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.
- "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
Case Materials
- "Freedom Watch: UMass Amherst parodies itself,"
by Harvey Silverglate, The Boston Phoenix, March 11, 2005 - "Send Out the Clowns,"
by Harvey Silverglate, The Boston Phoenix, October 28, 2004 - "Double standard on free speech?,"
by Cathy Young, The Boston Globe, October 25, 2004 - "Satirical UMass Students Victims of 'Double Standards,' Says FIRE,"
by Jim Brown, Agape Press, October 21, 2004 - "UMass failing constitutional test,"
by David French, Boston Herald, October 16, 2004 - "Under the Radar: Political Correctness Never Died,"
by Cathy Young, Reason, July 1, 2004