Which one went over the edge—the lawyer who muttered to a court official that the judge should “get the f— off all my cases”? Or the judge who held the lawyer in contempt and sentenced him to jail for that utterance?

As a New Yorker, it’s hard to believe that anyone can be so rattled by profanity. Plus, I believe in the therapeutic benefits of cursing. But the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit doesn’t share my view. It upheld the conviction and four-month jail sentence of South Carolina lawyer Robert Peoples for using the four-letter word to describe his feelings to a court official (he was upset that  judge Cameron McGowan Currie had dismissed a civil rights suit because of his tardiness to court). Here’s the court’s reasoning, reports The National Law Journal:

“He targeted a judge, using profane language directed at the judge so that she would remove herself from his cases,” Judge Diana Motz wrote in the Fourth Circuit opinion. “Thus, Peoples did more than merely utter profane words; he profanely threatened judicial authority.”

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