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Indiana court invokes absolute immunity in denying professor鈥檚 free speech claim 聽

In a , the Court of Appeals of Indiana denied a professor鈥檚 free speech claim, holding that Purdue University administrators are absolutely immune from suit. The ruling sets a dangerous precedent for students and faculty seeking vindication for First Amendment violations in our nation鈥檚 courts.

The court鈥檚 decision revolved around an extraordinary expansion of 鈥 a doctrine preventing parties from successfully suing government officials. Rooted in the that the king may do no wrong and thus may not be sued without his consent, courts and legislatures have reshaped this concept to the realities of our democratic society, resulting in extremely few officials having this impenetrable shield from liability. Nowadays, it protects judges, prosecutors, politicians, and from suit when engaged in their official duties. The overarching purpose, , is to 鈥減reserve their independent decision-making and to prevent undue deflection of attention from public duties.鈥

Although college officials are not judges or prosecutors, courts do occasionally bestow absolute immunity upon them in certain situations. For example, in 2012, held that officials at the University of Colorado at Boulder were immune from suit for firing a professor because their decision 鈥渨as a quasi-judicial action functionally comparable to a judicial process.鈥 The decision upheld a that compared the university鈥檚 process of terminating the professor to an administrative hearing. The courts held that, although these officials are not judges, their actions were similar enough to warrant absolute immunity.  

In last week鈥檚 ruling, the Indiana court also analogizes college officials to judges, stating that 鈥淸t]he same policies that underlie the grant of absolute judicial immunity to judges justify the grant of immunity to non-judicial officers who perform quasi-judicial functions.鈥 The court reasoned that since these college officials acted like judges during the university hearing process, that they may not be held liable for decisions rendered during these proceedings.

The problems with this holding are too extensive for a short blog, but let鈥檚 start with the most pressing: Shielding colleges administrators from suit eradicates any notion of accountability for even their most ridiculously flawed and egregious decisions. The possibility of getting hauled into court for infringing a student鈥檚 or professor鈥檚 First Amendment rights helps to ensure that these fundamental freedoms are protected on college campuses. This is why judges properly refuse to grant any form of immunity for state college administrators who violate the well-established rights of students or professors.

Such judicial cautiousness is well-warranted, as extending absolute immunity to college officials will have a disastrous impact on civil liberties in higher education. Any college administration could simply mask their determination in legalistic procedures to avoid liability for willful or grossly negligent First Amendment violations.

In this case, Professor Maurice Eisenstein was charged with 鈥渉arassment鈥 by Purdue University officials for online comments constituting protected speech. He was cleared of this charge after FIREintervened, yet still found guilty of 鈥渞etaliation鈥 for other comments. This finding prompted Eisenstein to pursue this lawsuit, only to then find that the doors of Indiana courts are effectively closed to his claims, leaving him with no legal recourse. If this perverse rationale were accepted by currently hearing the free speech claims of students and professors across the United States, the First Amendment would be a dead letter on college campuses.

Eisenstein this decision to a higher court. A fresh set of judicial eyes may set the record straight on this issue, and we鈥檒l keep our readers apprised of the result.

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