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Sunday, March 11, 2012

Girl, 12, sues over Facebook password - New York Daily News

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Girl, 12, sues over Facebook password - New York Daily News
Mar 11th 2012, 23:04

A 12-year-old Minnesota student is suing her school district, claiming her Constitutional rights were violated when she was punished for comments she left on Facebook and forced to hand over her Internet passwords.

The sixth-grader, identified only as R.S. in court papers, is backed by the American Civil Liberties Union in the lawsuit against Minnewaska School District, filed Tuesday by her mother on her behalf.

R.S. claims she was repeatedly punished for statements she made on her Facebook account, including an instance in which she wrote that she hated one of the school's hall monitors who was "mean to her," according to the Minnesota Star Tribune.

The principal found a screen shot of the post - what the ACLU called "a typical young girl's comment" - and put her in detention, ordering her to apologize to the hall monitor.

R.S. was later suspended for writing a Facebook post - which included an expletive - demanding to know who who turned her in, according to CNN.

In a third disciplinary interaction over her online behavior, the twelve-year-old says she was called in to meet with a deputy sheriff and two school staffers and forced to reveal her passwords after another student's mother complained R.S. used the computer to talk to her son about sex.

"She was intimidated, frightened, humiliated and sobbing while school administrators were scouring her private communications," attorney Wally Hilke said in a statement, according to CNN. "These adults traumatized this minor without any regard for her rights."

R.S. is suing on the grounds her First and Fourth Amendment rights were violated and the incidents caused her so much distress her schoolwork suffered because she was too embarrassed to return to class, according to the Star-Tribune.

The school district defended itself in a statement, saying, "The district did not violate R.S.'s civil rights, and disputes the one-sided version of events set forth in the complaint written by the ACLU...The district is confident that once all facts come to light, the district's conduct will be found to be reasonable and appropriate."

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