22-Year-Old Illinois Man Arrested For Burning The American Flag

flag burning

22-year-old Bryton Mellott was arrested by Urbana Police yesterday and charged with desecrating the American flag and disorderly conduct. Mellott’s demonstration was discovered after he smeared his handiwork all over Facebook:

From Forbes:

I am not proud to be an American. In this moment, being proud of my country is to ignore the atrocities committed against people of color, people living in poverty, people who identify as women, and against my own queer community on a daily basis,” Mellott wrote on Facebook in a post.

Bryton Mellott was booked into the Campaign [sic] County Jail at about 9:47 a.m. Monday after police received numerous calls from citizens concerned about his safety and theirs. The calls started coming in around 7:30 a.m., Sgt. Andrew Charles told [Forbes] over the phone.

The Champaign/Urbana area is a heavy population center in Illinois and its residents (many of whom are college students) are predominately left leaning. Mellott, who identifies as “queer,” represents an extreme end of Illinois’s political spectrum. His outburst, outside of capturing the attention of his Facebook and Tumblr friends, caught the ire of his neighbors, who were rightfully concerned. However, while Mellott seems unbalanced and would be my bet to spearhead the next mass shooting, he didn’t do anything illegal.

In a 5:4 decision, the Supreme Court ruled nearly 30 years ago that flag burning is symbolic speech and protected under the First Amendment. The late Justice Scalia wrote in concurrence with the court’s decision, stating that flag burning (and similar forms of “symbolic speech”) cannot be limited, especially considering Americans are supposed to burn and bury tattered and worn-out flags. To prosecute someone on flag burning is to determine intent and limit free speech. Despite several House of Representative attempts to push a ban on flag burning, the bill always fizzles out in the Senate, and thus the late ’80s precedent remains law. Overall, the US flag embodies such a sense of freedom that even the flag itself is not completely safe from demonstration.

This case gets murky when you consider flag burning is a class-four felony in Illinois, but grudgingly permissible under federal law. Moreover, the constitution’s supremacy clause says that federal law trumps local/state law. If Mellott was arrested solely on his flag-burning demonstration, the arrest would be considered unconstitutional. The Urbana police’s saving grace may be the disorderly conduct charge they slapped on him, reasoning that Mellott ‘committed an act that was “causing others to be put at risk of harm.”

I laud the judgement of the Urbana Police to hit Mellott with a secondary charge, considering the first one is almost guaranteed to be thrown out. This kid looks like a huge, privileged, entitled prick, and that mixture, in tandem with a touch of crazy, can be deadly. At least they’re squeezing this kid’s nuts a little.

Even if it takes limiting a different constitutional right, I hope Illinois finds a way to ensure Mellott never gets his hands on a gun.

[via Forbes]

Image via Facebook

    1. yacht_life

      Actually if it weren’t for Cook/Lake Counties (Chicago area) the state would probably be a red state

      10 years ago at 11:39 am
      1. Nosherz

        I believe you same thing with new york if you leave out nyc, most generalize us as liberals

        10 years ago at 4:44 pm
    1. RisingFratstarOfTX

      But he’s gay, which, in today’s society, makes him automatically superior and thus, untouchable.

      10 years ago at 1:06 pm
  1. Corn1845

    Usually I find fault in the reporting of political articles but this was well written and thoroughly researched. I am impressed. Good job Kramer.

    10 years ago at 11:49 am
    1. Kramer Smash

      I was getting up against my word limit but I also wanted to point out that his Facebook mysteriously went down while he was in custody (i.e. had no electronics access). I wonder if the police/da took it down and what the legality of that is

      10 years ago at 12:00 pm
      1. DubyasLeftNut

        Facebook might have taken it down because the flag burning was put on the Internet. His employer was also the prick’s Facebook.

        10 years ago at 5:47 pm
  2. GreekLaw

    Man…. That sucks that someone who hates America sooooo much is forced to live here. Wait a minute………

    10 years ago at 12:06 pm