Title: State v. Heffron

State: maine

Issuer: Maine Supreme Court

Document:

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT 
Reporter of Decisions 
Decision: 
2018 ME 102 
Docket: 
Sag-17-508 
Argued: 
June 13, 2018 
Decided: 
July 24, 2018 
 
Panel: 
SAUFLEY, C.J., and ALEXANDER, MEAD, GORMAN, HJELM, and HUMPHREY, JJ. 
 
 
STATE OF MAINE 
 
v. 
 
RICHARD A. HEFFRON III 
 
 
HJELM, J. 
[¶1]  Despite being enjoined by a protection from abuse order from 
having direct or indirect contact with the person protected by that order, on his 
Facebook page Richard A. Heffron III published several posts—including 
threatening ones—directed at the protected person.  Heffron was charged with 
violating the protection order (Class D), 19-A M.R.S. § 4011(1) (2017), and, 
after a jury-waived trial held in the Unified Criminal Docket (Sagadahoc County, 
Billings, J.), he was convicted of the crime.  Heffron appeals the conviction, 
asserting that his Facebook posts did not violate the protection order.  We 
affirm the judgment. 
 
2 
I.  BACKGROUND 
[¶2]  The State charged Heffron with violating the order for protection 
from abuse by having contact with the protected person—conduct that was 
prohibited by the order.1  The complaint was filed in September of 2017, and 
Heffron pleaded not guilty.  After holding a trial in November of 2017, the court 
made the following findings, which are supported by evidence in the record.2  
See State v. Proia, 2017 ME 169, ¶ 2, 168 A.3d 798. 
[¶3]  The order for protection from abuse, of which Heffron had actual 
notice, prohibited him from having direct or indirect contact with the protected 
person except in circumstances that are not present here.3  In September of 
2017, Heffron published several posts concerning the protected person on 
                                         
1  As is evident from our description of the evidence, see infra ¶ 3, the record could well have 
supported a charge that Heffron violated the provision of the protection order prohibiting him from 
threatening and harassing the protected person, but because of an admitted oversight, the State did 
not charge him with that type of violation.   
 
2  In accordance with the requirements of the Violence Against Women Act, 18 U.S.C.S. 
§ 2265(d)(3) (LEXIS through Pub. L. No. 115-196), we do not describe those facts that are likely to 
reveal the identity or location of the protected person.  See Doe v. Tierney, 2018 ME 101, ¶ 1 n.1, --- 
A.3d ---.   
 
3  The evidence presented at trial included a copy of the protection order, which reveals that it was 
issued after a full hearing (West Bath, Field, J.) held in June of 2016, that the order was predicated on 
a finding that Heffron had abused and “presents a credible threat to the physical safety of” the 
protected person, that the order was to remain in effect until June of 2018, and that the order 
prohibited Heffron from having direct or indirect contact with the protected person except in 
narrowly drawn circumstances that are not relevant to this case.   
 
3 
Facebook,4 a social media platform that Heffron and the protected person each 
used when they were in a relationship and on which they had once been 
“friends” and now have “friends” in common.5  The content of some of the posts 
was personal, and the language Heffron used was—as described by the court—
“obviously offensive.”  Heffron began some of the posts with the phrase, “Hey, 
[protected person’s name],” and the posts then directly addressed the 
protected person by using the second-person “you.”  For example, in one of the 
posts that Heffron authored, he stated, “IM GONNA RUN YOU DOWN EVERY 
CHANCE I CAN TODAY AND TOMORROW AND THE NEXT DAY AND THE NEXT.”   
[¶4]  The court found that “these are not posts that were simply 
expressing protected opinions about [the protected person] or providing 
information about [the protected person], these posts were intended to reach 
[the protected person] directly and by their plain language that was their 
intent[.] . . . [T]hey are addressing [the protected person] directly . . . .”  The 
court went on to find that Heffron intended for the Facebook posts to reach the 
                                         
4  At trial, Heffron argued that the evidence was insufficient for the court to find that he had 
authored at least some of the posts at issue.  The court nonetheless found that Heffron had written 
all of the posts attributed to him, and Heffron does not challenge that factual determination on appeal. 
 
5  Facebook, an internet-based social media platform, is “becoming the dominant mode of 
communicating directly with others, exceeding e-mail usage in 2009.”  State v. Craig, 112 A.3d 559, 
564 (N.H. 2015).  Facebook users can create their own Facebook profile pages and have the option of 
customizing their privacy settings so that “anyone including people off of Facebook” can view the 
contents of their profile page.  Id. (quotation marks omitted). 
 
4 
protected person and that this occurred.6  The court characterized Heffron’s use 
of the social media platform as a way for him to “communicate with [the] 
protected person through [Facebook as] an intervening agency or 
instrumentality.”  Based on these findings, the court found Heffron guilty of 
violating the protection order and sentenced him to a 90-day jail term with all 
but 21 days suspended and one year of probation that included conditions 
requiring him to comply with any protection orders in effect and to not issue 
posts on social media about or directed to the protected person.  Heffron 
appealed the conviction.  M.R. App. P. 2B(b). 
II.  DISCUSSION 
 
[¶5]  As authorized by 19-A M.R.S. § 4007(1)(D) (2017), the protection 
order issued against Heffron prohibited him “from having any contact, direct or 
indirect,” with the protected person except in specifically described 
circumstances that are not present here.  “Violation of a protection from abuse 
order is committed when the defendant violates a temporary, emergency, 
interim or final protective order if the defendant has prior actual notice of the 
existence of the order.”  State v. Smen, 2006 ME 40, ¶ 8, 895 A.2d 319 (alteration 
                                         
6  Evidence presented at the trial indicated that the protected person saw the posts after a member 
of Heffron’s family forwarded screenshots of them to the protected person.  The investigating officer 
testified that once he received a report of the posts, he was able to find them easily on Heffron’s public 
Facebook page.   
 
5 
omitted) (quotation marks omitted); see 19-A M.R.S. § 4011(1)(A).  A violation 
of a no-contact provision of a protection order is a Class D crime.  19-A M.R.S. 
§ 4011(1).  Heffron asserts that the entries he posted on Facebook do not 
constitute “direct or indirect contact” with the protected person, that he did not 
have sufficient notice that the posts were a form of proscribed conduct, and that 
the posts were a protected form of speech.    
[¶6]  Although “contact” is not defined in the protection statutes, see 
19-A M.R.S. §§ 4001-4014 (2017), we have explained that “[b]y prohibiting 
direct or indirect contact, . . . an order entered pursuant to section 4007(1)(D) 
instructs a defendant not to meet, connect, or communicate with the protected 
person, either personally or through an intervening agency, instrumentality, 
influence, or other person.”  State v. Elliott, 2010 ME 3, ¶ 34, 987 A.2d 513; see 
also State v. Pettengill, 635 A.2d 1309, 1310 (Me. 1994) (stating that, in a bail 
order prohibiting a defendant from having “contact” with another person, the 
“word ‘contact’ is not a word of art, but one of common usage and commonly 
understood”).  The “[c]ontact prohibited by paragraph (D) may be established 
by proof of a variety of actions,” including emailing, gesturing from the window 
of a car, calling the house of the protected person’s current romantic partner, 
 
6 
and “monitoring a person along a specified route to and from work . . . .”  Elliott, 
2010 ME 3, ¶¶ 33, 36, 987 A.2d 513. 
[¶7]  Given the breadth of the definition of “contact” that a protection 
order can bar, the court did not err by finding that Heffron had direct or indirect 
contact with the protected person.  The finding is supported first by the content 
of some of the posts, in which Heffron directly addressed the protected person 
by using the phrase, “Hey [protected person’s name]” followed by personal and 
demeaning allegations about the protected person.  The posts also referred to 
the protected person in the second person—in other words, as “you.”  Just as if 
Heffron were speaking directly to the protected person, he framed his posts as 
direct communications to that person.  Therefore, the court did not err by 
finding that the language of the Facebook posts itself demonstrated that 
Heffron intended to communicate with the protected person.7   
[¶8]  The court’s finding of contact is also supported by the means of 
communication that Heffron chose.  As the court found, when Heffron published 
the posts to his publicly accessible Facebook page, he knew that the protected 
                                         
7  Because the court found that Heffron’s actions were intentional, we do not need to reach his 
challenge concerning the mens rea required to establish a violation of the protection order or address 
the question of whether a lesser culpable state of mind would suffice to prove the commission of the 
crime.  See 17-A M.R.S. § 34(3) (2017) (explaining that if a court finds a defendant acted intentionally, 
then that finding is sufficient to establish that the defendant acted knowingly, recklessly, and 
negligently). 
 
7 
person and that person’s family and friends used Facebook.  Indeed, the 
protected person learned of Heffron’s Facebook posts when a relative of 
Heffron, who also knew the protected person, showed screenshots of the posts 
to the protected person.  Therefore, Heffron used Facebook as an intervening 
agency or instrumentality for the purpose of making contact with the protected 
person.  See Elliott, 2010 ME 3, ¶ 34, 987 A.2d 513. 
[¶9]  In short, the court’s finding that Heffron had indirect contact with 
the protected person was supported by the evidence, see Smen, 2006 ME 40, 
¶ 7, 895 A.2d 319 (stating that “[i]n reviewing a challenge to the sufficiency of 
the evidence in a criminal matter, we consider the evidence in the light most 
favorable to the State to determine whether the trier of fact rationally could 
have found beyond a reasonable doubt every element of the offense charged” 
(quotation marks omitted)), and the court’s legal analysis was fully consistent 
with the broad notion of “contact” explained in Elliott. 
[¶10]  The court’s findings also dispose of Heffron’s assertion that he did 
not have adequate notice that his Facebook posts were a prohibited form of 
contact with the protected person.  Through his posts, Heffron intended to have 
contact with that person.  Therefore, as found by the court, Heffron’s contact 
with the protected person was not inadvertent or achieved through a means 
 
8 
that was not reasonably seen to serve as an effective means of communication.  
Because his posts foreseeably reached the protected person, Heffron achieved 
his goal, and he cannot now successfully complain that he did not know that his 
conduct was proscribed.  Wherever the boundary may lie between conduct that 
falls within and without the protection order’s prohibition against contact, 
Heffron’s Facebook posts do not approach that line. 
[¶11]  Finally, Heffron may be seen to argue that his Facebook posts were 
protected speech.  We review this First Amendment challenge de novo.  See City 
of Bangor v. Diva’s, Inc., 2003 ME 51, ¶ 10, 830 A.2d 898.  Our review of Heffron’s 
Facebook posts, which we do not describe in detail for the reason explained 
above, see supra n.2, confirms that some of their contents are highly personal, 
derogatory, harassing, and threatening.  As we have explained, courts do not 
violate a defendant’s First Amendment protections by issuing a protection from 
abuse order that prohibits him or her from having any direct or indirect contact 
with the protected person where the defendant has a history of engaging in 
behavior that “would cause a reasonable person to fear bodily injury and suffer 
emotional distress . . . .”  Childs v. Ballou, 2016 ME 142, ¶ 26, 148 A.3d 291.  
Simply put, “[t]he First Amendment does not serve as a shield to protect 
[Heffron] from the consequences of his harassing communications.”  Id. ¶ 24. 
 
9 
[¶12]  Here, based on a judicial determination that Heffron had abused 
and posed a credible physical threat to the protected person, a protection 
order—which Heffron did not challenge—was issued against him and barred 
him from having direct or indirect contact with the protected person in nearly 
all circumstances, including those presented here.  That order was a 
constitutionally sound injunction against the very conduct in which Heffron 
later chose to engage, resulting in this prosecution.  See id. ¶¶ 20, 26.  Based on 
the evidence presented at this criminal trial, the court correctly determined 
that Heffron’s communications with the protected person fell short of those 
that deserve constitutional protection and that a conviction based on his 
violation of the protection order did not place his First Amendment rights at 
risk. 
The entry is: 
Judgment affirmed. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
James M. Mason, Esq. (orally), Handelman & Mason LLC, Brunswick, for 
appellant Richard A. Heffron III 
 
Jonathan R. Liberman, District Attorney, and Alvah J. Chalifour, Jr., Asst. Dist. 
Atty. (orally), Sagadahoc County District Attorney’s Office, Bath, for appellee 
State of Maine 
 
Sagadahoc County Unified Criminal Docket docket number CR-2017-856 
FOR CLERK REFERENCE ONLY