FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. (AP) — A North Carolina district attorney says he won’t prosecute a high school teacher for stepping on an American flag during a lesson on the First Amendment.
Cumberland County district attorney Billy West told The Fayetteville Observer the state’s misdemeanor flag-desecration charges are unenforceable because a 1989 U.S. Supreme Court ruling protects such actions.
Massey High Classical High School teacher Lee Francis says a history lesson was about that case, which determined flag-burning is a form of protected speech. Francis was put on paid administrative leave the next day.
News outlets quoted students as saying that Francis asked for a lighter or scissors, and when no one produced them, he put the flag on the floor and stomped on it.
Francis says he stepped on the flag several times with his right foot.
- Posted September 27, 2016
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Prosecutor: No state charges for teacher who stepped on flag
headlines Macomb
- ‘Bridging the Gap’
- Illinois man extradited and arraigned, charged with multiple felonies including felony murder
- Jury convicts Shelby Township man of four counts of first-degree criminal sexual conduct
- Justice Dept. opens investigations into three Michigan school districts
- Team dynamics in courts focus of webinar
headlines National
- A wave of lawsuits has resulted from online comments after Charlie Kirk’s assassination
- Goldman Sachs top lawyer resigns after emails show Jeffrey Epstein friendship
- Failed indictment of 6 Democratic lawmakers blamed on Jeanine Pirro-picked prosecutors
- Federal judges may address ‘illegitimate forms of criticism and attacks,’ according to new ethics opinion
- Senate GOP aims to reveal companies funding lawsuits
- Bad Bunny’s ‘love conquering hate’ message at Super Bowl reiterated by judge sentencing assaulter




