New York Post

UCLA ‘RACE’ SUIT

Prof-grading furor

- By REBECCA ROSENBERG

A UCLA professor is suing the school for putting him on involuntar­y leave and allegedly threatenin­g to fire him because he refused to grade black students more leniently than whites in the wake of George Floyd’s murder.

“Recently, I was suspended from my job for refusing to treat my black students as lesser than their non-black peers,” wrote Gordon Klein in an op-ed on Bari Weiss’ “Common Sense” newsletter on Substack.

The dean of UCLA’s business school launched an investigat­ion into Klein’s actions, put him on leave and tried to terminate him, wrote the professor, who has taught at the university’s Anderson School of Management for 40 years.

Although Klein was reinstated after three weeks, the highly publicized controvers­y devastated his consultanc­y practice and led him to lose out on lucrative expert witness contracts, which had comprised the bulk of his income, according to the suit.”

The controvers­y began June 2, 2020 — eight days after Floyd was murdered at the hands of then-Minneapoli­s Police Officer Derek Chauvin.

An unidentifi­ed white student e-mailed Klein and asked for a “no harm” final for black students — meaning poor grades wouldn’t be counted — because of the racially charged “unjust murders of Ahmaud Arbery, Breonna Taylor and George Floyd,” Klein said. The e-mail added, “[It’s] not a joint effort to get finals canceled for nonblack students, but rather an ask that you exercise compassion and leniency with black students in our major.”

In the op-ed, Klein wrote that he was “shocked” by the proposal, which he found “deeply patronizin­g and offensive” to black students.

Klein shot back with a sarcastic reply, which critics slammed as racist.

“Are there any students that may be of mixed parentages, such as half-black halfAsian?” the professor wrote in his reply. “What do you suggest I do with respect to them? A full concession or just half ?”

Klein is alleging breach of contract and other claims and is suing the school for unspecifie­d damages “not only to redress the wrongful conduct he has endured but also to protect academic freedom.” UCLA didn’t immediatel­y return a request for comment.

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