Oswald v. Lakota Local School Board

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedAugust 9, 2024
Docket1:21-cv-00681
StatusUnknown

This text of Oswald v. Lakota Local School Board (Oswald v. Lakota Local School Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oswald v. Lakota Local School Board, (S.D. Ohio 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION BRIAN OSWALD, : Case No. 1:21-cv-681 : Plaintiff, : Judge Jeffery P. Hopkins : vs. : : LAKOTA LOCAL SCHOOL BOARD, : : Defendant. : OPINION AND ORDER

Plaintiff Brian Oswald (“Mr. Oswald”) is not afraid to speak his mind. On at least three different occasions Mr. Oswald has chosen to speak at the regularly scheduled meetings of the Defendant Lakota Local School Board (the “Board”). At the Board’s meeting on June 14, 2021, he spoke against critical race theory. At the Board’s meeting on August 5, 2021, he spoke against COVID-19 mask mandates in schools. During both meetings Mr. Oswald spoke in opposition to one or more Board policies, and he did so without interruption because he directed his remarks at the Board’s “presiding officer” in compliance with Board Policy No. 0169.1 (the “Public Participation Policy” or the “Policy”). What brings Mr. Oswald before this Court is what occurred at the third Board meeting that he attended. On September 27, 2021, Mr. Oswald was intent on again speaking against the Board’s mask requirement as he had done without interruption at the August Board meeting. This time, instead of addressing the “presiding officer,” he repeatedly attempted to speak directly with “parents” seated in the audience in violation of the Public Participation Policy. After warning Mr. Oswald of his repeated violations of the Policy, the presiding officer of the Board, Kelley Casper (“Ms. Casper”), terminated Mr. Oswald’s speech. One month later, on October 25, 2021, Mr. Oswald filed the present lawsuit against the Board claiming his right to expression under the First Amendment had been violated. Oswald brings both a facial and as-applied First Amendment challenge to the Public Participation Policy. The primary focus of the Complaint is based upon Ms. Casper’s

termination of his speech at the September 27, 2021, Board meeting. See generally, Doc. 1. In response to the Complaint, the Board filed a Motion for Summary Judgment (the “Motion for Summary Judgment” or the “Motion”). Doc. 35. As explained below, the Court GRANTS Defendant Lakota Local School Board’s Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 35) and DISMISSES Plaintiff Brian Oswald’s Complaint (Doc. 1). I. BACKGROUND In compliance with this Court’s Standing Order Governing Civil Cases, the Board attached a document entitled “Proposed Undisputed Facts” (“PUF”) (Doc. 35-1) to its

Motion. See Standing Order Governing Civil Cases (II)(F)(6)(b). Mr. Oswald failed to file a response to the Board’s PUF (as required by the Standing Order), so the Court draws the factual background for this opinion largely from the Board’s PUF. Id. (requiring every brief in opposition to summary judgment to include a document entitled “Response to Proposed Undisputed Facts”). A. Public Comment at Board Meetings Is Governed by the Public Participation Policy. The Board, as the legislative body for the Lakota Local School District, allows members of the public to comment on educational issues at its periodic meetings. PUF, at ¶¶ 1–2; Doc. 23-2, PageID 349. All public comments at meetings of the Board are governed by Policy No. 0169.1, or the Public Participation Policy. PUF, at ¶¶ 1–2; Doc. 23-2, PageID 456. The Public Participation Policy prescribes rules to “permit the fair and orderly expression of [public] comment.” Doc. 23-2, PageID 456. According to the Policy, these rules

are to be administered by the “presiding officer of each Board meeting” when public comment occurs. Id. As part of her responsibilities, the presiding officer ensures that all presenters abide by rules including those that require them to: • “[R]egister their intent to participate . . . upon their arrival at the meeting”; • Limit their statement to three minutes unless extended by the presiding officer; • Speak only once on the same topic; and • Direct “[a]ll statements . . . to the presiding officer.” Id. The Policy permits the presiding officer to “interrupt, warn, or terminate a participant’s

statement when the statement is too lengthy, personally directed, abusive, obscene, or irrelevant.” Id. at PageID 457. It also permits the presiding officer to “request any individual leave the meeting when that person does not observe reasonable decorum or is disruptive to the conduct of the meeting,” and “request the assistance of law enforcement in the removal of a disorderly person when that person’s conduct interferes with the orderly progress of the meeting.” Id. The provisions of the Public Participation Policy involving the presiding officer are central to the case sub judice. B. Mr. Oswald Speaks Against Board Policies at the June and August Meetings of the Board. Mr. Oswald is a resident of Butler County, Ohio, and in recent years has taken a strong interest in certain policies promulgated by the Board. Doc. 23, PageID 309–10, 331. This interest resulted in his participation during the public comment period of meetings held by the Board. PUF, at ¶ 1; Doc. 23, PageID 326. Oswald first spoke to the Board at the June 14, 2021 Board meeting (the “June Meeting”). PUF, at ¶ 5; Doc. 23-2, PageID 456. During his allotted three minutes, Mr.

Oswald spoke against Lakota School District’s diversity, equity, and inclusion committee and the Board’s alleged promotion of “critical race theory.” PUF, at ¶ 5; Doc. 23-4, PageID 462– 64. As required under the Public Participation Policy, Mr. Oswald directed his speech to the presiding officer and was not interrupted while expressing his views at the June Meeting. PUF, at ¶¶ 5, 20; Doc. 23, PageID 364–65; Doc. 23-4, PageID 462–64; Doc. 34, PageID 692. At the Board meeting on August 5, 2021 (the “August Meeting”), Mr. Oswald again registered to speak. PUF, at ¶ 6; Doc. 23, PageID 366–67; Doc. 23-5, PageID 468–70. During his allotted three minutes, Mr. Oswald spoke against the Board’s imposition of a district-wide mask mandate. PUF, at ¶ 6; Doc. 23-5, PageID 468–70. As before, Mr. Oswald directed his speech to the presiding officer and was not interrupted while expressing his views at the

August Meeting. PUF, at ¶¶ 6, 20; Doc. 23, PageID 366–67; Doc. 23-5, PageID 468–70; Doc. 34, PageID 692. C. The Presiding Officer Terminates Mr. Oswald’s Speech After He Refuses to Direct His Speech to the Presiding Officer at the September Meeting. Mr. Oswald also registered to speak at the September 27, 2021, meeting of the Board (the “September Meeting”). PUF, at ¶ 8; Doc. 23, PageID 369. Ms. Casper was the presiding officer of that meeting. PUF, at ¶ 8; Doc. 24, PageID 525. Instead of addressing the presiding officer, however, like he had done at the June and August Meetings, Mr. Oswald began his speech by declaring that he was going to speak directly to the parents in the audience. PUF, at ¶ 9; Doc. 23-7, PageID 475; Doc. 24, PageID 522. He then turned away from the presiding officer to face the parents and audience members and began his remarks. Id. Thereafter, Ms. Casper interrupted Mr. Oswald and reminded him that he was required to address the presiding officer of the Board. PUF, at ¶ 9; Doc. 23-7, PageID 475. Mr. Oswald ignored Ms. Casper’s warnings to redirect his remarks to the presiding officer—six times in total—and

continued to address the parents. PUF, at ¶¶ 9–13; Doc. 23-7, PageID 475–77. After informing Mr. Oswald that the Public Participation Policy requires him to address the presiding officer of the Board three more times, Ms. Casper requested that the law enforcement officer in the room remove Mr. Oswald. PUF, at ¶¶ 9–13; Doc. 23-7, PageID 475–77. Ms. Casper stated that Mr. Oswald “forfeited [his] time because [he] did not follow” the requirement that he only address the presiding officer. Doc. 23-7, PageID 476. Mr. Oswald eventually left the podium on his own volition. Doc. 23, PageID 334. D. Mr. Oswald Files This Lawsuit. A month after this encounter at the September Meeting, Mr.

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