Dissident Law Professor Amy Wax Sues UPenn—Again
Professor Wax has launched a second lawsuit against Penn, this time in state court, alleging the school violated her academic freedom when it punished her for expressing her conservative views
UPenn Law Professor Amy Wax is back in court. Last week, she filed a second lawsuit against the University, this time before a Pennsylvania state judge.
This new complaint strikes at her core conflict with the school, alleging Penn breached the academic freedom provisions of her employment contract when it punished her last year for expressing her conservative views.
When we last checked in on the outspoken law professor, a federal court had dismissed her earlier discrimination lawsuit against Penn, where she argued the school applied a double standard, tolerating antisemitic speech while punishing her protected speech. Wax’s lawyers are appealing the decision, with briefs due next month.
If you’ve been following our ongoing coverage of Wax’s saga, you knew she wouldn’t back down:
- Case Dismissed: Prof. Amy Wax Loses Discrimination Lawsuit Against Penn
- Embattled UPenn Law Prof. Amy Wax Loses Bid To Pause Sanctions Ahead of Trial
- UPenn Asks Court to Dismiss Professor Amy Wax’s Racial Discrimination Lawsuit
- Prof. Amy Wax Sues UPenn Over Race-Based Discriminatory Speech Policy
- Embattled Law Prof. Amy Wax to UPenn: Lift Sanctions or I’ll See You in Court
- Report: UPenn To Sanction Dissident Law Professor Amy Wax
- Report: Embattled UPenn Law Prof. Amy Wax Appealing Hearing Board Sanctions Quietly Recommended Over The Summer
- House Committee Demands U Penn Antisemitism Records, Decries Hypocritical Mistreatment Of Prof. Amy Wax
- Embattled UPenn Law Prof Amy Wax Sets the Record Straight: “mainstream media coverage has been agenda-driven”
- It “Sucks” That Prof. Amy Wax Still Employed, U Penn Law Dean Declared On Recently Released 2019 Audio
- Tables Turned: Prof. Amy Wax, Charged With Wrongthink, Files Counter-Grievance Against U Penn Law Dean
- U Penn Law Prof. Amy Wax Seeks Dismissal Of University Disciplinary Proceedings: “Premature, Unwarranted, and Prejudicial”
- How A Weak Penn Law Dean Weaponized Student Hurt Feelings Against Dissident Prof. Amy Wax
Wax’s travails with Penn, to recap briefly, began in 2017, after she triggered the woke campus mob by unapologetically expressing traditional American values in an op-ed. As soon as the attacks against her started, she doubled down, persistently and publicly commenting on hot-button topics such as the negative consequences of affirmative action—observing that Black students “rarely” finish “in the top half” of their law school classes—and immigration restrictions.
Rather than engage her in discussion and debate, students and faculty demanded from an all-too-willing Dean Ruger that the award-winning, tenured law professor be fired for being a “racist.” Wax’s remarks escalated student protests and a petition for her removal.
Wax’s later comments that America would be better off “with fewer Asians and less Asian immigration”—because Asian immigrants support the Democrat party responsible for ruining the country—prompted swift condemnation from the dean, and finally gave him the pretext to begin proceedings to terminate her.
Those proceedings began in 2022 and dragged on relentlessly—even as Wax battled cancer—culminating in the school’s decision last September to sanction her “for a major infraction of the university’s behavioral standards.”
The school said Wax’s “discriminatory and disrespectful statements to specific targeted racial, national, ethnic, sexual orientation, and gender groups with which our students and colleagues identify” created “an unequal learning environment.”
Earlier this year, Wax sued Penn in the Eastern District federal Court of Pennsylvania after it refused to lift the sanctions, which included suspension for one year at half pay, loss of her named chair, and public reprimand—though she was not fired and did not lose tenure. That lawsuit was dismissed, though an appeal is pending.
In the new state court filing, Wax’s lawyers allege Penn punished her for her extramural (i.e., off-campus) comments—comments on podcasts and in op-eds that should have been protected by the academic freedom enshrined in the Faculty Handbook.
According to the complaint, Dean Ruger’s attorneys told the school’s disciplinary Hearing Board that Wax should be sanctioned “to make a very clear statement” that her “racist” and “xenophobic ideology is not who we are. It’s not who we want to be, and we will not tolerate it.”
However, the Faculty Handbook states that “[w]hen speaking or writing as an individual, the teacher should be free from institutional censorship or discipline.”
Tenured professors can only be suspended for a “major infraction” of university behavior standards. It is a punishment specifically limited to “actions”—not speech that is merely offensive, the lawsuit adds.
Penn also violated Wax’s contractual rights, the suit alleges, by denying her basic fairness and due process during the disciplinary proceedings.
According to the court filing, the sanctions imposed on Wax were based not on actual student testimony or evidence, but rather on allegations by Dean Ruger.
Wax disputed the allegations as based on “unsupported accusations from students who did not testify, did not submit to cross-examination and, in some cases, did not even submit an affidavit,” depriving her of the opportunity to confront and question her accusers directly.
Wax’s state court case also alleges that Penn selectively enforces academic freedom by allowing antisemitic speech while punishing her protected speech. That double standard shows its failure to apply contractual protections to Wax.
Wax’s lawyers have asked the court to block the sanctions and award her damages.
In the end, “Penn wanted Professor Wax punished for her public statements,” the lawsuit says, pointing to the dean’s lawyer’s closing argument “that there’s certain expression . . . that is so discredited, so far outside of the mainstream, so outside of acceptable discourse . . . that it should not be protected, should not be tolerated, and it should be the subject of major sanctions.”
In other words, Wax should be punished for challenging the woke campus orthodoxy.
And that, as her lawyer said from the beginning, is what makes Wax’s case “sui generis”: The University was trying to fire a tenured professor for her speech.
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Comments
She’s playing a little too much victim for my taste. A better argument is that the university is the unique place where you can say (profess) anything that you think is true. There’s counter speech as a corrective force, and thesis antithesis and synthesis as the positive result.
If you can’t do that, it’s not a university at all.
Your taste doesn’t enter into what satisfaction is possible under the jackass legal system.
Lesh Philling…
Bass great… ::)
(If i have to explain, you wouldn’t understand) 🙂
It’s not so much that it violates her rights but that it violates everybody’s rights.
And Amy waxed great, and went forward, and grew until she became very great in the eyes of the far left.
Never give up, never give in.
It also shuts down the opinions of STUDENTS who are conservative.
Marxism is exempt from “Academic Freedom”
The judge(s) who allowed a baphomet in the public square under the guise of religion must be removed by any and all means
While good and evil cannot in every case be delineated by rational men of good faith, there is a bright line for these two examples.
The republic falls absent meaningful victories in this regard
back in the late ’50s and early ’60s the University of Pennsylvania was univerally known as “Pee Yu”; it appears this is still true
My play on initials is the European Union. Euwww!
Our American university system has become a Fifth Column dedicated to undermining and destroying the traditional USA. Now they have adopted overtly antisemitic policies. I have firsthand knowledge of what goes on at Columbia, NYU, Dartmouth, Stanford and UC Berkeley. Columbia and Berkeley are the worst of this bunch. Conformist, intolerant, and mendacious. They deserve the fate of Carthage. Amy Wax won’t get any kind of justice from the modern American corrupt legal system. I don’t think the university system can be reformed. That will take a civil war which is where is we are headed. Watch what’s happening in Europe, especially the UK and Germany to see our fate unless we act aggressively. American Jews in particular face a dismal future here and in Europe.
Just nuke Penn and be done with it. It doesn’t even have to be from space. It’s irredeemable.
It’s time to bring the case that the Marxism that dominates Penn, Columbia, Berkeley etc is a religion. And being an intolerant religion at that means it fails the hypocrisy and legal test for banning Christianity and Judaism etc from its core teachings and beliefs.
Allow open Christianity and Judaism promotion on campus and in the classrooms, or lose all federal funding.
Because what Penn does by its policies and in its curriculum theocracy is organized or school-sponsored prayer (purportedly not “allowed” in U.S. public schools after the 1962 Supreme Court ruling in Engel v. Vitale, which found it unconstitutional), something has to give. Before this decision, practices like school-sponsored prayer and Bible reading were common in some states but not universally, and the issue was already controversial and not permitted in all schools. The ruling established that state-led prayer in public schools violates the Establishment Clause of the First Amendment. So either Penn etc stop practicing their Marxist theocracy or they allow all religious practices in their curriculum and actions.
If Amy Wax were to leave comments on this website, she would be inundated with little thumbs down. She is a race realist whom the hypocrites here are giving a pass because they like the ant-liberal, elite college vibe.
Wake up to her message.
Go, Amy! Amy and I were classmates at Yale, and she is a very strong person. I look forward to the day Penn is punished for the way it has treated her, and I believe that day is approaching.
Amy needs a win soon, or she risks going the way of the kraken lady.