Court thrashes 'crusade' against homosexuality
PONCE DE LEON - Principal David Davis led a "relentless crusade"
against homosexuality at Ponce de Leon High School, a federal judge
said in court documents filed Thursday.
It cost the school district $325,000, but the court's full opinion was not released until this week.
It thrashed Davis, who has since been replaced as principal.
"Davis
embarked on what can only be characterized as a witch hunt," wrote U.S.
District Judge Richard Smoak, who blasted him for his "morality
assemblies" and misunderstanding of the First Amendment.
The
opinion came more than two months after Heather Gillman and the
American Civil Liberties Union won a free-speech lawsuit against the
Holmes County School Board - which actually was Davis' complicit "alter
ego," Smoak wrote.
Gillman and the ACLU claimed Davis violated her rights by silencing all pro-gay messages.
Students had begun showing support following the taunting of a gay student at school.
In
response to the taunting incident, Davis told the gay student it wasn't
right for her to be homosexual and held a morality assembly, according
to testimony.
Then, after an investigation into the "secret
society" of gay pride at school, Davis suspended several students for
supporting the girl. He told one suspended student's mother "he could
secretly send her daughter off to a private Christian school" and said
"if there was a man in your house ... you wouldn't be having any of
these gay issues," according to the court.
Davis banned
rainbows, pink triangles and a number of what he called sexually
suggestive slogans. The slogans included "I Support Gays" and "God
Loves Me Just the Way I Am."
But Smoak noted that Davis did not
ban several magazines in the school's library - Cosmogirl, Woman's Day
and others - that contained articles about sex and dating. He also did
not punish a boy for making explicit sexual advances toward a girl - an
incident that occurred the same month as the morality assembly,
according to testimony.
Davis hushed Gillman and others
"because of his animosity toward students who were homosexual and his
relentless crusade to extinguish the speech supporting them," Smoak
wrote.
Advocates celebrated the court's opinion Friday.
"The
atmosphere that was created at the school was so intimidating for these
kids," said Chris Hampton, who worked on the case for the ACLU from the
start.
"It's not about everyone agreeing, it's about being able to disagree respectfully."
Smoak
wrote that the court's opinion was not meant to "mandate a social norm
for Holmes County or its schools," but rather to apply the Constitution
to the case.
"Indeed, Davis' opinions and views are consistent
with the beliefs of many in Holmes County, in Florida, and in the
country," Smoak wrote.
"Where Davis went wrong was when he endeavored to silence the opinions of his dissenters," he said.


