Draft cards under the Selective Service Act In 1948, the United States instituted a peace-time
draft with the Universal Military Training and Service Act (also called the
Selective Service Act), which required all male American citizens to register with a local draft board upon reaching the age of 18. In 1965,
Congress amended the act to prohibit the willful destruction of "
draft cards" or registration certificates. These were small white cards bearing the registrant's identifying information, the date and place of registration, and his Selective Service number, which indicated his state of registration, local board, birth year, and his chronological position in the local board's classification record. The act had already required all eligible men to carry the certificate at all times, and prohibited alterations that would perpetrate a forgery or fraud. The 1965 amendment, however, made it a separate crime under 50
U.S.C. § 462(b)(3) to "knowingly destroy" or "knowingly mutilate" the card. This amendment was passed at a time when public burnings of draft cards to protest the
Vietnam War were a growing phenomenon; many (including the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit) believed that Congress had intentionally targeted such protesters.
O'Brien's protest and conviction On the morning of March 31, 1966, David Paul O'Brien and three companions burned their draft cards on the steps of the
South Boston Courthouse, in front of a crowd that happened to include several
FBI agents. After the four men came under attack from some of the crowd, an FBI agent ushered O'Brien inside the courthouse and advised him of his rights. O'Brien proudly confessed to the agent and produced the charred remains of the certificate. He was subsequently indicted for violating § 462(b)(3) and put on trial in the
U.S. District Court for the District of Massachusetts. O'Brien insisted on
representing himself at his trial and argued that the act was unconstitutional. He explained to the
jury that he burned the draft card publicly to persuade others to oppose the war, "so that other people would reevaluate their positions with Selective Service, with the armed forces, and reevaluate their place in the culture of today, to hopefully consider my position". O'Brien was convicted and sentenced to the maximum of six years, as a "youth offender" under the now-repealed Youth Corrections Act, which submitted him to the custody of the
Attorney General "for supervision and treatment".
Appeal On
appeal, the
First Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the 1965 amendment ran afoul of the First Amendment because it singled out "persons engaging in protest for special treatment". However, although O'Brien could not be convicted for protesting, the First Amendment could not protect him from being required to carry a draft card. The court believed that all the factual issues necessary for a "nonpossession" conviction had been fully litigated, and so affirmed his conviction on that basis and remanded for appropriate resentencing. Both O'Brien and the United States
petitioned for review by the Supreme Court, with the government in ''United States v. O'Brien'' (No. 232) challenging the lower court's invalidation of § 462(b)(3) and O'Brien challenging in the nonpossession conviction in ''O'Brien v. United States'' (No. 233). The court decided both actions together and, in a 7–1 decision, upheld the constitutionality of § 462(b)(3), vacated the First Circuit's decision and reinstated O'Brien's sentence. O'Brien had also argued to the court that the First Circuit had unconstitutionally sustained his conviction for a crime of which he was neither convicted nor tried, and much of the court's questioning of the government during
oral argument challenged this ruling. However, with that decision vacated, the court did not reach that issue. ==Supreme Court's decision==