Wednesday, March 1, 2017
REUTERS: Fired prof and Sandy Hook doubter can proceed with conspiracy claims v. college
At least one conspiracy theory espoused by former
Florida Atlantic University professor James Tracy has been deemed to
have enough credibility to move forward in federal court, according to a
ruling last
week by U.S. District Judge Robin Rosenberg of West Palm Beach. Judge
Rosenberg said Tracy – who is best known for asserting the U.S.
government staged the 2012 massacre of 26 first-graders and educators at
Sandy Hook Elementary School in order to promote gun control laws – can
move forward with his claims that Florida Atlantic conspired with union
officials to violate his constitutional rights.
Tracy was fired from the university in 2016, ostensibly
for failing to submit required paperwork disclosing outside activities,
which, in his case, included writing a blog called Memory Hole. The ex-prof subsequently claimed in
a complaint against the university, its board of trustees, several
college officials, the Florida Education Association, his union local
and top union officials that the college’s true motive was to end any
association between Florida Atlantic and Tracy’s much-reviled writings
on Sandy Hook. He claimed, among other things, that the school and the
union that was supposed to represent his interests cooperated in a plan
to keep Tracy from trying to get his job back, in violation of the
professor’s First and Fourteenth Amendment rights.
Tracy insisted that he wrote the blog on his own time
and that it reflected his personal views. He also said the blog fell
outside of Florida Atlantic’s disclosure requirements for outside
activities. In September 2013 – with the aid of union officials – Tracy
reached a settlement with the school in which he agreed to remove
Florida Atlantic’s name from the blog, including from a disclaimer in
which he said he was only expressing personal views.
Florida Atlantic tweaked its disclosure policy for
outside involvement in the fall of 2015. Tracy refused to affirm his
compliance with the policy, occasioning a series of meetings and email
among college officials. Tracy sought advice from the union, which
supposedly told him to comply with the regulation and file a grievance.
But before Tracy
signed the affirmance, he received a disciplinary notice for failing to
do so. According to Tracy’s complaint, he asked his union to file a
grievance but was informed the union would not do so.
__________________________________________
PROOF: Noah Pozner did not die at Sandy Hook
PROOF: Noah Pozner did not die at Sandy Hook
Larry Rivera has done brilliant research proving that the figure known as "Doorman" standing in the doorway of the Texas School Book Depository was in fact Lee Oswald,
as Harold Weisberg, Jim Garrison and other serious students of JFK have
believed. So I was sure he could help to resolve this issue by
superposition:
Larry
found that these were the photos that best facilitated the
superposition, where the eyes, the eyebrows and the mouth align almost
perfectly. The key is fixing the inter-pupillary distance (between the
pupils of their eyes) the same. I knew he could help to resolve this
issue by superposition. Here is a series that demonstrates that, in spite of their age difference, considering normal growth, Noah and Michael are one and the same:
This
has to be one of the most powerful proofs yet that Sandy Hook was a
hoax. Lenny had already been outed by having sent Kelley Watt a "death
certificate" for Noah Pozner that turned out to be a fabrication. If
Noah had died at Sandy Hook, Lenny would not have had to fake it. This
is another example of the power of collaborative research using the
internet as an instrument of investigation, which resulted in Nobody Died at Sandy Hook (2015).
__________________________________________
__________________________________________
In their motion to dismiss Tracy’s conspiracy
allegations, union and university officials said the single meeting at
the heart of the ex-prof’s allegations was not sufficient evidence of a
plot to get rid of him. “Without providing any additional context with
regard to this meeting, the Plaintiff suggests that it is reasonable to
infer that … the union defendants and the university defendants would
join forces to ensure that the plaintiff’s employment would be
terminated and that the Union defendants would aid and abet the
termination, all in an effort to punish the plaintiff for the views he
expressed in his blog,” the brief said. “While it is conceivable that
such a conspiracy was hatched at this meeting, given the assistance
previously provided to the plaintiff by the union defendants to protect
the plaintiff’s right to express his personal views via his blog, the
Plaintiff’s recitation of facts … does not present a plausible
assertion.”
Moreover, the defendants said, the meeting between
union and college officials took place after Tracy received a notice of
discipline, so the union was only implicated in the supposed violation
of Tracy’s due process right to file a grievance against the university –
a recourse that Tracy himself chose not to pursue. And unless Tracy
could show the union’s participation in the conspiracy, the defendants
said, there could be no conspiracy because the university defendants all
acted on behalf of a single entity.
Judge Rosenberg signaled where she’d end up in the
introduction of her opinion, which said, “This is a case about the First
Amendment right to free speech.” That’s a good sign for Tracy as he
moves forward, since, after all, that’s how he wants the judge to view
the case. The university wants the judge to think of the litigation as a
run-of-the-mill employment dispute pumped up with constitutional
claims. Based on Judge Rosenberg’s dismissal opinion, the school still
has some work to do.
I
left messages for Tracy counsel Joel Medgebow and university counsel
Joseph Curley of Gunster Yoakley & Stewart but didn’t hear back.
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