BROOKLYN, NY – A federal judge has dismissed a lawsuit filed by a New York City public school employee who claimed the Department of Education retaliated against her for protected speech and workplace complaints.
Anna Maria Mule, the plaintiff, filed suit against the New York City Department of Education, the Board of Education, and two high-level administrators — Jennifer Goldberg and Janice Ross — alleging unlawful retaliation under both Title VII of the Civil Rights Act and the First Amendment.
Originally filed in New York state court on February 9, the case was removed to the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York, where Mule twice amended her complaint. In the final version of the lawsuit, she claimed she was retaliated against after raising issues related to school operations and workplace conditions.
But in a decision issued this week, U.S. District Judge Kiyo A. Matsumoto granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss, ruling that Mule had failed to establish a plausible legal basis for her claims under federal law.
The court noted that part of Mule’s complaint referenced a June 8, 2023 investigative report from the Department’s Office of Equal Opportunity, which substantiated allegations against her. The judge found that Mule’s retaliation claims were contradicted by the findings in that internal report and that her allegations did not demonstrate a direct connection between any protected activity and adverse employment actions.
Under Title VII, retaliation claims must show that a person engaged in protected activity, suffered a material adverse action, and that a causal link exists between the two. Similarly, First Amendment retaliation claims require that speech was made as a private citizen on a matter of public concern, and that it was a motivating factor for the employer’s response. Judge Matsumoto ruled that Mule’s complaint failed to meet those thresholds.
The ruling does not prevent Mule from pursuing other legal avenues, but as of now, the federal case is closed.
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Key Points
- NYC educator’s federal retaliation lawsuit dismissed by judge for lack of legal grounds
- Plaintiff claimed First Amendment and Title VII violations over workplace complaints
- Court found internal DOE report undercut her allegations of retaliatory conduct
A Brooklyn judge ruled the school employee’s retaliation claims failed to pass legal muster.