In re R.C , 2016 COA 166 ( 2016 )


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  • COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS                                        2016COA166
    Court of Appeals No. 14CA2210
    Boulder County District Court No. 14JD140
    Honorable Ingrid S. Bakke, Judge
    The People of the State of Colorado,
    Petitioner-Appellee,
    In the Interest of R.C.,
    Juvenile-Appellant.
    JUDGMENT REVERSED
    Division II
    Opinion by JUDGE HARRIS
    Ashby, J., concurs
    Webb, J., dissents
    Announced November 17, 2016
    Cynthia H. Coffman, Attorney General, Kevin E. McReynolds, Assistant
    Attorney General, Denver, Colorado, for Petitioner-Appellee
    Douglas K. Wilson, Colorado State Public Defender, Elizabeth Porter-Merrill,
    Deputy State Public Defender, Denver, Colorado, for Juvenile-Appellant
    ¶1    R.C., a fourteen-year-old middle school student, took a photo
    of his friend, L.P., and then drew a penis over the photo. He
    showed the doctored photo to L.P. and some other friends. L.P.
    reported R.C. to the principal, who called the police. The police
    charged R.C. with disorderly conduct and, after a bench trial, the
    court adjudicated R.C. a delinquent.
    ¶2    On appeal, R.C. challenges the sufficiency of the evidence,
    arguing, primarily, that the prosecution failed to prove that his
    display of the photograph tended to incite an immediate breach of
    the peace. We agree and therefore reverse.
    I.   Background
    ¶3    During class one afternoon, R.C. used his cell phone to take a
    photo of L.P. Then, using the mobile application Snapchat, he drew
    a picture of an ejaculating penis next to L.P.’s mouth.1 R.C. showed
    1 Snapchat is a popular mobile application that allows cell phone
    users to send photos and videos to their friends or contacts. Once
    the photo or video is sent to another person and viewed, it
    automatically deletes within a few seconds. However, the user can
    save a photo for up to twenty-four hours using the “Snapchat story”
    feature.
    1
    the altered photo to L.P. and three other friends. R.C. was
    “giggling” when he showed the other boys the photo. One of the
    other boys laughed too, but L.P. felt “bad.” About five minutes
    later, class ended and the boys went to lunch.
    ¶4    In the cafeteria, a few other students looked at the photo and
    laughed, which made L.P. feel even worse. Two of L.P.’s friends told
    R.C. to apologize and R.C. agreed to, but when he approached L.P.,
    L.P. pushed R.C. away. L.P. and his friends reported the incident to
    the principal later that day.
    The app has another feature that allows the cell phone user to
    use a finger to draw or write over the photo with what looks like a
    marker or a crayon. Figure 1 shows the Snapchat drawing app on
    a cell phone; Figure 2 is an example of a finished product.
    Figure 1 Figure 2
    See Appamatix, 3 Best Snapchat Secrets of 2014, October 12, 2014,
    available at http://appamatix.com/3-best-snapchat-secrets-2014/;
    Daily Mail, Now You Can Make Your Own Snapchat Lenses, July 21,
    2016, available at http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-
    3701038/Now-make-Snapchat-lenses-Fun-Face-Paint-feature-lets-
    draw-selfies.html.
    2
    ¶5    R.C. was charged with disorderly conduct, and the case
    proceeded to trial. The court ruled that R.C. knew that his drawing
    would make L.P. feel humiliated and ashamed and would have
    tended to incite an immediate breach of the peace, in large part
    because the drawing implied that L.P. was “homosexual or behaves
    in that kind of behavior or has some sort of demeanor about that.”
    The court sentenced R.C. to three months of probation, therapy,
    and eight hours of work crew.
    II.   Discussion
    ¶6    A person commits disorderly conduct if he or she
    “intentionally, knowingly, or recklessly: . . . [m]akes a coarse and
    obviously offensive utterance, gesture, or display in a public place
    and the utterance, gesture, or display tends to incite an immediate
    breach of the peace.” § 18-9-106(1)(a), C.R.S. 2016.
    ¶7    R.C. contends that the prosecution failed to prove beyond a
    reasonable doubt every element of the offense of disorderly conduct.
    According to R.C., his drawing was protected speech because,
    consistent with the First Amendment, only “fighting words” are
    prohibited under the statute, and the altered photo did not qualify
    as fighting words. Even if it did, R.C. says, the prosecution failed to
    3
    prove that he knew, or recklessly disregarded a substantial risk,
    that displaying the photo was likely to provoke an immediate,
    violent response.2
    A.    Standard of Review
    ¶8    On a challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence, we review the
    record de novo to determine whether the evidence, viewed as a
    whole and in the light most favorable to the prosecution, is both
    “substantial and sufficient” to support the defendant’s guilt beyond
    a reasonable doubt. Dempsey v. People, 
    117 P.3d 800
    , 807 (Colo.
    2005). In applying this test, “we must give the prosecution the
    benefit of every reasonable inference that might fairly be drawn
    from the evidence.” People v. Atencio, 
    140 P.3d 73
    , 75 (Colo. App.
    2005). And we will not disturb the fact finder’s determinations of
    2 R.C. also contends, for the first time on appeal, that the disorderly
    conduct statute requires proof of an actual breach of the peace,
    rather than proof that the display tended to incite a breach of the
    peace, and that the prosecution failed to prove that element as well.
    We need not decide the standard of review to apply in the event of
    an error because we perceive no error. The statute requires that
    the obviously offensive display “tend[] to incite an immediate breach
    of the peace.” People in Interest of K.W., 
    2012 COA 151
    , ¶ 29
    (quoting § 18-9-106(1)(a), C.R.S. 2016). Whether a breach of the
    peace actually occurs “is not determinative of a violation.” 
    Id. at ¶
    32.
    4
    witness credibility and the weight to be given to the evidence.
    People v. McIntier, 
    134 P.3d 467
    , 471 (Colo. App. 2005).
    B.    Analysis
    ¶9     The United States and Colorado Constitutions prohibit the
    enactment of laws abridging or impairing freedom of speech. U.S.
    Const. amend. I; Colo. Const. art. II, § 10; see also NAACP v. Button,
    
    371 U.S. 415
    , 444-45 (1963) (The “Constitution protects
    expression . . . without regard . . . to the truth, popularity, or social
    utility of the ideas and beliefs which are offered.”). Still, the
    constitutional prohibition is not absolute: courts have upheld the
    constitutionality of statutes that prohibit obscenity, see Miller v.
    California, 
    413 U.S. 15
    (1973); libel, see N.Y. Times Co. v. Sullivan,
    
    376 U.S. 254
    (1964); incitement, see Brandenburg v. Ohio, 
    395 U.S. 444
    (1969); invasion of substantial privacy interests of the home,
    see Rowan v. U.S. Post Office Dep’t, 
    397 U.S. 728
    (1970); and, as
    relevant here, “fighting words.” Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire, 
    315 U.S. 568
    (1942).
    ¶ 10   Fighting words are those “which by their very utterance tend
    to incite others to unlawful conduct or provoke retaliatory actions
    amounting to a breach of the peace.” Hansen v. People, 
    190 Colo. 5
      457, 461, 
    548 P.2d 1278
    , 1281 (1976), superseded by statute, Ch.
    227, sec. 1, § 18-9-106(1)(a), 1981 Colo. Sess. Laws 1010, as
    recognized in People v. Smith, 
    862 P.2d 939
    , 942 n.6 (Colo. 1993).
    To qualify as speech likely to incite a breach of the peace, it is not
    enough that words, gestures, or displays “stir[] the public to anger,”
    “invite dispute,” or “create a disturbance”; they must “produce a
    clear and present danger of a serious substantive evil that rises far
    above public inconvenience, annoyance, or unrest.” Terminiello v.
    City of Chicago, 
    337 U.S. 1
    , 4 (1949); see also Gooding v. Wilson,
    
    405 U.S. 518
    , 525 (1972) (stating that “opprobrious” and “abusive”
    words that convey disgrace and include harsh insulting language
    are not necessarily fighting words).
    ¶ 11   Colorado’s disorderly conduct statute is narrowly drawn to
    ban only “fighting words,” as that term has been interpreted by our
    supreme court and the United States Supreme Court. See 
    Hansen, 190 Colo. at 461
    , 548 P.2d at 1281 (to pass constitutional muster,
    the disorderly conduct statute may prohibit only “fighting words”).
    ¶ 12   Citing Chaplinsky, the dissent defines fighting words to
    include words that by their very utterance “inflict injury,” and it
    then appears to endorse R.C.’s conviction on the theory that the
    6
    photo amounted to bullying that was likely to inflict injury on L.P.
    But soon after Chaplinsky, the Supreme Court either dropped the
    “inflict injury” category of fighting words altogether or recited the
    full definition of fighting words without further reference to any
    distinction between merely hurtful speech and speech that tends to
    provoke an immediate breach of the peace. See Purtell v. Mason,
    
    527 F.3d 615
    , 623 (7th Cir. 2008) (discussing the evolution of the
    fighting words doctrine). The Supreme Court has “never held that
    the government may, consistent with the First Amendment, regulate
    or punish speech that causes emotional injury but does not have a
    tendency to provoke an immediate breach of the peace.” 
    Id. at 624;
    see Note, The Demise of the Chaplinsky Fighting Words Doctrine: An
    Argument for its Interment, 106 Harv. L. Rev. 1129, 1129 (1993)
    (“The jurisprudential history of the Chaplinsky doctrine has led
    some commentators to conclude that the Court has sub rosa
    overruled the entire fighting words doctrine, or at least the ‘inflict
    injury’ prong.”). In any case, the Colorado statute does not prohibit
    utterances, gestures, or displays that “inflict injury,” but only those
    that “tend[] to incite an immediate breach of the peace.”
    § 18-9-106(1)(a).
    7
    ¶ 13   The question, then, is not, as the dissent suggests, whether
    L.P. might have suffered reputational injury, or, as a “highly
    sensitive” middle schooler (as most middle schoolers are), might
    have become “upset” by the photo, Nuxoll ex rel. Nuxoll v. Indian
    Prairie Sch. Dist. # 204, 
    523 F.3d 668
    , 674 (7th Cir. 2008), but
    rather whether R.C.’s display of the doctored photo tended to incite
    an immediate breach of the peace; that is, whether the display was,
    “as a matter of common knowledge, inherently likely to provoke a
    violent reaction” from a reasonable person. Coggin v. State, 
    123 S.W.3d 82
    , 90 (Tex. App. 2003) (quoting Cohen v. California, 
    403 U.S. 15
    , 20 (1971)).
    ¶ 14   As a preliminary matter, we must disagree with the dissent’s
    characterization of the Snapchat photo as a “sexually explicit image
    of a minor” engaging in “fellatio.” Under federal law, a “sexually
    explicit” image of fellatio is one that depicts “graphic . . . oral-
    genital” contact “between persons of the same or opposite sex.” 18
    U.S.C. § 2256 (2)(B)(i) (2012). The Snapchat photo was not
    introduced at trial and is not part of the record on appeal (because
    it was automatically deleted after some number of hours), but there
    was no testimony (or argument) that the photo depicted graphic
    8
    oral-genital contact between two people. Instead, the evidence
    established that R.C. used the Snapchat app to hand draw a penis
    over an existing photo. Saying that a hand-drawn, cartoon-like
    picture of a penis superimposed on a photo is a “sexually explicit
    image” of a minor engaging in fellatio is like saying that the picture
    contained in footnote 1 (Figure 2) is a graphic depiction of
    rhinoplasty.
    ¶ 15   So we turn to the issue of whether the cartoon drawing of a
    penis on a photo is likely to incite a reasonable person — or even a
    reasonable middle schooler3 — to immediate physical violence.
    3 Protected speech is not transformed into “fighting words” by the
    peculiar sensibilities of the listener. Zamecnik v. Indian Prairie Sch.
    Dist. No. 204, 
    636 F.3d 874
    , 879 (7th Cir. 2011) (“Statements that
    while not fighting words are met by violence or threats or other
    unprivileged retaliatory conduct by persons offended by them
    cannot lawfully be suppressed because of that conduct.”); see also
    Street v. New York, 
    394 U.S. 576
    , 592 (1969) (speech cannot be
    restricted simply because some listeners, “shocked” by the
    defendant’s disrespectful conduct of burning a flag, might be
    “moved to retaliate” against him). If First Amendment rights are
    subject to a middle schooler’s “heckler’s veto,” the level of discourse
    might be limited “to that which would be suitable for a sandbox.”
    Reno v. Am. Civil Liberties Union, 
    521 U.S. 844
    , 875, 880 (1997)
    (quoting Bolger v. Youngs Drug Prods. Corp., 
    463 U.S. 60
    , 74-75
    (1983)). But even taking L.P.’s age into consideration, we do not
    believe violence would have been a reasonable response to R.C.’s
    display of the photo.
    9
    ¶ 16   In this day and age, the notion that any set of words — much
    less a crayon-type drawing of a penis on a photograph — is “so
    provocative that [it] can reasonably be expected to lead an average
    [person] to immediately respond with physical violence is highly
    problematic.” State v. Tracy, 
    130 A.3d 196
    , 209 (Vt. 2015). The
    cases cited at the outset of the dissenting opinion make this very
    point: words alone, no matter how offensive or cruel, cannot justify
    violence. And, as the Vermont Supreme Court has pointed out, that
    is a principle people ordinarily learn as children:
    In a society in which children are admonished
    to ‘use your words’ rather than respond to
    anger and frustration by physically lashing out
    — and are taught the refrain, ‘Sticks and
    stones will break my bones, but words will
    never hurt me,’ as an appropriate response to
    taunts — the class of insults for which violence
    is a reasonably expected response, if it exists
    at all, is necessarily exceedingly narrow.
    
    Id. at 209-10.
    ¶ 17   That the category of “fighting words” has been shrinking is
    obvious — the Supreme Court has overturned every single fighting
    words conviction it has reviewed since Chaplinsky was decided in
    1942. 
    Id. at 205;
    see also Burton Caine, The Trouble With “Fighting
    Words”: Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire is a Threat to First
    10
    Amendment Values and Should be Overruled, 88 Marq. L. Rev. 441,
    536 (2004).
    ¶ 18   The district court concluded that the drawing constituted
    fighting words because its display would tend to make the subject
    of the photo feel humiliated and ashamed. But speech that
    embarrasses or disgraces another is insufficient to qualify as
    fighting words. Even vulgar and insulting speech that is likely to
    arouse animosity or inflame anger, or even to provoke a forceful
    response from the other person, is not prohibited. “The fact that
    speech arouses some people to anger is simply not enough to
    amount to fighting words in the constitutional sense.” Cannon v.
    City & Cty. of Denver, 
    998 F.2d 867
    , 873 (10th Cir. 1993). Rather,
    fighting words are limited to “speech that, in the context in which it
    is uttered, is so inflammatory that it is akin to dropping a match
    into a pool of gasoline.” 
    Tracy, 180 A.3d at 210
    .
    ¶ 19   Our position would not change even if we believed, as the
    district court apparently did, that the photo might have implied that
    L.P. was gay. Indeed, this assumption was the basis of the court’s
    ruling: if R.C. had drawn a mustache or a big nose on the photo,
    the court explained, it would not have amounted to disorderly
    11
    conduct, even, presumably, if the big-nose photo had hurt L.P.’s
    feelings. But R.C. drew a picture that was “sexual [in] nature” and
    went “directly to [L.P.’s] gender being male,” which made the
    photograph much more offensive, according to the court; so much
    so that, upon seeing the photo, L.P. would reasonably have been
    incited to violence.
    ¶ 20   We discern two problems with the court’s reasoning. First,
    there was, in fact, no evidence that R.C. intended to imply that L.P.
    was gay or that L.P. perceived the photograph as any sort of
    commentary on his sexual orientation.
    ¶ 21   Second, even if we assume such commentary, we cannot
    conclude that, as a matter of law, the mere insinuation that a
    person is gay amounts to “fighting words.” We disagree with the
    district court, and the dissent, that the suggestion of homosexuality
    or homosexual conduct is so shameful and humiliating that it
    should be expected to provoke a violent reaction from an ordinary
    person.
    ¶ 22   In any event, the words — or the display of the Snapchat
    photo in this case — cannot be evaluated in a vacuum; context is
    critical. “[A] defendant’s words are considered as a ‘package’ in
    12
    combination with conduct and physical movements, viewed in light
    of the surrounding circumstances.” In re Welfare of M.A.H., 
    572 N.W.2d 752
    , 757 (Minn. Ct. App. 1997); see also People in Interest
    of K.W., 
    2012 COA 151
    , ¶ 30 (“The context or circumstances in
    which the language is used must also be considered.”). Thus,
    whether speech or a display constitutes fighting words must be
    determined on a case-by-case basis, considering all of the particular
    facts and circumstances. Conkle v. State, 
    677 So. 2d 1211
    , 1215
    (Ala. Crim. App. 1995); see also Texas v. Johnson, 
    491 U.S. 397
    ,
    409 (1989) (“[W]e have not permitted the government to assume
    that every expression of a provocative idea will incite a riot, but
    have instead required careful consideration of the actual
    circumstances surrounding such expression . . . .”).
    ¶ 23   With this standard in mind, we have been unable to uncover
    any authority to support the proposition that a mere statement that
    someone is a homosexual or engages in homosexual conduct
    (assuming the meaning ascribed to the photo by the district court
    and the dissent) constitutes fighting words. See also K.W., ¶ 34
    (affirming juvenile’s conviction for disorderly conduct where
    evidence showed more than juvenile’s single utterance of offensive
    13
    words; rather, juvenile was threatening to harm other students,
    “she was hostile” — requiring security guard to intervene, and she
    “repeatedly yelled the base obscenities at the security officer in an
    aggressive manner”); cf. Gilles v. State, 
    531 N.E.2d 220
    , 221-23
    (Ind. Ct. App. 1988) (holding that the defendant’s loud and
    boisterous shouting at large group of people that they were
    “fuckers,” “sinners,” “whores,” “queers,” “AIDS people,” and “scum
    of the earth” who were going to hell, which occurred at a festival
    where alcohol was served and continued despite police officers’
    repeated requests for the defendant to stop, constituted disorderly
    conduct). We note, however, that the display of swastikas during a
    march through a community inhabited by Holocaust survivors — a
    display that many might consider more likely to incite a violent
    response than a hand-drawn picture of a penis — has been held not
    to amount to “fighting words.” Village of Skokie v. Nat’l Socialist
    Party of Am., 
    373 N.E.2d 21
    , 25-26 (Ill. 1978). Nor could the City of
    St. Paul use its disorderly conduct statute to ban a defendant’s
    conduct of burning a cross on a black family’s lawn. See R.A.V. v.
    City of St. Paul, 
    505 U.S. 377
    , 391-92 (1992).
    14
    ¶ 24   Here, the circumstances surrounding R.C.’s display of the
    photograph do not support the finding that the display was likely to
    lead to immediate violence. To begin, R.C. and L.P. were friends.
    R.C.’s display was not accompanied by any hostile, aggressive, or
    threatening language or conduct. When R.C. showed L.P. and the
    other boys the altered photo, they were in a classroom where,
    presumably, a teacher was nearby and available to intervene or
    mediate if tempers flared or feelings were hurt. There was no
    evidence that R.C.’s display of the photo caused any sort of
    commotion or that it was even noticed by other children or the
    teacher. And, the display did not, in fact, arouse an immediate
    violent response from L.P.; instead, L.P.’s immediate reaction was to
    shrug off the incident, by pretending to laugh along with his
    friends. See 
    M.A.H., 572 N.W.2d at 757-58
    (fact that the target of
    alleged fighting words does not retaliate is relevant to question of
    whether speech constitutes fighting words, but is not
    determinative); see also 
    Purtell, 527 F.3d at 625
    (noting that display
    was present for weeks without causing any disruption and
    emphasizing that, to qualify as fighting words, the speech must
    15
    “have a tendency to provoke an average person to commit an
    immediate breach of the peace”).
    ¶ 25   The dissent misunderstands our position, insisting that we
    have concluded that case law does “not support treating references
    to sexual orientation as fighting words.” Our position, though, is
    simply that, under the circumstances presented in this case, R.C.’s
    display of the photo did not amount to fighting words because it
    was not likely to incite an immediate breach of the peace. We
    certainly have not foreclosed the possibility that, under other
    circumstances, references to a person’s sexual orientation might
    indeed rise to the level of fighting words.
    ¶ 26   Adopting the district court’s reasoning, and undaunted by the
    absence of any aggravating circumstances, the People argue for the
    first time on appeal that the photo was akin to R.C. calling L.P. a
    “cocksucker,” a term that by its mere utterance qualifies as fighting
    words. We are not persuaded.
    ¶ 27   The requirement that we consider the language in context
    means that we must also evaluate its harshness in the current
    climate: “what may have constituted ‘classical fighting words’ in
    1942 might comprise nothing more than an innocuous expression”
    16
    today. Svedberg v. Stamness, 
    525 N.W.2d 678
    , 683 (N.D. 1994).
    Indeed, in Chaplinsky, the Court deemed it incontrovertible that the
    language at issue — “damn racketeer” and “damn Fascist” — would
    tend to incite a breach of the 
    peace. 315 U.S. at 574
    . We have no
    difficulty concluding that those terms would qualify for First
    Amendment protection in 2016.
    ¶ 28   The word “cocksucker” is not an innocuous expression; it is
    vulgar and profane. But uttering the word is not a crime unless its
    mere utterance would tend to provoke a reasonable person to
    immediately retaliate with violence. The People point us to three
    cases, the most recent of which is nearly twenty-five years old, in
    which courts upheld disorderly conduct convictions where one of
    the words spoken was “cocksucker.” See City of Little Falls v.
    Witucki, 
    295 N.W.2d 243
    (Minn. 1980); State v. Broadstone, 
    447 N.W.2d 30
    (Neb. 1989); City of Shaker Heights v. Marcus, No.
    61801, 
    1993 WL 27676
    (Ohio Ct. App. 1993). But in each of those
    cases, the words (which included more than “cocksucker”) were
    accompanied by violent or threatening gestures. In Marcus, for
    example, the defendant was described as “extremely agitated, loud,
    [and] combative.” 
    1993 WL 27676
    , at *1. Witnesses thought he
    17
    might “use force against” the bank manager. 
    Id. In Broadstone,
    the
    defendant not only cursed at the witness, but also assaulted him
    with a 
    stick. 447 N.W.2d at 32-33
    . And in Witucki, the court
    characterized the defendant’s speech as threatening because it
    scared the victim who was working alone in a 
    bar. 295 N.W.2d at 244
    .
    ¶ 29     Later cases from these jurisdictions make clear that the
    decisions turned on the totality of the circumstances, particularly
    the threatening nature of the defendant’s speech and conduct. See
    City of Chillicothe v. Lowery, No. 97 CA 2331, 
    1998 WL 396316
    , at
    *5, *7 (Ohio Ct. App. 1998) (discussing disorderly conduct cases in
    Ohio, including Marcus, and concluding that “[i]n all of the cases
    upholding convictions for disorderly conduct involving profane
    language, the courts found that the profanity was used in a
    situation that likely could have become violent”); see also 
    M.A.H., 572 N.W.2d at 757
    (citing Witucki and noting that “[e]very speech-
    related disorderly conduct conviction upheld by Minnesota
    appellate courts since [1978] has involved either an explicit verbal
    or physical threat of violence or a situation where the victims were
    placed in fear of imminent physical harm”).
    18
    ¶ 30      Thus, even if we otherwise found these cases persuasive, their
    facts are distinguishable from the circumstances presented in this
    case.
    ¶ 31      In any event, more recent cases suggest that “cocksucker” has
    lost its former incendiary quality.4 See People v. Pierre-Louis, 
    927 N.Y.S.2d 592
    , 593 (N.Y. Dist. Ct. 2011) (holding that defendant’s
    tirade against district attorney, in which he stated that district
    attorney was a “piece of shit faggot fucking cock sucking cock,” did
    not constitute fighting words); ARMCO, Inc. v. United Steelworkers of
    Am., No. 2002CA0071, 
    2003 WL 22300027
    , at *7 (Ohio Ct. App.
    2003) (holding that the insult “Afro cock sucker” was “mere words”
    and would not tend to incite immediate violence); see also State v.
    Swoboda, 
    658 S.W.2d 24
    , 25, 27 (Mo. 1983) (though unpleasant,
    the words used by defendant — “motherfucker” and “cocksucker” —
    4 The word also appears to have entered our coarsened political
    discourse. In August 2016, the Governor of Maine, Paul LePage,
    left a profanity-laden voicemail for a state legislator in which he
    called the legislator a “little son of a bitch, socialist cocksucker” and
    lamented that he could not challenge the legislator to a duel. Eric
    Russell & Scott Thistle, LePage Effectively Endorses Racial Profiling
    in Maine’s Battle Against Drug Addiction, Portland Press Herald,
    Aug. 26, 2016, https://perma.cc/5A6F-JMUF. We are reluctant to
    hold a middle school student to a higher standard than the
    Governor of Maine.
    19
    are “by no means uncommon” and constitute “everyday street
    language”) (citation omitted); State v. McKenna, 
    415 A.2d 729
    , 732
    (R.I. 1980) (“[A] group of people with normal sensibilities would not
    likely retaliate against a woman who called them [cocksuckers] and
    made wild, idle threats.”).
    ¶ 32   In light of the surrounding circumstances, we conclude that
    the crude, sophomoric Snapchat photo does not rise to the level of
    “fighting words.” A middle school student of average sensibilities
    and maturity might have told R.C. that the photo was not funny, as
    L.P.’s friends did, or reported the hurtful conduct to a school
    administrator, as L.P. and his friends did later that day. But the
    average person — even an average fourteen-year-old — would not
    be expected to fly into a violent rage upon being shown a photo of
    himself with a penis drawn over it. R.C.’s display simply does not
    fall within the “exceedingly narrow” class of insults for which
    violence is a reasonably expected response.
    ¶ 33   Our decision does not leave the school without a remedy for
    inappropriate student behavior. A school administrator may,
    consistent with the First Amendment, discipline a student for
    broadcasting vulgar and offensive speech. See Bethel Sch. Dist. No.
    20
    403 v. Fraser, 
    478 U.S. 675
    , 685 (1986) (students’ First Amendment
    rights are circumscribed in light of special characteristics of the
    school environment). And Colorado, like most states, has an anti-
    bullying statute that gives schools the specific authority to
    prescribe consequences for conduct that satisfies the definition of
    bullying. See § 22-32-109.1, C.R.S. 2016.
    ¶ 34   In sum, we agree with R.C. that his display of the altered
    photo did not amount to fighting words. Accordingly, the
    government failed to prove an element of the offense.
    ¶ 35   In light of our resolution of the first question, we need not
    reach the second question — whether the evidence was sufficient to
    prove that R.C. knew, or recklessly disregarded a substantial risk,
    that his display would result in an immediate breach of the peace.
    III.   Conclusion
    ¶ 36   The judgment of conviction is reversed.
    JUDGE ASHBY concurs.
    JUDGE WEBB dissents.
    21
    JUDGE WEBB, dissenting.
    ¶ 37   Because the image that R.C. created depicting L.P. is not in
    the record and the trial court did not make detailed findings,
    exactly what it looked like is indeterminable. But for two reasons,
    my sufficiency review assumes that the image showed L.P.’s face
    with an adjacent ejaculating penis pointing at his open mouth.1
    ¶ 38   First, L.P. testified that R.C. had taken a picture of him with
    his mouth open. A student who saw a later version of this image
    testified that it showed L.P. with a penis drawn “on his face” which
    was “[p]ointing more towards his mouth.” That student also
    testified that the penis was ejaculating because “there was stuff
    coming out of it.” Another student testified that the image had a
    penis “[t]owards [L.P.’s] face” and “the penis was
    [ejaculating] . . . because there were . . . white lines everywhere.”
    ¶ 39   Second, even if the record leaves any reasoned doubt about
    exactly what the image depicted — which to my reading it does not
    1 The majority’s characterization of the image as “cartoon-like” has
    no support in the record. And in any event, the law also gives legal
    effect to cartoons. See, e.g., Yorty v. Chandler, 
    91 Cal. Rptr. 709
    ,
    711 (Cal. Ct. App. 1970) (“A cartoon, of course, remains subject to
    the law of libel and, like any other form of depiction or
    representation, it may be found libelous if it maliciously presents as
    fact defamatory material which is false.”) (citation omitted).
    22
    — the content of the image must be treated in the light most
    favorable to the prosecution. People v. Taylor, 
    131 P.3d 1158
    , 1164
    (Colo. App. 2005).
    ¶ 40       No one who appears before us suggests that such a sexually
    explicit image of a minor is innocuous.2 Even so, the novel question
    of whether a photograph, (or here, a digital image), as opposed to
    spoken words, even constitutes fighting words must be answered.3
    If so, the remaining question is whether this particular image was
    reasonably likely to provoke a violent response by L.P. Because I
    would answer both questions “yes,” I respectfully dissent.
    I.    For First Amendment Purposes, Does A Digital Image Trigger
    the Fighting Words Doctrine?
    ¶ 41       True enough, the picture of L.P. with an ejaculating penis
    superimposed near to or touching his face does not fit the
    traditional model of fighting words because no words were included.
    2 “‘Sexually exploitative material’ means any photograph . . . that
    depicts a child engaged in, participating in, observing, or being used
    for explicit sexual conduct.” § 18-6-403(2)(j), C.R.S. 2016.
    3 Other cases to have addressed non-spoken fighting words include
    Texas v. Johnson, 
    491 U.S. 397
    (1989) (flag burning), R.A.V. v. City
    of St. Paul, 
    505 U.S. 377
    (1992) (cross burning), and World Wide
    Street Preachers’ Fellowship v. City of Owensboro, 
    342 F. Supp. 2d 634
    (W.D. Ky. 2004) (picture of aborted fetus).
    23
    Still, “one picture is worth a thousand words.” People v. Sepeda,
    
    196 Colo. 13
    , 22, 
    581 P.2d 723
    , 730 (1978).
    ¶ 42   Not surprisingly, then, pictures have legal significance. For
    example, the law of libel, which also balances First Amendment
    interests, has long recognized that a photograph can be as
    defamatory as a printed word. See Knapp v. Post Printing & Publ’g
    Co., 
    111 Colo. 492
    , 496, 
    144 P.2d 981
    , 983-84 (1943) (“A definition
    of libel which has received general acceptance and approbation is to
    be found in 33 American Jurisprudence, page 38, section 3. It
    reads: ‘A libel is a malicious publication, expressed either in
    printing or writing or by signs and pictures . . . .’”) (emphasis
    added). As well, tort law gives effect to pictures. See, e.g., Ford
    Motor Co. v. Lemieux Lumber Co., 
    418 S.W.2d 909
    (Tex. Civ. App.
    1967) (holding that sales brochure with pictures of truck capable of
    crossing streams and ditches and climbing mountains could be
    construed as an express warranty).
    ¶ 43   I do not perceive any doctrinal ground on which to avoid
    balancing the fighting word exception against First Amendment
    rights merely because a picture is at issue.
    24
    ¶ 44   Acknowledging that forms of communication other than
    spoken words may convey fighting words also reflects the evolving
    nature of how we communicate. Today, communication —
    especially among the young — has become increasingly digital and
    visual. See Doninger v. Niehoff, 
    594 F. Supp. 2d 211
    , 223 (D. Conn.
    2009) (“[S]tudents are connected to each other through email,
    instant messaging, blogs, social networking sites, and text
    messages.”), aff’d in part and rev’d in part, 
    642 F.3d 334
    (2d Cir.
    2011).4
    ¶ 45   For these reasons, I would apply the fighting words doctrine to
    test whether the penis image of L.P. enjoys First Amendment
    protection.
    4 See Mary-Rose Papandrea, Student Speech Rights in the Digital
    Age, 
    60 Fla. L
    . Rev. 1027, 1037 (2008) (“Rather than harass their
    classmates in the locker room, hallways, and bathrooms, students
    engage in ‘electronic aggression,’ often in the form of malicious
    rumors or humiliating or threatening speech spread on social
    networking sites, e-mails, instant messages, chat rooms, text
    messages, and blogs.”); see also People in Interest of T.B., 
    2016 COA 151
    , ¶ 93 n.3 (Fox, J., dissenting) (“The cell phone is the most
    direct and most widely used mode of communication between young
    people. Seventy-one percent of teens own a cell phone and seventy-
    six percent of teens have sent text messages — in fact, of teens with
    cell phones, twenty-five percent of teens aged twelve to fourteen text
    daily and fifty-one percent of teens aged fifteen to seventeen text
    daily.”).
    25
    II.   Did the Image of L.P. Constitute Fighting Words?
    ¶ 46   Everyone would agree that “[t]he unprotected category of
    speech called ‘fighting words’ is an extremely narrow one.” Johnson
    v. Campbell, 
    332 F.3d 199
    , 212 (3d Cir. 2003). Such words are
    “those which by their very utterance inflict injury or tend to incite
    an immediate breach of the peace.” Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire,
    
    315 U.S. 568
    , 572 (1942). And “[t]he potential to elicit an
    immediate violent response exists only where the communication
    occurs face-to-face or in close physical proximity.” City of Billings v.
    Nelson, 
    322 P.3d 1039
    , 1045 (Mont. 2014).
    ¶ 47   But how great must be the risk of a violent response? To
    determine whether a communication includes fighting words, “the
    inquiry is not whether a reasonable person ‘might’ react violently,
    but instead whether someone in the circumstances of the addressee
    would likely react violently in the context in which the words were
    spoken.” In re Nickolas S., 
    245 P.3d 446
    , 452 (Ariz. 2011). At the
    same time, whether violence actually occurred is irrelevant, as a
    matter of law. See State v. Parnoff, 
    125 A.3d 573
    , 579 (Conn. App.
    Ct. 2015) (“To be considered ‘fighting words,’ the speech at issue
    need not actually cause those who hear the speech to engage in
    26
    ‘violent, tumultuous or threatening behavior,’ but must have ‘the
    tendency to provoke imminent retaliation’ from them.” (quoting
    State v. Szymkiewicz, 
    678 A.2d 473
    , 477-78 (Conn. 1996))) (cert.
    granted in part Nov. 30, 2015).5
    ¶ 48   So, what aspects of this case make such a violent response
    likely? As the majority recognizes, the context must be considered.
    Three contextual factors leap out.
    ¶ 49   First, the record shows that R.C. was in close physical
    proximity to L.P., who could have immediately retaliated with a
    violent act. Because of this proximity, displaying the image to L.P.
    differs from cases dealing with an electronic communication where
    no contemporaneous, in-person confrontation could have occurred.
    See Layshock ex rel. Layshock v. Hermitage Sch. Dist., 
    496 F. Supp. 2d 587
    , 602 (W.D. Pa. 2007) (“A ‘MySpace’ internet page is
    not outside of the protections of the First Amendment under the
    fighting words doctrine because there is simply no in-person
    5 Based on this principle, which the majority recognizes, its
    statement that the image “did not, in fact, arouse an immediate
    violent response from L.P.,” while factually correct, is legally
    inconsequential.
    27
    confrontation in cyberspace such that physical violence is likely to
    be instigated.”), aff’d in part, 
    650 F.3d 205
    (3d Cir. 2011).6
    ¶ 50   Second, a contextual approach requires that the age of the
    listener be considered. See Svedberg v. Stamness, 
    525 N.W.2d 678
    ,
    684 (N.D. 1994) (“No one would argue that a different reaction is
    likely if a thirteen-year-old boy and a seventy-five-year-old man are
    confronted with identical fighting words.”); see also Nuxoll ex rel.
    Nuxoll v. Indian Prairie Sch. Dist. # 204, 
    523 F.3d 668
    , 674 (7th Cir.
    2008) (adults “can handle such remarks better than kids can”).
    ¶ 51   Yet, the majority concludes that the image does not constitute
    fighting words because an “average person — even an average
    fourteen-year-old — would not be expected to fly into a violent rage
    upon being shown a photo of himself with a penis drawn over it.”
    The majority relies on State v. Tracy, 
    130 A.3d 196
    , 209 (Vt. 2015),
    6 See also State v. Drahota, 
    788 N.W.2d 796
    , 804 (Neb. 2010)
    (“[E]ven if a fact finder could conclude that in a face-to-face
    confrontation, [defendant’s] speech would have provoked an
    immediate retaliation, [the recipient] could not have immediately
    retaliated. [He] did not know who sent the e-mails, let alone where
    to find the author.”); but see Davidson v. Seneca Crossing Section II
    Homeowner’s Ass’n, 
    979 A.2d 260
    , 283 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 2009)
    (Series of e-mails “consisted of the use of ‘fighting words’” where
    they “regularly employed ‘personally abusive epithets
    which . . . [were] . . . inherently likely to provoke violent reaction.’”)
    (alterations in original) (citation omitted).
    28
    where the court explained that children are taught to use words
    “rather than respond to anger and frustration by physically lashing
    out.”
    ¶ 52      The reasoning in Tracy falls short because it is at odds with
    capital and life without parole sentencing cases that recognize
    children’s “lack of maturity and . . . underdeveloped sense of
    responsibility,” coupled with their vulnerability to outside
    influences. Roper v. Simmons, 
    543 U.S. 551
    , 569 (2005) (quoting
    Johnson v. Texas, 
    509 U.S. 350
    , 367 (1993)). These cases also
    acknowledge that children’s characters “are ‘not as well formed.’”
    Graham v. Florida, 
    560 U.S. 48
    , 68 (2010) (quoting 
    Roper, 543 U.S. at 569-70
    ).
    ¶ 53      Consistent with the Supreme Court’s observations on the
    infirmities of youth — as applied to fighting words — at least one
    court has held that “adolescent schoolchildren, are highly sensitive”
    and “easily upset by comments,” such as those “about their race,
    sex, etc.” 
    Nuxoll, 523 F.3d at 671
    . This court explained that such
    29
    comments relate to “major components of [a person’s] personal
    identity” and “can strike a person at the core of his being.” Id.7
    ¶ 54   Based on these authorities, I believe that L.P.’s age makes a
    violent response more — not less — likely than if a similar penis
    image of an adult had been displayed to the adult. But the
    contextual inquiry does not end with age.
    ¶ 55   Third, the calculus of violence ratchets up even higher
    because some of L.P.’s peers were present and saw the image when
    R.C. displayed it to him. Cf. City of Landrum v. Sarratt, 
    572 S.E.2d 476
    , 478 (S.C. Ct. App. 2002) (One factor “to consider in
    determining if profanity constitutes fighting words [is] the presence
    of bystanders.”).8
    7 In other contexts, the Supreme Court has found exceptions to
    First Amendment protections when the speech at issue involves
    minors. See United States v. Stevens, 
    559 U.S. 460
    , 471 (2010)
    (“[C]ategories of speech . . . fully outside the protection of the First
    Amendment” include child pornography because the state has “a
    compelling interest in protecting children from abuse.”).
    8 Kathleen Hart, Sticks and Stones and Shotguns at School: The
    Ineffectiveness of Constitutional Antibullying Legislation as a
    Response to School Violence, 
    39 Ga. L
    . Rev. 1109, 1119 (2005) (“One
    researcher has found that peers witness approximately 85% of
    bullying episodes that occur at school. Bystanders may be active
    participants by encouraging other kids to fight, or passive
    participants by merely laughing and doing nothing, perhaps
    30
    ¶ 56   The majority also rejects the trial court’s reasoning that the
    penis image conveyed fighting words because, according to the
    majority, the court incorrectly perceived the image as implying that
    L.P. was gay and more recent cases generally do not support
    treating references to sexual orientation as fighting words. That
    may be so, but the record is devoid of any evidence — such as
    accompanying statements by R.C. — from which a reasonable
    person standing in L.P.’s shoes would have taken the image as a
    reference to sexual orientation. And even assuming that the sexual
    orientation of such a person might be relevant, L.P.’s sexual
    orientation is unknown. Because of the barren record, gay bashing
    is only a straw man who suffers the predictable fate.
    ¶ 57   In any event, whether the image constituted fighting words is a
    question of law subject to de novo review. See Connick v. Myers,
    
    461 U.S. 138
    , 150 n.10 (1983) (“‘[W]e are compelled to examine for
    ourselves the statements in issue and the circumstances under
    which they are made to see whether or not they . . . are of a
    character which the principles of the First Amendment . . . protect.’
    because they fear that they will be the bully’s next victim.”)
    (footnotes omitted).
    31
    Because of this obligation, we cannot ‘avoid making an independent
    constitutional judgment on the facts of the case.’”) (citations
    omitted). Given that the trial court’s reasoning is not binding on
    appellate review, I decline to join the majority in dismembering it.
    ¶ 58   Returning, then, to whether the image showing L.P. engaged in
    fellatio constituted fighting words, based on the contextual factors
    discussed above, I am persuaded by the cases the Attorney General
    cites holding that the colloquial term “cocksucker” does not enjoy
    First Amendment protection under the fighting words doctrine. See
    City of Little Falls v. Witucki, 
    295 N.W.2d 243
    (Minn. 1980); State v.
    Broadstone, 
    447 N.W.2d 30
    (Neb. 1989); City of Shaker Heights v.
    Marcus, No. 61801, 
    1993 WL 27676
    (Ohio Ct. App. 1993).9
    Although the majority distinguishes these cases as also including
    threatening conduct, “threats are not, for First Amendment
    purposes, treated identically with either fighting words or
    expression tending to incite imminent lawless action.” In re M.S.,
    9 These cases are not alone in treating some sexually derogatory
    statements as fighting words. See, e.g., State v. Groves, 
    363 N.W.2d 507
    , 510 (Neb. 1985) (holding that “fuckhead” and “mother fucker”
    are fighting words, not constitutionally protected speech).
    32
    
    896 P.2d 1365
    , 1373 (Cal. 1995). As well, threatening conduct was
    not present here.10
    ¶ 59   With all of this in mind, I would hold that the image R.C.
    created and circulated showing an ejaculating penis adjacent to
    L.P.’s mouth constituted fighting words. Therefore, I would deny it
    First Amendment protection and affirm the judgment of conviction.
    10 The majority asserts that “more recent cases suggest that
    ‘cocksucker’ has lost its former incendiary quality.” But the cases
    cited do not carry the weight that the majority places on them. For
    example, in People v. Pierre-Louis, 
    927 N.Y.S.2d 592
    , 595 (N.Y. Dist.
    Ct. 2011), the alleged fighting words were from voicemails, not face-
    to-face interaction. Similarly, in State v. Swoboda, 
    658 S.W.2d 24
    ,
    26 (Mo. 1983), the alleged fighting words were overheard by a
    neighbor, but the “conduct took place entirely on [the defendant’s]
    own property and was not in any way directed towards the
    complainant.” And in State v. McKenna, 
    415 A.2d 729
    , 731 (R.I.
    1980), the defendant “addressed her remarks to a group of five
    men. She spoke to them as a group, not individually nor face-to-
    face.” Finally, in ARMCO, Inc. v. United Steelworkers of America, No.
    2002CA0071, 
    2003 WL 22300027
    , at *7 (Ohio Ct. App. 2003), the
    court was “unable to determine” if “Afro cock sucker” constituted
    fighting words.
    33