Louisiana Mother of Autistic Child Hit by Teacher Files Supreme Court Petition
School officials in three states are effectively immune from lawsuits over excessive corporal punishment. A Louisiana mother is asking the Supreme Court to step in.

Sonia Book's autistic daughter was hit by a public school teacher who later pleaded guilty to battering two other autistic students. Book tried to sue, but she happens to live in Louisiana, one of three states where school officials are essentially immune from lawsuits for excessive corporal punishment.
Now Book is asking the Supreme Court to step in.
The Institute for Justice, a libertarian-leaning public interest law firm, filed a petition to the Supreme Court this week on behalf of Book, asking the Court to resolve an issue that it says has made corporal punishment of children categorically exempt from constitutional scrutiny in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, which covers Texas, Louisiana, and Mississippi.
"If the school system isn't going to hold the people who hit my daughter accountable, then I hoped the courts would, but so far that hasn't happened," Book said in an Institute for Justice press release. "It makes no sense to me that people who hit your kids can get away with it if they work for the school. That's who my daughter should be able to trust, not fear."
In 2020, Book's 11-year-old daughter, who has nonverbal autism, was hit by school employees in the Jefferson Parish school district on at least three separate occasions for acting out. In one instance, the girl kicked in the direction of a teacher without making contact. In another, she pinched a teacher's aide.
Book filed a lawsuit against the teacher and several school officials in 2021, arguing that the school district and employees violated her daughter's rights. However, both a U.S. district court and the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit held that the school officials were exempt from Book's claims under Section 1983 of the Civil Rights Act, which created a right to sue government officials acting under the color of law for constitutional violations.
As the Institute for Justice describes in its petition for writ of certiorari, the 5th Circuit is an outlier. It's the only federal circuit that immunizes school officials from civil rights lawsuits for corporal punishment, as long as that force is plausibly related to maintaining classroom order. Under a binding precedent in the circuit, "as long as the state provides an adequate remedy, a public school student cannot state a claim for denial of substantive due process through excessive corporal punishment."
All other nine circuits in the country allow such claims to proceed under either the Fourth Amendment's excessive force provision or the 14th Amendment's Due Process Clause.
That 5th Circuit precedent has led to federal judges dismissing lawsuits where, for example, a student with disabilities was tased, or a 5-year-old boy was allegedly slammed to the ground and dragged to the principal's office by a school police officer. The 5th Circuit has only recognized excessive violence against students in cases where the abuse was cartoonishly grotesque and devoid of any pedagogical justification, such as tying a student to a chair for two days.
"The Fifth Circuit is way out of step with the rest of the nation's courts on this issue, and we're asking the Supreme Court to right this legal wrong," Institute for Justice senior attorney Patrick Jaicomo said in a press release. "The absolute protection the Fifth Circuit has created for abusive teachers and school administrators is greater than the overly-generous immunities that already extend to police and every other public employee."
Meanwhile, the teacher who struck Book's daughter was not disciplined. She transferred to another school. In September, the New Orleans Times-Picayune reported that the teacher pleaded guilty to simple battery of two other autistic siblings. A related lawsuit against the teacher accused her of slapping the children, segregating them from nondisabled children, and calling them "feral kids" and "filthy little things."
Reason has reported extensively on state violence against children with disabilities. In Florida, school-age children—disproportionately those with disabilities—are frequently restrained by police and involuntarily committed to psychiatric hospitals for throwing tantrums in the classroom. Last year, a Kansas sheriff's deputy hogtied and tased an 12-year-old autistic boy. In North Carolina in 2018, a school resource officer handcuffed a 7-year-old autistic boy and pinned him face-down on the ground for nearly 40 minutes while taunting him.
The Institute for Justice is asking the Supreme Court to resolve whether students' excessive violence claims are cognizable under Section 1983 and whether those claims should proceed under the Fourth Amendment or 14th Amendment.
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Reason 538423 for privatizing schools. You can sue them for abusing your child.
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What private school is going to take your 11 year old non verbal autistic kid? The public schools are forced to take her and provide accommodations no matter the cost.
Why would you taze an autistic ? They are already dialed up to 11, that's the problem; why would you escalate that ? Does anybody even get training before they are just set loose on children ?
Failure to escalate force on someone who doesn't immediately obey is one of the few things that can get a cop in trouble. Doesn't matter if it's a child, a grown adult, or a frail old lady. If the cop doesn't hurt the person they could be fired and blacklisted from the profession.
https://www.breitbart.com/crime/2023/10/14/teacher-savagely-beaten-by-student-has-no-interest-lesser-sentence-attacker/
There's one reason someone might taze an autistic person.
On the one hand, these abuses by teachers and school "resource officers" are horrible. On the other hand, they are entirely predictable results of our fixation on mainstreaming. If someone is autistic to the point of being non-verbal, they are beyond the capacity of the public school system to help. I know it sounds callous to say this (and there were many other abuses endemic when this was the rule) but kids that fundamentally disabled should be in dedicated mental health facilities with properly trained professional support.
I don't know about Louisiana, but where I live there are publicly funded schools for kids who can't function in a "normal" classroom setting, with people specifically trained to deal with autistic kids. No need for psychopaths with tazers.
This. Take care of your own retard, don't pawn that duty off on The State. If you do, the cretins which The State hires are likely to actually do unto your retard as what your retard's actions demand.
Meanwhile, the teacher who struck Book's daughter was not disciplined. She transferred to another school.
I am always disappointed when the parents don't meter out some justice when their kids are abused by public "servants". Every example in this piece requires retribution. Whining and pleading for another gov't agency to help you obviously doesn't work.
“I am always disappointed when the parents don’t meter out some justice when their kids are abused by public “servants”.”
So you think the parents should do something that will get them sent to prison and leave their kid, who is already being abused by the state, entirely in the hands of the state?
I'm not talking about murder, more like broken noses, or the hand that struck the child.
Also, don't get caught. If you get caught, demand a jury trial. Tell the jury what the teacher or SRO did to your AUTISTC kid.
Doing nothing only encourages more abuse.
While I agree with you in principle, the likely result of that wouldn't be government employees thinking twice before hitting kids. No, it would likely be more laws dramatically increasing penalties for causing harm to heroes who harm children.
"I’m not talking about murder, more like broken noses, or the hand that struck the child."
You can go to prison for assault too.
"Also, don’t get caught."
As if parents of a child that complained about the teacher to school authorities wouldn't be the first suspects.
Some teachers shouldn't be in school. Neither should some kids. I hate to be cold but does mainstreaming do anything?
Each kid counted on attendance day = More Money for the school.
Mainstreaming was one of those ideas from the 70s that sounded good, but reality has other plans. No, you cannot "mainstream" a severely handicapped child into a "normal" classroom or sometimes even into a regular school setting; the idea was to not ostracize them into an isolated or institutional setting, but at the time it came about it was one of those progressive ideas that just didn't brook dispute.
Autistic Child Hit by Teacher
Qualified immunity for teachers and why "Democrats waffle on it".
This is how to deal with autistic students in a human, progressive way.
Yay, more lawsuits!
Just what we need.
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My name is Will Rollins. I helped weaponize the justice system & used it against decent American people in violation of their due process and constitutional rights. I tortured American families and criminalized the first amendment. And make no mistake - I am proud of it. I am a worthless piece of shit, like so many others already in power. Please vote for me so I can do more damage to this country and to so many good people who don’t deserve it. I will never let you down.
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And Californians will elect him. Democrats just because he has a (D), and many traditional Republicans because they believe this b.s.
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Derek Chauvin files appeal to Supreme Court over George Floyd conviction in wake of new evidence.
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... if the state provides an adequate remedy, what's the problem?
Oh, my, it's practically murder! It's amazing that the kid survived! /sarc