Angela K. Sheets v. Greenville University

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedMarch 6, 2026
Docket3:23-cv-03754
StatusUnknown

This text of Angela K. Sheets v. Greenville University (Angela K. Sheets v. Greenville University) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Angela K. Sheets v. Greenville University, (S.D. Ill. 2026).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS

ANGELA K. SHEETS, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) vs. ) Case No. 3:23-cv-3754-MAB ) GREENVILLE UNIVERSITY, ) ) Defendant. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER Plaintiff Angela Sheets filed a Second Amended Complaint against Defendant Greenville University (“Greenville”) for claims arising under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and Title IX of the Education Amendments Act of 1972 (Doc. 42). Presently before the Court is Greenville’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiff’s Second Amended Complaint Pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) (Doc. 43). For the reasons set forth below, Greenville’s Motion to Dismiss is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part (Doc. 43). BACKGROUND I. The Second Amended Complaint (Doc. 42) Plaintiff Angela Sheets is a female softball coach who obtained her bachelor’s degree from Greenville in 2012 (Doc. 42 at p. 2).1 After graduating from Greenville, Plaintiff worked as the head softball coach at Peoria Christian Junior High School and obtained her master’s degree from Bradley University (Id. at pp. 2-3). On or around May

1 This matter is currently before the Court on a motion to dismiss and accordingly, the Court takes all well- pleaded factual allegations in Plaintiff’s First Amended Complaint as true and draws all permissible inferences in Plaintiff’s favor. See, e.g., Dix v. Edelman Fin. Servs., LLC, 978 F.3d 507, 512-13 (7th Cir. 2020). 2020, Plaintiff received a call from Greenville’s Athletic Director, Tom Ackerman (hereinafter, “A.D. Ackerman”) (Id. at p. 3). A.D. Ackerman informed Plaintiff that a

softball coaching position was available at Greenville and asked her to apply (Id.). Plaintiff did and her final interview was conducted with A.D. Ackerman and Katrina Lopez Liss, Greenville’s Chief Diversity and Culture Coordinator and Title IX Coordinator (Id.). Thereafter, Plaintiff was hired as Greenville’s head softball coach in July 2020 (Id.). Plaintiff’s first season as Greenville’s head softball coach occurred in 2021 (Id.). At

that time, Plaintiff was provided with a graduate assistant named Becca Oldham to help her manage the team (Id. at p. 4). Oldham had recently played on Greenville’s softball team prior to graduating and was friends with many of the players on the team (Id.). During the 2021 season, Oldham actively worked with her friends on the team to undermine Plaintiff (Id.). This included Oldham and her friends holding meetings with

A.D. Ackerman and Hayle Gibson - Greenville’s senior woman administrator and A.D. Ackerman’s associate head woman’s volleyball coach, wherein Oldham and her friends would make false claims about Plaintiff (Id.). Ultimately, the softball team went 9-15 in the 2021 season (Id.). After the 2021 season concluded, Greenville sent out anonymous reviews for the

softball team’s players to evaluate Plaintiff (Id.). Those reviews served as the basis for Plaintiff’s yearly review meeting with A.D. Ackerman, Gibson, and Stephen Groves - Greenville’s Associate Athletic Director and Assistant Men’s Basketball Coach (Id.). At that meeting, A.D. Ackerman told Plaintiff that Oldham’s friends on the team made false claims about Plaintiff in those reviews (Id. at pp. 4-5). However, Plaintiff was not provided with copies of those false reviews and they were not placed in her employee

file (Id. at p. 5). A.D. Ackerman also indicated that several of the players who made false claims had struggled with their conduct in the past (Id.). However, A.D. Ackerman did not want to remove the problematic players and instead suggested Plaintiff draft team rules and expectations (Id.). Meanwhile, Plaintiff held a yearly review meeting with Oldham (Id.). At that meeting, Oldham told Plaintiff that she wanted to be Greenville’s head softball coach and could do better than Plaintiff (Id.).

After the 2021 season, A.D. Ackerman required Plaintiff to attend weekly meetings with Sonya Jones, a professor at Greenville who had previously played softball at Greenville and had her office in the Athletic Department (Id. at pp. 5-6). Jones was close friends with Liss and would convey the contents of their weekly meetings to Liss (Id. at p. 6).

Additionally, Plaintiff followed A.D. Ackerman’s advice and created team rules and expectations (Id.). The players complained about the rules to Jones and showed her the rules (Id.). However, during Plaintiff’s weekly meeting with Jones, Jones told Plaintiff she did not see an issue with the rules Plaintiff developed (Id.). Subsequently, Liss informed Plaintiff that she and Jones are close friends, that she had knowledge of

Plaintiff’s meetings with Jones, and that she did not see an issue with the rules either (Id.). Ultimately, each player signed the new team rules (Id.). Oldham left her assistant position following the 2021 season and Ivan Estevez, a close friend of A.D. Ackerman, was hired on as a part-time assistant (Id. at pp. 6-7). Estevez was completing his master’s degree during Plaintiff’s first year of employment (Id. at p. 7). After being hired, A.D. Ackerman and Estevez held scheduled weekly

meetings together, which was unusual because Estevez was the only assistant coach who had weekly meetings scheduled with A.D. Ackerman (Id.). Furthermore, Estevez continued to work a full-time job outside of his assistant coaching position (Id.). As a result, Estevez was often late to practice and/or unable to travel to away games, and Plaintiff was frequently left to coach the 23 to 19 player team on her own (Id.). This prompted Plaintiff to beg A.D. Ackerman to increase her coaching staff by

adding a full-time assistant coach (Id. at pp. 7-8). A.D. Ackerman informed Plaintiff that she could only have a full-time assistant coach if there were over 30 players on the team’s roster (Id. at p. 8). Consequently, Plaintiff started a junior varsity program and was able to grow the softball team’s roster to over 30 players for the 2023 season (Id.). However, A.D. Ackerman then backtracked and told Plaintiff that she could only look for a

graduate assistant, who would offer minimal help (Id.). At Plaintiff’s weekly meeting with Jones, Plaintiff told Jones that she was not receiving the assistant coaching support that other head coaches had received and expressed her frustration with A.D. Ackerman’s backtracking (Id.). At that time, male head coaches at Greenville were each supported by one assistant coach or more (Id. at pp. 8-9).

During the 2022 season, the main issue the softball players raised with Plaintiff related to playing time (Id. at p. 9). Additionally, Plaintiff removed two players from the team during the 2022 season due to their failure to communicate with Plaintiff and Estevez (Id.). Liss attended softball games with A.D. Ackerman, Jones, and Suzanne Davis, the President of Greenville (Id.). A.D. Ackerman and Liss are both close friends with Davis outside of work (Id. at pp. 9-10). Moreover, Davis’s husband is also close

friends with A.D. Ackerman (Id. at p. 9). In the end, the softball team finished the 2022 season with a record of 22-21 and made it to the conference championship game (Id.). Several team members were awarded additional regional honors and the team led the conference in various performance metrics (Id. at p. 10). Meanwhile, Greenville’s Athletic Department was in the process of planning a multimillion-dollar sports complex during the 2022 season (Id.). The planned complex

did not have any female specific locker rooms or showers, even though several men’s teams received their own spaces (Id.). Instead, after the football season had ended, the softball program would share the football locker room with the women’s track team (Id.).

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