SLRC in
the News
7 May
2001
Louisiana
Student Threatens to Sue Over Confederate Symbol Ban
Mandeville, La. (AP) -- A
high school student and his parents are threatening to sue a Louisiana
school district after the boy was sent home for wearing a T-shirt depicting
the Confederate battle flag.
Fontainebleau High School administrators had
warned Tom King Jr. and other students on May 3 that they'd be sent home if
they wore
clothes with Confederate imagery. They sent King home the next day and said
he could not return to school until he changed the shirt, which showed the
flag and Confederate President Jefferson Davis.
"I told him he should do what he felt
was right and I'd support him," said Rhonda King, who says she feels
her son's free-speech rights are being violated. "It was his
decision."
King's parents said they would fight the
school's actions in court. A North Carolina-based Southern legal group is
also considering a lawsuit.
King said he has worn shirts with Confederate
flags and other Civil War images every Friday since December as a tribute to
his ancestors, not to intimidate or agitate others. He said he was not aware
of any turmoil at the 1,700-student school over the flag.
"I need to honor these people who gave
their lives," King said, adding that his shirts shouldn't be associated
with groups that use the flag as a symbol of white supremacy.
School officials said Principal Randy Morgan
was concerned about mounting tensions between black and white students at
the school and felt the Confederate symbols were disruptive.
"We just don't think it's safe for those
students to wear that kind of thing at that school," Assistant
Superintendent Richard Tanner said.
The school district allows principals to ban
clothing they consider disruptive or inflammatory.
Although King's parents say they support the
school's right to control what students wear, they feel that their son's
clothes are not disruptive.
"I understand what they're trying to
achieve, but they're going about it the wrong way," said Tom King Sr.
"These are educators. They should be educating these students about the
flag."
King's parents vow to fight the decision in
court, saying administrators are sacrificing their son's rights in order to
keep the peace.
"They're just putting a Band-Aid on the
situation and not really dealing with the problem," Tom King Sr. said
Lawyers for the Southern Legal Resource
Center, a Black Mountain, N.C., advocate for Southern history, said they
were reviewing the case. Kirk Lyons, the group's chief trial counsel,
condemned the school's actions, saying they violated students' free-speech
rights.
"If there was an actual disruption among
the students, then administrators have a right to take action," Lyons
said. "But I would say it probably is a violation of his First
Amendment rights."
© May 7, 2001 The Associated Press