UVa Response to Medical Student First Amendment Lawsuit

Norman K. Moon Senior Judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of Virginia

by James C. Sherlock

Jim Bacon reported April 8 on the claims of Kieran Ravi Bhattacharya, a former student at the University of Virginia Medical School, who alleges that he was retaliated against for exercising his First Amendment freedoms at a panel discussion by the University’s chapter of the American Medical Women’s Association (“AMWA”).

Senior Judge Norman K. Moon of the United States District Court Western District of Virginia in a memorandum opinion dated March 31, 2021, dismissed three of the four complaints but left in place the First Amendment allegation. 

Mr. Bacon offered the following cautions: 

“That ruling presents only one side of the story, Bhattacharya’s, and has to be considered in that light.”

“If Bhattacharya displayed a pattern of being loud, belligerent, and threatening, the actions taken against him conceivably might be justified.”

The defense Answer to the plaintiff’s First Amendment retaliation allegation was filed yesterday.  

The University, represented by Assistant Virginia Attorneys General, asserts that Bhattacharya was dismissed from the School of Medicine not because of his actions at the panel discussion, but rather after a series of incidents and repeated instances of erratic behavior that raised security concerns as well as questions about his professionalism and fitness to practice medicine.  

The Defense further asserts that the University took action to protect the safety of the University community by banning him from the Grounds.

I will quote parts of the Answer here:

Defendants specifically deny that Plaintiff was retaliated against for the content of his questions and comments at the panel discussion. Defendants further aver that if Plaintiff is unable to pursue his chosen career in medicine, which Defendants do not admit, it is due to Plaintiff’s own actions and behaviors, and not due to his exercise of his First Amendment rights or the actions of Defendants. 

Defendants categorically deny ever attempting to silence or punish anyone for their views on microaggression and again deny the characterization of Dr. Rasmussen’s speech during the panel discussion. 

Defendants … deny that Plaintiff ever faced discipline because of the content of Plaintiff’s speech at the panel discussion. 

Defendants admit a November 26, 2018 email was sent from the Medical School directing Plaintiff to undergo a psychological evaluation before returning to class but deny that the email was related to or triggered by Plaintiff’s speech at the panel discussion. 

Instead, it was triggered by events including but not limited to: a November 14, 2018 meeting between Plaintiff and (Dean) John Densmore at which Plaintiff’s behavior was erratic and troubling, to the point that Dean Densmore was sufficiently concerned about Plaintiff’s health and welfare that he accompanied him to the University’s counseling center; Plaintiff’s involuntary admission to the hospital thereafter; a later meeting between Dean Densmore and Plaintiff during which Plaintiff’s behavior was extremely erratic, aggressive, and concerning, to the point that Dean Densmore had to call the police; another involuntary hospitalization of Plaintiff; and the issuance of a restraining order against Plaintiff with respect to his girlfriend, who was also a Medical School student. 

The Medical School could not in good conscience permit the return of a student who posed a potential threat to fellow students and faculty without further evaluation and information. 

Defendants further admit that, approximately one month later, upon consideration of all information available to it, the University’s Threat Assessment Team made a decision to issue a no trespass warning to Plaintiff for a four-year period, which resulted in an inability for him to appeal his suspension. Defendants categorically deny that the content of Plaintiff’s speech at the panel discussion caused Plaintiff’s suspension or ban from grounds. 

Defendants affirmatively aver that it was Plaintiff who was focused on his behavior at the panel discussion, refusing to discuss any of the other concerning behavior, of which he was well aware, to include his two hospitalizations, his interactions with Dean John Densmore, and the restraining order that his girlfriend obtained against him. 

The defense further denied all conspiracy allegations.

It requested the Court dismiss the action with prejudice and, failing that, demanded a jury trial.

The Defendants’ Answer, like the Plaintiff’s complaint, offer two sides of the same story. We now all await a response from Judge Moon and the results of any trial.


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13 responses to “UVa Response to Medical Student First Amendment Lawsuit”

  1. Nancy Naive Avatar
    Nancy Naive

    Well, at least Ted Kaczynski was a mathematical genius.

  2. Stephen Haner Avatar
    Stephen Haner

    I withdraw my previous assertion that expensive outside counsel were involved, burning up taxpayer or student funds. But on the other hand, if this is a bunch of bull and they are destroying this young man’s future with no good reason, it is on Herring.

    1. Publius Avatar

      It’s on Herring and the medical bureaucrats. Of course it had nothing – NOTHING! – to do with Bhattacharya’s questioning of the scientific bases of microaggressions. The timing is all coincidental… And the Dean said he was ERRATIC! And had him involuntarily subjected to counseling because he was…ERRATIC!
      Because, you know, people who are driven enough to get into med school usually are erratic and particularly erratic scientifically and therefore much more likely to be erratic enough to demand some science for proof of microaggressions…

    2. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Ya know, the school is responsible not to create another Shipman or Swango.

      I seem to recall there was a lot of wailing and gnashing of teeth over the respective schools not doing enough about the VT and Aurora shooters when they were aware of social and mental issues.

      1. ScottAdler Avatar
        ScottAdler

        Right. As a survivor of a terrorist attack by the Black Students Union that was covered in all major newspapers, I am called even worse names simply for remembering that it happened, which my University now denies.

  3. This could get interesting.

    1. Nancy Naive Avatar
      Nancy Naive

      Get? These situations are fun. What is the responsibility of licensing or conferring institutions to avoid producing a dangerous product and loosing them on an unsuspecting and virtually defenseless public?

      Suppose an aircraft maintenance school has a student who brags that he has learned enough to cause a plane crash and not get caught? Or a flight instructor with a student who says he doesn’t need to learn how to land?

  4. Thanks to Jim for posting this information. I had missed it. The Defense version of events brings out a number pertinent facts that did not appear in Moon’s summary of Bhattacharya’s complaint, in particular, that Bhattacharya was hospitalized twice and a restraining order had been issued in connection with his girlfriend. I’d say those points are very relevant and support the Defense’s contentions.

    I suspect the details surrounding the involuntary hospitalizations will figure prominently in any determination.

    One wonders if Bhattacharya’s allegedly erratic behavior could have been an expression of his frustration and anger at how he was being treated. One can imagine from the facts on the table that Bhattacharya was perfectly reasonable when he questioned the Woke Lady, felt he was treated unfairly, responded with anger, the administration overreacted, he felt like he was being treated even more unfairly, and got even more angry — an escalating tit for tat. Pure conjecture, of course, but it’s a possible reconciliation of what seem to be totally incompatible versions of what happened.

    It will be some time before we find out the full particulars. I understand that the case could drag on well into 2022.

  5. Publius Avatar

    The legal process is not fun. It is draining and expensive and time consuming and usually unsatisfactory. But, the adversarial process does tend to bring out all the little factors that end up being big factors. I suspect Jim’s supposition of superseding bungles by both sides has merit. But I also suspect it was questioning orthodoxy that was the main precipitant. The standard in a civil case is more likely than not.
    Meanwhile, in Minneapolis, where the location of the trial is grounds enough for a mistrial, the standard is beyond a reasonable doubt. And the fact that the prosecution has posited multiple possible causes of death would seem to argue even the prosecution has some doubts. But I suspect it will take an incredibly brave juror to express that opinion…and even with a guilty verdict, there will probably be mostly peaceful protests…

  6. James C. Sherlock Avatar
    James C. Sherlock

    Judge Moon is a superb jurist. I expect him to get to the bottom of this.

    1. PassTheBuckBureaucrat Avatar
      PassTheBuckBureaucrat

      … on planet bizarro

    2. Stephen Haner Avatar
      Stephen Haner

      The facts on both sides need to be developed through the process. But the description of the school pushing this student into mental health treatment has a chilling whiff of the worst of Soviet Russia under Stalin. So again, if they are doing this just to destroy a dissident, this could be a very disturbing case.

  7. […] the ongoing case of the medical student.  In that case the University took […]

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