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  • Date:

    Akoju v. University of New Hampshire (D. N.H. Feb. 26, 2026)

    Opinion and Order Denying Plaintiff’s Motion for a Temporary Restraining Order. Plaintiff, a former graduate student at the University of New Hampshire proceeding pro se, sued the university alleging violations of Title VII and the Fourteenth Amendment after the school terminated her enrollment, ended her SEVIS status, and evicted her from her dorm following her failure to pay more than $14,000 in outstanding charges on her student account. The court denied plaintiff’s request for a temporary restraining order (TRO), finding that plaintiff was unlikely to succeed on the merits of her claims because she received adequate notice of both the registration deadline and the consequences of failing to pay her balance. The court also found that the university’s actions were based on legitimate, non-retaliatory reasons that were consistent with institutional policies and not a pretext for discrimination or retaliation. Although the court acknowledged that plaintiff could suffer significant harm without injunctive relief, including the loss of her F-1 visa status, it found that this harm did not outweigh the deficiencies in her claims.  

    Topics:

    Constitutional Issues | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Due Process | Faculty & Staff | Immigration | International Students | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Retaliation | Student Housing | Students

  • Date:

    Kilborn v. Amiridis, et al. (N.D. Ill. Feb. 9, 2026)

    Opinion Denying in Part Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss. Plaintiff, a tenured professor at the University of Illinois Chicago School of Law, sued several university officials bringing First Amendment retaliation, Fourteenth Amendment due process, and state law defamation claims after an internal investigation concluded that he violated the school’s nondiscrimination policy based on an exam hypothetical referencing racial slurs, racially insensitive classroom remarks, and intimidating comments he made in response to student criticismThe court denied defendants’ motion to dismiss plaintiff’s First Amendment retaliation claim, holding that it fell within the Ex parte Young exception to Eleventh Amendment immunity because plaintiff sought prospective relief in the form of expungement of the investigation findings from his employment record. However, the court dismissed plaintiff’s Fourteenth Amendment due process claims, finding that he had no entitlement to the 2% merit raise he claimed was withheld and that reputational harm alone did not establish a constitutional liberty interest. The court also dismissed plaintiff’s defamation claims based on an internal investigation findings letter that stated plaintiff had used racial slurs, denounced minorities participation in civil rights, and had referred to minorities as “cockroaches. The court concluded that those statements were “non-actionable” because a transcript confirmed plaintiff had, in fact, made those statements – and truth was a defense to defamationBut the court allowed the plaintiff’s other defamation claims to proceed, finding statements that plaintiff had engaged in race-based harassment, intimidated or threatened students, created fears of physical safety or retaliation, and made inappropriate comments in class coulreasonably be construed as objectively verifiable. 

    Topics:

    Constitutional Issues | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Due Process | Faculty & Staff | First Amendment & Free Speech | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Retaliation

  • Date:

    Kessinger v. West Virginia State University (S.D. W.Va. Feb. 6, 2026) 

    Opinion Granting Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment. Plaintiff, a former music instructor for West Virginia University, sued the university alleging violation of procedural due process, Title IX retaliation, and state law claims after she was placed on administrative leave based on allegations of her making sexually explicit comments to students during class, rehearsal, office hours, and allegations of unprofessional behavior during a choir trip. The court found that the university was entitled to Eleventh Amendment immunity and further held that the individual defendants within their official capacities did not violate procedural due process because plaintiff received notice of the allegations, a written investigation letter outlining her rights, and an opportunity to respond before being suspended. The court also dismissed her Title IX retaliation claims, finding that she had not engaged in protected activity under Title IX, as she was the subject, not the complainant, of the investigationAfter dismissing all federal claims, the court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction and remanded the remaining state-law claims to state court.  

    Topics:

    Constitutional Issues | Due Process | Employee Sexual Misconduct | Retaliation | Sex Discrimination

  • Date:

    McCoul v. The Texas A&M University System, et al., (S.D. Tex. Feb. 4, 2026)

    Complaint for Declaratory Relief and Damages. Plaintiff, a former senior lecturer in English Literature for Texas A&M University, sued the university and several campus officials alleging violation of her First Amendment and Due Process rights after the university terminated her for “failing to modify her course content” to exclude content related to gender identity. Plaintiff claims that the university’s purported reason for her termination was pretextual because she was never told she was required to modify her course content and was, in fact, due to political backlash that followed a classroom video recording of a student objecting to the course content, which went viral. Plaintiff further claims that the university violated her due process rights when it failed to follow its own policies for dismissal, which required the university to provide notice of the charges, an opportunity to respond, and a hearing. She also alleges her rights were violated when the university ignored findings of the university’s Academic Freedom Council, which determined she “was fired for the content of her class,” and findings of its faculty appeals hearing body, which held the university had not demonstrated her dismal was for good cause.

    Topics:

    Academic Freedom & Employee Speech | Constitutional Issues | Due Process | Faculty & Staff | First Amendment & Free Speech

  • Date:

    American Federation of Teachers, et al., v. U.S. Department of Education, et al. (4th Cir. Jan. 21, 2026)

    The Department of Education dropped its appeal of an August 2025 federal court ruling that blocked the Department’s February 14, 2025 Dear Colleague Letter and a related requirement that school districts certify they do not engage in “illegal DEI” practices. With this withdrawal, the district court’s decision will stand.

    Topics:

    Admissions | Constitutional Issues | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Diversity in Employment | Due Process | Financial Aid, Scholarships, & Student Loans | First Amendment & Free Speech | Race and National Origin Discrimination | Students

  • Date:

    Christensen v. Carter (S.D. Oh. Jan. 14, 2026)

    Opinion and Order Granting Plaintiff’s Motion for Preliminary Injunction. Plaintiff, a student at Ohio State University, sued the president of the university and several senior administrators alleging violation of his First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, after the university disenrolled him based on controversial social media videos he posted on his personal TikTok account. The court held that plaintiff demonstrated a strong likelihood of success on his First Amendment retaliation claim, reasoning that while plaintiff’s speech was controversial, it did not “explicitly encourage violence or lawlessness and [was] unlikely to be an implicit endorsement of such action.” Further, the court determined that the facts “[did] not support the conclusion that [d]efendants’ forecast of substantial disruption was reasonable” given the lack of evidence that plaintiff’s speech disrupted any classwork and the fact that the semester was over and plaintiff was not on campus, let alone in the state of Ohio. The court also held that plaintiff was likely to succeed on the merits of his Fourteenth Amendment claim because he did not receive notice and the university failed to show that emergency circumstances justified its failure to hold a hearing prior to disenrolling him. Finally, the court determined that the disenrollment notation on plaintiff’s transcript constituted ongoing irreparable harm and ordered the university to expunge the notation.

    Topics:

    Constitutional Issues | Due Process | First Amendment & Free Speech | Social Media | Student Speech & Campus Unrest

  • Date:

    Pichiorri v. Burghes (6th Cir. Dec. 19, 2025)

    Opinion Affirming Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss. Plaintiff, a former research scientist at The Ohio State University sued the Board of Trustees and several university officials alleging violations of due process and equal protection under § 1983 and various state law claims, when, after the plaintiff left the university, a university committee began and completed an investigation finding she had committed research misconduct, and reported their findings to several medical journals and the plaintiff’s employer roughly two years after the conclusion of the investigation. The district court dismissed plaintiff’s complaint, holding that sovereign immunity barred her claims against the Board and university officials in their official capacities, certain claims were time-barred, and all federal claims failed on the merits. The Sixth Circuit affirmed, reasoning that plaintiff’s procedural due process claim failed because she failed to plausibly allege a protected liberty interest, and her alleged harms to future employment opportunities fell short under the stigma-plus test. The court further held that the university’s delay in notifying the plaintiff’s employer and medical journals of its research-misconduct findings did not rise to the level of conscious-shocking conduct required for a due process claim, even if the disclosures were defamatory in nature.

    Topics:

    Constitutional Issues | Due Process | Research | Research Misconduct

  • Date:

    Doe v. Bd. of Regents of Univ. Sys. of Md. (D. Md. Oct. 10, 2025)

    Memorandum Opinion Denying Request for Temporary Restraining Order. Plaintiff, a former student at the University of Maryland, sued the university for Title IX and due process violations after the university denied his request for changes to a campus Title IX disciplinary proceeding in which he was the respondent. Finding that plaintiff’s invocation of a deliberate indifference theory to challenge the conduct of a campus disciplinary proceeding “misplaced,” the court held that plaintiff was not likely to succeed on his Title IX claim since he had not alleged any fact suggesting he was sexually discriminated against or harassed, or that the university was deliberately indifferent in its response. On plaintiff’s due process claim, the court held that since none of the exceptions to the university’s sovereign immunity were applicable here, sovereign immunity precluded any chance of him succeeding on the merits. The court denied plaintiff’s request for a TRO, noting that in addition to failing to show a likelihood of success on either claim, plaintiff had also failed to demonstrate irreparable harm.   

    Topics:

    Constitutional Issues | Due Process | Students | Title IX & Student Sexual Misconduct

  • Date:

    Dudley v. Boise State University (9th Cir. Aug. 27th, 2025)

    Opinion Reversing in Part and Affirming in Part. Plaintiff, a graduate of Boise State University, brought due process claims against the university after her degree was revoked for misconduct during a required internship. The District Court found in favor of the university, determining that plaintiff was afforded sufficient notice and opportunity to be heard and that she failed to allege a property interest in her university education. On appeal, the Circuit Court affirmed the district court’s dismissal of plaintiff’s substantive due process claim, reasoning that the university’s decision to revoke the degree was “not substantively arbitrary [or] lacking a rational basis.” However, the court reversed its dismissal of her procedural due process claim, calling the revocation “procedurally infirm.” The court held that because plaintiff had an ascertainable monetary value in her degree and further had “a legitimate claim of entitlement” to her degree under Idaho law, the university improperly denied her procedural due process rights when it revoked her degree without any notice or hearing.  

    Topics:

    Academic Performance and Misconduct | Constitutional Issues | Due Process | Internships, Externships, & Clinical Work | Students

  • Date:

    Jackson Fed’n of Teachers v. Eitch (S.D. Miss. Aug. 18, 2025)

    Order Granting Plaintiffs’ Motion for Preliminary Injunction. Plaintiffs, several individuals and organizations impacted by Mississippi House Bill 1193 (HB 1193), challenged the constitutionality of the law. The state law prohibits public schools and universities from teaching, promoting, or requiring participation in diversity, equity, and inclusion programs. HB 1193 bans educational engagement with “divisive concepts,” though it does not clearly define what concepts are prohibited. Defendants maintained that the law is not a violation of the First Amendment because it “seeks to regulate only government speech, and the speech of public employees (such as educators) in their official capacity.” The court previously granted a temporary restraining order (TRO) on the implementation of the law on July 22, 2025. The court granted a preliminary injunction, finding that plaintiffs sufficiently demonstrated the potential for irreparable harm. The court noted the “dearth of evidence” from defendants on the issue of irreparable harm and agreed with plaintiffs that HB 1193 is “unconstitutionally vague, fails to treat speech in a viewpoint-neutral manner, and carries [] serious risks of terrible consequences with respect to the chilling of expression and academic freedom.” 

    Topics:

    Constitutional Issues | Discrimination, Accommodation, & Diversity | Due Process | Enforcement of Non-Discrimination Laws | First Amendment & Free Speech