The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Morehouse seeks dismissal of lawsuit

3 students allege college ignored sex harassment claims.

- By Eric Stirgus eric.stirgus@ajc.com

Morehouse College wants a sexual harassment lawsuit recently filed by a former student and two others dismissed, saying the lead plaintiff didn’t cooperate with the school’s efforts to investigat­e his claims.

Attorneys representi­ng the all-male, historical­ly Black college wrote in court documents filed Friday in U.S. District Court in Atlanta that Michael Key’s, “sensationa­lization of his allegation­s — characteri­zing pinching of cheeks as sexual assault or sexual abuse, for instance — minimizes the experience­s of other victims who have actually undergone such assault or abuse.”

Key and two other, unnamed plaintiffs filed a lawsuit against Morehouse in late June claiming the college did little to investigat­e their complaints that two officials at the college sexually harassed them.

The college countered in court documents that Key did not respond to nine emails and failed to attend many meetings when the college tried to investigat­e his complaints.

Tiffany M. Simmons, an attorney representi­ng Key, said her client unsuccessf­ully tried for about a year to get help from Morehouse administra­tors, and denied he was unhelpful.

“This is absolutely ludicrous,” Simmons said in a telephone interview Tuesday about the college’s claims. “That is an absolute lie.”

Her clients said the harassment began in 2018, shortly after they began their studies at Morehouse. They say the officials used crude language, sometimes in the presence of other students, to urge the students to “come out” as gay.

In one instance, an official kissed the student’s stomach and tried to remove his pants and underwear, according to the lawsuit complaint.

The students say their complaints went largely ignored until Key posted several videos on Twitter that received more than 90,000 views in about 24 hours. Key and his attorneys held a news conference a week later detailing some of his complaints.

The lawsuit seeks unspecifie­d damages.

Key is no longer a Morehouse student, the college said in court records.

Morehouse said one official was fired and another official eventually “separated from the college” after internal investigat­ions “despite Plaintiff Key’s repeated refusal to provide any informatio­n.”

“We outlined the immediate steps we took within the first 24 hours of being notified of the social media allegation and have carried forward with that investigat­ion for more than a year,” Jose Mallabo, Morehouse’s vice president of marketing communicat­ions, said in a statement to the AJC. “(Friday’s) filing reflects some of the findings of that investigat­ion and our position on the many false, sensationa­lized, or ambiguous claims within the lawsuit filed related to this case earlier this summer.”

‘We outlined the immediate steps we took within the first 24 hours of being notified of the social media allegation and have carried forward with that investigat­ion for more than a year.’

Jose Mallabo

Morehouse vice president

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM/FILE ?? Morehouse, an all-male, historical­ly Black college, is fighting a lawsuit stemming from students’ complaints of sexual harassment.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM/FILE Morehouse, an all-male, historical­ly Black college, is fighting a lawsuit stemming from students’ complaints of sexual harassment.

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