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Federal Judge Orders: Put Harry Back on Library Shelves
April 24, 2003
On Tuesday, April 22, a federal judge in the U.S. District Court for the Western
District of Arkansas ruled in favor of two Cedarville, Arkansas, parents, Billy
Ray and Mary Nell Counts, who challenged the Cedarville School District's attempt
to restrict students' access to the Harry Potter series in school libraries. In March 2003, more than a dozen national groups, including the American Booksellers
Foundation for Free Expression (ABFFE), and author Judy Blume, filed an amicus
brief in support of the parents.
"It is the bravery of people like the Counts that protects free speech
in this country," said ABFFE President Chris Finan.
In the decision, U.S. District Court Judge Jimm L. Hendren said the books must
be displayed "where they can be accessed without any restrictions other
than those administrative restrictions that apply to all works of fiction in
the libraries of the district."
The controversy over the Potter books began in June 2002, when a Cedarville
parent, Angie Haney, who has two children attending Cedarville schools, filed
a formal complaint with the Cedarville School District. In her complaint, she
argued that the Potter series teaches children that parents, teachers, and rules
are stupid or are something to be ignored and "that there are 'good witches'
and 'good magic,'" as reported by the Fort Smith, Arkansas, Times Record.
The Library Committee voted 15-0 to reject Haney's complaint. However, the
school board ignored the committee's decision and voted 3-2 to remove the series
from the libraries' shelves.
The Counts, whose child, Dakota, attends Cedarville elementary school, filed
a federal lawsuit on July 3 challenging the board's decision. They argued that
the school board's decision violates their First Amendment right to free speech
and to receive information. The school board responded to the Counts' lawsuit
in August, arguing that it has the right to decide what is available in its
libraries.
In his ruling, Hendren wrote: "[W]hile it is recognized that Boards of
Education 'have important, delicate, and highly discretionary functions,' it
is also recognized that there are 'none that they may not perform within the
limits of the Bill of Rights. That they are educating the young for citizenship
is reason for scrupulous protection of Constitutional freedoms of the individual,
if we are not to strangle the free mind at its source and teach youth to discount
important principles of our government as mere platitudes."
"This is a complete victory," Brian Meadors, the attorney for the
Counts, told BTW. "I think the Counts have been very courageous
to be the named plaintiffs in the case. They are very patriotic people and very
much disagree with censorship." The ruling, Meadors said, is effective
immediately.
This was the first legal challenge to a restriction on the use of Harry Potter
books in a public school. For the last four years, the Potter books have been
the most frequently challenged books in the country, according to the American
Library Association.
In addition to ABFFE and Judy Blume, the amicus brief is signed by Americans
United for Separation of Church and State, the Association of American Publishers,
the Association of Booksellers for Children, the Center for First Amendment
Rights, the Children's Book Council, Feminists for Free Expression, the Freedom
to Read Foundation, the National Coalition Against Censorship, Peacefire, PEN
American Center, People for the American Way Foundation, the Student Press Law
Center, and Washington Area Lawyers for the Arts. --David
Grogan
Topics: Free Expression, News - Bookselling,
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