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Barred from Adams State, Former Faculty Member Sues over an Utter Lack of Due Process

Last November, FIREcriticized Adams State University (ASU) in Colorado for its curious and sudden designation of 鈥persona non grata鈥 status to a former faculty member, Danny Ledonne, who taught at ASU from 2011 to 2015. He was not re-hired by ASU after Spring 2015, and in October, Ledonne launched the blog , from which he criticized ASU鈥檚 wage and labor policies. ASU banned Ledonne from its campus just two days after the blog鈥檚 first entry, purporting to act pursuant to a policy that it had instituted only the day before, and apparently only to target Ledonne. In fact, the policy was so new that ASU hadn鈥檛 to remove the name of the they copied-and-pasted:

On Wednesday, Ledonne and the filed a lawsuit against ASU, that ASU鈥檚 鈥減rocess鈥 was somehow more farcical than had been publicly described. For one, the brand new policy was only a proposed policy, which ASU wisely鈥攆or once鈥攐pted not to accept as drafted 鈥渂ecause several faculty and staff cited legal concerns with the proposed new policy.鈥 Rather, ASU was obligated to follow an when designating a non-student as 鈥persona non grata.鈥 That policy required ASU to provide a 鈥渞easonable attempt to notify the individual of the basis for the order and an opportunity to be heard on the matter鈥 before banning him from the campus. Even if the policy did not require a hearing before such an order were issued against Ledonne, a . ASU, Ledonne alleges, provided no hearing before barring him from campus, then mangled the appeal process.
That brings us to ASU鈥檚 response to the lawsuit. According to Inside Higher Ed, ASU in response to the lawsuit鈥檚 filing:
Adams State said in a statement that the complaint is 鈥渂ased on a wholly false premise that we have been eager to completely refute, but have lacked the legal ability to do, until now.鈥 Officials said that they look forward to 鈥渕aking the case that the university鈥檚 actions were based solely on evidence and the belief that Mr. Ledonne鈥檚 longstanding pattern of inappropriate actions and threatening statements required us to act in an abundance of caution to protect our students, faculty and staff. We will aggressively contest any accusation that our safety-based decisions were in any way related to constitutionally protected freedom of expression.鈥
This makes little sense. One of the core problems with ASU鈥檚 treatment of Ledonne is its silence. ASU was required by its own policies to give Ledonne an opportunity to respond, but it never told Ledonne what, precisely, merited his exile.
Nor has ASU鈥檚 purported need to remain silent kept it, well, silent. It has not stopped ASU鈥檚 president from granting Ledonne as having engaged in 鈥減ersonal attacks and terrorism against me.鈥 It didn鈥檛 deter ASU鈥檚 board of trustees from issuing to the campus. It didn鈥檛 prevent ASU from issuing a . It has not stopped ASU鈥檚 police chief from sending about Ledonne in which he acknowledged that Ledonne hadn鈥檛 broken any law but wrote that it was necessary to banish him to reassure a sense of safety and comfort, and something about Columbine:
My decision and recommendation to disallow this or any person access to our campus is based on the needs and safety of the ASU community which clearly outweighs the special interests of the singular. In this post-Columbine, hypersensitive world of mass shootings and violence on college campus鈥 nationwide, it is my duty to balance the free speech and individual rights against the public safety of the many. As your Chief of Police it is my duty to assure the sense of safety, security and comfort to all who attend and work here at Adams State University. Although, Mr. Ledonne鈥檚 behavior has not yet breached the realm of violation of our laws, my recommendation to ban him from campus is sound, rational and errs on the side of public safety.
Nor did ASU鈥檚 鈥渘eed鈥 to remain silent prevent ASU鈥檚 president from sending and meeting with other faculty members:
I will be appearing before the Faculty Senate and [Associated Student & Faculty Senate] to discuss this matter. The administration is being as open and transparent as we can under the law. It is unfortunate that misinformation has led some to believe this is about "free speech" versus safety.
ASU鈥檚 need to remain silent hasn鈥檛 prevented it from speaking in detail about the matter, except for the one time when it most mattered: when due process demanded that ASU give Ledonne an opportunity to respond and contest ASU鈥檚 allegations. This would have been the opportunity to correct any 鈥渕isinformation鈥濃攏ot after Ledonne was forced to file a lawsuit.
As for ASU鈥檚 assertion that its designation of Ledonne as persona non grata is unrelated to his blog鈥攖his, too, is dubious. Many of the incidents disclosed by ASU to defend their actions occurred long before Ledonne was banned, principally Ledonne鈥檚 creation of a 10 years earlier. Yet ASU curiously waited to act against this purported 鈥渢hreat鈥 to their campus until after Ledonne began writing about them publicly.
FIRE remains skeptical of ASU鈥檚 unsubstantiated claims and process-lite treatment of Ledonne, who is now against ASU. We will continue following this case as it progresses.
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