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Stockton University drops five charges for studentās political Facebook status, disruption charge remains
Stockton, just outside Atlantic City, N.J., defended charging a student with "disruptive behavior" for a political Facebook status.
- Amid public backlash, Stockton now claims studentās Facebook status, not his Zoom background of Trump, is the āsubstantial disruptionā warranting the charge
- Student still faces probation, community service, a decision-making workshop, and a fine for expressing his political opinion on social media
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J., Aug. 11, 2020 ā Stockton University administrators on Monday dropped five of the six charges against a student investigated for a political post on Facebook and a Zoom background of President Donald Trump. The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education wrote to Stockton today to address the remaining trumped-up ādisruptive behaviorā charge against doctoral student Robert Dailyda.
If found responsible, the universityās proposed minimum sanctions for Dailyda include a semester of probation, community service, and a $50 fine. He might also be forced to attend a ādecision making workshop.ā This marks an improvement over the earlier charges, for which Dailyda could have been suspended or expelled.
āDropping some of the charges is a step in the right direction, but itās not enough,ā said Zach Greenberg, author of Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās second letter in as many weeks to Stockton President Harvey Kesselman. āStockton has no business investigating the political speech of its students, and Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS will continue to defend Robertās speech rights.ā
In a post on his personal Facebook page, Dailyda wrote in part, āIām ready to fight to the death for our country and against those that want to take it down.ā The university expressed additional concerns about comments others left on the post. Some students found the post to be āoffensive, threatening, and concerning,ā Stockton reported.
Dailyda also used a photo of the president as his Zoom background during a July 1 virtual class, prompting complaints from some students in a private GroupMe chat after class. Stocktonās incident report described the background and stated that the photo caused students to feel āoffended, disrespected, and taunted.ā Though Stocktonās incident report cites the controversy over the background, after Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās first letter and public backlash, the university now says that Dailyda will only be charged in relation to the Facebook post, which they consider to be a āsubstantial disruption of University activities or operations.ā
āStockton provided no evidence that Robertās post caused a substantial disruption,ā said Greenberg. āĀé¶¹“«Ć½IOS again calls on the university to abandon its misguided desire to squelch political expression.ā
Leading up to Mondayās reduction in the number of charges, administrators on July 10 asked Dailyda to explain his political views. Six days later, Stockton charged Dailyda with violating the code of conduct for disruptive behavior, discrimination, harassment, creating a hostile environment, causing harm, and cyberbullying. At a pre-hearing interview on July 31, an administrator listed potential sanctions for the charges, including: ā[s]uspension, $50 fine, community service project, social justice workshop, and decision making workshop.ā Dailyda contested the charges on Aug. 7.
Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās letter calls on Stockton to rescind Dailydaās final charge and reminds the public institution that Dailydaās personal Facebook post is āquintessential political expression meriting the highest level of protection under the First Amendment, which Stockton is bound to uphold.ā Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS first wrote to Stockton on Aug. 7 to defend Dailydaās speech rights.
The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education is a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to defending and sustaining the individual rights of students and faculty members at Americaās colleges and universities. These rights include freedom of speech, freedom of association, due process, legal equality, religious liberty, and sanctity of conscience ā the essential qualities of liberty.
CONTACT:
Daniel Burnett, Assistant Director of Communications, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS: 215-717-3473; media@thefire.org
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