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Plaintiffs, JUDGE
-vs-
SALINE AREA SCHOOLS;
SALINE AREA SCHOOLS BOARD OF
EDUCATION;
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NOW COME the above-named Plaintiffs, by and through their undersigned counsel, and
together bring this Verified Complaint against the above-named Defendants, their employees,
agents, and successors in office, and in support thereof allege the following upon information and
belief:
INTRODUCTION
1. “If there is a bedrock principle underlying the First Amendment, it is that the
government may not prohibit the expression of an idea simply because society finds the idea itself
offensive or disagreeable.” Texas v. Johnson, 491 U.S. 397 (1989). “Speech may not be banned
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on the ground that it expresses ideas that offend.” Metal v. Tam, 137 S.Ct. 1744, 1751 (2017).
2. A foundational core of our Constitutional Republic is that the State cannot punish
its citizens for engaging in speech that is protected by the First Amendment. Just as citizens cannot
be criminally punished for protected speech, a public school cannot discipline speech that falls
3. This case arises because of a private Snap Chat snap chat group text that occurred
on January 26, 2020 (Sunday) between numerous children who were all friends and acquaintances.
The snap chat did not occur on school grounds or campus, with school property, at a school
sponsored event or field trip, nor was it connected to any functions of the school in any way.
4. Despite the children sending these text messages from their homes, with their
privately owned phones, on a non-school day, Defendants acted outside the scope of their authority
and violated Plaintiffs’ rights by suspending all four of them and recommending the expulsion of
5. The messages in the snap chat were inappropriate and immature. It was the parents,
however, who had the right to discipline their children, not the government authorities employed
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by the school.
6. This case seeks to protect and vindicate statutory and fundamental constitutional
rights. Plaintiffs bring a civil rights action under the First and Fourteenth Amendments to the
United States Constitution and 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and for other statutory and constitutional
violations, challenging Defendants’ acts, policies, practices, customs, and procedures, which
7. As set forth in this Complaint, the actions, policies, practices, customs, and
procedures of Defendants were the cause of, and the moving force behind, the statutory and
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8. Plaintiffs bring this action not only for money damages, but also for these express
purposes:
A. for a declaration that the acts of Defendants were unconstitutional and violate
events related to those actions, from Plaintiffs’ transcript and complete student
C. for changes to the policies and procedures of the School District so that no other
students are punished for engaging in non-school related and off-campus free
speech; and
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9. This action arises under the Constitution and laws of the United States. Jurisdiction
is conferred on this Honorable Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and 1343, and 42 U.S.C. §
1983, 1985, 1986, and 1988, and other Federal and State laws and regulations, to redress
10. This Honorable Court has jurisdiction pursuant to Article III of the United
States Constitution, 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and 28 U.S.C. § 1343(a)(1), (2), (3), and (4). Declaratory
11. This Honorable Court has supplemental jurisdiction regarding the remaining state
claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1367 because the state claims arise out of the same nexus of
12. Plaintiffs’ claims for declaratory and injunctive relief are authorized by 28 U.S.C.
§ 2201 and 2202, by Rules 57 and 65 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and by the general
legal and equitable powers of this Honorable Court. Plaintiffs’ claims for damages are authorized
under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, 42 U.S.C. § 2000d-7, and by the general legal and equitable powers of
13. Venue is proper under 28 U.S.C. § 1391(b) because all events giving rise to
PLAINTIFFS
14. Child A is a student at Saline High School, a United States citizen, and a resident
15. Child A is represented by his/her next friend, Parents A, for all purposes relating to
this action and are United States citizen and residents in Washtenaw County, Michigan.
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16. Child B is a student at Saline High School and is a United States citizen and
17. Child B is represented by his/her next friend, Parents B, for all purposes relating
to this action and are United States citizens and residents in Washtenaw County, Michigan.
18. Child C is a student at Saline High School, a United States citizen, and a resident
19. Child C is represented by his/her next friend, Parent C, for all purposes relating to
this action and is a United States citizen and a resident in Washtenaw County, Michigan.
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20. Child D is a student at Saline High School, a United States citizen, and a resident
21. Child D is represented by his/her next friend, Parents D, for all purposes relating to
this action and are United States citizens and residents in Washtenaw County, Michigan.
22. All Plaintiff children are minors and respectfully request to appoint their parents as
next friend for the proposes of this action. Further, Plaintiffs request that this Honorable Court
grant the attached Motion for Protective Order to permit the use of pseudonyms.
DEFENDANTS
County, Michigan and is the governmental body responsible for operating the Saline High School.
Saline Area Schools operates under the laws of the State of Michigan. Saline Area Schools office
24. Defendant Saline Area Schools Board of Education is the body responsible for
managing the Saline Area School District and for adopting, implementing, and enforcing all school
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25. Defendant Scot Graden is the Superintendent of Saline Area Schools, is a resident
27. Defendant David Raft is the Principal of Saline High School, is a resident of
30. Defendant Molly Garcia is the Director of Student Services of Saline High School,
STATEMENT OF FACTS
32. All four children are successful students at the high school and none have ever been
disciplined, suspended, or expelled by the school prior to the incident leading to this complaint.
33. On Sunday evening, January 26, 2020, a private snap chat group was formed by
two other minor children who are close friends. One child was African-American and one was
Caucasian. Eventually Defendants disciplined the Caucasian child, but he is not a party to this
action.
34. Children A, B, C, and D, who are all Caucasian, were later added to the snap chat
group.
35. Other students were also added to the snap chat group, including both African-
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36. In the course of their conversation, many of the children, both African-American
and Caucasian, used inappropriate language that included offensive terms like the “N” word and
various abbreviations of that word, “white power,” and “the South will rise again.” There was also
a longer quote from Chris Rock included that used the “N” word.
37. In the course of their conversation, many of the children, both African-American
and Caucasian, used inappropriate “memes” or pictures that included offensive terms like the “N”
38. One of the African-American children jokingly suggested that everyone on the chat
say the “N” word at the same time to stop racism and many of the children did so.
39. While Plaintiffs do not excuse the use of such language, the intent and understood
usage of these offensive terms was in the context of immature banter between friends and in a
joking manner. The initial children on the snap chat understood this to be the intent.
40. When a person leaves a snap chat group, everything that person said or posted is
immediately erased, leaving only the texts or images posted by the remaining members in the
group.
41. After a number of the African-American children logged off the snap chat, another
African-American child joined the group late and was therefore unable to see the prior postings by
42. The late-arriving African-American student saw the posts by the Caucasian
43. This African-American child immediately publicly posted the video of the snap
chat, discussed what he had seen, and used the “N” word himself, while discussing his short
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44. This snap chat group was a private chat visible only to the few children asked to
join into the chat and the chat was not available on any public social media.
45. None of the Plaintiffs posted or otherwise distributed any of the content of the snap
chat to any public social media site, to the school, to the student body, or to any other person.
46. There was no intent by Plaintiffs to make this private conversation public, or to
cause anyone to be hurt or upset, or to take the inappropriate language out of context.
47. One of the African-American children acknowledged this to be true in a text the
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Child C: [Child’s name] you know last night was all a misunderstanding and a joke
correct?
African-American Child: Yea ik [i know] it got outta control but on some level
48. Both African-American and Caucasian children on the snap chat also sent each
49. The screen shots taken by the late-arriving African-American child did not show
the entire conversation that occurred between all the participants because large portions of the
discussion had been erased when the other African-American students logged off the chat.
50. The entirety of the chat occurred in private, did not occur at any Saline Area School
location, at any school event, while traveling to or from a school event, or on any technology, web
51. On January 27, 2020, despite Defendants only having a small portion of the snap
chat conversation, approximately 10 hours after snap chat occurred and with virtually no
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investigation, Defendants made a grossly negligent decision to verbally suspend all the Plaintiff
children and barred them from attending Saline High School indefinitely.
52. None of the African-American students who participated in the snap chat
53. None of the Plaintiffs, nor their parents, received any written notice of their
suspensions, the grounds for the suspensions, or any advisement of their rights to a hearing or other
January 27, 2020, without any notification to his parents and without any notice of his legal rights
55. In a letter distributed publicly, and to the entire Saline school community less than
24 hours after the snap chat, Defendant Superintendent Scot Graden and other school officials
rushed to judgment and labelled all the Plaintiff children as racists, and falsely stated the Plaintiff
children were guilty of “an act of racism that created harm to all of our students, especially students
of color. Hate, prejudice, and racism have no place in our schools or our community.” The letter
further stated, “we strongly denounce the actions and words of these students.” Further, Defendant
Graden subsequently conducted numerous media interviews, conducted meetings, and made
56. Defendants further alienated and stigmatized the Plaintiff children from their
classmates and the school community by publicly stating, “The District will continue working to
ensure that our schools provide a safe and inviting environment void of these types of despicable
57. All four Plaintiff children remained suspended through February 7, 2020, without
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58. Late Friday afternoon on February 7th, Plaintiffs received written communications
from the Defendant school district with specific allegations of claimed violations of the school
59. Children A and B were suspended for 10 days and have been notified that they can
60. Children C and D are still currently suspended and have been notified of the
school’s recommendation for expulsion and given notice of their right to appeal this
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recommendation.
61. Plaintiff children have suffered academically as they have been unable to attend
school, attend their class lectures, or otherwise fully participate in their education.
62. Plaintiff children have been banned from all school extra-curricular activities,
including, but not limited to, sports teams, clubs, and school events.
GENERAL ALLEGATIONS
SCHOOL POLICIES
63. Defendants derive their authority to adopt and enforce school policies and a student
64. MCL 380.11a(3)(b) states that Defendants only have the authority to adopt and
enforce policies and a student code of conduct that provides “for the safety and welfare of pupils
while at school or a school sponsored activity or while en route to or from school or a school
sponsored activity.”
punish speech or expression that does not occur “at school or a school sponsored activity or while
expansion of their policy to include speech that does not occur “at school” is unlawful.
66. Defendants’ Anti-Harassment Policy (po5517) states in the very first paragraph:
“This policy applies to unlawful conduct occurring on school property, or at another location if
67. As none of snap chats occurred on school property or at any activity sponsored by
the school board, the Anti-Harassment Policy did not provide Defendants with any authority to act
in this case.
68. The Michigan Legislature enacted the Matt Epling Safe School Law (MCL
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380.1310b) which is an anti-bullying law that codified the authority for schools to handle bullying
situations and the statute required that all school districts adopt anti-bullying policies. The law
clearly limited the authority of schools to regulate bullying as it only prohibited bullying “at
69. The statute defines “at school” to mean “in a classroom, elsewhere on school
whether or not it is held on school premises. ‘At school’ includes conduct using a
telecommunications access device or telecommunications service provider that occurs off school
owned by or under the control of the school district or public-school academy.” MCL
380.1310b(10)(a).
the school denotes at the end of its policy that its authority to adopt such a policy comes from the
71. Despite the clear statutory limitation that the Matt Epling Safe School Law only
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applies to conduct “at school,” the School District acted outside its authority and violated state law
by unlawfully expanding its policy to include “[m]isconduct occurring outside of school may also
72. Nothing in the Matt Epling Safe School Law grants any authority to Defendants to
police or punish speech or expression that does not occur “at school.”
73. Defendants Interrogation of Students policy (po5540) requires that “[b]efore the
student(s) is (are) questioned as a witness to or suspect in an alleged violation of law, the building
administrator shall attempt to contact the parent prior to questioning and shall remain in the room
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during the questioning unless compelling reasons for exclusion are provided by the law
enforcement agency.”
75. Defendants’ Student Code of Conduct clearly states that it only applies to the
B. at school,
C. on school property,
76. It is undisputed that the snap chat occurred on a Sunday evening and did not happen
while Plaintiffs were traveling to and from school, at school, on school property, at school
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77. Therefore, Defendants Student Code of Conduct cannot apply to the snap chat that
occurred.
78. After Plaintiffs had been suspended the morning after the snap chat which occurred
on January 26, 2020, Defendant Graden sent out a public letter to everyone in the Saline Area
School community on January 27, 2020, and posted it on the school’s public website. 1 He made
the entire school community and the public aware of “offensive and inappropriate racist
comments,” labeled the snap chat as an “act of racism,” and stated that “[h]ate, prejudice, and
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racism have no place in our schools or community.” He further falsely stated that what occurred
required “clear discipline for infraction of school rules.” Further, Defendant Graden subsequently
conducted numerous media interviews, conducted meetings, and made further public statements
79. Prior to Defendant Graden’s initial public message, there were no media reports
80. Nearly every initial media report regarding the snap chat referenced Defendant
81. Teachers at Saline High School used class-time to bring up the snap chat and to
condemn the Plaintiff children who were involved in the snap chat, including advocating that they
82. Defendants contacted the local police to pursue criminal charges against Plaintiffs.
83. Defendants contacted the F.B.I. to pursue federal criminal charges against
Plaintiffs.
1
https://www.salineschools.org/downloads/district_files/sas.statement.1.27.20.pdf
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84. Plaintiffs hereby incorporate and repeat herein paragraphs 1 through 83 above as if
to the United States Constitution, and it is protected by Article I, Section 5 of the Michigan
Constitution.
86. While Plaintiffs’ speech was immature and inappropriate, none of Plaintiffs’ speech
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amounted to a true threat, it was not reasonably calculated to reach the school environment, nor
87. Any disruption that occurred in the school environment was the result of the
88. Defendants did not have a constitutionally justified reason, nor legal authority, to
90. Defendants acted intentionally and under the color of state law, which violated
Plaintiffs’ clearly established constitutional rights by illegally punishing them for their protected
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93. Defendants’ policies and/or procedures described above are in direct conflict with
Plaintiffs’ First Amendment rights and are a custom, pattern, and practice of Defendants in
94. Defendants’ policies and procedures operate to force all students to curtail their
95. Defendants failed to properly train, hire, and/or supervise its school officials
regarding the proper policies, procedures, and limitations on student discipline, including the need
96. Defendants’ failure to properly hire, train, and/or supervise its school officials was
a moving force behind the constitutional violations alleged herein and was a direct and proximate
97. As a direct and proximate result of the acts and omissions of Defendants, Plaintiffs
have suffered mental anguish, damage to their reputation, and suffered adverse consequences
objectively unreasonable.
99. Punitive damages are available against the individual Defendants and are hereby
claimed as a matter of federal common law, Smith v. Wade, 461 U.S. 30 (1983).
100. Plaintiffs are entitled to recovery of their costs, including reasonable attorney fees
101. Plaintiffs are entitled to preliminary and permanent injunctions prohibiting further
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102. Plaintiffs are entitled to injunctive relief ordering their immediate return to school,
to resume all school activities, and to be permitted to make up any academic schoolwork missed
103. Plaintiffs hereby incorporate and repeat herein paragraphs 1 through 102 above as
104. Education is a fundamental right and a property interest protected by the Fourteenth
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property interest in, and a fundamental right to, an education under Goss v. Lopez, 419 U.S. 565,
106. All Plaintiffs were suspended the morning after the snap chat, prior to a full
investigation being completed, prior to notifying the parents, prior to providing the families a
proper opportunity to be heard, and prior to establishing that Defendants had any authority to act.
107. All Plaintiffs were deprived of any meaningful opportunity to contest the
108. Plaintiffs were not given any notice as to how the private snap chat allegedly
violated any school policies until after Plaintiffs had been suspended for one week.
109. After one week of suspension, Defendants sent letters to Plaintiffs erroneously
stating that the children had been suspended for violating the Anti-Harassment policy (po5517)
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despite the policy unequivocally stating that it only regulated conduct occurring “on school
property.”
110. Child B and his counsel met with Defendant Laatsch and the school’s attorneys on
February 4, 2020. Child B gave notice to Defendants that they were acting outside the scope of
their authority and requested that all Plaintiffs be fully reinstated in school. Defendants refused.
111. Later that week, Defendants consented to Child A and Child B returning to school
after two weeks of suspension if they completed a class on racism. Child A and Child B completed
112. Defendants gave notice late Friday afternoon, February 7, 2020, that expulsion
proceedings for Child C and Child D had begun. To date, Child C and Child D remain suspended
indefinitely.
113. Upon information and belief, a partial record of what occurred in the snap chat and
Defendants’ response to it have been placed in Plaintiffs’ permanent school record, transcript, and
file.
114. Defendants acted outside the scope of their authority, disciplined Plaintiffs for
speech not occurring on school property, did not follow their own policies and procedures, violated
MCL 380.11a(3)(b), and thereby deprived Plaintiffs of their due process rights and violated 42
U.S.C § 1983.
115. Defendants further violated Plaintiffs’ due process rights by enforcing the
inapplicable Student Code of Conduct and suspending Plaintiffs for engaging in a private snap
chat, which is not covered by the Code of Conduct and thus Defendants’ acted outside the scope
of their authority.
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116. Defendants failed to properly train, hire, and/or supervise its school officials
regarding the proper policies, procedures, and limitations on student discipline, including the need
117. Defendants’ failure to properly hire, train, and/or supervise its school officials was
a moving force behind the constitutional violations alleged herein and was a direct and proximate
118. As a direct and proximate result of the acts and omissions of Defendants, Plaintiffs
have suffered mental anguish, damage to their reputation, and suffered adverse consequences
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objectively unreasonable.
120. Punitive damages are available against the individual Defendants and are hereby
claimed as a matter of federal common law, Smith v. Wade, 461 U.S. 30 (1983).
121. Plaintiffs are entitled to recovery of their costs, including reasonable attorney fees
122. Plaintiffs are entitled to preliminary and permanent injunctions prohibiting further
123. Plaintiffs are entitled to injunctive relief ordering their immediate return to school,
to resume all school activities, and to be permitted to make up any academic schoolwork missed
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COUNT III –THE SCHOOL DISTRICT VIOLATED THE MATT EPLING SAFE SCHOOL LAW
(MCL 380.1310b)
AGAINST ALL DEFENDANTS
124. Plaintiffs hereby incorporate and repeat herein paragraphs 1 through 123 above as
125. Defendants and its School Board are responsible for creating, adopting, approving,
ratifying, and enforcing the bullying policies, practices, customs and procedures as set forth in this
Complaint.
126. As outlined above, the Matt Epling Safe School Law only permits schools to
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127. Defendants acted outside of the scope of their authority by applying the Matt Epling
Safe School Law for a snap chat which occurred over the weekend and was not “at school.”
128. Nothing in the Matt Epling Safe School Law or MCL 380.11a(3) grants any
authority to Defendants to police or punish speech or expression that does not occur “at school.”
Therefore, Defendants’ improper expansion of their policy to include speech that does not occur
objectively unreasonable.
130. As a direct and proximate result of the School District’s statutory violations,
Plaintiffs have suffered, are suffering, and will continue to suffer, irreparable harm, entitling them
131. As a direct and proximate result of the acts and omissions of Defendants, Plaintiffs
have suffered mental anguish, damage to their reputation, and suffered adverse consequences
132. Plaintiffs are entitled to preliminary and permanent injunctions prohibiting further
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133. Plaintiffs are entitled to injunctive relief ordering their immediate return to school,
to resume all school activities, and to be permitted to make up any academic schoolwork missed
restated herein.
135. By reason of the aforementioned acts, policies, practices, customs and procedures
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created, adopted, and enforced under color of state law, Defendants deprived Plaintiffs of their
mentioned policies for all the reasons as stated above denied Plaintiffs and students at the
School District the right to “freely speak, write, express and publish his views on all
subjects” and restrain or abridge their liberty of speech. In particular, Defendants actions
violated Plaintiffs free speech rights as they disciplined the students for an incident which
discrimination. Defendants, for all the reasons as stated above, deprived Plaintiffs of their
right to participate in Michigan’s “system of free public elementary and secondary schools
as defined by law. Every school district shall provide for the education of its pupils without
136. The School District’s training, supervision, policies, practices, customs, and
procedures, punished and imposed discipline on Plaintiffs for expression Defendants found to be
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offensive. Defendants’ actions injured Plaintiffs by infringing on their free speech and due process
rights through their discipline, suspension, and/or expulsion of Plaintiffs and for failure to comply
137. As a direct and proximate result of Defendants’ violation of the state constitutional
provisions specified above, Plaintiffs have suffered, are suffering, and will continue to suffer,
irreparable harm, including the loss of their fundamental constitutional rights, entitling them to
138. As a direct and proximate result of the acts and omissions of Defendants, Plaintiffs
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have suffered mental anguish, damage to their reputation, and suffered adverse consequences
139. Plaintiffs are entitled to preliminary and permanent injunctions prohibiting further
objectively unreasonable.
141. Plaintiffs are entitled to injunctive relief ordering their immediate return to school,
to resume all school activities, and to be permitted to make up any academic schoolwork missed
restated herein.
143. The Due Process clauses of the United States Constitution and the Michigan
Constitution require that the law provide predictability for all citizens. U.S. Const., Am. 14; Mich.
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144. An unambiguously drafted school policy affords prior notice to the parents and
145. A fundamental principle of due process, embodied in the right to prior notice, is
that a policy is void for vagueness where its prohibitions are not clearly defined.
146. Defendants’ policies must give an ordinary parent and student notice of what is
prohibited, so that a person may act within the confines of the policy.
147. If a parent or student has to guess at what a policy means, or if the policy is not
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148. Defendants’ Anti-Bullying policy (po5517.01) is void for vagueness and invalid
A. The policy states that “[m]isconduct occurring outside of school may also
policy.
D. Said policy is vague and overly broad because there is no limiting principle
as it could be applied to any student, at any location, for any thing, so long
as the Defendants (in their sole discretion) deem the misconduct to affect
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149. Defendants’ Suspension and Expulsion policy (po5610) is void for vagueness and
B. The policy provides no definition for “gross misconduct” and does not
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the students and parents to guess as to what may rise to the level of
“gross misconduct.”
150. As a direct and proximate result of the acts and omissions of Defendants, Plaintiffs
have suffered mental anguish, damage to their reputation, and suffered adverse consequences
objectively unreasonable.
152. Punitive damages are available against the individual Defendants and are hereby
claimed as a matter of federal common law, Smith v. Wade, 461 U.S. 30 (1983).
153. Plaintiffs are entitled to recovery of their costs, including reasonable attorney fees
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154. Plaintiffs are entitled to preliminary and permanent injunctions prohibiting further
155. Plaintiffs are entitled to injunctive relief ordering their immediate return to school,
to resume all school activities, and to be permitted to make up any academic schoolwork missed
A. declare that Defendants’ actions in this case are unconstitutional and that
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B. declare and make a finding that Defendants acted outside the scope of their
authority;
C. declare and make a finding that Defendants acted outside the scope of authority as
D. declare and make a finding that Defendants’ policies are vague, overbroad, and
back in school and fully expunging any record of this private incident from their complete student
G. award Plaintiffs their reasonable attorney fees, costs, and expenses pursuant to 42
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Respectfully submitted,
I HEREBY STATE AND AFFIRM THAT I HAVE HAD READ THE FOREGOING
VERIFIED COMPLAINT AND THAT IT IS TRUE AND ACCURATE TO THE BEST
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