Fall 2007 - Cover Story
Vol. XXVIII, No. 3 - Page 20
Chipping away
U.S. Supreme Court’s decision in Morse v. Frederick leaves narrow hole in landmark Tinker standard
© 2007 Student Press Law Center
By Judy Wang
A burst of laughter broke over the marble halls
of the U.S. Supreme Court chamber when one of the nine dignified, black-robed
figures seated behind a raised bench began to speak about "bong
hits."
While delivering the Morse v. Frederick ruling, witnesses
said, Chief Justice of the United States John Roberts sarcastically described a
comical banner reading "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" amid some chuckles from the crowd
that had gathered to watch the final decision reading of the Court’s
term.
Students and First Amendment advocates, however, were not
laughing.
On June 25, nearly five years after a high school student in
Juneau, Alaska, held up the now-famous banner across the street from his school
during the 2002 Olympic Torch Relay, the Supreme Court ruled that his school had
a right to discipline him for his actions. In a narrow ruling, the Court decided
that schools do not violate a student’s First Amendment free-speech rights
by punishing speech that advocates illegal drug use at a school-sanctioned and
school-supervised activity.
While students and advocates bristled at
this setback to students’ freedom of expression, school administrators
maintained that the right side prevailed. These groups were not the only ones
that disagreed on the outcome of the legal battle, as the Court itself exhibited
more than one sharp ideological split in the decision.
Speculation among
First Amendment advocates about the decision’s potential impact ranged
from optimistic to deeply skeptical. Several advocates simply shrugged and
resignedly said, "It could have been worse."
The
decision
Many legal experts said the outcome of Morse, although unfavorable
to established First Amendment protections, carves out a narrow precedent that
is unlikely to prove devastating for student-speech rights.
The
controversy began in January 2002 when Joseph Frederick, then an 18-year-old
senior at Juneau-Douglas High School, raised a 14-foot banner duct-taped with
the words "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" to attract the television cameras parked on the
street next to his school. Frederick unfurled the banner for a moment in the
spotlight, but he probably did not realize how much attention his message would
soon receive.
Although Frederick would later claim that the words on the
banner were "absurdly funny" but nonsensical, Principal Deborah Morse thought
they carried a pro-drug use message.
After spotting the display across
the street, Morse grabbed the banner and suspended Frederick for 10 days.
Frederick appealed to the Juneau School Board to end his punishment but lost.
The conflict gained momentum in April 2002 when Frederick, with help
from the American Civil Liberties Union of Alaska, filed suit in a federal court
alleging that his free-speech rights had been violated.
But the district
court ruled that Morse and the school board did not infringe upon his rights,
stating that the First Amendment does not protect Frederick’s message in
this case because the banner "conflicted with the school’s deterrence of
illegal drug use."
Frederick appealed to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
Appeals, which reversed the lower court’s ruling. The appeals court
unanimously decided that the school violated Frederick’s free-speech
rights because it failed to "show a reasonable concern about the likelihood of
substantial disruption to its educational mission, applying the Supreme
Court’s 1969 Tinker standard.
But the school board,
displeased with this ruling, brought its complaint to the Supreme Court.
Oral arguments were heard in the high court March 19. By that time, the
case had gained national fame and drawn the interest of former special
prosecutor and dean of the Pepperdine University School of Law Kenneth Starr,
who signed on to represent the school district pro bono.
An
eclectic group of organizations, including the Student Press Law Center, ranging
from the left-leaning Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund to the
conservative Alliance Defense Fund, filed friend-of-the-court briefs with the
Supreme Court in support of Frederick. Groups such as the National School Boards
Association and Drug Abuse Resistance Education filed for Morse.
The
Supreme Court ended the lengthy legal battle in June by giving the school
district and Starr the final victory.
"I’m glad that the Court
recognized the need to have reasonable rules governing student speech for the
good of all students," Morse said in a conference call the day the Court ruled
in her favor. "It’s been very challenging ... both personally and
professionally."
The 18-page opinion of the court, written by Roberts,
sympathizes with school officials and the "difficult" and "important" job they
have in shielding students from drug advocacy. Drawing on an educator’s
duty to deter drug use, the majority decision said it would give school
officials legal cover to strike down student speech that can be "reasonably
regarded as encouraging illegal drug use." The majority found the school’s
interpretation of Frederick’s banner as a pro-drug message to be
reasonable.
The decision used the Court’s 1986 ruling in Bethel
School District v. Fraser, in which it ruled that sexually suggestive speech
delivered at a high school assembly is punishable, to argue that the 1969
Tinker v. Des Moines Independent Community School District decision, the
standard-bearer for student speech, is "not absolute."
Tinker
restricted censorship by only permitting schools to suppress speech that causes
a substantial disruption in the learning environment or infringes on the rights
of others.
The Morse decision also states that although Frederick
raised his "pro-drug" banner across the street from his school, he still can be
disciplined because the environment surrounding the Olympic torch relay
constituted a school-sanctioned and school-supervised event.
Many legal
experts said the ruling’s impact on student speech, however damaging, is
considerably tempered by a concurring opinion written by Associate Justice
Samuel Alito and joined by Associate Justice Anthony Kennedy. In the weeks
leading up to the decision reading, Alito publicly spoke on the importance of
upholding the First Amendment and was expected by many to stand up for student
free-speech rights in the impending decision.
Although his vote was not
for Frederick, Alito’s concurrence warned school administrators about the
limits of drug speech regulation. He wrote that he and Kennedy support the
Court’s decision as long as it "goes no further" than to allow
administrators to restrict expression advocating illegal drug use and does not
permit administrators to restrict commentary on "any political or social
issue."
Alito said the Court will not uphold restrictions on student
speech that references illegal drug use but does not promote the illegal
activity, which he said includes student speech that examines "the wisdom of the
war on drugs" or the issues concerned with "legalizing marijuana for medicinal
use."
In addition, to prevent administrators from using the ruling as a
carte blanche to censor, Alito wrote that the Court does not endorse the
argument brought by the school district and Starr that the First Amendment
permits public school officials to censor student speech that interferes with a
school’s "educational mission."
James Tidwell, an Eastern Illinois
University professor of journalism, said the Alito-Kennedy concurrence makes it
clear that students will not entirely relinquish free-speech rights at school.
"This case has carved out a narrow, narrow exception for speech that
advocates drug use," he said.
Associate Justice Clarence Thomas also
concurred but wrote a separate statement that called on the Court to put the
kibosh on student-speech rights entirely. None of the other justices signed on
with this stance.
The
dissent
The breakdown of votes in the Supreme Court mirrored the bench’s
ideological split, as the five conservative justices agreed with the school
district and the four more left-leaning or moderate justices were sympathetic to
Frederick’s argument.
Associate Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, John
Paul Stevens and David Souter dissented from the Court’s opinion and
Associate Justice Stephen Breyer concurred in part and also gave a partial
dissent.
Breyer said the Court simply should have decided that Frederick
could not seek damages for his punishment, and it was "unwise and unnecessary"
to pursue a First Amendment debate. He expressed concern that the decision would
authorize further viewpoint-based restrictions on student speech, which he said
could encourage school officials to prohibit speech that calls on the government
to legalize marijuana.
"This Court need not and should not decide this
difficult First Amendment issue on the merits," Breyer wrote.
Stevens
went much further to denounce the majority opinion.
Stevens, who
reportedly shook his head disapprovingly as Roberts read the ruling, said in the
dissent that the First Amendment supersedes any justification Morse can make for
doling out punishments for a banner with an "oblique reference" to drugs.
"The First Amendment demands more, indeed, much more," he
wrote.
Drawing on Tinker, which stated that students do not "shed
their constitutional rights to freedom of speech or expression at the
schoolhouse gate," Stevens argued that the decision misconstrues a precedent
that would have upheld Frederick’s message.
SPLC Attorney Advocate
Adam Goldstein said while Morse does little harm to the Tinker
protections as a rule of law, the recent decision undercuts the authority of the
older decision because it is the third exception the Court has made to the rule.
The other two exceptions came down in Fraser and in the 1988
Supreme Court decision Hazelwood School District v. Kuhlmeier, which
permitted public high school officials to censor some school-sponsored student
publications if the publications are not "public forums for student
expression."
Morse has now added illegal drug advocacy to the list
of unprotected speech.
Goldstein and SPLC Executive Director Mark
Goodman have expressed concern that Morse could lead to more erosion of
the Tinker standard.
"If this path continues, eventually the
exceptions will swallow the rule," Goldstein said.
Watching from the
sidelines
Stevens and the other dissenting justices were far from being the only
people to speak against the ruling.
In the weeks following the decision
announcement, a number of media outlets and non-profit groups, including the
New York Times, --The Washington Post and the Journalism Education
Association, released statements criticizing the Court for curtailing
students’ First Amendment rights.
JEA, an organization of
journalism teachers and advisers based at Kansas State University in Manhattan,
Kan., held a meeting to discuss ways to counteract Morse’s impact
on student press rights. The organization released a statement warning educators
not to treat the decision as an invitation to restrict student expression that
they think is controversial.
"This is one of the most frightening
decisions ever to come down," JEA Executive Director Linda Puntney said.
Puntney said because Frederick was not technically in school when he
unfurled his banner, school administrators could misinterpret the ruling as
permission to control content on students’ Web sites or other media.
Puntney, who serves as director of publications at Kansas State
University and taught journalism in high school for 12 years, said she fears the
decision will have a chilling effect on student journalists who should instead
be encouraged to pursue robust discussion.
"Because of this, I think
there will be students who develop a tendency to self-censor," she said.
But others took a more optimistic view of the ruling.
Mathew
Staver, the founder and chairman of the Liberty Counsel, which also filed a
friend-of-the-court brief supporting Frederick, said his organization is
satisfied with the outcome, despite being momentarily displeased with
Frederick’s loss.
"We were concerned about this decision because
it had the potential to undo free speech," Staver said. "But it appears that the
free-speech rights of students are still intact."
Not all students will
take a hit from the decision; a few states have student-expression laws that are
far more protective than the federal standard. California’s statute on
student expression, for instance, states, "Students of the public schools shall
have the right to exercise freedom of speech and of the press."
Some
groups that supported Morse have criticized the Court for not going far enough
to limit student speech on a national level.
Tom Hutton, the National
School Boards Association senior attorney, said he was somewhat disappointed
that the decision, like Fraser, has made only a single addition to the
categories of speech that schools can regulate.
"This is a very ad
hoc approach that doesn’t give anybody as much clarity and guidance as
might be helpful to avoid future litigation," he said. "We would have liked a
little more discretion for school officials."
The road ahead
Although it has been weeks since the chattering crowds descended the white
steps of the Supreme Court building after the decision was announced, interest
in the "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" case has not died down.
Legal scholars and
advocacy groups have turned their eyes to the places in which the ruling will
take its toll — the schools.
Mary Becker, the president of Juneau
School Board, said she is pleased that the Supreme Court upheld school policy on
drug promotion.
"We won’t have principals and administrators
worrying any longer that they cannot prohibit those kinds of advocacy by
students," she said. "I’m pleased that [the Supreme Court] agreed that we
were just defending our policy."
Becker said she has no plans to revise
school policy on speech or publications because it is already "strong" and has
been "strengthened" by the Morse decision.
Few schools, for now,
have said they will revise school policy on speech and publications to reflect
their new authority to regulate pro-drug speech, though some experts said more
are likely to revisit student expression policy once school begins this fall.
Hutton said he thinks most schools will probably refer to Morse
when a confrontation involving drug speech crops up, but they are far less
likely to take a proactive approach to restricting student
expression.
Some raised concerns that the ruling, despite Alito’s
concurrence, will lead school officials to censor speech that delivers an
anti-drug message or makes a controversial political statement. A number of
pending court cases, including a conflict involving a high school student from
New York who attached a piece of paper to his shirt with the message "Abortion
is Murder," may be affected by the Morse rationale.
But the high
court’s refusal to hear another case may indicate that it does not intend
the decision to be interpreted so broadly.
Days after the Morse
decision, the Court denied a Vermont school district’s petition for a writ
of certiorari to hear a case involving a student who was punished for
wearing a T-shirt depicting President Bush with images of illegal drugs and
alcohol.
Zach Guiles, a former student at Williamstown Middle High School
in Williamstown, Vt., was suspended in May 2004 when he wore a shirt that called
President Bush "Chicken-Hawk-in-Chief" and illustrated him as a chicken
surrounded by cocaine and a martini glass. In retaliation, Guiles arrived at
school in the following few days wearing the same shirt covered with duct tape
bearing the word "censored."
Although a district court said the school
could legally censor some of the images on the shirt, the 2nd U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals decided that the school’s actions violated Guiles’s First
Amendment rights. The school petitioned the Supreme Court in February to hear
its case.
Legal experts said the Court probably denied the writ of
certiorari because the student’s message in his case was a
political statement, and thus protected by the First Amendment, according to
Morse.
Clay Calvert, a Pennsylvania State University professor of
journalism who attended the oral arguments for Morse, said the Court has
indicated that it reached the recent decision only by drawing a distinction
between pro-drug speech and political speech about drugs.
"The good news
is that the Court did not adopt Justice Thomas’ line of reasoning in which
he would have completely stripped students of free speech rights altogether," he
said. "It’s bad news, but it could have been worse news."
Yet,
Calvert said he would still be curious to see how lower courts use the
Morse ruling to decide cases involving speech or published material about
legalizing marijuana, a question that Justices Breyer and Stevens said in their
respective opinions Morse has precariously left open for debate.
"It’ll be interesting to see if students test this by making
drug-based speech that is clearly political," Calvert said.
For now,
students across the nation are still faced with what may prove a perplexing task
of deciding what kinds of speech are acceptable in their schools and what kinds
of speech may land them in the principal’s office, where the law may not
be able to help.
Mary Beth Tinker, whose lawsuit established protections
for student expression in 1969, said the ruling leaves too much up to
administrators.
"To censor student speech that is against school policy
is opening the door to a wide range of issues that schools can censor," she
said. "So much is just left up to interpretation."
Hareesh Ganesan, 16,
an editor in chief of Silver Chips, a student newspaper from Montgomery
Blair High School in Silver Spring, Md., said his newspaper has run several
stories about drugs in the past without any problems, but he said he fears that
the recent ruling may give the administration more self-assurance to misconstrue
these pieces as pro-drug speech.
"If the school decides to interpret
them as advocating or glorifying drug use, then [Morse] would really hurt
us in that situation," he said.
Ganesan said because many school
administrators may miss the nuances in the new standard and decide that it gives
them free reign to censor, it will be important for students to educate
themselves about the "Bong Hits 4 Jesus" case and learn how it affects their
right to free speech.
"Hopefully, they’ll come to understand what
this entails for them," he said.
For more Information: Morse v. Frederick, No. 06-278 (U.S. June 25, 2007).
Read the decision
Read the transcript of Supreme Court oral arguments
Supreme Court rules in 'Bong Hits 4 Jesus' case News Flash, 6/25/2007
Supreme Court hears oral arguments in 'Bong Hits 4 Jesus' case News Flash, 3/19/2007
Twenty-three organizations file briefs with Supreme Court in 'Bong Hits 4 Jesus' case News Flash, 4/9/2007
Supreme Court will hear 'Bong Hits 4 Jesus' case News Flash, 12/5/2006
Supreme Court urged to review 'Bong Hits 4 Jesus' case News Flash, 9/7/2006
Suspension for 'Bong Hits 4 Jesus' poster violated student's rights, court says News Flash, 3/15/2006
U.S. appeals court hears case of Alaska student punished for off-campus speech News Flash, 7/12/2004
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