View Full Version : Mom sues over yearbook photo


ABlairican Pie
12-13-2006, 09:26 AM
MSNBC.com

Mom sues over yearbook photo

Senior’s picture with sword nixed because of school’s no-weapons policy
The Associated Press
Updated: 4:38 p.m. PT Dec 12, 2006

http://msnbcmedia1.msn.com/j/ap/bx20212122116.widec.jpg
In this 2006 photo released by Heidi Farrington, her son, Portsmouth High School senior Patrick Agin, 17, is shown in his Society for Creative Anachronism costume in Portsmouth, R.I. Portsmouth High rejected the photo for use in the school yearbook.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. - The mother of a high school senior who posed in chain mail and held a medieval sword for his yearbook picture sued after the school rejected the photo because of its "zero-tolerance" policy against weapons.

Patrick Agin, 17, belongs to the Society for Creative Anachronism, an international organization that researches and recreates medieval history. He submitted the photo in September for the Portsmouth High School yearbook.

But the school's principal refused to allow the portrait as Agin's official yearbook photo because he said it violated a policy against weapons and violence in schools, according to a lawsuit filed Monday by the Rhode Island branch of the American Civil Liberties Union.

The lawsuit seeks an order that would prevent the yearbook from being published without Agin's senior portrait.

Agin's mother, Heidi Farrington, said she and her son believe the decision defies common sense.

"He doesn't see it as promoting violence," Farrington said Tuesday. "He sees it just as a theatrical expression of the reenactment community that he's involved in right now."

According to the lawsuit, principal Robert Littlefield told Farrington she could pay to put the photo in the advertising section of the book, but he would not allow it as Agin's senior portrait.

"That in and of itself demonstrates to us that there's absolutely no legitimate rationale for banning Patrick's photo," said Steven Brown, executive director of the Rhode Island ACLU.


Littlefield said he thought there would be less editorial scrutiny given to paid advertising space, and that an ad would not be viewed as receiving the school's endorsement.

The complaint says there is nothing in the weapons policy that would apply to the picture Agin submitted. It also says the weapons policy is arbitrarily enforced, noting theatrical plays at the school have included prop weapons and that the mascot — a patriot — is depicted on school grounds and publications as carrying a weapon.

© 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.

MsOrange
12-13-2006, 11:11 AM
oh good grief

Hollow
12-13-2006, 07:01 PM
"He doesn't see it as promoting violence," Farrington said Tuesday. "He sees it just as a theatrical expression of the reenactment community that he's involved in right now."
:rolleyes: and it's not the way he sees it that matters.

dlemond
12-13-2006, 07:16 PM
I dub thee Sir Dork of Geekingham.


In about 5 years or so he will begin to realize what a great favor the school inadvertently did for him.

TJL
12-13-2006, 08:23 PM
Nice outfit there Aragorn.

You must be the most popular boy in school.

;)

FOLrocks1
12-13-2006, 09:06 PM
Who would want to wear that for their senior picture in the first place? And the picture is a horrible quality senior picture.

MsOrange
12-13-2006, 09:13 PM
i thought senior pictures were taken at school....i never knew a school to allow students to submit senior portraits

FOLrocks1
12-13-2006, 09:38 PM
I've always know it to be the other way around. My school doesn't have a special senior photo day.

*Pleasant Tomorrow*
12-13-2006, 09:58 PM
I've always know it to be the other way around. My school doesn't have a special senior photo day.
Same here, most people get them down on their own senior year, so they look professional.

haha that kid is lame. Okay, it's one thing if you want to be weird and make your senior pic a friggen knight, but to sue over it?

AllIWantIsYourClutch
12-13-2006, 09:59 PM
That is an awful picture. And usually you can't use full-length pictures as yearbook portraits.

~LadyJess~
12-13-2006, 10:00 PM
I've always know it to be the other way around. My school doesn't have a special senior photo day.

Ditto. We had a special studio that our school wanted to get our senior pictures taken at so all the backgrounds for the yearbook would be the same. You had to get all sorts of weird overrides and stuff if you wanted to go to a different studio.

Jonathan
12-13-2006, 10:26 PM
People complain about ANYTHING. :eek: :rolleyes:

Courtnee
12-13-2006, 10:46 PM
i thought senior pictures were taken at school....i never knew a school to allow students to submit senior portraits
mhm. I'm on the yearbook staff at my school, so I've learned about how all of this works.

Most of the time (or at least here), they (the seniors) have their cap and gown pictures taken at the school, but their professional ones where they pose in regular clothes are taken at a studio and then the yearbook dept. recieves the photos and puts them in the yearbook. :D

*yearbook nerd*

KristinHerreraFan
12-14-2006, 12:31 AM
Thats ridiculous.

dawsongirl
12-14-2006, 12:50 AM
ha ha ha!!!; hell, she cannot help it, if her son is the dork of the senior class!
I just wished my mom would had sue my middle school for both my 7th and 8th grade photographs:lol: (god, THEY were horrid!)
ha...my 7th grade pic was disgusting.

80sTrivia
12-14-2006, 07:06 AM
Can anyone say "frivolous law suit"??? :rolleyes:

~LadyJess~
12-14-2006, 11:56 AM
ha...my 7th grade pic was disgusting.

I don't think anyone's 7th grade picture is good. That is a horrible grade/age.

Babes_Cat
12-16-2006, 01:39 AM
... this is interesting.
i have a cousin who is a junior @ portsmouth high in rhode island.