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ACLU OF OKLAHOMA FILES FEDERAL LAWSUIT ON BEHALF
OF STUDENT ACCUSED OF 'HEXING' A TEACHER
Thursday, October 26, 2000
TULSA, OK--In a case reminiscent of the Salem
Witch trials, the American Civil Liberties Union of Oklahoma today filed a
federal lawsuit charging that school officials violated 15-year-old Brandi
Blackbear's rights when they accused her of casting a hex that
resulted in a teacher's illness.
"These outlandish accusations have made Brandi
Blackbear's life at school unbearable," said Joann Bell,
Executive Director of the ACLU of Oklahoma. "I for one
would like to see the so-called evidence this school has that a
15-year-old girl
made a grown man sick by casting a magic spell."
While the ACLU has defended
students' religious beliefs in Wicca and other minority religions, Bell
said the Oklahoma lawsuit is believed to be the first in the country
involving actual accusations of witchcraft by school officials.
In its legal complaint filed
today in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma, the
ACLU said that school officials not only suspended Blackbear for 15 days in
December 1999 for allegedly casting spells, but also violated her religious freedom when they told
her that she could not wear or draw in
school any symbols related to the Wicca religion.
The ACLU
lawsuit also accuses school officials of violating the young woman's due
process rights when, in the spring of 1999, they suspended her for
19-days over the content of private writings taken from her book
bag. Officials had searched her possessions based on a
rumor that Blackbear was carrying a gun, although no weapon of any sort
was ever found. To date, school officials have not returned Blackbear's writings
to her.
Before
these incidents, the ACLU complaint said, Brandi Blackbear had no
discipline problems and had a perfect attendance record since the third
grade. Since being accused, she has "suffered continuous ridicule and
humiliation," and "become an outcast among her fellow students," according
to the complaint. She has also fallen behind in her school work
because of the suspensions.
"It's hard for me to believe that in the year 2000 I
am walking into court to defend my daughter against charges of witchcraft
brought by her own school," said Timothy Blackbear. "But if that's what it
takes to clear her record and get her life back to normal, that's what we'll
do."
The ACLU is
seeking an undisclosed amount of punitive and financial damages on the
Blackbear family's behalf, a declaration that the school
violated the student's rights, an injunction preventing the
school from banning the wearing of any non-Christian religious
paraphernalia and an order expunging her school record.
"The
actions of the school have inflicted severe emotional damage on a very
sensitive young woman. This lawsuit will allow her to reclaim some
of her self-esteem by vindicating the violation of her rights in a court
of law," said John M. Butler, an ACLU cooperating
attorney
The case is Blackbear v.
Union Public School Independent District No. 9, et al. Defendants named in
the lawsuit are Union Eighth Grade Center Principal Jack Ojala,
Speech Therapist/Counselor Catherine Miller, Union High School Assistant
Principal Charlie Bushyhead and Counselor Sandy Frankin.
The Blackbear family is
represented by ACLU cooperating attorneys John M. Butler and Aundrea R. Smith of Tulsa.
Although
today's case may well be the first in which a student has been accused of
actually using witchcraft against a teacher, the ACLU has defended other
students who have professed interest in Wicca. In March 1999, a Michigan
school settled a lawsuit brought by the state ACLU on behalf of a Wiccan
student who was not allowed to wear a pentacle, a symbol of the Wicca
religion.
The Wicca
religion has been recognized in United States courts and by the United
States Army Chaplain's Handbook. It stresses individual enlightenment and
celebrates the seasons and the four elements: earth, wind, fire and water. Proselytizing is forbidden.
The ACLU complaint is
available online at www.aclu.org <http://www.aclu.org/>
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