Missouri 13-Year-Old Suspended for Making a Rifle Out of Dr. Pepper Cans
The boy and his mother are now suing the school district and its officials to protect students' right to free expression.

A 13-year-old Missouri middle school student was suspended for sharing a photo of his weekend art project on his private Snapchat account. The student, W.G., and his mother Riley Grunden are now suing the school district, principal, and superintendent for violating W.G.'s constitutionally protected First Amendment right to creative expression and for labeling him a "cyberbully" on his permanent record.
While at home after school on September 14, 2024, W.G. took a photo on his personal electronic device of Dr. Pepper cans assembled into the shape of a rifle to mimic a social media trend of "can art," according to the lawsuit filed by Goldwater Institute's American Freedom Network. He then posted the photo on his personal Snapchat story to share with his friends. The post was accompanied by a trending audio file, titled "Ak47," which includes a voiceover saying, "This is the famous AK47, with over 50 million manufactured in ten countries, the AK47 is the most popular assault rifle in the world."
The following day, W.G.'s mother received a phone call from W.G.'s school principal, who informed her that another parent had reported the Snapchat post and that W.G. would be subject to a search before entering the school premises the next day. The day after the search, Grunden met with the principal, superintendent, and school resource officer, where she and W.G. were told that, even though the superintendent had found "no credible evidence of any danger," the Snapchat post had "brought fear to other students" and could be interpreted as a "terrorist threat." As a result, W.G. would receive three days of out-of-school suspension for cyberbullying. Before this incident, W.G. had no history of bullying or cyberbullying. Now, Grunden is suing on behalf of her son's free expression rights.
Although adolescent social media and internet use is one of today's hot topics, the Supreme Court has made it clear that schools do not have the right to punish students for constitutionally protected speech that has no connection to school safety.
The Court's 2021 Mahanoy Area School District v. B.L. opinion reiterated schools' limited ability to regulate off-campus speech only when speech materially disrupts the educational environment, and hedged against the temptation to censor all off-campus speech. Rather, the Court warned that "courts must be more skeptical of a school's efforts to regulate off-campus speech, for doing so may mean the student cannot engage in that kind of speech at all." Additionally, in the 2023 Counterman v. Colorado opinion, the Court established that speech could only be punished as a "true threat" if the speaker anticipated that the expression would be perceived as threatening.
W.G. created and posted his Dr. Pepper can rifle off-campus, after school hours, and through his personal device and internet connection. There was no mention or connection to his school, and there was no intention or anticipation that the Snapchat post would be perceived as threatening. Since his post, W.G. has become the focal point of rumors alleging that he threatened violence against the school, and the incident has been documented in his permanent record as cyberbullying. In their attempt to protect the "safety and well-being" of the students, school officials may have increased the students' perception of threatened school violence.
School violence does exist, and credible threats should be taken seriously. Spending time and resources to punish a 13-year-old's home art project does not make schools safer. Instead, it distracts parents and school officials from identifying and acting accordingly to threats that actually exist.
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good thing we didn't have insta our tennis ball can cannons would have resulted in expulsion and imprisonment
I loved those things. Back in the 1970s when the world was different we would snag empty tennis ball cans, punch a hole on the side near the bottom, put a little gas in and hold a match (yeah, a match because the world was safer back then) and launch the ball about 50' into the air. Rinse repeat until we ran out of gas or matches, whichever happened first. Ah, the golden years....
During a very rare snow closure in the late 70's at a certain northern New England university, several friends and I spent the morning firing tennis balls from just such a cannon back and forth along the length of a dorm corridor. We had a blast, no one was seriously hurt, and made memories for a life. Kids today are being cheated out of so much; we've let them down.
the Snapchat post had "brought fear to other students" and could be interpreted as a "terrorist threat."
Lie.
Definitely a lie.
The mouth-carved Pop Tart from a few years ago was way scarier.
"This is the famous AK47, with over 50 million manufactured in ten countries, the AK47 is the most popular assault rifle in the world."
Looks more like an AK74 to me.
Remember when you told us about getting together with your lurker friends to clean guns?
What's the venn diagram look like of those friends, the shipyard ones, and the Marine ones? I'm guessing if you add "imaginary" it forms a circle.
So they searched this kid for Dr. Pepper cans? Okay to be fair, an unopened Dr. Pepper can propelled with sufficient force could put somebody's eye out. But that would require some kind of can blaster. Or something.
Stupid question but where was this kids due process when it came to the suspension and entry into his permeant record?
Where's the so called American (apparently now San Salvadoran) Civil Liberties Union for this kid?
Only illegal immigrants with deportation orders are entitled to years of due process. Try to keep up.
Also, skin color.
The most important thing!
And who says you can't sue stupid people?
Missouri?
When did they get neutered?
The Don't Show Me state.
Definitely bullying, but not by the kid.
Lana Tharp, the Mountainview-Birch Tree R-III Superintendent, released the following statement: “We have enough information to believe the video has caused fear to at least one student and understandably so. The safety and well-being of our students is our top priority and we responded swiftly to address the concerns.”
The video of a collection of objects lying on the ground in a vague shape of a rifle "understandably" caused fear? Only to perhaps the most idiotic and easily terrified people in the world. Or to the people most willing to pretend to be that idiotically fearful in an attempt to control the actions of others.
"Only to perhaps the most idiotic and easily terrified people in the world."
What do you think Democrats have spent the past 100 years creating?
If a bunch of empty soda cans causes you "fear", you need to be secured in a psych ward.
If a principal considers the delusional "fear" of one disturbed kid grounds to suspend a kid who did nothing wrong, that principal needs to be be fired for having no idea what his job is.
'The following day, W.G.'s mother received a phone call from W.G.'s school principal, who informed her that another parent had reported the Snapchat post and that W.G. would be subject to a search before entering the school premises the next day. The day after the search, Grunden met with the principal, superintendent, and school resource officer, where she and W.G. were told that, even though the superintendent had found "no credible evidence of any danger," the Snapchat post had "brought fear to other students"'
Guess who needs to be relocated to Chicken Little Pussy World, where no scary things ever challenge the emotionally fragile.
Imagine the amount of fear on pop quiz day.
The principal is a gutless liar, and the school board will settle out of court. This is a slam dunk.
Be it clearly known that the tyrant-bullies in this case, as listed in the lawsuit, are Principal Tammy Heiney and Superintendent Lana Tharp.