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Student Unjustly Suspended by University of Tulsa Announces Lawsuit
Nearly a year ago, Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOS brought attention to the University of Tulsaās (TUās) unjust suspension of student George āTreyā Barnett. Now, Barnett, who was only two months away from graduation when he was suspended, is suing TU for violating its policies.
In 2014, Barnettās then-fiancĆ©āwho was not a TU studentācriticized two TU professors and a student in Facebook posts tagging Barnett or written directly to Barnettās page. Susan Barrett, one of the professors mentioned in the posts, filed a complaint against Barnett, claiming he should be held responsible for his fiancĆ©ās posts.
In September 2014, TU Senior Vice Provost Winona Tanaka notified Barnett of the complaint and imposed eight harsh interim measures against him, including removal from three classes and a theater production he was involved in, as well as a ban on communicating with certain faculty members. Less than a month later, Tanaka found Barnett guilty of harassment without providing him the hearing he was entitled to under TUās policies. She also found him guilty of retaliation for discussing the complaint with his fiancĆ©, who had provided Tanaka with a sworn affidavit stating that he, not Barnett, wrote the posts. Barnett was informed that, as punishment, he would be suspended until at least January 2016, and that he was forbidden from receiving a degree in his major from TU.
Compounding its errors, TUās administration then The Collegian, which was reporting on Barnettās suspension, that if āanything that the university deems to be confidentialā was āpublished or shared, (that) could violate university policies.ā
TU refused to acknowledge that its failure to provide Barnett with a hearing violated university policy and ignored Āé¶¹“«Ć½IOSās and othersā demand that the university immediately reinstate Barnett. In fact, TU was so determined to bury the matter, rather than admit that it failed to live up its promises to respect studentsā free speech and due process rights, that it hid criticism of Barnettās treatment from its Facebook page.
Fortunately, Barnett is still fighting back. His lawsuit, filed January 13, alleges that TUās refusal to speak to Barnettās fiancĆ© or his exculpatory witness, and to provide Barnett with procedural safeguards, was negligent and constitutes a breach of contract as it denied him āany meaningful due processā in violation of TUās promises to its students. The lawsuit also alleges that TUās persecution of Barnett violated the universityās promises of free speech and āintentionally and recklesslyā subjected him to āsubstantial mental anguish.ā Barnett is seeking more than $75,000 in damages.
TU on the lawsuit. Hopefully, however, this serves as an important lesson to TUās administration that studentsā rights, like this lawsuit, cannot just be ignored.
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