Amicus Brief: E.D. v. Noblesville School District
Plaintiffs E.D. and her parents sued the Noblesville (IN) School District, its superintendent, high school principal, and other officials for derecognizing the Students for Life group. To advertise a meeting, the chapter proposed to administrators to post a flyer with a photo of students in front of SCOTUS holding signs that said “Defund Planned Parenthood,” along with the meeting time, place, and location. E.D. and her mother met with an administrator, who told E.D. that she couldn’t post the flyer because it was “political.” That same day, the principal sent E.D.’s mother an email revoking the club’s status, claiming that “[a] poster cannot contain any content that is political” and expressing his doubts that the club was student-driven. After plaintiffs sued, the principal re-recognized the group.
The district court granted defendants summary judgment on all counts, finding that the principal wasn’t a final policymaker, but relying only on cases analyzing repealed laws. It also ruled that plaintiffs couldn’t succeed on their retaliation and Equal Access Act claims because they didn’t create a triable issue that punishing protected speech was a motivating factor in the revocation decision because flyers “could reasonably be perceived to bear the imprimatur of the school.” Plaintiffs are appealing two issues: First, whether an Indiana school principal qualifies as a final policymaker for Monell liability (municipalities’ violation of civil rights); and second, whether the principal retaliated and violated the Equal Access Act.
A panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, where the Manhattan Institute filed an amicus brief supporting E.D., affirmed. MI has now joined Young America’s Foundation and Students for Life America on a brief supporting E.D. petition for en banc (full court) review. We argue that the panel’s decision promotes censorship rather than constitutional rights at school and that a public high school may not limit a student’s speech due to the student’s political viewpoint without material and substantial proof of disruption.
Ilya Shapiro is a senior fellow and director of Constitutional Studies at the Manhattan Institute. Follow him on Twitter here.
Photo by Kayla Bartkowski/Getty Images
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