Los Angeles Times

Chapman prof will keep his job

Chapman faced calls to boot John Eastman, who was at Giuliani’s side before D. C. riot.

- By Nina Agrawal

Constituti­onal law scholar John Eastman spoke alongside Rudy Giuliani at the Jan. 6 pro- Trump rally in D. C. and made election fraud claims.

Chapman University’s president says he cannot and will not f ire a professor and former law school dean amid growing campus calls for action against the faculty member’s participat­ion in a pro- Trump rally during which he made claims about election fraud on the day a violent mob stormed the Capitol.

“I am not the Emperor of Chapman University, nor am I the Supreme Leader of Chapman University. I am the President of the university, and as such, I am bound by laws and processes that are clearly spelled out in our Faculty Manual,” Daniele Struppa said in a statement.

John Eastman, an endowed professor and constituti­onal law scholar at Chapman, spoke alongside Trump’s personal attorney Rudy Giuliani at the “Save America” rally Jan. 6, citing “secret folders” in ballot machines that were used to skew vote totals.

“They were unloading the ballots from that secret folder, matching them, matching them to the unvoted voter, and voilà, we have enough votes to barely get over the f inish line,” Eastman said at the Jan. 6 rally. “We saw it happen in real time last night and it happened on Nov. 3rd as well.” Two Democrats won U. S. Senate seats in runoff elections Jan. 5.

A Jan. 8 letter signed by more than 160 Chapman faculty members called for the faculty senate, provost, president and law school dean to take action against Eastman, including stripping him of his endowed professors­hip and removing him from teaching students.

“Free speech is sacred, and tenured academics like Eastman have the privilege of speaking their mind without fear of repercussi­on. But Eastman abused that freedom,” they wrote, saying that his conspirato­rial claims about a stolen election formed the basis of the insurrecti­on.

In his first statement, issued Friday, Struppa said Eastman “played a role in the tragic events in Washington, D. C ., that jeopardize­d our democracy .”

“Eastman’s actions are in direct opposition to the values and beliefs of our institutio­n,” Struppa said in the statement. “He has now put Chapman in the position of being publicly disparaged for the actions of a single faculty member.”

But Struppa said he would follow the guidelines laid out in the faculty manual — which in his second statement Saturday said allowed for the terminatio­n of faculty members if they are found guilty of a felony or disbarred. “The university has no right to substitute itself for these formal bodies,” he said.

Lisa Leitz, department chair of peace studies at Chapman and a lead author of the faculty letter, said Eastman’s “outright lies related to electoral fraud” amounted to a violation of academic integrity and profession­al misconduct, which can be grounds for disciplina­ry action, according to the faculty manual.

“Academic freedom is sacrosanct in our business ... but inciting a riot that attempts to overthrow a government — it’s a little different than just speaking your mind in politics,” Leitz said.

In an emailed response, Eastman said his claims are backed up by evidence, and that the breach at the Capitol was instigated by the leftist, anti- fascist group known as antifa.

“Without bothering to check with me about the evidence I have to support every statement I made, they simply made scurrilous, defamatory, and unfounded claims that my statements had no basis in law or fact,” Eastman wrote.

There has been no evidence of widespread voter fraud in the presidenti­al election, nor that leftist extremist groups led the violence at the Capitol last week.

A university spokespers­on did not respond to questions about whether any investigat­ory or disciplina­ry process had begun in Eastman’s case, but if one had, such personnel matters are usually confidenti­al.

Eastman is on leave from Chapman this year and serving as a visiting professor at the University of Colorado Boulder. Boulder Chancellor Phil DiStefano called Eastman’s advocacy of conspiracy theories “repugnant” but said he would not fire him, citing First Amendment protection­s, according to local newspaper the Daily Camera.

Eastman, who has testified before Congress about presidenti­al impeachmen­t and written extensivel­y about freedom of religion, citizenshi­p and immigratio­n, served as dean of Chapman’s law school from 2007 to 2010. He stepped down to pursue a bid for California attorney general the year that Kamala Harris was elected to the position.

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