|
Supreme
Court to hear student record case
WASHINGTON
(U-WIRE)The Supreme Court announced last week it will decide
the reach of federal legislation that protects student records.
The Court will hear a case involving a Gonzaga University graduate
who wants to sue the school for disclosing a rape complaint to a
teacher certification board.
Ru
Paster, a 1994 Gonzaga graduate who was denied teacher certification
in Washington state, hopes to sue his school for violating the Family
Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA), which prohibits universities
from releasing personal information about students unless they are
found guilty of a violent or sexual crime.
No
charges were ever filed against Paster, who denies allegations made
against him that were later withdrawn. Several college employees
reported that a female student said that Paster had raped her, but
the female student has denied those claims in a videotaped disposition.
Roberta
S. League, the certification expert at Gonzaga's School of Education
alerted the certification board of the charges and refused to submit
a statement of good character for Paster. Such a statement is required
for a teacher certification.
Paster's
defense attorney, Laurie H. Siddoway, said in an interview that
this is an important case for college students to be aware of because
they may not be sure that federal law protects their student records.
The
lawyers for Gonzaga are contending that students should not have
the right to bring their college or university to court. They hope
to avoid a flood of litigation.
Siddoway
plans to argue against the prosecution's claim, citing the small
number of cases students have brought against FERPA since its creation
in 1974. Siddoway sees this case as an opportunity for the Supreme
Court to determine how far civil rights legislation can go.
"The
case going to the Supreme Court is a pure legal question,"
Siddoway said, "but that is why my client's case is most troubling.
The information was passed third- or fourth-hand, and it was incorrect."
What
complicates this case further, Siddoway said, is that students often
want their school to pass information along. The Court will determine
how much information can be given without violating FERPA.
The
case will be tried as Gonzaga University and Roberta S. League v.
John Doe.
|