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View Full Version : Texas Cheerleader Who Refused To Cheer For Her Rapist Loses Case


ShyGuyInChicago
May 5th, 2011, 03:49 PM
http://www.care2.com/causes/civil-rights/blog/texas-cheerleader-who-refused-to-cheer-for-her-rapist-loses-case/

Earlier this week, the Supreme Court denied review of the case of the Texas cheerleader who was suspended from her team for refusing to cheer for her rapist without comment. This means that a lower court ruling, which said that a cheerleader acts as a mouthpiece for the school and can thus be dismissed for refusing to speak, will stand. It also means that the cheerleader's family now owes the district $45,000 for the costs of "defending a frivolous suit," as ordered by the New Orleans appeals court.

This story illustrates an appalling violation of a student's right to speak out against an insensitive and traumatic order from school officials. The girl, who is known just as "H.S.," says that she was 16 when she was raped at a party by Rakheem Bolton, a star of her high school football team. He pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge and received a suspended sentence. The following winter, Bolton was playing in a basketball game when he went up to the foul line to shoot a free throw.

H.S.'s lawyer says that the girls were instructed to chant, "2, 4, 6, 8, 10, come on, Rakheem, put it in." H.S., who had cheered for the rest of the game, folded her arms and remained silent.

This is an understandable protest against the fact that Bolton was allowed to return to school, and H.S. had every right to refuse to cheer for a man who had pleaded guilty to sexually assaulting her. School officials, however, told her that she had to cheer for Bolton or be dismissed from the team. She continued to refuse, was dismissed, and sued school officials and the district, saying that they had punished her for exercising her right of free expression.

An appeals court ruled that because cheerleaders were a "mouthpiece" for the school, and that H.S.'s protest was a "disruption to the educational process." But I have to wonder what would have happened if H.S. had claimed that cheering for a player was against her religion. And what on earth is a "disruption," if not an action by school officials that threatens the health and well-being of a student?

The Supreme Court's refusal to hear the case is a devastating rejection of students' rights to speak out against school officials, and a disturbing affirmation of a culture that punishes rape victims instead of perpetrators.

anonymous53
May 5th, 2011, 04:30 PM
So now this family has to pay 45,000 just because their daughter didn't want to cheer for the guy who RAPED her?


Why did this even make it to the courts again?
Furthermore, this boy pleaded guilty to rape and still gets to go back to school?

This is just pathetic.

ShyGuyInChicago
May 5th, 2011, 04:37 PM
So now this family has to pay 45,000 just because their daughter didn't want to cheer for the guy who RAPED her?


Why did this even make it to the courts again?
Furthermore, this boy pleaded guilty to rape and still gets to go back to school?

This is just pathetic.

The $45,000 dollars is the schools legal fees. The family has to pay the fees because the judge ruled the case "frivolous." The boy pleaded guilty, but not to rape. He plead guilty to misdemeanor assault. The girl only accepted the plea because it would have taken a year for the case to go to court. Personally, I feel sorry for what this girl is going through

AutumnDae
May 5th, 2011, 06:00 PM
I'm just voicing my opinion....but to me freedom of speech means being able to say what your want...or not. In this case, she chose to be silent.

Although, who even noticed that she had her arms folded and was silent? This is the first I've heard of this, but why was it such a huge deal that she didn't cheer? Who brought it up? The coach, the school, bystanders?

ShyGuyInChicago
May 5th, 2011, 06:18 PM
I'm just voicing my opinion....but to me freedom of speech means being able to say what your want...or not. In this case, she chose to be silent.

Although, who even noticed that she had her arms folded and was silent? This is the first I've heard of this, but why was it such a huge deal that she didn't cheer? Who brought it up? The coach, the school, bystanders?

I think you are right. IT should not have been a huge deal. In fact, she could have remained silent with her arms folded and no one would even notice in my humble opinion

Sith Lord 13
May 5th, 2011, 08:23 PM
If you're on a team, you do what the coach says. If you blatantly defy the coach, you're not on the team any more. In this case I think more compassion should have been shown by the school, but they were technically in the right. I don't think the boy should have been let back to the same school as her, but that's a different issue. In any case, suing over cheer leading seems frivolous to me, especially considering it's cheer leading for another team and not as a sport in and of itself.

Roses_Are_Yellow
May 7th, 2011, 03:21 AM
So, she gets sexually assaulted, and is then forced to pay 45,000? That's so messed up!

bravo-charlie
June 25th, 2011, 12:09 AM
This is so ridiculous! This is what the American law and the courts have come to?Really?I can't believe it...

PoseidonX43
June 25th, 2011, 03:05 AM
that such BS

Iron Man
June 25th, 2011, 03:27 AM
Fucking morons. This seems so sexist. And I thought womens` rights meant something. I would cheer for her if she shot him in the genitals.

Suicune
June 25th, 2011, 07:33 AM
So, she gets sexually assaulted, and is then forced to pay 45,000? That's so messed up!
Read the OP again.



I think I'm going to have to agree with Alex on this one.

Sith Lord 13
June 26th, 2011, 03:02 AM
Fucking morons. This seems so sexist. And I thought womens` rights meant something. I would cheer for her if she shot him in the genitals.

How is it sexist?

Iron Man
June 26th, 2011, 03:29 AM
How is it sexist?

Actually, come to think of it, I have no idea.

boonsim
June 26th, 2011, 11:28 AM
What the f*ck is wrong with that court? I read about this in my sister's Seventeen magazine. If I was the judge, this guy would no longer exist.