An appeals court said a Baton Rouge judge wrongly ordered LSU to reinstate Ken Levy, who was supsended after criticizing Gov.
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — A Louisiana appeals court on Tuesday upheld the suspension of an LSU law professor who criticized Gov.
The university is also barred from interfering with Levy's job as a tenured professor at the LSU Paul M. Hebert Law Center on ...
Tenured LSU law professor Ken Levy sued the university, claiming he was punished for making political comments in class. A ...
A legal battle over the teaching suspension of a tenured law professor continues to intensify as LSU fires back in legal ...
A Louisiana appeals court ruled LSU doesn’t have to reinstate law professor Ken Levy—at least not yet. His legal challenge is ...
A state judge has ordered LSU to allow its law professor Ken Levy to return to teaching duties. The university had removed ...
The Louisiana First Circuit Court of Appeal sided with LSU Tuesday, agreeing that the university does not have to immediately return embattled LSU law professor Ken Levy to the classroom at this time.
A day before Winston DeCuir Jr. submitted his resignation letter, he'd offered encouraging words to a group of students ...
Private attorneys hired by Louisiana State University Friday morning asked a district court to either stay or dissolve a ...
LSU must immediately allow law professor Ken Levy to return to teaching, an East Baton Rouge Parish district judge ruled Thursday morning. Under a temporary restraining order issued by Judge ...
From Louisiana Illuminator (Piper Hutchinson), reporting on this short restraining order: A state judge has [temporarily] ordered LSU to allow its law professor Ken Levy to return to teaching duties.