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Welcome to the UNCA Chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union

                                                                    September 2007

We invite all students to join this official university organization and to explore the resources and  issues that the ACLU is working on by visiting our:

National site:   www.aclu.org
State site        www.acluofnorthcarolina.org
Regional site:   www.acluwnc.org
Student site:     www.aclu.org/standup

 

             communicate online with the group here

News and Urgent Issues

ACLU Slams Supreme Court Decision in Student Free Speech Case (6/25/2007)
 

WASHINGTON - The American Civil Liberties Union today criticized the Supreme Court's 5-4 ruling in Morse v. Frederick, which held that Alaska public school officials did not violate a student's free speech rights by punishing him for displaying a banner during a public event.

"We are disappointed by the Supreme Court's ruling, which allows the censorship of student speech without any evidence that school activities were disrupted," said Douglas K. Mertz, an ACLU cooperating attorney who argued the case before the Supreme Court.

The case arose in 2002 when Joseph Frederick, then a student at Juneau-Douglas High School in Juneau, Alaska, was suspended for 10 days for holding up a humorous sign that the principal interpreted as a pro-drug message. As the ACLU and Mertz noted, the sign caused no disruption, was displayed at the Olympic Torch Relay - a public event on public streets - and Frederick had not yet arrived at school for the day.

"The Court's ruling imposes new restrictions on student speech rights and creates a drug exception to the First Amendment," said Steven R. Shapiro, ACLU National Legal Director. "The decision purports to be narrow, and the Court rejected the most sweeping arguments for school censorship. But because the decision is based on the Court's view about the value of speech concerning drugs, it is difficult to know what its impact will be in other cases involving unpopular speech.

"The Court cannot have it both ways," Shapiro added. "Either this speech had nothing to do with drugs, which is what Joe Frederick claimed all along, or it was suppressed because school officials disagreed with the viewpoint it expressed on an issue that is very much the subject of debate in Alaska and around the country."

Frederick said that the phrase on the banner, Bong Hits 4 Jesus, "was never meant to have any substantive meaning. It was certainly not intended as a drug or religious message. I conveyed this to the principal by explaining it was intended to be funny, subjectively interpreted by the reader and most importantly an exercise of my inalienable right to free speech."

The ACLU noted that the ruling is limited to rights under federal law rather than Alaska state law, which is more protective of personal liberties.

"The fight to defend free speech will go on, both in this case and in others," Mertz said. "We are grateful for the many Alaskans and Americans who rallied to defend the First Amendment and promise our continued support for civil liberties."

The case attracted support from more than a dozen groups across the ideological spectrum, from the conservative American Center for Law and Justice, Christian Legal Society and Rutherford Institute to the Student Press Law Center, Lambda Legal Defense and Education Fund, Drug Policy Alliance and National Coalition Against Censorship.

More information on the case is online at: www.aclu.org/frederick

The decision is online at: www.scotusblog.com/movabletype/archives/06-278_All.pdf

In addition to Mertz and Shapiro, attorneys for Frederick are Catherine Crump and Jonathan Miller of the national ACLU and Jason Brandeis, Legal Director of the ACLU of Alaska.
 

 

The UNCA Chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union welcomes and encourages all students who are interested in protecting personal freedoms guaranteed in the Constitution to join and participate in this club.

Visit our action center to easily contact your representatives on issues the ACLU is working on.

The ACLU works daily in courts, legislatures, and communities to defend and preserve the individual rights and liberties guaranteed by the Constitution and laws of the United States. 

 

 

ACLU-NC Applauds Court Ruling That Prevents Religious Discrimination in the Administration of Courtroom Oaths by Allowing Use of Multiple Religious Texts For Swearing-In Proceedings
                                                                                                          
RALEIGH– The American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina (ACLU-NC) applauded a ruling today by Superior Court Judge Paul Ridgeway, requiring that people of non-Christian faiths must be allowed to use religious texts other than the Christian Bible when being sworn in as jurors or witnesses in state court proceedings.

Judge Ridgeway wrote, “The highest aim of every legal contest is the search for the truth. To require pious and faithful practitioners of religions other than Christianity to swear oaths in a form other than the form most meaningful to them would thwart the search for the truth.”

The lawsuit was originally filed in July 2005 in Superior Court in Wake County on behalf of the organization’s statewide membership of approximately 8,000 individuals of many different faiths, including Islam and Judaism. In November 2005, the ACLU-NC added another plaintiff to the case, Syidah Mateen. Syidah Mateen is a Muslim woman who was denied the option of using the Quran when she was being sworn in as a witness in a court proceeding in Guilford County. She was told that the only holy text used in the courtroom is the King James Version of the Bible. A superior court judge had dismissed the ACLU-NC’s lawsuit in December 2005, ruling that neither Ms. Mateen nor the ACLU-NC could present a “case or controversy” that was ripe for judicial review, but in January 2007, a unanimous North Carolina Court of Appeals overturned that dismissal and ruled that the case could go forward.

"Today’s court ruling makes it clear that the government cannot favor one set of religious values over another and must allow all individuals of faith to be sworn in on the holy text that is in accordance with their faith,” said Jennifer Rudinger, Executive Director of the ACLU-NC. “By allowing only the Christian Bible to be used in the administration of religious oaths in the courtroom, the State had been discriminating against people of non-Christian faiths, such as Syidah Mateen.”

On June 28, 2005, the ACLU-NC’s legal arm wrote to the Administrative Office of the Courts (AOC), calling upon that rule-making body to adopt a policy allowing the use of the Quran and other religious texts for the swearing of oaths in court proceedings. The Al Ummil Ummat Islamic Center had previously offered to donate copies of the Quran to the Guilford County court system for this purpose. Muslim groups, the Council on American-Islamic Relations and interfaith religious organizations also called upon the state courts to respect religious diversity in North Carolina by allowing the use of multiple religious texts in addition to the Bible. On July 14, 2005, the AOC responded that it was declining to adopt any rule concerning the use of religious texts and indicated that either the legislature or a court would have to decide this question.

The ACLU-NC lawsuit sought a court order clarifying that phrase “Holy Scriptures” in N.C.G.S. § 11‑2 is broad enough to allow the use of multiple religious texts in addition to the Christian Bible in the administration of courtroom oaths. While declining to interpret the phrase “Holy Scriptures” to be so inclusive, Judge Ridgeway looked to centuries of well-settled North Carolina case law and wrote an 18-page opinion ruling that in the interest of justice, all people of faith must be allowed to be sworn in on the holy text that is in accordance with their faith and that N.C.G.S. § 11‑2 is merely one of many ways in which oaths may be administered in North Carolina.

"Today’s ruling is a very important victory for all people of faith in North Carolina,” said Seth Cohen, General Counsel for the ACLU-NC and lead counsel in this case. “When the government gets involved in playing favorites among religions, all religious freedom is jeopardized.”

Existing North Carolina statutes also allow for the use of a religious oath to be sworn “with upraised hand,” without the use of any religious text, and for the use of a secular oath such that the word “affirm” replaces the word “swear” and the words “so help me God” are deleted. The ACLU-NC lawsuit did not concern either of these two options and addressed only the use of a religious oath that also involves the use of a religious text, as codified in N.C.G.S. § 11‑2 and as previously interpreted by state judges to allow only the King James Version of the Bible to be used.

 
 
 

Triumvirate President:     David Oppenheimer

Triumvirate President:     Andy Ritchie

Triumvirate President:     Sarah Young           

 

 

     

 

 

 

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