University of Massachusetts at Amherst: Suppression of ‘Racist’ Speech

The University of Massachusetts at Amherst campaigned to persecute nine students who were seen in photographs containing a caricature of one of them as the "Grand Wizard" of the Ku Klux Klan. At a post-election party following the Student Government Association (SGA) elections, Patrick Higgins, a student defeated in a race for SGA President during which he was labeled a "racist," was in attendance. Another student, in an effort to mock the charges of racism, drew a caricature of Higgins as a member of the Ku Klux Klan on a dry-erase board. A photo was taken of the caricature and later circulated around campus. After controversy erupted, UMass Amherst Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Michael Gargano threatened a range of punishments, from community service to expulsion, charging nine students involved with "harassment conduct less than a physical attack." Ultimately, despite FIRE's letter to the university pointing out the violation of free expression, the students were forced to resign from their positions of leadership on the SGA.

    Case Materials

  • "Repression and Double Standards at UMass Amherst," October 15, 2004: Last spring, the University of Massachusetts Amherst defended the free speech rights of a columnist who celebrated the death of Army Ranger Pat Tillman. Now the university is persecuting nine students who were seen in photographs containing a caricature of one of them as the "Grand Wizard" of the Ku Klux Klan. The mere existence of the drawing, which mocked spurious accusations of "racism" in a student government election campaign, led UMass to charge the nine students with "harassment" and threaten them with penalties ranging from criminal charges to expulsion.
  • "FIRE Letter to UMass Amherst Chancellor John V. Lombardi, October 7, 2004," October 7, 2004