Suspended student sues over Pat Robertson image

Houston Chronicle/November 30, 2007

A Spring man who said a private university founded by Pat Robertson suspended him over an image showing the televangelist with his middle finger extended has sued the school in federal court.

Adam Key, 23, filed suit Thursday, accusing Regent University in Virginia Beach, Va., of violating his constitutional rights.

Key said university officials suspended him from law school for posting the image of Robertson on the Internet. Officials considered the image obscene, he said.

The suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Houston, states the university violated Key's rights guaranteed by the 5th and 14th amendments of the U.S. Constitution as well as his freedom of religion, assembly and speech included in the 1st Amendment.

University officials cannot comment on the case because of student privacy issues, said Judy Baker, university spokeswoman.

The suit, which names Robertson and the university, seeks repayment of tens of thousands of dollars that Key paid in school costs during the 18 months he attended the university, said Randall Kallinen, his attorney.

The suit states that Key used as his profile picture on an account on Facebook, an Internet social networking Web site, a photograph showing Robertson with his middle finger extended.

The photograph, the suit states, was the last frame in a video he had seen on the video-sharing Web site YouTube that depicted Robertson scratching his face.

After university officials saw the photograph, the suit states, they threatened disciplinary action against him because it was obscene and not in an academic context. He removed the picture.

He then posted on a university e-mail discussion group the photograph along with an academic critique of the university's policies regarding free speech and obscenity. A few days later, he said, he was suspended.

The critique states, among other things, that: "anytime the Regent administration disagrees with someone's views, they (sic) can censor those views on the basis that it violates 'accepted standards of decency.' "

Key said he would like to be reinstated at the university so that he can more easily transfer to the University of Houston Law Center.

He said law schools generally don't admit students who are on disciplinary suspension from other schools.

Kallinen said the center previously accepted him to law school, but he chose Regent because they offered him a partial scholarship.

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