MARSHALL v. CLARKE

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 4, 2022
Docket2:21-cv-04336
StatusUnknown

This text of MARSHALL v. CLARKE (MARSHALL v. CLARKE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MARSHALL v. CLARKE, (E.D. Pa. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA DOUGLAS MARSHALL, et al., : Plaintiffs : CIVIL ACTION v : PETER C. AMUSO, et al., No. 21-4336 Defendants : MEMORANDUM PRATTER, J. APRIL 4, 2022 Four residents of the Pennsbury School District challenge the School Board’s policies restricting speech at its meetings. They filed suit against the District, as well as the individual members of the School Board, certain administrative officials, and the District’s Solicitor and Assistant Solicitor in their individual and official capacities. The Court has granted Plaintiffs’ request for a preliminary injunction to prevent enforcement of certain provisions of the challenged policies, and now considers Defendants’ motion to dismiss various portions of the Complaint. For the reasons that follow, the Court grants the Defendants’ motion in part and denies in part. BACKGROUND L School Board Policies The Pennsbury Scheol Board policy manual allows members of the public five minutes of speaking time at School Board meetings. Due to the pandemic, the School District held its board meetings online (or online with limited in-person audience capacity) from April 2020 through April 2021. Public speakers were asked to provide their commentary in writing, to be read at the meeting. Public comment is subject to Policies 903 and 922. Policy 903 limits speakers in the first, one-hour public comment period to addressing meeting agenda items and then allows those who

have not already spoken to speak during a subsequent 30-minute period after a voting segment. Policy 903 requires speakers to announce their name and address before making their comments. Doc. No. 4-7, at 3.1 The policy allows the presiding officer to “[i]nterrupt or terminate a participant’s statement when the statement is too lengthy, personally directed, abusive, obscene, or irrelevant.” Jd. at 3. Policy 903 also forbids speakers from bringing banners or placards that

are “[o}ffensive,” “otherwise inappropriate,” or “that contain personal attacks.” fd at 4. The policy provides that “[iJndividuals who repeatedly violate this policy may have restrictions imposed on their right to be present or to speak at School Board meetings.” Jd. at 3. Policy 922, the “Civility Policy,” provides that “[o]ffensive, inappropriate, intolerant, and/or threatening speech or behavior erodes the civil, orderly, and respectful environment that the Board seeks to promote in district schools, on district property, and at district-sponsored events and activities.” Doc. No. 1, Compl. 4 35; Doc. No. 4-9, at 2. Tl. The Incidents The alleged violations of Plaintiffs’ free speech rights spanned from December 3, 2020 to June 17, 2021 (and extend to the present, based on the allegations of chilled speech). The incidents described in the Complaint involve 1) rejection of Plaintiffs’ written comments by the Board in advance of the online Board meetings; 2) video editing of Plaintiff Douglas Marshall’s comments; 3) termination of comments specific to the District’s equity policy during the March 18, 2021 meeting; and 4) interruption of Mr. Campbell’s comments on June 17, 2021. A. Written Comments Rejected in Advance of Online Board Meetings During the virtual meetings period, Plaintiff Robert Abrams submitted comments critical of the School Board and Pennsbury personnel. Criticisms included calling for the removal of

Although Policy 903 is not attached to the Complaint, the Court considers it at the motion to dismiss stage because it is “integral” to the Complaint. Schmidt v. Skolas, 770 F.3d 241, 249 (3d Cir. 2014).

Solicitor Michael Clarke and Assistant Solicitor Peter Amuso, as well as the resignation of certain board members. At a December 3, 2020 meeting, School Board President Christine Toy-Dragoni and Mr. Clarke discussed reviewing written comments deemed to be “personally directed” before each meeting and then editing or excluding any statements that they found to violate Policy 903. Compl. 41-43. School Board Member Howard Goldberg stated that the Board should not read “offensive” comments into the record. Mr. Abrams and Plaintiff Tim Daly then submitted comments to be read at the December 17, 2020 public meeting. Neither comment was posted online, read at the meeting, or made part of the meeting record. Mr. Daly and Mr. Abrams submitted written comments again on January 21, 2021 stating that the School Board “showed a lack of leadership,” criticizing the search for a new superintendent and accusing Pennsbury of financial mismanagement. Jd ff 48, 50. Defendant Ann Langtry emailed to both Mr. Daly and Mr. Abrams the Board’s rejections of their submitted comments “for being personally directed, abusive, obscene, and/or irrelevant,” and offered each a half hour to resubmit an edited comment before the meeting. Id. J] 49,51. Both Mr. Daly and Mr. Abrams also submitted comments for the February 18, 2021 meeting, but no public comments were read aloud at this meeting. Mr. Abrams again submitted comments for the March 4, 2021 meeting related to censorship of speech and use of the District’s “Contingency Fund.” fd. 56. Ms. Langtry again responded that his comment was declined “[i]Jn accordance with Board Policy 903, . . . for being personally directed, abusive, obscene, and/or irrelevant.” Id. 457.

B. Video Editing of Mr. Marshall’s Comments Mr. Marshall then spoke at the March 18, 2021 Board meeting to express his disagreement with the teaching of critical race theory. His comments included discussions of the Ku Klux Klan

as a leftist organization and statistics about unarmed white men killed by police. Two days after Mr. Marshall’s comments, Pennsbury’s Director of Equity, Diversity, and Education, Cherrissa Gibson, wrote to Ms. Toy-Dragoni and Superintendent William Gretzula to opine that Mr. Marshall’s comments were “offensive and abusive” in violation of Board policy. fd. 69-70. Ms. Toy-Dragoni apologized for not muting Mr. Marshall’s comments and had the video of the Board meeting edited to excise certain of his historical references with a disclaimer stating: “A portion of this recording was edited due to content.” Jd. §§ 77, 79-81. Following purported public outcry, the Board restored the original recording of the March 18, 2021 meeting with a new disclaimer that the Board does not endorse any statement by any member of the public. C. Terminated Equity Comments The May 20, 2021 Board meeting included a presentation on equity by Dr. Gibson as an agenda item, with Mr. Amuso as the presiding officer. When, during the public comment period, Mr. Daly began to give a statement in support of Mr. Marshall’s previous comments, Mr. Amuso stopped him and stated that the Board was “not going to tolerate misrepresentation of facts around equity. So, it’s irrelevant and you can stop.” Jd. 7 89. As Mr. Daly threatened legal action, Mr. Amuso shouted “I said you’re done” repeatedly in an effort to terminate Mr. Daly’s comments. Id.

2 Specifically, Ms. Gibson opined that Mr. Marshall used “coded, racist terms, also known as “dog whistles’” that are “seemingly innocuous speech often not noticeable to some, but explicitly communicate a more insidious and abusive message to a subset of the audience, in this case black and brown students and community members.” Jd 972. .

Mt. Marshall spoke next. He began with critical comments calling the equity policy the “critical race theory audit.” Jd. § 90. Mr. Amuso interrupted him, saying that such comments were irrelevant because that was not the policy’s name. Jd. After Mr. Marshall continued for a couple of minutes and then began discussing “first-generation Nigerian immigrants,” Mr. Amuso shouted “You’re done!” eleven times and ended Mr. Marshall’s speech, fd. § 92-93. The last to speak, Mr.

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