With no explanation, chose the best option from "A", "B", "C" or "D". activity. Whittington v. State, 669 N.E.2d 1363, 1367 (Ind.1996). Second, if it has, the court must decide whether the restricted activity constituted an abuse of the right to speak. Id. Analyzing the first prong of the test, we note that the right to speak clause focuses on the restrictive impact of state action on an individual’s expressive activity. Id. at 1368. At a minimum, the clause is implicated when the State imposes a direct and significant burden on a person’s opportunity to speak his or her mind, in whatever manner the speaker deems most appropriate. Id. Here, we conclude that this condition is satisfied by -AB.’s adjudication for harassing Gobert by posting a message on an internet website. See Madden v. State, 786 N.E.2d 1152, 1156 (Ind.Ct.App.2003), trans. denied (<HOLDING>). Turning to the second prong of the analysis,

A: holding that a persons conviction for making unreasonable noise based on her swearing and screaming at police officers while her husband was being cited for a traffic violation constitutes a restriction of claimants expressive activity by state action
B: holding that plaintiffs motion to amend her complaint to add her husband as a defendant did not relate back because her failure to sue her husband was not due to misnomer or mistake involving the identity of the proper party but because the law at the time of the complaint did not allow one spouse to sue another in tort
C: holding that the employee was acting within the course of her employment when she died while returning from the workrelated session because her death occurred on a public highway which was brought within the scope of her employment by her employers requirement that she attend training at the state police academy
D: holding wife did not have a duty to warn a police officer who was shot while escorting her home that her husband had threatened to kill any police officer
A.