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Imagine a mom named Elizabeth Jones who lives in Letcher County, Kentucky. She has two kids in a school district called Jenkins Independent School District. In December 2025, the school said some of her social media posts "appeared to be harassment" and told her she could not go on school property or go to school events anymore.
But here is the tricky part:
A group called the ACLU of Kentucky (a group that protects people’s rights) went to a federal judge (a type of top-level referee for laws) and asked for something called a preliminary injunction. Think of this like a "pause button" on the ban while the bigger problem is figured out.
The judge said yes! Now, while her lawsuit (a formal complaint to a court) continues:
The ACLU of Kentucky says the school punished Jones for things she said online that are protected. In the U.S., the First Amendment is a rule in the constitution (the country’s main rulebook) that lets people speak freely without the government punishing them just for being disliked.
Bethany Baxter, a lawyer for the ACLU of Kentucky, explained it like this:
"This ruling affirms a basic constitutional principle: public officials cannot punish people simply because they dislike or take offense at protected speech. Ms. Jones should never have been forced to choose between exercising her First Amendment rights and participating fully in her children’s lives."
The ACLU filed the lawsuit saying the school:
Court papers tell us a few important things:
The preliminary injunction is not the final answer. It just temporarily stops the school from enforcing the ban while the court looks at the rest of the case.
Important Point: The ban is paused, not erased. The full lawsuit is still going, and the judge has not made a final decision yet.
The official name of the case is:
Elizabeth Jones v. Jenkins Independent School District, et al.
It is being handled in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky.
A federal judge let Elizabeth Jones return to her kids’ school events while her lawsuit continues. The ACLU says the school banned her for harmless social media posts and broke her free speech rights. The school never named the exact posts or claimed she was violent. The court’s order is temporary, but it stops the ban for now. The bigger case is still underway in Kentucky.
1. What is a preliminary injunction?
It is a temporary court order that stops something (like a ban) from being enforced while the court decides the full case.
2. Did the school say Elizabeth Jones was dangerous?
No. The school did not accuse her of making threats or engaging in violence.
3. Is the case finished now?
No. The injunction only pauses the ban. The lawsuit is still moving forward in court.
4. What is the First Amendment in simple terms?
It is a rule that protects your right to speak freely without the government punishing you just for saying things they do not like (in most cases).
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