Calif. university drops disciplinary charges against underground humor publication
© 2002 Student Press Law Center
June 25, 2002
CALIFORNIA — The University of California at San Diego
has dropped student disciplinary charges against The Koala,
an underground humor publication whose editors faced punishment
that some say amounted to censorship.
Although the board ruled last week that there was insufficient
evidence to substantiate the charges against The Koala,
the lawsuit filed by the publication against the university alleging
repeated attempts to silence the humor publication remains active.
"Obviously, we think that the problems we are having with
the university have not disappeared and we are hopeful that our
lawsuit may help remedy some of the causes of these issues,"
said Koala editor George Liddle.
In its decision, the board denied that the proceedings had
anything to do with the paper's satirical nature.
"The student complaint and hearing focused exclusively
on alleged disruptive behavior by an alleged Koala staff
member," the university said in a press release. "Neither
the complaint nor the hearing concerned The Koala's editorial
content."
The controversy began when two Koala members accompanied
a freelance photographer to a May 19 meeting of the Movimiento
Estudiantil Chicano de Azatlan (MEChA), a Chicano-rights group,
and took a photo of member Ernesto Martinez after being asked
not to photograph the gathering.
After a complaint from Martinez, the university brought the
three students up on charges of disturbing the meeting.
At the May 22 hearing, The Koala asked that the board's
proceedings be opened to the public. University code prohibits
open hearings without the consent of both parties involved. The
university objected, but citing the University of California system's
less stringent requirements to open the proceedings, board chairwoman
Parisa Baharian ruled in the paper's favor.
Koala editors presented a limited defense after university
representative Cara Silbaugh walked out of the hearing.
"Under university polices, the privacy of participants
in disciplinary hearings is paramount," the university press
release said. "Closed hearings are a normal procedure in
the case of disciplinary issues. To protect the privacy of its
student records, UCSD was unable to comply with that request."
Nicholas Aguilar, director of student policy and judicial affairs
at the university, nullified the hearing, and the disciplinary
action was rescheduled for June 5 behind closed doors despite
the objections of the school-sponsored paper the Guardian.
Koala attorney Elliott Kanter filed suit against the
university June 5, seeking $1 million in damages for repeated
attempts by the university to silence the humor publication. The
judge denied Kanter's request for a temporary restraining order.