CAIR Lawsuit Filing
CAIR Lawsuit Filing
CAIR Lawsuit Filing
Defendants.
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COMPLAINT
for Justice in Palestine at the University of Texas at Dallas, and Democratic Socialists of
America, by and through their undersigned counsel, CAIR LEGAL DEFENSE FUND, file
this Complaint for damages, declaratory and injunctive relief against the defendants named
above. The Complaint asserts that Governor Abbott’s executive order, along with the
campus-level efforts to comply with it, are obvious attempts to illegally suppress a viewpoint
INTRODUCTION
1. On March 27, 2024, when Governor Gregg Abbott issued Executive Order GA 44, he
aimed to extinguish from public campuses a viewpoint critical of Israel and supportive
Amendment, and the students and groups suing here seek the Court’s intervention to
2. Since that executive order, Governor Abbott has revealed a boundless resolve to
suppress students and others from expressing common and typical criticisms of one
3. Governor Abbott has labeled as criminals and bigots students and others protesting
4. The First Amendment is a better guide for our public discussions than Governor
Abbott’s whims, and this lawsuit insists that all public officials adhere to their
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obligation to respect the free speech rights of the students we are teaching in our public
schools.
5. This is an action for damages and declaratory and injunctive relief arising under the
First and Fourteenth Amendments to the U.S. Constitution and 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
6. This Court has subject matter jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 and 1343 because
7. Venue is proper pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1391(b)(1) and (2) because the events that
PARTIES
student group at the school. As a recognized student group, SJP-UH can reserve space,
receive and raise funds on campus, and otherwise participate as other student groups
recognized student group at the school. As a recognized student group, SJP-UTD can
reserve space, receive and raise funds on campus, and otherwise participate as other
of thousands of members nationwide and more than 2,000 in Texas. DSA includes a
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Texas, University of Houston, Texas Tech University, Texas State University, and
11. Greg Abbott is the Governor of Texas, where he heads that state’s executive branch
In that role, Governor Abbott wields extensive authorities over higher education, and
public universities in Texas are located on state property, Governor Abbott has direct
control over what occurs on public grounds of campuses in the state, which he recently
exercised to violently disband student protests that were critical of Israel. Greg Abbott
resides in Austin, Texas. Governor Abbott is being sued in his official capacity, only.
12. The University of Houston (“UH”) is a state university subject to the Executive Order
and its members, Defendants Tilman Fertitta, Alonzo Cantu, John A. McCall Jr., Beth
Madison, Ricky Raven, Jack B. Moore, Tammy D. Murphy, and Gregory C. King, as
well as UH’s President, Rene Khator. They are collectively referred herein as the
revised its policies in conformity with Executive Order GA 44, after formally being
in Texas (in or around Houston). The University of Houston and the UH System
Board of Regents are being sued in its official capacity, only; the remaining University
of Houston Defendants are being sued in their individual and official capacity.
13. (Nonparty) the University of Texas at San Antonio (“UTSA”) is a state university
subject to the Executive Order GA 44 as well as the orders and direction of Defendants
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University of Texas System Board of Regents, and its members, Kevin Eltife, Janiece
Longoria, James C. Weaver, Christina Melton Crain, Jodie Lee Jiles, Kelcy L.
President, Taylor Eighmy. The University of Texas System Board of Regents, through
its members, are responsible for revising its policies in conformity with Executive
enforcing UTSA’s Policies, and was responsible for the decision to ban “From the
River to the Sea, Palestine will be free” as described below. Eighmy resides in or
around San Antonio, Texas; his official position is located in San Antonio. The
Eighmy is being sued in his official and individual capacities; the remaining
FACTS
Governor Abbott has wages a more than half decades long effort to suppress
viewpoints critical of one particular foreign country
14. In Texas, for decades now, federal courts have considered the grounds of public
15. But state law goes even further than the First Amendment. Texas law allows members
16. Governor Abbott signed that law, Tex. Educ. Code § 51.9315, in 2019. It requires all
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expressive activities of others.” This applied to “all persons,” whether they are students
or not.
17. When Abbott signed that law, he described it as reflecting his desire to ensure
18. When it comes to one particular foreign country, however, Abbott has been repeatedly
willing to press his own viewpoints and abandon even the pretense of following the
First Amendment.
19. He does so for the purpose of using the machinery of his government to insulate a
foreign country from the criticism students and others in Texas and beyond are leveling
against Israel.
20. In 2017, Governor Abbott signed House Bill 89 that required all state contractors, as
Israel for that country’s benefit and to the detriment of those who advocate for
signing a state contract and even refrain from encouraging others to boycott Israel for
the duration of the contract’s life. The law made it impossible to contract with the state
22. When Governor Abbott signed HB 89, he did so on Israel’s Independence Day to
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23. When Governor Abbott signed HB 89, he threatened those who, like Plaintiffs,
advocate for Palestinians and criticize Israel, in the common and typical ways people
advocate for and criticize things on campus—by calling for boycotts and economic
pressure, by assembling and petitioning public officials, by inviting people to join such
efforts. “[W]e will not tolerate such actions,” Governor Abbott promised.
24. That law was permanently enjoined by a federal court because it violated the First
Amendment.
25. Days after a federal court permanently enjoined House Bill 89, Abbott signed another
employees—to sign such oaths for that foreign country’s benefit and to the detriment
of those who advocate for Palestinians and criticize Israel. See Tex. Gov’t Code
26. That law is subject to a preliminary injunction entered against it, because it violated
27. Governor Abbott has padded his extensive record of suppressing viewpoints critical of
Israel just last month when, on April 23, 2024, Governor Abbott ordered 100 state
troopers to clear protestors who had gathered on UT Austin’s campus mere hours
earlier, were not obstructing traffic or movement, and were simply gathered together
for an expressive purpose. Governor Abbot did so again on April 29, 2024.
encampment on campus that SJP-UH helped organize a few hours after it began, even
though other student groups, including students who campus officials permitted to set
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29. Similarly, on May 1, 2024, Texas State Troopers and other police forces forcibly
including three SJP-UTD board members were arrested during the forcible
disbursement.
30. Abbott’s use of overwhelming police force against peaceful protestors on campuses
reflects Abbott’s resolve to suppress a viewpoint about Israel and Palestine with which
he disagrees.
31. This effort to shut down campus gatherings in April and May was based on a frenzied
moral panic about a wave of student protests on campuses all over the world. Those
protests have been critical of Israel, supportive of Palestinians, and Governor Abbott
has made repeatedly clear he views persons and groups like Plaintiffs and their
32. Governor Abbott ordered his campus crackdown on the basis of rumors that protestors
intended to emulate students elsewhere rather than on the basis of their own conduct
in Texas. But at the time of Abbott’s order to remove the protestors, campus protestors
had not been violating campus policies and had been assembled for only the normal
and usual time involved with other similar kinds of expressive campus activities.
33. Together, these two viewpoint-conscious laws and the Spring 2024 campus crackdown
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35. The order is Governor Abbott’s illegal instruction to campus officials to rid public
taken steps in furtherance of that order, including but not limited to the following:
phrase-specific rule. That rule was explained to YSDA members after one
asked a campus official “what they can and can’t say” under the order’s
that they are not allowed to say from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free,
b. On May 15, 2024, the UH System Board incorporated the entirety of the
that label as antisemitic the common and typical criticisms people make about
foreign countries when those criticisms are made against Israel. At the Board
36. In the press release accompanying his GA 44, Abbott described it as a way of
micromanaging the terms of the public debate by punishing students on one side of
that debate even for the phrases they use at protests and on placards to criticize Israel
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37. The order labels campus groups that are critical of Israel as “radical” and their peaceful
activism “antisemitic.”
38. The order names SJP specifically as “radical” and their peaceful activism
“antisemitic.”
39. The order acknowledges that Plaintiffs and other student groups use phrases such as
“Students for Justice in Palestine” and “Palestine Solidarity Committee” to brand their
efforts to organize as students on campus against what they view as Israel’s genocide
in Gaza. The order thus justifies targeting these groups because of their viewpoint.
40. The order also labels also as “antisemitic” the common words and phrases used at
protests and gatherings by Plaintiffs, students attending events they help organize, or
by student groups with which Plaintiffs work. Those phrases include the decades-old
political slogan “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” which is defined as
per se antisemitism by the order, even though its literal and figurative meaning reflect
an aspiration for peace and dignity for all people—Palestinians, Israelis, Arabs,
41. By directing school officials to adopt the IHRA definition of antisemitism, Abbott
42. The IHRA definition, once adopted, would transform normal and typical criticism of
a foreign country into antisemitism when the foreign country criticized is Israel. For
example:
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levied against Israel that is not also made against other countries.
SJP-UH, SJP-UTD, and DSA activities are forbidden by Governor Abbott’s Order, and the slogans,
rhetoric, and objectives are labeled as per se antisemitic by the order
SJP-UH
43. SJP-UH is led by University of Houston students who advocate for Palestinians. SJP-
subjecting others to an apartheid system that denies them dignity and freedom. The
direct action.
44. During the 2023-2024 school year, SJP-UH has helped organize protests, teach-ins,
meetings, and other events to communicate a viewpoint that is critical of Israel. In the
future, SJP-UH plans to continue to organize the same kinds of events described
above.
45. An illustrative example of the kinds of events and activities SJP-UH has organized in
the past and intends to organize again in the future, include the following.
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were invited to make signs and shirts, enjoy food, and learn
about Palestine.
years.
genocide.
46. At SJP-UH gatherings, students regularly invoke popular political slogans—like “from
the river to the sea, Palestine will be free”—as a shorthand for their peaceful calls
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47. At SJP-UH gatherings, students use forceful political rhetoric that calls Israel’s
48. SJP-UH gatherings bring together, not only the group’s own members and supporters,
but also those belonging to other student groups, including Palestine Solidarity
Committee and SJP groups at other schools, all groups which the order labels as
antisemitic.
49. SJP-UH also advocates for boycotts, divestment, and sanctions against Israel as part
50. As part of an ongoing project SJP-UH helped launch the University of Houston BDS
Coalition, a student-led coalition of more than twenty groups, advocating for their
school to divest itself of $7.6 million it has invested in companies SJP-UH believes
profit off of the violence against Palestinians and remove certain products and
DSA
51. DSA has YDSA chapters at half a dozen Texas public university campuses, including
Houston, Texas Tech University, Texas State University, and Texas A&M University.
52. DSA’s YDSA chapters at Texas public universities are open to students and campus
workers, under the age of 30, who are dues-paying DSA members.
53. There are more than 2,000 DSA members in Texas, and among them are students and
campus workers who have played a leading role in campus advocacy for Palestine for
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54. During the 2023-2024 school year, YDSA chapters in Texas have helped organize
protests, sit-ins, film screenings, strikes, and other events to communicate a viewpoint
55. In the future, DSA plans to continue to organize the same kinds of events described
below.
56. An illustrative example of the kinds of events and activities DSA has organized in the
past and intends to organize again in the future, include the following:
a. The YDSA chapter at UTSA organized a “Die-in for Palestine” that the group
co-sponsored with SJP-UTSA. The event was meant to educate the campus
community about the genocide in Gaza and express solidarity with student
b. The YDSA chapter at Texas State University held a teach-in about Palestine
for fellow students where, at the end of the program, a coalition of students,
faculty, and community letter sent a letter demanding that UTST stand against
c. The YDSA chapter at Texas A&M University organized meetings and other
Palestine—for students and other campus leaders to help students build a long-
lasting campaign for Palestine. YDSA is offering this program virtually to its
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57. At YDSA gatherings in Texas about Palestine, students regularly use popular political
slogans—like “from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free”—as a shorthand for
their peaceful calls demanding dignity and freedom for everyone in that geographic
area.
58. At YDSA gatherings in Texas about Palestine, students use forceful political rhetoric
that calls Israel’s conduct a genocide in Gaza and an apartheid system elsewhere.
59. YDSA gatherings in Texas about Palestine gatherings bring together, not only the
group’s own members and supporters, but also those belonging to other student
groups, including Palestine Solidarity Committee and SJP groups at other schools, all
60. DSA also advocates for boycotts, divestment, and sanctions against Israel as part of
announced in 2017 that it “declares itself in solidarity with Palestinian civil society’s
support[s] BDS.” YDSA chapters have worked in coalition with other student groups
61. At UTSA, YDSA’s chapter spoke with a campus official who confirmed that it was
UTSA’s understanding that Governor Abbott’s order forbid students from chanting
from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free at their protests. During a recording of that
conversation between YDSA members and a UTSA campus official, a YDSA member
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asks “what they can and can’t say” and the campus official states explicitly that they
are not allowed to use that slogan, because it “was written specifically in the order.”
62. YDSA’s chapter at Texas A&M University asked campus officials to reject Governor
Abbott’s order, to publicly state it will not enforce the order, and to affirm their First
Amendment rights. The university has not responded to requests to reject the order.
SJP-UTD
63. SJP-UTD is led by University of Dallas students who advocate for Palestinians. SJP-
UTD believes that Israel is committing a genocide against Palestinians in Gaza and
subjecting others to an apartheid system that denies them dignity and freedom. The
group communicates its views through education, programming, advocacy and direct
action.
64. During the 2023-2024 school year, SJP-UTD has helped organize protests, sit-ins, film
Israel. In the future, SJP-UTD plans to continue to organize the same kinds of events
described below.
65. An illustrative example of the kinds of events and activities SJP-UTD has organized
in the past and intends to organize again in the future, include the following:
a. From the River to the Sea, Palestine is Almost Free. Students Rise Against
faculty about Israel’s Apartheid policies and to push for divestment from
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board members.
“from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free”—as a shorthand for their peaceful
calls demanding dignity and freedom for everyone in that geographic area.
67. At SJP-UTD gatherings, students use forceful political rhetoric that calls Israel’s
68. SJP-UTD gatherings bring together, not only the group’s own members and
supporters, but also those belonging to other student groups, including Palestine
Solidarity Committee and SJP groups at other schools which the order labels as
69. SJP-UTD has asked the campus officials to reject Governor Abbot’s order, to publicly
state it will not enforce the order, and to affirm the First Amendment rights of SJP-
UTD. The university has not responded to requests to reject the order.
70. SJP-UTD also advocates for boycotts, divestment, and sanctions against Israel as part
Count I
Section 1983: First Amendment – GA 44’s Viewpoint/Content Discrimination
(against all defendants)
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72. The First Amendment forbids government actors from restricting people’s speech
based on viewpoint or content. The First Amendment applies to state actors through
73. The order violates SJP-UH, DSA, SJP-UTD, and their members’ First Amendment
right to free speech, because it prohibits them from using even peaceful political
slogans commonly invoked and otherwise smears them, their prospective supporters,
74. The order unconstitutionally censors SJP-UH, DSA, SJP-UTD, and their members
75. It is impermissible viewpoint discrimination to prohibit speech when the rationale for
77. By directing campus officials to “ensure” the punishment of two plaintiffs by name for
any violations of GA 44’s terms, the order makes it clear that it’s aimed at Plaintiffs
and that it is so aimed because of their views and the contents of their message. By
labeling from the river to the sea and the pro-Palestine protests on Texas campuses during
the Spring 2024 semester antisemitic, Governor Abbott’s order once fully implemented
78. The order unconstitutionally chills the speech of SJP-UH, DSA, SJP-UTD, and their
members because it labels as antisemitic their activism and associations with each
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other. This deters their work together and separately and gives pause to prospective
supporters.
79. Governor Abbott has a long track record of repeated efforts to suppress viewpoints
80. Specifically, Governor Abbott’s crackdown has directly affected the persons holding
81. SJP-UH, DSA, and SJP-UTD each intend to engage in protected conduct. Each
genocide in Gaza and each organization has concrete plans to continue engaging in
these protests.
82. SJP-UH, DSA, and SJP-UTD’s past, present, and future speech is explicitly proscribed
by the order.
a. SJP-UH, DSA, and SJP-UTD have all organized protests and will continue to
organize protests where the phrase “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be
free” is used.
b. The plain meaning of the executive order directs public universities to treat the
use of this phrase as antisemitic and thus will cause campus officials to restrict
Plaintiffs’ use of that phrase, punish it, or at the very least, objectively chill its
use.
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c. SJP-UH, DSA, and SJP-UTD have all organized protests and will continue to
organize protests where language used by protestors would fit the definition of
83. SJP-UH, DSA, and SJP-UTD face a substantial threat of future enforcement of the
order.
a. The order sets a deadline of June 25, 2024 (within 90 days of the order), for the
chair of the board of regents for each Texas public university to report on their
warned students, including DSA members, that is against their rules to use the
phrase “From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free” as a result of the order.
c. Neither the public universities of Texas nor the state of Texas have indicated
84. The order unconstitutionally singles out SJP-UH and SJP-UTD by directing Texas
higher education officials to discipline groups “such as” “Students for Justice in
Palestine.”
85. The order has objectively chilled the speech of SJP-UH and SJP-UTD. Plaintiffs
understand the order to be aimed at them, because it either names them specifically or
describes them by their activism. As a result, Plaintiffs have altered plans and advocacy
86. Plaintiffs are entitled to compensatory damages from the individual capacity
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permanent injunction against all Defendants in the form described below, as well as
costs and attorneys’ fees, as well as any other relief the Court deems just and
appropriate.
Count II
Section 1983: First Amendment – UTSA’s From the River to the Sea Rule
(by Plaintiff DSA against Taylor Eighmy only)
88. It is impermissible viewpoint discrimination to prohibit speech when the rationale for
90. UTSA has announced to students, Plaintiff DSA’s members among them, that using
the political slogan from the river to the sea, Palestine will be free is a per se violation, because
91. That order originated from Taylor Eighmy, the President of UTSA, who has the sole
authority in the absence of any specific action by the University of Texas Board of
92. UTSA’s declaration that it is impermissible to chant “from the river to the sea,
93. UTSA’s from the river to the sea rule is also content discrimination that is not necessary
to preserve the purposes of a limited forum, as UTSA’s public spaces are public
forums, and it is not antisemitic and does not create a hostile environment against
Jewish students.
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94. UTSA’s from the river to the sea rule is impermissible viewpoint discrimination, casts an
unconstitutional chill on DSA’s members and those they organize with who would
use that phrase at protests on the UTSA campus, but are reasonably and objectively
95. As a result of UTSA’s from the river to the sea rule, Plaintiff DSA is entitled to
judgment and a preliminary and permanent injunction against Taylor Eighmy, in his
official capacity, in the form described below, as well as costs and attorneys’ fees, as
well as any other relief the Court deems just and appropriate.
WHEREFORE, Plaintiffs request that this Honorable Court enter judgment in their favor
and against Defendants on each count in this Complaint, and issue an order awarding the
following relief:
Prohibiting individuals from saying or chanting “From the river to the sea, Palestine
will be free” is illegal viewpoint and content discrimination in violation of the First
Amendment.
2. An injunction that:
Defendants shall not take any action in furtherance of the order or in accordance with
GA-44;
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o Defendants shall not update their free speech policies, in accordance with
2 or Paragraph 3;
o Defendants shall not treat the use of phrases and slogans such as “from the river
UT and UH Defendants will not update their policies to incorporate the IHRA
Defendants shall provide to Plaintiff SJP and DSA the normal and typical permissions
3. Compensatory damages;
4. Attorneys’ fees, costs and expenses of all litigation, under 42 U.S.C. § 1988; and
5. Any other relief that the Court may deem just and proper.
Respectfully submitted,
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/s/Lena Masri_______
Lena Masri
Gadeir Abbas*
Justin Sadowsky
453 New Jersey Ave SE
Washington, D.C. 20003
T: (202) 488-8787
ldf@cair.com
*Licensed in VA; not in D.C., practice
limited to federal matters
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