San Francisco Chronicle

Cursing student not punished for vulgar messages

- By Adam Liptak Adam Liptak is a New York Times writer.

WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Wednesday ruled that a Pennsylvan­ia school district had violated the First Amendment by punishing a student for a vulgar socialmedi­a message sent away from school grounds.

The vote was 81, with Justice Clarence Thomas dissenting.

The case concerned Brandi Levy, a Pennsylvan­ia high school student who had expressed her dismay over not making the varsity cheerleadi­ng squad by sending a colorful Snapchat message to about 250 people.

She sent the message on a Saturday from the Cocoa Hut, a convenienc­e store popular with teenagers. It included an image of Levy and a friend with their middle fingers raised, along with a string of words expressing the same sentiment. Using a swear word four times, Levy objected to “school,” “softball,” “cheer” and “everything.”

Although Snapchat messages are meant to vanish not long after they are sent, another student took a screenshot and showed it to her mother, a coach. The school suspended Levy from cheerleadi­ng for a year, saying the punishment was needed to “avoid chaos” and maintain a “team like environmen­t.”

Levy sued the school district, winning a sweeping victory from a divided threejudge panel of 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, relying on a precedent 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, saying the students had not “shed their constituti­onal rights to freedom of speech or expression at the schoolhous­e gate.” But disruptive speech, at least on school grounds, could be punished.

Although the 3rd Circuit was united in ruling for Levy, the judges disagreed about the rationale. The majority announced a categorica­l rule barring discipline for offcampus speech that seemed to limit the ability of public schools to address many kinds of disturbing communicat­ions by students on social media, including racist threats and cyberbully­ing.

The Supreme Court has limited students’ First Amendment rights since the Tinker decision in 1969. In the court’s last major decision on students’ free speech, in 2007, for instance, the court sided with a principal who had suspended a student for displaying a banner that said “Bong Hits 4 Jesus.”

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