Criminal Law Exercise

Using the Keeler Case brief format as a reference on pages 1.6.5, 1.6.6 & 1.6.8, provide a case briefing for Texas v. JohnsonLinks to an external site., 491. U.S. 397 (1989) on page 1.6.3.

https://www.law.cornell.edu/supremecourt/text/491/397

The case briefing must contain the following components:

1. The title, plus citation. The citation indicates where to find the case.

2. The procedural facts of the case. The procedural facts discuss who is appealing and in which court the case is located.

3. The substantive facts. The substantive facts discuss what happened to instigate the case.

4. The issue. The issue is the question the court is examining.

5. The substantive holding. The substantive holding answers the issue question and is the case law.

6. The procedural holding. The procedural holding discusses what the court did procedurally with the case.

7. The rationale. The rationale is the reason the court held the way it did.

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