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Lotteries

  • Ex parte Jackson(1877)

In Ex parte Jackson (1877), the Supreme Court said Congress did not violate
the First Amendment by closing the postal system to literature about
lotteries.

  • In re Rapier (1892)

In re Rapier affirmed that federal statutes prohibiting the use of the mail
to send lottery cards or advertisements do not violate First Amendment
freedom of the press.

  • United States v. Edge Broadcasting Co. (1993)

In 1993, the U.S. Supreme Court in United States v. Edge Broadcasting Co.
upheld a federal law prohibiting the broadcasting of advertisements for
state-run lotteries by broadcasters in nonlottery states.

ABOUT US

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The Free Speech Center is a nonpartisan, nonprofit public policy center dedicated to building understanding of the five freedoms of the First Amendment through education, information and engagement.

freespeechcenter@mtsu.edu

FEATURE POSTS

Happy birthday to us – on the day that cleared a road to freedom

Memorial Day: Honoring those who gave all for our freedoms

White House Correspondents’ Dinner: levity, gravity, and a toast to the First Amendment

The origins of academic freedom in the U.S.

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