Local

Lawsuit over Georgia school’s ban on Black Lives Matter shirts dropped

El Cajon, CA Police Fatally Shoot Unarmed Man EL CAJON, CA - SEPTEMBER 29: Sadic Ali Khalil wears a shirt bearing names of black people shot by police at the site where an unarmed black man, Alfred Olango, 38, had been shot by police earlier this week on September 29, 2016 in El Cajon, California. A family member called police to help Olango as he was acting erratically and walking through traffic, but shot him when he quickly pulled out an electronic cigarette device. He died later that evening. (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images) (David McNew/Getty Images)

SPRINGFIELD, Ga. (AP) — A federal judge agreed Friday to dismiss a lawsuit that had accused a Georgia school district of racial discrimination, including for barring students from wearing Black Lives Matter T-shirts.

The dismissal was requested by attorneys for students who filed the complaint in U.S. District Court in Savannah. The attorneys said they are new to the case and plan to file a new version of the complaint later.

The lawsuit accused school administrators in Effingham County of a broad pattern of racial discrimination. Allegations included that students were prohibited from wearing Black Lives Matter shirts to school events while white peers got to wear shirts with Confederate flags.

The lawsuit listed as plaintiffs three unnamed Black teenagers who attend high school in Effingham County, where 65,000 people live in rural and suburban communities west of Savannah. The original complaint was filed by the mother of one of the teens acting as their attorney.

TRENDING STORIES:

IN OTHER NEWS:

0