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College

Pro-Pot Student Group Wins 1A Fight With Meddling School Admins, State GOP

Court says Iowa State University discriminated against student marijuana-policy group based on "political pushback."

Elizabeth Nolan Brown | 2.13.2017 3:05 PM

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Large image on homepages | NORML ISU/Facebook
(NORML ISU/Facebook)

NORML ISU/Facebook

A win for free-speech and marijuana-decriminalization advocates from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit. On Monday, a three-judge panel ruled in favor the student chapter of National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) at Iowa State University (ISU), which had been banned from using ISU trademarks on much of its promotional material after drug prohibitionists in state politics complained.

ISU generally grants student groups the right to use ISU insignia, logos, and other trademarks (such as the words "ISU" and "Iowa State") on promotional materials, under certain broad conditions. Decisions are made by the school's Trademark Licensing Office. When NORML ISU first formed, in 2012, group members submitted a request for approval of a t-shirt saying "Freedom is NORML at ISU" with a small cannabis leaf above the slogan, and the Trademark Office initially approved it.

Soon thereafter, the Des Moines Register ran an article about marijuana legalization in which ISU student Josh Montgomery, then president of the school's NORML chapter, mentioned that ISU was supportive of his organization's efforts and had even approved the aforementioned t-shirt. On the day the Register article ran, the Iowa House Republicans Caucus sent a formal letter to ISU leadership asking whether they had actually approved the NORML t-shirt. By the end of the day, ISU President Steven Leath and his top staff were emailing one another to discuss whether the school could revoke approval of the NORML design.

The next day, a representative from the Iowa Governor's Office of Drug Control Policy personally contacted ISU administrators to voice concern with their t-shirt approval policies.

A few days after that, NORML ISU requested permission from the Trademark Office to use the same t-shirt design for another batch of shirts. This time, their request was placed on hold pending an upcoming ISU President's cabinet meeting. Thereafter, the ISU Trademark Office informed NORML students that it could not approve the use of any ISU trademarks in conjunction with any design featuring a cannabis leaf. It also said the group must clear all future designs with Student Affairs leadership before submitting them to the Trademark Office.

From there on out, "the Trademark Office rejected every NORML ISU design application that included the image of a cannabis leaf," explained the circuit court in its decision. "The Trademark Office also rejected designs that spelled out the NORML acronym but replaced 'Marijuana' with either 'M********" or "M[CENSORED].' The Trademark Office however approved several designs which did not use a cannabis leaf, but simply stated the group's name, and fully spelled out the NORML acronym."

In response, two members of the student group filed a lawsuit against their university, alleging violations of their First Amendment rights. The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Iowa initially ruled in favor of the students, prompting the university to appeal.

On Monday, the appeals court affirmed the district court's ruling, concluding that students' "attempts to obtain approval to use ISU's trademarks on NORML ISU's merchandise amounted to constitutionally protected speech." And state schools cannot discriminate against constitutionally protected speech on the basis of its viewpoint without proving that this restriction serves a compelling governmental interest and is narrowly tailored to serve that interest.

In this case, Iowa State's rejection of NORML ISU designs did discriminate based on viewpoint, the court found, and this discrimination was based on "political pushback." Therefore, "the district court did not err by concluding that [ISU] violated plaintiffs' First Amendment Rights because defendants engaged in viewpoint discrimination and did not argue that their administration of the trademark licensing program was narrowly tailored to satisfy a compelling governmental interest."

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Elizabeth Nolan Brown is a senior editor at Reason.

CollegeIowaRepublican PartyMarijuanaTrademarksFree Speech
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  1. WakaWaka   8 years ago

    Thank God those planned riots against NORML have been diffused. Tolerance!

  2. Diane Reynolds (Paul.)   8 years ago

    Now if we can just get that pro-wine cooler Student Group to be allowed to organize on campus.

    1. Acosmist   8 years ago

      Title IX should handle that.

  3. Chipper Morning Wood   8 years ago

    I guess there aren't too many Ron Paul Republicans left in the Iowa GOP.

  4. Lachowsky   8 years ago

    If the school just didn't accept any public funding, they could have banned all the speech they wanted to. I wish more schools would think of this.

    1. Acosmist   8 years ago

      Pretty sure if you put it in those terms, they'd keep the Stafford loan gravy train going.

    2. C. S. P. Schofield   8 years ago

      Sarc? I mean, it IS Iowa STATE.

      1. Lachowsky   8 years ago

        more snark than sarc, I wis publically funded universities would go the way of the dodo.

  5. WakaWaka   8 years ago

    While what constitutes as a 'victory' for 'free speech' is being set even lower, this happened.

    http://observer.com/2017/02/ac.....ee-speech/

  6. John Titor   8 years ago

    If I lived in Iowa I'd want to smoke a lot of pot too.

    1. FreeRadical   8 years ago

      Geez, shut the fuck up with your sneering dismissal of a place where people live. You took the time to make two posts looking down your nose at Iowans. What are you a progressive who lives in California?

      And yes, I'm from Iowa so I'm sensitive and butt hurt.

      1. John Titor   8 years ago

        I'm from northern Ontario. If you're not almost freezing to death and fighting off brain-parasite moose attacks on a regular basis you're an urban pussy. Get on my level.

        1. FreeRadical   8 years ago

          Yeah, people from Iowa like to talk about how cold it is there, but they got nothin on you.

  7. John Titor   8 years ago

    I mean, forgive me for my ignorance of Iowa history, but what exactly has the state produced in the long run? Corn, National Treasure Iowahawk, and...?

    1. Homple   8 years ago

      Robert Noyce
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Noyce
      Norman Borlaug
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Norman_Borlaug

      1. John Titor   8 years ago

        Well fine, I guess Iowans have invented the microchip and the Green Revolution.

        But what have they done for us lately?

        1. Lachowsky   8 years ago

          Absolutely fantastic quail and pheasant hunting, if you are into that sort of thing.

    2. Rhywun   8 years ago

      More corn.

      1. Acosmist   8 years ago

        It's not different at all, is it, Steve?

    3. WakaWaka   8 years ago

      At least a quarter of the food consumed in the world

    4. kinnath   8 years ago

      Maytag, Amana Radar Range, the radios that talked to Apollo on the moon, . . . . .

      Recently? High Fructose Corn Syrup I suppose.

      1. FreeRadical   8 years ago

        Pella Windows. John Deere. Rockwell Collins Avionics. Lot of hogs.

    5. SomeGuy   8 years ago

      does that really matter? They play a crucial role in supporting out parts of the country that specialize in more futurist stuff. Don't talk shit about support roles because if you don't have basic necessities you can;t do anything.

      this is not sarcasm....i am being serious. Every part of the economy plays a critical wrong in the whole picture....even hookers. We would be better off if people could pay for sex and smoke weed if they wanted to :/

  8. The Late P Brooks   8 years ago

    There's a drought. In fact, it'll probably never rain again

    The Oroville Dam is working as expected. Even so, the failure of peripheral dam structures?one or both of the spillways?could have disastrous consequences for the economy and environment. State and federal officials passed on the opportunity to take preventative action to upgrade these structures, improvements that would have cost tens to hundreds of millions of dollars. Now that both spillways have sustained damage, the improvements are instead damage control. The costs to communities are still being tolled.

    Upgrading the Oroville Dam spillways isn't a project that fits neatly into Trump's $1 trillion prescription for infrastructure spending. So far, Trump's plan largely means privatizing infrastructure development through the use of tax credits. Armoring the Oroville Dam's emergency spillway isn't the kind of investment likely to lure profit-minded private developers.

    "Maintenance? Fuck that. Somebody else's name is already on that dam."

    I wonder how the State of California will get the money; this might not be the best time to secede from the Union.

    And, as always, when in doubt, blame Trump.

    1. IceTrey   8 years ago

      Someone on tv said it will cost $200 million to repair.

    2. SomeGuy   8 years ago

      i love how the federal tax papers are going to get stuck with a state issue of incompetence.......

  9. Fist of Etiquette   8 years ago

    The Iowa House Republicans Caucus is no doubt readying a formal letter to those so-called judges as we speak. DEFUND.

  10. Ornithorhynchus   8 years ago

    I still haven't learned how to post links correctly.

    sigh

    This would be the perfect time for a YouTube link to I Owe A Lot To Iowa Pot (either the original, or the Napoleon XIV version-- it doesn't matter which).

    1. SomeGuy   8 years ago

      tinyurl.com

  11. FreeRadical   8 years ago

    I went to Iowa State and smoked quite a bit of pot there, so there's that.

  12. Jason Williams   8 years ago

    Superb post. Thanks a lot for sharing iOS 11 features

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