FIREv. Tarleton State University: Texas University Covers Up Professor’s ‘Highly Inappropriate’ Behavior by Censoring Student Newspaper and Unlawfully Withholding Public Records
Cases
Tarleton State University
Case Overview
FIRE v. Tarleton State University - Original Petition for Writ of Mandamus
This public university in Texas, one of America’s 10 Worst Colleges for Free Speech — paid a professor to leave after he was accused of booking a hotel room for himself and a female student without her knowledge during travel, and inviting another student to his home for a movie, dinner, and drinks while his wife was away. Three years later, after the professor threatened to sue the student newspaper Texan News Service for reporting the story, Tarleton gave the student editors a choice: lose the articles or lose the paper’s funding. On August 30, FIREand the Student Press Law Center wrote to Tarleton explaining that the university's demand that TNS remove content from its website violates the university's obligations under the First Amendment and that Landis' threats were barred by statute of limitations. Rather than revoke its directives, Tarleton instead chose to revoke Texan News Service's editorial independence. Tarleton seized control from the students and now falsely claims — contrary to the paper’s policy handbook and history — that Texan News Service was never independent.
When FIREsubmitted public-information requests about this sorry state of affairs, Tarleton claimed the documents were confidential “student records” — even though the records relate to employees and university business and the school could redact any student information. In February 2022, FIREsued Tarleton to vindicate the public’s right to know and to shine a bright light on the university’s violation of the First Amendment rights of its student press.
On June 9, 2023, the court granted ֭'s motion for summary judgment and ordered Tarleton to produce the records within 21 days. To the extent that the records contain students' or parents' personally identifiable information, the court ordered Tarleton to redact it. The court also ordered Tarleton to pay FIREits costs of litigation and reasonable attorney's fees. On June 22, 2023, Tarleton moved the court to reconsider its grant of summary judgment to ֭. FIREfiled its opposition to Tarleton's motion to reconsider on July 6, 2023. On September 28, 2023, the court denied Tarleton's motion for reconsideration, upholding its order directing the university to produce the records. However the court reversed its grant of costs and fees to ֭.