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San Bernardino apple farm sues school district for pulling student tours for owner’s racially charged tweets
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This archival content was originally written for and published on KPCC.org. Keep in mind that links and images may no longer work — and references may be outdated.

Feb 19, 2019
Listen 16:18
San Bernardino apple farm sues school district for pulling student tours for owner’s racially charged tweets
For years, Riley Farms in San Bernardino county hosted school tours featuring a colonial era, reenactment-style apple orchard.
Family members are reunited with their children, students from North Park Elementary school, at Cajon High School in San Bernardino on Monday afternoon, April 10, 2017 following a shooting that left two adults dead and two students wounded.
Cajon High School in San Bernardino on Monday afternoon, April 10, 2017.
(
Maya Sugarman/KPCC
)

For years, Riley Farms in San Bernardino county hosted school tours featuring a colonial era, reenactment-style apple orchard.

For years, Riley Farms in San Bernardino county hosted school tours featuring a colonial era, reenactment-style apple orchard.

That was until tweets from owner James Riley surfaced sparking a public backlash. Riley’s tweets, often of a conservative political nature took a racial tone when he disputed the existence of white supremacy in America saying, “... If there’s a problem in America today it’s BLACK supremacy. Farrakhan, Obama, Lebron James, etc. Typical brain dead feminist.”

Parents and school officials spoke out against the owner’s statements expressing concern for treatment of students of color who attend school tours. The Claremont Unified School district notified Riley Farms they would be discontinuing trips. Riley countered with a lawsuit alleging a violation of his first amendment right to free speech and 14th amendment right to equal treatment.  

Guests:

Gustavo Arellano, features writer for the Los Angeles Times who wrote about the Riley Farms controversy; tweets at

Thomas J. Eastmond, attorney representing James Riley, owner of Riley farms

Barry McDonald, professor of law at Pepperdine University, his focus includes constitutional law and First Amendment law

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