnson, 491 U.S. at 404
    . “The use of an emblem or flag to symbolize
    some system, idea, institution, or personality, is a short cut
    from mind to mind,” and “a primitive but effective way of
    communicating ideas.” W. Va. State Bd. of Educ. v. Barnette,
    
    319 U.S. 624
    , 632 (1943); see also Anderson v. City of
    Hermosa Beach, 
    621 F.3d 1051
    , 1061 (9th Cir. 2010)
    (“Tattoos are generally composed of words, realistic or
    abstract images, symbols, or a combination of these, all of
    which are forms of pure expression that are entitled to full
    First Amendment protection.”). In this context, the Court has
    frequently recognized “the communicative nature of conduct”
    relating to the American flag, which “as readily signifies this
    Nation as does the combination of letters found in
    ‘America.’” 
    Johnson, 491 U.S. at 405
    –06. Because “[t]he
    very purpose of a national flag is to serve as a symbol of our
    country,” 
    id. at 405,
    such acts as attaching a peace sign to the
    American flag, Spence v. Washington, 
    418 U.S. 405
    , 409–11
    (1974), refusing to salute the flag, 
    Barnette, 319 U.S. at 632
    –33, or burning the flag, 
    Johnson, 491 U.S. at 405
    –06,
    constitute symbolic speech that “may find shelter under the
    First Amendment.” 
    Id. at 405.6
    6
    The dissent’s contention that courts should analyze laws burdening
    symbolic speech conveyed by a “physical emblem,” such as a flag or a
    medal, differently than they analyze laws burdening oral or written speech,
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                        21
    In adjudicating a First Amendment challenge to a
    government enactment that regulates speech, the Supreme
    Court considers whether the enactment is content-based or
    content-neutral. See Reed v. Town of Gilbert, 
    135 S. Ct. 2218
    , 2226–27 (2015). This threshold inquiry is the same for
    symbolic speech as it is for enactments that regulate spoken
    or written words. See 
    Johnson, 491 U.S. at 403
    (holding that
    if the conduct at issue is communicative in nature, the Court
    must first determine “whether the State’s regulation is related
    to the suppression of free expression”). Even where an
    enactment “contains no explicit content-based limitation on
    the scope of prohibited conduct,” United States v. Eichman,
    
    496 U.S. 310
    , 315 (1990), a court must consider whether the
    law “suppresses expression out of concern for its likely
    communicative impact,” 
    id. at 317.
    See also Nordyke v.
    King, 
    319 F.3d 1185
    , 1189–90 (9th Cir. 2003) (rejecting a
    First Amendment challenge to an ordinance barring the
    possession of firearms on County-owned property because it
    was not aimed at the communicative impact of firearm
    possession).
    If the purpose of a law regulating conduct is aimed at the
    conduct itself, rather than at the message conveyed by that
    conduct, the regulation is subject to the lesser scrutiny given
    to content-neutral restrictions. Put differently, lesser scrutiny
    applies if the government’s interest in such a regulation “is
    unrelated to the suppression of free speech.” 
    Clark, 468 U.S. at 294
    .      In such circumstances, and only in such
    circumstances, the O’Brien test is applicable. See Doe v.
    Reed, 
    586 F.3d 671
    , 678 (9th Cir. 2009) (assuming that
    signing a referendum petition is expressive conduct subject to
    Dis. op. at 39–40, is inconsistent with these precedents. Indeed, the
    dissent cites no case supporting its views.
    22                 UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    the O’Brien test); Corales v. Bennet, 
    567 F.3d 554
    , 567 (9th
    Cir. 2009) (analyzing “the school’s policy of disciplining
    truancies and leaving campus without permission” under
    O’Brien’s “intermediate scrutiny applied to content-neutral
    rules of conduct.”). To pass the O’Brien test, however, the
    regulation must be “narrowly drawn to further a substantial
    governmental interest.” 
    Clark, 468 U.S. at 294
    .7
    On the other hand, where the government’s aim is to
    regulate the message conveyed by expressive conduct, the
    content-neutral O’Brien test is not applicable. Nor may it be
    applied unless “the conduct itself may constitutionally be
    regulated.” 
    Id. As explained
    in Johnson, “[i]f the State’s
    regulation is not related to expression, then the less stringent
    standard we announced in United States v. O’Brien for
    regulations of noncommunicative conduct controls,” but “[i]f
    it is, then we are outside of O’Brien’s test” and the regulation
    must survive “under a more demanding 
    standard.” 491 U.S. at 403
    ; see also 
    Spence, 418 U.S. at 412
    , 414 n.8 (concluding
    that the state’s interest in “preserving the national flag as an
    unalloyed symbol of our country” was directly related to
    expression, and accordingly “the four-step analysis of United
    States v. O’Brien is inapplicable”); 
    Nordyke, 319 F.3d at 1189
    (stating that if an ordinance barring the possession of firearms
    on County property is “related to the suppression of free
    expression” then a First Amendment challenge to the
    ordinance must be analyzed under Johnson; if not, the
    7
    The test for “time, place, or manner restrictions” may also be
    applicable to a content-neutral regulation of symbolic conduct. 
    Clark, 468 U.S. at 293
    . There is, however, “little, if any, differen[ce]” between
    the two tests. See 
    Clark, 468 U.S. at 298
    ; see also Vlasak v. Super. Ct. of
    Cal., 
    329 F.3d 683
    , 691 (9th Cir. 2003) (noting that O’Brien is “nearly
    identical to the time, place and manner test”). Because Perleman applied
    O’Brien, we focus on the O’Brien standard.
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                    23
    O’Brien test applies.). Accordingly, if a government
    enactment is “directed at the communicative nature of
    conduct” then it is content-based, and “must, like a law
    directed at speech itself, be justified by the substantial
    showing of need that the First Amendment requires.”
    
    Johnson, 491 U.S. at 406
    (emphasis omitted) (quoting Cmty.
    for Creative Non-Violence v. Watt, 
    703 F.2d 586
    , 622–623
    (D.C. Cir. 1983) (Scalia, J., dissenting), rev’d sub nom. Clark,
    
    468 U.S. 288
    ).
    The Supreme Court has recently provided authoritative
    direction for differentiating between content-neutral and
    content-based enactments. See 
    Reed, 135 S. Ct. at 2226
    –27.
    Reed explained that “[g]overnment regulation of speech is
    content based if a law applies to particular speech because of
    the topic discussed or the idea or message expressed.” 
    Id. at 2227.
    If “a regulation of speech ‘on its face’ draws
    distinctions based on the message a speaker conveys,” it is a
    content-based regulation. 
    Id. Laws that
    are facially content-
    neutral, but “cannot be justified without reference to the
    content of the regulated speech, or that were adopted by the
    government because of disagreement with the message [the
    speech] conveys,” are also content-based and subject to
    scrutiny under a higher standard. 
    Id. (alteration in
    original)
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Government
    regulations of symbolic speech frequently fall into this
    second category of content-based prohibitions. For instance,
    where a state prohibited burning the American flag because
    it might lead people to believe that the flag does not stand for
    the positive concepts of “nationhood and national unity,” the
    Court was quick to conclude that such “concerns blossom
    only when a person’s treatment of the flag communicates
    some message, and thus are related to the suppression of free
    expression.” 
    Johnson, 491 U.S. at 410
    (internal quotation
    24               UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    marks omitted). Such a content-based regulation is “outside
    of O’Brien’s test altogether.” 
    Id. Even if
    a challenged restriction is content-based, it is not
    necessarily subject to strict scrutiny. Although “[c]ontent-
    based regulations are presumptively invalid,” the Court “has
    permitted restrictions upon the content of speech in a few
    limited areas, which are of such slight social value as a step
    to truth that any benefit that may be derived from them is
    clearly outweighed by the social interest in order and
    morality.” R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, 
    505 U.S. 377
    , 382–83
    (1992) (internal quotation marks omitted) (indicating that
    obscenity, defamation, and fighting words fall within this
    category). Both the plurality and concurring opinions in
    Alvarez recognized the existence of “historical” and
    traditional categories of content-based restrictions that are not
    subject to strict scrutiny under the First Amendment and
    which courts have generally found permissible. 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2544
    (Kennedy, J., plurality opinion) (explaining
    that content-based restrictions on speech have been permitted
    only for a “few historic and traditional categories” of speech,
    including incitement, obscenity, defamation, speech integral
    to criminal conduct, so-called “fighting words,” child
    pornography, fraud, true threats, and “speech presenting some
    grave and imminent threat the government has the power to
    prevent”); 
    id. at 2553–54
    (Breyer, J., concurring) (internal
    quotation marks omitted) (referencing additional “statutes
    and common-law doctrines” that make “utterance of certain
    kinds of false statements unlawful,” including torts involving
    intentional infliction of emotional distress, lying to a
    government official, false claims of terrorist attacks or other
    lies about the commission of crimes or catastrophes,
    impersonation of an officer, and trademark infringement,
    among others).
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                     25
    B
    Applying these principles to Swisher’s facial challenge to
    § 704(a), we first ask whether this statute regulates speech.
    It clearly does. According to the government, the purpose of
    a military medal is to communicate “that the recipient has
    served the military efforts of the United States with valor,
    exceptional duty, or achievement worthy of commendation.”
    The value of a military medal lies not in the materials of
    which it is comprised, but in its message; it is “a primitive but
    effective way of communicating ideas,” 
    Barnette, 319 U.S. at 632
    . Wearing a medal, like wearing a black armband or
    burning an American flag, conveys a message “by conduct
    that is intended to be communicative and that, in context,
    would reasonably be understood by the viewer to be
    communicative,” 
    Clark, 468 U.S. at 294
    . Specifically,
    wearing a medal communicates that the wearer was awarded
    that medal and is entitled to the nation’s recognition and
    gratitude “for acts of heroism and sacrifice in military
    service.” 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2548
    (Kennedy, J., plurality
    opinion) (internal quotation mark omitted). Wearing a medal
    without authorization, therefore, generally communicates the
    false message that the wearer is entitled to such recognition
    and gratitude. Because wearing a medal is symbolic speech,
    and § 704(a) precludes the unauthorized wearing of a medal,
    we conclude that § 704(a) regulates speech.
    We next determine whether § 704(a) is a content-based or
    content-neutral restriction of symbolic speech. See 
    Johnson, 491 U.S. at 403
    . As in Johnson, the purpose of § 704(a) is to
    stop a particular message: the misappropriation or distortion
    of the message of valor conveyed by a medal. See 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2549
    (noting the government’s argument that the
    purpose of the Stolen Valor Act is to avoid diluting “the value
    26                  UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    and meaning of military awards”). Because these “concerns
    blossom,” 
    Johnson, 491 U.S. at 410
    , only when a person’s
    unauthorized wearing of a medal communicates a false
    message, we conclude that § 704(a) “suppresses expression
    out of concern for its likely communicative impact,”
    
    Eichman, 496 U.S. at 317
    , and is a content-based restriction
    on speech.
    As such, the tests applicable to content-neutral regulations
    (the time, place, or manner test, and the O’Brien test) are not
    applicable here. 
    Johnson, 491 U.S. at 410
    (stating that a
    content-based regulation is “outside of O’Brien’s test
    altogether”). Instead, § 704(a) “must, like a law directed at
    speech itself, be justified by the substantial showing of need
    that the First Amendment requires,” 
    Johnson, 491 U.S. at 406
    . In light of this analysis, we conclude that Perelman
    erred in applying the test set forth in O’Brien, which applies
    only to content-neutral enactments.8
    C
    Because § 704(a) is a content-based regulation of false
    symbolic speech, it is closely analogous to § 704(b). Indeed,
    8
    United States v. Hamilton, 
    699 F.3d 356
    (4th Cir. 2012), engaged in a
    similar analysis, correctly noting that “the key factor that determines
    whether we apply the ‘relatively lenient’ test employed in O’Brien, or the
    ‘most exacting scrutiny’ standard set forth in Johnson, is whether the
    statute being reviewed is related to the suppression of free expression.”
    
    Id. at 370.
    The Fourth Circuit further acknowledged that when § 704(a)
    is construed as requiring an intent to deceive, it “could reach conduct that
    solely involves free expression, within the holding of Johnson.” 
    Id. at 371.
    The Fourth Circuit ultimately did not determine whether § 704(a)
    was symbolic speech because it concluded, erroneously in our view, that
    § 704(a) survived strict scrutiny. See 
    id. UNITED STATES
    V. SWISHER                          27
    both statutes bar lies about having received a military medal.
    Accordingly, we review the constitutionality of § 704(a)
    under the tests enunciated in the plurality and concurring
    opinions in Alvarez. If they apply to § 704(a) in the same
    manner as they apply to § 704(b), the reasoning of Alvarez
    requires us to hold that § 704(a) is also unconstitutional.
    We begin by considering the standard set forth in Justice
    Breyer’s concurring opinion, which reviewed the
    constitutionality of § 704(b) under a less demanding test than
    the plurality required. As a threshold matter, Justice Breyer
    interpreted § 704(b) favorably to the government as
    proscribing “only false factual statements made with
    knowledge of their falsity and with the intent that they be
    taken as true.” 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2552
    –53 (Breyer, J.,
    concurring). We adopt the same narrowing construction of
    § 704(a), and interpret it as proscribing unauthorized persons
    from wearing military medals for the purpose of falsely
    communicating that they have been awarded such medals.
    See also 
    Perelman, 695 F.3d at 871
    (concluding that a person
    violates § 704(a) only “if he or she has an intent to deceive”).
    The first prong of Justice Breyer’s intermediate scrutiny
    test requires consideration of “the seriousness of the
    speech-related harm the provision will likely cause.” 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2551
    . Justice Breyer noted that the narrowing
    interpretation of § 704(b) “diminishes the extent to which the
    statute endangers First Amendment values.” 
    Id. at 2553.
    Because we have adopted the same narrowing interpretation
    for § 704(a), the same conclusion applies.9
    9
    Because both § 704(a), see supra at 26–27, and § 704(b), see Alvarez,
    
    132 S. Ct. 2552
    –53, prohibit only lies made knowingly and with an intent
    to deceive, both provisions impose an identical speech-related harm:
    28                 UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    But like § 704(b), § 704(a) lacks the limiting features that,
    in Justice Breyer’s view, justified other statutes and common
    law doctrines punishing the communication of false
    statements. 
    Id. at 2553–54.
    Section 704(a) does not require
    “proof of specific harm to identifiable victims,” or that
    “someone was deceived into following a course [of action] he
    would not have pursued but for the deceitful conduct,” or
    specify “that the lies be made in contexts in which a tangible
    harm to others is especially likely to occur.” See 
    id. at 2254
    (alteration in original) (internal citations and quotation marks
    omitted). Nor is § 704(a) limited to false statements that “are
    particularly likely to produce harm.” See 
    id. Accordingly, we
    conclude that under Justice Breyer’s test, § 704(a), like
    § 704(b), “creates a significant risk of First Amendment
    harm.” 
    Id. at 2555.
    Arguing against this conclusion, the government asserts
    that § 704(a) is analogous to statutes prohibiting trademark
    infringement such as the Lanham Act, since it prevents
    misappropriation of governmental property. Justice Breyer
    rejected a similar argument, concluding that § 704(b) had a
    broader reach than trademark statutes, which are typically
    “focused upon commercial and promotional activities that are
    likely to dilute the value of a mark,” and would “typically
    require a showing of likely confusion, a showing that tends to
    assure that the feared harm will in fact take place.” 
    Id. at burdening
    the speech of a person who intentionally chooses to lie, see
    
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2555
    –56. And in prosecuting either statute, the
    government would be required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that
    the defendant had the requisite mens rea. Therefore, we reject the
    dissent’s argument that § 704(b) would have a greater chilling effect and
    pose a greater risk of selective prosecution than § 704(a) because a person
    could thoughtlessly lie but could not thoughtlessly wear an unauthorized
    medal. Dis. op. at 41.
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                  29
    2554. Because § 704(a) has the same broad reach as
    § 704(b), and likewise does not require that a specified harm
    (such as public confusion) will take place, the same analysis
    applies here, and we likewise reject the government’s
    contention.
    In reaching the conclusion that suppressing a symbolic
    communication threatens the same First Amendment harm as
    suppressing a spoken communication, we again part ways
    with Perelman. Although Perelman distinguished § 704(a)
    from § 704(b) on the ground that “[t]he use of a physical
    object goes beyond mere speech and suggests that the wearer
    has proof of the lie, or government endorsement of 
    it,” 695 F.3d at 871
    , we see no basis for Perelman’s conclusion
    that wearing a medal is more probative than speaking a lie.
    Cf. Kevin Jon Heller, The Cognitive Psychology of
    Circumstantial Evidence, 
    105 Mich. L
    . Rev. 241, 248–52
    (2006) (noting, as an empirical matter, that jurors give more
    weight to testimony, such as eyewitness identifications and
    confessions, than to physical evidence, such as blood and
    fingerprints). As a practical matter, the government’s
    concession at oral argument that military medals are freely
    available for purchase confirms that the probative value of
    owning a medal or other military decoration is minimal. In
    any event, wearing a medal has no purpose other than to
    communicate a message. We therefore see no principled
    basis for distinguishing a spoken communication from a
    symbolic communication in this context.
    We also reject Perelman’s reasoning that § 704(a) is like
    the statutes described in Alvarez that prohibit impersonation
    of government officials, like 18 U.S.C. § 912, or the
    unauthorized wearing of military uniforms, like 18 U.S.C.
    § 702, which the Court assumed (without deciding) was valid.
    30              UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    
    See 695 F.3d at 872
    (citing 
    Schacht, 398 U.S. at 61
    ). As
    Justice Breyer pointed out, “[s]tatutes forbidding
    impersonation of a public official typically focus on acts of
    impersonation, not mere speech, and may require a showing
    that, for example, someone was deceived into following a
    course [of action] he would not have pursued but for the
    deceitful conduct.” 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2554
    (Breyer, J.,
    concurring) (alteration in original) (internal quotation marks
    omitted). But § 704(a), like § 704(b), requires no act beyond
    the false communication itself. While there is a quantum of
    conduct involved in pinning on a medal, it is not materially
    different from the quantum of conduct involved in speaking
    or writing. Nor does § 704(a) require proof that anyone was
    deceived into taking a course of action. We also reject
    Perelman’s reliance on Schacht to support its conclusion that
    § 704(a) survives First Amendment scrutiny. Schacht itself
    merely held that even if the government could constitutionally
    prohibit a person from wearing a military uniform without
    authorization, Congress may not make “it a crime for an actor
    wearing a military uniform to say things during his
    performance critical of the conduct or policies of the Armed
    
    Forces.” 398 U.S. at 62
    –63; see also 
    R.A.V., 505 U.S. at 430
    –31 (interpreting Schacht as precluding viewpoint
    discrimination). Neither Schacht nor any other Supreme
    Court case examined a First Amendment challenge to statutes
    precluding wearing military uniforms without authorization,
    and both the Alvarez plurality and concurring opinion
    indicated that laws prohibiting impersonation of an officer are
    distinguishable from false claims of entitlement to a military
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                            31
    medal. See 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2546
    (Kennedy, J., plurality
    opinion); 
    id. at 2254
    (Breyer, J., concurring).10
    The second prong of Justice Breyer’s intermediate
    scrutiny test requires an evaluation of “the nature and
    importance of the provision’s countervailing objectives.” 
    Id. at 2551.
    We conclude that the government had the same
    compelling interest in enacting § 704(a) as it did in enacting
    § 704(b): in both cases, the government has a “substantial
    countervailing objective” of avoiding dilution of “the
    country’s recognition of [award recipients’] sacrifice in the
    form of military honors.” 
    Id. at 2555;
    see also 
    Hamilton, 699 F.3d at 371
    (“Accordingly, we hold that the
    government’s interest in preserving the integrity of the
    system honoring military members for their achievements and
    sacrifices is compelling.”).11
    Finally, we consider the third prong of Justice Breyer’s
    test: “the extent to which the provision will tend to achieve
    those objectives, and whether there are other, less restrictive
    ways of doing so.” 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2551
    . As explained
    in Alvarez, Congress could adopt narrowing strategies to limit
    10
    Contrary to the dissent, our analysis does not necessarily invalidate
    18 U.S.C. § 709. Cf. Dis. op at 37–38. Because § 709 is limited to
    precluding false representations in certain limited contexts (such as in the
    field of banking, finance, or law enforcement) where “a tangible harm to
    others is especially likely to occur,” 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2554
    (Breyer,
    J., plurality opinion), it is distinguishable from § 704(a).
    11
    We are sympathetic to the dissent’s description of the government’s
    powerful interest in protecting the message of valor and heroism that is
    conveyed by a medal. Dis. op. at 43–46. But because we already
    conclude that the government’s interest in preventing the wearing of
    unauthorized medals is compelling, the dissent’s further elaboration does
    not affect our First Amendment analysis.
    32                 UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    the breadth of the prohibition, and could establish
    “information-disseminating devices,” such as “an accurate,
    publicly available register of military awards, easily
    obtainable by political opponents.” 
    Id. at 2556
    . These
    alternative means to meeting the government’s goals in
    enacting § 704(b) would be equally effective to meet the
    government’s stated goals for § 704(a), namely to preserve
    the integrity of the military honors system and protect the
    symbolic value of military medals.12
    Given that the statute fails Justice Breyer’s intermediate
    scrutiny test, it also fails under the plurality’s exacting
    scrutiny test. See 
    id. at 2543
    (Kennedy, J., plurality
    opinion).13 The plurality’s conclusion that the compelling
    interest served by § 704(b) could be satisfied by a database of
    medal winners, and that there is an insufficient causal link
    between the government’s compelling interest and the
    restriction “on the false claims of liars,” is equally applicable
    to § 704(a). See 
    id. at 2549–50.
    12
    The dissent’s arguments to the contrary, see Dis. op. at 47–48, are
    based on its view that symbolic speech involving a physical emblem is
    qualitatively different than spoken or written speech, a position
    inconsistent with 
    Johnson. 491 U.S. at 403
    –04. For the same reason, we
    disagree with Hamilton’s conclusion that § 704(a) survives strict scrutiny
    because a database is inadequate to counter symbolic speech involving a
    physical 
    object. 699 F.3d at 373
    .
    13
    Although Alvarez lacked a majority opinion, we need not determine
    whether the plurality opinion or Justice Breyer’s opinion constitutes the
    holding of the Court, see Marks v. United States, 
    430 U.S. 188
    , 193
    (1977), because we reach the same conclusion under either standard.
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                          33
    V
    Alvarez clarified that lies do not fall into a category of
    speech that is excepted from First Amendment 
    protection. 132 S. Ct. at 2546
    –47 (Kennedy, J., plurality opinion); 
    id. at 2553
    (Breyer, J., concurring). Given that clarification, our
    analysis follows a familiar road. Content-based prohibitions
    of speech and symbolic speech are analyzed under the same
    framework, and so Alvarez dictates our conclusion that
    § 704(a) violates the First Amendment. Because § 704(a)
    was unconstitutionally applied to Swisher’s conduct, the
    district court erred in denying Swisher relief under 28 U.S.C.
    § 2255. We therefore reverse the district court and overrule
    Perelman to the extent inconsistent with this opinion.14
    REVERSED.
    14
    The government also argues that § 704(a) is not subject to the First
    Amendment because military medals convey government speech. In
    support, the government relies on Walker v. Texas Division, Sons of
    Confederate Veterans, Inc., which held that Texas could reject a proposed
    design for specialty license plates without violating the First Amendment
    because license plate designs constitute government speech. 
    135 S. Ct. 2239
    , 2243–45 (2015). But § 704(a) does not regulate the design of
    military medals or other government speech; rather, it punishes an
    individual’s false communication regarding the entitlement to wear a
    military medal. As such, Walker does not help the government here.
    34              UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    BYBEE, Circuit Judge, dissenting, with whom N.R. SMITH
    and WATFORD, Circuit Judges, join:
    Xavier Alvarez announced in a public meeting that he
    was a former Marine and had been awarded the
    Congressional Medal of Honor. When the United States
    prosecuted Alvarez for “falsely represent[ing] himself . . .
    verbally” as having received a military decoration or medal,
    18 U.S.C. § 704(b) (2011 ed.), the Supreme Court held that
    his speech was protected by the First Amendment. United
    States v. Alvarez, 
    132 S. Ct. 2537
    , 2551 (2012) (Kennedy, J.)
    (plurality opinion); 
    id. at 2556
    (Breyer, J., concurring in the
    judgment). Elven Swisher took Alvarez one step better: he
    not only said he was a decorated soldier, he proved it by
    wearing his Marine Corps League uniform with five
    medals—including a Silver Star, a Purple Heart, and the
    Navy and Marine Corps Commendation Medal with a bronze
    “V.” Like Alvarez, Swisher was an undeserving claimant;
    although a veteran, he had not earned a single one of the
    commendations he wore. As in Alvarez, the United States
    indicted Swisher under the Stolen Valor Act, but this time it
    accused him of violating § 704(a), which prohibits
    “knowingly wear[ing] . . . any decoration or medal authorized
    by Congress . . . except when authorized.” 18 U.S.C.
    § 704(a) (2002 ed.).
    The majority today holds that Swisher’s conduct is a form
    of speech entitled to the same protection as Alvarez’s actual
    speech. I beg to differ. The Supreme Court’s decision in
    Alvarez does not compel the result here. The law has always
    been able to tell the difference between conduct and speech,
    even when the conduct may have some communicative value.
    I respectfully dissent.
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                    35
    I
    Alvarez held that false statements are not categorically
    unprotected by the First Amendment. 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2545
    –47 (Kennedy, J.) (plurality opinion); 
    id. at 2552–53
    (Breyer, J., concurring in the judgment). As Justice Breyer
    explained, the government can have little interest in policing
    the “white lies” we tell to “provide the sick with comfort, or
    preserve a child’s innocence,” or false statements made “in
    technical, philosophical, and scientific contexts, where . . .
    examination of a false statement . . . can promote a form of
    thought that ultimately helps realize the truth.” 
    Id. at 2553
    (Breyer, J., concurring in the judgment). But the Court
    stopped well short of protecting lying generally. As Justice
    Kennedy reminded us, “there are instances in which the
    falsity of speech bears upon whether it is protected.” 
    Id. at 2546
    (plurality opinion).
    The statute at issue here, however, does not police “white
    lies,” nor does it prohibit lying generally. Instead, it targets
    a very specific lie that implicates a very specific government
    interest, an interest which the full court here and the Supreme
    Court in Alvarez agrees is significant. And importantly, the
    lie the government wishes to punish cannot be uttered with
    words; it can only be accomplished by falsely wearing the
    nation’s medals. Although the Court in Alvarez found that
    the harm caused by the form of the lie regulated by § 704(b)
    did not outweigh the First Amendment harm, the interests
    implicated by § 704(a) must be weighed differently from
    those at issue in Alvarez under § 704(b). The harm to the
    government’s interest in upholding the military honors
    system caused by the false wearing of its medals is greater
    than the harm caused by “bar stool braggadocio.” 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2555
    (Breyer, J., concurring in the judgment).
    36                   UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    Concomitantly, because § 704(a) requires proof of deceptive
    conduct, any harm to First Amendment interests is less than
    in Alvarez, and the less restrictive alternatives discussed in
    Alvarez, less effective.
    The majority today ignores these distinctions, and
    discusses the outcome of this case as though Alvarez renders
    it a foregone conclusion. But it is not. Alvarez does not
    clearly compel the result here—indeed, that was the
    conclusion reached by a panel of our court in United States v.
    Perelman, 
    695 F.3d 866
    , 872–73 (9th Cir. 2012), in which we
    upheld § 704(a) under the lesser scrutiny applied to conduct
    regulations laid out in O’Brien.1 It was also the conclusion
    reached by the Fourth Circuit, which found that § 704(a)
    would survive strict scrutiny. United States v. Hamilton,
    
    699 F.3d 356
    , 371–74 (4th Cir. 2012). While I do not entirely
    agree with the reasoning in these cases, they demonstrate that
    the reach—and indeed the holding—of Alvarez is unclear.
    Alvarez gives uncertain guidance as to how false statements
    should be analyzed, especially if Justice Breyer’s opinion
    controls under Marks v. United States, 
    430 U.S. 188
    , 193
    (1977).2 Justice Breyer, writing for himself and Justice
    Kagan, applies what he describes as “intermediate scrutiny,”
    
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2556
    , although without really
    explaining why that is the proper test.
    1
    United States v. O’Brien, 
    391 U.S. 367
    (1968).
    2
    Justice Kennedy, writing for himself and three others, applies strict
    scrutiny to § 704(b)’s “content-based restrictions.” 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2548
    (Kennedy, J.) (plurality). In dissent, Justice Alito, joined by two
    others, would have held that Alvarez’s false statement “merit[ed] no First
    Amendment protection.” 
    Id. at 2563
    (Alito, J., dissenting). Justice
    Breyer’s opinion is the narrowest opinion that a majority of the Court
    agreed upon. 
    Marks, 430 U.S. at 193
    .
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                          37
    Part of the analytical challenge of Alvarez is trying to
    understand why intermediate scrutiny applies. In Perelman,
    the panel used the O’Brien 
    test. 695 F.3d at 872
    . I can’t
    agree with the Perelman panel on that point because § 704(a)
    seems to violate at least one prong of O’Brien: The
    Government’s interest in § 704(a) is not “unrelated to the
    suppression of free expression.” 
    O’Brien, 391 U.S. at 377
    ;
    see also Texas v. Johnson, 
    491 U.S. 397
    , 410 (1989). For that
    reason, the Fourth Circuit did not apply O’Brien, but
    ultimately concluded the statute would survive strict scrutiny.
    
    Hamilton, 699 F.3d at 371
    . The anomaly is, as Judge Davis
    pointed out, that § 704(a) survives strict scrutiny, but would
    fail O’Brien’s version of intermediate scrutiny. 
    Id. at 377
    (Davis, J., concurring).3
    Despite this ambiguity, the majority goes out of its way
    to extend Alvarez where it does not clearly apply. Moreover,
    the majority fails to consider the consequences of our
    decision. In addition to creating an unnecessary split with the
    Fourth Circuit over a statute that is no longer in effect,4
    3
    In my view, § 704(a) should be reviewed under intermediate scrutiny
    and treated as an “impersonation of a war hero” statute. See 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2554
    (Breyer, J., concurring in the judgment) (noting that
    § 704(b) differs from anti-impersonation statutes because they typically
    prohibit “acts of impersonation, not mere speech” ); see also 
    id. at 2553
    –55 (discussing examples of the “many statutes and common-law
    doctrines [that] make the utterance of certain kinds of false statements
    unlawful”). Unlike § 704(b), we deal here with something more than
    “mere speech.”
    4
    Both provisions of the Stolen Valor Act were amended following
    Alvarez, subsequent to the events that gave rise to Swisher’s case.
    Congress removed the “wearing” provision in § 704(a), apparently
    preemptively, and more substantively revised § 704(b) to comply with the
    Court’s holding in Alvarez. See Stolen Valor Act of 2013, Pub. L. No.
    38                  UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    today’s decision calls into question the validity of numerous
    other statutes that prohibit, for example: the unauthorized
    wearing of a military uniform, 18 U.S.C. § 702—which the
    Supreme Court has noted is “a valid statute on its face,”
    Schacht v. United States, 
    398 U.S. 58
    , 61 (1970); the
    unauthorized use of the name of federal agencies, 18 U.S.C.
    § 709; or the impersonation of a federal officer, 18 U.S.C.
    § 912—a statute we upheld in United States v. Tomsha-
    Miguel, 
    766 F.3d 1041
    , 1048–49 (9th Cir. 2014), a case in
    which we relied on Perelman (which we now overturn).5 In
    light of this, I see no reason to extend Alvarez to § 704(a), in
    order to protect deceptive conduct that has no First
    Amendment value, and which poses greater harm to the
    government’s significant interest in upholding the military
    honors system than did the speech covered by § 704(b).
    113-12, § 2, 127 Stat. 448 (2013). Thus, the precise provisions at issue
    here are no longer in effect. As amended, however, the statute would still
    appear to cover Swisher’s conduct. Section 704(b) now reads: “Whoever,
    with intent to obtain money, property, or other tangible benefit,
    fraudulently holds oneself out to be a recipient of a decoration or medal
    . . . shall be fined under this title, imprisoned not more than one year, or
    both.” 127 Stat. 448.
    5
    Consider also: 18 U.S.C. § 703 (unauthorized wearing of a uniform of
    a friendly nation); § 706 (wearing of Red Cross with the fraudulent
    purpose of inducing the belief that wearer is a member or agent of the Red
    Cross); and § 706a (wearing of Geneva distinctive emblem (Red Crescent
    or Red Crystal) with fraudulent purpose of inducing the belief that wearer
    is a member or agent of an authorized national society using the emblem,
    the International Committee of the Red Cross, or the International
    Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies).
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                     39
    II
    The majority concludes that the Supreme Court’s decision
    in Alvarez dictates the outcome of this case, identifying three
    factors from Justice Breyer’s concurring opinion in Alvarez,
    and mechanically applying them to the statute at issue here.
    Maj. Op. at 26–32. For the reasons I have explained, I agree
    with the majority that Justice Breyer’s analysis controls and
    that the relevant factors are: (1) “the seriousness of the
    speech-related harm the provision will likely cause”; (2) “the
    nature and importance of the provision’s countervailing
    objectives”; and (3) “the extent to which the provision will
    tend to achieve those objectives, and whether there are other,
    less restrictive ways of doing so.” 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2551
    . Yet in applying these factors, the majority fails to
    account for the crucial differences between § 704(b) and
    § 704(a)—and indeed, fails to engage in much critical
    analysis at all. I am going to address each of the factors in
    turn.
    A
    In analyzing the speech-related harm caused by § 704(a),
    the majority concludes that § 704(a) works the same speech-
    related harm as § 704(b) because it “lacks the limiting
    features that, in Justice Breyer’s view, justified other statutes
    and common law doctrines punishing the communication of
    false statements.” Maj. Op. at 28. I have two points. First,
    I part ways with the majority’s premise that speech and
    communicative conduct are the same for First Amendment
    purposes. In O’Brien, the Supreme Court rejected “the view
    that an apparently limitless variety of conduct can be labeled
    ‘speech’ whenever the person engaged in the conduct intends
    thereby to express an 
    idea.” 391 U.S. at 376
    . Here, the
    40                  UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    majority doesn’t just blur the lines between conduct and
    speech, it simply erases them: It finds that the “quantum of
    conduct involved in pinning on a medal . . . is not materially
    different from the quantum of conduct involved in speaking
    or writing.” Maj. Op. at 30. With all respect, that just isn’t
    true. If it were, then we could save ourselves trouble and
    money by simply announcing that we are awarding medals
    without actually giving the recipients anything. But as
    anyone knows who has witnessed the President awarding the
    Congressional Medal of Honor or a promotion ceremony
    pinning a new officer—or even an Olympic medals ceremony
    or a Cub Scout court of honor—there is value, both symbolic
    and tactile, in the awarding of a physical emblem. If there is
    important value in the act of awarding a physical medal, there
    is important value in the wearing of it.6
    6
    The majority notes, twice, that distinguishing between pure speech,
    like false statements, and “symbolic speech” conveyed through conduct,
    like the unauthorized wearing of a military medal, is inconsistent with
    Texas v. Johnson, 
    491 U.S. 397
    (1989). Maj. Op. at 20–21 n.6, 32 n.12.
    This reference to Johnson is puzzling. Johnson is relevant only if we must
    analyze this statute under strict scrutiny as a content-based restriction on
    speech. See 
    Johnson, 491 U.S. at 411
    –12 (applying strict scrutiny to a
    statute prohibiting the burning of the American flag). But Justice Breyer’s
    concurrence in Alvarez, on which the majority bases its entire analysis,
    clearly departs from this traditional First Amendment framework,
    analyzing restrictions on false speech under an intermediate scrutiny,
    balancing-of-interests approach Justice Breyer refers to as
    “proportionality.” 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2551
    –52 (Breyer, J., concurring
    in the judgment). Moreover, as I have already noted, in analyzing false
    speech, Justice Breyer specifically distinguishes between “mere speech”
    and “acts of impersonation where an act of impersonation is more likely
    to cause harm. 
    Id. at 2554
    (emphasis in original). Johnson is irrelevant
    here.
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                            41
    Second, even if there isn’t a relevant difference in content
    between the lie represented by saying one has a medal and the
    deceit communicated by actually wearing it, the majority
    never grapples with the speech-related harms that Justice
    Breyer focused on in striking down § 704(b), and therefore
    fails to consider whether there is any difference between the
    two situations that alters the need for the “limiting features”
    discussed in Alvarez. For example, Justice Breyer was
    particularly concerned with the potential chilling effect of
    § 704(b), because individuals would worry about “being
    prosecuted for a careless false statement” even if they lacked
    the requisite mens rea, and so would curtail their own speech.
    
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2555
    . It makes little sense, however, to
    extend this principle—that people sometimes thoughtlessly
    say things that they don’t really mean—to the context of
    § 704(a). Here, by contrast, it seems unlikely that an
    individual could carelessly or negligently wear a military
    medal with the intent to deceive. Thus, there is less danger
    here that individuals will self-censor their sartorial choices
    for fear of being prosecuted for negligent speech.7
    There is also much less ambiguity in the wearing of a
    military medal, and that diminishes the risk of selective
    prosecution under this provision. 
    Id. at 2555
    Breyer, J.,
    concurring in the judgment) (noting the risk that § 704(b)
    7
    For reasons the panel explained in Perelman, because we must read
    § 704(a) to prohibit only the wearing of a medal with the intent to deceive,
    the statute does not apply to anyone wearing a medal in a theatrical
    production, as part of a Halloween costume, or in protest as a political
    
    statement. 695 F.3d at 870
    (listing these and other examples). In these
    situations, we will readily recognize that the wearer is making no claim to
    being a medal recipient. The only person who can be prosecuted under
    § 704(a) is one who is lying and wants us to rely on his possession of the
    medal as proof of his valor. There is no First Amendment value in that lie.
    42                 UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    may be applied “subtly but selectively to speakers that the
    Government does not like,” particularly in the political
    arena). Human speech is often ambiguous and subject to
    different interpretations. As a result, speech subject to
    § 704(b) must be understood in context, and thus is more
    easily subject to manipulation and “the risk of censorious
    selectivity by prosecutors.” 
    Id. As judges,
    we are familiar
    with the dangers of reading a cold record and trying to supply
    voice inflection, facial expression, and body language.8 For
    good reason, we defer to the fact-finders who have actually
    seen the witnesses to judge their demeanor as a measure of
    their truthfulness. See e.g., Anderson v. Bessemer City,
    
    470 U.S. 564
    , 575 (1985) (“[O]nly the trial judge can be
    aware of the variations in demeanor and tone of voice that
    bear so heavily on the listener’s understanding of and belief
    in what is said.”); United States v. Raddatz, 
    447 U.S. 667
    ,
    679 (1980) (“‘The most careful note must often fail to
    convey the evidence fully in some of its most important
    elements. . . . It cannot give the look or manner of the
    witness: his hesitations, his doubts, his variations of language,
    his confidence or precipitancy, his calmness or
    consideration.’” (quoting Queen v. Bertrand, 16 Eng. Rep.
    391, 399 (1867))).
    8
    Consider, for example, Charlie Chaplin’s classic exchange in The
    Great Dictator (1940). When Chaplin mutters “this is a fine country to
    live in,” he is arrested, but escapes punishment by explaining that all he
    said was “this is a fine country to live in.” Joseph G. Brennan, A
    Handbook of Logic 213 (2d ed. 1961) (describing this an example of the
    informal “fallacy of accent”). See also Watts v. United States, 
    394 U.S. 705
    , 708 (1969) (overturning the petitioner’s conviction for threatening
    the President because his statement, made at a political rally opposing the
    Vietnam war, was simply “crude” “political hyperbole,” not a true threat).
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                   43
    By contrast, wearing clothing, particularly with the
    precision demanded when one dons a military uniform, is far
    less ambiguous than the vagaries of human speech. The very
    nature of a uniform suggests that once we recognize the
    distinctive colors and insignia, we know immediately whether
    we are dealing with the local constabulary or a member of the
    nation’s armed forces, whether the service member is wearing
    the camouflage of the ground forces or the crisp whites of the
    navy, whether the service member belongs to the armored
    division or the medical corps, and whether the member is
    commissioned or non-commissioned. In the same vein, we
    can discern, without any words being exchanged, the
    campaigns in which the member has participated and whether
    the member has been decorated for actions in combat.
    Indeed, so clear is our understanding of the meaning of the
    uniform that no voice inflection or body language can
    countermand what we have seen for ourselves. Elven
    Swisher didn’t have to tell anyone that his Purple Heart meant
    that he had been wounded in battle, or that his Navy and
    Marine Corps Commendation Medal was awarded for valor.
    Contrary to the majority’s assertion that there is no
    principled distinction between § 704(a) and § 704(b), Maj.
    Op. at 29, § 704(a) engenders less potential constitutional
    harm than § 704(b), because there is less risk to the First
    Amendment in the government identifying and policing
    specific instances of deceptive conduct than in trying to
    police the line between false and true statements.
    B
    The false wearing of military medals poses significantly
    greater harm to the government’s interests than does mere
    false speech. That means that, contrary to the majority’s
    44               UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    assertion, Maj. Op. at 31, the government’s objectives here
    are not precisely the same as those at issue under § 704(b).
    The United States has a powerful interest in protecting the
    integrity of its military decorations. Indeed, Congress has
    punished the wearing, manufacture, or sale of military
    decorations without authorization since 1923. See Act of
    Feb. 24, 1923, ch. 110, 42 Stat. 1286. The wearing of an
    unearned military medal dilutes the message conveyed by the
    medal itself. Even if the wearer is later exposed as a liar, the
    utility of the medal as a symbol of government
    commendation has been undermined. The public can no
    longer trust that the medal actually is a symbol of government
    commendation, i.e., that the person wearing the medal has
    actually earned it. This results in a different, more concrete
    harm than that which may arise from the false statement that
    one has earned a military medal. It is one thing to say that
    one has been decorated; it is quite another to produce the
    evidence for it by appropriating a symbol that the
    government, through decades of effort, has imbued with a
    particular message. Unlike false statements, which may work
    harm by giving the public the general impression that more
    personnel earn military honors than actually do, the false
    wearing of medals directly undermines the government’s
    ability to mark out specific worthy individuals, because the
    symbol the government uses to convey this message can no
    longer be trusted. This may also mean that those who
    rightfully wear a military medal are less likely to be believed.
    In this respect, a military medal is akin to a trademark: a
    symbol that denotes a particular level of quality, or
    worthiness. See 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2554
    (Breyer, J.,
    concurring in the judgment) (“Statutes prohibiting trademark
    infringement present, perhaps, the closest analogy to the
    present statute.”). As Justice Breyer recognized in Alvarez,
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                    45
    a false claim regarding a military medal “creates confusion
    about who is entitled to wear it, thus diluting its value to
    those who have earned it, to their families, and to their
    country.” 
    Id. Although in
    Alvarez, Justice Breyer ultimately
    concluded that the confusion caused by false statements was
    not sufficient to outweigh the constitutional harm caused by
    the statute, here, the calculus is different, because § 704(a)
    creates less risk of constitutional harm, and because the
    wearing of an unearned medal offers more convincing proof
    of the lie than a mere false statement.
    The false and deceptive wearing of military medals
    “dilutes the value” of military honors generally, by conveying
    the impression that “everyone” earns them. Moreover, such
    conduct also dilutes the symbolic value of the medal itself,
    hampering the government’s ability to reward those it has
    concluded are worthy of recognition. The purpose of a
    military medal is not only that it conveys the government’s
    appreciation for an individual’s service to the individual, but
    that it conveys the government’s commendation of that
    individual to others, identifying the medal winner “as an
    example worthy of emulation.” United States v. Alvarez,
    
    617 F.3d 1198
    , 1234 (9th Cir. 2010) (Bybee, J., dissenting).
    The value of the military medal, like the value of a trademark,
    is that it is both recognizable and publicly understood to
    convey a specific message: in this case, the message that the
    wearer has done something worthy of admiration. When
    those who are unworthy are allowed to wear the medal, the
    government can no longer identify its heroes in a way that is
    easily discernible by the public.
    To be clear, this harm does not occur when an unearned
    medal is worn for purposes of art, theater, political
    expression, or the like. It is only when the medal-wearer
    46                  UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    wears the medal in order to appropriate the message
    conveyed by the medal—that the wearer has actually earned
    a military honor—that the medal’s symbolic value is diluted.
    Elven Swisher, however, was not wearing his false military
    medals for purposes of art, political expression, intellectual
    debate, or even any of the “innocent” reasons people may lie.
    He wore his medals to support the elaborate story he had
    concocted to fraudulently obtain disability benefits from the
    government. He even wore his fraudulent medals to
    embellish his credibility when testifying at a criminal trial
    (not his own). See United States v. Hinkson, 
    585 F.3d 1247
    (9th Cir. 2009) (en banc), as amended, 
    611 F.3d 1098
    (9th
    Cir. 2010).9 It is absurd to argue that allowing someone like
    Swisher to wear unearned military honors in the course of
    impersonating a war hero does not do significant damage to
    the value of the genuine honor bestowed on those who have
    sacrificed for their country.
    9
    Swisher testified as a government witness in a federal murder-for-hire
    case, appearing on the witness stand with a Purple Heart pinned to his
    lapel. 
    Hinkson, 585 F.3d at 1254
    . Swisher testified that the defendant in
    that case, David Hinkson, had heard about his impressive military service
    record and had wanted to hire him to torture and kill a federal judge, an
    AUSA, and an IRS agent. During the course of the trial, Hinkson’s
    lawyers called Swisher’s credibility into serious question, on the basis that
    his “reissued” military discharge papers, which detailed the military
    honors Swisher had supposedly won, could not be authenticated. See 
    id. at 1251–57
    (recapping the Hinkson trial and Swisher’s role); see also
    United States v. Hinkson, 
    611 F.3d 1098
    (9th Cir. 2010) (en banc)
    (amending the original en banc opinion); 
    id. at 1099
    (W. Fletcher, J.,
    dissenting) (discussing in even more detail Swisher’s relationship with
    Hinkson and the Hinkson trial). The parties here agreed that Swisher’s
    conduct at the Hinkson trial would not be introduced at his own trial.
    Swisher was indicted based on a photograph showing that he had worn his
    false medals to a Marine Corps League event.
    UNITED STATES V. SWISHER                    47
    C
    Finally, there are fewer less restrictive regulatory
    alternatives available to the government where the
    unauthorized and deceptive wearing of a military medal is
    concerned. To be sure, the statutory provision at issue here
    punishes the same kind of lie at issue in Alvarez. But the fact
    that the lie here is told in a more effective way, with physical
    proof in the form of the medal to support the false claim of
    entitlement, increases the harm caused by the lie and also
    means that other, less restrictive means are less likely to be
    effective. Justice Breyer noted that many statutes punishing
    false statements require some showing of actual or likely
    harm resulting from the lie and suggested that “a more finely
    tailored statue might . . . insist upon a showing that the false
    statement caused specific harm or at least was material, or
    focus its coverage on lies most likely to be harmful or on
    contexts where such lies are most likely to cause harm.”
    
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2556
    (Breyer, J., concurring in the
    judgment).       Section 704(a) satisfies Justice Breyer’s
    concerns. First, the harm caused by the false wearing of
    military medals is material. It is material to the message
    conveyed by the medals themselves. When pretenders wear
    medals, the medal itself can no longer be taken as a sign that
    the wearer has earned it and is therefore worthy of
    commendation. Second, § 704(a) is confined to a single
    context—the intentional wearing of medals when the wearer
    intends to deceive—where it is most likely to cause harm.
    Moreover, “counterspeech” will be less effective in
    correcting the falsehood conveyed by deceptively wearing an
    unearned military decoration. See 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2549
    –50 (Kennedy, J.) (plurality opinion); 
    id. at 2556
    (Breyer, J., concurring in the judgment). One could denounce
    48                 UNITED STATES V. SWISHER
    Swisher as an impostor, but as the Fourth Circuit explained,
    “speech may not effectively counter that which a person
    sees.” 
    Hamilton, 699 F.3d at 373
    . One could, perhaps,
    engage in a war of words with Alvarez, but Swisher, who has
    the medals on his uniform, occupies the high ground.
    Finally, the majority, following 
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2550
    –51 (Kennedy, J.) (plurality opinion); 
    id. at 2556
    (Breyer, J., concurring in the judgment), proposes a database
    of medal winners as a means to counteract Swisher’s
    deception.10 Maj. Op. at 31–32. To my mind, this is no
    solution at all to the problem of individuals falsely wearing
    medals. If the public has to check the database to confirm
    that a medal wearer actually earned the medal, the purpose of
    the medal itself is utterly defeated. If we can no longer trust
    what we can see, the only honor the United States can confer
    on its heroes is a listing in a database. Once wearing the
    medal itself doesn’t signify anything more than a
    presumption of a property right, the nation’s highest honors
    will have become, literally, virtual.
    III
    I would uphold the constitutionality of §704(a).                    I
    respectfully dissent.
    10
    The majority, quoting Alvarez, refers to the database as an
    “‘information-disseminating device’” for confirming that the medal wearer
    has actually earned the military honor. Maj. Op. at 31–32 (quoting
    
    Alvarez, 132 S. Ct. at 2556
    (Breyer, J., concurring in the judgment)).
    Although it is low-tech, we already have such an “information-
    disseminating device”: the medal.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 11-35796

Citation Numbers: 811 F.3d 299

Filed Date: 1/11/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (35)

United States v. Aguirre-Ganceda , 592 F.3d 1043 ( 2010 )

Anderson v. City of Hermosa Beach , 621 F.3d 1051 ( 2010 )

Corales v. Bennett , 567 F.3d 554 ( 2009 )

Georgia Nunez v. Gary F. Davis , 169 F.3d 1222 ( 1999 )

Pamelyn Vlasak v. Superior Court of California, for the ... , 329 F.3d 683 ( 2003 )

russell-allen-nordyke-ann-sallie-nordyke-dba-ts-trade-shows-jess-b-guy , 319 F.3d 1185 ( 2003 )

United States v. Lepowitch , 63 S. Ct. 914 ( 1943 )

Bousley v. United States , 118 S. Ct. 1604 ( 1998 )

the-community-for-creative-non-violence-v-james-g-watt-secretary-of-the , 703 F.2d 586 ( 1983 )

UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. William ... , 172 F.3d 1153 ( 1999 )

Doe v. Reed , 586 F.3d 671 ( 2009 )

United States v. Alvarez , 617 F.3d 1198 ( 2010 )

United States v. Hinkson , 611 F.3d 1098 ( 2010 )

United States v. Juan Sanchez-Cervantes, AKA Hugo Quirox, ... , 282 F.3d 664 ( 2002 )

Marks v. United States , 97 S. Ct. 990 ( 1977 )

Davis v. United States , 94 S. Ct. 2298 ( 1974 )

West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette , 63 S. Ct. 1178 ( 1943 )

Spence v. Washington , 94 S. Ct. 2727 ( 1974 )

Turner Broadcasting System, Inc. v. Federal Communications ... , 114 S. Ct. 2445 ( 1994 )

United States v. Alvarez , 132 S. Ct. 2537 ( 2012 )

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