Tuesday, January 24, 2017
Student Group Sues After Members Arrested for Handing Out Copies of Constitution
Student members of the Young Americans for Liberty chapter at Kellogg Community College are suing their school after they were arrested for passing out copies of the U.S. Constitution.
The group says that on Sept. 20, 2016, KCC students Michelle Gregoire, Brandon Withers, and three others were in an open area in front of KCC’s Binda Performing Arts Center handing out pocket Constitutions and talking with students about YAL.
The students allege in their federal lawsuit that campus administrators and security approached them and told them they were violating the school’s Solicitation Policy because they were passing out the Constitution copies without prior approval. They were also informed they could not engage in such activity at that particular location.
The students allege that an administrator told them that “engaging [students] in conversation on their way to educational places” violated the Solicitation Policy because it was an “obstruction to their education” to ask them questions such as “Do you like freedom and liberty?”
The students say in their lawsuit that no one was blocked from attending class or berated for not responding. They did not force anyone to take a Constitution or participate in a conversation.
After nearly two hours of talking with students on Sept. 20, an administrator approached the YAL members, according to the lawsuit. This administrator said the students needed a permit, but after Gregoire explained how the last time she tried the official route she had no luck, the administrator asked how much longer she would be at the location. She said another one or two hours, and the administrator said that would be OK.
But five minutes later, another administrator, Drew Hutchinson, told the students to stop what they were doing and insisted they were keeping students from their education. Hutchinson allegedly told the YAL members that asking passing students if they liked freedom and liberty was a “provocative” question.
When Gregoire and Withers refused to move, saying they were having success at that location, Hutchinson left and returned with KCC’s chief of public safety, Harold West.
West told them to leave the area and threatened to arrest Withers for trespassing. He left, but Gregoire, Edikaukas, and another supporter, Nathan Berning from the Leadership Institute, remained.
West arrested them for trespassing, and told Gregoire—a student at KCC—that she could not return to campus without his permission.
The three were booked in the Calhoun County Jail on trespassing charges, and spent more than seven hours locked up before posting bond. Ten days after their arrest, the county prosecutor dismissed the charges against them.
Withers says in the lawsuit that he has witnessed other students violating KCC’s free speech and solicitation policies without incident.
He said that a year prior to his encounter, he saw members of an LGBT student organization distributing literature in the Student Center while freely walking around and not confined to sitting quietly at a table.
Withers also alleges he has seen students asking for petition signatures around other areas of campus without prior approval to do so.
While KCC’s Solicitation Policy clearly states that activities such as the one YAL engaged in must receive prior approval from the school, the group alleges the policy is unconstitutional in part because it gives school administrators discretion over restricting student speech.
SOURCE
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
6 comments:
How did administrators minds get so twisted ?
Anon 2;31 When they started rearing Das Kapital and The COMMUNIST MANIFESTRO by KARL MARX
What give? I spent considerable time writing a response only to receive a
"Bad Request" message after entering my id and proving I am not a robot. To add injury to insult my post was deleted.
Oh well, next time I'll remember to copy my post before attempting to publish.
Time for all those grand exualted poo poo heads to finaly pay the piper and he has doubled his wages
Simple case. Take it to the courts as a violation of the first amendment. Previous history of accommodating the leftist causes should be enough to get a win.
Its too bad these collage administrators have rejected to Constitution now they need to leave america and never come back again
Post a Comment