FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
MONTPELIER, VT – The American Civil Liberties
Union of Vermont announced today that the U.S. Second Circuit Court of Appeals
has reversed a lower court’s ruling and affirmed the free speech rights of a
Williamstown Middle School student to wear a T-shirt critical of President
Bush.
“The court’s decision is a strong statement
for student free speech rights,” said Allen Gilbert, Executive Director of the
American Civil Liberties Union of Vermont, which brought the case. “The
unanimous decision of the three-judge panel couldn’t be clearer that the school
overstepped its bounds in trying to censor the anti-Bush T-shirt worn by Zach
Guiles.”
The case began in May 2004, when Guiles was
suspended for wearing a T-shirt that called Bush “Chicken-Hawk-in-Chief” who was
engaged in a “World Domination Tour.” Guiles was later allowed back in school,
but he was told that he couldn't wear the T-shirt unless he taped over
images of a martini glass, a marijuana cigarette, and cocaine. The pictures
were allusions to Bush's alleged former substance abuse problems -- which were
also described in words on the T-shirt.
The school claimed the display of the
pictures violated the school’s dress policy, which prohibits all images of
drugs, or drug paraphernalia, on student clothing. The ACLU of Vermont argued that such
images should be allowed when part of a political message, as opposed to
promotion of drugs and alcohol.
After a trial in August 2004, Judge William
K. Sessions III ruled that Guiles' free speech rights covered the written words
on the T-shirt, even those words describing Bush's alleged drug problems.
However, said Sessions, those rights did not cover the pictures on the T-shirt.
The school's policy against drug images of any type allowed it to censor that
part of Guiles' shirt.
The
Second Circuit disagreed, relying on the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark 1969
decision in Tinker v. Des Moines involving the right of students to
wear black armbands in protest of the Vietnam
War (a lawsuit also brought by the ACLU).
The Second Circuit decision stated: “The pictures are an important part of
the political message Guiles wished to convey, accentuating the anti-drug (and
anti-Bush) message . . . Applying Tinker to the facts of this case, we conclude
that defendants’ censorship of the images on Guiles’s T-shirt violated his free
speech rights,” the court concluded.
“I think this is a very good sign that
even with the current administration and the way the country is going there can
still be a justice that allows free speech,” Plaintiff Zachary Guiles, now 15,
said. “I’m very happy with the way the case turned out. It’s basically all that
we hoped would happen.”
Guiles was represented by ACLU cooperating
attorneys Stephen Saltonstall of Bennington and David J. Williams of St.
Johnsbury.