Tenured LSU law professor Ken Levy sued the university, claiming he was punished for making political comments in class. A ...
Levy filed a suit against the university in an effort to keep his job, and on Thursday, District Court Judge Don Johnson sided with Levy, issuing a temporary restraining order against LSU. This means ...
Donald R. Johnson, a state district court judge, signed a one-page order Thursday putting Ken Levy back in the classroom. The return might be short-lived; Johnson set a hearing for Feb. 10, during or ...
A district judge Thursday ordered LSU to allow embattled LSU law professor Ken Levy to return to the classroom.
Ken Levy spoke out against an instance in which Gov. Jeff Landry last year publicly criticized LSU law professor Nicholas Bryner, according to Levy's attorney, Jill Craft. Levy, a criminal law ...
BATON ROUGE, La. (Louisiana First) — LSU law professor Ken Levy has been suspended with pay after making political comments in class, his attorney Jill Craft confirmed. According to Craft ...
BATON ROUGE, La. (Louisiana First) — LSU law professor Ken Levy has been suspended with pay after making political comments in class, his attorney Jill Craft confirmed. According to Craft, Levy was ...
The 5.5-mill permanent continuous levy would generate $1,186,00 a year. It would cost residents an additional $81 a year.
LSU Paul M. Hebert Law Center Dean Alena Allen told students in an online meeting Tuesday that tenured law professor Ken Levy is being replaced pending an investigation. Baton Rouge attorney Jill ...
Professor Ken Levy’s attorney, Jill Craft, said the lecture that took place before he was placed on leave was about the First Amendment and interactions between law enforcement and the public.