Hanley vs Tampa Bay Sports and Entertainment LLC Putting the Telephone Consumer Protection Act on Ice 

June, 2019 - Kevin Brown

The sports world is under attack again for its text marketing tactics directed to consumers. This time the target is Tampa Bay Sports & Entertainment, LLC, the owner of the National Hockey League team, the Tampa Bay Lightning. In a federal class action lawsuit filed in March 2019 (Bryan Hanley vs. Tampa Bay Sports and Entertainment LLC, Case No. 8:19-CV-550-CEH-CPT (M.D. Fla), plaintiff Bryan Hanley alleges that the Lightning’s owner violated the Telephone Consumer Protection Act (TCPA) by sending more than a dozen marketing text messages to Mr. Hanley’s cellphone without his consent. Such TCPA class actions are nothing new to sports franchises seeking to engage their fans with omnichannel marketing. But what is relatively new is that TCPA defendants (like the Lightning’s owner) are striking back with sweeping constitutional challenges predicated on the First Amendment.

The TCPA (47 U.S.C. § 227) was enacted in 1991 to protect consumers from receiving unsolicited telemarketing messages. Its reach now includes messages sent by telephone, fax or text. In 2015, Congress exempted from this restriction messages made by government officials or private entities to collect a debt owed to or guaranteed by the United States, such as a student loan. That amendment (generally known as the Government Debt Exception), coupled with the Supreme Court’s decision inReed v. Town of Gilbert, 135 S.Ct. 2218 (2015), has spawned a series of challenges to strike down the TCPA (in its entirety) as violating the First Amendment. Proponents of these challenges argue that the TCPA has steadily become a full-throttle restriction on speech— broadly and categorically restricting purportedly “unwanted speech” to consumers under the guise of a content-neutral regulation.

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