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First Amendment Challenge to Discipline of 8th-Grader for "Racially Insensitive" Instagram Post Can Go Forward
The student had “posted a screenshot of a friend with a cosmetic mud mask on her face with the caption ‘when he says he’s only into black girls’ on her Instagram account.”
From R.H. v. Borough of Sayreville Bd. of Ed., decided May 12 by Judge Zahid Quraishi (D.N.J.):
On Saturday, February 11, 2017, A.H., then an eighth-grade student at Sayreville Middle School, posted a screenshot of a friend with a cosmetic mud mask on her face with the caption "when he says he's only into black girls" on her Instagram account. {Plaintiffs explain that the relevant post was made on a "Finstagram" (a contraction of "Fake" and "Instagram") account, which is intended for parody, as opposed to a real Instagram account, which is "for more polished and serious communications.} A.H. did not create the photo or draft the caption. A.H. added her own comment to the post that stated, "Ha, ha, ha! Love her – [laughing face], [laughing face]." A.H. posted the screenshot from her personal phone while she was at home, on an internet network and social media account unaffiliated with the Sayreville school system. A.H.'s friend in the post did not attend school in Sayreville.
On February 16, 2017, the Board received complaints regarding A.H.'s Instagram post. According to Plaintiffs, "[t]here were no altercations at Sayreville Middle School as a result of the post, no classes were canceled, and there was no need for an assembly to discuss the racial issues at the school." Rather "[t]he sole alleged disruption to the Board was to keep a close watch on the [Sayreville Middle School] students in the cafeteria due to the fear these students might confront A.H."
{In 2010, the State of New Jersey adopted what is known as the Anti-Bullying Bill of Rights Act. The Act sets forth the following definition for "Harassment, intimidation, or bullying":
"Harassment, intimidation or bullying" means any gesture, any written, verbal or physical act, or any electronic communication, whether it be a single incident or a series of incidents, that is reasonably perceived as being motivated either by any actual or perceived characteristic, such as race, color, religion, ancestry, national origin, gender, sexual orientation, gender identity and expression, or a mental, physical or sensory disability, or by any other distinguishing characteristic, that takes place on school property, at any school-sponsored function, on a school bus, or off school grounds [when a school employee is made aware of such actions], that substantially disrupts or interferes with the orderly operation of the school or the rights of other students and that:
- a reasonable person should know, under the circumstances, will have the effect of physically or emotionally harming a student or damaging the student's property, or placing a student in reasonable fear of physical or emotional harm to his person or damage to his property;
- has the effect of insulting or demeaning any student or group of students; or
- creates a hostile educational environment for the student by interfering with a student's education or by severely or pervasively causing physical or emotional harm to the student.}
In response to the complaints, the Board launched a HIB investigation. The Board's HIB Specialist ultimately found that A.H.'s Instagram post violated the Board HIB Policy. The principal of Sayreville Middle School and the superintendent of the school district accepted the HIB's Specialist's assessment. The Board then affirmed the HIB determination and thereafter rejected A.H.'s appeal of that decision. As a result, A.H. received a one-day suspension from school, was removed from the Student Council, prevented from attending a special trip for members of the Student Council, removed from the role of making the morning announcements at her school, and prohibited from attending a school assembly….
The court concluded that the Act and the Board HIB Policy based on the act weren't unconstitutionally vague, but concluded that plaintiff's First Amendment challenge to the disciplinary actions in this case could go forward:
Here, taking the allegations set forth in Plaintiffs' Complaint as true, much like the student's speech in Mahanoy Area School District, A.H.'s Instagram post "did not involve features that would place it outside the First Amendment's ordinary protection." The Instagram post included a screenshot of A.H.'s friend with a cosmetic mud mask on her face with the caption "when he says he's only into black girls," and the additional comment, made by A.H. herself, stating, "Ha, ha, Ha! Love her – [laughing face], [laughing face]." The post, while racially insensitive, did not amount to fighting words or obscenity. Rather, the post itself indicates that it was intended to be satirical (regardless of its satirical value), and, therefore, was the "kind of pure speech to which, were [A.H.] an adult, the First Amendment would provide strong protection."
Further, similar to the speech at issue in Mahanoy Area School District, A.H.'s Instagram post "appeared outside of school hours from a location outside the school"; "[s]he did not identify the school in her post[ ] or target any member of the school community with vulgar or abusive language"; and A.H. "transmitted her speech through a personal cellphone" on her personal Instagram account to her friends and followers. "These features of her speech, while risking transmission to the school itself, nonetheless … diminish the school's interest in punishing [A.H.'s] utterance."
The Board contends that A.H.'s social media post was not protected by the First Amendment because the post risked serious disruption to school activity. The Board specifically highlights that Plaintiffs even allege that, following complaints regarding the post, school administrators had to keep a close watch on students in the cafeteria due to fear of a confrontation between A.H. and other students, amid rising racial tensions at the school. But, considering the guideposts set forth in Mahanoy Area School District, increased supervision of students in the cafeteria likely does not amount to "the sort of 'substantial disruption' of a school activity or a threatened harm to the rights of others that might justify the school's action." "[F]or the State in the person of school officials to justify prohibition of a particular expression of opinion, it must be able to show that its action was caused by something more than a mere desire to avoid the discomfort and unpleasantness that always accompany an unpopular viewpoint."
In Mahanoy Area School District, distractions in Algebra class and heightened tensions among members of the school's cheerleading team due to the speech at issue were insufficient disruptions to school activity to warrant disciplinary action. The same conclusion is justified here regarding the increased supervision of students in the cafeteria because of A.H.'s Instagram post. According to Plaintiffs, "[t]here were no altercations at Sayreville Middle School as a result of the post" and "no classes were canceled." Accepting the facts set forth in Plaintiffs' Complaint as true, as is necessary at this stage, "[t]he alleged disturbance here does not meet Tinker's demanding standard" for regulation of student speech, especially considering that with respect to "off-campus speech … the leeway the First Amendment grants to schools in light of their special characteristics is diminished." For these reasons, the Board's motion to dismiss Plaintiffs' First Amendment claims is denied.
That said, whether A.H.'s Instagram post caused a substantial disruption sufficient for regulation of the speech by the Board is ultimately an issue of fact that is inappropriate for resolution on the instant motion to dismiss. Should discovery further elucidate disruption to school activity caused by A.H.'s post, such evidence may place A.H.'s speech outside the protections afforded by the First Amendment….
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Sounds like the "HIB Specialist" (what ever in the hell that is?) is trying to justify their existence. With that being said, why is the "school" even involved?
HIB? thats Hemophilus Influenzae type B, dont really need a specialist for that.
The Board contends that A.H.'s social media post was not protected by the First Amendment because the post risked serious disruption to school activity. The Board specifically highlights that Plaintiffs even allege that, following complaints regarding the post, school administrators had to keep a close watch on students in the cafeteria due to fear of a confrontation between A.H. and other students, amid rising racial tensions at the school. . . .
Should discovery further elucidate disruption to school activity caused by A.H.'s post, such evidence may place A.H.'s speech outside the protections afforded by the First Amendment
Not really into the Board or Court's reasoning here. They're basically handing a heckler's veto to the students. It's banned if its disruptive and it's disruptive if there's a confrontation, therefore the confrontational students decide the contours of speech by causing a confrontation. This is unworkable for a whole mess of reasons. It's disappointing to see the court accepting this reasoning. Even if there's disruption to school activity, it's not A.H. causing it, it's the disruptive students. Deal with them, not her.
Why not? That's how it is being done in colleges and universities. You don't like someone's statements or opinions, cause an incident and cry about how you were offended by their statement or opinion and the school does your work for you.
It only works if you are privileged.
I think they made her into a racist for life.
Well, it's not this court, unfortunately that's what Tinker does. If students signal that they're likely to create a disruption in response to certain speech, schools can ban it. But they don't have to, they can allow the speech and punish the disruptors. So this really gives schools the ability to choose what speech to allow, and who to punish.
It is not hard to imagine schools in the 1950's and 1960's punishing anti-segregation speech by students- even if uttered off-campus- because some students reacted violently to the idea of equality.
That's what the Supreme Court says. Don't like it, take it up with Abe Fortas, Earl Warren, William Douglas, William Brennan, Byron White, Thurgood Marshall, Potter Stewart, Hugo Black and John Harlan.
Idealy SCOTUS should clarify Tinker and hold that speech that causes other students to disrupt school activates is still protected.
That's not "clarifying" Tinker; that's overruling it.
I know that that Bong Hits 4 Jesus case already made a mockery of Tinker, but this is at least as bad.
How can that be? Bong Hits was incorrect, but this decision is correct. Well, except for the part about the policy not being unconstitutionally vague.
Sorry, but "this" I meant the school's action.
Ah, got it.
"...as opposed to a real Instagram account, which is "for more polished and serious communications."
Huh.
I guess whoever runs schools have n ot learned the fine art of minding their own business.
Of course not. The reason that schools are worried that students will cause a disruption over inconsequential things like this is that that's what they are teaching them to do.
I'm sure Instagram posts can cause drama among the students. I'm just less convinced that it can disrupt teaching.
I would hope that the Supreme Court would apply the Brandenburg principle to student speech alleged to have caused disruption, holding speech by students can only be considered disruptive if it is likely to cause imminent disruption, and in fact caused immediate disruption. (Yelling a racial slur at a teacher in class would clearly fit this bill).
That would be fantastic
Like a rare steak, they're all pink on the inside.
But unfortunately not rare.
So this case started with bullies using an "anti-bullying" law to bully a classmate. This is completely predictable to anyone who was a government school inmate, but probably the politicians who passed the law are all from rich families who sent them to private schools.
Instagram? Polished and serious?
Would relevant "disruption" be only that disruption that was relied upon by the authorities making the initial decision to suspend the student?
Six years ago. The incident was in February, 2017 when plaintiff was in middle school. In September, 2021, after the student should have graduated high school, she exhausted administrative remedies. The complaint was filed in November, 2021. The motion to dismiss was decided in May, 2023.
Legal experts call that "percolating." Justice is like coffee, a watched pot never boils.
This is beyond stupid. First of all, I don't know if it's at all racially insensitive. It's a joke. Is the movie "White Men Can't Jump" racially insensitive. How about the song, "Cave Bitch"? We live in a free society (allegedly). What if the girl had a Confederate flag on her instagram?
You know she'd (redacted) like (redacted)
with a "Rebel Yell" at the climactic moment, (hit by Billy Idol in....1984? big White Supremercist, Billy)
Frank
This white, male, right-wing blog has some peculiar fixations . . . which its target audience seems to love.
Get The Reverend Sandusky busting balls (literally) on other peoples "Peculiar Fixations"
This is especially stupid because the picture not only didn't tag the school, but wasn't even of anyone who attended the school. If you're a fellow student and you don't want to be subjected to such horrors... don't follow her account.
The policy cannot be that any speech which might trigger other students to cause a disruption - even if that speech is completely off campus, is not intended to cause such disruption, and is not even addressed to anyone at the school - is prohibited.
Sadly, many pulic school administrators believe themselves to be tinpot dictators.
Dennis Manning's father had the right idea.
https://www.quora.com/If-you-had-a-child-in-middle-school-who-was-being-bullied-how-would-you-handle-it/answer/Dennis-Manning-9
I say he should be punished severely AND that it seems outside any 1A relevance. I doubt this was his first egregious bad behavior. Where are the teachers in loco parentis who should tell the little hater that he ships up or gets expelled.
The judge's opinion merits a lot of criticism. First of all, the plaintiff makes out an EPC claim if she can factually plead, "You didn't do anything to my tormentors in school." Second, this was an off-hand remark uttered when the girl was 13. The tut-tutting of the federal judge is unseemly.