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VICTORY: Court orders Texas university to provide records showing how admins censored then commandeered an independent student newspaper
- FIRE鈥檚 lawsuit sought records about Tarleton State University鈥檚 investigation of a professor accused of 鈥渉ighly inappropriate behavior鈥 and its administration鈥檚 takeover of a student newspaper.
- The financial cost of Tarleton鈥檚 unsuccessful defense may deter other public universities from obscuring access to public information.
STEPHENVILLE, Texas, June 12, 2023 鈥 It鈥檚 better to know the truth later than never.
The FIREsued Tarleton State University in Feb. 2022 to obtain records that the university improperly withheld under Texas鈥檚 Public Information Act. On Friday, June 9, the court ordered Tarleton to produce the records.
The records will help reveal why Tarleton鈥檚 administration censored and seized editorial control over its student newspaper after pressuring student editors to remove articles about a former professor鈥檚 inappropriate behavior toward female students.
鈥淲e鈥檙e glad the court agreed to shine a light on Tarleton鈥檚 slippery behavior,鈥 said FIREattorney Gabe Walters. 鈥淭he university should have done the right thing years ago, but the truth has prevailed.鈥
Judge Jason Cashon of Texas鈥 266th Judicial District Court ordered Tarleton to produce the records within 21 days of Friday鈥檚 ruling. The court鈥檚 decision affirms that universities cannot hide public records about administrative decisions and faculty misconduct behind irrelevant exceptions to the Texas Public Records Act鈥檚 presumption of transparency.
Tarleton quietly paid professor Michael Landis more than $61,000 in September 2018 to leave the university after an investigation found that he acted inappropriately toward female students. Three years later, Landis threatened to sue an independent student newspaper, the , for defamation over stories it published at the time about his misconduct and departure.
Landis鈥 threat to sue was toothless. Any defamation suit would have been too late under the statute of limitations, and the student newspaper鈥檚 reporting was accurate and truthful.
But that did not stop Tarleton administrators from pressuring students to take down the articles. After FIREwrote the university in August 2021 to defend the student publication, Tarleton falsely claimed that TNS was never independent from the administration 鈥 contrary to TNS鈥檚 former policy handbook and history.
Provost Karen Murray also wrote in a Sept. 30 letter to faculty that it is 鈥渋mperative that the TNS operate only as an instructional laboratory for students and interns鈥 and not as an editorially independent paper.
FIRE learned from a faculty member that classifying TNS as an 鈥渋nstructional laboratory鈥 would give TNS鈥 adviser final editorial discretion over what the paper does and doesn鈥檛 publish. While a faculty-edited publication isn鈥檛 necessarily a bad thing, taking over a formerly student-run publication certainly is. In redefining TNS鈥 identity, the administration essentially stripped the publication of its editorial independence 鈥 all so the university could try to cover up an embarrassing situation.
Alarmed by Tarleton鈥檚 blatant censorship, FIRElodged several public-records requests with the university, seeking information on efforts to censor TNS and on Landis鈥 threat of a lawsuit. Tarleton provided some records in response, but withheld others, claiming that the withheld information is confidential under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act.
The court disagreed with Tarleton, affirming 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 claim that universities cannot invoke exceptions meant to protect student privacy as a guise to withhold information related to the administration. Judge Cashon ordered Tarleton to produce the documents and to redact any information that identifies students.
鈥淭arleton State covered up Landis鈥 inappropriate behavior by demanding TNS remove its reporting, and then covered up the cover up by withholding public records,鈥 said FIREstaff attorney Kelley Bregenzer. 鈥淭he court鈥檚 ruling reminds Tarleton that public information belongs to the people, and not the state.鈥
Judge Cashon also ordered Tarleton to pay 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 attorneys鈥 fees and litigation costs. The court will hold an evidentiary hearing to decide exactly how much the university must pay. The monetary cost of Tarleton鈥檚 unsuccessful defense will hopefully deter other public universities from obscuring access to public information.
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. FIRErecognizes that colleges and universities play a vital role in preserving free thought within a free society. To this end, we place a special emphasis on defending the individual rights of students and faculty members on our nation鈥檚 campuses, including freedom of speech, freedom of association, due process, legal equality, religious liberty, and sanctity of conscience.
CONTACT
Katie Kortepeter, Communications Campaign Manager, 果冻传媒app官方: 215-717-3473; media@thefire.org
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