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In early test of Mahanoy, FIREfiles amicus brief defending high-schooler鈥檚 off-campus Snapchat joke
In June, the Supreme Court explained in Mahanoy Area School District v. B.L. that courts should be skeptical when public grade schools attempt to regulate off-campus speech, lest school administrators control 鈥渁ll the speech a student utters during the full 24-hour day.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
The Court鈥檚 ruling has direct implications for another pending case involving a Colorado high school student who was for an off-campus, after-hours Snapchat post. Before Mahanoy was decided, the U.S. District Court for the District of Colorado the student鈥檚 claims that his First Amendment and due process rights had been violated, granting the school broad power to regulate student speech regardless of where or when it is uttered.
On Sept. 16, FIRE鈥 joined by the Cato Institute 鈥 filed a brief of amici curiae in the case of C1.G v. Siegfried, in support of the student鈥檚 appeal in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit, which could become the first federal circuit to rule on a public school鈥檚 regulation of off-campus speech since Mahanoy.
Testing the limits of Mahanoy
On the night of Friday, Sept. 13, 2019, a Cherry Creek High School student, referred to in court documents only as C.G., took a of three of his friends in a thrift store while they sported headwear, including a hat that (to him) resembled foreign military garb circa WWII. Posting the photo on Snapchat for his circle of friends, C.G. added a caption based on a : 鈥淢e and the boys bout to exterminate the Jews.鈥 C.G. removed the post and apologized online within a few hours (鈥淚鈥檓 sorry for that picture it was ment [sic] to be a joke鈥), but not before a classmate who saw the photo showed it to her father, who called the police, who then responded to C.G.鈥檚 house and determined there was no threat against anyone.
When officials at Cherry Creek got wind that members of the local community had taken offense to the post, they suspended C.G. for five days, then another five, then an additional 11 days, before ultimately expelling him for a full year. When C.G. and his parents later sued, the district court , ruling there was no First Amendment or due process violation as a matter of law.
The district court鈥檚 ruling is directly at odds with the Supreme Court鈥檚 reasoning in Mahanoy. Like B.L., the student cheerleader in Mahanoy, C.G. posted on social media after school hours, off-campus, and not as part of any school program 鈥 all of which diminish any leeway the First Amendment may otherwise permit to grade schools to regulate student speech. C.G. did not even reference the school or its programs in his post, as did B.L. when she wrote, 鈥.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
As FIREnotes in its brief, 鈥Mahanoy all but disarms K-12 officials from disciplining off-campus speech that is not directed at any student, teacher, or administrator or otherwise lacks any nexus to the school.鈥
VICTORY: Supreme Court sides with high school cheerleader, rules school鈥檚 punishment for Snapchat posts violated First Amendment
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Even before Mahanoy, more than 50 years of jurisprudence on student speech required reversal of the district court鈥檚 decision. In 1969, the Supreme Court made clear in Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District that school officials cannot punish speech simply because they anticipate unpleasantness or discomfort among a student body. As reiterated this year in Mahanoy, Tinker held that administrators may only regulate student speech that creates a concrete threat of substantial disruption to school activities. There was no evidence of that here.
Justice Alito likewise cautioned in his Mahanoy concurrence that even if 鈥渟peech is deeply offensive to members of the school community and may cause a disruption, the school cannot punish the student who spoke out,鈥 adding that, 鈥渢he school may suppress the disruption, but it may not punish the off-campus speech that prompted other students to engage in misconduct [emphasis added].鈥&苍产蝉辫;
However, the district court justified its dismissal of C.G.鈥檚 First Amendment claim in part by calculating the possibility of disruption based on how deeply speech offends.
In our brief, FIREadvised the Tenth Circuit panel that 鈥淸a]llowing the decision below to stand will only worsen the problem of censorship in both the K-12 and collegiate contexts by ratifying an impermissible heckler鈥檚 veto.鈥 In its more than two decades of advocating for civil liberties, FIREhas seen more than its fair share of school officials use the discomfort of others to justify the sacrifice of free speech.
Should the lower court ruling stand, 鈥渟tudents would rationally but mistakenly conclude that they must self-censor everywhere, lest they cause offense to others.鈥
As explained in Mahanoy, America鈥檚 public schools are 鈥渘urseries of democracy,鈥 with a strong interest in protecting the 鈥渕arketplace of ideas.鈥 Indeed, the majority opinion explicitly reminded schools that they not only have a responsibility to respect students鈥 First Amendment rights, but are tasked with fostering an environment that actually encourages students to value free speech.
This is no less the case for Cherry Creek, even though C.G. was joking. Discharging that duty may have been a harder pill for Cherry Creek officials to swallow had C.G. expressed actual anti-semitic sentiment. (If anything, he appears to have been lampooning Nazis and anti-semites, given the absurdity of his friends鈥 appearances.) But here, especially once C.G. apologized, it should have been an easy decision to make the experience an opportunity for learning instead of punishment.
School officials and the wider community have their own right to condemn a speaker鈥檚 words 鈥 鈥渕ore speech鈥 is the remedy the First Amendment envisions for unwelcome expression. But punishing merely offensive speech, as Cherry Creek did, wrongly conveys to students that their words are undeserving of constitutional protection. FIREpointed out to the Tenth Circuit that, should the lower court ruling stand, 鈥渟tudents would rationally but mistakenly conclude that they must self-censor everywhere, lest they cause offense to others.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
Due process violated
Compounding Cherry Creek鈥檚 failure to follow the Constitution, the school also neglected to provide C.G. due process in expelling him. We argued in our brief that the school鈥檚 failure to notify C.G. of all but one charge against him deprived him of the opportunity to mount a meaningful defense to his suspension, and that officials gave him no opportunity at all to respond to subsequent, harsher punishments. On top of this, despite the long-established rights explained in Tinker, Cherry Creek refused to even consider whether the First Amendment barred them from punishing C.G. for his post in the first place.
FIRE weighed in on Mahanoy, in which the Supreme Court delivered a win for student speech and cabined its decision from applying to higher education. The concerns that animated that case are equally present here. As we cautioned in our brief: 鈥淏ecause tomorrow鈥檚 college students attend today鈥檚 grade schools, and because courts often misapply K鈥12 precedent to speech restrictions involving college students, the resolution of this case could resonate on campuses across the country for years to come.鈥&苍产蝉辫;
This could present the first opportunity for a circuit court to rule on a case involving off-campus online student speech following Mahanoy, and we will keep you all posted on the outcome.
In need of First Amendment resources for teachers? The FIREhas you covered. Our "First Things First" First Amendment textbook for college undergraduates explores the fundamentals of modern American free speech law. Meanwhile, our K-12 First Amendment curriculum modules help educators enrich and supplement their existing instruction on First Amendment and freedom of expression issues in middle and high school classrooms. Explore thefire.org for even more First Amendment educational resources.
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