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LAWSUIT: High school student sues after receiving suspension for posting off-campus cat meme

WATCH: Student suspended after posting memes
- A Tennessee high school student, backed by the 果冻传媒app官方, sued his school after being suspended for posting satirical Instagram memes while off campus.
- The memes, none of which caused any disruption at school, depicted the principal holding a box of vegetables, as an anime cat wearing a dress, and as a cartoon character being hugged by a cartoon bird.
- FIRE鈥檚 lawsuit seeks to cement Supreme Court law that schools cannot punish students for nondisruptive, private, off-campus speech.
TULLAHOMA, Tenn., July 19, 2023 鈥 In one Tennessee school district, kids can鈥檛 be kids.
Today, a 17-year-old rising senior represented by the FIREsued his Tennessee public high school after the principal suspended him for posting memes lampooning the principal for being overly serious.
鈥淭he First Amendment bars public school employees from acting as a 24/7 board of censors,鈥 said FIREattorney Conor Fitzpatrick. 鈥淎s long as a student鈥檚 posts do not substantially disrupt school, what teens post on social media on their own time is between them and their parents, not the government.鈥
The First Amendment bars public schools from acting as round-the-clock censors. But on Aug. 10, 2022, Tullahoma High School鈥檚 principal and assistant principal called the student to their office and interrogated him about three memes he posted to Instagram off school grounds and outside school hours.
The first meme shows Principal Jason Quick holding a box of vegetables with the caption, 鈥淢y brotha.鈥 The second depicts Quick as an anime cat with cat ears and whiskers wearing a dress. The third shows Quick鈥檚 head superimposed on a hand-drawn cartoon character being hugged by a cartoon bird. The student intended the images to be tongue-in-cheek commentary, gently ribbing a school administrator he perceived as humorless.
The memes caused no disruption at school.
Nevertheless, Quick slapped the student with a three-day out-of-school suspension. Quick and Assistant Principal Derrick Crutchfield claimed reliance on a school policy prohibiting students from posting images on social media which 鈥渆mbarrass,鈥 鈥渄iscredit,鈥 or 鈥渉umiliate鈥 another student or school staff. But the Supreme Court held in 2021 that if a student鈥檚 off-campus online speech does not cause disruption at school, the school cannot censor it. That鈥檚 why students have an off-campus First Amendment right to say 鈥fuck school鈥 on social media.
Tullahoma High School also prohibits social media activity that is 鈥渦nbecoming of a Wildcat,鈥 the school鈥檚 mascot. What that means, specifically and practically, is anyone鈥檚 guess. The Constitution, however, requires laws regulating speech to provide enough information so parents and students know how to comply.
鈥淎dministrators cannot wield vague social media policies to punish nondisruptive, off-campus satire,鈥 said FIREattorney Harrison Rosenthal. 鈥淧rincipal Quick suspended a student over playful memes 鈥 but he can鈥檛 suspend the First Amendment.鈥
FIRE鈥檚 lawsuit names Tullahoma City Schools, Quick, and Crutchfield as defendants and seeks to remove the suspension from the student鈥檚 record and halt enforcement of the school鈥檚 vague policies.
The FIRE(果冻传媒app官方) is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to defending and sustaining the individual rights of all Americans to free speech and free thought 鈥 the most essential qualities of liberty. FIREeducates Americans about the importance of these inalienable rights, promotes a culture of respect for these rights, and provides the means to preserve them.
FIRE is assisted in this case by local counsel Darrick O鈥橠ell of Spicer Rudstrom PLLC.
CONTACT
Katie Kortepeter, Communications Campaign Manager, 果冻传媒app官方: 215-717-3473; media@thefire.org
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