College Subjected Student to 'Extended Inquisition' Into Her Political Beliefs, Lawyer Claims
Morgan Bettinger might sue the University of Virginia for violating her First Amendment rights.

Morgan Bettinger was a rising senior at the University of Virginia when she was accused by a popular student activist of making violent threats to a crowd of Black Lives Matter protesters in 2020. Even though an investigation by the university later cleared her of any wrongdoing, Bettinger still received a litany of punishments.
Last week, on the same day that Reason published an investigation into the story, Bettinger's lawyer released a draft lawsuit against the university, arguing that the school violated her First Amendment rights and committed due process violations in sanctioning her. The lawsuit has not yet been filed.
On July 17, 2020, Morgan Bettinger was driving home from work when she found that the road ahead was blocked by a large public works truck, with several dozen protesters gathering on the street behind it. The draft suit states that when she got out of her car to investigate, the truck driver initiated a casual conversation with her, during which Bettinger quipped something to the effect of, "It's a good thing you're here otherwise they could be made speed bumps." The draft suit states that once the conversation was over, Bettinger walked around the truck and took a photograph of the protest.
As Bettinger began walking back to her car, protesters began taking an interest in her, following her to her car and shouting, taunting, and filming her. A few minutes later, another UVA student, prominent activist Zyahna Bryant, sent out several tweets claiming that Bettinger had driven around a series of police barricades and "approached protesters in Charlottesville and told us that we would make 'good speed bumps.'"
However, the draft lawsuit contends that "Bryant did not personally hear Ms. Bettinger's comments to the truck driver" and that "Bryant first learned of the speed bump comment from a third party." Regardless, Bryant's claims stoked student outrage, receiving over 1,000 retweets and leading to a flurry of calls for students to lobby the administration to expel Bettinger.
In the months that followed, Bettinger would be subject to a litany of investigations into her alleged conduct. The first investigation, from the University Judiciary Committee (UJC), UVA's completely student-run dispensary system, found Bettinger guilty of "threatening the health or safety" of UVA students and sanctioned her to do 50 hours of community service, meet three times with a professor meant to teach her about "police community relations," write an apology letter to Bryant, and expulsion in abeyance (meaning that Bettinger could continue her schooling, but if she was found guilty of a similar offense again, she would likely be expelled.)
But despite punishing her, the UJC's student jury also seemed to agree with Bettinger's version of what she said, writing, "You yourself acknowledged saying 'it's a good thing you are here because, otherwise, these people would have been speed bumps.' Given the tragic events of August 12 and the context in which you uttered these words, you disregarded Charlottesville's violent history."
"UJC credited Ms. Bettinger with her own language…thus acknowledging that her statement was directed to the driver rather than any of the protesters and uttered in the context of a political arena," the draft suit states. "UJC did not find that Ms. Bettinger either actually threatened or intended to threaten physical harm to Bryant or any of the protesters, only that her words posed a risk."
Thus, the student jury had no legal grounds to punish her, as UVA is a public university barred from punishing students for First Amendment–protected speech, which Bettinger's comment clearly was. "At best, her comment was an acknowledgment that the police, who were the target of the protest, still cared enough about the safety of the protesters to position a dump truck to block the road," the draft suit states. "At worst, Ms. Bettinger's remark constituted political hyperbole protected by the Constitution."
After her student-run trial, Bettinger was also subject to a second investigation, this time from UVA's Office of Equal Opportunity and Civil Rights (EOCR), which considered claims by Bryant that Bettinger had harassed Bryant on the basis of her race.
The draft lawsuit claims that, during the EOCR investigation, Bettinger—who is openly pro-police—was subject to an "extended inquisition into her views and opinions of the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement," bringing concerns that investigators were biased against her.
Bettinger's counsel raised a formal objection to the line of questioning. "Anyone evaluating the allegations against Morgan must not consciously or unconsciously make decisions based on how closely Morgan's views on BLM (or any related topic) align with their own…. Moreover, the BLM movement is one of the most prominent issues in the public discourse today. People have a wide array of views on it. Questioning Morgan on her views on it chills speech since it suggests that her guilt or innocence, penalty or lack thereof, will be contingent in some way on her expressing a favored political view."
The draft lawsuit also reveals the considerable emotional impact of Bryant's allegations and the subsequent investigations through extended excerpts from one of Bettinger's EOCR interviews.
"I have sleepless nights and I've had to be prescribed medication to be able to sleep anymore," Bettinger told investigators. "I had to up my therapy to speak with my counselor because this had just gotten so much. It finally broke me a little bit ago. It's just not okay for someone to get away with to keep doing this."
Despite concerns of bias, the EOCR investigation—which finished in June 2021—ultimately cleared Bettinger, not only finding that she did not harass Bryant, but also uncovering serious flaws in Bryant's allegations. Contrary to Bryant's claims that she personally witnessed Bettinger threaten protesters, the EOCR investigation concluded that it was "more likely than not" that Bryant never heard Bettinger make a "speed bumps" remark at all.
"EOCR addressed each of Bryant's allegations and concluded that each was either unsupported by the evidence or demonstrably false," the draft suit states. "EOCR arrived at a conclusion that should have been obvious from the face of Bryant's allegations in the beginning; namely, that her comment to the truck driver about speed bumps was not threatening on its face and was thus speech protected by the Constitution."
Bettinger and her legal counsel viewed the results of the EOCR investigation as an exoneration and sent a letter to UVA President Jim Ryan—later followed by a letter from the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression (FIRE)—demanding that Bettinger's sanctions be expunged. However, the school refused to act, claiming that it would be inappropriate to interfere with a student-run investigation.
"Ms. Bettinger received a fair hearing and review," Ryan wrote in an August 2021 response letter to FIRE, "As President, it would be inappropriate for me to intervene in a case that has been properly adjudicated."
Last Thursday, Charles Weber, Bettinger's lawyer, released the draft lawsuit against the university claiming that the school violated her First Amendment and due process rights.
The university "upheld the retaliation against Ms. Bettinger for her unpopular but constitutionally protected political expression," the draft lawsuit states. "Although Bryant initiated the process of retaliation through her social media postings and formal complaints with EOCR and UJC, the active and ongoing actions of the Defendants chilled her speech, adversely impacted her personal safety and emotional/mental health, upheld her punishment and caused the long-term harm to her reputation."
"The Defendants imposed limitations on appeal that were unwarranted and inconsistent with due process of law," the draft suit continues, adding that Ryan, "the one named Defendant with both the power and responsibility to exercise discretionary judgment to correct the legal errors of his subordinates and to ensure discipline of students in compliance with the law, was negligent in the performance of his duties."
The draft lawsuit comes almost three years after the original incident. While it has not yet been filed, Weber tells Reason that he intends to file the suit if university officials again refuse to expunge Bettinger's sanctions.
"We pray that the officials of the University of Virginia will do the right thing," he says.
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In light of these false allegations, what were the consequences for Bryant?
She was apparently forced to participate in a pie eating contest. 243 times.
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From the article in the June 2023 Issue "Bryant has thrived since the incident. She received a glowing Washington Post profile in 2021, and last year she was named to Ebony's "Power 100" list and was featured in a Juneteenth-themed post on Instagram's official page." https://reason.com/2023/04/24/the-most-hated-person-on-campus/
Bryant should be in jail.
UVA? I'm sure Haven Monahan is behind all of this.
You might think that they would have learned something from that incident. Perhaps done some soul-searching with regard to tolerating mob justice, leaping to conclusions, lack of evidence-based investigations, etc.
But apparently, you would be wrong.
We will never reach peak stupid.
It is the most robust of renewable resources.
What the student judicial committee that convicted Ms. Bettinger is really guilty of is not punishment for constitutionally protected speech but a lack of understanding of the English language. The statement that Ms. Bettinger actually made, according to the committee itself, had no political content whatever, and far from constituting a threat, it expressed concern for the protesters' well-being. The committee was plainly incompetent.
The bigger problem I see is that, even if she made exactly the comment she's accused of making, that's 100% politically protected speech that absolutely belongs within a healthy society. If protestors are out blocking the road, you have the absolutely right to mock them and to tell them they would make good speed bumps. Because their cause is not sacred, it's political speech and advocacy in itself, and it only has value if that advocacy can be mocked by those who disagree with it.
Maybe it was just a friend in the back seat suggesting she say it.
Now I know where that came from.
The bear in the trunk, perhaps.
But a bad thing happened like 5 years ago, so no one can ever question the acticvists again. I think that's how it works.
I credit this article for not including her whining (expressed at length elsewhere) about how other students thought less of her for identifying fellow students (who apparently did not share her stale views) as prospective speed bumps.
She is entitled to choose the wrong side of history; she is not entitled to avoid the predictable, justified consequences of that choice.
Always nice to hear from such a jolly red fascist.
Fuck off and die, asshole bigot.
Ok, Rev, let’s suppose you were in CVille near the BLM protesters and muttered one of your favorite words (clingers), but they misheard it as something else and started yelling at and harassing you. It wouldn’t matter who you were referring to. Almost the same situatiion, but then you’re an old white man who doesn’t have much to look forward to, so maybe you wouldn’t care what happened to you. Of course, you didn’t bother to read the article either.
She never suggested she didn't say what they heard her say. She admitted it. You're just lying to deflect from the reality, which is that people are obviously going to shun her for the rest of her life because she is a murderous far-right conspiracy-theory bunny boiler.
Did you even read the article? Nothing suggests an admission of guilt, and even if she said it, it is protected by the 1st Amendment.
Bettinger should proceed with the lawsuit.
So you are the sole determiner of what is the wrong side of history? LOL
He's certainly on the wrong side of the grave.
Aren't you the moralizing woke Christian fraud?
BLM are terrorists. Better to speak softly and keep your powder dry around them.
They are state sponsored terrorists.
Be careful.
“Morgan Bettinger was a rising senior at the University of Virginia….” Why do writers include BS like that? Totally unaddressed in the piece.
Maybe if she was an athlete, looking forward to a dominant senior year, on course to set a scoring record, or something. Then it makes sense to call someone a rising senior.
Otherwise, yeah, that's nonsense.
Rising just means she will be that grade when classes resume (the event happened in the summer) it's not indicative of any accomplishment. The usage eliminates confusion over whether a student just finished or is about to start whichever year is mentioned.
No, incoming senior would do that. The rising usage is just odd.
Incoming? You mean she's transferring in from another school?
I'm confused by your usage.
It is so weird you think that because you don't like how words are used they must mean something else.
it does matter because scholastic prosecution could have an effect on grades and even potential employment by some loony DEI human resource officer. expunging the record is the right thing to do even three years later.
Ah, here are what I would think are key allegations from the complaint:
“19. No permit had been requested by or issued to the organizers of the protest as required by law;
“20. The closure of the public right of way by the organizers of the protest violated state law.
“21. City of Charlottesville officials, including those in the Charlottesville Police Department, were unaware that the protest organizers planned to close vehicular traffic along E. High Street in the vicinity of the local court house.
“22. Neither the City of Charlottesville nor the protest organizers provided notice to the traveling public of any planned or expected closure of the public right of way along E. High Street.”
If true, this would make the “speed bump” remark all the more innocent.
A mob illegally pouring into a public roadway unannounced, blocking legitimate traffic – yeah, they deserve to be mocked. It’s not threatening to point out the hazards they’re running with their illegal, dangerous behavior.
I would be interested to know if the city and/or university took actiton against the kids who illegally blocked the road.
Also...look up some pictures of this other student who alleged the comments. I mean, she literally does look like a speed bump. Maybe that's why she's so sensitive.
I mean, she literally does look like a speed bump.
What do you drive? Bigfoot?
"Morgan Bettinger was a rising senior at the University of Virginia when she was accused by a popular student activist of making violent threats to a crowd of Black Lives Matter protesters in 2020. Even though an investigation by the university later cleared her of any wrongdoing, Bettinger still received a litany of punishments."
As it should have been. What Bettinger did or did not do is not important. The anointed have labeled her as a representative of evil, so she should be burned at the stake.
I hope she sues Bryant next. Cunt has it coming. She needs a public execution (woodchipper?).
You're gonna need a bigger chipper for that one.
"We pray that the officials of the University of Virginia will do the right thing," he says.
I hope they don't. More colleges need to be hit in the endowments hard like Oberlin was.
UVA takes government money does it not?
Maybe there’s an intrepid lawyer out there who can make the case that UVA’s violation of Bettinger’s rights was State sponsored? I also bet that this was all justified by UVA under Title IX.
Just file the damn lawsuit. Don't wait for UVA to "do the right thing"
Maybe they're just giving them one last chance to "do the right thing" knowing full well they won't?
But I agree, just file the lawsuit either way.
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FFS, she admitted doing what she was accused of. She came up with a flimsy cover story that is just barely adequate to provide reasonable doubt in a legal sense, but which no reasonable person could possible believe.
Fact is, she's a crazy Karen who ought to be in jail, and stayed out by the skin of her teeth after threatening to run over protestors with her truck.
When people read the fable The Emperor’s New Clothes, they always identify with the truth-telling little boy, but in reality they are the deluded naked old man.
and the 80 million that supposedly voted for him.... 😉
Trump lost the popular vote heavily in 2016 and all the polls said he would lose in 2020, especially after his COVID debacle. So why do you phonies still pretend like he was going to win if not for some phantom conspiracy?
So you didn't read the article.
Are you trying to have the stupidest take possible? Even if she had done exactly what she was accused of (which doesn't seem to be the case), there was no basis for any punishment, let alone criminal charges that would land her in jail. What she was accused of saying isn't a threat and is protected speech.
Moron.
It's pretty funny that Zyahna Bryant, a social justice activist, has protected tweets. How bad are her random musings if she's too much of a coward to make them public?
Anyone who calls themselves a SJA/W likely has bipolar or borderline personality disorder which they are usually happy to mention adds to their victim status and intersectionality value. It also gives them a pass for compulsive lying because it’s a symptom of these disorders.
She is just another lowlife fat braided rug head ratchet who is all about getting free stuff and getting out of trouble based on her race.
Aside from UVA being a public university and first amendment protections applying, Ms Bettinger was not on campus when this happened and neither were the BLM protestors. This was on a city street (public property), which makes 1A even more relevant. So there never should have been a case in the first place. Ms Bryan I guess is free to call Ms Bettinger whatever she wants on social media, but UVA disciplinary code does not apply here.
The fact that "student activist" is even a thing makes my fucking skin crawl. Silly me, I thought the purpose of "higher education" was just that - to get an education, not to spend your time being an activist.
In the first article Emma wrote about this a couple of days ago she said this activist first started at age 12. That's fucking creepy. A 12 year old "activist" is the same as a trans-kid or a vegan cat. They're not the one making those decisions, someone else is - probably their parent(s) and/or teachers - and the kid's just being used to push an ideological agenda because they know that their opponents won't want to appear to be "attacking" a child. This "student activist" is basically just the BLM version of Greta Thunberg.
Doesn't sound like it to me. Sounds to me like she got the typical Star Chamber treatment and the only reason they didn't fully expel her after reaching their pre-determined guilty was because Bryant's accusations were just that flimsy.
Sue them regardless. It might keep shit like this from happening to anyone else.
Good for Morgan. Though don’t hold your breath for an apology from the University … I’m still waiting for an apology from UVA for smearing my fraternity after the fictitious Rolling Stone rape article. No interest in facts, just political posturing from the school administration. I’m a diehard Wahoo (UVA ‘93) but sickened by the coddling of the current student body and pandering to the political fad of the day (and those like Bryant) rather than challenging student minds to actually think critically, they only reinforce the orthodoxy of preconceived (and immature) political views.
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Colleges are run by and full of these weak woke authoritarian twits who constantly belie their alleged commitment to the truth and legal norms too. Everything in their hateful little mind is based on the race and "privilege" of the suspect because they all swore a blood oath to D.I.E.
You have to blame stupid and lazy Biden for the increase in these incidents. Mary Eberstadt writing in First Things sees what most must see but won’t accept
“According to the first thorough examination of the street protests triggered by the death of George Floyd, undertaken by Armed Conflict Location and Event Data Project in conjunction with the Bridging Divides Initiative at Princeton, more than 10,600 incidents of what is benignly called “unrest” were recorded between May 24 and August 22. Of these, some 570 involved violence. Of those, most have involved Black Lives Matter activists. Preliminary insurance estimates show that the damage will surpass the $1.2 billion in damages accrued during the 1992 Rodney King riots.”