Las Vegas Review-Journal

A cheerleade­r’s vulgar social media message prompts a First Amendment showdown

- By Adam Liptak

WASHINGTON — It was a Saturday in the spring of 2017, and a ninth-grade student in Pennsylvan­ia was having a bad day. She had just learned that she had failed to make the varsity cheerleadi­ng squad and would remain on junior varsity.

The student expressed her frustratio­n on social media, sending a message on Snapchat to about 250 friends. The message included an image of the student and a friend with their middle fingers raised, along with text expressing a similar sentiment. Using a curse word four times, the student expressed her dissatisfa­ction with “school,” “softball,” “cheer” and “everything.”

Though Snapchat messages are ephemeral by design, another student took a screenshot of this one and showed it to her mother, a coach. The school suspended the student from cheerleadi­ng for a year, saying the punishment was needed to “avoid chaos” and maintain a “teamlike environmen­t.”

The student sued the school district, winning a sweeping victory in the 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in Philadelph­ia. The court said the First Amendment did not allow public schools to punish students for speech outside school grounds.

This month, at its first private conference after the holiday break, the Supreme Court will consider whether to hear the case, Mahanoy Area School District v. BL, No. 20-255. The 3rd Circuit’s ruling is in tension with decisions from several other courts, and such splits often invite Supreme Court review.

In urging the justices to hear the case, the school district said administra­tors around the nation needed a definitive ruling from the Supreme Court on their power to discipline students for what they say away from school.

“The question presented recurs constantly and has become even more urgent as COVID-19 has forced schools to operate online,” a brief for the school district said. “Only this court can resolve this threshold First Amendment question bedeviling the nation’s nearly 100,000 public schools.”

Justin Driver, a law professor at Yale and author of “The

Schoolhous­e Gate: Public Education, the Supreme Court and the Battle for the American Mind,” agreed with the school district, to a point.

“It is difficult to exaggerate the stakes of this constituti­onal question,” he said. But he added that schools had no business telling students what they could say when they were not in school.

“In the modern era, a tremendous percentage of minors’ speech occurs off campus but online,” he said. “Judicial decisions that permit schools to regulate off-campus speech that criticizes public schools are antithetic­al to the First Amendment. Such decisions empower schools to reach into any student’s home and declare critical statements verboten, something that should deeply alarm all Americans.”

The key precedent is from a different era. In 1969, in Tinker v. Des Moines Independen­t Community School District, the Supreme Court allowed students to wear black armbands to protest the Vietnam War but said disruptive speech, at least on school grounds, could be punished.

Making distinctio­ns between what students say on campus and off was easier in 1969, before the rise of social media. These days, most courts have allowed public schools to discipline students for social media posts so long as they are linked to school activities and threaten to disrupt them.

A divided three-judge panel of the 3rd Circuit took a different approach, announcing that a categorica­l rule would seem to limit the ability of public schools to address many kinds of disturbing speech by students on social media, including racist threats and cyberbully­ing.

In a concurring opinion, Judge Thomas Ambro wrote that he would have ruled for the student on narrower grounds. It would have been enough, he said, to say that her speech was protected by the First Amendment because it did not disrupt school activities. The majority was wrong, he said, to protect all off-campus speech.

In a brief urging the Supreme Court to hear the school district’s appeal, the Pennsylvan­ia School Boards Associatio­n said the line the 3rd Circuit had drawn was too crude.

“Whether a disruptive or harmful tweet is sent from the school cafeteria or after the student has crossed the street on her walk home, it has the same impact,” the brief said. “The 3rd Circuit’s formalisti­c rule renders schools powerless whenever a hateful message is launched from off campus.”

The student, represente­d by lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union, told the Supreme Court that the First Amendment protected her “colorful expression of frustratio­n, made in an ephemeral Snapchat on her personal social media, on a weekend, off campus, containing no threat or harassment or mention of her school, and that did not cause or threaten any disruption of her school.”

The brief focused on that last point, and it did not spend much time defending the 3rd Circuit’s broader approach.

The Supreme Court has a reputation for being protective of First Amendment rights. Chief Justice John Roberts, in an appearance at a law school last year, described himself as “probably the most aggressive defender of the First Amendment on the court now.”

But the court has been methodical­ly cutting back on students’ First Amendment rights since the Tinker decision in 1969. And in the court’s last major decision on students’ free speech, in 2007, Roberts wrote the majority opinion, siding with a principal who had suspended a student for displaying a banner that said “Bong Hits 4 Jesus.”

Driver said that suggested a blind spot. “There is at least one major area where Chief Justice Roberts’ defense of the First Amendment is notably lax: student speech,” he said. “I fervently hope that Roberts will regain his fondness for the First Amendment when the court finally resolves this urgent question.”

 ?? ANNA MONEYMAKER / NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2020) ?? The American flag flies outside the United States Supreme Court on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on May 13. A Pennsylvan­ia school district has asked the Supreme Court to rule on whether students may be discipline­d for what they say on social media.
ANNA MONEYMAKER / NEW YORK TIMES FILE (2020) The American flag flies outside the United States Supreme Court on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on May 13. A Pennsylvan­ia school district has asked the Supreme Court to rule on whether students may be discipline­d for what they say on social media.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States