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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsTrump admin's prosecution of Don Lemon could crumble over this obscure clause
I am a law geek and discussions of the commerce clause in the US Constitution really make me happy. I am sorry that my introduction to this article is so long but again, I am a law geek and cannot help myself.
Don Lemon was indicted under the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act. This act was intended to protect abortion clinics, but the GOP offered a poison pill of including places of worship in the FACE Act. The Democrats surprised the GOP and accepted this poison pill because there were no real history of people protesting to stop people from going to places of worship.
The FACE Act is based on the Commerce Clause of the US Constitution which allows Congress to regulate activities that affect the commerce between the various states. The discussion of the Commerce Clause in Constitutional Law normally covers several class sessions but generally the Commerce Clause is considered to be very broad but the activity being regulated has to be part of commerce. The FACE Act has been upheld as to blocking access to abortion clinics because abortion clinics involve commerce. The FACE Act has never been tested as to whether churches and places of worship are in interstate commerce.
Trump admin's prosecution of Don Lemon could crumble over this obscure clause
— Lee (@5newmanl.bsky.social) 2026-02-11T22:30:35.552Z
www.rawstory.com/don-lemon-26...
https://www.rawstory.com/don-lemon-2675260556
Some experts and pundits have speculated the case could be thrown out due to the First Amendment's protection of freedom of the press but in fact, Anna Bower, Eric Columbus, and Troy Edwards argued for Lawfare on Wednesday, there's a different provision of the Constitution that makes a much stronger case for throwing out the FACE Act charges: the Commerce Clause.
A First Amendment defense, they argued, isn't so straightforward: "As the Supreme Court has noted, there is a 'well-established line of decisions holding that generally applicable laws do not offend the First Amendment simply because their enforcement against the press has incidental effects on its ability to gather and report the news.'" So if the prosecution can successfully argue Lemon and his co-conspirators intimidated churchgoers with the threat of force, the First Amendment wouldn't shield that.
A better argument, and one that could set a major precedent in law, they said, is the fact that the Commerce Clause didn't actually give Congress the authority to apply the FACE Act to houses of worship in the first place.
The FACE Act only covers churches, conservative legal scholar Ed Whelan has noted, because Republicans forced debate on an amendment to do so in a bid to stop the bill from passing altogether, only for Democrats to catch them off guard by agreeing to the amendment. Despite this, the FACE Act has almost never been used to prosecute church disruptions, as there are other statutes on the books for this, chiefly the Church Arson Prevention Act of 1988.
For this reason, the authors point out, the FACE Act's application to churches has not been given a lot of constitutional scrutiny by courts but that may change now.
"As the Supreme Court has explained, the Commerce Clause permits Congress to regulate 'the channels of interstate commerce,' the 'instrumentalities of interstate commerce, and persons or things in interstate commerce,' and 'activities that substantially affect interstate commerce,'" said the analysis. "This power extends even to 'purely local' activities so long as they are 'part of an economic class of activities that have a substantial effect on interstate commerce.'"
Courts have clearly held that abortion clinic access is an interstate commerce issue, due to the far-reaching impact of health care access but they have never made such a ruling for local church services, and the same arguments don't apply very well in this case. Moreover, the analysis noted, the FACE Act doesn't have a jurisdictional hook provision, a common legal device in Commerce Clause laws that limits its application to activities that clearly have an interstate commerce element giving courts a compelling potential reason to strike it down.
"Absent a valid exercise of Congresss Commerce Clause authority, the FACE Acts religious worship provisions are unconstitutional and unenforceable," wrote the authors. And to top it all off, the other charge the Trump administration has filed a "conspiracy against rights" charge under the Ku Klux Klan Act of 1870 would have to be dismissed if the FACE Act charge is dismissed, because it "depends on the deprivation of a right 'secured by that provision.'"
The law geek in me really loved the above legal analysis which basically summarized a week or two of classes in constitutional law.
This case will be fun to watch
LetMyPeopleVote
(177,142 posts)Here is another explanation of why the FACE Act may be unconstitutional as applied in the Lemon case
Don Lemon was charged under the FACE Act for covering a church protest. But the law may be unconstitutional, says Catoâs Matthew Cavedon.
— Cato Institute (@cato.org) 2026-02-02T22:30:14.306294104Z
https://ow.ly/89vT50Y7RKw
https://www.cato.org/blog/face-act-don-lemon-charged-violating-may-be-unconstitutional
FACE stands for Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances. Enacted in 1994 as compromise legislation, it bans forcefully disrupting peoples ability to enter abortion clinics and to carry out religious services. During the Biden administration, the FACE Act was used to charge a number of pro-life protesters, sometimes following dramatic arrests by militarized police.
The Act purports to be an exercise of Congresss powers under the Commerce Clause as well as the Fourteenth Amendment. To quickly dispense with the first argument, the FACE Act does not regulate interstate activity or commerce, and the Supreme Court struck down an attempt to criminalize domestic violence relying on Commerce Clause rationales. It seems unlikely that the Court would uphold the FACE Act using them.
Again, this will be a fun case to follow for law nerds
kwolf68
(8,342 posts)Methinks Republicans have lost Libertarians. I know a very small segment of the population, but there IS A strain of Libertarianism that runs in the Republic Party. I think they know the Republicans lip service to limited government, free markets and states' rights was all bullshit. Eventually it will just be pure fascists that support this gang of thugs.
LetMyPeopleVote
(177,142 posts)I really do not expect this case to make it to trial
Link to tweet
https://www.cnn.com/2026/02/13/media/don-lemon-arraignment-minnesota
Federal prosecutors allege Lemon and another independent journalist, Georgia Fort, participated in a takeover-style attack of Cities Church and intimidated congregants, after the two livestreamed a group of anti-Immigration and Customs Enforcement protesters rushing into the church on January 18, interrupting the service.
Lemon is being charged with two federal crimes: conspiring to violate someones constitutional rights and violating the FACE Act, which prohibits the use of force or threats to intentionally interfere with someone expressing their First Amendment right to practice religion.
The journalist and former CNN anchor who now hosts his show on YouTube has vowed to fight the charges. He has hired Joseph H. Thompson, a former Minnesota federal prosecutor, to represent him, according to court records filed earlier this week.
