Open source traffic analysis

ABA Home
Constitutional Law

Squeezing Student by Throat Constitutional

Posted Nov 7, 2007, 11:32 am CDT
By Debra Cassens Weiss

A Georgia teacher who grabbed a 14-year-old boy by the throat and squeezed his neck as he tried to leave her classroom did not violate the youth’s civil rights, a federal appeals court has ruled.

The Atlanta-based 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the teacher’s action, which left bruises, was inappropriate but did not constitute "unconstitutionally excessive" corporal punishment, according to the Fulton County Daily Report.

"The justification for some corporal punishment was considerable given that the student repeatedly disobeyed the teacher's command to be seated and given that the student first touched the teacher by forcing her hand from the doorframe," the court said in its Oct. 25 opinion (PDF).

Atlanta attorney William P. Claxton, who represented the mother of the student, Jonathon Peterson, called the ruling a license to strangle misbehaving children.

E-Mail This Story


(Separate multiple addresses with a comma.)




Share This Story

URL to share: http://www.abajournal.com/news/squeezing_student_by_throat_constitutional/

Title: Squeezing Student by Throat Constitutional


Comments

    Be the first to comment.


Commenting has expired on this post.


Subscribe

Get the ABA Journal the way you want it — in print, online, by e-mail — and when you want it — monthly, weekly, daily or as news breaks.





Are you an ABA Member? Read This First

Subscribe via RSS
Subscribe to the mobile edition
Subscribe to the monthly magazine


Return to top