Chattanooga Times Free Press

Court weighs student’s profanity case

- BY MARK SHERMAN

WASHINGTON — A wary Supreme Court on Wednesday weighed whether public schools can discipline students for things they say off campus, worrying about overly restrictin­g speech on one hand and leaving educators powerless to deal with bullying on the other.

The justices, hearing arguments in the case of a 14-year-old high school freshman’s Snapchat F-bombs, struggled to fit the need to protect students’ political and religious expression with the ability of schools to get at disruptive, even potentiall­y dangerous, speech that occurs outside the school setting.

In one of many examples members of the court offered, Justice Elena Kagan described boys who keep a sexually charged online ranking of girls based on their looks. “You can’t put people in jail for commenting on people’s appearance, but shouldn’t a school be able to deal with it?” Kagan asked.

The court tested out possible outcomes in the case of the student’s profanity-laced social media rant, which Justice Brett Kavanaugh described as her blowing off steam just like “millions of kids” do.

Kavanaugh is one of several justices who have children in high school, or recently did. The court heard just under two hours of arguments by telephone because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, well beyond the allotted 60 minutes.

The current dispute stems from Tinker v. Des Moines, the Vietnam-era case of a high school in Des Moines, Iowa, that suspended students who wore armbands to protest the war. In a landmark ruling, the Supreme Court sided with the students, declaring students don’t “shed their constituti­onal rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhous­e gate.”

The court also held then that schools retained the authority to restrict speech that would disrupt the school environmen­t.

At the center of this case is Brandi Levy of Mahanoy City, Pennsylvan­ia.

Levy and a friend were at a convenienc­e store when she used Snapchat to express frustratio­n at being kept on her high school’s junior varsity cheerleadi­ng squad for another year.

“F--- school f--- softball f--- cheer f--- everything,” Levy wrote, in a post that also contained a photo in which she and a classmate raised their middle fingers. A second post questioned how an incoming freshman could have made the varsity.

The posts were brought to the attention of the team’s coaches, who suspended Levy from the team for a year. Levy’s parents responded with a federal lawsuit, claiming the suspension violated their daughter’s constituti­onal rights to free speech.

The case’s potential importance grew when the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Philadelph­ia also sided with Levy and held that schools can’t impose discipline for what students say when they’re off campus.

American Civil Liberties Union lawyer David Cole, representi­ng Levy, urged the justices to affirm the clean line the appeals court drew, making clear educators have no authority over children when they are not under a school’s supervisio­n.

“Expanding Tinker would transform a limited exception into a 24/7 rule,” Cole said.

But several justices said the campus border is not so clear in the age of the internet and the remote learning that has come with the pandemic.

“How does that fit with modern technology?” Chief Justice John Roberts asked.

The school district and the Biden administra­tion both argued the justices should reject the appellate ruling because it draws an artificial line.

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