IN THE COURT OF CRIMINAL APPEALS
OF TEXAS
NO. PD-0552-18
EX PARTE JORDAN BARTLETT JONES, Appellant
ON STATE’S PETITION FOR DISCRETIONARY REVIEW
FROM THE TWELFTH COURT OF APPEALS
SMITH COUNTY
YEARY, J., filed a concurring opinion.
CONCURRING OPINION
Today the Court reverses the published court of appeals’ opinion in this case in an
unpublished per curiam opinion. If it were up to me alone, I would publish the Court’s
opinion.
Nevertheless, I agree with the Court that the “revenge porn” statute, properly
construed, does not violate the First Amendment, even as it read prior to its recent
amendment. 1 In my view, properly construed, it survives strict scrutiny. I also agree with
the Court that it is appropriate to attach a culpable mental state to the lack-of-effective-
1
Section 21.16 of the Penal Code is entitled “Unlawful Disclosure or Promotion of Intimate
Visual Material.” TEX. PENAL CODE § 21.16. It was amended by Acts 2019, 86th Leg., ch. 1354,
§ 2, eff. Sept. 1, 2019. The offense in this case occurred, however, prior to the effective date of the
2019 amendment.
JONES ― 2
consent element of the statute. But, unlike the Court, I believe the statute is readily
susceptible to such a construction, and that it is not necessary for us to invoke United States
Supreme Court precedents pertaining to federal principles of statutory construction. Nor
do I believe that the statute must necessarily satisfy strict scrutiny before we may uphold
it. Finally, I would not conduct an overbreadth analysis at all. For these reasons, I can only
concur in the result the Court reaches; I cannot join its opinion.
It is incumbent upon us to construe a statute narrowly to assure its constitutionality
whenever it is readily susceptible to such a construction. Ex parte Perry, 483 S.W.3d 884,
903 (Tex. Crim. App. 2016). Of course, we may not usurp the legislative prerogative by
misrepresenting the import of a clear statute—even for the sake of rendering it
constitutional. Morehead v. State, 807 S.W.2d 577, 581 (Tex. Crim. App. 1991); see also
Wilson v. State, 448 S.W.3d 418, 424–25 (Tex. Crim. App. 2014) (“[W]hile we have a duty
to interpret statutes in a way as to preserve their constitutionality, we can do so only to the
extent that our interpretative authority permits.”). In my view, the statute may readily be
read to ascribe a culpable mental state to the critical circumstance surrounding conduct:
lack of effective consent of the depicted person. 2 Unlike the Court, I understand the
2
Prior to amendment in 2019, Section 21.16(b) of the Penal Code provided:
(b) A person commits an offense if:
(1) without the effective consent of the depicted person, the person
intentionally discloses visual material depicting another person
with the person’s intimate parts exposed or engaged in sexual
conduct;
JONES ― 3
language of the statute to be at least susceptible to such a construction. 3 And this
construction of the statute, by itself, suffices to assure that it would operate in a manner
(2) the visual material was obtained by the person or created under
circumstances in which the depicted person had a reasonable
expectation that the visual material would remain private;
(3) the disclosure of the visual material causes harm to the depicted
person; and
(4) the disclosure of the visual material reveals the identity of the
depicted person in any manner, including through:
(A) any accompanying or subsequent information or
material related to the visual material; or
(B) information or material provided by a third party
in response to the disclosure of the visual
material.
TEX. PENAL CODE § 21.16(b). All further citations to Section 21.16 are to the pre-amendment
statute.
3
In People v. Austin, 155 N.E.3d 439 (Ill. 2019), cert. denied, 141 S. Ct. 233 (2020), the
Illinois Supreme Court construed a statute very similar to our own—except for the fact that it
expressly attaches a culpable mental state to the lack of consent element of the offense. The Illinois
statute made it an offense for a person to commit:
(b) . . . non-consensual dissemination of private sexual images when he or she:
(1) intentionally disseminates an image of another person:
(A) who is at least 18 years of age; and
(B) who is identifiable from the image itself or
information displayed in connection with the image;
and
(C) who is engaged in a sexual act or whose intimate
parts are exposed, in whole or in part; and
(2) obtains the image under circumstances in which a reasonable
person would know or understand that the image was to remain
private; and
JONES ― 4
that does not offend the First Amendment. After all, if the depicted person consents to the
disclosure, it would not matter whether that person harbored a reasonable expectation of
non-disclosure at the time the visual material was obtained by the actor. It also would not
matter whether the actor reveals the depicted person’s identity. Ultimately, the depicted
person’s effective consent, alone, determines the constitutionality of proscribing the
disclosure of otherwise constitutionally protected, sexually oriented visual material.
I. THE PROPER CONSTRUCTION OF THE STATUTE
The United States Supreme Court has regarded non-obscene sexually oriented
visual material⸻also known as non-obscene pornography⸻as protected speech. United
States v. Williams, 553 U.S. 285, 288 (2008). If ever non-obscene pornography may be
regulated without violating the United States Supreme Court’s First Amendment
precedents, it must be when the person depicted in the pornographic material has not
consented to its disclosure. The reason that “revenge porn” may be prohibited consistent
with the Supreme Court’s First Amendment jurisprudence, if at all, is that it is disclosed
without the effective consent of the depicted person, thereby invading the substantial
personal privacy interest of the depicted person in an essentially intolerable manner. See
Scott v. State, 322 S.W.3d 662, 668–69 (Tex. Crim. App. 2010) (“The State may lawfully
(3) knows or should have known that the person in the image has
not consented to the dissemination.
720 ILCS 5/11-23.5(b). The Illinois Supreme Court observed about this provision that “[t]he lack
of consent to dissemination forms the core of the statute and its protective purpose.” People v.
Austin, 155 N.E.3d at 465. “Where the person portrayed in the image has consented to its
disclosure, the statute simply does not apply and poses no restriction on the distribution of the
image to others.” Id.
JONES ― 5
proscribe communicative conduct (i.e., the communication of ideas, opinions, and
information) that invades the substantial privacy interests of another in an essentially
intolerable manner.”).
Lack of consent is, thus, a circumstance surrounding the conduct of disclosure that
would serve to separate non-obscene pornography that may be constitutionally regulated
from non-obscene pornography that may not. It is therefore essential to assign a culpable
mental state to that circumstance—both from the standpoint of ordinary principles of
criminal liability, see Robinson v. State, 466 S.W.3d 166, 171 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015)
(“[W]hen the circumstances of the conduct render specific conduct unlawful, a culpable
mental state must attach to the circumstances of the conduct.”), and also to assure that it
may be regulated despite its jurisprudential status as protected speech.
The revenge porn statute begins (as do so many penal provisions) with the simple
assertion that “[a] person commits an offense if[,]” followed by a colon. TEX. PENAL CODE
§ 21.16(b). The sub-subsection that immediately follows the colon contains the only
culpable mental state that appears explicitly in the statute:
(1) without the effective consent of the depicted person, the person
intentionally discloses visual material depicting another person with the
person’s intimate parts exposed or engaged in sexual conduct[.]
Id. § (b)(1) (emphasis added). Plainly, the disclosure itself must be intentional, since
“discloses” is the verb that “intentionally” directly and unequivocally modifies. The most
efficacious way to construe the statute so as not to offend the United States Supreme Court-
protected right of individuals to share non-obscene pornography is to understand the statute
to attach a culpable mental state not only to the disclosure-element itself, but also to the
JONES ― 6
equally indispensable element of lack of effective consent to the disclosure. And I believe
the Texas Legislature did exactly that.
Unlike the Court, I do not find it unambiguously clear, from the face of Section
21.16(b), that it fails by its terms to incorporate a culpable mental state into this critical
circumstance-surrounding-conduct element. See Majority Opinion at 22 (“[W]e cannot
read the adverb ‘intentionally’ to modify the effective consent clause because reading
‘intentionally’ backwards up the statute goes against the plain reading of the text in context
under common grammar and usage rules.”). Quite the opposite. I believe the statute is
readily susceptible to the application of at least a “knowing” culpable mental state to the
lack-of-effective-consent element. Certainly, the prosecutor who drafted the indictment in
this case understood the statute in this way. See Majority Opinion at 10 (quoting the
indictment’s allegation that Appellant acted “knowingly without the effective consent of”
the complainant by “intentionally disclos[ing]”). By endorsing that interpretation, we
would better fulfill our obligation to construe the statute narrowly so as to assure its
constitutionality.
I believe we can more than reasonably construe Section 21.16(b) in this way. It reads
similarly to the Unauthorized Use of a Vehicle statute, which we construed in McQueen v.
State, 781 S.W.2d 600, 603 (Tex. Crim. App. 1989). That statute read:
(a) A person commits an offense if he intentionally or knowingly
operates another’s [vehicle] without the effective consent of the
owner.
TEX. PENAL CODE § 31.07(a). Although the culpable mental state directly modified the
word “operates” in this provision, we held that, because such conduct would be innocuous
JONES ― 7
in the absence of the circumstance surrounding that conduct, we should read the culpable
mental state to modify that element of the offense as well, explaining that “some form of
culpability must apply to those ‘conduct elements’ which make the overall conduct
criminal.” McQueen, 781 S.W.2d at 604. See also Delay v. State, 443 S.W.3d 909, 923–24
(Tex. Crim. App. 2014) (construing a culpable mental state to modify not only the act
prohibited, but also the circumstance under which committing the otherwise innocuous act
becomes “intrinsically blameworthy”). This amounts to a kind of presumption that a
culpable mental state should be applied to a circumstance surrounding conduct whenever
that circumstance constitutes the pivotal element that renders otherwise innocent conduct
criminally offensive. This Court’s own cases regarding statutory construction support this
approach; we need not resort to federal cases that apply federal principles of statutory
interpretation that are not binding on us. 4
4
By analogy only, in construing federal statutes, the United States Supreme Court indulges
an “interpretive maxim” that presumes the application of scienter to modify “elements that
criminalize otherwise innocent conduct”—whether or not the statute otherwise specifies a scienter
requirement at any point in its text. Rehaif v. United States, 139 S. Ct. 2191, 2195 (2019); see id.,
at 2197 (“It is therefore the defendant’s status, and not his conduct alone, that makes the difference.
Without knowledge of that status, the defendant may well lack the intent needed to make his
behavior wrongful.”). Indeed, under these circumstances, the Supreme Court has “interpreted
statutes to include a scienter requirement even where the most grammatical reading of the statute
does not support one.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted). It would seem even more imperative
to construe a statute in this way whenever, as here, the constitutionality of the statute turns on the
presence or absence of a culpable mental state applicable to the circumstances-of-the-offense
element, and the statute is readily susceptible to such an interpretation. “The federal constitution
affords the states broad authority to construe a statute narrowly to avoid a constitutional violation.”
State v. Johnson, 475 S.W.3d 860, 872 (Tex. Crim. App. 2015). And, once we have so construed
a statute, the United States Supreme Court will be bound by that construction in reviewing its
constitutionality. See, e.g., Wisconsin v. Mitchell, 508 U.S. 476, 483 (1993) (“There is no doubt
that we are bound by a state court’s construction of a state statute.”).
JONES ― 8
It is true, as the Court notes, that in Section 21.16(b)(1), the clause “without the
effective consent” appears before the culpable mental state, not after (as in Section
31.07(a), the statute at issue in McQueen). Majority Opinion at 21. But that does not mean
that, syntactically, the culpable mental state may not be read to apply to that circumstance
as well as to the act of disclosure. The way I see it, the syntactical difference between:
without the effective consent of the depicted person, the person
intentionally discloses visual material depicting another person . . .
(as the Section 21.16(b)(1) is phrased) and:
the person intentionally discloses visual material depicting another
person without the effective consent of the depicted person . . .
does not change the substantive meaning of the passage. If it is permissible to read a
culpable mental state to travel down to the circumstance surrounding conduct in the second
phrase, it should be equally permissible to read it to relate back to the circumstance
surrounding conduct in the first. It is no great leap to read the statute this way in order to
assure its constitutionality. If the word “intentionally” may be read to apply to the later
phrase “without the effective consent of the depicted person,” as in the second example
given above—which is more like the statute we construed in McQueen—it is not clear why
it may not also be read to modify that same phrase just because it comes before the modifier
and is separated by a comma. Also, and again, even if one were to consider the statute to
be ambiguous with regard to whether it may be read in this way, I believe we could resolve
that ambiguity in favor of a constitutional construction of the statute.
Here is how I understand Section 21.16(b)(1). The Grammar Canon provides:
“Words are to be given the meaning that proper grammar and usage would assign them.”
JONES ― 9
Antonin Scalia & Brian A. Garner, Reading Law, p. 140 (Thompson/West 2012). “Without
the effective consent of the depicted person” is itself an adverbial phrase. It is a modifier.
In the sentence at issue here, at the very outset of the sentence, the phrase “without the
effective consent of the depicted person” immediately modifies the later appearing verb:
“discloses.” The relevant definition of the word “modify” is: “to limit in meaning.”
WEBSTER’S NEW WORLD DICTIONARY OF THE AMERICAN LANGUAGE (Simon & Schuster 1984).
So, at the very outset of the sentence, before doing anything else, the Legislature limited
the meaning of the later appearing word “discloses” to: “discloses without the effective
consent of the depicted person.” The Legislature only then added the extra adverb
“intentionally” just before the previously modified and limited verb “discloses (without the
effective consent of the depicted person).” The word “intentionally” (the second adverbial
modifier in the sentence), therefore may be read only to limit/modify the previously
limited/modified version of that word: “discloses without the effective consent of the
depicted person.” Understood in this way, the word “intentionally” may be read to require
an awareness on the part of the actor both with regard to the verb: “discloses,” and with
regard to the adverbial phrase that previously limited that same verb: “without the effective
consent of the depicted person.” In other words, by the time the word “intentionally” has
an opportunity to modify the word “discloses,” the only meaning of the word “discloses”
that remains to be modified by the word “intentionally” is “discloses without the effective
consent of the depicted person.” Nothing that I find in the section on “Adverbs” in
Professor Garner’s Manual on Legal Style precludes this understanding. Bryan A. Garner,
The Redbook: A Manual on 20 Legal Style, p.150-152 (1st. ed. 2002).
JONES ― 10
It is true, as the Court observes, Majority Opinion at 22–23, that the only mental
state provided in Section 21.16(b)(1) (“intentionally”) does not ordinarily apply to a
circumstance-surrounding-conduct type of element. See Lugo-Lugo v. State, 650 S.W.2d
72, 87 (Tex. Crim. App. 1983) (Clinton, J., concurring). It is nevertheless appropriate,
under our precedents, to read a statute to imply a lesser culpable mental state (“knowledge”
or “recklessness”) to a lack-of-effective-consent element. See Sanchez v. State, 995 S.W.2d
677, 685 & n.7 (Tex. Crim. App. 1999) (construing the explicit “intentional” culpable
mental state of the official-oppression-by-sexual-harassment statute, as it applied to the
“unwelcome-sexual-advances” definition of sexual harassment, to require no greater
scienter than an awareness (i.e., knowledge) by the actor that his sexual advances were
unwelcome). Read in this way, Section 21.16(b) is nearly identical to the Illinois statute
that was recently found by that state’s highest court to survive at least intermediate scrutiny.
People v. Austin, 155 N.E.3d 439, 459–66 (Ill. 2019), cert. denied, 141 S. Ct. 233 (2020).
This construction of the statute mollifies the court of appeals’ concerns about the
constitutionality of the statute. The court of appeals believed that Section 21.16(b) failed
to satisfy the First Amendment because it might apply to a person who passed along a
sexually explicit image he did not create without any awareness that the person depicted
had not consented to the disclosure of the image. Ex parte Jones, ___ S.W.3d ___, 2018
WL 2228888, at *5–6 (Tex. App.—Tyler 2018). That view presupposes a reading of the
statute that refuses to ascribe a culpable mental state to the lack-of-effective-consent
element of the offense. The court of appeals also concluded that Section 21.16(b) was
unconstitutionally overbroad—again, based upon a reading of the statute that refused to
JONES ― 11
ascribe a culpable mental state to the lack-of-effective-consent element. See id., 2018 WL
2228888, at *7 (concluding that the statute “is extremely broad” in that it could criminalize
the disclosure of a sexually private image without any “knowledge or reason to know” that,
under the circumstances, the person depicted in the image had not consented to its
dissemination and had expected it to remain private). My reading of the statute, were it to
be adopted, would suffice to put these concerns to rest.
II. SHOULD INTERMEDIATE, NOT STRICT, SCRUTINY APPLY?
The State argues that Section 21.16(b) should be tested against the First
Amendment’s intermediate scrutiny test, rather than strict scrutiny, because it does not
target speech per se, but only the secondary effect that such speech has on sexual privacy
whenever the depicted person has not consented to the disclosure. I am inclined to agree
with this proposition. Section 21.16(b) does not target non-obscene pornography because
of its expressive content. Nor does it ban all (or probably even very much, relatively
speaking) non-obscene pornography. Properly construed, it only limits the disclosure of
non-obscene pornography that the actor knows, or is reckless whether, the depicted person
has not consented to; and it does so for the purpose of protecting the depicted person’s
personal sexual privacy. In that sense, it is roughly analogous to the zoning ordinance
regulating adult movie houses that was at issue in City of Renton v. Playtime Theaters, Inc.,
475 U.S. 41 (1986). That ordinance prohibited the exhibition of all adult movies in theaters
located near residential zones, churches, parks, and schools. Id. at 43. The United States
Supreme Court measured the ordinance against an intermediate scrutiny standard rather
JONES ― 12
than strict scrutiny because it was “aimed not at the content of the films shown . . . but
rather at the secondary effects of such theaters on the surrounding community.” Id. at 47.
As with the zoning ordinance in Renton, Section 21.16(b) does not prohibit the
disclosure of non-obscene pornography—at least, not on the basis of its constitutionally-
protected, sexually-explicit content. It simply prohibits the disclosure of non-obscene
pornography that the depicted person has not effectively consented to, thereby preserving
that person’s personal sexual privacy. “Government regulation of expressive activity is
content neutral so long as it is justified without reference to the content of the regulated
speech.” Ward v. Rock Against Racism, 491 U.S. 781, 791 (1989) (citations and internal
quotation marks omitted). The justification for Section 21.16(b) has nothing to do with
whatever value non-obscene pornography may have as expressive activity, and everything
to do with the potentially devastating secondary effect that disclosure of sexually explicit
material may have upon the non-consenting person depicted therein. It is not a regulation
“that focus[es] on the direct impact of speech on its audience[,]” as was the case in Boos v.
Barry, 485 U.S. 312, 320–21 (1988) (plurality opinion), in which Renton was
distinguished. Rather, it focuses on the direct impact that the disclosure will have on the
non-consenting person depicted in the visual material.
For this reason, it is at least arguable that it should only have to satisfy an
intermediate scrutiny standard, under the rationale of Renton. The Illinois Supreme Court
recently concluded that its own revenge porn statute—which is remarkably similar to our
own, so long as we construe Section 21.16(b) to incorporate a culpable mental state as to
lack of effective consent—to be subject only to (and to satisfy) the First Amendment’s
JONES ― 13
intermediate scrutiny standard, analogizing to Renton. People v. Austin, 155 N.E.3d 439,
456–59, 466 (Ill. 2019), cert. denied, 141 S. Ct. 233 (2020).
III. STANDING TO APPLY OVERBREADTH?
There is some suggestion in Supreme Court precedents that even a statute that
targets wholly unprotected speech, such as obscenity or child pornography, may yet be
subject to First Amendment condemnation under the overbreadth doctrine—at least in the
absence of a scienter requirement in the proscribing statute. See New York v. Ferber, 458
U.S. 747, 764 (1982) (“As with obscenity laws, criminal responsibility [for distributing
child pornography] may not be imposed without some element of scienter on the part of
the defendant.”) (citing Smith v. California, 361 U.S. 147 (1959)). But, as I have already
noted, the indictment in this case alleges that Appellant knew he lacked the consent of the
depicted person, so the statute does not operate unconstitutionally as to him.
Elsewhere, in the context of assessing the constitutionality of our flag-destruction
statute, I have developed my own view that, as a state court, “we ought to refuse to address”
questions of overbreadth “when they are presented by individuals who have suffered no
constitutional deprivation.” State v. Johnson, 475 S.W.3d 860, 887 & n.4 (Tex. Crim. App.
2015) (Yeary, J., dissenting). Unlike the Court, “I do not believe that the relaxed standing
requirement employed by the United States Supreme Court for overbreadth claims is a
substantive guarantee of the First Amendment.” Id. at 889 (Yeary, J., dissenting). 5 The
5
As I explained in Johnson:
Consistent with the requirement that a claimant demonstrate standing before
being allowed to advance a claim, the Supreme Court ordinarily requires adherence
to the rule that, “a person to whom a statute may constitutionally be applied will
JONES ― 14
State in this case has committed itself, by pleading in the indictment that Appellant was
aware that he lacked the effective consent of the depicted person, to prove a violation of
the statute under circumstances in which his conduct is not constitutionally protected. That
being the case, I do not think that Appellant should be permitted to claim in Texas courts
to have standing to invoke the overbreadth doctrine to invalidate the statute in this case,
and I believe the Court should therefore refrain from entertaining such a claim. 6
FILED: May 26, 2021
PUBLISH
not be heard to challenge [the] statute on the ground that it may conceivably be
applied unconstitutionally to others, in other situations not before the Court.”
Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 413 U.S. [601,] 610 [(1973)]. That Court has apparently
relied on “prudential” considerations to relax this ordinary rule of standing in cases
alleging First Amendment overbreadth. However, I do not believe that we in Texas
are free to interpret our constitutionally mandated separation of powers provision
as liberally as the United States Supreme Court has interpreted its own court-made
federal doctrine of separation of powers, pursuant to merely “prudential”
considerations. Consequently, in this case, because Appellee cannot show that his
own First Amendment rights have been violated, I would conclude Appellee’s
claim—that the Texas destruction-of-a-flag statute is facially unconstitutional—is
barred.
475 S.W.3d at 892–93 (Yeary, J., dissenting).
6
Obviously, even according to my own understanding,Appellant might still be able to
pursue his overbreadth claim in federal court.