Colleges around the country are dealing with the effects of ongoing anti-Israel protests that have disrupted campus life and have prompted lawsuits from students who argue administrators failed in their responsibilities to keep campuses safe.
Several such lawsuits have been filed against schools in recent weeks, including proposed class action lawsuits against Columbia University and the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), and an individual suit brought by a Rutgers University student against the school. The Columbia suit is a proposed class action in federal court, while the Rutgers and UCLA cases were filed in state court.
Paul Mauro, a legal expert who held leadership roles in NYPD’s legal and intelligence bureaus and is a contributor to Fox News and Fox Business, said in an interview that the lawsuits campuses are facing generally fall into two categories: those alleging civil rights violations and those accusing the schools of failing to uphold contractual obligations.
“Students that have been harassed or even assaulted, or in any way had their rights infringed upon on the basis of religion, race, protected class,” are likely to bring civil rights suits against the schools, Mauro explained. “That’s going to be the class primarily of Jewish students, who we’ve seen in videos walking across campus and being confronted because they’re wearing a yarmulke or something like that. And so those are almost certainly going to be federal cases that ground in civil rights.”
“There is another class of cases which will be contractual, and those are going to be students who are not suing on the basis of civil rights, but are suing on the basis that we’ve paid for a certain level of education and a certain educational experience, and we were denied it because the university did not take the action that it could have and should have,” Mauro said.
Students considering filing a civil rights lawsuit against the university or joining a pending class action suit should take care to document the incidents they plan to cite in their claim in as much detail as possible.
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Author: Faith N
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