The Volokh Conspiracy
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U Tenn Pharmacy School Pays $250K Settlement for Trying to Expel Student for Sexually Themed Tweets
FIRE, which represented the student (Kimberly Diei) reports:
After her First Amendment lawsuit set precedent last fall for student free speech rights, Memphis pharmacist Kimberly Diei agreed to a $250,000 settlement with the University of Tennessee. [The settlement was $180K to Diei, and $70K to her lawyers at FIRE. -EV]
Just a month into her studies in September 2019, UT's pharmacy school investigated Kim for her social media content focused on sexuality, fashion, and music. The college justified the investigation by using vague "professionalism" standards—standards it never provided to Kim—but ultimately dropped that first investigation.
In one tweet, Kim contributed to a trending discussion on Twitter about the song "WAP" by Cardi B and Megan Thee Stallion, suggesting lyrics for a possible remix. In another, she posted a selfie and referenced lyrics from a popular Beyoncé song. [Just to be clear, the lyrics were pretty sexually themed, though that rightly didn't change the First Amendment analysis. -EV]
Unfortunately, Kim's ordeal was not unique. For years, colleges around the country have wielded professionalism codes against students for their expression even when the student's speech has no bearing on their ability to succeed in a given field. Kim's posts were wholly separate from the college, as her accounts operated under a pseudonym and did not reveal her then-identity as a student.
Yet by the following year, Kim was under a second investigation, and UT administrators voted to expel her. In the midst of preparing for exams, she appealed to the dean, who reversed the decision after hearing from FIRE. Then, FIRE sued on behalf of Kim in February 2021….
In 2024, a federal appeals court agreed, ruling that her expression—which administrators called "sexual," "crude," and "vulgar"—was "clearly protected" by the First Amendment. Crucially, in a blow to the qualified immunity that often shields government actors from paying damages for violating constitutional rights, the court emphasized that previous Supreme Court precedent and prior Sixth Circuit rulings put "beyond debate" that the First Amendment protects Kim's speech.
Here's my September post on the Sixth Circuit opinion:
From [the] opinion in Diei v. Boyd, written by Judge Chad Readler and joined by Judges Joan Larsen and Stephanie Davis:
Kimberly Diei enrolled at the University of Tennessee Health Science Center College of Pharmacy to pursue a doctorate in pharmacy. At the time, Diei maintained social media accounts under the pseudonym "KimmyKasi," where she posted about song lyrics, fashion, and sexuality. According to Diei, her social media posts neither identified her "as a College of Pharmacy student" nor "indicated any affiliation with the University of Tennessee." Those accounts would nevertheless put Diei at the center of a school investigation.
Just a month into her studies, Diei was informed by Christa George, Chair of the College's Professional Conduct Committee, that the Committee had received an anonymous complaint regarding Diei's social media activity. George explained that the Committee would review the posts to decide whether they violated the "Standards for Student Professionalism Conduct," requirements Diei asserts she was never provided. Following an investigation, the Committee unanimously held that Diei's postings were "sexual," "crude," and "vulgar" in nature, and thereby violated the College's professionalism standards. The Committee, however, did not vote to expel Diei.
The following school year, George notified Diei that the Committee had received a second complaint similar to the first. After a hearing, the Committee informed Diei that the content of the newly complained-of posts also violated the College's professionalism standards. The Committee deemed Diei's social media activity "a serious breach of the norms and expectations of the profession[]," and concluded that Diei did not "meet the threshold of professional behavior or the requirements of the Technical Standards for students." Accordingly, the Committee voted unanimously to dismiss Diei from the College. Diei appealed that decision to the school's Dean. Roughly three weeks later, the Dean reversed the Committee's decision.
Diei sued, claiming the original decision violated the First Amendment, and the Sixth Circuit held that her case could go forward:
First Amendment freedoms are somewhat constrained in the educational context. Generally speaking, "students do not 'shed their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression,' even 'at the schoolhouse gate.'" At the same time, public high schools and universities have considerable authority to control student speech in light of the pedagogical roles of those institutions. That is not to say the First Amendment necessarily affords the same protection to speech by a high school freshman as it does to a graduate student. Rather, the First Amendment permits teachers, administrators, and courts to consider the "'level of maturity' of the student."
The Supreme Court has directed us in weighing these competing interests. "[S]chools," we understand, "have a special interest in regulating speech that materially disrupts classwork or involves substantial disorder or invasion of the rights of others." But "the leeway the First Amendment grants to schools in light of their special characteristics is diminished" when the speech at issue occurs off campus. "[T]he less the speech has to do with the curriculum and school-sponsored activities, the less likely any suppression will further a 'legitimate pedagogical concern[],' which is why the First Amendment permits suppression under those circumstances only if the speech causes 'substantial disruption of or material interference with school activities.'" …
As alleged, Diei's social media posts were unrelated to the College of Pharmacy and caused no disruption. She posted about sexuality, fashion, and song lyrics—topics that have little bearing on pharmacy studies. Her posts made no reference to her scholarship or her classmates. And she used a pseudonym to make the posts, further distancing her speech from the College; indeed, Diei alleged that her posts "never identified" her "as a College of Pharmacy student" nor "indicated any affiliation with the University of Tennessee." This is a far cry from a case like Yoder v. University of Louisville (6th Cir. 2013), where a nursing student was expelled for inappropriate blog posts. In that case, after all, the plaintiff both identified herself as a student and violated the confidentiality of her patients. Based on the allegations in the complaint, which we accept as true, Diei's speech did not identify her with the College, had no connection to her studies, and did not lead to disruption. So unless the College had a genuine educational purpose for regulating Diei's speech, her communications fell safely within the confines of First Amendment protection.
Defendants counter that they did have a legitimate pedagogical purpose: training their students to comport with the norms of the pharmacy profession. For support, they cite Al-Dabagh v. Case Western Reserve University (6th Cir. 2015). There, a medical student was denied a degree due to his asserted lack of professionalism, both inside and outside the classroom. But the basis for the student's punishment was his conduct—arriving late, sexual harassment, poor academic performance, and driving while intoxicated—not his speech.
Nor do defendants' citations to two out-of-circuit cases—Hunt v. Board of Regents of the University of New Mexico (10th Cir. 2019), and Keefe v. Adams (8th Cir. 2016)—alter this conclusion. In Hunt, a medical student was punished for online speech. But unlike here, the speech there disparaged and "harass[ed] others," including other students, albeit not by name. Keefe is similarly distinguishable. In that case, a student was removed from a nursing program after the school received complaints about his online posts. 840 F.3d at 525. Yet those posts, it bears noting, were about the school, were directed at other students in the program, and caused material disruption to the "educational experience."
Finally, recall that Diei has alleged that she was never provided with the professionalism policies that formed the basis for her discipline, even when she asked. So those policies are not properly before us. It is thus difficult, at this stage of the litigation, for us to credit the College's claim of a pedagogical purpose. For instance, the College asserts an interest in teaching students to comply with the "professional standards that practicing Tennessee pharmacists live and work under 365 days a year." Perhaps so. But because we have no record at this point whether the College ever imparted such standards, we cannot make that judgment. And even were we to agree that an interest in teaching professionalism may sometimes legitimately curtail a student's speech, the interest evaporates entirely if the College's professionalism regulations bear little resemblance to those of the profession. Again, assessing that relationship would require not only access to the policies, but also a sense of how they are enforced. Neither inquiry is one we can perform on the basis of the complaint alone. At bottom, Diei has adequately alleged that defendants lacked a "legitimate pedagogical concern[]" justifying regulation of her off-campus, online, pseudonymous speech about topics unrelated to the College of Pharmacy that caused no disruption….
And the court also concluded that, if the facts are as plaintiff alleges, defendants should be denied qualified immunity. An excerpt:
[In] Papish v. Board of Curators of the University of Missouri, … a graduate student was expelled for distributing a newspaper on campus "containing forms of indecent speech." … The Supreme Court … [held] that universities cannot rely on "conventions of decency" alone to stifle protected speech. "[I]n the absence of any disruption of campus order or interference with the rights of others," the Supreme Court explained, a university cannot "proscribe" speech based on its content—"no matter how offensive to good taste" the speech may be. The First Amendment, the Supreme Court observed, "leaves no room for the operation of a dual standard in the academic community with respect to the content of speech." …
And the court went on to say:
This is not to say that a professionalism policy may never serve a pedagogical purpose. A university may use a policy of that ilk to inculcate graduate students with the norms and expectations of their professions, preparing them for their future endeavors. In some cases, in other words, instructional purposes may give universities "space" to discipline "speech by students in professional schools that appears to be at odds with customary professional standards."
But even when a professional school adopts a policy regulating student conduct for pedagogical reasons, the policy must genuinely reflect the professional norms and provide students with sufficient notice of what activity could subject them to discipline. Without sufficient notice, the university policy risks becoming a tool for chilling student speech rather than fostering student development. This concern becomes a reality when, as alleged here, a university fails to provide students with the policy in the first place. It is exceedingly difficult to see how any professionalism policy could serve a pedagogical purpose if students are unaware of its existence.
Based on Diei's complaint, the College's treatment of her speech clearly transgressed the school's authority. Diei alleges that her speech did not concern her courses, classmates, or school, nor did it have any disruptive effect on school activities. Further, Diei alleges that she never received the professionalism policies that gave rise to her punishment. In Diei's case, then, the professionalism policies served no pedagogical purpose….
I think the proper First Amendment rule is more speech protective than the panel's analysis: Papish expressly rejected the notion that the university's "legitimate authority to enforce reasonable regulations as to the time, place, and manner of speech and its dissemination" extends to "disapproved content … rather than the time, place, or manner of its distribution." And Papish expressly held that "the First Amendment leaves no room for the operation of a dual standard in the academic community with respect to the content of speech," which is to say a different standard than the First Amendment applies to the government as regulator. Or, to quote Healy v. James (1972),
[T]he precedents of this Court leave no room for the view that, because of the acknowledged need for order, First Amendment protections should apply with less force on college campuses than in the community at large. Quite to the contrary, "[t]he vigilant protection of constitutional freedoms is nowhere more vital than in the community of American schools."
This means that, outside class discussions and assignments, public universities generally may not restrict otherwise protected student speech based on its content, even if they view the message of the speech as "disruptive" or not "professional." (I say "otherwise protected" because of course some speech, such as true threats of illegal conduct, solicitation of illegal conduct, and so on, is generally unprotected, even against criminal punishment or civil liability. Under such circumstances, the government as educator has the power to punish such unprotected speech through university discipline as well. Likewise, when the university has students provide patient care or client services at law school, it can restrict their disclosure of confidential material that they acquire through such mechanisms—just as the government as sovereign can restrict the disclosure of confidential material acquired by litigants in discovery.) But in any event, I think the court's result here was quite right.
Here, by the way, is Diei's speech, as alleged in the Complaint:
[60.] For example, in the following tweet, Diei contributed to a trending discussion on Twitter about the song "WAP" by Cardi B featuring Megan Thee Stallion by suggesting lyrics for a possible remix:
[62.] In another tweet, Diei defended the lyrics of "WAP" against criticism from other users—who were arguing that those lyrics were inappropriate—by pointing out that humans are inherently sexual beings:
[63.] And in another tweet, Diei joked about the amount of time she spends getting prepared to go out for the evening by referencing the popular song "Partition" by Beyoncé:
Greg H. Greubel, Katlyn A. Patton, JT Morris, and Raul A. Ruiz of FIRE (the Foundation for Individual Rights & Expression) represent plaintiff.
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Even affirmative action students have 1st Amendment rights.
Sure. Even racists do.
And she is one.
And your evidence she's a racist is what?
Geez, Ed. why do you embarrass yourself with stuff like this? If you can't comment on any Black person without losing self-control in a involuntary spasm of Stupid, then maybe it's safest to avoid any topic about anyone with dark skin. Stick to ruminating on the sexiness of Nazi salutes. Musk is liable to spent a lot of time on the public stage over the next two years. That topic will probably prove timely.
Ed, yoiu aren't a doctor, we all know that. ANd you are despicably hateful and stupid.
Too bad the money won't be coming from the idiots that pursued this ludicrous action.
How is this different from the members of the tiki torch brigade?
She wrote about "sexuality, fashion, and song lyrics" -- she wrote about being a slut but whatever.
But would anyone permit yee neo-nazi to do likewise?
Sexuality -- All of the Nazi stuff, the marching, the salutes and such, is inherently sexual. It comes from Paganism, it's where Hitler got it from, and the Nazis were initially known as a gay outfit.
Fashion: The way you tell the difference between a real neo-nazi and a false flagger is that the real ones get the details RIGHT.
Song lyrics: 99 Balloons isn't the only song in German to receive English lyrics.
And I think we all know this case wouldn't have happened were she a White male skinhead....
Drink your Metamucil, grampa.
None of that, of course, is true. "Nazi salutes are inherently sexual" may be the dumbest thing you've ever said, and that bar is very very very very high.
It goes immediately into my Top Ten list for Ed-isms. I think you're being a bit quick to label it as the dumbest thing he's every said (although I must admit that I'm struggling to think of any competitor from him that is more idiotic).
Don't panic...he's got 4 more years to top this whopper.
But he is right that sexual perversion marked the whole high command.
Some of it is true. Adolph Hitler's Adjutant, Captain Von Roehm,
Chief of the Brown Shirt Army was as perverted and depraved as anyone Rohm sometimes ordered S.A. street- fighters to beat up former lovers who cheated on him. Rohm enjoyed the company of gay noblemen “with faces of perverse angels”
Röhm was indeed gay, but he was also purged and murdered almost as soon as the Nazis actually took power.
Which even if true is irrelevant. The boots on the ground was...boots on the ground.
I’ll just say that this reflects cultural gap between what would be considered respectable or decent in the UT trustees world and in the world of their students. In the UTtrustees world, it would indeed bring disrespect on the profession.
I think the Supreme Court has generally speaking let schools impose what might he considered today as very prudish standards on their students. And in general, I think the Supreme Court would have been better off not trying to impose its own views as to what constitutes obscenity, or to insert itself into sexual mores generally, but to leave society to itself to work these things out on its own.
I think the last week has already made the that society has radically changed as quaint as the idea that resolving disputes by means of war was a thing of the past had beenin the 1920s.
It’s hardly the first time that authoritarians have used “out of hand” loose sexual mores as an excuse to take over. Perhaps the left shoild have let people fight it out among themselves rather than have had the changes imposed by courts and thereby be denouncible as illegitimate.
Our new masters already appear to be preparing the transit beam for our return to Transylvania. Hang on!
Incorrect reference. 🙂
To return to Transylvania, you gotta first have a jump to the left (okay, yes, and then a step to the right). Here, in 2025 America; it's a jump to the right . . . and then another jump to the right. And then a bigger jump to the far-right. (Maybe this way is the instructions on how they to get here from there???) Oooh...Deep. Thought. . . .
But isn’t that exactly what happened in the movie too? The jump to the left, which was most of the movie, preceded the step to the right, which happened quite quickly. Even in the song where it happens, the takeover only comes in at the very end.
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=e8xGVnLales
Clarification. I’m not referring to the “Time Warp” scene, which seems to be what you’re thinking about. I’m referring to the scene near the end where Riffraff and Magenta come in in full-dress regalia and take over. When they take over, which happens near the end of the clip above, Riffraff says:
“Frank-N-Furter it’s all over
Your mission is a failure
Your lifestyle’s too extreme
I’m you’re new commander
You are now my prisoner
We return to Transylvania
Prepare the transit beam.”
That’s what “our new masters already appear to be preparing the transit beam” is referring to. And I think it’s a very apt reference. It is, like it or not, more or less how I suspect Trump’s followers see things.
Yes. I was making a joke, of course. (Fun fact: As a former RHPS nerd, who saw the movie 300+ times; when I was on "Who Wants to be a Millionaire" [but not as the big money contestant], I had to alert the producers, who had asked a Rocky Horror question and all 4 possible provided answers were incorrect.)
Your last point, about the song refrain being an encapsulation of the movie's mores is genuinely fascinating. And one that I never thought about. You are correct...the moved starts on the Right (conservative, White, middle America, in Denton, USA), consistently moves to the Left (dancing, drag, rather wanton straight and gay sex, etc), and then moves back to the (a very different type of) Right at the very end, when RR and Magenta betray Frank and go back to Transexual. That thesis would have blown our minds, back in the day...although, to be fair, the odds were pretty good that we would have been stoned silly at the time. 🙂
Let me float this. Do you see any resemblance between Frank-N-Furter and Elon Musk? Don’t worry about the silly right/left dance, it’s a distraction. Nor about the mode of dress. But Musk, not unlike Dr. F, not only has a child-like faith in his own scientific genius and seeks to build toys to amuse himself, he also has a similar lack concern about a few mere Earthlings being killed along the way to achieve it. He also seems to have a thing for groupies, and is reported to have had quite a few children by them.
But that school is a contract (whether you dislike their morals or not) is the only issue. You go to X then you act as X likes.
This reminds me of the story about the Notre Dame professor who is so sad that her pro-abortion views are not respected !!!!
YOu deserve no respect if you go to work for a Catholic institution and work to subvert their mission.
Freedom of speech issues in academic settings are always complex. While schools have the right to maintain professional standards, punishing students for personal, non-threatening social media activity crosses a line. This case highlights how blurry those boundaries can be. On a related note, students facing academic pressures often struggle to express themselves freely, especially when balancing personal and professional expectations. That’s why resources like literature review writing help can be helpful—alleviating some academic stress and letting students focus on what matters. Ultimately, institutions need clearer policies that respect both academic integrity and individual rights without overstepping.
Given the purpose of the First Amendment, I find it strange that the courts decided to protect sexually obscene speech in Diei v. Boyd, but explicitly political speech in Hunt v. Board of Regents was not protected.