Starkville Daily News

Professor sues Mississipp­i auditor in ‘scholar strike’ spat

- By EMILY WAGSTER PETTUS

JACKSON — A tenured professor at the University of Mississipp­i filed a lawsuit Wednesday saying that state auditor defamed him by saying the professor should be fired for participat­ing in a two-day “scholar strike.”

Sociology professor James Thomas said the Sept. 8-9 event was part of a national effort to draw attention to racism and injustice. Auditor Shad White has accused Thomas of violating state law by taking part in a work stoppage.

White, who is a Republican, has said Thomas did not teach or respond to email from students during those days, causing tuition-paying students and taxpayers to suffer a loss. On Dec. 1, White demanded $1,912 from the professor. More than half of White’s demand is for the professor to pay the auditor’s investigat­ive costs and interest.

Attorneys from the Mississipp­i Center for Justice, representi­ng Thomas, filed the lawsuit in state circuit court. They wrote that Thomas provided lesson plans in advance and that the professor answered students’ email before and after the two days.

“Dr. Thomas earned his salary the week of September 7, 2020, as he did every week during the academic year,” his lawsuit said.

The lawsuit specifies that the professor is not seeking any public money if a jury finds in his favor. It requests that White pay any judgment out of his own pocket.

“By claiming that Dr. Thomas violated a law that carries a punishment of terminatio­n, Mr. White indicated that Dr. Thomas was unfit to remain in his job,” the lawsuit said. “Mr. White’s statements constitute defamation for which he is liable under the law.”

White issued a brief statement after the suit was filed. “The lawsuit is not worth the paper it’s written on,” he said.

Professors and others halted their classes and other duties during the protest to call attention to such issues as mass incarcerat­ion. Organizers said the event was inspired by pro football player Colin Kaepernick and players from

the NBA and WNBA who have brought attention to police shootings and “racialized violence.”

In a Sept. 14 letter to University of Mississipp­i Chancellor Glenn Boyce, White said the university should recover money it paid Thomas for those days of work and should go to court to try to remove him from his job. Thomas was granted tenure in 2019, which gives him additional job security.

Mississipp­i law bans public employees from striking. Thomas’s lawsuit repeats what one of his attorneys has said since September: Thomas was not trying to change his own work conditions or increase his own pay — two elements required to define participat­ion in a strike.

White was appointed state auditor in July 2018 by then-gov. Phil Bryant, a fellow Republican. After

Brett Kavanaugh was confirmed to the U.S. Supreme Court in October 2018, Thomas came under broad criticism from conservati­ves after the professor said on Twitter that people should disrupt U.S. senators’ meals. “They don’t deserve your civility,” Thomas wrote.

At the time, Bryant criticized Thomas. “There is no place in a civilized society, and particular­ly on a college campus, for urging individual­s to harass anyone,” Bryant wrote on Twitter.

Police investigat­e triple homicide in central Mississipp­i

CANTON (AP) — A man and a pregnant woman were shot to death and the woman’s 1-yearold daughter was wounded during a robbery early Tuesday in a home in central Mississipp­i, a police chief said.

Canton Chief Otha Brown told news outlets that the people killed were brother and sister. The woman was about eight months’ pregnant, and the baby inside her also died. He said the case is being investigat­ed as a triple homicide.

The surviving child, who was shot in the face, was taken to the University of Mississipp­i Medical Center in critical condition.

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