the case was dismissed under rule 12(B)(6). I can provide cites if you so desire. that's why the complainant was required to pay the school district's court costs.
"A Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal for failure to state a claim is
appropriate when the plaintiff has not alleged enough facts to state a claim to
relief that is plausible on its face, and when the plaintiff fails to plead facts
“enough to raise a right to relief above the speculative level, on the assumption
that all the allegations in the complaint are true""
That's why it was dismissed.
I didn't say no rape occurred. I said that there was no legal determination of that. The only legal determination was that he committed misdemeanor assault. Whether he did or didn't actually rape her is not known. But it is inarguable that there was no legal finding of rape.
When in a cheerleader uniform, she represents the school. In that position, her speech is severely limited, as it should be. She should be, for example, allowed to wear a "close guantanamo" pin. But not in uniform. I have read far more than the "link". I read the ACTUAL legal case which I am happy to link for you, not some mediocre article about it.
The case is as simple as this. She is a school mouthpiece when in her cheerleader outfit, and cannot choose who to cheer for and who NOT to cheer for. Her position requires her to be a cheerleader for the entire team. Period.
The article you link to spoonfeeds you a bunch of misleading stuff that you are repeating. Why not read the ACTUAL case and not some biased review of it that misleads by saying "he pled guilty" w.o explaining that he pled guilty to MISDEMEANOR ASSAULT , not rape, as the article implies. The article also refers to him as the boy who raped her, which is not a foregone conclusion at all. Here's an accurate summary from a legal blog... i can link to more if you would like
http://www.illinoislawyerblog.com/cases_in_the_news/Saw a fascinanting article in the November 8, 2010 Sports Illustrated, written by Selena Roberts. Ms. Roberts details how a Silsbee, Texas high school cheerleader was kicked off the cheerleading squad. Her crime? She didn't cheer for an athlete that she claimed had sexually assaulted her.
In October, 2008, the cheerleader, who is simply identified as H.S. in the article, was at a high school party. Beer was flowing, as it normally does at such parties. H.S. found herself in a room with three young men. Rakheem Bolton, age 17, Christian Rountree, age 18 and another boy, aged 16. The bedroom door was locked and H.S. was sexually assaulted. She screamed, the police were called and charges were filed. A therapist urged H.S. to continue her high school routine. The accused were barred from the campus, so she did so.
Unfortunately, in January, 2009 a grand jury decided there was not enough evidence to pursue criminal charges. So Bolton, a two sport star at the high school, was soon playing basketball again. And at Silsbee High School, whenever a Silsbee player is shooting free throws, the Silsbee cheerleaders shout his name. Bolton was fouled twice in the first half, and when her cheerleadering cohorts shouted his name, H.S. simply stepped back, folded her arms, and remained silent. H.S. was reprimanded at half-time.
The following Monday, H.S. was kicked off the Cheerleading squad. Her father protested the decision and was told H.S. either cheered for her attacker or she was off the squad. H.S. later filed a civil suit but the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that her protest was not protected speech. H.S. graduated and plans on attending college.
Bolton ultimately pled to a lesser offense and is on probation and in anger management. He plans on starting college soon as well.