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    RICE v PALADIN ENTERPRISES,

    U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals

    RICE v PALADIN ENTERPRISES

                                             Filed:  December 4, 1997
    

                      UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    

                          FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    

                              
                  
    
    

                               No. 96-2412
                             (CA-95-3811-AW)
                              
                  
    
    

    Vivian Rice, etc., et al,

                                             Plaintiffs - Appellants,
    

    versus

    The Paladin Enterprises, etc.,

                                                Defendant - Appellee.
    

                              
                  
    
    

                                O R D E R
                              
                  
    
    

    The Court amends its opinion filed November 10, 1997, as follows:

    On page 28, first paragraph, line 29 -- the cross-reference is corrected to read " infra at 39-44."

    On page 29, first paragraph, line 14 -- the cross-reference is corrected to read " infra at 37-38."

    On page 30, first full paragraph, line 18 -- the opening quotation mark before the phrase "to be represehensible" is deleted.

                                         For the Court - By Direction
    

                                            /s/ Patricia S. Connor
                                         
                                
    
    

    Clerk

    PUBLISHED

    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS

    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT

    VIVIAN RICE, Guardian and next

    friend of Tamielle Horn; MARILYN

    FARMER, Co-personal representatives

    of the estate of Mildred Horn;

    TIFFANI M. HORN, Co-personal

    representatives of the estate of

    Mildred Horn; MICHAEL D.

    SAUNDERS, Individually and next

    friend of Colin D. Saunders, a

    minor and personal representative of

    the estate of Janice Y. Saunders;

    COLIN D. SAUNDERS; JANICE Y.

    SAUNDERS,

    Plaintiffs-Appellants,

    v.

    No. 96-2412

    THE PALADIN ENTERPRISES,

    INCORPORATED, a/k/a The Paladin

    Press,

    Defendant-Appellee,

    and

    PETER C. LUND,

    Defendant.

    DAVID CRUMP, Professor of

    Constitutional Law and Recipient of

    "Friend of the First Amendment"

    Award; NATIONAL VICTIM CENTER;

    STEPHANIE ROPER FOUNDATION,

    INCORPORATED; VICTIMS RIGHTS

    POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE; THE

    HORROR WRITERS ASSOCIATION; THE

    THOMAS JEFFERSON CENTER FOR THE

    PROTECTION OF FREE EXPRESSION;

    AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION

    FOUNDATION; AMERICAN CIVIL

    LIBERTIES UNION OF THE NATIONAL

    CAPITOL AREA; AMERICAN CIVIL

    LIBERTIES UNION OF COLORADO; ABC,

    INCORPORATED; AMERICA ONLINE,

    INCORPORATED; ASSOCIATION OF

    AMERICAN PUBLISHERS; THE

    BALTIMORE SUN COMPANY; E.W.

    SCRIPPS COMPANY; FREEDOM TO READ

    FOUNDATION; MAGAZINE PUBLISHERS

    OF AMERICA, INCORPORATED;

    MCCLATCHY NEWSPAPERS,

    INCORPORATED; MEDIA GENERAL, INC.;

    MEDIA PROFESSIONAL INSURANCE;

    NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF

    BROADCASTERS; NEWSPAPERS

    ASSOCIATION OF AMERICA; THE NEW

    YORK TIMES; THE REPORTERS

    COMMITTEE FOR FREEDOM OF THE

    PRESS; SOCIETY OF PROFESSIONAL

    JOURNALISTS; THE WASHINGTON POST,

    Amici Curiae.

    Appeal from the United States District Court

    for the District of Maryland, at Baltimore.

    Alexander Williams, Jr., District Judge.

    (CA-95-3811-AW)

    Argued: May 7, 1997

    Decided: November 10, 1997

    Before WILKINS, LUTTIG, and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges.

    _________________________________________________________________

    2

    Reversed and remanded by published opinion. Judge Luttig wrote the

    opinion, in which Judges Wilkins and Williams joined.

    _________________________________________________________________

    COUNSEL

    ARGUED: Rodney Alan Smolla, Marshall-Wythe School of Law,

    COLLEGE OF WILLIAM & MARY, Williamsburg, Virginia, for

    Appellants. Thomas Buchan Kelley, FAEGRE & BENSON, L.L.P.,

    Denver, Colorado, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: John Marshall, MOL-

    DAWER & MARSHALL, Rockville, Maryland; Howard Siegel,

    Rockville, Maryland; Thomas L. Heeney, HEENEY, ARMSTRONG

    & HEENEY, Rockville, Maryland, for Appellants. Steven D. Zans-

    berg, FAEGRE & BENSON, L.L.P., Denver, Colorado; Lee Levine,

    Seth D. Berlin, LEVINE, PIERSON, SULLIVAN & KOCH, L.L.P.,

    Washington, D.C., for Appellee. David Crump, UNIVERSITY OF

    HOUSTON LAW CENTER, Houston, Texas, for Amicus Curiae

    Crump. Neal Goldfarb, D. Thomas Nelson, Russell Butler, Charles G.

    Brown, INGERSOLL & BLOCH, Washington, D.C., for Amici

    Curiae National Victim Center, et al. Douglas E. Winter, BRYAN

    CAVE, L.L.P., Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae Horror Writers

    Association. Robert M. O'Neil, J. Joshua Wheeler, THE THOMAS

    JEFFERSON CENTER FOR THE PROTECTION OF FREE

    EXPRESSION, Charlottesville, Virginia; Dwight H. Sullivan,

    AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION FOUNDATION OF

    MARYLAND, Baltimore, Maryland; Arthur Spitzer, AMERICAN

    CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION OF THE NATIONAL CAPITAL

    AREA, Washington, D.C.; Mark Silverstein, AMERICAN CIVIL

    LIBERTIES UNION OF COLORADO, Denver, Colorado, for Amici

    Curiae Thomas Jefferson Center, et al. Bruce W. Sanford, Henry S.

    Hoberman, Michael J. Lorenger, BAKER & HOSTETLER, L.L.P.,

    College Park, Maryland, for Amici Curiae ABC, et al.

    _________________________________________________________________

    OPINION

    LUTTIG, Circuit Judge:

    To Those Who Think,

    To Those Who Do,

    To Those Who Succeed.

    3

    Success is nothing more than taking advantage

    of an opportunity.

    A WOMAN RECENTLY ASKED HOW I could, in good conscience,

    write an instruction book on murder.

    "How can you live with yourself if someone uses what you write to

    go out and take a human life?" she whined.

    I am afraid she was quite offended by my answer.

    It is my opinion that the professional hit man fills a need in society

    and is, at times, the only alternative for "personal" justice. Moreover,

    if my advice and the proven methods in this book are followed, cer-

    tainly no one will ever know.

    [A]lmost every man harbors a fantasy of living the life of Mack

    Bolan or some other fictional hero who kills for fun and profit. They

    dream of living by their reflexes, of doing whatever is necessary with-

    out regard to moral or legal restrictions. But few have the courage

    or knowledge to make that dream a reality.

    You might be like my friends -- interested but unsure, standing on

    the sidelines afraid to play the game because you don't know the

    rules. [But] within the pages of this book you will learn one of the

    most successful methods of operation used by an independent con-

    tractor. You will follow the procedures of a man who works alone,

    without backing of organized crime or on a personal vendetta. Step

    by step you will be taken from research to equipment selection to job

    preparation to successful job completion. You will learn where to find

    employment, how much to charge, and what you can, and cannot, do

    with the money you earn.

    But deny your urge to skip about, looking for the "good" parts.

    Start where any amateur who is serious about turning professional

    will start -- at the beginning.

    [And when] [y]ou've read all the suggested material, you [will

    have] honed your mind, body and reflexes into a precision piece of

    4

    professional machinery. You [will have] assembled the necessary

    tools and learned to use them efficiently. Your knowledge of dealing

    death [will have] increased to the point where you have a choice of

    methods. Finally, you [will be] confident and competent enough to

    accept employment.

    [When you go to commit the murder, you will need] several (at

    least four or five pairs) of flesh-tone, tight-fitting surgical gloves. If

    these are not available, rubber gloves can be purchased at a reason-

    able price in the prescription department of most drug stores in boxes

    of 100. You will wear the gloves when you assemble and disassemble

    your weapons as well as on the actual job. Because the metal gun

    parts cause the rubber to wear quickly, it is a good practice to change

    and dispose of worn gloves several times during each operation.

    [The bag you take to the kill also] should contain a few pairs of

    cheap handcuffs, usually available at pawn shops or army surplus

    stores.

    Dress, as well as disguises, should be coordinated according to the

    job setting.

    Black, dark brown or olive green clothes do not stand out and will

    probably appear at first glance to be a mechanic or delivery driver's

    uniform. . . . And underneath, you can wear your street clothes for a

    quick change after the job is completed.

    The kill is the easiest part of the job. People kill one another every

    day. It takes no great effort to pull a trigger or plunge a knife. It is

    being able to do so in a manner that will not link yourself or your

    employer to the crime that makes you a professional.

    [If you decide to kill your victim with a knife,] [t]he knife . . .

    should have a six-inch blade with a serrated edge for making effi-

    cient, quiet kills.

    The knife should have a double-edged blade. This double edge,

    combined with the serrated section and six-inch length, will insure a

    deep, ragged tear, and the wound will be difficult, if not impossible,

    to close without prompt medical attention.

    5

    Make your thrusts to a vital organ and twist the knife before you

    withdraw it. If you hit bone, you will have to file the blade to remove

    the marks left on the metal when it struck the victim's bone.

    Using your six inch, serrated blade knife, stab deeply into the side

    of the victim's neck and push the knife forward in a forceful move-

    ment. This method will half decapitate the victim, cutting both his

    main arteries and wind pipe, ensuring immediate death.

    [You might also use an ice pick to murder your victim.] . . . An ice

    pick can . . . be driven into the victim's brain, through the ear, after

    he has been subdued. The wound hardly bleeds at all, and death is

    sometimes attributed to natural causes.

    [If you plan to kill your victim with a gun,] you will learn [on the

    following pages] how to make, without need of special engineering

    ability or expensive machine shop tools, a silencer of the highest

    quality and effectiveness. The finished product attached to your 22

    will be no louder than the noise made by a pellet gun. Because it is

    so inexpensive (mine cost less than twenty dollars to make), you can

    easily dispose of it after job use without any great loss. . . . Your first

    silencer will require possibly two days total to assemble . . . as you

    carefully follow the directions step by step. After you make a couple,

    it will become so easy, so routine, that you can whip one up in just

    a few hours.

    The following items should be assembled before you begin [to build

    your silencer]:

    - Drill rod, 7/32 inch (order from a machine shop if not obtainable

    locally)

    - One foot of 1-1/2 inch (inside diameter) PVC tubing and two end

    caps

    - One quart of fiberglass resin with hardener

    - One yard thin fiberglass mat

    [List continues]

    6

    [If you plan to kill your victim with a gun,][c]lose kills are by far

    preferred to shots fired over a long distance. You will need to know

    beyond any doubt that the desired result has been achieved.

    When using a small caliber weapon like the 22, it is best to shoot

    from a distance of three to six feet. You will not want to be at point-

    blank range to avoid having the victim's blood splatter you or your

    clothing. At least three shots should be fired to ensure quick and sure

    death.

    [If you plan to kill your victim from a distance,] use a rifle with a

    good scope and silencer and aim for the head -- preferably the eye

    sockets if you are a sharpshooter. Many people have been shot

    repeatedly, even in the head, and survived to tell about it.

    The rifle has a ridge on top that will easily accept a scope, even

    though it is not cut for one. Put the scope in place, tighten it down,

    then sight it in. After sighting in, scratch a mark behind each scope

    clamp to allow remounting of the scope without resighting each time.

    Extra clips are a must for both the rifle and pistol and should be

    carried as a precautionary measure. Hollow-point bullets are recom-

    mended because they deform on impact, making them nontraceable.

    As an added precaution, you can fill the hollows with liquid poison

    to insure success of your operation. . . . [Details follow]

    To test your guns and ammunition, set up a sheet of quarter-inch

    plywood at distances of two to seven yards maximum for your pistol,

    and twenty to sixty yards maximum for your rifle. Check for penetra-

    tion of bullets at each range. Quarter-inch plywood is only a little

    stronger than the human skull.

    If the serial number is on the barrel of the gun, grinding deeply

    enough to remove it may weaken the barrel to the point that the gun

    could explode in your face when fired. To make these numbers

    untraceable, [instructions follow].

    [After shooting your victim] run a [specified tool] down the bore

    of the gun to change the ballistic markings. Do this even though you

    7

    intend to discard the crime weapon. . . . If, for some reason, you just

    can't bear to part with your weapon . . . alter the[specified parts of

    the gun according to the directions that follow].

    Although several shots fired in succession offer quick and rela-

    tively humane death to the victim, there are instances when other

    methods of extermination are called for. The employer may want you

    to gather certain information from the mark before you do away with

    him. At other times, the assignment may call for torture or disfigure-

    ment as a "lesson" for the survivors.

    There is no end to the various ways of torturing a mark until he

    would tell you what you want to know, and die just to get it over.

    Sometimes all it takes is putting a knife to his throat. Not from behind

    with the blade across the throat the way they do in the movies, but

    from the front with the tip of the blade creasing the soft hollow of the

    throat, where the victim can see the gleaming steel and realizes what

    damage it would do if fully penetrated.

    The only time I can think of that explosives might be in order is

    when several marks will be together in one place at the same time,

    and you might be able to get them all with one shot. Notice that I

    stressed the word might . Shrapnel doesn't always kill. So in the after-

    math, it will be your responsibility to enter the area and make sure

    that the desired result was accomplished.

    [If you plan to kill your victim with a fertilizer bomb,] purchase a

    fifty pound bag of regular garden fertilizer from your garden center

    [and follow these detailed instructions for constructing the bomb].

    Extend the fuse and light . . . .

    Arson is a good method for covering a kill or creating an "acci-

    dent."

    Don't ever use gasoline or other traceable materials to start your

    fire. [Specified substance] is your best starter because it burns away

    all traces.

    [In order to dispose of a corpse,] you can simply cut off the head

    after burying the body. Take the head to some deserted location,

    8

    place a stick of dynamite in the mouth, and blow the telltale dentition

    to smithereens! After this, authorities can't use the victim's dental

    records to identify his remains. As the body decomposes, fingerprints

    will disappear and no real evidence will be left from which to make

    positive identification. You can even clip off the fingertips and bury

    them separately.

    [Or] you can always cut the body into sections and pack it into an

    ice chest for transport and disposal at various spots around the coun-

    tryside.

    If you choose to sink the corpse, you must first make several deep

    stabs into the body's lungs (from just under the rib cage) and belly.

    This is necessary because gases released during decomposition will

    bloat these organs, causing the body to rise to the surface of the

    water.

    The corpse should be weighted with the standard concrete blocks,

    but it must be wrapped from head to toe with heavy chain as well, to

    keep the body from separating and floating in chunks to the surface.

    After the fishes and natural elements have done their work, the chain

    will drag the bones into the muddy sediment. . . .

    If you bury the body, again deep stab wounds should be made to

    allow the gases to escape. A bloating corpse will push the earth up

    as it swells. Pour in lime to prevent the horrible odor of decomposi-

    tion, and lye to make that decomposition more rapid.

    [After you killed your first victim,] you felt absolutely nothing. And

    you are shocked by the nothingness. You had expected this moment

    to be a spectacular point in your life. You had wondered if you would

    feel compassion for the victim, immediate guilt, or even experience

    direct intervention by the hand of God. But you weren't even feeling

    sickened by the sight of the body.

    After you have arrived home the events that took place take on a

    dreamlike quality. You don't dwell on them. You don't worry. You

    don't have nightmares. You don't fear ghosts. When thoughts of the

    hit go through your mind, it's almost as though you are recalling

    some show you saw on television.

    9

    By the time you collect the balance of your contract fee, the doubts

    and fears of discovery have faded. Those feelings have been replaced

    by cockiness, a feeling of superiority, a new independence and self-

    assurance.

    [E]verything seems to have changed.

    The people around you have suddenly become so aggravatingly

    ordinary. You start to view them as an irritating herd of pathetic

    sheep, doing as they are told, doing what is expected, following some-

    one, anyone, blindly. You can't believe how dumb your friends have

    become, and your respect diminishes for people you once held in awe.

    You too have become different. You recognize that you made some

    mistakes, but you know what they were, and they will never plague

    you again. Next time (and you know there will be a next time), there

    will be no hesitation, no fear.

    Your experience in facing death head-on has taught you about life.

    You have the power and ability to stand alone. You no longer need

    a reason to kill.

    The things you have learned about life are important. You may

    wish to pass on your observations to someone you care about. When

    the bullshit starts to flow, you may feel compelled to set the record

    straight and tell those morons how it really is. When someone starts

    to brag, in confidence, about something he's done, the intimacy of the

    moment, the shared confessions, may inspire you to do a little brag-

    ging of your own. Or you may want to overawe some new woman in

    your life with your masculinity and you feel the urge to shock her just

    a little by hinting at your true profession.

    Start now in learning to control your ego. That means, above all,

    keeping your mouth shut! You are a man. Without a doubt, you have

    proved it. You have come face to face with death and emerged the vic-

    tor through your cunning and expertise. You have dealt death as a

    professional. You don't need any second or third opinions to verify

    your manhood.

    10

    Then, some day, when you've done and seen it all; when there

    doesn't seem to be any challenge left or any new frontier left to con-

    quer, you might just feel cocky enough to write a book about it.

    Selected passages from Hit Man: A Technical Manual for Indepen-

    dent Contractors . 1

    _________________________________________________________________

    I.

    On the night of March 3, 1993, readied by these instructions and

    steeled by these seductive adjurations from Hit Man: A Technical

    Manual for Independent Contractors , a copy of which was subse-

    quently found in his apartment, James Perry brutally murdered Mil-

    dred Horn, her eight-year-old quadriplegic son Trevor, and Trevor's

    nurse, Janice Saunders, by shooting Mildred Horn and Saunders

    through the eyes and by strangling Trevor Horn. Perry's despicable

    crime was not one of vengeance; he did not know any of his victims.

    Nor did he commit the murders in the course of another offense. Perry

    acted instead as a contract killer, a "hit man," hired by Mildred Horn's

    ex-husband, Lawrence Horn, to murder Horn's family so that Horn

    would receive the $2 million that his eight-year-old son had received

    in settlement for injuries that had previously left him paralyzed for

    life. At the time of the murders, this money was held in trust for the

    benefit of Trevor, and, under the terms of the trust instrument, the

    trust money was to be distributed tax-free to Lawrence in the event

    of Mildred's and Trevor's deaths.

    In soliciting, preparing for, and committing these murders, Perry

    meticulously followed countless of Hit Man 's 130 pages of detailed

    factual instructions on how to murder and to become a professional

    killer.

    _________________________________________________________________

    1 The foregoing passages have been selected by the court as representa-

    tive, both in substance and presentation, of the instructions in Hit Man .

    These are but a small fraction of the total number of instructions that

    appear in the 130-page manual. And the court has even felt it necessary

    to omit portions of these few illustrative passages in order to minimize

    the danger to the public from their repetition herein.

    11

    Perry, for example, followed many of the book's instructions on

    soliciting a client and arranging for a contract murder in his solicita-

    tion of and negotiation with Lawrence Horn. Cautioning against the

    placement of advertisements in military or gun magazines, as this

    might prompt "a personal visit from the FBI," Hit Man instructs that

    "as a beginner" one should solicit business "through a personal

    acquaintance whom you trust." Hit Man at 87. James Perry offered his

    services as a professional killer to Lawrence Horn through Thomas

    Turner, a "good friend" of Perry's, and Lawrence Horn's first cousin.

    State v. Perry , 344 Md. 204, 686 A.2d 274, 278 (1996), cert . denied ,

    117 S. Ct. 1318 (1997).

    Hit Man instructs to request "expense money" from the employer

    prior to committing the crime, advising the contract killer to get " all

    expense money up front ." Hit Man at 92 (emphasis added). The man-

    ual goes on to explain that this amount should generally range from

    five hundred to five thousand dollars, "depending on the type of job

    and the job location," and that the advance should be paid in cash. Id .

    Prior to commission of the murders, Lawrence Horn paid James Perry

    three thousand five hundred dollars through a series of wire transfers

    using phony names. Perry , 686 A.2d at 280.

    Hit Man instructs that the victim's personal residence is the "initial

    choice" location for a murder and "an ideal place to make a hit,"

    depending on its "layout" and "position." Hit Man at 81-82. James

    Perry murdered the Horns at their place of residence. Perry , 686 A.2d

    at 277.

    Hit Man instructs its readers to use a rental car to reach the victim's

    location, Hit Man at 98, and to "steal an out-of-state tag" and use it

    to "replace the rental tag" on the car, explaining that "[s]tolen tags

    only show up on the police computer of the state in which they are

    stolen." Id . James Perry stole out-of-state tags and affixed them to his

    rental car before driving it to the Horns' residence on the night of the

    murders. Perry , 686 A.2d at 276.

    Hit Man instructs the reader to establish a base at a motel in close

    proximity to the "jobsite" before committing the murders. Hit Man at

    101. On the night that he killed Mildred and Trevor Horn and Janice

    Saunders, James Perry took a room at a Days Inn motel in Rockville,

    12

    Maryland, a short drive from the Horns' residence. Perry , 686 A.2d

    at 276.

    Hit Man instructs that one should "use a made-up [license] tag

    number" when registering at the motel or hotel. Hit Man at 102.

    James Perry gave a false license tag number when he registered at the

    Days Inn on the night of the murders. Perry , 686 A.2d at 276.

    Hit Man instructs that a "beginner" should use an AR-7 rifle to kill

    his victims. Hit Man at 21. James Perry used an AR-7 rifle to slay

    Mildred Horn and Janice Saunders. Perry , 686 A.2d at 279.

    Hit Man instructs its readers where to find the serial numbers on

    an AR-7 rifle, and instructs them that, prior to using the weapon, they

    should "completely drill[ ] out" these serial numbers so that the

    weapon cannot be traced. Hit Man at 23. James Perry drilled out the

    serial numbers of his weapon exactly as the book instructs. Perry , 686

    A.2d at 280.

    Hit Man instructs in "explicit detail" (replete with photographs)

    how to construct, "without [the] need of special engineering ability or

    machine shop tools," a homemade, "whisper-quiet" silencer from

    material available in any hardware store. Hit Man at 39-51. James

    Perry constructed such a homemade silencer and used it on the night

    that he murdered Mildred and Trevor Horn and Janice Saunders. J.A.

    at 24.

    Perry also followed any number of Hit Man 's instructions on how

    to commit the murder itself. The manual, for example, instructs its

    readers to kill their "mark" at close range, so that they will "know

    beyond any doubt that the desired result has been achieved." Hit Man

    at 24. The book also cautions, however, that the killer should not

    shoot the victim at point blank range, because "the victim's blood

    [will] splatter [the killer] or [his] clothing." Id . Ultimately, the book

    recommends that its readers "shoot [their victims] from a distance of

    three to six feet." Id . James Perry shot Mildred Horn and Janice

    Saunders from a distance of three feet. J.A. at 24.

    Hit Man specifically instructs its audience of killers to shoot the

    victim through the eyes if possible:

    13

    At least three shots should be fired to insure quick and sure

    death. . . . [A]im for the head -- preferably the eye sockets

    if you are a sharpshooter.

    Hit Man at 24. James Perry shot Mildred Horn and Janice Saunders

    two or three times and through the eyes. Perry , 686 A.2d at 277.

    Finally, Perry followed many of Hit Man 's instructions for con-

    cealing his murders. Hit Man instructs the killer to "[p]ick up those

    empty cartridges that were ejected when you fired your gun." Hit Man

    at 104. Although Perry fired his rifle numerous times during the mur-

    ders, no spent cartridges were found in the area. Compare Perry , 686

    A.2d at 277, with id . at 280.

    Hit Man instructs the killer to disguise the contract murder as bur-

    glary by "mess[ing] the place up a bit and tak[ing] anything of value

    that you can carry concealed." Hit Man at 104. After killing Mildred

    and Trevor Horn and Janice Saunders, James Perry took a Gucci

    watch, as well as some credit cards and bank cards from Mildred

    Horn's wallet. Perry , 686 A.2d at 278. According to the police report,

    a few areas of the Horns' residence appeared "disturbed" or "slightly

    tossed," and "a rug and cocktail table in the living room had been

    moved." Id . at 277.

    Hit Man instructs that, after murdering the victims, the killer

    should break down the AR-7 in order to make the weapon easier to

    conceal. Hit Man at 105. James Perry disassembled his weapon after

    the murders, in accordance with the instructions in Hit Man . Perry ,

    686 A.2d at 280.

    Hit Man instructs killers to use specified tools to alter specified

    parts of the rifle. Hit Man at 25. The author explains that the

    described alterations will prevent the police laboratory from matching

    the bullets recovered from the victims' bodies to the murder weapon.

    James Perry altered his AR-7 in accordance with these instructions.

    Perry , 686 A.2d at 280.

    Hit Man also instructs the killer to dispose of the murder weapon

    by scattering the disassembled pieces of the weapon along the road

    14

    as he leaves the crime scene. Hit Man at 105. And, after killing Mil-

    dred and Trevor Horn and Janice Saunders, Perry scattered the pieces

    of his disassembled AR-7 rifle along Route 28 in Montgomery

    County. Perry , 686 A.2d at 280.

    In this civil, state-law wrongful death action against defendant Pal-

    adin Enterprises -- the publisher of Hit Man -- the relatives and rep-

    resentatives of Mildred and Trevor Horn and Janice Saunders allege

    that Paladin aided and abetted Perry in the commission of his murders

    through its publication of Hit Man 's killing instructions. For reasons

    that are here of no concern to the court, Paladin has stipulated to a

    set of facts which establish as a matter of law that the publisher is civ-

    illy liable for aiding and abetting James Perry in his triple murder,

    unless the First Amendment absolutely bars the imposition of liability

    upon a publisher for assisting in the commission of criminal acts. As

    the parties stipulate: "The parties agree that the sole issue to be

    decided by the Court . . . is whether the First Amendment is a com-

    plete defense, as a matter of law, to the civil action set forth in the

    plaintiffs' Complaint. All other issues of law and fact are specifically

    reserved for subsequent proceedings." J.A. at 58.

    Paladin, for example, has stipulated for purposes of summary judg-

    ment that Perry followed the above-enumerated instructions from Hit

    Man , as well as instructions from another Paladin publication, How

    to Make a Disposable Silencer, Vol. II , in planning, executing, and

    attempting to cover up the murders of Mildred and Trevor Horn and

    Janice Saunders. J.A. at 61. Paladin has stipulated not only that, in

    marketing Hit Man , Paladin "intended to attract and assist criminals

    and would-be criminals who desire information and instructions on

    how to commit crimes," J.A. at 59, but also that it "intended and had

    knowledge" that Hit Man actually "would be used, upon receipt , by

    criminals and would-be criminals to plan and execute the crime of

    murder for hire." J.A. at 59 (emphasis added). Indeed, the publisher

    has even stipulated that, through publishing and selling Hit Man , it

    assisted Perry in particular in the perpetration of the very murders for

    which the victims' families now attempt to hold Paladin civilly liable.

    J.A. at 61. 2

    _________________________________________________________________

    2 The full fact stipulation of the parties reads as follows:

    15

    Notwithstanding Paladin's extraordinary stipulations that it not

    only knew that its instructions might be used by murderers, but that

    _________________________________________________________________

    JOINT STATEMENT OF FACTS

    The parties agree that the matters set forth below represent

    facts that the plaintiffs and/or defendants would be able to estab-

    lish by affidavit or otherwise in the context of defendants'

    motion for summary judgment under F.R.C.P. 56. These facts

    are offered only for the purposes of this motion and the parties

    specifically reserve the right to contest all statements which fol-

    low at any subsequent proceeding in this case. The parties agree

    that the sole issue to be decided by the Court in this motion is

    whether the First Amendment is a complete defense, as a matter

    of law, to the civil action set forth in the plaintiffs' Complaint.

    All other issues of law and fact are specifically reserved for sub-

    sequent proceedings.

    1. Prior to March 3, 1993, Lawrence Horn began plotting

    with James Perry of Detroit, Michigan, to have Perry murder his

    ex-wife, Mildred Horn, and his son, Trevor.

    2. On or about January 24, 1992, James Perry responded to

    a catalogue solicitation by the defendant, Paladin, advertising Hit

    Man: A Technical Manual for Independent Contractors (herein-

    after referred to as " Hit Man "), and How to Make a Disposable

    Silencer, Volume 2 (hereinafter referred to as" Silencers "). Perry

    ordered both publications. Hit Man and Silencers were mailed to

    him by the defendants shortly thereafter.

    3. Defendants had no other known contact with Perry and no

    contacts with Lawrence Horn.

    4. Defendants concede, for purposes of this motion, and for

    no other purposes, that:

    a. defendants engaged in a marketing strategy intended to

    attract and assist criminals and would-be criminals who desire

    information and instructions on how to commit crimes; and

    b. in publishing, marketing, advertising and distributing Hit

    Man and Silencers , defendants intended and had knowledge that

    their publications would be used, upon receipt, by criminals and

    would-be criminals to plan and execute the crime of murder for

    hire, in the manner set forth in the publications.

    c. The conditional factual concessions made in this * 4 relate

    only to the defendants' state of mind, and do not preclude defen-

    dants from contending that defendants' published words, in and

    of themselves, were neither directed at causing imminent unlaw-

    16

    it actually intended to provide assistance to murderers and would-be

    murderers which would be used by them "upon receipt," and that it

    _________________________________________________________________

    ful action nor likely to produce such action, for purposes of the

    doctrine of Brandenburg v. Ohio , 395 U.S. 444 (1969).

    5. Plaintiffs concede, for purposes of this motion and for no

    other purposes, that:

    a. defendants' marketing strategy was and is intended to

    maximize sales of its publications to the public, including sales

    to (i) authors who desire information for the purpose of writing

    books about crime and criminals, (ii) law enforcement officers

    and agencies who desire information concerning the means and

    methods of committing crimes, (iii) persons who enjoy reading

    accounts of crimes and the means of committing them for pur-

    poses of entertainment, (iv) persons who fantasize about com-

    mitting crimes but do not thereafter commit them, and (v)

    criminologists and others who study criminal methods and men-

    tality.

    b. in publishing, marketing, advertising and distributing Hit

    Man and Silencers , as well as other publications, defendants

    intended and had knowledge that their publications would be

    purchased by members of the general public, including those

    persons and for those purposes listed in * 5(a).

    c. The conditional factual concessions made in this * 5 shall

    not preclude the plaintiffs from contending that such facts are

    irrelevant to any issue before this court.

    6. On March 3, 1993, James Perry traveled from Detroit,

    Michigan to Montgomery County, Maryland and murdered Mil-

    dred Horn, Trevor Horn, and Janice Saunders, Trevor's private

    duty nurse. Perry followed a number of instructions outlined in

    Hit Man and Silencers (set forth in* 7 below) in planning, exe-

    cuting and attempting to get away with the murders described in

    the complaint.

    7. Defendants concede, for the purpose of this motion and

    for no other purposes, that in publishing, distributing and selling

    Hit Man and Silencers to Perry, defendants assisted him in the

    subsequent perpetration of the murders which are the subject of

    this litigation, in the ways set forth in paragraphs 18 and 19 of

    the Rice complaint and paragraphs 20 and 21 of the Saunders

    complaint which are incorporated by reference and are filed

    herewith as exhibit "D".

    17

    in fact assisted Perry in particular in the commission of the murders

    of Mildred and Trevor Horn and Janice Saunders, the district court

    granted Paladin's motion for summary judgment and dismissed plain-

    tiffs' claims that Paladin aided and abetted Perry, holding that these

    claims were barred by the First Amendment as a matter of law.

    Because long-established caselaw provides that speech -- even

    speech by the press -- that constitutes criminal aiding and abetting

    does not enjoy the protection of the First Amendment, and because

    we are convinced that such caselaw is both correct and equally appli-

    cable to speech that constitutes civil aiding and abetting of criminal

    conduct (at least where, as here, the defendant has the specific pur-

    pose of assisting and encouraging commission of such conduct and

    the alleged assistance and encouragement takes a form other than

    abstract advocacy), we hold, as urged by the Attorney General and the

    Department of Justice, that the First Amendment does not pose a bar

    to a finding that Paladin is civilly liable as an aider and abetter of

    Perry's triple contract murder. We also hold that the plaintiffs have

    stated against Paladin a civil aiding and abetting claim under Mary-

    _________________________________________________________________

    8. Hit Man was first published in 1983 and Silencers was

    first published in 1983. Approximately 13,000 copies of Hit Man

    and an unknown but not disproportionate number of copies of

    Silencers have been sold nationally.

    9. At all relevant times, defendants had no specific knowl-

    edge (1) that either Perry or Horn planned to commit a crime; (2)

    that Perry and Horn had entered into a conspiracy for the pur-

    pose of committing a crime; and (3) that Perry had been retained

    by Horn to murder Mildred Horn, Trevor Horn, or Janice

    Saunders.

    10. The defendants' current catalogue, and publications Hit

    Man and Silencers are filed herewith by the parties as exhibits

    A, B and C, respectively.

    11. The parties may file affidavits or supplement but not

    alter the foregoing stipulation. Plaintiffs reserve the right to chal-

    lenge defendants' affidavits declarations with counter-affidavits

    or pursuant to F.R.C.P. 56.

    J.A. at 58-62.

    18

    land law sufficient to withstand Paladin's motion for summary judg-

    ment. For these reasons, which we fully explain below, the district

    court's grant of summary judgment in Paladin's favor is reversed and

    the case is remanded for trial.

    II.

    A.

    In the seminal case of Brandenburg v. Ohio , 395 U.S. 444 (1969),

    the Supreme Court held that abstract advocacy of lawlessness is pro-

    tected speech under the First Amendment. Although the Court pro-

    vided little explanation for this holding in its brief per curiam

    opinion, it is evident the Court recognized from our own history that

    such a right to advocate lawlessness is, almost paradoxically, one of

    the ultimate safeguards of liberty. Even in a society of laws, one of

    the most indispensable freedoms is that to express in the most impas-

    sioned terms the most passionate disagreement with the laws them-

    selves, the institutions of, and created by, law, and the individual

    officials with whom the laws and institutions are entrusted. Without

    the freedom to criticize that which constrains, there is no freedom at

    all.

    However, while even speech advocating lawlessness has long

    enjoyed protections under the First Amendment, it is equally well

    established that speech, which, in its effect, is tantamount to legiti-

    mately proscribable nonexpressive conduct, may itself be legitimately

    proscribed, punished, or regulated incidentally to the constitutional

    enforcement of generally applicable statutes. Cf . Cohen v. Cowles

    Media Co. , 501 U.S. 663, 669 (1991) (noting "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"). As

    no less a First Amendment absolutist than Justice Black wrote for the

    Supreme Court almost fifty years ago in Giboney v. Empire Storage

    & Ice Co. , in rejecting a First Amendment challenge to an injunction

    forbidding unionized distributors from picketing to force an illegal

    business arrangement:

    It rarely has been suggested that the constitutional free-

    dom for speech and press extends its immunity to speech or

    19

    writing used as an integral part of conduct in violation of a

    valid criminal statute. We reject the contention now. . . .

    . . .

    . . . It is true that the agreements and course of conduct

    here were as in most instances brought about through speak-

    ing or writing. But it has never been deemed an abridgment

    of freedom of speech or press to make a course of conduct

    illegal merely because the conduct was in part initiated, evi-

    denced, or carried out by means of language, either spoken,

    written, or printed. Such an expansive interpretation of the

    constitutional guaranties of speech and press would make it

    practically impossible ever to enforce laws against agree-

    ments in restraint of trade as well as many other agreements

    and conspiracies deemed injurious to society.

    336 U.S. 490, 498 , 502 (1949) (citations omitted). And as the Court

    more recently reaffirmed:

    Although agreements to engage in illegal conduct undoubt-

    edly possess some element of association, the State may ban

    such illegal agreements without trenching on any right of

    association protected by the First Amendment. The fact that

    such an agreement necessarily takes the form of words does

    not confer upon it, or upon the underlying conduct, the con-

    stitutional immunities that the First Amendment extends to

    speech. [W]hile a solicitation to enter into an agreement

    arguably crosses the sometimes hazy line distinguishing

    conduct from pure speech, such a solicitation, even though

    it may have an impact in the political arena, remains in

    essence an invitation to engage in an illegal exchange for

    private profit, and may properly be prohibited.

    Brown v. Hartlage , 456 U.S. 45, 55 (1982); see also Osborne v. Ohio ,

    495 U.S. 103, 110 (1990) (quoting Giboney , 336 U.S. at 498 ); New

    York v. Ferber , 458 U.S. 747, 761-62 (1982) (same); Ohralik v. Ohio

    State Bar Ass'n , 436 U.S. 447, 456 (1978) (quoting Giboney , 336

    U.S. at 502); National Organization for Women v. Operation Rescue ,

    37 F.3d 646, 656 (D.C. Cir. 1994) ("That `aiding and abetting' of an

    20

    illegal act may be carried out through speech is no bar to its illegal-

    ity."); United States v. Varani , 435 F.2d 758, 762 (6th Cir. 1970)

    ("[S]peech is not protected by the First Amendment when it is the

    very vehicle of the crime itself."); Laurence H. Tribe, American Con-

    stitutional Law 837 (2d ed. 1988) ("[T]he law need not treat differ-

    ently the crime of one man who sells a bomb to terrorists and that of

    another who publishes an instructional manual for terrorists on how

    to build their own bombs out of old Volkswagen parts.").

    Were the First Amendment to bar or to limit government regulation

    of such "speech brigaded with action," Brandenburg , 395 U.S. at 456  

    (Douglas, J., concurring), the government would be powerless to pro-

    tect the public from countless of even the most pernicious criminal

    acts and civil wrongs. See , e.g. , Model Penal Code § 223.4 (extortion

    or blackmail); id . § 240.2 (threats and other improper influences in

    official and political matters); id . § 241 (perjury and various cognate

    crimes); id . § 5.02 and § 2.06(3)(a)(i) (criminal solicitation); 18

    U.S.C. § 871 (threatening the life of the President); Model Penal Code

    § 5.03 (conspiracy); id . § 250.4 (harassment); id . § 224.1 (forgery); id .

    § 210.5(2) (successfully soliciting another to commit suicide); id .

    § 250.3 (false public alarms); and the like. As Professor Greenawalt

    succinctly summarized:

    The reasons of ordinary penal policy for covering com-

    municative efforts to carry out ordinary crimes are obvious,

    and the criminal law sensibly draws no distinction between

    communicative and other acts. Although assertions of fact

    generally fall within a principle of freedom of speech, what

    these sorts of factual statements contribute to the general

    understanding of listeners is minimal, and the justifications

    for free speech that apply to speakers do not reach commu-

    nications that are simply means to get a crime successfully

    committed.

    Greenawalt, Speech, Crime, and the Uses of Language at 85 (1989).

    In particular as it concerns the instant case, the speech-act doctrine

    has long been invoked to sustain convictions for aiding and abetting

    the commission of criminal offenses. Indeed, every court that has

    addressed the issue, including this court, has held that the First

    21

    Amendment does not necessarily pose a bar to liability for aiding and

    abetting a crime, even when such aiding and abetting takes the form

    of the spoken or written word.

    Thus, in a case indistinguishable in principle from that before us,

    the Ninth Circuit expressly held in United States v. Barnett , 667 F.2d

    835 (9th Cir. 1982), that the First Amendment does not provide pub-

    lishers a defense as a matter of law to charges of aiding and abetting

    a crime through the publication and distribution of instructions on

    how to make illegal drugs. In rejecting the publisher's argument that

    there could be no probable cause to believe that a crime had been

    committed because its actions were shielded by the First Amendment,

    and thus a fortiori there was no probable cause to support the search

    pursuant to which the drug manufacturing instructions were found,

    the Court of Appeals explicitly foreclosed a First Amendment defense

    not only to the search itself, but also to a later prosecution:

    To the extent . . . that Barnett appears to contend that he is

    immune from search or prosecution because he uses the

    printed word in encouraging and counseling others in the

    commission of a crime, we hold expressly that the first

    amendment does not provide a defense as a matter of law to

    such conduct.

    Id . at 843 (emphasis in original); see also id . at 842 ("The first

    amendment does not provide a defense to a criminal charge simply

    because the actor uses words to carry out his illegal purpose. Crimes,

    including that of aiding and abetting, frequently involve the use of

    speech as part of the criminal transaction."). The Ninth Circuit

    derided as a "specious syllogism" with "no support in the law" the

    publisher's argument that the First Amendment protected his sale of

    the instruction manual simply because the First Amendment protects

    the written word. Id . at 842.

    The principle of Barnett , that the provision of instructions that aid

    and abet another in the commission of a criminal offense is unpro-

    tected by the First Amendment, has been uniformly accepted, and the

    principle has been applied to the aiding and abetting of innumerable

    crimes.

    22

    Notably, then-Judge Kennedy, in express reliance upon Barnett ,

    invoked the principle in United States v. Freeman to sustain convic-

    tions for the aiding and abetting of tax fraud. 761 F.2d 549, 552-53

    (9th Cir. 1985), cert . denied , 476 U.S. 1120 (1986). In Freeman , the

    Ninth Circuit concluded that the defendant could be held criminally

    liable for counseling tax evasion at seminars held in protest of the tax

    laws, even though the speech that served as the predicate for the con-

    viction "spr[ang] from the anterior motive to effect political or social

    change." 761 F.2d at 551. Said the court:

    [T]he First Amendment is quite irrelevant if the intent of the

    actor and the objective meaning of the words used are so

    close in time and purpose to a substantive evil as to become

    part of the ultimate crime itself. In those instances, where

    speech becomes an integral part of the crime, a First

    Amendment defense is foreclosed even if the prosecution

    rests on words alone.

    Id . at 552 (citations omitted). Thus, the court held that a First Amend-

    ment instruction was required only for those counts as to which there

    was evidence that the speaker "directed his comments at the unfair-

    ness of the tax laws generally, without soliciting or counseling a vio-

    lation of the law in an immediate sense [and] made statements that,

    at least arguably, were of abstract generality, remote from advice to

    commit a specific criminal act." Id . at 551-52. For those counts as to

    which the defendant, through his speech, directly assisted in the prep-

    aration and review of false tax returns, the court held that the defen-

    dant was not entitled to a First Amendment instruction at all. Id . at

    552. See also United States v. Mendelsohn , 896 F.2d 1183, 1186 (9th

    Cir. 1990) (holding Brandenburg inapplicable to a conviction for con-

    spiring to transport and aiding and abetting the interstate transporta-

    tion of wagering paraphernalia, where defendants disseminated a

    computer program that assisted others to record and analyze bets on

    sporting events; program was "too instrumental in and intertwined

    with the performance of criminal activity to retain first amendment

    protection").

    Our own circuit, and every other circuit to address the issue, has

    likewise concluded that the First Amendment is generally inapplica-

    ble to charges of aiding and abetting violations of the tax laws. See ,

    23

    e.g. , United States v. Kelley , 769 F.2d 215 (4th Cir. 1985); United

    States v. Rowlee , 899 F.2d 1275 (2d Cir. 1990), cert . denied , 498 U.S.

    828 (1990); United States v. Moss , 604 F.2d 569 (8th Cir. 1979), cert .

    denied , 444 U.S. 1071 (1980); United States v. Buttorff , 572 F.2d 619,

    623-24 (8th Cir. 1978) (holding that tax evasion speeches were not

    subject to Brandenburg because, although they did not "incite the

    type of imminent lawless activity referred to in criminal syndicalism

    cases," they did "go beyond mere advocacy of tax reform"), cert .

    denied , 437 U.S. 906 (1978).

    Thus, in Kelley , we held that a defendant who "participate[d]" in

    the preparation of false tax forms for others by telling listeners "what

    to do and how to prepare the forms" and by supplying forms and

    materials was not entitled to the protections of the First Amendment,

    769 F.2d at 217, even though the defendant offered his advice in a

    meeting of a group concededly dedicated to the political belief "that

    the federal income tax is unconstitutional as applied to wages," id . at

    216. We observed, as the Ninth Circuit did with respect to the claim

    made in Barnett , that,

    [t]he claim of First Amendment protection of [Kelley's]

    speech is frivolous. His was no abstract criticism of income

    tax laws. His listeners were not urged to seek congressional

    action to exempt wages from income taxation. Instead, they

    were urged to file false returns, with every expectation that

    the advice would be heeded.

    The cloak of the First Amendment envelops critical, but

    abstract, discussions of existing laws, but lends no protec-

    tion to speech which urges the listeners to commit violations

    of current law. Brandenburg v. Ohio , 395 U.S. 444 , 89 S.

    Ct. 1827; United States v. Buttorff , 572 F.2d 619 (8th Cir.

    1978). It was no theoretical discussion of non-compliance

    with laws; action was urged; the advice was heeded, and

    false forms were filed.

    Kelley , 769 F.2d at 217. Analogously, we held in United States v.

    Fleschner , 98 F.3d 155 (4th Cir. 1996), cert . denied , 117 S. Ct. 2484

    (1997), that defendants who instructed and advised meeting attendees

    to file unlawful tax returns were not entitled to a First Amendment

    24

    jury instruction on the charge of conspiracy to defraud the United

    States of income tax revenue because "[t]he defendants' words and

    acts were not remote from the commission of the criminal acts." 98

    F.3d at 158-59.

    Indeed, as the Department of Justice recently advised Congress, the

    law is now well established that the First Amendment, and

    Brandenburg 's "imminence" requirement in particular, generally

    poses little obstacle to the punishment of speech that constitutes crim-

    inal aiding and abetting, because "culpability in such cases is prem-

    ised, not on defendants' `advocacy' of criminal conduct, but on

    defendants' successful efforts to assist others by detailing to them the

    means of accomplishing the crimes." Department of Justice, "Report

    on the Availability of Bombmaking Information, the Extent to Which

    Its Dissemination is Controlled by Federal Law, and the Extent to

    Which Such Dissemination May Be Subject to Regulation Consistent

    with the First Amendment to the United States Constitution" 37

    (April 1997) (footnote omitted) [ hereinafter "DOJ Report"]; see also

    id . ("[T]he question of whether criminal conduct is `imminent' is rele-

    vant for constitutional purposes only where, as in Brandenburg itself,

    the government attempts to restrict advocacy, as such."). 3 And, while

    _________________________________________________________________

    3 Congress, in the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of

    1996 ["the AEDPA"], Pub. L. No. 104-132, 110 Stat. 1214, 1297,

    required the Attorney General to conduct a study concerning, inter alia ,

    the extent to which there is available public access to materials instruct-

    ing on "how to make bombs, destructive devices, or weapons of mass

    destruction"; the application of then-existing federal laws to such materi-

    als; and the extent to which the First Amendment protects such materials

    and their private and commercial distribution. The statutory mandate to

    the Attorney General was prompted by legislation proposed by Senators

    Feinstein and Biden in the aftermath of the Oklahoma City bombing,

    which would criminalize the teaching or demonstration of the manufac-

    ture of explosive materials "if the person intends or knows that such

    explosive materials or information will likely be used for, or in further-

    ance of" specified criminal offenses.

    The AEDPA required the Attorney General to submit to the Congress

    a report on these subjects and to make that report available to the public.

    Recognizing that the exhaustive legal analysis set forth in that report was

    directly relevant to the issues pending before us, the parties jointly

    25

    there is considerably less authority on the subject, we assume that

    those speech acts which the government may criminally prosecute

    with little or no concern for the First Amendment, the government

    may likewise subject to civil penalty or make subject to private causes

    of action. Compare Garrison v. Louisiana , 379 U.S. 64 (1964)

    (applying the same "actual malice" standard to both criminal libel

    prosecutions and private defamation actions) with New York Times

    Co. v. Sullivan , 376 U.S. 254 (1964). Cf . Cohen , 501 U.S. 663 (find-

    ing in civil promissory estoppel case that First Amendment does not

    bar liability for newspaper's publication of confidential source's

    name); Zacchini v. Scripps-Howard Broadcasting Co. , 433 U.S. 562  

    (1977) (First Amendment does not bar liability for common law tort

    of unlawful appropriation of "right to publicity" where television sta-

    tion broadcast "human cannonball" act in its entirety without plain-

    tiff's authorization); Harper & Row, Publishers, Inc. v. Nation

    Enterprises , 471 U.S. 539 (1985) (rejecting First Amendment defense

    to copyright infringement action against magazine for printing unau-

    thorized presidential memoir excerpts). Even if this is not universally

    _________________________________________________________________

    moved for, and we granted them, permission to file the report with the

    court. The decision we reach today, which, as noted, was urged upon us

    by Attorney General Reno and the Department of Justice, follows from

    the principal conclusion reached by the Attorney General and the Depart-

    ment in that report:

    The First Amendment would impose substantial constraints on

    any attempt to proscribe indiscriminately the dissemination of

    bombmaking information. The government generally may not,

    except in rare circumstances, punish persons either for advocat-

    ing lawless action or for disseminating truthful information --

    including information that would be dangerous if used -- that

    such persons have obtained lawfully. However, the constitutional

    analysis is quite different where the government punishes speech

    that is an integral part of a transaction involving conduct the

    government otherwise is empowered to prohibit; such"speech

    acts" -- for instance, many cases of inchoate crimes such as aid-

    ing and abetting and conspiracy -- may be proscribed without

    much, if any, concern about the First Amendment, since it is

    merely incidental that such "conduct" takes the form of speech.

    DOJ Report at 2 (emphasis added).

    26

    so, we believe it must be true at least where the government's interest

    in preventing the particular conduct at issue is incontrovertibly com-

    pelling.

    B.

    We can envision only two possible qualifications to these general

    rules, neither of which, for reasons that we discuss more extensively

    below, is of special moment in the context of the particular aiding and

    abetting case before us.

    1.

    The first, which obviously would have practical import principally

    in the civil context, is that the First Amendment may, at least in cer-

    tain circumstances, superimpose upon the speech-act doctrine a

    heightened intent requirement in order that preeminent values under-

    lying that constitutional provision not be imperiled. See , e.g. , New

    York Times , 376 U.S. 254 ; cf . United States v. Aguilar , 515 U.S. 593 ,

    605 (1995) (rejecting defendant's First Amendment construction in

    part because "the statute here in question does not impose such a

    restriction [on the disclosure of wiretap authorizations] generally, but

    only upon those who disclose wiretap information` in order to

    [ob]struct, impede, or prevent' a wiretap interception" (emphasis

    added)); Haig v. Agee , 453 U.S. 280, 308-09 (1981) ("[The defen-

    dant's] disclosures, among other things, have the declared purpose of

    obstructing intelligence operations and the recruiting of intelligence

    personnel. They are clearly not protected by the Constitution."

    (emphasis added)); United States v. Featherston , 461 F.2d 1119, 1122

    (5th Cir. 1972) (rejecting First Amendment challenge to federal stat-

    ute criminalizing the teaching or demonstration of the making of any

    explosive device after construing statute to require"intent or knowl-

    edge that the information disseminated would be used in the further-

    ance of a civil disorder"), cert . denied , 409 U.S. 991 (1972); National

    Mobilization Committee to End the War in Viet Nam v. Foran , 411

    F.2d 934, 937 (7th Cir. 1969). That is, in order to prevent the punish-

    ment or even the chilling of entirely innocent, lawfully useful speech,

    the First Amendment may in some contexts stand as a bar to the

    imposition of liability on the basis of mere foreseeability or knowl-

    edge that the information one imparts could be misused for an imper-

    27

    missible purpose. Where it is necessary, such a limitation would meet

    the quite legitimate, if not compelling, concern of those who publish,

    broadcast, or distribute to large, undifferentiated audiences, that the

    exposure to suit under lesser standards would be intolerable. See dis-

    cussion infra , Part IV. At the same time, it would not relieve from lia-

    bility those who would, for profit or other motive, intentionally assist

    and encourage crime and then shamelessly seek refuge in the sanctu-

    ary of the First Amendment. Like our sister circuits, at the very least

    where a speaker -- individual or media -- acts with the purpose of

    assisting in the commission of crime, we do not believe that the First

    Amendment insulates that speaker from responsibility for his actions

    simply because he may have disseminated his message to a wide

    audience. See , e.g. , Barnett , 667 F.2d 835 (holding that drug manu-

    facturing instructions mailed to countless customers with whom the

    defendant had no personal contact could give rise to aiding and abet-

    ting conviction); Mendelsohn , 896 F.2d 1183 (holding that First

    Amendment did not forbid prosecution of aiding and abetting inter-

    state transportation of wagering paraphernalia where computer pro-

    grams for recording and analyzing illegal wagers were distributed

    generally and widely to the public); Buttorff , 572 F.2d at 622-23

    (affirming, despite First Amendment challenges, convictions for pro-

    viding tax-evasion information at "large public gatherings" to partici-

    pants whom the defendants did not personally meet); Kelley , 769 F.2d

    215 (similar); Moss , 604 F.2d 569 (similar); Freeman , 761 F.2d 549

    (similar). This is certainly so, we are satisfied, where not only the

    speaker's dissemination or marketing strategy, but the nature of the

    speech itself, strongly suggest that the audience both targeted and

    actually reached is, in actuality, very narrowly confined, as in the case

    before us. See discussion infra at 39-44. Were the First Amendment

    to offer protection even in these circumstances, one could publish, by

    traditional means or even on the internet, the necessary plans and

    instructions for assassinating the President, for poisoning a city's

    water supply, for blowing up a skyscraper or public building, or for

    similar acts of terror and mass destruction, with the specific, indeed

    even the admitted, purpose of assisting such crimes -- all with impu-

    nity.

    We need not engage in an extended discussion of the existence or

    scope of an intent-based limitation today, however, because we are

    confident that the First Amendment poses no bar to the imposition of

    28

    civil (or criminal) liability for speech acts which the plaintiff (or the

    prosecution) can establish were undertaken with specific, if not crimi-

    nal, intent. See DOJ Report at 42-43 (advising that "the government

    may punish publication of dangerous instructional information where

    that publication is motivated by a desire to facilitate the unlawful

    [conduct as to which the instructions inform, or] [a]t the very least,

    publication with such an improper intent should not be constitution-

    ally protected where it is foreseeable that the publication will be used

    for criminal purposes . . . ."). In fact, this conclusion would seem to

    follow a fortiori from the Supreme Court's holding in New York

    Times , 376 U.S. 254 , allowing the imposition of civil tort liability on

    a media defendant for reputational injury caused by mere reckless dis-

    regard of the truth of its published statements. And, here, as previ-

    ously noted, see also discussion infra at 37-38, Paladin has stipulated

    that it provided its assistance to Perry with both the knowledge and

    the intent that the book would immediately be used by criminals and

    would-be criminals in the solicitation, planning, and commission of

    murder and murder for hire, and even absent the stipulations, a jury

    could reasonably find such specific intent, see discussion infra at 38-

    42. Thus, Paladin has stipulated to an intent, and a jury could other-

    wise reasonably find that Paladin acted with a kind and degree of

    intent, that would satisfy any heightened standard that might be

    required by the First Amendment prerequisite to the imposition of lia-

    bility for aiding and abetting through speech conduct. 4

    2.

    The second qualification is that the First Amendment might well

    (and presumably would) interpose the same or similar limitations

    upon the imposition of civil liability for abstract advocacy, without

    more, that it interposes upon the imposition of criminal punishment

    for such advocacy. In other words, the First Amendment might well

    circumscribe the power of the state to create and enforce a cause of

    _________________________________________________________________

    4 In addition to their aiding and abetting counts, which require that Pal-

    adin have acted knowingly or intentionally, the plaintiffs also brought

    claims sounding inter alia in negligence and strict liability. The district

    court did not address these claims and we do not do so herein. We leave

    to the district court on remand the task of addressing these counts in the

    first instance.

    29

    action that would permit the imposition of civil liability, such as aid-

    ing and abetting civil liability, for speech that would constitute pure

    abstract advocacy, at least if that speech were not "directed to inciting

    or producing imminent lawless action, and . . . likely to incite or pro-

    duce such action." Brandenburg , 395 U.S. at 447 . The instances in

    which such advocacy might give rise to civil liability under state stat-

    ute would seem rare, but they are not inconceivable. Cf . Schenck v.

    United States , 249 U.S. 47 (1919) (criminal conspiracy prosecution

    predicated upon subversive advocacy); Frohwerk v. United States ,

    249 U.S. 204 (1919) (same); Debs v. United States , 249 U.S. 211  

    (1919) (criminal attempt prosecution predicated upon such advocacy).

    Again, however, an exhaustive analysis of this likely limitation is not

    required in this case.

    Here, it is alleged, and a jury could reasonably find, see discussion

    infra Part III.A, that Paladin aided and abetted the murders at issue

    through the quintessential speech act of providing step-by-step

    instructions for murder (replete with photographs, diagrams, and nar-

    ration) so comprehensive and detailed that it is as if the instructor

    were literally present with the would-be murderer not only in the

    preparation and planning, but in the actual commission of, and

    follow-up to, the murder; there is not even a hint that the aid was pro-

    vided in the form of speech that might constitute abstract advocacy.

    As the district court itself concluded, Hit Man "merely teaches what

    must be done to implement a professional hit." J.A. at 218. Moreover,

    although we do not believe such would be necessary, we are satisfied

    a jury could readily find that the provided instructions not only have

    no, or virtually no, noninstructional communicative value, but also

    that their only instructional communicative "value" is the indisputably

    illegitimate one of training persons how to murder and to engage in

    the business of murder for hire. See id .; see also id . at 221 ("This

    Court, quite candidly, personally finds Hit Man to be reprehensible

    and devoid of any significant redeeming social value").

    Aid and assistance in the form of this kind of speech bears no

    resemblance to the "theoretical advocacy," Scales v. United States ,

    367 U.S. 203, 235 (1961), the advocacy of "principles divorced from

    action," Yates v. United States , 354 U.S. 298, 320 (1957), overruled

    on other grounds , Burks v. United States , 437 U.S. 1 (1978), the

    "doctrinal justification," id . at 321,"the mere abstract teaching [of]

    30

    the moral propriety or even moral necessity for a resort to force and

    violence," Brandenburg , 395 U.S. at 448 ( quoting Noto v. United

    States , 367 U.S. 290, 297-98 (1961)), or any of the other forms of dis-

    course critical of government, its policies, and its leaders, which have

    always animated, and to this day continue to animate, the First

    Amendment. Indeed, this detailed, focused instructional assistance to

    those contemplating or in the throes of planning murder is the antithe-

    sis of speech protected under Brandenburg . It is the teaching of the

    "techniques" of violence, Scales , 367 U.S. at 233 , the "advocacy and

    teaching of concrete action," Yates , 354 U.S. at 320 , the "prepar[a-

    tion] . . . for violent action and [the] steeling . . . to such action,"

    Brandenburg , 395 U.S. at 448 ( quoting Noto , 367 U.S. at 297 -98). It

    is the instruction in the methods of terror of which Justice Douglas

    spoke in Dennis v. United States , when he said, "If this were a case

    where those who claimed protection under the First Amendment were

    teaching the techniques of sabotage . . . I would have no doubts. The

    freedom to speak is not absolute; the teaching of methods of terror . . .

    should be beyond the pale . . . ." 341 U.S. 494, 581 (1951) (Douglas,

    J., dissenting). As such, the murder instructions in Hit Man are, col-

    lectively, a textbook example of the type of speech that the Supreme

    Court has quite purposely left unprotected, and the prosecution of

    which, criminally or civilly, has historically been thought subject to

    few, if any, First Amendment constraints. Accordingly, we hold that

    the First Amendment does not pose a bar to the plaintiffs' civil aiding

    and abetting cause of action against Paladin Press. If, as precedent

    uniformly confirms, the states have the power to regulate speech that

    aids and abets crime, then certainly they have the power to regulate

    the speech at issue here.

    III.

    The district court's contrary conclusion, reached in an initial and

    then an amended opinion, must be attributed ultimately, we believe,

    to that court's failure at the time of its initial ruling to realize that

    Maryland does recognize a civil cause of action for aiding and abet-

    ting. Once the court's error with respect to the existence in Maryland

    of a civil aiding and abetting cause of action was brought to the

    court's attention by the parties on motion for reconsideration, it

    appears that the court was simply unprepared to revisit its decision,

    issued only the week before, in order to address the above-discussed

    31

    cases, which the district court itself had observed are "factually simi-

    lar" to the case at hand, J.A. at 156, but which the court had distin-

    guished on the ground that they involved criminal prosecutions for

    aiding and abetting and Maryland does not provide a civil cause of

    action for aiding and abetting. J.A. at 155 ("Plaintiffs are asking the

    Court to allow the Defendants to be subjected to civil liability for

    murder, based on a theory of civil aiding and abetting - a claim that

    does not exist under Maryland law ." (emphases added)). Perhaps

    ironically, this unwillingness foreordained what was, as we explain

    below, the district court's second error in the interpretation of Mary-

    land law -- its holding, on reconsideration, that Maryland would not

    recognize aiding and abetting liability under the facts as stipulated by

    the parties to this litigation, or on the facts as they appear from the

    record.

    Whatever doubts the district court may have harbored about its

    interpretation of Maryland aiding and abetting law were almost cer-

    tainly eased because it concluded alternatively (albeit in dicta ) that

    Hit Man is entitled to the protections of Brandenburg in any event

    because it is a mere instructional manual for, and not an incitement

    to, murder. However, in this conclusion the district court erred as

    well, misunderstanding the Supreme Court's decision in Brandenburg

    to protect not just abstract advocacy of lawlessness and the open criti-

    cism of government and its institutions, but also the teaching of the

    technical methods of criminal activity -- in this case, the technical

    methods of murder.

    A.

    In its initial memorandum opinion, the district court rejected the

    plaintiffs' principal argument, that the First Amendment does not bar

    the imposition of liability for the aiding and abetting of murder, on

    the ground that the State of Maryland does not recognize a civil cause

    of action for aiding and abetting:

    Plaintiffs argue that Hit Man is not protected by the First

    Amendment because the First Amendment does not protect

    communication aiding and abetting murder. This argument

    must fail, however, because Plaintiffs do not cite, nor has

    the Court located, any reported decision that suggests that

    32

    Maryland recognizes the tort of aiding and abetting. A fed-

    eral court sitting in diversity cannot create new causes of

    action. Therefore, the Court cannot create a cause of action

    for aiding and abetting under Maryland law . . . .

    J.A. at 153-54 (footnote and citations omitted). In response to submis-

    sions by both parties filed the very next day informing the court that

    Maryland does recognize civil aiding and abetting, the district court

    was obliged to amend its memorandum opinion to acknowledge the

    overwhelming authority that Maryland does, in fact, recognize such

    a cause of action. However, rather than address then the numerous

    precedents holding that the First Amendment offers little protection

    against claims of aiding and abetting criminal conduct, which in its

    initial opinion the court had agreed were similar to the instant case,

    the district court thereafter merely added to its original memorandum

    opinion the single conclusory footnote sentence (together with the

    necessary conforming changes to the relevant paragraph from its ini-

    tial opinion 5 ) that, "[a]lthough Maryland appears to recognize aider

    and abetter tort liability, it has never been applied to support liability

    in this context." J.A. at 205 n.2 (internal citation deleted). 6 In this

    _________________________________________________________________

    5 Thus, in relevant part, the amended opinion reads as follows:

    Plaintiffs argue that Hit Man is not protected by the First

    Amendment because the First Amendment does not protect com-

    munication aiding and abetting murder. This argument, the Court

    believes, fails, however, because of the absence of any reported

    decision suggesting that Maryland extends the tort of aiding and

    abetting to the circumstances of this case. A federal court sitting

    in diversity cannot create new causes of action. Therefore, the

    Court cannot apply a new theory or extend the tort of aiding and

    abetting under Maryland law . . . .

    J.A. at 205-06 (footnote and citations omitted; emphases added). As evi-

    dence of the haste with which the revised analysis was undertaken, the

    amended opinion elsewhere still includes a statement of the district

    court's initial conclusion that Maryland does not provide a civil cause of

    action for aiding and abetting. See id . at 207 ("Plaintiffs are asking the

    Court to allow the Defendants to be subjected to civil liability for mur-

    der, based on a theory of civil aiding and abetting - a claim that does not

    exist under Maryland law.").

    6 The issue of whether, under the stipulated facts, Paladin could be held

    liable for aiding and abetting under Maryland law was not even before

    33

    holding, as with its original holding that Maryland did not recognize

    a cause of action for civil aiding and abetting, the district court erred.

    Maryland's highest court has held that a defendant may be liable

    in tort if he "by any means (words, signs, or motions) encourage[s],

    incite[s], aid[s] or abet[s] the act of the direct perpetrator of the tort."

    Alleco Inc. v. Harry & Jeanette Weinberg Foundation , 340 Md. 176,

    665 A.2d 1038, 1049 (1995) ( quoting Duke v. Feldman , 245 Md. 454,

    226 A.2d 345, 347 (1967)). It further appears that generally Maryland

    defines the tort of aiding and abetting in the same way that it defines

    the crime of aiding and abetting. The state defines"aider" as one who

    "assist[s], support[s] or supplement[s] the efforts of another," and

    defines "abettor" as "one who instigates, advises or encourages the

    commission of a crime." Anello v. State , 201 Md. 164, 93 A.2d 71,

    72-73 (Md. 1952). The Court of Appeals has explained that in order

    for a conviction to stand, "it is not essential that there be a prear-

    ranged concert of action, although, in the absence of such action, it

    is essential that [the defendant] should in some way advocate or

    encourage the commission of the crime." Id . And, recently, the court

    has reiterated that criminal aiding and abetting "may be predicated

    upon counseling or encouraging" a criminal act, even if there is no

    agreement between the principal and the aider or abettor, and also that

    "[i]t is well settled that aiding and abetting does not always require

    a conspiracy." Apostoledes v. State , 323 Md. 456, 593 A.2d 1117,

    1121 (1991).

    The primary, and possibly only, difference between Maryland's

    civil and criminal laws of aiding and abetting is the intent require-

    ment. As Judge Learned Hand explained in discussing generally the

    difference between civil and criminal aiding and abetting laws, the

    intent standard in the civil tort context requires only that the criminal

    conduct be the "natural consequence of [one's] original act," whereas

    criminal intent to aid and abet requires that the defendant have a "pur-

    ________________________________________________________________

    the district court. In fact, the parties had expressly stipulated that "[t]he

    parties agree that the sole issue to be decided by the Court in this motion

    is whether the First Amendment is a complete defense, as a matter of

    law, to the civil action set forth in the plaintiffs' Complaint. All other

    issues of law and fact are specifically reserved for subsequent proceed-

    ings." J.A. 58-59.

    34

    posive attitude" toward the commission of the offense. United States

    v. Peoni , 100 F.2d 401, 402 (2d Cir. 1938); see also Nye & Nissen

    v. United States , 336 U.S. 613, 619 (1949) (adopting Judge Hand's

    view of the criminal intent requirement). We assume that Maryland

    prescribes a higher intent standard for the imposition of criminal lia-

    bility than it does for civil liability.

    Especially in light of the caselaw discussed above, we are satisfied

    not only that the Maryland courts would conclude that an aiding and

    abetting cause of action would lie in the circumstances of this case,

    but also that plaintiffs have, by way of stipulation and otherwise,

    established a genuine issue of material fact as to each element of that

    cause of action. Perhaps most importantly in this regard, we conclude

    that plaintiffs have more than met their burden of establishing a genu-

    ine issue of material fact as to Paladin's intent, even assuming that the

    First Amendment erects a heightened standard from that required

    under Maryland state law.

    Paladin itself has stipulated that "Perry followed a number of

    instructions outlined in Hit Man " in preparing for and in murdering

    Mildred and Trevor Horn and Janice Saunders. J.A. at 61. In fact, as

    noted, the publisher has actually stipulated that it assisted Perry in the

    "perpetration of the murders." Id .

    Even without these express stipulations of assistance, however, a

    reasonable jury could conclude that Paladin assisted Perry in those

    murders, from the facts that Perry purchased and possessed Hit Man

    and that the methods and tactics he employed in his murders of Mil-

    dred and Trevor Horn and Janice Saunders so closely paralleled those

    prescribed in the book. As discussed above, see discussion supra Part

    I, Perry followed, in painstaking detail, countless of the book's

    instructions in soliciting, preparing for, and carrying out his murders.

    Without repeating these in detail here, Perry faithfully followed the

    book's instructions in making a home-made silencer, using a rental

    car with stolen out-of-state tags, murdering the victims in their own

    home, using an AR-7 rifle to shoot the victims in the eyes from point

    blank range, and concealing his involvement in the murders. The

    number and extent of these parallels to the instructions in Hit Man

    cannot be consigned, as a matter of law, to mere coincidence; the cor-

    respondence of techniques at least creates a jury issue as to whether

    35

    the book provided substantial assistance, if it does not conclusively

    establish such assistance.

    A jury likewise could reasonably find that Perry was encouraged

    in his murderous acts by Paladin's book. Hit Man does not merely

    detail how to commit murder and murder for hire; through powerful

    prose in the second person and imperative voice, it encourages its

    readers in their specific acts of murder. It reassures those contemplat-

    ing the crime that they may proceed with their plans without fear of

    either personal failure or punishment. And at every point where the

    would-be murderer might yield either to reason or to reservations, Hit

    Man emboldens the killer, confirming not only that he should pro-

    ceed, but that he must proceed, if he is to establish his manhood. See

    discussion infra at 54-56. The book is so effectively written that its

    protagonist seems actually to be present at the planning, commission,

    and cover-up of the murders the book inspires. Illustrative of the

    nature and duration of the criminal partnership established between

    Hit Man and its readers who murder is the following "dialogue" that

    takes place when the murderer returns from his first killing:

    I'm sure your emotions have run full scale over the past few

    days or weeks.

    There was a fleeting moment just before you pulled the

    trigger when you wondered if lightning would strike you

    then and there. And afterwards, a short burst of panic as you

    looked quickly around you to make sure no witnesses were

    lurking.

    But other than that, you felt absolutely nothing . And you

    are shocked by that nothingness. You had expected this

    moment to be a spectacular point in your life. . . .

    The first few seconds of nothingness give you an almost

    uncontrollable urge to laugh out loud. You break into a wide

    grin. Everything you have been taught about life and its

    value was a fallacy.

    Hit Man at 107. As this and other cases reveal, the book is arrestingly

    effective in the accomplishment of its objectives of counseling others

    to murder and assisting them in its commission and cover-up.

    36

    Finally, and significantly, Paladin also has stipulated to an intent

    that readily satisfies that required under Maryland law or the First

    Amendment. Even if the First Amendment imposes a heightened

    intent-based limitation on the state's ability to apply the tort of aiding

    and abetting to speech, see discussion supra at II.B.1, we are confi-

    dent that, at the very least, the aiding and abetting of a malum in se

    crime such as murder with the specific purpose of assisting and

    encouraging another or others in that crime would satisfy such a limi-

    tation. Paladin has stipulated not only that it had knowledge that its

    publication would be used upon receipt by murderers and other crimi-

    nals in the commission of murder, but that it even intended that the

    book be so used. Thus, the publisher stipulated, "defendants intended

    and had knowledge that their publications would be used, upon

    receipt, by criminals and would-be criminals to plan and execute the

    crime of murder for hire." J.A. at 59. Paladin has even stipulated that

    it "engaged in a marketing strategy intended to attract and assist crim-

    inals and would-be criminals who desire information and instructions

    on how to commit crimes." Id . These stipulations are more than suffi-

    cient to foreclose an absolute First Amendment defense to plaintiffs'

    suit. See DOJ Report at 43 & 44-45 n.71 ("[W]e believe that the dis-

    trict court in Rice v. Paladin erred insofar as it concluded that

    Brandenburg bars liability for dissemination of[instructions on mur-

    der] regardless of the publisher's intent. . . . [Defendant Paladin's]

    concession[s] would, for purposes of summary judgment, seem to

    foreclose a constitutional defense . . .").

    The district court was never required to consider the intent require-

    ment under Maryland's law of aiding and abetting, much less whether

    the First Amendment imposes a heightened intent standard in the con-

    text of authorizing liability for speech acts, because of its mistaken

    conclusion that Maryland does not recognize a civil cause of action

    for aiding and abetting. In analogizing this case to the copycat cases

    (and seemingly in order to permit the analogy), however, the district

    court accepted Paladin's post hoc "clarification" that it meant by its

    stipulation only that it was reasonably foreseeable to the publisher

    that, once the book was published and publicly available, it would be

    used by murderers to plan and to commit murder. Thus, in accepting

    the defendants' belated clarification, the district court said:

    Defendants conceded that they intended that their publica-

    tions would be used by criminals to plan and execute murder

    37

    as instructed in the manual. . . . However, Defendants clarify

    their concession by explaining that when they published,

    advertised and distributed both Hit Man and Silencers , they

    knew, and in that sense "intended," that the books would be

    purchased by all of the categories of readers previously

    described and used by them for the broad range of purposes

    previously described.

    J.A. at 215-16 (citations omitted). Of course, the district court was

    without authority to allow Paladin to alter the parties' stipulation uni-

    laterally, particularly given that Paladin was the party moving for

    summary judgment. If anything, the stipulation should have been, and

    in any event must now be, interpreted in the light most favorable to

    the plaintiffs.

    Furthermore, even if the stipulation only established knowledge,

    summary judgment was yet inappropriate because a trier of fact could

    still conclude that Paladin acted with the requisite intent to support

    civil liability. Wholly apart from Paladin's stipulations, there are four

    bases upon which, collectively, if perhaps not individually, a reason-

    able jury could find that Paladin possessed the intent required under

    Maryland law, as well as the intent required under any heightened

    First Amendment standard. Compare DOJ Report, at 45 n.71 ("[E]ven

    assuming arguendo that the defendants' own construction of the

    `intent' stipulation were correct, that still would not justify the grant

    of summary judgment, since it would leave unanswered the question

    whether Paladin also had the specific purpose of facilitating mur-

    der.").

    First, the declared purpose of Hit Man itself is to facilitate murder.

    Consistent with its declared purpose, the book is subtitled "A Techni-

    cal Manual for Independent Contractors," and it unabashedly

    describes itself as "an instruction book on murder," Hit Man at ix. A

    jury need not, but plainly could, conclude from such prominent and

    unequivocal statements of criminal purpose that the publisher who

    disseminated the book intended to assist in the achievement of that

    purpose.

    Second, the book's extensive, decided, and pointed promotion of

    murder is highly probative of the publisher's intent, and may be con-

    38

    sidered as such, whether or not that promotion, standing alone, could

    serve as the basis for liability consistent with the First Amendment.

    See Wisconsin v. Mitchell , 508 U.S. 476, 489 (1993) ("The First

    Amendment . . . does not prohibit the evidentiary use of speech to

    establish the elements of a crime or to prove motive or intent."); cf .

    Noto , 367 U.S. at 299 . 7 After carefully and repeatedly reading Hit

    Man in its entirety, we are of the view that the book so overtly pro-

    motes murder in concrete, nonabstract terms that we regard as distur-

    bingly disingenuous both Paladin's cavalier suggestion that the book

    is essentially a comic book whose "fantastical" promotion of murder

    no one could take seriously, and amici 's reckless characterization of

    the book as "almost avuncular," see Br. of Amici at 8-9. The unique

    text of Hit Man alone, boldly proselytizing and glamorizing the crime

    of murder and the "profession" of murder as it dispassionately

    instructs on its commission, is more than sufficient to create a triable

    issue of fact as to Paladin's intent in publishing and selling the man-

    ual.

    Third, Paladin's marketing strategy would more than support a

    finding of the requisite intent. Cf . Direct Sales v. United States , 319

    U.S. 703, 712-13 (1943) (holding that jury may infer intent to assist

    a criminal operation based upon a drug distributor's marketing strat-

    egy). It is known through Paladin's stipulations that it "engaged in a

    marketing strategy intended to attract and assist criminals and would-

    be criminals who desire information and instructions on how to com-

    mit crimes." J.A. at 59. But an inference as to such a strategy would

    be permitted from Paladin's catalogue advertisement of Hit Man . The

    _________________________________________________________________

    7 Cf . DOJ Report at 30 & n.47 (citations omitted) ("Insofar as publica-

    tion of [bombmaking] manuals were criminalized on account of those

    manuals' advocacy of unlawful conduct, such a prohibition almost cer-

    tainly could not pass constitutional muster. The First Amendment would

    not, however, prohibit the evidentiary use of such advocacy to demon-

    strate a disseminator's intent in conveying bombmaking information .

    Therefore, insofar as criminal culpability for dissemination of such infor-

    mation depends upon the distributors' intent -- for example, upon

    whether a disseminator of bombmaking manuals had the conscious pur-

    pose of helping others to use the information to engage in unlawful con-

    duct -- the substance of the advocacy in such manuals could be used as

    material evidence of such intent.").

    39

    publisher markets the book as follows, invoking a disclaimer which,

    the district court's characterization notwithstanding, a jury could

    readily find to be transparent sarcasm designed to intrigue and entice:

    Learn how a pro gets assignments, creates a false identity,

    makes a disposable silencer, leaves the scene without a

    trace, watches his mark unobserved and more. Feral reveals

    how to get in, do the job and get out without getting caught.

    For academic study only!

    Paladin Press Catalog, Vol. 26, No. 2 at 41 (emphasis in original). See

    also infra note 10. From this statement by the publisher in its own

    promotional sales catalogue, a jury could conclude that Paladin mar-

    keted Hit Man directly and even primarily to murderers and would-be

    criminals, and, from this permissible conclusion, in turn conclude that

    Paladin possessed the requisite intent necessary to support liability.

    Certainly, such a conclusion would be reasonable based upon this

    promotional description coupled with the singular character of Hit

    Man , which is so narrowly focused in its subject matter and presenta-

    tion as to be effectively targeted exclusively to criminals. In other

    words, despite the fact that Paladin may technically offer the book for

    sale to all comers, we are satisfied that a jury could, based upon Hit

    Man 's seemingly exclusive purpose to assist murderers in the com-

    mission of murder, reasonably conclude that Paladin essentially dis-

    tributed Hit Man only to murderers and would-be murderers -- that

    its conduct was not, at least in law, different from that of a publisher

    (or anyone else) who delivered Hit Man to a specific person or group

    of persons whom the publisher knew to be interested in murder. And

    even Paladin effectively concedes that it could be liable were such a

    finding permissibly made. Paladin's Memorandum in Support of

    Summary Judgment at 33 n.24.

    A conclusion that Paladin directed Hit Man to a discrete group

    rather than to the public at large would be supported, even if not

    established, by the evidence that Hit Man is not generally available

    or sold to the public from the bookshelves of local bookstores, but,

    rather, is obtainable as a practical matter only by catalogue. Paladin

    Press is a mail order company, and for the most part does not sell

    books through retail outlets. In order to procure a copy of Hit Man ,

    40

    the prospective reader must first obtain a copy of Paladin's catalogue,

    typically by completing a request form reprinted in one of Paladin's

    advertisements in specialized magazines such as Soldier of Fortune .

    After obtaining that catalogue, the reader must scan the list of book

    titles and read the accompanying descriptions. Once the reader finds

    the book he desires, he must then complete and mail another form to

    order the book.

    From the requirements of this process, together with the book's

    character, a jury need not, but could, permissibly find that Hit Man

    is not at all distributed to the general public and that, instead, it is

    available only to a limited, self-selected group of people interested in

    learning from and being trained by a self-described professional killer

    in various methods of killing for money, individuals who are then

    contemplating or highly susceptible to the commission of murder.

    Finally, a jury could reasonably conclude that Paladin specifically

    intended to assist Perry and similar murderers by finding, contrary to

    Paladin's demurs, as would we, that Hit Man 's only genuine use is

    the unlawful one of facilitating such murders. 8 Cf . J.A. at 221 (obser-

    vation by district court that Hit Man is "devoid of any significant

    redeeming social value"). Although before us Paladin attempts to

    hypothesize lawful purposes for Hit Man , and it would doubtless

    advance the same hypotheses before a jury, at some point hypotheses

    are so implausible as to be deserving of little or no weight. The likeli-

    hood that Hit Man actually is, or would be, used in the legitimate

    manners hypothesized by Paladin is sufficiently remote that a jury

    could quite reasonably reject them altogether as alternative uses for

    the book. If there is a publication that could be found to have no other

    use than to facilitate unlawful conduct, then this would be it, so

    devoid is the book of any political, social, entertainment, or other

    legitimate discourse. Cf . Miller v. California , 413 U.S. 15 (1973) (dis-

    tinguishing obscene from nonobscene material in part on basis of

    "whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic,

    _________________________________________________________________

    8 Paladin contends that plaintiffs have stipulated "that the defendant's

    book has substantial informational value unrelated to the facilitation of

    crime." Appellee's Br. at 29 (footnote omitted). But they have not; they

    have stipulated only that Paladin's "marketing strategy" was intended to

    reach audiences beyond criminals and would-be criminals. J.A. at 60.

    41

    political, or scientific value"). Thus, for example, a jury would cer-

    tainly not be unreasonable in dismissing (in fact, it arguably would be

    unreasonable in accepting) Paladin's contention that Hit Man has sig-

    nificant social value in that the book, in the course of instructing mur-

    derers how to murder, incidentally informs law enforcement on the

    techniques that the book's readers will likely employ in the commis-

    sion of their murders. Likewise, a reasonable jury could simply refuse

    to accept Paladin's contention that this purely factual, instructional

    manual on murder has entertainment value to law-abiding citizens.

    And, just as a permissible inference as to Paladin's marketing strategy

    would be supportable by evidence as to the specialized process by

    which one acquires Hit Man , either of these conclusions as to the

    absence of lawful purpose could be reinforced by the same evidence.

    In summary, a reasonable jury clearly could conclude from the

    stipulations of the parties, and, apart from the stipulations, from the

    text of Hit Man itself and the other facts of record, that Paladin aided

    and abetted in Perry's triple murder by providing detailed instructions

    on the techniques of murder and murder for hire with the specific

    intent of aiding and abetting the commission of these violent crimes.

    B.

    Any argument that Hit Man is abstract advocacy entitling the book,

    and therefore Paladin, to heightened First Amendment protection

    under Brandenburg is, on its face, untenable. Although the district

    court erred in its alternative conclusion that the speech of Hit Man is

    protected advocacy, see discussion infra at III.B.2, even that court

    expressly found that "the book merely teaches what must be done to

    implement a professional hit." J.A. at 217-18; id . at 218 n.4 (discuss-

    ing "instructive nature" of book). Indeed, Paladin's protests notwith-

    standing, this book constitutes the archetypal example of speech

    which, because it methodically and comprehensively prepares and

    steels its audience to specific criminal conduct through exhaustively

    detailed instructions on the planning, commission, and concealment

    of criminal conduct, finds no preserve in the First Amendment. To the

    extent that confirmation of this is even needed, given the book's con-

    tent and declared purpose to be "an instruction book on murder," Hit

    Man at ix, that confirmation is found in the stark contrast between this

    42

    assassination manual and the speech heretofore held to be deserving

    of constitutional protection.

    1.

    Through its stipulation that it intended Hit Man to be used by crim-

    inals and would-be criminals to commit murder for hire in accor-

    dance with the book's instructions , Paladin all but concedes that,

    through those instructions, Hit Man prepares and steels its readers to

    commit the crime of murder for hire. But even absent the publisher's

    stipulations, it is evident from even a casual examination of the book

    that the prose of Hit Man is at the other end of the continuum from

    the ideation at the core of the advocacy protected by the First Amend-

    ment.

    The cover of Hit Man states that readers of the book will "[l]earn

    how a pro makes a living at this craft [of murder] without landing

    behind bars" and,

    how he gets hit assignments, creates a false working iden-

    tity, makes a disposable silencer, leaves the scene without

    a trace of evidence, watches his mark unobserved, and more

    . . . how to get in, do the job, and get out -- without getting

    caught.

    In the first pages of its text, Hit Man promises, consistent with its title

    as "A Technical Manual for Independent Contractors," that the book

    will prepare the reader, step by step, to commit murder for hire:

    Within the pages of this book you will learn one of the most

    successful methods of operation used by an independent

    contractor. You will follow the procedures of a man who

    works alone, without backing of organized crime or on a

    personal vendetta. Step by step you will be taken from

    research to equipment selection to job preparation to suc-

    cessful job completion. You will learn where to find

    employment, how much to charge, and what you can, and

    cannot , do with the money you earn.

    43

    But deny your urge to skip about, looking for the "good"

    parts. Start where any amateur who is serious about turning

    professional will start--at the beginning.

    Hit Man at x-xi (emphasis in original). And, faithful to these prom-

    ises, in the successive chapters of the 130 pages that follow, Hit Man

    systematically and in meticulous detail instructs on the gruesome par-

    ticulars of every possible aspect of murder and murder for hire. The

    manual instructs step-by-step on building and using fertilizer bombs,

    constructing silencers, picking locks, selecting and using poisons,

    sinking corpses, and torturing victims. It teaches would-be assassins

    how to arrive at, and conduct surveillance of, a potential victim's

    house, and it instructs on the use of a fake driver's license and regis-

    tration at a motel, the placement of stolen out-of-state license plates

    on rental cars, and the deception of the postal service into delivering

    weapons to the murder scene. The book instructs the reader in murder

    methods, explaining in dispassionate and excruciatingly graphic detail

    how to shoot, stab, poison, and incinerate people, and in gory detail

    it expounds on which methods of murder will best ensure the death

    of the victims. The book schools the reader on how to escape the

    crime scene without detection, and how to foil police investigations

    by disassembling and discarding the murder weapon, altering the bal-

    listics markings of that weapon, stealing and switching license plates,

    and disguising the reader's physical appearance. And it counsels on

    how to manipulate the legal system, if caught.

    At the risk of belaboring the obvious, but in order to appreciate the

    encyclopedic character of Hit Man 's instructions, one need only con-

    sider the following chapter-by-chapter synopsis.

    Chapter One of Hit Man , entitled "The Beginning -- Mental and

    Physical Preparation," starts by outlining the"essential" steps to

    becoming a professional killer. Hit Man at 9. The book urges the

    reader to read other books from publishers such as Paladin Press, but

    it cautions that "[b]ooks on subjects related to the professional hit

    man are hard to find [and that] there are[only] a few publishers out

    there who have the backbone to provide those . . . who take life seri-

    ously with the necessary educational materials." Hit Man at 9-10. The

    book goes on to recommend that one read articles in magazines such

    as Soldier of Fortune , and military newsletters in order to "[s]tay

    44

    abreast of new trends and developments [in weapons and techniques

    of killing] as well as new gadgets and inventions as they become

    available." Hit Man at 9. It also encourages the reader to comb fic-

    tional accounts of murder, on the off chance that, for example, "the

    warped imagination of a fiction writer will point out an obvious but

    somehow never before realized method of pacification or body dis-

    posal." Id . at 10. It instructs its readers to study their local newspapers

    carefully "to see who in your area might be your next employer . . .

    or victim," and to use the classified advertisements, among other

    things, to find "new toys and pick them up from private owners to

    avoid registering your weapons." Id . The book provides in-depth

    advice on using a variety of publicly available reference materials to

    locate weapons and other "equipment," gather information about vic-

    tims, and plan murders for hire. For example, the book instructs its

    readers to go to the auto tag department of the county courthouse and

    "[l]ook up the mark by last name or tag number for address," because

    books containing such information are often "left out for public use."

    Id . at 12. Similarly, the book instructs the readers in how to use the

    postal service to "track[ ] down the last known address of anyone you

    choose as a function of the Freedom of Information Act," id . at 14,

    and to send weapons safely to the location of a planned murder, id .

    at 13.

    In addition, Hit Man instructs its readers to become familiar with

    local law enforcement techniques, for example by obtaining law

    enforcement handbooks, and it provides practical advice on how to

    obtain these books, either from "any college bookstore where law

    enforcement courses are taught," id . at 14, or by theft. The book also

    offers the readers practical tips on diet, fitness, combat training,

    ("Veterans with wartime experience and the ability to kill are first

    choice instructors." Id . at 17), and observational skills. Although

    much of the information in this chapter is not explicit in outlining the

    methods of terror, it is explicit in advising the would-be assassin

    where to turn for additional information beyond that found between

    the covers of the book.

    Chapter Two of the book, entitled "Equipment-- Selection and

    Purpose," imparts a wealth of information on the"basic equipment"

    the "beginner" will need as tools of his trade, id . at 21, and provides

    detailed instructions as to the equipment's use. For example, the book

    45

    first instructs the reader to obtain, inter alia , an AR-7 rifle, hollow-

    point bullets, disposable silencers, liquid poison, disposable rubber

    gloves, a double-edged knife with a six-inch blade, handcuffs, and a

    ski mask. See id . at 21-22. The book next provides precise instruc-

    tions on how to kill, using each of the various weapons. The manual

    recommends "close kills," and teaches that:

    When using a small caliber weapon like the 22, it is best

    to shoot from a distance of three to six feet. You will not

    want to be at point-blank range to avoid having the victim's

    blood splatter you or your clothing. At least three shots

    should be fired to ensure quick and sure death.

    You can judge when death has occurred by observing the

    wound. When the blood ceases to flow, the heart has

    stopped working. Check for pulse at both the wrist and

    throat as an added precaution.

    Id . at 24. The book goes on to teach which weapons to avoid and

    why, explaining, for example, that,

    [a]lthough revolvers are often depicted as being a favorite

    tool among hit men, they are not recommended by this pro.

    Revolvers cannot be effectively silenced. The open cylinder

    allows gases to escape, thus making noise. When fired, gas

    is forced around the cylinder in a 360 degree circle, thereby

    throwing powder all over the person who fires the gun.

    An automatic, on the other hand, is tightly sealed so that

    when it is fired almost all the powder residue is forced into

    the silencer, where it is trapped. This prevents the powder

    from escaping and covering the person who fired the shot.

    . . . If a shell catcher is used, the powder residue will

    become trapped inside the catch bag.

    Id . at 26. The manual further instructs how to kill efficiently at close-

    range with a knife:

    The knife you carry should have a six-inch blade with a

    serrated section for making efficient, quiet kills. . . .

    46

    The knife should have a double-edged blade. This double

    edge, combined with the serrated section and six-inch

    length, will insure a deep, ragged tear, and the wound will

    be difficult, if not impossible, to close without prompt medi-

    cal attention.

    Make your thrusts to a vital organ and twist the knife

    before you withdraw it. If you hit bone, you will have to file

    the blade to remove the marks left on the metal when it

    struck the victim's bone.

    Id . at 27-28. The book also instructs on alternatives to the close-range

    kill, including instructions such as the following:

    If you must do your shooting from a distance, use a rifle

    with a good scope and silencer and aim for the head-- pref-

    erably the eye sockets if you are a sharpshooter. Many peo-

    ple have been shot repeatedly, even in the head, and

    survived to tell about it.

    Id . at 24. Finally, the chapter includes a host of other instructions on

    how to use basic tools, ranging from handcuffs, to lock picks, to sur-

    veillance equipment, in the commission of murder. For instance, the

    book teaches the need for a hit man to always wear gloves and it dis-

    cusses glove choice, recommending surgical gloves because,

    [l]eather gloves are not to be considered as a job tool. The

    leather has the same individual, distinct characteristics as

    the human fingerprint. If you have to use leather gloves,

    destroy them immediately after the job. If found in your

    possession, they can convict you as quickly as a set of your

    own fingerprints.

    Id . at 27. The chapter continues in like vein.

    Chapter Three, entitled "The Disposable Silencer-- A Poor Man's

    Access to a Rich Man's Toy," teaches the reader, with step-by-step

    instructions and accompanying photographic illustration, how to con-

    struct a "whisper-quiet," "inexpensive," and "effective" disposable

    47

    silencer that is "reusable for over four hundred rounds." Id . at 47, 51.

    These directions are designed to allow the "amateur" to construct dis-

    posable silencers, which, the book explains, are "one of the most

    important tools a professional will ever have." Id . at 38. As the book

    explains, these "same directions can be followed successfully to con-

    struct a silencer for any weapon, with only the size of the drill rod

    used for alignment changed. . . ." Id . at 39.

    Hit Man 's Chapter Four, entitled "More Than One Way To Kill a

    Rabbit -- The Direct Hit is Not Your Only Alternative," includes dis-

    cursive instructions on numerous additional methods of killing and

    torture. If "several marks will be together in one place at the same

    time," the book teaches, one can kill all of the "marks" with a fertil-

    izer bomb, and it goes on to teach the reader, through step-by-step

    instructions, how to build such a bomb. Id . at 54-55. The chapter

    teaches the reader how to kill by arson, admonishing and instructing,

    "Don't ever use gasoline or other traceable materials to start your fire.

    [Specified substance] is your best starter because it burns away all

    traces." Id . at 56. In addition, the chapter includes instructions such

    as that, "[a] fire victim will have smoke present in his lungs. There-

    fore, if this is your choice of extermination, your mark should be

    unconscious, but breathing, when the fire is set. Make sure no

    scratches or bruises point to foul play." Id . Later in the chapter, Hit

    Man discusses poisons. After teaching an elaborate method for

    obtaining hard-to-find poisons through impersonation, the manual

    explains how one can successfully use substances such as tetrodo-

    toxin, oleander, nicotine, and jessamine to kill his victims. See id . at

    58-63. The chapter's discussion of torture techniques provides

    explicit advice on how to inflict sufficient pain to ensure that "people

    will tell you anything you want to know, even when they are sure they

    are about to die." Id . at 64. In what is offered as a helpful example,

    the book illustrates from the author's own experience:

    We [the book's author and his accomplice, referred to only

    as "the Indian"] subdued the [victim], stripped him to the

    waist and tied him into a wooden chair.

    . . .

    The Indian pulled an ice pick from his hip pocket.

    48

    . . .

    . . . Suddenly he stopped and inserted the tip of the pick

    into the [victim's] upper arm about a quarter of an inch.

    When he withdrew the pick, there was a sickening little pop-

    ping sound as blood spurted from the wound for a second,

    then stopped.

    . . .

    Several stabs later, the [victim] was quivering like a jelly-

    fish, his body like a pin cushion, while the Indian was get-

    ting more and more excited and more and more into his

    work.

    . . . With a malicious grin, [the Indian] pulled a pair of

    pliers from his other hip pocket and gave me a sly wink.

    Pointedly, methodically, he began with the [victim's] little

    finger on his left hand and crunched each knuckle slowly

    with the pliers. It seemed to take no effort at all on his part

    as the soft bone gave way under the force of the simple tool.

    He had only gotten to the third finger when the [victim]

    began to cry like a baby and spill his guts.

    Id . at 65-66. The chapter concludes with instructions for disposing of

    human corpses without detection, providing directions for, inter alia ,

    hiding the bodies in a river:

    If you choose to sink the corpse, you must first make several

    deep stabs into the body's lungs (from just under the rib

    cage) and belly. This is necessary because gases released

    during decomposition will bloat these organs, causing the

    body to rise to the surface of the water.

    The corpse should be weighted with the standard concrete

    blocks, but it must be wrapped from head to toe with heavy

    chain as well, to keep the body from separating and floating

    in chunks to the surface. After the fishes and natural ele-

    ments have done their work, the chain will drag the bones

    into the muddy sediment.

    49

    Id . at 67. And the instructions we repeat here are but a few of the

    methods of inflicting torture and death taught in the chapter.

    The next chapter, entitled "Homework and Surveillance -- Map-

    ping a Plan and Checking It for Accuracy," instructs on how to obtain

    information about the victim from the client. It explains the impor-

    tance of finding out information such as whether the victim has a dog

    or other pet that might provide a warning of the impending assassina-

    tion, the layout of the victim's residence, and whether the victim has

    roommates or neighbors. The chapter includes a lengthy "sample

    information sheet" that may be used in planning a first kill. Id . at 73-

    80.

    Chapter Six, entitled "Opportunity Knocks -- Finding Employ-

    ment, What to Charge, What to Avoid," teaches readers how to find

    someone who will hire their services as professional killers. The

    chapter explains where to find potential employers, what to look for

    in such persons, and what to charge for each murder:

    Prices vary according to the risk involved, social or politi-

    cal prominence of the victim, difficulty of the assignment,

    and other factors. A federal judge [Judge Wood, slain in

    Texas in 1978] recently brought a price of $250,000, for

    example. A county sheriff might bring $75,000 to $100,000.

    . . .

    . . . It is not recommended that you take any contract that

    pays less than $30,000, and that is working mighty cheap.

    To work for any amount less would be amateurish. . ..

    There are two good reasons for setting a $30,000 mini-

    mum for your services. First, the risks involved are high. . . .

    A fee of $5,000 or even $10,000 will be of little consolation

    as you wait helplessly behind bars.

    Second, because the risks are so high and employment

    opportunities are limited, the money you earn should be suf-

    ficient to carry you over until your next job comes along.

    50

    Id . at 90-91. The chapter also provides instructions on how to com-

    municate with the employer after the hit, explaining, for example, that

    it is best to develop a code for informing the employer that the con-

    tract has been fulfilled, such as calling the employer's residence and

    asking to speak with a fictitious individual, whose name signals to the

    employer that the victim is dead. See id . at 93-94.

    In the following chapter, titled "Getting the Job Done Right --

    Why the Described Hit Went Down the Way It Did," Hit Man pro-

    vides instructions for reaching the victim's location, transporting

    tools, preparing to commit the murder, and cleaning up the crime

    scene and escaping after the killing. Illustrative of the chapter's direc-

    tions for preparing to commit the murder:

    Wipe down your weapons as you assemble them. Even

    the inner parts of your guns must be wiped to remove any

    prints that were left behind during the last cleaning.

    Wipe down each bullet and wear rubber gloves as you

    load the clip. Just in case you leave behind an empty car-

    tridge, you don't want your fingerprint emblazoned on the

    casing.

    Id . at 103. Similarly, the manual instructs on how best to discard the

    clothes worn to commit the killing:

    The first thing you should do when you reach the car

    [after killing your victims] is change into another disguise

    and get out of those work clothes. Check them for blood-

    stains. If there are none, you can toss them into a charity

    collection box or trash can. If the victim's blood is on those

    clothes, they must be burned or buried.

    Id . at 105. And it explains, with respect to sanitization of the rental

    car:

    [S]top and wipe the car for prints and wear driving gloves

    as you return the car to the rental agency. . . .[W]ash the

    car and vacuum the interior immediately when you arrive at

    51

    your destination [because] foreign soil from the [crime

    scene] is now imbedded in the car's interior[and its] air fil-

    ter . . . .

    Id . at 106.

    Chapter 8, entitled "Danger: Ego, Women, and Partners -- Con-

    trolling Your Situation" instructs the reader on how, as a professional

    killer, to use money, women, and partners. This chapter of the book,

    for example, instructs the reader on how to use women while commit-

    ting professional killings without getting caught. Thus, after explain-

    ing that the "deceitful, `game-playing' natures" of women make them

    potentially better professional killers than men, the book goes on to

    say that,

    [f]ortunately for the world, a woman usually makes only

    one man her target, and the nesting instinct quickly takes her

    off the street and ties her down to the little world of babies,

    laundry and housework she creates and protects for her own.

    Unfortunately, even a hit man cannot deny that what women

    have to offer is a basic necessity.

    . . .

    [Cautioning against marriage], if [your wife] knows too

    much, she could someday become [your] worst enemy on

    the face of the earth and may someday have to be eliminated

    in the name of self-preservation.

    And if she knows too little, her suspicious, jealous nature

    could lead to more snooping and following and conjecture

    on her part than is healthy -- for either of [you].

    . . .

    . . . Women are highly emotional, rarely rational crea-

    tures. Is ten minutes of pleasure worth your life at the hands

    (or tongue) of an irate spouse?

    . . .

    52

    Ideally, a professional hit man will remain single. He will

    either purchase his sexual pleasures or participate in imper-

    sonal one-night-stands. His involvement with women will

    only be on a sexual level. He will not live with them, nor

    will he let them invade his privacy . . . . In most cases, they

    won't even know his real name.

    . . .

    As a man, I appreciate as much as anyone a good-looking

    body and a warm, willing smile on a woman. As a profes-

    sional, however, that seems to have lost some of its thrill as

    I've moved on to bigger, more exciting and more dangerous

    prey.

    Id . at 114-17. The chapter also advises the reader on how to enjoy the

    fruits of crime without getting caught, warning that,

    Unless you have additional sources of income to justify

    large expenditures like a new home, paying off an old mort-

    gage or a new sports car, don't spend any of your earnings

    on big items of this type. Big expenditures arouse suspicion,

    not only of your friends and family, but of the IRS and the

    authorities if you should ever come under investigation.

    Id . at 113.

    The final chapter of Hit Man , entitled "Legally Illegal," includes

    various sections instructing the reader on how and where to purchase

    false identification, how to make false identification, how to launder

    illegal money, and how to act in encounters with law enforcement

    officers. For example, the book instructs on how to "launder" "illegal

    money" through the use of a tax haven in the Cayman Islands:

    The procedure is really quite simple: You form a corpora-

    tion in [an offshore Island country] and put your illegal

    monies into that corporation. Then you form a legal U.S.

    corporation as your business and borrow the money you

    need to get going from the foreign corporation you have pre-

    viously set up. . . .

    53

    Let's say your legal American corporation is a land devel-

    opment company, because you want to invest your laun-

    dered monies into real estate. . . .

    [Instructions continue].

    Id . at 124. The book concludes by offering advice on how to escape

    punishment by exploiting legal technicalities in the event that the

    reader is arrested by the police, including how to avoid jailhouse

    snitches and undercover agents.

    As Hit Man instructs, it also steels its readers to the particular vio-

    lence it explicates, instilling in them the resolve necessary to carry out

    the crimes it details, explains, and glorifies. Language such as that

    which is reprinted in the prologue to this opinion, and similar lan-

    guage uncanny in its directness and power, pervades the entire work:

    You may threaten, bargain, torture or mutilate to get the

    information you want, and you must be prepared to use

    whatever method works .

    . . .

    You are working. This is your job and you are a profes-

    sional.

    . . .

    . . . You have the power and ability to stand alone. You

    no longer need a reason to kill .

    . . .

    . . . You are a hardened criminal. You are capable of per-

    forming cold-blooded murder for a fee . . . . [Y]ou are not

    fit to be a part of organized society.

    Id . at 66, 100, 111, 127 (second emphasis added). Speaking directly

    to the reader in the second person, like a parent to a child, Hit Man

    54

    addresses itself to every potential obstacle to murder, removing each,

    seriatim, until nothing appears to the reader to stand between him and

    his execution of the ultimate criminal act. To those who are reluctant

    because of the value of human life, Hit Man admonishes that "[l]ife

    is not robust and precious and valuable" and that "[e]verything you

    have been taught about life and its value was a fallacy[,] [a] dirty rot-

    ten lie." Id . at 107. To those who fear guilt or remorse, the book reas-

    sures:

    You made it! Your first job was a piece of cake! Taking

    all that money for the job was almost like robbery. Yet here

    you are, finally a real hit man with real hard cash in your

    pockets and that first notch on your pistol.

    . . .

    [After killing your first victim] [Y]ou felt absolutely

    nothing . And you are shocked by that nothingness. You had

    expected this moment to be a spectacular point in your life.

    You had wondered if you would feel compassion for the

    victim, immediate guilt, or even experience direct interven-

    tion by the hand of God. But you weren't even feeling sick-

    ened by the sight of the body.

    Id . at 106-07. And the book allays the natural apprehension about the

    immediate aftermath of the murders it counsels:

    After you have arrived home [after your kill], the events

    that took place take on a dreamlike quality. You don't dwell

    on them. You don't worry. You don't have nightmares. You

    don't fear ghosts. When thoughts of the hit go through your

    mind, it's almost as though you are recalling some show you

    saw on television.

    By the time you collect the balance of your contract fee,

    the doubts and fears of discovery have faded. Those feelings

    have been replaced by cockiness, a feeling of superiority, a

    new independence and self-assurance.

    55

    Id . at 108. Those who fear their cold-bloodedness are assuaged with

    the reminders that "a hit man has a wide range of feelings" and that

    he "may be extremely compassionate towards the elderly or disabled"

    or "even . . . religious in his own way." Id . at 106. And for those who

    fear only that they will be caught, comes the ominous pledge that "the

    American Justice System is so bogged down in technicalities, over-

    crowded jails, plea bargaining and a host of other problems that even

    if charged with a serious crime, we [as killers] can rest assured that

    the law is on our side," see id . at 125, that a "true" "professional"

    "won't ever have to face [various] legal predicaments." Id . at 130.

    Indeed, one finds in Hit Man little, if anything, even remotely

    characterizable as the abstract criticism that Brandenburg jealously

    protects. Hit Man 's detailed, concrete instructions and adjurations to

    murder stand in stark contrast to the vague, rhetorical threats of politi-

    cally or socially motivated violence that have historically been con-

    sidered part and parcel of the impassioned criticism of laws, policies,

    and government indispensable in a free society and rightly protected

    under Brandenburg . The speech of Hit Man defies even comparison

    with the Klansman's chilling, but protected, statement in

    Brandenburg itself that, "[the Ku Klux Klan is] not a revengent orga-

    nization, but if our President, our Congress, our Supreme Court, con-

    tinues to suppress the white, Caucasian race, it's possible that there

    might have to be some revengeance taken," 395 U.S. at 446 ; the

    protestor's inciteful, but protected, chant in United States v. Hess , 414

    U.S. 105, 108 (1973) that "[w]e'll take the fucking street again"; the

    NAACP speaker's threat, rhetorical in its context, to boycott violators

    that "[i]f we catch any of you going in any of them racist stores, we're

    gonna break your damn neck," which was held to be protected in

    NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware Co. , 458 U.S. 886, 902 (1982); or the

    draft protestor's crude, but protected, blustering in Watts that "[i]f

    they ever make me carry a rifle the first man I want to get in my

    sights is L.B.J," Watts v. United States , 394 U.S. 705, 706 (1969).

    Plaintiffs observed in their submissions before the district court

    that,

    Hit Man is not political manifesto, not revolutionary dia-

    tribe, not propaganda, advocacy, or protest, not an outpour-

    ing of conscience or credo.

    56

    . . .

    It contains no discussion of ideas , no argument, no informa-

    tion about politics, religion, science, art, or culture . . . it

    offers no agenda for self-governance, no insight into the

    issues of the day . . . .

    Appellant's Br. at 32; Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Sup-

    port of Plaintiffs' Opposition to Defendant's Motion for Summary

    Judgment at 31-32. And, this is apt observation. Hit Man is none of

    this. Ideas simply are neither the focus nor the burden of the book. To

    the extent that there are any passages within Hit Man 's pages that

    arguably are in the nature of ideas or abstract advocacy, those sen-

    tences are so very few in number and isolated as to be legally of no

    significance whatsoever. 9 Cf . Kois v. Wisconsin , 408 U.S. 229 , 231

    (1972) ("A quotation from Voltaire in the flyleaf of a book will not

    constitutionally redeem an otherwise obscene publication."); see also

    Miller , 413 U.S. at 24 ; Penthouse International, Ltd. v. McAuliffe ,

    610 F.2d 1353 (5th Cir. 1980), cert . dismissed , 447 U.S. 931 (1980).

    Hit Man is, pure and simple, a step-by-step murder manual, a training

    book for assassins. There is nothing even arguably tentative or recon-

    dite in the book's promotion of, and instruction in, murder. 10 To the

    _________________________________________________________________

    9 This circuit and others have repeatedly rejected Paladin's argument

    that speech can be punished under the speech act doctrine, without regard

    to the strictures of Brandenburg , only when that speech has no purpose

    or value other than to facilitate a specific wrongful act. See Appellee's

    Supp. Br. at 9. Thus, in Kelley , we found the defendant's concrete pro-

    motion of, and provision of instructions for, tax evasion unprotected by

    the First Amendment, even though the defendant offered his advice in a

    meeting of a group indisputably dedicated to the political belief that the

    federal income tax is unconstitutional as applied to wages. 769 F.2d at

    216-17. And in Freeman , the Ninth Circuit upheld a similar conviction,

    even though the defendant's speech "spr[ang] from the anterior motive

    to effect political or social change." 761 F.2d at 551. See also Agee , 453

    U.S. at 308-09 (holding that a former Central Intelligence Agency

    employee's disclosure of intelligence information was unprotected by the

    First Amendment even though the employee was "also engaged in criti-

    cism of the Government").

    10 The several brief "disclaimers" and "warnings" in Hit Man 's adver-

    tisement description and on its cover, that the book's instructions are "for

    57

    contrary, the book directly and unmistakably urges concrete viola-

    tions of the laws against murder and murder for hire and coldly

    instructs on the commission of these crimes. The Supreme Court has

    never protected as abstract advocacy speech so explicit in its palpable

    entreaties to violent crime.

    2.

    In concluding that Hit Man is protected "advocacy," the district

    court appears to have misperceived the nature of the speech that the

    Supreme Court held in Brandenburg is protected under the First

    Amendment. In particular, the district court seems to have misunder-

    stood the Court in Brandenburg as having distinguished between "ad-

    vocating or teaching" lawlessness on the one hand, and "inciting or

    encouraging" lawlessness on the other, any and all of the former

    being entitled to First Amendment protection. The district court thus

    framed the issue before it as "whether Hit Man merely advocates or

    teaches murder or whether it incites or encourages murder." J.A. at

    212. And, finding that Hit Man "merely teaches" in technical fashion

    the fundamentals of murder, it concluded that "[t]he book does not

    cross that line between permissible advocacy and impermissible inci-

    tation to crime or violence." Id . at 218.

    The Court in Brandenburg , however, did not hold that "mere teach-

    ing" is protected; the Court never even used this phrase. And it cer-

    tainly did not hold, as the district court apparently believed, that all

    teaching is protected. Rather, however inartfully it may have done so,

    the Court fairly clearly held only that the "mere abstract teaching" of

    principles, id . at 447-48 ( quoting Noto , 367 U.S. at 297 -98) (emphasis

    _________________________________________________________________

    informational purposes only!" and "for academic study only!," and that

    "[n]either the author nor the publisher assumes responsibility for the use

    or misuse of the information contained in this book ," are plainly insuffi-

    cient in themselves to alter the objective understanding of the hundreds

    of thousands of words that follow, which, in purely factual and technical

    terms, tutor the book's readers in the methods and techniques of killing.

    These "disclaimers" and "warnings" obviously were affixed in order to

    titillate, rather than "to dissuade readers from engaging in the activity

    [the book] describes," as the district court suggested they might be

    understood, J.A. at 219.

    58

    added), and "mere advocacy ," 395 U.S. at 448 -49 (emphasis added),

    are protected. In the final analysis, it appears the district court simply

    failed to fully appreciate the import of the qualification to the kind of

    "teaching" that the Supreme Court held to be protected in

    Brandenburg . See J.A. at 217 (defining "advocacy" as "mere teach-

    ing" rather than "mere abstract teaching" but citing to Brandenburg ,

    395 U.S. at 448 (quoting Noto , 367 U.S. at 297 -98)). As the Supreme

    Court's approving quotation from its opinion in Noto confirms, it is

    not teaching simpliciter, but only "the mere abstract teaching . . . of

    the moral propriety or even moral necessity " for resort to lawlessness,

    or its equivalent, that is protected under the commands of

    Brandenburg . 367 U.S. at 297 -98 (emphasis added). 11

    Although we believe the district court's specific misreading of

    Brandenburg was plainly in error, we cannot fault the district court

    for its confusion over the opinion in that case. The short per curiam

    opinion in Brandenburg is, by any measure, elliptical.

    In particular, the Court unmistakably draws the distinction dis-

    cussed above, between "the mere abstract teaching. . . of the moral

    propriety or even moral necessity for a resort to force and violence"

    on one hand, 395 U.S. at 448 , and the "prepar[ation] [of] a group for

    violent action and steeling it to such action" on the other. Id . And it

    then recites in the very next sentence that "[a] statute which fails to

    draw this distinction," id . (emphasis added) -- a seeming reference to

    the distinction between "mere abstract teaching" and "preparing and

    steeling" -- is unconstitutional under the First Amendment. In the

    succeeding paragraph and a later footnote, however, the Court distin-

    guishes between "mere advocacy" and "incitement to imminent law-

    _________________________________________________________________

    11 Even if the district court were correct in its holding that Hit Man is

    speech somehow deserving of the protections of Brandenburg , we would

    yet be constrained to reverse the court's judgment. Given Paladin's

    remarkable stipulations that it knew that its murder manual would be

    used by murderers, would-be murderers, and other criminals " upon

    receipt " to assist them in the planning, commission, and cover up of their

    crimes, that the publisher intended that the manual would be so used, and

    that Hit Man actually assisted Perry's commission of the crime of mur-

    der, we could not conclude as a matter of law that Hit Man is not

    directed to inciting and likely to incite imminent lawlessness.

    59

    less action," a distinction which, as a matter of common sense and

    common parlance, appears different from the first distinction drawn,

    because "preparation and steeling" can occur without "incitement,"

    and vice-versa. See id . at 448 ("Neither the indictment nor the trial

    judge's instructions to the jury in any way refined the statute's bald

    definition of the crime in terms of mere advocacy not distinguished

    from incitement to imminent lawless action." (footnote omitted)); id .

    at 449 n.4 ("Statutes affecting the right of assembly, like those touch-

    ing on freedom of speech, must observe the established distinctions

    between mere advocacy and incitement to imminent lawless action

    . . . ." ).

    It would have been natural, based upon its prior cases, for the Court

    actually to have contemplated and intended both distinctions, and to

    have developed the latter only, because the case before it turned

    exclusively on that distinction. It is more likely, however, that the

    Court did not focus at all on the seeming facial incongruity between

    the first and the latter two of these distinctions. The Court, therefore,

    may well have intended to equate the preparation and steeling of a

    group to violent action with speech that is directed to inciting immi-

    nent lawless action and likely to produce such action. In other words,

    the Court may well have meant to imply that one prepares and steels

    another or others for violent action only when he does so through

    speech that is "directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless

    action and . . . [that is] likely to incite or produce such action," id . at

    447, and thus that preparation and steeling is not per se unprotected.

    Compare id . at 447-48 ("As we said in Noto . . . .") with Noto , 367

    U.S. at 298 (describing preparation and steeling through "a call to vio-

    lence"). Assuming that it did so mean to imply, however, we are con-

    fident it meant to do so only in the context of advocacy -- speech that

    is part and parcel of political and social discourse-- which was the

    only type of speech at issue in Brandenburg , Noto , and the other cases

    relied upon by the Court. See , e.g. , 44 Liquormart v. Rhode Island ,

    116 S. Ct. 1495, 1505 (1996) (Stevens, J., for plurality) (describing

    Brandenburg as setting forth "test for suppressing political speech").

    The Court even so defined its own holding: "These later decisions

    have fashioned the principle that the constitutional guarantees of free

    speech and free press do not permit a State to forbid or proscribe

    advocacy of the use of force or of law violation except where such

    advocacy is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action

    60

    and is likely to incite or produce such action." 395 U.S. at 447 (foot-

    note omitted; emphases added). For, as this case reveals, and as the

    Court itself has always seemed to recognize, one obviously can pre-

    pare, and even steel, another to violent action not only through the

    dissident "call to violence," but also through speech, such as instruc-

    tion in the methods of terror or other crime, that does not even

    remotely resemble advocacy, in either form or purpose. And, of

    course, to understand the Court as addressing itself to speech other

    than advocacy would be to ascribe to it an intent to revolutionize the

    criminal law, in a several paragraph per curiam opinion, by subjecting

    prosecutions to the demands of Brandenburg 's "imminence" and

    "likelihood" requirements whenever the predicate conduct takes, in

    whole or in part, the form of speech -- an intent that no lower court

    has discerned and that, this late in the day, we would hesitate to

    impute to the Supreme Court.

    Accordingly, we hold that plaintiffs have stated, sufficient to with-

    stand summary judgment, a civil cause of action against Paladin

    Enterprises for aiding and abetting the murders of Mildred and Trevor

    Horn and Janice Saunders on the night of March 3, 1993, and that this

    cause of action is not barred by the First Amendment to the United

    States Constitution.

    IV.

    Paladin, joined by a spate of media amici , including many of the

    major networks, newspapers, and publishers, contends that any deci-

    sion recognizing even a potential cause of action against Paladin will

    have far-reaching chilling effects on the rights of free speech and

    press. See Br. of Amici at 3, 22 ("Allowing this lawsuit to survive will

    disturb decades of First Amendment jurisprudence and jeopardize free

    speech from the periphery to the core. . . . No expression -- music,

    video, books, even newspaper articles -- would be safe from civil lia-

    bility."). That the national media organizations would feel obliged to

    vigorously defend Paladin's assertion of a constitutional right to

    intentionally and knowingly assist murderers with technical informa-

    tion which Paladin admits it intended and knew would be used imme-

    diately in the commission of murder and other crimes against society

    is, to say the least, breathtaking. But be that as it may, it should be

    apparent from the foregoing that the indisputably important First

    61

    Amendment values that Paladin and amici argue would be imperiled

    by a decision recognizing potential liability under the peculiar facts

    of this case will not even arguably be adversely affected by allowing

    plaintiffs' action against Paladin to proceed. In fact, neither the exten-

    sive briefing by the parties and the numerous amici in this case, nor

    the exhaustive research which the court itself has undertaken, has

    revealed even a single case that we regard as factually analogous to

    this case.

    Paladin and amici insist that recognizing the existence of a cause

    of action against Paladin predicated on aiding and abetting will sub-

    ject broadcasters and publishers to liability whenever someone imi-

    tates or "copies" conduct that is either described or depicted in their

    broadcasts, publications, or movies. This is simply not true. In the

    "copycat" context, it will presumably never be the case that the broad-

    caster or publisher actually intends, through its description or depic-

    tion, to assist another or others in the commission of violent crime;

    rather, the information for the dissemination of which liability is

    sought to be imposed will actually have been mis used vis-a-vis the

    use intended, not, as here, used precisely as intended. It would be dif-

    ficult to overstate the significance of this difference insofar as the

    potential liability to which the media might be exposed by our deci-

    sion herein is concerned.

    And, perhaps most importantly, there will almost never be evi-

    dence proffered from which a jury even could reasonably conclude

    that the producer or publisher possessed the actual intent to assist

    criminal activity. In only the rarest case, as here where the publisher

    has stipulated in almost taunting defiance that it intended to assist

    murderers and other criminals, will there be evidence extraneous to

    the speech itself which would support a finding of the requisite intent;

    surely few will, as Paladin has, "stand up and proclaim to the world

    that because they are publishers they have a unique constitutional

    right to aid and abet murder." Appellant's Reply Br. at 20. Moreover,

    in contrast to the case before us, in virtually every "copycat" case,

    there will be lacking in the speech itself any basis for a permissible

    inference that the "speaker" intended to assist and facilitate the crimi-

    nal conduct described or depicted. Of course, with few, if any, excep-

    tions, the speech which gives rise to the copycat crime will not

    directly and affirmatively promote the criminal conduct, even if, in

    62

    some circumstances, it incidentally glamorizes and thereby indirectly

    promotes such conduct.

    Additionally, not only will a political, informational, educational,

    entertainment, or other wholly legitimate purpose for the description

    or depiction be demonstrably apparent; but the description or depic-

    tion of the criminality will be of such a character that an inference of

    impermissible intent on the part of the producer or publisher would

    be unwarranted as a matter of law. So, for example, for almost any

    broadcast, book, movie, or song that one can imagine, an inference of

    unlawful motive from the description or depiction of particular crimi-

    nal conduct therein would almost never be reasonable, for not only

    will there be (and demonstrably so) a legitimate and lawful purpose

    for these communications, but the contexts in which the descriptions

    or depictions appear will themselves negate a purpose on the part of

    the producer or publisher to assist others in their undertaking of the

    described or depicted conduct. Compare Miller , 413 U.S. 15 .

    Paladin contends that exposing it to liability under the circum-

    stances presented here will necessarily expose broadcasters and pub-

    lishers of the news, in particular, to liability when persons mimic

    activity either reported on or captured on film footage and dissemi-

    nated in the form of broadcast news. Appellee's Br. at 26 n.17. This

    contention, as well, is categorically wrong. News reporting, we can

    assume, no matter how explicit it is in its description or depiction of

    criminal activity, could never serve as a basis for aiding and abetting

    liability consistent with the First Amendment. It will be self-evident

    in the context of news reporting, if nowhere else, that neither the

    intent of the reporter nor the purpose of the report is to facilitate repe-

    tition of the crime or other conduct reported upon, but, rather, merely

    to report on the particular event, and thereby to inform the public.

    A decision that Paladin may be liable under the circumstances of

    this case is not even tantamount to a holding that all publishers of

    instructional manuals may be liable for the misconduct that ensues

    when one follows the instructions which appear in those manuals.

    Admittedly, a holding that Paladin is not entitled to an absolute

    defense to the plaintiffs' claims here may not bode well for those pub-

    lishers, if any, of factually detailed instructional books, similar to Hit

    Man , which are devoted exclusively to teaching the techniques of vio-

    63

    lent activities that are criminal per se . But, in holding that a defense

    to liability may not inure to publishers for their dissemination of such

    manuals of criminal conduct, we do not address ourselves to the

    potential liability of a publisher for the criminal use of published

    instructions on activity that is either entirely lawful, or lawful or not

    depending upon the circumstances of its occurrence. Assuming, as we

    do, that liability could not be imposed in these circumstances on a

    finding of mere foreseeability or knowledge that the instructions

    might be misused for a criminal purpose, the chances that claims aris-

    ing from the publication of instructional manuals like these can with-

    stand motions for summary judgment directed to the issue of intent

    seem to us remote indeed, at least absent some substantial confirma-

    tion of specific intent like that that exists in this case.

    Thus, while the "horribles" paraded before us by Paladin and amici

    have quite properly prompted us to examine and reexamine the estab-

    lished authorities on which plaintiffs' case firmly rests, we regard

    them ultimately as but anticipatory of cases wholly unlike the one we

    must decide today.

    Paladin Press in this case has stipulated that it specifically targeted

    the market of murderers, would-be murderers, and other criminals for

    sale of its murder manual. Paladin has stipulated both that it had

    knowledge and that it intended that Hit Man would immediately be

    used by criminals and would-be criminals in the solicitation, plan-

    ning, and commission of murder and murder for hire. And Paladin has

    stipulated that, through publishing and selling Hit Man , it "assisted"

    Perry in particular in the perpetration of the brutal triple murders for

    which plaintiffs now seek to hold the publisher liable. Beyond these

    startling stipulations, it is alleged, and the record would support, that

    Paladin assisted Perry through the quintessential speech act of provid-

    ing Perry with detailed factual instructions on how to prepare for,

    commit, and cover up his murders, instructions which themselves

    embody not so much as a hint of the theoretical advocacy of princi-

    ples divorced from action that is the hallmark of protected speech.

    And it is alleged, and a jury could find, that Paladin's assistance

    assumed the form of speech with little, if any, purpose beyond the

    unlawful one of facilitating murder.

    Paladin's astonishing stipulations, coupled with the extraordinary

    comprehensiveness, detail, and clarity of Hit Man 's instructions for

    64

    criminal activity and murder in particular, the boldness of its palpable

    exhortation to murder, the alarming power and effectiveness of its

    peculiar form of instruction, the notable absence from its text of the

    kind of ideas for the protection of which the First Amendment exists,

    and the book's evident lack of any even arguably legitimate purpose

    beyond the promotion and teaching of murder, render this case unique

    in the law. In at least these circumstances, we are confident that the

    First Amendment does not erect the absolute bar to the imposition of

    civil liability for which Paladin Press and amici contend. Indeed, to

    hold that the First Amendment forbids liability in such circumstances

    as a matter of law would fly in the face of all precedent of which we

    are aware, not only from the courts of appeals but from the Supreme

    Court of the United States itself. Hit Man is, we are convinced, the

    speech that even Justice Douglas, with his unrivaled devotion to the

    First Amendment, counseled without any equivocation "should be

    beyond the pale" under a Constitution that reserves to the people the

    ultimate and necessary authority to adjudge some conduct -- and

    even some speech -- fundamentally incompatible with the liberties

    they have secured unto themselves.

    The judgment of the district court is hereby reversed, and the case

    remanded for trial.

    It is so ordered

    65

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