Tuesday, March 6, 2012

District court rules against Freshwater’s appeal

The 5th District Court of Appeals in Ohio issued a decision Monday affirming a lower court’s decision to uphold the firing of former eighth-grade science teacher John Freshwater.

The appeal to the district court came after Knox County Court of Common Pleas Judge Otho Eyster ruled against Freshwater in October of 2011. In that prior decision, the county judge did not cite any evidence or applicable law to support upholding the firing.

Freshwater’s appeal to the district court argued that Eyster’s decision to uphold the firing “without the examination of any factual issues disputed by Appellant or any analysis of his First and Fourteenth Amendment claims, constitutes an abuse of discretion.”

The district court explained in a written opinion that it is very limited in how it is allowed to review cases brought before it. According to the three-judge panel, “unless this court determines that the trial court abused its discretion, we are compelled to affirm its decision.”

The court then cited a prior decision that defined “abuse of discretion” as being “an attitude that is unreasonable, arbitrary or unconscionable.”

After having provided multiple citations explaining the limited role of the district court and the concept of abuse of discretion, the court then skipped reviewing the decision of the county judge and instead proceeded to review the recommendation given by state administrative hearing referee R. Lee Shepherd.  

The district court apparently made the switch to evaluating the reasoning process of Shepherd instead of Eyster because Eyster did not show his reasoning process in his decision.

Ultimately, the district court decided to suppose that Shepherd’s “memorandum” could have served as the basis for Eyster’s decision and thus showed a reasoning process that, in the opinion of the district court, was not an abuse of discretion.

Eyster, however, never specifically stated that the document written by Shepherd was the basis of his decision.

(See here for a copy of the district court’s decision. PDF.)

(The district court's three-judge panel was comprised of W. Scott Gwin, William B. Hoffman and Sheila G. Farmer.)

Does it matter that Eyster did not provide his reasoning process?:

According to one law review article, a judge failing to provide his reasoning process does create “the appearance of arbitrariness”:

“Justice must not only be done, it must appear to be done. The authority of the federal judiciary rests upon the trust of the public and the bar. Courts that articulate no reasons for their decisions undermine that trust by creating the appearance of arbitrariness.” (“An Evaluation of Limited Publication in the United States Courts of Appeals: The Price of Reform” by William L. Reynolds and William M. Richman, The University of Chicago Law Review, [1981].)

Another law review article took the position that, “In our law... the exercise of a power to speak authoritatively as an interpreter carries with that an obligation to explain the grounds upon which the interpreter gives the authoritative judgment.” (Textualism, Constitutionalism, and the Interpretation of Federal Statutes” by Jerry L. Mashaw, William & Mary Law Review, [1991].)

(The above two quotes are from the website nonpublication.com.)

More information about the U.S. court system:

There are a few folks out there who think the U.S. courts could use some improving, among them are people writing for the following websites:




As always, the views and opinions expressed on sites linked to are those of the individuals expressing them and are not necessarily those of AccountabilityInTheMedia.com.

Thursday, January 12, 2012

MVBOE Members Sworn In

New Mount Vernon Board of Education member Cheryle Feasel and re-elected members Dr. Margie Bennett and Jody Goetzman took an improvised oath of office at the board's Tuesday organizational meeting. The organizational meeting was followed by the first regular meeting of the year.

For a non-paraphrased version of the oath, see the 2010 swearing in: "MVBOE New Members Sworn In."

See here for a PDF copy of the agendas for both meetings.

During public participation, Richard Hoppe spoke to board members about the importance of attending the local science fair.


MVBOE Members Sworn In (Jan 2012)


Richard Hoppe invites MVBOE to science fair

UPDATE - “Oath of office of member”:

The following is Ohio Revised Code 3313.10 (“Oath of office of member”):

“Before entering upon the duties of his office each person elected or appointed a member of a board of education shall take an oath to support the Constitution of the United States and the constitution of this state and that he will perform faithfully the duties of his office. Such oath may be administered by the treasurer or any member of the board.”

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Freshwater appeals to 5th District Court

In a brief filed recently with the 5th District Court of Appeals in Ohio, John Freshwater asked the district court to order the Mount Vernon Board of Education to reinstate him to his position teaching at the school.

The school board, in January, fired Freshwater for what the board described as religious reasons.


(The Mount Vernon Board of Education met recently below a poster that could be interpreted as being of a religious nature: The Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry coat of arms.)

The appeal to the district court comes after Knox County Court of Common Pleas Judge Otho Eyster ruled against Freshwater earlier this year. In that prior decision, the county judge did not cite any evidence or applicable law to support upholding the firing.

In the appeal to the district court, submitted Dec. 6 by Freshwater’s council R. Kelly Hamilton and The Rutherford Institute, Freshwater takes the position that “the true basis for his termination was a combination of religious animus, an unfounded fear of lawsuits, and a desire to appease members of the community who were prejudiced by the sensationalized Tesla coil incident that was ultimately found to be insignificant.”

Regarding the allegation that a student was burned by the Tesla coil, state administrative hearing Referee R. Lee Shepherd told the school board in his report:

“Due to the sensational and provocative nature of this specified ground, it and the facts and circumstances surrounding it became the focus of the curious, including those in the video, audio, and print media. Once sworn testimony was presented, it became obvious that speculation and imagination had pushed reality aside. Further, and more crucial to a review of the [2008] Amended Resolution, the use of the Tesla Coil by John Freshwater did not seem to be a proper subject for the Amended Resolution. […] The issue and incident was dealt with by the administration. That case was closed.”

The board, subsequently, did not include any mention of the burn allegation in the 2011 resolution firing Freshwater.

Three issues for review

Freshwater’s appeal states that there are three main issues that the court needs to review:

“I. Does a public school teacher’s facilitation of classroom discussion concerning popular alternative theories to the Big Bang theory, and the encouragement of students to distinguish scientific theories and hypotheses from fact as directed and permitted by school policy and Ohio’s Academic Content Standards, create ‘good and just cause’ for termination of the teacher’s employment contract, or does the termination of the teacher on this basis constitute an impermissible violation of the rights of the teacher and his students to free speech and academic freedom under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and a manifestation of hostility toward religion in violation of the First Amendment's Establishment Clause?

“II. Does the presence of religious texts from the school’s library in a teacher’s classroom, or the display of a patriotic poster depicting the nation’s highest executive leaders praying, as permitted by O.R.C. §3313.601, constitute ‘good and just cause’ for termination of the teacher’s employment contract, or does the termination of a teacher on this basis constitute an impermissible violation of the rights of a teacher and his students to free speech and academic freedom under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and a manifestation of hostility toward religion in violation of the First Amendment's Establishment Clause?

“III. Was the Mount Vernon City School District Board of Education’s termination of Freshwater’s employment contract improperly based upon an unconstitutional animus toward a perception of Freshwater’s religious faith, thus belying the lower court’s finding that there was ‘good and just cause’ for said termination and, in fact, violating Freshwater’s First Amendment right to free speech and Fourteenth Amendment right to equal protection?”

The brief is worth reading in its entirety. (See here for a copy. PDF. )

“Religious articles” in the classroom

One of the reasons the school board gave for firing Freshwater was the following concerning “religious articles” in the classroom:

“Mr. Freshwater was directed to remove or discontinue the display of all religious articles in his classroom, including all posters of a religious nature, and whereas, Mr. Freshwater has failed to comply with that directive and, further, has brought additional religious articles into his classroom, in a direct act of insubordination;”

The appeal interprets the board’s statement “failed to comply with that directive” as the board referring to a poster in Freshwater’s classroom of Colin Powell and President George W. Bush.


(This poster has been banned from Mount Vernon City Schools. The photograph was taken January 28, 2003. © Brooks Kraft/CORBIS. The poster was printed by Freeport Press, Inc.)

However, the punctuation used by the board in that sentence places the reference to “posters” within a non-restrictive clause, and, thus, like inserting an extraneous comment about Babe Ruth here, is not essential to the meaning of the sentence. Interpreting the sentence based on the punctuation used would result in “that directive” referring back to “directed to remove or discontinue the display of all religious articles.” The result would, then, be that the board’s statement never specifically states what was not removed from the classroom.

Throughout the course of the hearing it was undisputed that Freshwater was told to remove his personal Bible from off of his desk. It was also undisputed that Freshwater did not remove his Bible. However, Shepherd never made a finding of fact that Freshwater failed to remove his personal Bible.

That there ever was a directive to remove the Colin Powell poster was disputed. The school never presented any documentation that specifically identified that poster as needing to be removed. Shepherd never gave a finding of fact as to who was right in the dispute over the existence of an oral order to remove the poster.

Shepherd did make a finding of fact regarding the issue of Freshwater bringing in “additional religious articles into his classroom.” Shepherd said: “He checked out religious texts from the school library and added them to the array on his classroom desk. […] The act appears to have been one of defiance, disregard, and resistance.”

The items Freshwater checked out? A Bible and a book titled “Jesus of Nazareth.”

(The poster hanging above the school board when it voted to fire Freshwater stated, “Read and The Force is with you.” Perhaps the poster should have said, “Read and the school board will expel you.” The poster of Yoda has since been replaced with the Hogwarts coat of arms.)

See the articles in the archive for additional coverage of the Freshwater controversy.

UPDATE 1-13-2012:

Attorneys for the school board filed their response brief on Wednesday. See here for a PDF copy of the document.

The brief concludes with the following summary statement: “Freshwater inappropriately taught science with deference to religious beliefs and principles. He maintained a religious display in his classroom and was non-compliant with the Board’s lawful directive to remove his religious display.”

Regarding new evidence that was presented which countered testimony given by James Stockdale, the board’s attorneys argued, “The records could be incomplete or, most likely, the witness could have been mistaken as to the date he heard the comments.”

Stockdale had testified during the state administrative hearing that in the fall of 2006 he heard Freshwater make remarks to his class about the subject of homosexuality.

The school records, however, showed that Stockdale's duties did not take him into Freshwater’s classroom anytime Sept. 1, 2005 through June 30, 2008. (See the June 1, 2011 AccountabilityInTheMedia article “EXCLUSIVE: Witness impeached by school records.” )

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

MV school board bids farewell to Sharon Fair

The last regular meeting of the Mount Vernon Board of Education for 2011, held on Monday, included a presentation of a “Distinguished Service Award” to outgoing board member Sharon Fair. The board also said goodbye to Treasurer Barbara Donahue.

The legislative liaison report, by board member Paula Barone, included mention of House Bill 136 (see 55:12-58:00 in video). The board had previously approved a resolution stating opposition to HB 136, which the board said if enacted “would significantly expand the availability of vouchers for students to attend private or parochial schools” (see JPG copy of resolution). Barone said that the Ohio School Board Association “has reiterated its stance against this legislation.”

The website School Choice Ohio states about HB 136, “This proposal would give many parents the opportunity to choose an educational environment that best meets their needs rather than conforming to a one-size-fits-all model.”


(Mount Vernon Board of Education, Dec. 12, 2011 meeting)

Friday, December 2, 2011

Right Wing Watch does ‘a quick Google search’

The liberal website RightWingWatch.org posted an article Wednesday by Kyle Mantyla critical of the quality of American historian David Barton’s research. To support the criticism, Mantyla offered up information from what he acknowledged was “a quick Google search.”

The search concerned information about fired Mount Vernon Middle School teacher John Freshwater, who was a guest on Barton’s radio program WallBuildersLive.com.

After Mantyle offered up what he presented as counter-evidence to information presented on Barton’s program, Mantyle concluded by saying, “Barton's success is largely rooted in the fact that his intended audience generally doesn't question anything he says or bother to check to see if his claims are accurate or true, and this is just the latest example of how he uses that power to routinely mislead them in order to create false narratives that support his own political and religious agenda.”

What, then, was presented on Barton’s program that was so terrible? As Mantyle put it, “Freshwater was portrayed simply as a man who has been relentlessly persecuted because of his Christian faith.”

Based on “a quick Google search” Mantyle said that “Freshwater was actually fired for allegedly burning a cross onto the arms of two of his students and using his classroom to teach creationism, attack gays, and promote his religion.”

However, if someone listens to the full program instead of just the short clip that Mantyle includes, one will discover that Freshwater does acknowledge that multiple accusations were lobbed at him after he refused to remove his personal Bible from off his classroom desk.

Although it may be true that “a quick Google search reveals dozens of articles reporting” the claim of the alleged burning as a reason for Freshwater’s firing, such a claim is not supported by the primary source documents: The school board did not include that unsubstantiated allegation in their list of reasons for firing the teacher.

In the program, Freshwater does address the “Creationism” allegation: “I teach what I call a ‘robust’ evolution. I showed the evidence for evolution, and I showed evidence that was opposed to evolution. […] I stayed neutral on it and let the kids make a decision on it.” (Editor’s note: The Mount Vernon Board of Education did not state that Freshwater directly taught Creationism, but, instead, that he taught “evidence both for and against evolution” and that the “‘evidence’ against evolution was based, in large part, upon Christian religious principals of Creationism and Intelligent Design.”)

Although the school board’s reasons for the firing did include, as Mantyle mentions, the allegation that Freshwater made remarks about homosexuality to his class, that allegation itself is not supported by the relevant school records: The lone witness who testified to having heard the remarks was, according to school records, not in Freshwater’s classroom.

It is true that the school board claimed Freshwater included his religious beliefs in his teaching. That characterization by the board, however, was their summary statement of the issues involving evolution and the alleged remarks about homosexuality.

Next time, Right Wing Watch, do more than “a quick Google search.”

Sunday, October 30, 2011

MV school board candidates answer questions

During a debate Thursday evening, candidates for the Mount Vernon Board of Education addressed topics ranging from church and state issues to problems with school funding.

The debate began with a questioned posed to Jeff Cline about expressing Christian values in the classroom. Cline responded that although he does not advocate preaching in the classroom he does believe that there are times when a Christian should choose to honor God’s law over man’s law.

Cline gave the example of a time, as a high school baseball coach, that he prayed and discussed his Christian beliefs with a student who had approached him asking for help with some problems. “As a Christian,” Cline told the audience, “if you have certain moral values and certain convictions, stand for them.”

Later in the evening when the matter of the school’s handling of the firing of teacher John Freshwater was brought up, Cline said that issue is one of the reasons he is running for the school board. He explained that his position on that issue is that “Freshwater was wronged.” He went on to say, “If we have another situation like that, we will make sure that it is not [handled] wrong.”

The debate was sponsored by the Knox County 912 Project and held at the Knox County Career Center, Adult Education Building.

Candidates present were Dr. Margie Bennett (Incumbent), Jeff Cline, Marie Curry and Stephen Kelly. Not present were Cheryl Feasel and Jody Goetzman (Incumbent).

Comments from Richard McLarnan were not included in video coverage of the debate due to him being a candidate for the governing board of the Knox County Educational Service Center instead of a candidate for the Mount Vernon Board of Education.

For information regarding “church and state” issues, see the article by David Barton “The Separation of Church and State.”


(“School board candidate takes on notion of 'separation of church and state'”)




(“MVBOE candidates answer questions”)


UPDATE 11-2-2011 (FACT CHECK):

School district’s expenses for recent legal matters

During the debate, Bennett responded to the issue of the expenses for recent legal matters, saying (32:33 in video):

“I would just remind everyone that the Mount Vernon City School Board was sued, we didn’t seek the lawsuit, we simply defended the school district, and it’s been upheld in each court in which it has been presented. It amounts to $300,000 per year for three years, which was one percent of our budget, for legal expenses, which is probably not exorbitant if you think of a business; we are the fifth largest employer in Mount Vernon. Am I happy that we had to spend money that way? Absolutely not. But the school board had no choice; it was obligated to defend itself. And we have attempted to put additional personnel policies in place so that more evaluation and accountability will take place at a sooner level so that hopefully teachers will know the boundaries and respect them.”

The following is a list of the recent legal matters and the cost incurred by the district (expenses covered by the district’s insurance are not included):

• The federal case Doe v. Mount Vernon Board of Education et al. (in which the Dennis family sued the school board and others): $0.00.

• The federal case Freshwater v. Mount Vernon Board of Education et al. (in which Freshwater sued the school board and others): $0.00.

• The state administrative hearing pursuant to Ohio Revised Code 3319.16 (in which evidence for and against firing Freshwater was presented to a referee): $922,425.91.

• The Knox County Court of Common Pleas case John Freshwater v. Mount Vernon City School District Board of Education (in which Freshwater appealed his firing): $0.00.

The district was not directly responsible for the legal costs in the cases in which it was sued. Although it is true that once the board decided to start the process of firing Freshwater it was obligated to have a hearing if Freshwater requested one, the board did make choices that affected the cost incurred by the district for the hearing.

When Freshwater requested the hearing he also requested that the hearing be held before members of the board. Instead, the board decided to have the hearing before a referee. (Both options are allowed under Ohio law.) That decision cost $35,749.50.

When the board faced the decision of legal representation for the hearing it had two options under Ohio law: Use the services of the law director for the city of Mount Vernon or hire an attorney. The board chose to hire an attorney and ended up paying the attorney’s law firm $833,288.16.

Related documents:

The schools’ expenses for legal matters. 75KB PDF.

Ohio law regarding the hearing and legal representation for the school board. 142KB PDF.


UPDATE (2011 SCHOOL BOARD RESULTS):

The following are the official results for the Mount Vernon Board of Education race (three positions were up for election):

Jolene Goetzman 4,375 (20.36%)


Margie Bennett 4,049 (18.84%)

Cheryl A. Feasel 3,757 (17.48%)

Marie K. Curry 3,733 (17.37%)

Jeffrey S. Cline 3,004 (13.98%)

Stephen Kelly 2,572 (11.97%)