US | Middleborough State to Town: Sorry, People Are Allowed to Swear Massachusetts AG asks Middleborough to scrap rule By Newser Editors and Wire Services Posted Oct 9, 2012 4:21 PM CDT Copied In this 2007 file photo, pedestrians stroll through downtown Middleborough, Mass. (AP Photo/Steven Senne, File) Massachusetts Attorney General Martha Coakley is recommending that the town of Middleborough change or repeal a bylaw that prohibits public profanity. The town approved a proposal this summer that would allow police to enforce the 1968 ban by imposing a $20 fine on people who engage in loud swearing in public. The proposal came in response to concerns by merchants about profanity-laden language used by teenagers and other young people in the downtown area and public parks. But Coakley said today the original bylaw appears to violate First Amendment guarantees of free speech, and she called on Middleborough to take it off the books or amend it. Read These Next Iran goes after 'the eyes' of opponents' defense systems. Iran picks Khamenei's son as supreme leader. A math genius appears to have plagiarized a landmark paper. Barack Obama takes on Donald Trump, without ever saying his name. Report an error