DENVER —  In an important victory for students’ free speech rights, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit has ruled that a high school could not punish a student for an anti-Semitic message posted on social media outside school. The decision comes in the case C1.G v. Scott Siegfried, et al., which asked whether, and when, public schools can discipline young people for their speech outside of school without running afoul of the First Amendment. The American Civil Liberties Union and ACLU of Colorado filed an amicus brief in the case and appeared at oral argument, urging the court to protect young people’s and students’ free speech rights. 

“While the speech at issue here was hateful and asinine, the court’s approach to this case has affirmed the free speech rights of all young people in the 10th Circuit,” said Vera Eidelman, staff attorney for the ACLU Speech, Privacy and Technology Project. “The court correctly recognized that schools cannot reflexively extend their in-school authority off campus. Otherwise, young people would never be fully free to explore ideas or exercise their voices — whether they are posting on Snapchat on a Friday night, attending a protest over the weekend, or writing an op-ed in their local newspaper.” 

This is the first case about a school’s authority to discipline students for online, off-campus speech to reach a federal appellate court since the ACLU’s victory last June in Mahanoy v. B.L., in which the U.S. Supreme Court held that schools do not have the same authority to regulate and punish student speech outside of school as they do in school. In C1.G v. Scott Siegfried, et al., the court recognized that, when it comes to political or religious speech, the school will bear a heavy burden in justifying any punishment, and that it will rarely stand in the place of parents when it comes to discipline for off-campus speech. 

The case involves an offensive snap a young person posted on Snapchat from a local thrift store on a Friday night. The snap included a photograph of the student and three friends, including one person wearing a World War II-era hat, with an anti-Semitic caption, stating “Me and the boys bout to exterminate the Jews.” Within hours, the student took down the snap and apologized for it. The school expelled the student in response. The school did not claim that the snap constituted bullying or harassment, but argued that it could punish the student just as it could discipline students for in-school speech that has the potential to disrupt the school environment. 

The ACLU’s brief focused on the implications of the case not only for CG, but all young people, and argued that schools must respect students’ rights to express themselves outside of school, including their right to express dissenting or unpopular views. 

This comment can be found online here: https://www.aclu.org/press-releases/federal-appeals-courts-affirms-students-free-speech-rights-outside-school

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Thursday, July 7, 2022 - 1:15pm

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Appellate ruling in case of C.G. v Siegfried, et al.

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n Friday, The U.S. Supreme Court issued a shameful ruling overturning Roe v. Wade and dismantling constitutional protections for abortions that have been in place for nearly 50 years. The court’s ruling in the Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization case paves the way for anti-abortion politicians to ban abortions and criminalize essential health care in half of the states in the country, affecting 36 million people who can become pregnant. 

The ACLU of Colorado will not back down. We will fight this attack on the fundamental right of millions of people to decide if and when to have a child. You can join us in that fight.  

Gather with us, and our partners in the Colorado Reproductive Health Rights and Justice Coalition, on the west steps of the Colorado State Capitol, Monday, June 27, at 6 p.m. to rally against the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe.

Abortion will not truly be accessible until everyone is able to get the essential care they need — in their own communities — in every state.  

Make no mistake: Politicians won’t stop here. Our rights and liberties are under attack like never before. Justice Thomas wrote in his concurring opinion, explicitly, that Griswold v. Connecticut, which grants the right to access contraception; Lawrence v. Texas, which invalidated the criminalization of same-sex intimacy; and Obergfell v. Hodges which granted the right to same-sex marriage, should all be overruled. 

Despite the courts allowing anti-abortion politicians to attack our fundamental rights — they don’t get the final say — the people do. Join us and raise your voice against this cruel decision to ban reproductive freedom for millions of people who can get pregnant.

If you can't attend, please consider donating and help fund our efforts to uphold our fundamental right to reproductive freedom in Colorado.

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