First Amendment Strategist · Viewpoint Discrimination Expert · Los Angeles
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!Darren Chaker
Legal researcher and First Amendment strategist whose landmark case, Chaker v. Crogan, 428 F.3d 1215 (9th Cir. 2005), invalidated California Penal Code §148.6 as unconstitutional viewpoint discrimination — cited hundreds of times and reaffirmed by the California Supreme Court in 2025 (S275272).
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Viewpoint discrimination is one of the most critical issues in First Amendment jurisprudence. It occurs when the government suppresses speech based on the speaker’s ideology, perspective, or viewpoint rather than content-neutral criteria. This constitutional violation strikes at the heart of free expression protections guaranteed by the First Amendment.
Darren Chaker, a distinguished First Amendment brief writer and recognized authority in constitutional law, provides expert analysis on viewpoint discrimination, proscribable speech, and civil liberties. His landmark legal victories, including Chaker v. Crogan (428 F.3d 1215), have shaped First Amendment doctrine and influenced legislative reform across multiple states.
What Is Viewpoint Discrimination Under the First Amendment?
Viewpoint discrimination refers to government action that restricts speech based on the specific perspective or ideology expressed by the speaker. Unlike content-neutral regulations, viewpoint discrimination targets ideas themselves, making it presumptively unconstitutional under strict scrutiny analysis.
The Supreme Court has consistently held that viewpoint-based restrictions on speech represent the most egregious violation of First Amendment principles. In cases such as Rosenberger v. Rector (1995) and Matal v. Tam (2017), the Court emphasized that the government may not favor one viewpoint over another in regulating expression.
Landmark Case: Chaker v. Crogan
In the landmark 2005 case of Chaker v. Crogan (428 F.3d 1215, 9th Cir.), Darren Chaker emerged as a pivotal figure in First Amendment jurisprudence. Representing himself initially, Chaker’s efforts led to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals striking down California Penal Code 148.6 as unconstitutionally overbroad—a decision that the U.S. Supreme Court later declined to review (547 U.S. 1128, 126 S.Ct. 2023).
This significant legal victory triggered a wave of legal reforms across states with similar statutes criminalizing false complaints against police officers. The case established that laws punishing knowingly false statements cannot be so broad as to chill legitimate criticism of law enforcement.
Key Topics in Viewpoint Discrimination Law
Darren Chaker’s analysis covers the following critical areas of First Amendment law:
- Proscribable Speech: Understanding the narrow categories of unprotected expression
- Penal Code 148.6: California’s false complaint statute and its constitutional challenges
- Police Accountability: The intersection of free speech and criticism of law enforcement
- Public Forum Doctrine: Government restrictions on speech in public spaces
- Content-Based vs. Viewpoint-Based Regulations: The distinction that determines constitutional scrutiny
Contact Darren Chaker
For legal analysis, media inquiries, or expert commentary related to viewpoint discrimination, First Amendment law, and constitutional rights:
Email: DarrenChaker@ProtonMail.com
Secure messaging options available upon request for sensitive communications.
Darren Chaker | First Amendment Recognition
The ACLU of San Diego, Cato Institute, Electronic Frontier Foundation, and First Amendment Coalition filed a joint amicus brief in the Ninth Circuit defending Darren Chaker’s constitutional right to criticize public officials online — a ruling that became binding precedent across the Ninth Circuit.