Cheerleader’s First Amendment Snapchat Case Headed for SCOTUS
28 Dec 2020
It’s been years since a teen in Pennsylvania took to Snapchat to express her frustration in vulgar terms of not making the varsity cheerleading team. After a screenshot of the post led to her suspension from the squad for one year and a successful suit by the student only identified as B.L., four years later the case is heading to the United States Supreme Court.
“F ck school, f ck softball, f ck cheer, fuck everything,” she wrote, with a photo of herself giving the middle finger.
After her parents, Lawrence and Betty Lou Levy sued the school district for the suspension the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit ruled that the action violated B.L.’s First Amendment rights by trying to regulate her speech while off-campus.
Dr. James Phillips worked his last shift at Walter Reed Medical Center on Sunday
Phillips was attending physician at hospital when Trump was ill with COVID-19
On October 4, Trump took ride in SUV to wave to supporters outside hospital
Phillips slammed president for putting Secret Service agents at risk of infection They might get sick. They may die. For political theater, he tweeted at the time
Earlier this month, it was reported that Phillips was removed from hospital rota
He still works as head of disaster medicine at George Washington University
TRUMP S 48 HOURS OF COVID CRISIS: HOW SUPERSPREADER PRESIDENT SHOCKED EXPERTS AND CRASHED MARKETS
Sunday, October 4
5.30pm: Trump briefly leaves his hospital room at Walter Reed Medical Center in an SUV with the Secret Service to go for a drive and thank supporters. Secret Service agents in the front seat are seen in full PPE, including gowns, and will have to quarantine for 14 days after the drive. Trump sat in the back seat with a mask on
Trump drove by supporters who had gathered outside the Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Maryland while he is being treated for COVID-19
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photo by: Journal-World File Photo
The Douglas County Judicial and Law Enforcement Center is pictured in this file photo from Aug. 4, 2020.
A local adult entertainment club has asked a judge to backtrack on her ruling that she would not stop Douglas County from enforcing a health order, and it’s now citing a recent San Diego court case.
Amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, the owner of Paradise Saloon in Lawrence filed a lawsuit that, in part, asked a judge to issue a temporary restraining order that would have prevented county health officials from enforcing restrictions at that establishment. As the Journal-World has reported, Judge Kay Huff recently denied that request, but the civil case continues in Douglas County District Court.