Tampa Free Press

Liberty Justice Center Urges Supreme Court to Hear Illinois ‘Bubble Zone’ Case and Protect Free Speech

August 16, 2024

(Tampa Free Press)—The Liberty Justice Center has filed a legal brief supporting a challenge to a Carbondale, Illinois law that creates “bubble zones” around healthcare facilities, restricting free speech within these areas.

The law, aimed at pro-life activists near abortion clinics, has a broader impact, creating over 150 zones where certain speech is prohibited.

According to the Liberty Justice Center, in January 2023, the city of Carbondale, Illinois, enacted a law creating 100-foot “bubble zones” around all entrances to the city’s hospitals, medical clinics, and healthcare facilities. The law prohibits anyone in one of these “bubble zones” from speaking to another person “for the purpose of . . .  engaging in oral protest, education, or counseling.”

Although specifically enacted to prohibit pro-life advocacy near abortion clinics, the law’s broad application to all healthcare facilities has created over 150 “bubble zones” across the city where people are prohibited from exercising their right to free speech.

In May 2023, Coalition Life and the Thomas More Society filed a lawsuit to challenge the “bubble zone” law for violating the First Amendment. After lower courts dismissed the case—citing the 2000 U.S. Supreme Court decision Hill v. Colorado—Coalition Life and the Thomas More Society appealed their case to the Supreme Court.

“The government cannot create zones where certain types of speech are not allowed. The Supreme Court has repeatedly held that content-based restrictions on speech are presumptively unconstitutional. The Court’s decision in Hill v. Colorado—allowing “bubble zone” laws restricting speech, like the one Carbondale adopted—is an outlier in the Court’s First Amendment cases,” said Jeffrey Schwab, Senior Counsel at the Liberty Justice Center. “We urge the Supreme Court to overturn Hill to bring more consistency to the Court’s protection of free speech rights.”