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Louisiana officials react after judge lets suspended LSU professor return to class

Louisiana officials react after judge lets suspended LSU professor return to class

Yahoo13-02-2025

BATON ROUGE, La. (Louisiana First) – Reactions continue to pour in after a judge allowed LSU Law Professor Ken Levy to return to the classroom. This after he was suspended by LSU for negative comments he made about Governor Jeff Landry and President Donald Trump.
Ken Levy is breathing a sigh of relief at a Judge's ruling to allow him to continue working.
His attorney Jill Craft said LSU President William Tate yanked Levy out of the classroom without following official university guidelines after a student complained and took a video of Levy making negative remarks about Trump and Landry in class.
'They were incompetent, they were callous, they knowingly violated my rights,' said Levy. 'I teach Tuesdays and Thursdays, so Thursday, I plan to return.'
Louisiana lawmakers question LSU president on recruitment, DEI and Title IX
Landry shared his reaction on social media after the judge's decision.
'Ruling is absurd! It not only ignores the law and the facts, it disrespects the broad base of Louisiana citizens who are demanding a level of professionalism in our universities. The judge ignored the facts, the law, and the Constitution—but that is what we have come to expect out of the 19th JDC. I am confident that the 1st circuit or the SC will correct this! I am curious as to whether this Judge would allow this professor to act like that in his court room!'
Governor Jeff Landry via X
Attorney General Liz Murrill released a statement after the ruling.
'For the second time, a judge has flatly defied the law and rulings of higher courts. This is why we have appeal courts. These rulings undermine the management structure of all our higher public education institutions. If the appeal courts don't sort it out, the Legislature should.'
Attorney General Liz Murrill
Craft said she believes this type of zealous debate is what Levy aimed for while teaching, believing it to be real-world training for students.'I think it's really big,' said Craft. 'The message it sends is academic freedoms and rights of due process are alive and well in the United States.'LSU will reportedly continue investigating the matter.
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Louisiana officials react after judge lets suspended LSU professor return to class
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