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AL Supreme Court to consider whether university policy violates law protecting students' freedom of speech

ADF attorneys available for media interviews following oral arguments Thursday

Wednesday, Sep 14, 2022

WHO: Alliance Defending Freedom attorneys

WHAT: Available for media interviews following oral arguments in Young Americans for Liberty at University of Alabama in Huntsville v. St. John IV

WHEN: Thursday, Sept. 15 at 10 a.m. CDT

WHERE: Lurleen B. Wallace Community College, 1000 Dannelly Blvd., Andalusia

MONTGOMERY, Ala. – Alliance Defending Freedom attorneys representing a chapter of Young Americans for Liberty and a student member will be available for media interviews at Lurleen B. Wallace Community College Thursday following oral arguments in front of the Alabama Supreme Court in their lawsuit against University of Alabama in Huntsville officials. The student group is challenging the university’s policy that limits most student speech to small “speech zones” and to obtain a permit to speak on campus three business days in advance—both in violation of the Alabama Campus Free Speech Act and the Alabama Constitution.

Alabama’s Campus Free Speech Act requires public colleges and universities to respect the free speech rights of students on campus and explicitly prohibits speech zones, prior permission requirements, and other suppressive measures. In February, ADF attorneys appealed to the Alabama Supreme Court after a lower court dismissed the case.

“Alabama state law guarantees that all students at public universities can freely speak outdoors on campus grounds. University campuses should be encouraging free speech, not stifling it with burdensome and illegal rules like limiting speech to certain zones and requiring students to get a permit from college administrators before sharing their views,” said ADF Legal Counsel Mathew Hoffmann, who will be arguing before the court on behalf of the student group and student. “We hope the Alabama Supreme Court will affirm the right of students with Young Americans for Liberty to exercise their freedoms under state law.”

“YAL’s commitment to free speech is finally getting its day in court tomorrow. The bureaucrats in the University of Alabama system have made it clear that they view their students’ rights to free expression as secondary to their own desire for control,” said JP Kirby, director of Student Rights at YAL. “Not only are the policies we are challenging unconstitutional under the Alabama constitution, but they have been specifically outlawed by the Alabama Campus Free Speech Act. Fortunately, students like Joshua Greer at UA Huntsville are willing to go the distance to fight for their rights.”

ADF attorneys explain in the lawsuit that the policy illegally prevents students from engaging in spontaneous expression and from promoting their events. The student members of Young Americans for Liberty want to engage their peers in important policy debates about a variety of issues including gun control, federalism, and other topics but are refraining from doing so for fear of violating the university’s suppressive speech policy. The policy requires students to share their views on certain topics in specified speech zones and request approval to speak days in advance. And because the permits are subject to the university’s approval, administrators can pick and choose which views are allowed on campus.

Brent Woodall, one of more than 4,600 attorneys in the ADF Attorney Network, is serving as local counsel for the chapter and student in the case, Young Americans for Liberty at University of Alabama in Huntsville v. St. John IV.

Alliance Defending Freedom is an alliance-building, non-profit legal organization committed to protecting religious freedom, free speech, parental rights, and the sanctity of life.

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