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Cheerleaders Have No Free Speech Rights in Texas

SOScrewed's picture
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This is unbelievable:

A teenage girl who was dropped from her high school's cheerleading squad after refusing to chant the name of a basketball player who had sexually assaulted her must pay compensation of $45,000 (£27,300) after losing a legal challenge against the decision.


The United States Supreme Court on Monday declined to hear a review of the case brought by the woman, who is known only as HS. Lower courts had ruled that she was speaking for the school, rather than for herself, when serving on a cheerleading squad – meaning that she had no right to stay silent when coaches told her to applaud.

...She was 16 when she said she had been raped at a house party attended by dozens of fellow students from Silsbee High School, in south-east Texas. One of her alleged assailants, a student athlete called Rakheem Bolton, was arrested, with two other young men.

In court, Bolton pleaded guilty to the misdemeanour assault of HS. He received two years of probation, community service, a fine and was required to take anger-management classes. The charge of rape was dropped, leaving him free to return to school and take up his place on the basketball team.

Four months later, in January 2009, HS travelled to one of Silsbee High School's basketball games in Huntsville. She joined in with the business of leading cheers throughout the match. But when Bolton was about to take a free throw, the girl decided to stand silently with her arms folded.

"I didn't want to have to say his name and I didn't want to cheer for him," she later told reporters. "I just didn't want to encourage anything he was doing."

Richard Bain, the school superintendent in the sport-obsessed small town, saw things differently. He told HS to leave the gymnasium. Outside, he told her she was required to cheer for Bolton. When the girl said she was unwilling to endorse a man who had sexually assaulted her, she was expelled from the cheerleading squad.

...HS and her parents instructed lawyers to pursue a compensation claim against the principal and the School District in early 2009. Their lawsuit argued that HS's right to exercise free expression had been violated when she was instructed to applaud her attacker. But two separate courts ruled against her, deciding that a cheerleader freely agrees to act as a "mouthpiece" for a institution and therefore surrenders her constitutional right to free speech. In September last year, a federal appeals court upheld those decisions and announced that HS must also reimburse the school district $45,000, for filing a "frivolous" lawsuit against it.

To recap: the school allowed a convicted criminal to rejoin the basketball team but kicks his victim off the chearleading squad for not cheering him on. I knew a woman who was beaten to a pulp by her footballer boyfriend. The school protected him and paid the girlfriend off to stay quiet because he was one of their star athletes. It shouldn't be a surprise to anyone that schools and universities regularly protect athletes who commit rape among other crimes both on and off campus. I've just never heard of a victim who had to pay the school for protecting her assailant.

The only "justice" HS and her parents can take away from this awful experience is that her rapist's photo and articles associating him with being a rapist is now on the front page of Google when you search his name. But then again, he's an athlete so he could very well be rewarded with a million dollar big league contract and a pat on the back.

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Aeryl's picture
Submitted by Aeryl on

But did not know that the case had been rejected by the Supremes.

In addition to an Economic Bill of Rights(analogous to FDR's 2nd BoR) we also need a victim's BoR.

And you know, this just shows how little rape is taken seriously. You'd think anyone with a modicum of compassion would understand this girl's situation, but no. Instead, because he was allowed on back on the team, she should have just quit the cheer squad all together, and hung her head in shame like a "proper" victim.

Joe's picture
Submitted by Joe on

he wasn't convicted of rape.

Aeryl's picture
Submitted by Aeryl on

With you over this and your neanderthal attitudes about this before, so I'm not going to engage, but it takes a "special" type of human being. who looks at a story where a girl is raped(a fact NOT in dispute) where an accused pleads guilty to a lesser crime, like all criminals would when given the opportunity, and then wants to get nitpicky and insultingly pedantic, about how someone addresses the situation as a whole(i.e. rape culture, where victims are commonly disbelieved and denigrated when they try to seek justice), as if I went to his house and spray painted "RAPIST" on his car.

Whether or not he was convicted of "rape"(which if growing to be a meaningless word in our culture, where victims can't say it in court, and news stories commonly refer to child rape as "having sex"). He WAS convicted of assaulting the young woman in question, and she is still being punished for not behaving like a proper victim, who hangs her head in shame, and never mentions it again.

And there I went and broke my promise on engaging. Another five minutes of my life I'll never get back.

lizpolaris's picture
Submitted by lizpolaris on

Too bad this didn't get in front of a jury - the outcome would be the opposite. Also, why is this young criminal still on the sports team? It appears there are no moral values among the school administration or the school board. How many rapes is a student allowed before being banned from school sports in that town? It would be nice if they set out a policy so the girls could be forewarned.

Aeryl's picture
Submitted by Aeryl on

But not really supported by reality. Victims, especially rape victims, are treated like garbage by juries, cops, prosecutors, judges.....

lambert's picture
Submitted by lambert on

.... I seem to recall that a lot of student-athletes go into finance and sales. One can only wonder whether the same (patriarchal) culture of impunity that these guys learned in school carries through to the workplace. I'd bet it does, and I bet it also perpetuates itself through funding of sports events and teams, as well as, er, endowments.

Eureka Springs's picture
Submitted by Eureka Springs on

isn't it amazing the original link for this news originates outside of the US.

Perhaps the appeal will get a bit more attention.

Submitted by libbyliberal on

When single individuals exercise horrifying levels of non-empathy it is one thing. But when communities embrace such denial and minimization, ignore the un-ignorable, cheer not chastise the perpetrator of horror, and in this case pursue punishment of the messenger of reality, truth and justice, the very victim of gross injustice, it awes and enrages those capable of conscience.

It is a microcosm, this community as an accessory to such a profound crime, perpetrating their own, for their own collective-ego convenience and tunnel visioned aggrandizement, reflects what is happening to the US as an entire country embracing not rejecting the war criminality of our government. Exceptionalism on steroids.

Submitted by Elliott Lake on

of this blood money herself? I'd contribute.

As to the athletes going into sales & finance... there's that over-large charming personality some have which can be channeled into helping others (kid I knew in high school, captain of football team, became a Marine and then a lawyer, one of the protective ones)---or can be channeled into aggression and self aggrandisement. And monstrous other things. Depends on the parents quite a bit I expect.

Turlock