SPLC - Student Press Law Center
SPLC Home Resource Center News Flashes About SPLC SPLC Report SPLC Members SPLC Store
News Flash

NEWS FLASH ARCHIVES
  Current News Flashes
  2010 News Flashes
  2009 News Flashes
  2008 News Flashes
  2007 News Flashes
  2006 News Flashes
  2005 News Flashes
SEARCH ARTICLES
Advanced Search



Join SPLC E-Mail List




Email This Page Print This Page

Minn. Supreme Court declines to hear appeal by professor claiming defamation

Professor sued St. Cloud State University after the student newspaper printed libelous statements about him


© 2005 Student Press Law Center

June 23, 2005

MINNESOTA -- The Minnesota Supreme Court last week refused to consider an appeal by a St. Cloud State University professor who had sued the university for libel.

The court's denial of Richard Lewis' appeal upheld the principle that public colleges and universities that do not make content decisions cannot be held liable for defamatory statements printed in their student newspapers.

The Minnesota State College and University System had a policy in place that said "student-funded publications shall be free of censorship and advance approval of copy, and their editors and managers shall be free to develop their own editorial and news coverage policies."

Lewis, a professor and former dean at St. Cloud State University, sued the school and the Minnesota State College and University System after the school's student newspaper, the University Chronicle, ran a story in October 2003 in which a student accused Lewis of being anti-Semitic.

Neither the newspaper nor its staff was named in the lawsuit.

According to the state supreme court's Web site, the court on June 14 refused to consider the case.

A district court judge dismissed Lewis' case in June 2004 and the state's court of appeals in March upheld the dismissal, saying the school was not liable for statements printed in the student newspaper.

-- By Sean Hill



Share


For More Information:

CASE: Lewis v. St. Cloud State University et al., 693 N.W. 2d 466 (Minn. Ct. App. 2005).

Read previous coverage

Search | Contact the SPLC | Resource Center | News Flashes | About SPLC | SPLC Report | Members | SPLC Store | Site Map | Home