Groups Challenge Wyoming's 'Downright Un-American' Censorship Laws

A coalition of advocacy groups filed suit in Wyoming on Tuesday, charging that the state’s recently enacted “data trespass laws” are unconstitutional, undemocratic, and “downright un-American.”

“It’s clear that Wyoming’s agricultural industry looking for a way to silence its critics, and the state legislature went along with the plan.”
—Travis Bruner, Western Watersheds Project

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The lawsuit (pdf) claims that a pair of Wyoming state laws, enacted this spring, stifle freedom of speech and make citizen science illegal in the state.

The “Data Censorship Statutes,” as they are dubbed in the lawsuit, punish individuals who gather information—everything from water quality data to photographs to ground surveys—about land or resources and then communicate, or plan to communicate, that information to government agencies.

As attorney Justin Pidot, who will be representing the groups in court, wrote for Slate earlier this year:

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