MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
In
Doninger v. Niehoff,
I.
The facts of this case are familiar to all involved, and were set forth at length in the Court’s preliminary injunction ruling.
See Doninger,
*215 ii.
Before turning to the motions currently pending before the Court, a brief review of the prior decisions in this case is in order. This lawsuit was originally removed from state court in July of 2007, shortly after Ms. Doninger completed her junior year at LMHS. Claiming irreparable harm if she was not given an opportunity to run for senior class secretary, Ms. Doninger sought a preliminary injunction on the basis of her First and Fourteenth Amendment claims. After holding four days of hearings, during which the Court heard testimony from ten witnesses and received into evidence numerous exhibits, the Court denied the Motion for a Preliminary Injunction, finding that Ms. Doninger had not established a substantial likelihood of success on the merits.
Doninger,
A.
On Ms. Doninger’s claim that disqualifying her from running for class secretary violated her First Amendment rights, after reviewing the Supreme Court’s decisions concerning student speech in public schools, the Court initially observed that it was not clear whether the
Tinker
or
Fraser
line of cases applied to the particular facts at issue. In brief, in
Tinker v. Des Moines Independent School District,
The Court believed that this case differed from both
Tinker
and
Fraser
because it did not arise from a suspension or other similar student discipline but rather involved participation in voluntary, extracurricular activities — namely, serving as class secretary. In other contexts, the Court explained, “the Supreme Court and other courts have been willing to accord great discretion to school officials in deciding whether students are eligible to participate in extracurricular activities.”
Doninger,
Similarly, this Court explained that Ms. Doninger’s education was not impeded by Defendants’ actions and she remained “free to express her opinions about the school administration and their decisions in any manner she wishes.... However, Avery does not have a First Amendment right to run for a voluntary extracurricular position as a student leader while engaging
*216
in uncivil and. offensive communications regarding school administrators.”
Doninger,
Nor was Avery barred from running simply because she disagreed with school administrators and that is made clear by the fact that the other three students who sent the mass Jamfest email were permitted to run for student office. Instead, Avery was barred from running as a class officer because of her conduct and the vulgar language she used in her blog, neither of which were consistent with her desired role as a class leader.
Id.
In the alternative, the Court concluded that if it had to choose between the
Tinker
and
Fraser
line of cases, the Court considered the facts of the case “closer to
Fraser
than to
Tinker,”
though the Court admitted that “this calculus is less than entirely clear and that this case is neither just like
Fraser
nor
Tinker.” Id.
at 216. The Court noted that the Second Circuit had recently decided
Wisniewski v. Board of Education of the Weedsport Central School District,
The Court expressed “more substantial concerns ... regarding the ‘Team Avery' t-shirts,” but decided that because there was no imminent election assembly, a preliminary injunction was not necessary.
See id.
at 218. Finally, the Court concluded that Ms. Doninger had failed to show a clear or substantial likelihood of success on the merits on her Equal Protection claim, which was based on a “class-of-one” theory, because she had failed to show that she was
prima facie
identical to others who were treated differently.
See Doninger,
B.
The Second Circuit affirmed this Court’s First Amendment ruling, although it did so on different grounds than those relied on by this Court. The court agreed that
*217
“Avery’s language, had it occurred in the classroom, would have fallen within
Fraser
and its recognition that nothing in the First Amendment prohibits school officials from discouraging inappropriate language in the school environment.”
Doninger,
The Second Circuit relied on three factors to support its conclusion that Ms. Doninger’s blog entry satisfied the Tinker standard — that is, that her speech “fore-seeably created a risk of substantial disruption within the school environment.” Id. (citation, quotation marks, and brackets omitted). 2 First, the court looked at the language that Ms. Doninger had used in her blog entry and found it to be “plainly offensive” and “potentially disruptive of efforts to resolve the ongoing controversy” over Jamfest. Id.; see also id. at 51 (referring to the “post’s vulgar and, in this circumstance, potentially incendiary language”).
Second, the Second Circuit observed that the blog entry was “at best misleading and at worst false.”
Id.
at 51 (quoting
Doninger,
Third, the court explained that “it is of no small significance that the discipline here related to Avery’s extracurricular role as a student government leader” because “Avery’s conduct risked not only disruption of efforts to settle the Jamfest dispute, but also frustration of the proper operation of LMHS’s student government and undermining of the values that student government, as an extracurricular activity, is designed to promote.” Id. at 52. Viewed in this light, the Second Circuit observed, this case bore a similarity to the Lowery decision relied on by this Court. As in Lowery, there was no First Amendment violation in disqualifying Ms. Doninger from running for class secretary in view of her offensive blog posting.
The Second Circuit rejected Ms. Don-inger’s Equal Protection claim for much the same reasons as this Court. The court further rejected Ms. Doninger’s claims under the Connecticut Constitution, finding that although Ms. Doninger “argues that the Connecticut Constitution affords broader protections than those of the First Amendment ... she can cite no Connecti *218 cut cases that expressly find broader speech rights for students than are available under the federal constitution.” Id. at 53 (quotation marks and citations omitted). Thus, the Second Circuit concluded that Ms. Doninger had failed to show a substantial likelihood of success on the merits for any of her claims.
III.
Defendants argue that they are entitled to summary judgment on the basis of the Second Circuit’s decision and the record created at the preliminary injunction hearing. Ms. Doninger responds that, despite the Second Circuit’s adverse decision, she is entitled to a trial on her First Amendment claim regarding her blog entry because new evidence obtained during discovery casts doubt on two of the three factors relied on by the Second Circuit and also because there is conflicting evidence in the record as to whether Ms. Niehoff punished her because of the potential for disruption or because she found the blog entry offensive.
A.
First, Ms. Doninger points to new evidence in the record that she alleges calls into question the conclusion that the blog entry was “at best misleading and at worst false” as found by both this Court and the Second Circuit. For instance, Ms. Niehoff says in a newly-discovered email that “I will tell Jen Hill that the event runs in the cafeteria, acoustic only, or that it is can-celled,” PL’s Obj. to Mot. for Summ. J. [doc. # 82] Ex. 4, which is consistent with Ms. Doninger’s testimony at the preliminary injunction hearing, see Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J. [doc. # 73] Ex. A at 261. In another email to Ms. Schwartz and David Miller, Ms. Niehoff says that she has “no problem being the bad guy, so to speak by directing them to use the cafeteria again this year-acoustic only.” PL’s Obj. to Mot. for Summ. J. [doc. #82] Ex. 11. Ms. Niehoff, on the other hand, testified that she never said it was cancelled and that she merely said that it would have to be held on the scheduled date in the cafeteria or at some later date in the auditorium. Other evidence in the record supports Ms. Niehoffs testimony. Thus, Ms. Doninger contends that there is a factual dispute on the issue of whether she was told Jamfest was cancelled and, hence, whether her blog entry was false.
Ms. Doninger also claims that new evidence casts doubt on whether the blog entry actually caused disruption as Defendants alleged. For instance, Ms. Doninger points to an email sent by Ms. Niehoff in which she says she does not care that she must miss a health seminar in order to deal with the fallout from the blog entry. See Pl.’s Obj. to Mot. for Summ. J. [doc. # 82] Ex. 5. From this, Ms. Doninger argues that Ms. Niehoff chose not to attend the seminar because she did not want to go and not because of any disruption caused by the blog entry. In another example, . Defendants argued at the preliminary injunction hearing that they were required to provide alternate coverage for Jennifer Hill’s class so that she could attend the meeting about Jamfest. According to Ms. Doninger, Ms. Niehoffs email shows that it was Ms. Niehoffs choice to have the meeting at that time and that she was not forced to find coverage for Ms. Hill’s class. See id.
It is true that while the Court was entitled to discredit Ms. Doninger’s testimony at the preliminary injunction stage, the Court may not decide credibility issues on a motion for summary judgment.
See Dillon v. Morano,
Furthermore, the fact that Ms. Niehoff apparently did not care whether she missed her health seminar does not mean that there was no disruption. Ms. Niehoff may have prioritized the meeting about Jamfest over the health seminar precisely because it had caused so much disruption. Likewise, she may have chosen to pull Jennifer Hill out of class because the situation needed to be resolved quickly. The fact that Ms. Niehoff chose to have the meeting at that time does not negate the fact that Ms. Hill’s teaching schedule was disrupted. Quibbling about who scheduled a meeting does not help Ms. Doninger survive summary judgment. And Ms. Doninger has failed to uncover evidence that shows that the numerous other examples of disruption given by Defendants were somehow fabricated or untrue. More importantly, as the Second Circuit noted, even if Defendants had failed to show any actual disruption, “[t]he question is not whether there has been actual disruption, but whether school officials ‘might reasonably portend disruption’ from the student expression at issue.” Doninger, 527 F.8d at 51 (emphasis added).
Nevertheless, Ms. Doninger’s other objection to summary judgment on the basis of the Second Circuit’s decision is more substantial. She argues that even if her blog entry did raise the potential for disruption at LMHS, Ms. Niehoff and Ms. Schwartz did not punish her for that reason. Rather, Ms. Doninger argues, they were offended by the language she used in blog entry, particularly the word “dou-chebag,” and therefore they punished Ms. Doninger for her speech, not for the potential for disruption. The potential for disruption, Ms. Doninger alleges, was concocted after the fact in order to justify Defendants’ actions. Ms. Doninger is correct that
Tinker
requires not only a potential for disruption, but also that “the concern for disruption, rather than some other, impermissible motive, was the actual reason for” the punishment imposed.
Locurto v. Giuliani,
The Court agrees with Ms. Doninger that there is evidence in the record — particularly when viewed in the light most favorable to her — that suggests that Ms. Niehoff may have punished Ms. Doninger because the blog entry was offensive and uncivil and not because of any potential disruption at school. For example, Ms. Niehoff testified that she punished Ms. Doninger because the blog entry “demón-stratela] lack of citizenship” and she said that she thought “the word douchebags itself [was] a horrible word.” Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J. [doc. # 73] Ex. J at 560. This Court accepted these reasons and denied the preliminary injunction on that ground. See Doninger, 514 F.Supp.2d at *220 214-15. To be sure, there is other evidence in the record to suggest that the potential for disruption did motivate Defendants to bar Ms. Doninger from running for class secretary. Ms. Niehoff in particular testified that she punished Ms. Doninger, in part, because of the disruptive nature of the blog entry. See Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J. [doc. # 73] Ex. J at 561. And of course, school administrators may have multiple motivations for their actions. It is possible that Ms. Niehoff was motivated both by the potential for disruption and by the offensive nature of the blog entry.
However, Defendants did not even discover the blog entry until weeks after the Jamfest incident had been resolved, at which point there was no longer any potential for disruption. The Court does not suggest that a school cannot punish potentially disruptive behavior after the fact so as to prevent students from engaging in the same disruptive behavior in the future.
See Doninger,
B.
That does not end the inquiry, however. For Defendants also claim they are entitled to qualified immunity even on Ms. Doninger’s version of the facts. Qualified immunity shields public officials from lawsuits for damages, unless their actions violate clearly established rights of which an objectively reasonable official would have known.
See Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
In
Saucier v. Katz,
The concern of the immunity inquiry is to acknowledge that reasonable mistakes can be made as to the legal constraints on particular [official] conduct. It is sometimes difficult for an [official] to determine how the relevant legal doctrine ... will apply to the factual situation the [official] confronts. An [official] might correctly perceive all of the relevant facts but have a mistaken understanding as to whether a particular [act] is legal in those circumstances. If the [official’s] mistake as to what the law requires is reasonable, however, the [official] is entitled to the immunity defense.
Id.
at 205,
Though the Supreme Court recently took up the issue of whether
Saucier
should be overruled,
see Pearson v. Callahan,
— U.S. —,
The Court is convinced that Defendants are entitled to summary judgment on their defense of qualified immunity insofar as Ms. Doninger’s First Amendment blog entry claim is concerned. Turning to the first step under
Saucier,
this Court has already held that under
Fraser,
there was no First Amendment violation, even if Ms. Doninger was punished because of the offensive content of her blog entry rather than for its potential for disruption.
See Doninger,
To be sure, the fact that the Second Circuit declined to address Fraser in its decision might have been intended to gently telegraph to the Court that it erred in its analysis of Fraser. However, even if Fraser does not apply to off-campus speech, the Court believes that Defendants would still enjoy qualified immunity because the constitutional right at stake was not clearly established at the time the alleged violation occurred.
In order to make this determination, the Court must first carefully define the constitutional right at issue. In
Zahrey v. Coffey,
With the right so defined, the Court concludes that it was not clearly established. First, as the Court previously has stated, it is not at all clear that participation in extracurricular activities should be considered a right at all. Although the Supreme Court has addressed this question in other contexts,
see, e.g., Vernonia Sch. Dist. 47J v. Acton,
Second, it is hardly debatable that Fraser’s applicability to off-campus speech was not clearly established when Defendants made the decision to punish Ms. Doninger. Indeed, it is not even clearly established today given the fact that the Second Circuit explicitly refused to decide the issue in this very case. At the time of the events in question, it was not even clearly established that Tinker applied to off-campus speech because Wisniewski was not decided until July 2007, several months after Ms. Niehoff prohibited Ms. Doninger from running for class secretary.
Ms. Doninger points to
Thomas v. Board of Education,
Perhaps more importantly, we are not living in the same world that existed in 1979. The students in Thomas were writing articles for an obscene publication on a typewriter and handing out copies after school. Today, students are connected to each other through email, instant messaging, blogs, social networking sites, and text messages. An email can be sent to dozens or hundreds of other students by hitting “send.” A blog entry posted on a site such as livejournal.com can be instantaneously viewed by students, teachers, and administrators alike. Off-campus speech can become on-campus speech with the click of a mouse. As the case before us demonstrates, we are decidedly not in the world confronted by the Second Circuit in Thomas. In the words of one court:
the line between on-campus and off-campus speech is blurred with increased use of the internet and the ability of students to access the internet at school, on their own personal computers, school computers and even cellular telephones. As technology allows such access, it requires school administrators to be more concerned about speech created off campus — which almost inevitably leaks onto campus — than they would have been in years past.
J.S. v. Blue Mt. Sch. Dist.,
No. 3:07cv585,
increasingly faced with instances of threatening or derogatory student speech on the Internet. The lack of direction from the Court has resulted in overzealous restriction or excessive protection of student speech by administrators who are unclear as to the amount of and circumstances surrounding First Amendment protection that is accorded to students. Students are increasingly pushing the envelope to the outer bounds of administrators’ authority to punish student speech, and new contexts for speech, such as web pages, email, and instant messaging communications, keep emerging. In light of these problems, the three seemingly clear standards of Tinker, Fraser, and Hazelwood have become muddled and are applied to varying degrees by different courts, leaving behind a state of confusion regarding the proper test to be applied and the proper context in which to apply it.
Erin Reeves, The Scope of a Student: How to Analyze Student Speech in the Age of the Internet, 42 Ga. L. Rev. 1127, 1131 (2008).
First Amendment jurisprudence will need to evolve in order to address this new environment, and the Second Circuit has begun to address it in cases such as Wis-niewski. But the contours of the law in *224 this area are still unclear, as even a cursory review of the legal commentary shows. Thus, a recent law review article observes that “when it comes to student cyber-speech, the lower courts are in complete disarray, handing down ad hoc decisions that, even when they reach an instinctively correct conclusion, lack consistent, controlling legal principles.” Kenneth R. Pike, Locating the Mislaid Gate: Revitalizing Tinker by Repairing Judicial Overgener-alizations of Technologically Enabled Student Speech, 2008 B.Y.U. L. Rev. 971, 990 (2008); see also Kyle W. Brenton, BONGHiTSUESUS.COM? Scrutinizing Public School Authority Over Student Cy-berspeech Through the Lens of Personal Jurisdiction, 92 Minn. L. Rev. 1206, 1215 (2008) (“[T]he extent to which [the First Amendment] protects the off-campus online speech of students remains unsettled.”); Robert D. Richard & Clay Calvert, Columbine Fallout: The Long-Term Effects on Free Expression Take Hold in Public Schools, 83 B.U. L. Rev. 1089, 1140 (2003) (“[T]he judiciary seems to be in a state of tumult about the precise scope of First Amendment rights possessed by students.”); Kara D. Williams, Public Schools vs. MySpace & Facebook: The Newest Challenge to Student Speech Rights, 76 U. Cin. L. Rev. 707, 719 (2008) (“The Supreme Court has never addressed student Internet speech specifically, and it is difficult for lower courts to apply the existing framework to the type of cases discussed above. The Internet has changed the concept of student speech, rendering elements of the existing framework untenable.”); Sandy S. Li, The Need for a New, Uniform Standard: The Continued Threat to Inter-neh-Related Student Speech, 26 Loy. L.A. Ent. L. Rev. 65, 67 (2005) (“Due to these conflicting standards, there is a lack of uniformity amongst the decisions rendered by the lower courts ... As a result, schools and students have very little guidance when trying to determine what type of speech is protected.”); Brian Oten, Disorder in the Courts: Public School Student Expression on the Internet, 2 First Amend. L. Rev. 403, 422 (2004) (“The various and inconsistent outcomes among lower courts in attempting to apply precedent to this emerging area of law necessitate action by higher courts in determining specifically what standards apply to Internet speech.”).
If courts and legal scholars cannot discern the contours of First Amendment protections for student internet speech, then it is certainly unreasonable to expect school administrators, such as Defendants, to predict where the line between on- and off-campus speech will be drawn in this new digital era. Since, as explained above, the particular right Ms. Doninger seeks to enforce was not clearly established at the time of the events in question, Defendants are entitled to qualified immunity on Ms. Doninger’s blog entry First Amendment claim. Accordingly, the Court GRANTS summary judgment to Defendants on that claim.
IV.
The Court next turns to Ms. Don-inger’s “Team Avery” t-shirt First Amendment claim, on which both Ms. Doninger and Defendants move for summary judgment. The Court denied Ms. Doninger a preliminary injunction on this issue because it found that there was no imminent election assembly and, hence, no risk of irreparable harm. Ms. Doninger has now graduated, and the Court presumes that she will not be attending any election assemblies at LMHS. Furthermore, the school has apparently implemented new guidelines for election assemblies that would make Ms. Doninger’s claim for in-junctive relief moot even if she were still a *225 student at LMHS. Of course, none of that affects Ms. Doninger’s claim for damages.
In its preliminary injunction ruling, the Court made clear that the “Team Avery” t-shirts were “not governed by either
Fraser
or
Kuhlmeier,
but rather by
Tinker.” Doninger,
Defendants contend that they were simply enforcing a general ban on electioneering materials and not singling out the “Team Avery” t-shirts because of the message they contained. As the Court indicated in its preliminary injunction ruling, the Court has no doubt that a school could choose to place reasonable viewpoint-neutral restrictions on electioneering materials in school assemblies.
See Peck v. Baldwinsville Cent. Sch. Dist.,
However, in this case, LMHS had no general ban on electioneering materials. It is undisputed that there was no written policy that would have prohibited the t-shirts and there is no evidence that Ms. Niehoff was confiscating any other electioneering materials at the doors to the school auditorium. Furthermore, the email sent by Ms. Niehoff to Ms. Schwartz and others on the morning of the election assembly makes clear that she was particularly focused on preventing “Team Avery” t-shirts from being worn into the auditorium. Defendants cannot claim that the t-shirts violated an unwritten policy that Ms. Niehoff apparently made up on the spot and then applied only to the “Team Avery” t-shirts. Such a
post hoc
rationalization is not a reasonable viewpoint neutral restriction.
See Lakewood v. Plain Dealer Pub. Co.,
486
U.S.
750, 758,
Defendants’ principal argument on this claim appears to be that Ms. Doninger lacks standing to pursue a First Amendment claim for damages because she did not intend to wear a “Team Avery” t-shirt into the auditorium and, therefore, her speech was not chilled by Ms. Niehoffs conduct. It is true that for Ms. Doninger to show that her speech was chilled, she “must proffer some objective evidence to substantiate [her] claim that the challenged conduct has deterred [her] from engaging in protected activity.”
Bordell v. General Electric Co.,
Defendants make a strong case, but there is other evidence in the record, which when construed favorably for Ms. Doninger, would permit a reasonable jury to conclude that Ms. Doninger’s speech was chilled. For one, in her affidavit in support of her motion for summary judgment, Ms. Doninger states, “I was afraid to put on the ‘Team Avery’ shirt that I intended to wear in the auditorium.” Id. Ex. B, ¶ 21. For another, the word “after” in Ms. Doninger’s preliminary injunction testimony, recited above, could mean any number of things. It could mean after she got to the assembly, after she sat down, or after the assembly was over. Moreover, Ms. Doninger did not have to wear the t-shirt in order to get across her message. She could have, for instance, held the t-shirt up during the assembly when several students called out her name. The one thing that is clear from the record, however, is that when Ms. Doninger saw Ms. Niehoff prohibiting other students from wearing the “Team Avery” t-shirts, she hid her t-shirt in her backpack and she did not take it out until after the assembly. While there is conflicting evidence in the record, it is at least arguable that Ms. Doninger’s speech was chilled and that is all that is necessary to prevent the entry of summary judgment for Defendants.
Defendants also claim qualified immunity on the t-shirt claim, but the Court concludes that this case is sufficiently similar to
Tinker
that the right was clearly
*227
established and, thus, Defendants’ are not entitled to qualified immunity. Defendants point out some distinctions, such as the fact that this case involves t-shirts rather than armbands, that
Tinker
did not involve speech in a school auditorium, and that
Tinker
did not involve electioneering materials. None of these distinctions convinces the Court that the right of students to engage in non-offensive, non-disruptive speech on school property was not clearly established. To accept Defendants’ qualified immunity defense would be to ignore the Second Circuit’s instruction to courts not to define the right so narrowly that “qualified immunity would be a defense unless the very action in question has previously been held unlawful.”
Zahrey,
Therefore, the Court DENIES Ms. Don-inger’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment and DENIES Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment on this claim. At trial, Ms. Doninger will have to prove that her speech was chilled and also will have to prove the amount of damages, if any, that she suffered as a result of any First Amendment violation that is found.
y.
The Court turns next to Ms. Doninger’s Equal Protection arguments. This claim is premised on a “class-of-one” theory, which requires that a plaintiff “has been intentionally treated differently from others similarly situated and that there is no rational basis for the difference in treatment.”
Village of Willowbrook v. Olech,
(i) no rational person could regard the circumstances of the plaintiff to differ from those of a comparator to a degree that would justify the differential treatment on the basis of a legitimate government policy; and (ii) the similarity in circumstances and difference in treatment are sufficient to exclude the possibility that the defendants acted on the basis of a mistake.
Clubside, Inc. v. Valentin,
Ms. Doninger argues that Defendants treated her differently from others similarly situated in two respects. First, she contends that Ms. Niehoff caused a discipline log entry to appear in her permanent file regarding inappropriate use of school computers to send unauthorized e-mails, while no such discipline log entry appeared in the files of the other three students involved in the e-mail. Second, Ms. Don-inger asserts that Defendants punished her for the livejournal.com blog entry, while another student who posted an offensive comment in response to the blog entry was not punished and, indeed, was given a good citizenship award shortly thereafter.
The Court,finds no merit in Ms. Doninger’s “class-of-one” claim. In terms of the discipline log, it is undisputed that all four students received the same log entry. Ms. Doninger argues that only she had the discipline log placed in her permanent record. However, the undisputed evidence in the record shows that the discipline log *228 entry was never part of her permanent record. See Defs.’ Mot. for Summ. J. [doc. # 73] Ex. J at 521-22; id. Ex. L at 53, 74; id. Ex. 0 at 226, 228-29. A courtesy copy was temporarily placed in Ms. Doninger’s guidance file so that her mother could come in to examine the file; the discipline log entry was removed shortly thereafter. Although Ms. Doninger asserts that Ms. Niehoff wanted the discipline log to become part of Ms. Doninger’s permanent file and that she used her mother’s inspection request as an excuse to do so, there is simply no evidence to support Ms. Doninger’s conjecture. As a result, the Court is more than a little perplexed at Ms. Don-inger’s continued assertion of this unfounded claim. See, e.g., Pl.’s Obj. to Mot. for Summ. J. [doc. # 82] Ex. 8 (Email from Ms. Niehoff to Ms. Bilodeau) (“Mrs. Don-inger has asked to come in to review Avery’s cumulative file. I am putting the print out of her discipline record in your box.”).
Ms. Doninger’s alternative “class-of-one” theory similarly fails because she is not prima facie identical to J.R., the student who posted an offensive comment to the blog. For one, J.R. was not a student council officer, and the punishment Ms. Doninger received was limited to barring her from running for class secretary. For another, J.R.’s comment, while offensive, did not attempt to provoke disruption by providing students with misleading information and telling them to call Ms. Schwartz to “piss her off more.” Both differences are rational reasons why Defendants may have chosen to punish Ms. Doninger and not J.R. Since Ms. Doninger cannot show that she and J.R. were prima facie identical, it is irrelevant that they were treated differently, regardless of how Ms. Doninger would like to characterize J.R.’s good citizenship award. 4 Therefore, the Court GRANTS Defendants summary judgment on Ms. Doninger’s Equal Protection claim.
VI.
Finally, the Court considers Ms. Don-inger’s state law claims under Article First, §§ 4, 5, and 14 of the Connecticut Constitution and for intentional infliction of emotional distress. The Court need not spend much time on Ms. Doninger’s Connecticut constitutional claims because she devotes very little space — less than two pages — to them in her brief. Ms. Doninger has not identified a single Connecticut decision that suggests that free speech protections for public school students are broader under the Connecticut Constitution than under the U.S. Constitution.
More importantly, as Defendants point out, it is not entirely clear whether Connecticut law recognizes a direct cause of action for money damages under the Connecticut Constitution. In
Binette v. Sabo,
If the Court were to decide this claim, it would have to decide not only whether to create a new cause of action that Connecticut courts have not recognized, but also whether to grant greater protections for student speech under the Connecticut Constitution. This is categorically not the role of a federal court. Hence, the Court declines to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Ms. Doninger’s Connecticut constitutional claims.
See
28 U.S.C. § 1367(c) (“The district courts may decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over a claim under subsection (a) if ... the claim raises a novel or complex issue of State law.”);
O’Connor v. Nevada,
Lastly, Ms. Doninger has brought a tort claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress. In order to prove a claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress, a plaintiff must establish four elements: “(1) that the actor intended to inflict emotional distress; or that he knew or should have known that the emotional distress was a likely result of his conduct; (2) that the conduct was extreme and outrageous; (3) that the defendant’s conduct was the cause of the plaintiffs distress; and (4) that the emotional distress sustained by the plaintiff was severe.”
Carrol v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
Under Connecticut law, “[[liability for intentional infliction of emotional distress requires conduct that exceeds all bounds usually tolerated by decent society.”
Carrol,
Having considered the record evidence in the light most favorable to Ms. Doninger, the Court believes that no reasonable jury could conclude that the actions of Defendants rise to the level of extreme and outrageous conduct under Connecticut tort law. Ms. Doninger was surely disappointed that she could not run for senior class secretary, but it was not “extreme and outrageous” to prohibit her from doing so. And while Ms. Doninger may have been upset that Ms. Niehoff prevented other students from wearing “Team Avery” t-shirts, Ms. Niehoffs actions in this regard were not even directed towards Ms. Doninger. The only interaction Ms. Doninger and Ms. Niehoff had concerning the T-shirts was when Ms. Niehoff examined Ms. Doninger’s “R.I.P. Democracy” t-shirt and allowed her to wear it in the auditorium. While Ms. Doninger’s speech may have been chilled for the purposes of her First Amendment claim, Ms. Niehoffs conduct certainly does not meet the standard of extreme and outrageous.
Cf. Bell v. Bd. of Educ.,
VII.
In sum, with respect to Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment [doc. # 73], the Court GRANTS summary judgment to Defendants on Ms. Doninger’s blog entry First Amendment claim, her Equal Protection claim, and her claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress. The Court DENIES summary judgment to Defendants on Ms. Doninger’s First Amendment “Team Avery” t-shirt claim. The Court declines to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Ms. Doninger’s state constitutional claims and therefore dismisses those claims without prejudice to renewal in state court. Finally, the Court DENIES Plaintiffs Motion for Partial Summary Judgment [doc. # 74], The Court will issue a separate trial scheduling order.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Because Avery Doninger was a minor when this lawsuit began, the Plaintiff was initially her mother, Lauren Doninger, as guardian and next friend of Avery Doninger. Once Avery turned eighteen, she was substituted as Plaintiff for Lauren Doninger. See Order [doc. # 85].
. As a preliminary matter, the Second Circuit concluded that the record amply supported this Court’s conclusion that Ms. Doninger's blog posting was purposefully designed to come on to the LMHS campus, and that it was reasonably foreseeable that other students would view the blog and that school administrators would become aware of it.
See Doninger,
. The Court is cognizant of the fact that in certain situations the Second Circuit has departed from
Saucier's
rigid two-step process.
See Higazy v. Templeton,
. Insofar as Ms. Doninger is also basing her Equal Protection claim on the fact that she was prohibited from running for senior class secretary while the other three students involved in writing the original e-mail were not prohibited from running, this claim is also without merit. The other three students did not post the offensive and potentially disruptive livejournal.com blog entry and therefore are not
prima facie
identical.
See Doninger,
. Ms. Doninger suggests that this Court should certify the question to the Connecticut Supreme Court. However, as her counsel acknowledged at oral argument, certification would require that the parties agree on the facts. Although the Court has granted sum-maiy judgment on Ms. Doninger's blog entry First Amendment claim, there are still numerous factual disputes that would make certification impossible. Therefore, the Court declines to certify the question to the Connecticut Supreme Court.
