果冻传媒app官方

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The Supreme Court of the United States today agreed to hear the campus free speech case of . The resulting opinion will clarify important questions about how students can vindicate their First Amendment rights when public colleges violate them. In March, FIREfiled an amicus curiae brief with the Supreme Court urging the Court to grant certiorari.

鈥淸T]he Eleventh Circuit鈥檚 decision fails to appreciate that the deprivation of a constitutional right is an injustice irrespective of whether it results in monetary loss.鈥

The case stems from a 2016 incident in which Georgia Gwinnett College student Chike Uzuegbunam from talking to others about his Christian faith in the school鈥檚 common areas. Despite being a public institution bound by the First Amendment, Georgia Gwinnett鈥檚 policy at the time banned any expression 鈥渨hich disturbs the peace and/or comfort of person(s)鈥 and restricted speech to two tiny 鈥渇ree speech zones.鈥 Uzuegbunam was told he would need to reserve such a space to exercise his free speech rights.

Represented by the , Uzuegbunam sued Georgia Gwinnett. But after the school agreed to change the policies 鈥 in what appeared to be a move to stop litigation 鈥 the federal district court dismissed the case for mootness. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit upheld the district court鈥檚 ruling. FIREfiled an amicus brief before the Eleventh Circuit panel, as well as one requesting rehearing by the entire Eleventh Circuit, which was denied.

At issue is whether a claim for nominal damages 鈥 that is, a small, symbolic amount of money 鈥 can survive when an offending policy has been changed or the student has graduated, or both. Because colleges can change their policies at any time and students often graduate before a case reaches a final resolution, nominal damages are an important tool for ensuring students have their day in court. 

In 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 brief to the Supreme Court, we argued that students will be prevented from vindicating their First Amendment rights if schools are allowed to avoid litigation by simply changing their policies after using those very same policies to violate student rights. Instead, we urged the Court to clarify that students who had their rights violated by public colleges and universities should not be prevented from pursuing justice through the legal system, writing:  

If standalone nominal damages claims are mooted . . . students will be left with little incentive to challenge unlawful speech codes in court. Student speech rights will become increasingly devalued and colleges and universities will be emboldened to expand their speech restrictions.

鈥淸T]he Eleventh Circuit鈥檚 decision fails to appreciate that the deprivation of a constitutional right is an injustice irrespective of whether it results in monetary loss,鈥 we wrote. 鈥淭his Court鈥檚 intervention is needed to protect students鈥 ability to hold colleges and universities accountable and to vindicate their priceless First Amendment rights.鈥

FIRE Legal Network member of and his colleague Justin Burnam assisted FIREin filing the brief.

We hope today鈥檚 development at the Supreme Court signals that soon, public institutions will no longer be able to use this legal loophole to violate students鈥 rights with impunity.

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