Professor Erica Goldberg joined the University of Dayton School of Law faculty in August 2017. Prior to her appointment, she was an assistant professor at Ohio Northern University Law School. She also taught Legal Research and Writing as a Climenko Fellow and Lecturer on Law at Harvard Law School and Civil Procedure, Criminal Procedure, and Law and Religion as a Visiting Assistant Professor at Penn State Law School.
After graduating from Stanford Law School, Professor Goldberg clerked for Judge Ronald L. Gilman on the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, practiced appellate litigation at Latham & Watkins LLP, and served as a legal fellow at the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education. Professor Goldberg has helped write briefs and petitions filed before several courts of appeals and the Supreme Court.
Students Punished for âVulgarâ Social Media Posts Are Fighting Back
A lawsuit against the University of Tennessee questions when schools can discipline students because of their online speech.
The University of Tennessee said it would expel Kimberly Diei for Instagram and Twitter posts it deemed inappropriate. Credit.Whitten Sabbatini for The New York Times
Feb. 5, 2021
To Kimberly Diei, a pharmacy graduate student at the University of Tennessee, her posts on Twitter and Instagram were well within the bounds of propriety. She was just having fun. âSex positive,â she called them.
Posting under a pseudonym, kimmykasi, she exposed her cleavage in a tight dress and stuck out her tongue. In homage to the rapper Cardi B, one of her idols, she made up some raunchy rap lyrics. By this week, she had gained more than 19,500 Instagram followers and 2,000 on Twitter.
Black student sues university after probed for sex-positive social media posts
Kimberly Diei filed a First Amendment lawsuit against the University of Tennessee Pharmacy School that twice investigated her digital content.
A graduate student at the
University of Tennessee has filed a lawsuit against the institution for violating her First Amendment rights after her social media content led to two investigations and an expulsion.
Kimberly Diei is a student in the doctoral program at UT and seeking her doctorate in pharmacy with an emphasis on nuclear pharmacy. She was expelled from the program after an anonymous tip led the professionalism committee in the College of Pharmacy to conduct inquires into her social media accounts. After the
Students punished for vulgar social media posts are fighting back, questioning when schools can discipline over online speech courant.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from courant.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
A pharmacy PhD student is suing the University of Tennessee for spying on her after she was KICKED OUT for posting vulgar photos on Instagram and her own Cardi-B-style rap lyrics
Kimberly Diei, 27, is suing the University of Tennessee for violating her freedom of speech after it tried to expel her in September
The doctoral candidate in nuclear medicine was accused of vulgar Instagram and Twitter posts including wearing a low-cut top and writing dirty rap lyrics
She was twice reported by an anonymous source to the public college s Health and Science Center (UTHSC) before a panel voted to expel her