Palatine teacher fired over anti-BLM posts turns to SCOTUS

Palatine teacher fired over anti-BLM posts turns to SCOTUS

Spread the love

A former Palatine High School teacher who was fired for posting anti-Black Lives Matter content to her personal Facebook page has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to tell lower courts they were wrong to allow the suburban school district for which she worked to toss her lawsuit because the district’s interest in mollifying angry students and community members outweighed the teacher’s First Amendment right to speak.

And the effort by plaintiff Jeanne Hedgepeth to revive her lawsuit against District 211 has gained some hefty legal support from an attorney widely regarded as one of the most influential and successful lawyers to argue before the Supreme Court in the past quarter century.

“Schools have a right to insist that a social studies teacher teach social studies, not math, and to ensure that speech in the classroom is nondisruptive,” Hedgepeth’s lawyers wrote in her petition to the high court. “But they cannot use that limited authority to play censor over speech that occurs outside the classroom via private channels during summer break—particularly when the speech is unrelated to job responsibilities.

“… Whatever latitude public employers may have to restrict speech to avoid genuine workplace disruption, it does not extend to firing employees for engaging in private, off-duty speech simply because school officials must field some complaints from people with little connection to the school.”

Attorneys for Jeanne Hedgepeth filed a petition with the Supreme Court in January, asking the court to take up her appeal.

The court has indicated it will consider Hedgepeth’s petition at a conference of justices on Feb. 20.

The petition landed at the Supreme Court about five months after an appeals panel at the U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals in Chicago sided with Township High School District 211 in the dispute.

Hedgepeth has been in court against District 211 since July 2021, when she first filed suit against the district in Chicago federal court.

District 211 is the largest public high school district in Illinois. It covers about 12,000 students at five high schools in Chicago’s northwest suburbs, including Palatine, Fremd, Hoffman Estates, Schaumburg and Conant high schools.

Hedgepeth had worked at Palatine High School as a music teacher for 20 years.

According to the federal complaint, Hedgepeth was illegally targeted for termination for comments she posted to Facebook critical of widespread rioting, looting and other unrest in Chicago and elsewhere in the U.S. in 2020 following the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis while in the custody of police.

In those comments, among others, Hedgepeth called for rioters to be “hosed down” with liquid human waste by septic trucks.

She further posted longer comments discussing her displeasure with the use of terms like “white privilege,” critical of those who characterized the U.S. as systematically racist, and questioning why discussions on race cannot include statistical information concerning the murder rate among the black population, nor the abortion rate.

The lawsuit noted all of Hedgepeth’s comments were posted on her personal Facebook page, and she did not identify herself as a teacher or employee of District 211 or Palatine High School.

However, the complaint claimed Hedgepeth was immediately placed under investigation and ultimately fired by the school board, with the board citing her Facebook posts as justification.

In a separate action, Hedgepeth had also sued Tim McGowan, a Black Lives Matter activist who she blamed for launching the effort to get her fired. That lawsuit would eventually be dismissed by a Cook County Circuit Court judge.

McGowan would be elected to serve on the District 211 Board of Education from 2021-2025.

In federal court, Hedgepeth’s lawsuit against District 211 also failed to gain traction.

A federal district judge found Hedgepeth’s free speech rights fall short when compared against the school district’s interest in minimizing disruption to the learning environment.

And that reasoning was upheld on appeal by the Seventh Circuit panel, which agreed District 211 officials did not improperly bow to the demands of activists, students and others when they fired Hedgepeth.

In the ruling, the Seventh Circuit judges said Hedgepeth, as a public school teacher, enjoyed a “unique position of trust,” which should mean the First Amendment protections normally applied to individual speech may not apply to her, should her taxpayer-funded employer determine her speech has caused a community uproar and jeopardizes the school district’s educational environment.

The Seventh Circuit panel said Hedgepeth “lost her job because she posted a series of vulgar, intemperate, and racially insensitive messages to a large audience” within the Palatine High School community.

Hedgepeth and her attorneys, however, assert that reasoning stands First Amendment law on its head and demonstrates a dangerous misinterpretation of Supreme Court precedent.

They particularly asserted the Seventh Circuit misapplied the Supreme Court’s 1968 decision in Pickering v Board of Education. In that case, lower courts, including the Illinois Supreme Court, had ruled a Will County school board had not violated the constitutional rights of school teacher Marvin Pickering, who had written a letter, published by the local newspaper, assailing the school district’s spending priorities and handling of tax increases.

The U.S. Supreme Court, however, ruled the First Amendment protects the teacher from retaliation for exercising his speech rights.

In Hedgepeth’s case, however, the Seventh Circuit asserted the balancing test established in Pickering actually supports District 211’s decision to fire Hedgepeth.

Hedgepeth has been represented from the beginning by attorney Paul J. Orfanedes and others with the conservative political action organization, Judicial Watch.

However, before the Supreme Court her cause has now been taken up by constitutional law attorney Paul D. Clement and others with the firm of Clement & Murphy, of Washington, D.C.

Clement is regarded as one of America’s preeminent Supreme Court litigators. He has argued before the high court more than 100 times and has enjoyed a long record of considerable success.

Of relevance to Hedgepeth’s case, Clement helped secure a Supreme Court victory in 2022 for Joseph Kennedy, a public high school football coach who was fired from his head coaching job in Bremerton, Washington, because he led students in voluntary postgame Christian prayer sessions.

While that case, known as Kennedy v Bremerton, addressed the religious exercise rights of public school employees, Clement and Hedgepeth’s other lawyers say similar protections should apply to public school employees’ First Amendment free speech rights.

“As several circuits have correctly recognized, nothing in Pickering or any other case from this Court suggests that public employers can engage in blatant viewpoint discrimination simply because some in (or even far outside) the workplace do not like an employee’s views,” Hedgepeth’s lawyers wrote. “To the contrary, the Court has repeatedly rejected the notion—including in the public high school setting—that protected speech must ‘give way to a ‘heckler’s veto.’’

“That is particularly true when the speech is far removed from the schoolhouse in every dimension,” they added.

They called on the Supreme Court to use Hedgepeth’s case to send a message to District 211 and other public employers that they cannot trample free speech rights and punish employees for expressing views the school district or community may find unacceptable.

To hold otherwise would all but give public employers a ready vehicle to evade the First Amendment and enforce ideological conformity in schools and other settings.

“… The viewpoint discrimination here is so unmistakable that to leave this decision standing would invite public employers to continue silencing controversial speech by their employees under the guise of ‘avoiding disruption,'” Hedgepeth’s attorneys said.

“That is not a tolerable result for the 22 million public employees in America.”

District 211 and its school board members have not yet responded to the petition. According to the Supreme Court’s online docket, the district waived its right to file a response, unless directed to do so by the Supreme Court after the Feb. 20 conference.

Leave a Comment





Latest News Stories

Illinois quick hits: US Steel reopening Granite City furnace; unemployment down slightly

Illinois quick hits: US Steel reopening Granite City furnace; unemployment down slightly

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square US Steel reopening Granite City furnace U.S. Steel says customer demand has driven the company to begin the process of restarting...
WATCH: Gun ban with SCOTUS; ICE enforcement pushback; End of life options bill with gov

WATCH: Gun ban with SCOTUS; ICE enforcement pushback; End of life options bill with gov

By Greg Bishop | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – In today's edition of Illinois in Focus Daily, The Center Square Editor Greg Bishop reviews the status...
Meeting Briefs

Meeting Summary and Briefs: Crete-Monee School District 201-U for November 2025

Crete-Monee School District 201-U Meeting | November 2025 The Crete-Monee School District 201-U Board of Education met on Tuesday, November 18, 2025, for a meeting that balanced celebration with serious...
U.S. Supreme Court takes up Michigan foreclosure case

U.S. Supreme Court takes up Michigan foreclosure case

By Elyse ApelThe Center Square A Michigan family’s decades-long fight over a property seizure will soon be before the U.S. Supreme Court, marking the latest high-stakes challenge to how counties...
Grand jury declines to re-indict Letitia James

Grand jury declines to re-indict Letitia James

By Chris WadeThe Center Square The Justice Department has reportedly failed to secure a new indictment against New York Attorney General Letitia James in a blow to the Trump administration's...
U.S. Supreme Court upholds Texas' new congressional maps

U.S. Supreme Court upholds Texas’ new congressional maps

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square The U.S. Supreme Court on Thursday handed Texas a win in a challenge to its new congressional redistricting maps, granting a stay of a lower...
In last four years, five northern states saw most illegal crossings

In last four years, five northern states saw most illegal crossings

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square Under the Biden administration, the greatest number of illegal border crossers at the U.S.-Canada border were reported in U.S. history, breaking records nearly every month...
Illinois quick hits: Another attack on CTA passenger; plaintiffs move to dismiss their ICE use of force case

Illinois quick hits: Another attack on CTA passenger; plaintiffs move to dismiss their ICE use of force case

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square Another attack on CTA passenger Illinois House Republicans say the SAFE-T Act continues to fail Illinois residents after a suspect with...
Some push for FDA approval of psychedelic treatments for veterans

Some push for FDA approval of psychedelic treatments for veterans

By Andrew RiceThe Center Square State leaders across the country are pushing for medical trials of the psychedelic drug ibogaine to treat neurological conditions. Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry spoke...

WATCH: Pritzker: ‘No’ to state taxpayer-funded guaranteed income

By Jim Talamonti | The Center SquareThe Center Square (The Center Square) – Gov. J.B. Pritzker says he is not planning to follow Cook County by implementing a guaranteed income...

WATCH: IL congresswoman willing to withhold highway dollars over CDL issues

By Greg BishopThe Center Square A Republican congresswoman from Illinois is looking to enforce federal Commercial Drivers License requirements by withholding federal funds from states that aren’t compliant. Data provided...
Disability group, coroners press governor ahead of assisted suicide decision

Disability group, coroners press governor ahead of assisted suicide decision

By Catrina Barker | The Center Square contributorThe Center Square (The Center Square) – A Chicago-based disability-rights organization is seeking a meeting with Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s office as Illinois prepares...
35 lawmakers unveil bipartisan health care proposal, beg leadership to adopt it

35 lawmakers unveil bipartisan health care proposal, beg leadership to adopt it

By Thérèse BoudreauxThe Center Square With only 27 days until the enhanced Obamacare Premium Tax Credits expire, a group of U.S. House members is urging congressional leadership to accept a...
DOJ confirms identity of pipe bomb suspect

DOJ confirms identity of pipe bomb suspect

By Sarah Roderick-FitchThe Center Square The U.S. Department of Justice offered few details in the ongoing investigation that led to the arrest of a suspect related to pipe bombs planted...
Trump admin implements swath of visa restrictions for dozens of countries

Trump admin implements swath of visa restrictions for dozens of countries

By Bethany BlankleyThe Center Square The Trump administration has implemented a swath of visa restrictions citing national security threats, human rights abuses and illegal immigration. After National Guard troops were...