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monkeygirlsmom
11-04-2004, 12:51 PM
LIVERPOOL, New York (AP) -- A fourth-grader and her mother claim a school district violated the girl's constitutional rights to free speech and equal protection by refusing to allow her to distribute "personal statement" fliers to other students because they carried a religious message.

The lawsuit was filed Thursday in U.S. District Court against the Liverpool Central School District by Nicole Martin and her daughter, Michaela Bloodgood.

According to the lawsuit, the school district near Syracuse repeatedly denied Martin's requests for Michaela to pass out a homemade "personal statement" flier to other students at Nate Perry Elementary School.

The flier, about the size of a greeting card, starts out: "Hi! My name is Michaela and I would like to tell you about my life and how Jesus Christ gave me a new one." The flier mentions five ways in which Jesus had come into her life.

"This is nothing less than viewpoint discrimination," said Mat Staver, an attorney and executive director of Liberty Counsel, an Orlando, Florida-based conservative legal group that is representing Bloodgood.

According to the lawsuit, Liverpool officials said Michaela could not distribute it because her flier was religious and that there was "a substantial probability" that other parents and students might misunderstand and presume that the district was "endorsing" the religious statements in the flier.

"The idea that people would think the district was endorsing Michaela's statements is simply absurd. Schools do not endorse everything they allow students to distribute," Staver said.

Liverpool Superintendent Jan Matousek said she had not been informed of the lawsuit and therefore could not comment.

The lawsuit noted that Michaela has received literature from other students at school, including literature concerning a YMCA basketball camp, Syracuse Children's Theater promotion of the show "Dragon Slayers" and the Camp Fire USA's summer camps.

Staver said Michaela intended to distribute her flier only during "non-instructional time," such as on the bus before school, lunch, recess and after school.

Zoobee
11-05-2004, 12:57 PM
Well, they really should not be allowed to distribute in the school. Parents should have the say in what their kids read, and by handing it directly to the kids it violates that right. The school is just protecting itself from a bunch of potentially angry parents.

Of course, that doesnt stop them from handing our fliers 100 feet (or whatever the legal measurement is) from the school either.....

:D

flute
11-05-2004, 10:27 PM
ZooBee is right.

We had/have a Christian club at our High school, it's allowed because, students choose to participate or not. 6 years & still going strong. I know the person who started it :)