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Churubusco, Indiana High School, Violated Rights By Punishing Students Over MySpace Photos, Judge Says

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08/12/11 09:18 AM ET   AP

FORT WAYNE, Ind. -- An Indiana school district violated the First Amendment rights of two teenage girls who were punished for posting sexually suggestive photos on MySpace during their summer vacation, a federal judge ruled.

The case involving Churubusco High School and Smith-Green Community School Corp. raised questions about the limits school officials can place on out-of-school speech in a digital era. U.S. District Judge Philip Simon delayed a decision on whether to award damages, pending a ruling in a separate case before the 7th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago.

Wednesday's ruling stemmed from a lawsuit the American Civil Liberties Union of Indiana filed on the teens' behalf in October 2009. The lawsuit claimed the district improperly banned the girls, who were sophomores at the time, from extracurricular activities for expression that didn't involve the school, then humiliated the girls by requiring them to apologize to an all-male coaches' board and undergo counseling after the photographs were circulated at school.

The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that students can be disciplined for activities that happen outside of school, so long as the school can prove the activities were disruptive or posed a danger and that it was foreseeable the activities would find their way to campus.

The ACLU argued that the school violated the girls' First Amendment rights by punishing them for photos never intended for public dissemination.

"The families in this case were convinced the students' constitutional rights were violated and the policy itself was also unconstitutional," ACLU legal director Ken Falk said Thursday. "The issue is that we're dealing with expressive conduct by students out of school that does not affect schools."

The girls, then 15 and 16 years old, took the photos during a 2009 sleepover with friends before school started and posted them on their MySpace pages, setting the privacy controls so only those designated as friends could view them. In the photos, the girls wore lingerie and pretended to lick a penis-shaped lollipop. Other photos depicted the two in sexually suggestive poses with various props. None of the photos made any reference to the school.

A parent who obtained copies of the photos brought them to school Superintendent Steve Darnell and complained they were causing "divisiveness" among the volleyball team, court records show.

Principal Austin Couch subsequently ordered the girls suspended from volleyball, show choir and cheerleading for the year. He later reduced the penalty to 25 percent of fall semester activities after the girls completed three counseling sessions and apologized to the coaches' board.

School officials argued that the photographs were obscene and weren't protected by the First Amendment. They said Couch was enforcing the northeast Indiana school's athletic code, which allows the principal to bar from school activities any student-athlete whose behavior in or out of school "creates a disruptive influence on the discipline, good order, moral or educational environment at Churubusco High School."

Simon said the photographs didn't meet the definition of obscenity under Indiana law and found the district's discipline policy was "so vague and overbroad as to violate the Constitution."

The ruling noted that courts have upheld First Amendment rights involving photographs of flag burnings, sit-ins and other expressions. In this case, Simon wrote, the photographs, "although juvenile and silly," were intended to be humorous to the girls and their intended teenage audience.

W. Erik Weber, an attorney for the school district, said Thursday that he believes the school had the right to discipline the students. He called it an "an unsettled area of the law."

He said it's too soon to say whether the district will appeal because the judge still must rule whether it has immunity from damages.

Simon deferred a decision on damages until the appeals court rules in a case that will decide whether Indiana school districts are considered public entities and thus immune from damages under the Constitution.

Courts have ruled districts don't have 11th Amendment protection because they have local control over funding and taxes, but Smith-Green argues that 2008 changes to Indiana's school funding formula removed local control of school funding and that the school corporation is now an arm of the state.

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FORT WAYNE, Ind. -- An Indiana school district violated the First Amendment rights of two teenage girls who were punished for posting sexually suggestive photos on MySpace during their summer vacation...
FORT WAYNE, Ind. -- An Indiana school district violated the First Amendment rights of two teenage girls who were punished for posting sexually suggestive photos on MySpace during their summer vacation...
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09:14 PM on 08/19/2011
In a similar type situation, the parents of a 15 year old are suing URBAN OUTFITTERS for using obsence photos of their daughter on the grounds posting of the photos is breaking the law. Why aren't these girls or their PARENTS being charged under this law? Here is the information from THAT ARTICLE: The pictures come from a March 2010 photo-shoot of the 15-year-old girl in and around Los Angeles for an unnamed magazine, according to the lawsuit filed Thursday in Manhattan Federal Court. Her parents knew about the photo session but did not give permission to use the pictures, the lawsuit says.

"She is posed in a blatantly salacious manner with her legs spread, without a bra, revealing portions of her breasts," the lawsuit says.

"The image of Teen in a spread eagle position making her crotch area the focal point of the image may portray a child in a sexually suggestive manner and may be in violation of one or more federal and/or state laws."

If they are using this law, why does it NOT APPLY to these 15 and 16 year old girls? This has nothing to do with THEIR RIGHT TO GET AWAY WITH THIS UNDER THE FIRST AMENDMENT, but rather are they not breaking this law?

Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/2011/08/18/2011-08-18_xrated_pics_of_underage_model_surface_at_urban_outfitters_parents_sue_photog_sto.html#ixzz1VWg8B5i3.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
commchf
isthisthingworking?
11:07 AM on 08/13/2011
I'll bet the school officials who freaked out about this were small government conservatives.
07:03 AM on 08/13/2011
This is not an "unsettled area of the law," as the district's lawyer opined. Without actual or imminently threatened disruption to school activities (Tinker, Bethel) and in the absence of impermissible drug use or advocacy (Morse, i.e. "Bong Hits"), the students' actions are not subject to school discipline. It is a question of fact, not law, and the courageous judge seems to have gotten it right.
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Y Woodman Brown
live & let live
10:33 PM on 08/12/2011
Schools can't teach, so they police.
10:10 PM on 08/12/2011
Hooray for the ACLU defending their rights to be who they are...human beings! Fox News owns MySpace so anyone wanting to keep personal matters confidential should be aware of this (perhaps it should be called BigBrother.com?)

Too many people think it is okay to interfere with others' sexual or other personal matters...enough of that crap!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
chaapai
just an earthbound misfit, I
09:15 PM on 08/12/2011
wait a minute, wait a minute… hold on there. Someone still used Myspace?!
10:16 PM on 08/12/2011
too funny
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treemonkey
Illegitimi non carborundum
03:21 PM on 08/13/2011
Yeah, two suspicious looking administrators from an Indiana school district.
08:33 PM on 08/12/2011
Schools do not own children's lives. They need to back WAYYYY off.
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Steele361
You can't handle the truth
08:23 PM on 08/12/2011
Why did the parent of the Brat girl who probably got jealous of the other girls having fun take the pictures to the school? Look, look they're having fun and my baby isn't, punish them!! Waaaah!
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Coinspinner
08:07 PM on 08/12/2011
Bong hits for Jesus, anyone?
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Nopinky
07:56 PM on 08/12/2011
What's most vile to me is that schools seem to think that this is a perfectly normal, productive, expected reaction. Isn't this kind of the extreme end of the whole "fear of government invasion" thing? Why did this other mother (who really should be slapped a little) think "OMG this is terrible! I have to show the principal!" Why does she feel that she has the right to do anything other than talk to her own kids and MAYBE let the parents of the girls know what they posted?
Methinks her kid stinks at volleyball and she figured if she got these girls kicked off, that hers would look better.
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07:16 PM on 08/12/2011
Here's a case where everyone is wrong and no one wins.
The school has no business in students' private lives.
The girls should have been raised better.
Their parents are idiots.
04:08 PM on 08/13/2011
I think you've forgotten what it is to be a kid. It was nothing but a little teenage mischief.
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08:34 PM on 08/13/2011
Try harder.
06:54 PM on 08/12/2011
Right now, somewhere in America, there's a high school principal who's sitting at his home computer, with his pants bunched around his ankles, looking at all the sexy pics your stupid kid took with his/her cell phone; which you paid for. I say "his/her," but we all know, it's really the girls, and their stupid duckface, who're causing all the trouble. Girls have an instinctual need to post sexy pics on MySpace. Boys just post pics of themselves setting things on fire, or playing guitars, you know... cool stuff.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pT9YI3hAkCY
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climbing panda
there's a log in my cabin
06:51 PM on 08/12/2011
so the message these parents want their kids to take away fro this is that their behavior is acceptable. it is implicit in challenging the school's ruling.
moldndecay
Only that day dawns to which you are awake
07:03 PM on 08/12/2011
No, not at all. They are saying that whatever the girls did in the summer had nothing to do with the school. That is all.
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climbing panda
there's a log in my cabin
07:44 PM on 08/12/2011
what the girls did on summer vacation is none of the schools business. what the school took exception to was their posting this on myspace and the pictures eventually circulating at school.

the parents should be on the side of the school. that they are fighting this ruling sends the implied message that it was okay for them to do what they did and then post it on myspace. it is an implied acceptance of their behavior. just what i said in my original post.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Phreaked
In Brightest Day, In Blackest Night
07:06 PM on 08/12/2011
No the message i believe is that behavior has nothing to do with school and therefore the school should have no say about it
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Parade Keegan
I Can Hear You
06:50 PM on 08/12/2011
I hope the ACLU is suing the "busybody" parent who distributed "sex themed photos of minor girls" to adults (school officials), it's a crime isn't it?
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07:17 PM on 08/12/2011
I bet the photos were all...sticky.
;-)
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Parade Keegan
I Can Hear You
07:42 PM on 08/12/2011
Only if she's a christian! Lol
pricespector
Not in the 99%, nor the 1%
07:48 PM on 08/12/2011
How could it be a crime if they were deemed to not be obscene?
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Parade Keegan
I Can Hear You
07:59 PM on 08/12/2011
If they're not considered "obscene" why did the school punish the girls?
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05:47 PM on 08/12/2011
This demonstrates once again why all children should be stored in cages until they are adults.

It is bad enough that such a irrelevant thing might invoke bullying by peers at school. It is quite another thing that the school feels compelled to punish students over such harmless acts.