Los Angeles Times

Students sue for Coulter

GOP group accuses Berkeley of moving event to sabotage it.

- By Paige St. John

A Republican student group on Monday filed a lawsuit demanding that UC Berkeley allow conservati­ve pundit Ann Coulter to speak on campus Thursday as originally planned.

Citing unspecifie­d threats, administra­tors had reschedule­d Coulter’s appearance for May 2, when they said the university could provide adequate security.

But in its free-speech lawsuit, the Berkeley College Republican­s — which planned to host Coulter — called that date a “sham” intended to ensure her address was poorly attended.

Harmeet Dhillon, a lawyer representi­ng the students, accused Berkeley of adopting an unwritten policy under which it declares certain speakers “high profile” and then restricts when and where they can appear on campus.

The day offered to Coulter falls during “dead week,”

when students are studying for final exams and the campus traditiona­lly is deserted. The university also had said Coulter would have to speak at midday, in a science hall located away from the central campus, rather than during the evening.

“If you can host Supreme Court justices of the United States, if you can host Bill Maher … surely you can host a controvers­ial talking head pundit,” said Dhillon, who also is a member of the state Republican National Committee.

The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in San Francisco, seeks an injunction against Berkeley’s enforcemen­t of its policy regarding speakers.

A university spokesman on Monday said no such policy exists.

“Nobody here understand­s what they are referring to,” Dan Mogulof said, adding that there was no “cookie-cutter” approach to dealing with campus event requests. In the case of Coulter, the spokesman said, university officials felt those who might show up to protest her posed a risk.

Coulter has said she intends to speak Thursday regardless of whether her appearance is sanctioned. Dhillon said the groups that originally invited her have not determined if they will be party to that. “They’ll have to make that decision on that day,” the lawyer said.

The primary financial sponsor for Coulter’s Berkeley appearance — the Young America’s Foundation, a national conservati­ve nonprofit — is a party to the lawsuit. Coulter’s fee is listed on the organizati­on’s website as in excess of $20,000.

A February event hosted by the Berkeley College Republican­s featuring rightwing provocateu­r Milo Yiannopoul­os was closed down before it even began because of violent street protests. That and two subsequent political demonstrat­ions at Berkeley have resulted in multiple injuries and arrests.

In early March, the mayor’s office and the Berkeley Police Department reached an agreement with the university that events involving high-profile speakers would take place only during the daytime, according to a campus police email filed in the court documents.

Other emails included with the legal filing show that Berkeley administra­tors objected more to the time of day of Coulter’s address than the original Thursday date.

In one communicat­ion with student organizers, an official said campus police had cited “safety and security issues” not just for those attending her speech but also for the surroundin­g community. It recommende­d that the event conclude by 3 p.m., a deadline students said was too early.

In the same email, the administra­tor suggested organizers either push back Coulter’s appearance to the following week, or reschedule it for next fall to provide “an environmen­t that is secure and prepared for productive dialogue across difference­s of viewpoint.”

 ?? Cliff Owen Associated Press ?? UC BERKELEY reschedule­d Thursday’s talk by pundit Ann Coulter for May 2. A Republican student club says the move was intended to lower attendance.
Cliff Owen Associated Press UC BERKELEY reschedule­d Thursday’s talk by pundit Ann Coulter for May 2. A Republican student club says the move was intended to lower attendance.
 ?? Ben Margot Associated Press ?? A GROUP of Republican students says UC Berkeley adopted an unwritten policy to restrict when and where certain speakers appear on campus. A school spokesman said no such policy exists. Above, a flier on campus.
Ben Margot Associated Press A GROUP of Republican students says UC Berkeley adopted an unwritten policy to restrict when and where certain speakers appear on campus. A school spokesman said no such policy exists. Above, a flier on campus.

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