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果冻传媒app官方, ADF File 鈥楢mici鈥 Brief in Eighth Circuit for Student Expelled for Facebook Posts

Yesterday, FIREand Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) filed an amici curiae (鈥渇riends of the court鈥) brief (PDF) with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit, arguing that a federal district court incorrectly dismissed former Central Lakes College (CLC) student Craig Keefe鈥檚 First Amendment lawsuit against the school.

Keefe was a nursing student at the public Minnesota college when he landed in trouble for comments he posted on Facebook expressing negative feelings towards his classmates. While his posts included profanity, all of them fell far outside the narrowly defined categories of speech unprotected by the First Amendment, such as 鈥渢rue threats.鈥 Nevertheless, the public institution 鈥渁s a consequence of of the profession and transgression of professional boundaries.鈥

Keefe sued the college in federal court, arguing that it violated his First Amendment and due process rights. The district court (PDF) in August of this year, holding that 鈥淐entral Lakes College may hold students in its associate degree nursing program to the standards of the nursing profession.鈥 Keefe is now appealing the dismissal to the Eighth Circuit.

In the amici brief, FIREand ADF argue that public colleges may not abandon the First Amendment for professional codes of conduct. This is especially important when those codes rely on vague standards and are used to restrict constitutionally protected expression, as in Keefe鈥檚 case.

FIRE and ADF explain in our brief how the lower court鈥檚 decision is inconsistent with First Amendment jurisprudence and, if allowed to stand, will have serious repercussions for free speech on campus:

The College attempts to justify its disregard for its legal obligations under the Bill of Rights by invoking a vague, subjective 鈥減rofessional standard.鈥 But like the overly broad and vague college speech codes struck down by federal courts across the country over the past twenty-five years, the College鈥檚 purported justification for regulating and punishing protected student expression fails to pass First Amendment scrutiny. Public institutions may not require students to conform to professional conduct codes that violate the First Amendment. Nor may they interpret professional conduct codes to permit punishment of students for speech otherwise protected by the First Amendment.

Keefe鈥檚 punishment is particularly problematic because his speech was off-campus:

Punishment of off-campus student speech, which the district court sanctioned here, opens the door to far more ominous applications and teaches students the wrong lesson about their First Amendment rights in our modern liberal democracy. As with a public secondary school, a public college鈥檚 campus is 鈥渘ot without boundaries and the reach of school authorities is not without limits.鈥

Unfortunately, this 颈蝉苍鈥檛 the first time we鈥檝e seen a public institution rely on hazy notions of 鈥減rofessional standards鈥 to justify disciplining a student for protected speech. Last December, FIREand the Student Press Law Center filed an amici brief in a similar case currently pending before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.

In that case, Oyama v. University of Hawaii, a student in a teaching program was expelled for expressing unorthodox views about students with disabilities and age-of-consent laws. Our brief (PDF)鈥攑repared by noted First Amendment expert Eugene Volokh in conjunction with the University of California, Los Angeles School of Law鈥檚 First Amendment Amicus Brief Clinic鈥攑ointed out that allowing institutions to expel students from professional programs simply because the university does not feel their viewpoints or beliefs are in accord with prevailing professional norms does great damage to the profession. What鈥檚 more, it lays the groundwork for silencing unpopular speech under vague, subjective 鈥減rofessional standards鈥:

If universities may dismiss students from educational programs on the grounds that the student鈥檚 views fail to comply with dominant professional norms, then most of these campus speech codes could be revived merely by being slightly reworded (for instance, on the theory that allegedly bigoted or otherwise offensive speech is contrary to professional norms). Indeed, if university student speech expressing calm, reasoned views on important public policy topics such as age of consent laws and disability education policy is stripped of First Amendment protection, then universities would have a virtually free hand in engaging in the viewpoint discrimination that the Supreme Court has long condemned. As the speech code cases show, even well-intentioned university administrators often face substantial pressure鈥攆rom activists, legislators, other administrators, faculty, or students鈥攖o restrict student speech. The decision below would give administrators a roadmap to impose such restrictions.

As FIREhas now argued to both the Eighth and Ninth Circuits, such a result is antithetical to the purpose and mission of a university, as well as the legal obligations that bind public colleges and universities.

Read FIREand ADF鈥檚 brief in the Keefe case and check out 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 past coverage for more.

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