Reason Magazine
•74% Informative
Livingston Parish School Bd. v. Kellett, decided Thursday by the Louisiana Court of Appeal (Judge Allison Penzato, joined by Judges Duke Welch & Walter Lanier) The School Board says Ms.Kellett concealed electronic devices in her child's clothing or personal belongings in November 2019.
Ms. Kelllett purportedly used these devices to "intercept communications by and between faculty, students, and others in the school and/or classroom during school hours and while on school property".
There has been no judicial determination that the words allegedly spoken by Ms. Kellett and the accusations purportedly by her made were defamatory per se.
Until words lose First Amendment protection, they are guarded against prior restraint.
The remaining prohibition on "displays of hostility or anger" still seems unconstitutional to me.
VR Score
83
Informative language
87
Neutral language
37
Article tone
formal
Language
English
Language complexity
83
Offensive language
possibly offensive
Hate speech
not hateful
Attention-grabbing headline
not detected
Known propaganda techniques
not detected
Time-value
short-lived
External references
3
Source diversity
2