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University of Iowa officials denied immunity in religious freedom case

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit ruled that qualified immunity does not protect University of Iowa administrators who targeted a Christian student group. (Daniel Tadevosyan / Shutterstock.com)

In a much-anticipated decision, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit Friday that University of Iowa administrators targeted a Christian student group with discriminatory treatment and that qualified immunity, a doctrine designed to protect government officials from liability, does not protect administrators from being held personally liable for actions that clearly violate the constitutional rights of students.

FIRE initially wrote about the student group Business Leaders in Christ (BLinC) when it UI back in 2017 for revoking the student group鈥檚 recognition. The university claimed the group was violating an anti-discrimination policy, called the Human Rights Policy, after BLinC made the decision to exclude LGBTQ members from leadership. 

READ MORE: DOJ filing in Iowa case cites alarming trend of campus First Amendment violations

The decision to revoke the group鈥檚 recognition came on the heels of an investigation looking into the denial of a leadership position to a gay student who refused to affirm BLinC鈥檚 mission statement rejecting homosexuality. Following the investigation, the university issued a blanket statement that BLinC had engaged in discrimination, disregarding BLinC鈥檚 explanation that the student was denied from leadership because they refused to affirm the group鈥檚 views on sexual morals. 

But BLinC was not going to take the decision to revoke its recognition sitting down. The group launched a lawsuit claiming that UI was infringing upon its . The District Court for the Southern District of Iowa and held that the university violated the group鈥檚 First Amendment rights when it revoked BLinC鈥檚 recognition in response to its refusal to consider a student for a leadership position after the student opposed the group鈥檚 principles.  

The Eighth Circuit sided squarely with the students, stating: 鈥淲e are hard-pressed to find a clearer example of viewpoint discrimination."

This prompted an appeal by the university, which hoped the Eighth Circuit would come to a different conclusion. However, the Eighth Circuit sided squarely with the students, : 鈥淲e are hard-pressed to find a clearer example of viewpoint discrimination. The University focused its 鈥榗lean up鈥 on specific religious groups and then selectively applied the Human Rights Policy against them. Other groups were simply glossed over or ignored.鈥

READ MORE: Federal judge rules First Amendment means University of Iowa cant play favorites with student orgs

Although many circuit courts have sided with government employees on issues involving qualified immunity, the Eighth Circuit found the university鈥檚 conduct to be clearly unconstitutional because it targeted 鈥渞eligious groups for differential treatment 鈥 while carving out exemptions and ignoring other violative groups with missions they presumably supported.鈥

The court鈥檚 ruling also noted that the university 鈥渢urned a blind eye to decades of First Amendment jurisprudence鈥 and that 鈥渜ualified immunity provides no safe haven.鈥

UI suggested it had no plans to appeal to the Supreme Court, stating that it respects 鈥渢he decision of the court and will move forward in accordance with the decision.鈥 

While this decision marks a victory for FIREand First Amendment cases at the university level, the battle against qualified immunity is hardly over. In the words of Justice Thomas in the recent case Hoggard v. Rhodes, 鈥渜ualified immunity jurisprudence stands on shaky ground鈥 and 鈥渨hy should university officers, who have time to make calculated choices about enacting or enforcing unconstitutional policies, receive the same protection as a police officer who makes a split-second decision to use force in a dangerous setting?鈥 

The Supreme Court has yet to provide a clear answer. 


Catherine Lynch is a rising 2L at Drexel University鈥檚 Thomas R. Kline School of Law and a FIRELegal Clerk

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