Judge: Banning fliers about Jesus violated student's rights
April 2, 2007
SYRACUSE, New York (AP) -- A school district violated a fourth-grader's constitutional rights to free speech and equal protection by refusing to allow her to distribute "personal statement" fliers carrying a religious message, a federal judge has ruled.
The Liverpool Central School District in upstate New York based its restrictions on "fear or apprehension of disturbance, which is not enough to overcome the right to freedom of expression," Chief U.S. District Judge Norman Mordue wrote in a 46-page decision Friday.
"School officials had no right to silence Michaela's personal Christian testimony," attorney Mat Staver said Monday.
Staver is executive director of Liberty Counsel, the Orlando, Florida-based conservative legal group that represented Michaela Bloodgood and her mother, Nicole.
Liverpool school district lawyer Frank Miller said the school district was studying the decision and "reviewing its options." the rest
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