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[atlarge-discuss] Re: FC: California univ. student punished for... posting event flyer



Declan and all,

 An interesting and very sad as well as disgusting story.
I hope Steve Hinkle along with FIRE.ORG brings
a constitutional legal case against Cal Poly and is
successful in such a Prosecution or Cal Poly
sees the error in it's ways before hand and
adequately compensates Mr. Hinkle as they should.

  Such behavior and lack of comprehension of Mr.
Hinkles rights is inexcusable and Cal Poly's
administration should be severally punished themselves
as well as severely ashamed...

Such displays of CENSORSHIP should never be
tolerated as they are terribly disgusting and show
the rest of the world that a double standard exists
in the higher learning institutions in the USA...

Declan McCullagh wrote:

> ---
>
> Date: Mon, 30 Jun 2003 14:02:04 -0500 (EST)
> From: "Thor L. Halvorssen" <thor@thefire.org>
> To: Declan McCullagh <declan@well.com>
>
> To: Declan McCullagh
> From: Thor L. Halvorssen
>
> Cal Poly Student Punished for Posting Flier
> Public University Gives Veto to Students Who Claim "Offense"
>
> SAN LUIS OBISPO, CA -- In the spring of 2003, a student at the California
> Polytechnic State University (Cal Poly) was found guilty of "disruption"
> for posting a flier -- in a public area -- that some students found
> "offensive."  The public university placed unequal rights above the Bill of
> Rights.  "Allowing some individuals to veto the protected expression of
> others is an unconscionable betrayal of Cal Poly's moral and legal
> obligations," said Thor L. Halvorssen, CEO of the Foundation for Individual
> Rights in Education (FIRE).
>
> On November 12, 2002, Steve Hinkle, an undergraduate and a member of the
> Cal Poly College Republicans (CPCR), posted fliers advertising a speech by
> Mason Weaver, author of "It's OK to Leave the Plantation."  In that book,
> Weaver argues that dependence on the government puts many African-Americans
> in circumstances similar to slavery.  Weaver's speech was sponsored by both
> CPCR and the student government.  The flier contained merely the title of
> the book, a photograph of the author (who is African-American), and the
> time and location of the speech.
>
> When Hinkle sought to post a flier on a public bulletin board in the
> Multicultural Center, several students approached him.  They claimed that
> they were "offended" by the flier and that it was in violation of the
> Center's posting policy.  Hinkle left to check the policy, confirming that
> he was indeed in compliance.  While he was gone, one of the students called
> the university police.  The officer summoned to the Center stated in
> writing that he was investigating a report of "a suspicious white male
> passing out literature of an offensive racial nature."
>
> The students in the Multicultural Center admit trying to prevent Hinkle
> from advertising the event.  Charges were brought not against these
> censors, however, but against Hinkle himself.  On January 29, 2003, Cal
> Poly charged Hinkle with "disruption" of a "campus event."  The students
> who objected to the posting of the flier claimed that they were holding a
> Bible study dinner and meeting at the time of the incident.  The
> university's "finding of facts" notes that the Bible study group is not
> officially recognized, that the bulletin board is in a public "student
> lounge area," and that no notice of any kind indicated that a meeting was
> underway at the time.
>
> In February, Cal Poly subjected Hinkle to a lengthy hearing.  He was denied
> the right to have a lawyer present at the proceedings, but his faculty
> advisor made a transcript.  At that hearing, Cornel Morton, vice president
> for student affairs, told Hinkle: "You are a young white male member of
> CPCR.  To students of color, this may be a collision of experience....  The
> chemistry has racial implications, and you are naive not to acknowledge
> those."
>
> On March 12, Vice Provost W. David Conn found Hinkle guilty.  Conn ordered
> Hinkle to write letters of apology to the offended students.  The
> sentencing letter from Conn stated that the text of the apology would be
> subject to the approval of the Office of Judicial Affairs.   The letter
> also warned that "there is no parameter or guarantee regarding the
> confidentiality of the letter [of apology]" and that "this decision is
> final."  Conn informed Hinkle that if he did not accept this punishment, he
> would face much stiffer penalties, up to expulsion.
>
> Hinkle submitted his case to FIRE.  On April 15, 2003, Greg Lukianoff,
> FIRE's director of legal and public advocacy, wrote to Cal Poly President
> Warren J. Baker, urging him to defend Steve Hinkle's fundamental
> constitutional rights.  Lukianoff demonstrated the absurdity of a
> "disruption" charge against someone who was silently posting, on a public
> bulletin board, a flier for an approved campus event.  Moreover, Lukianoff
> wrote, the "disrupted" students were "not a recognized student group and
> the 'meeting' was therefore not a 'campus function.'  Ironically, Mr.
> Hinkle was actually posting fliers for an event that was sponsored by a
> recognized student group and by the student government, and it is he who
> has the far better claim to 'campus function' status."
>
> Lukianoff continued: "All accounts agree that Mr. Hinkle, who only wanted
> to post a flier, was then approached by the students -- not the other way
> around."  Hinkle's accusers, he noted, "themselves initiated what they
> later claimed was his 'disruption'....If they had allowed Mr. Hinkle to go
> about his constitutionally protected activity, there would have been no
> 'disruption' at all.  All of this leads FIRE to draw the obvious
> conclusion: Mr. Hinkle and the CPCR are being punished for the content of
> their expression."
>
> On May 9, 2003, Cal Poly's legal counsel, Carlos Cordova, responded to
> FIRE's letter.  Cordova denied any wrongdoing and did not substantively
> address any of FIRE's specific concerns.  Today, Steve Hinkle remains
> punished for trying to post a factual, simple, and constitutionally
> protected flier.
>
> "I have been distracted from my studies because a handful of my fellow
> students want to see me punished for the content of my flier," Hinkle
> said.  "With FIRE in my corner, I now hope that Cal Poly will be made to
> respect my free speech rights."
>
> "Cal Poly grants selected students abusive control over the expression of
> other students," Halvorssen noted.  "Disagreement, now called 'offense,' is
> all it takes to get Cal Poly administrators to launch an inquiry and secure
> a conviction on a spurious charge of 'disruption.'  Cal Poly gives some
> people the power to veto what others have to say.  Students at that
> institution now live in insecure possession of their most basic First
> Amendment rights."
>
> The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education is a nonprofit
> educational foundation. FIRE unites civil rights and civil liberties
> leaders, scholars, journalists, and public intellectuals across the
> political and ideological spectrum on behalf of individual rights, freedom
> of expression, freedom of conscience, and due process on our nation's
> campuses. FIRE's efforts to preserve liberty at Cal Poly and elsewhere can
> be seen by visiting www.thefire.org.
>
> CONTACT:
> Thor L. Halvorssen, CEO, FIRE: 215-717-3473; fire@thefire.org
>
> Greg Lukianoff, Director of Legal and Public Advocacy, FIRE: 215-717-3473;
> greg@thefire.org
>
> Warren J. Baker, President, Cal Poly: (805) 756-6000; wbaker@calpoly.edu
>
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Regards,
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Jeffrey A. Williams
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