Appellate Practice
Nov. 29, 2016
Can schools punish off-campus speech?
The U.S. Supreme Court has held a school can regulate a student's on-campus speech to prevent bullying. This raises the question the 9th Circuit recently considered: Can a school regulate a student's off-campus speech to prevent bullying? By Audra Ibarra





Hall of Justice (East Wing)
Audra Ibarra
Judge
Felony Trials/Preliminary Hearings
New York Univ SOL
Audra is an appellate specialist certified by the State Bar of California Board of Legal Specialization and serves on the California Judicial Council. Find out more about Audra at www.calapplaw.com. Appellate Zealots is a monthly column on recent appellate decisions written by the attorneys of the California Appellate Law Group LLP, an appellate boutique with offices in San Francisco and Los Angeles.
APPELLATE ZEALOTS
According to the Southern Poverty Law Center, it collected 701 reports of "hateful harassment" the week after the election. Although most acts of bullying were against immigrants and minorities, even a teenage Trump supporter was attacked at a Bay Area high school. More harassment was reported in California than any other state, and more harassment was reported at K-1...
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