Four high school students from Morgan Hill, Calif. lost a federal lawsuit this week over American flag T-shirts. The students claimed that school administrators violated their free speech rights by asking them to change clothes or take excused leave from class after they wore American flag T-shirts to school on Cinco de Mayo.
The plaintiffs argued that their First Amendment rights were suppressed and that they were denied equal protection because they were treated differently than students wearing Mexican flags and colors the same day.
The district court sided with the school in the dispute, finding that administrators had demonstrated a non-discriminatory purpose for asking the students to remove their American-flag apparel. While they may have been treated differently than students wearing Mexican-flag apparel that day, the court noted that the students wearing Mexican flags had not been targeted for violence.
One point worth noting in this case is that the named plaintiff, M.D., was permitted to return to class without changing his shirt; his mother later removed him from class for the remainder for the day. The school argued that M.D. had not suffered an injury. We agree.
None of the students were threatened with suspension. Those who were asked to turn their shirts inside-out or go home for the rest of the day were told that they would receive excused absences if they left.
What do you think? Should the plaintiffs fight the good fight, and push the Morgan Hill T-shirt case to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, or was this a reasonable restriction on free speech rights?
Related Resources:
- Dariano v. Morgan Hill Unified School District (US Courts)
- Student Press Law: Cert Denied in Lewd Stick Figure Cartoon Case (FindLaw’s Second Circuit blog)
- Court Upholds Students’ Free Speech Rights in Sleepover Pics Case (FindLaw’s Seventh Circuit blog)
- U.S. Flags on Cinco de Mayo: Student Speech Rights (FindLaw’s Law and Daily Life)
U.S. Flags on Cinco de Mayo: Student Speech Rights (FindLaw’s Law and Daily Life)
You Don’t Have To Solve This on Your Own – Get a Lawyer’s Help
Civil Rights
Block on Trump’s Asylum Ban Upheld by Supreme Court
Criminal
Judges Can Release Secret Grand Jury Records
Politicians Can’t Block Voters on Facebook, Court Rules