Harrison v. RVA Dirt, LLC PLEASE FILE IN THIS CASE ONLY! DO NOT FILE IN MEMBER CASE!

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedFebruary 25, 2025
Docket3:24-cv-00384
StatusUnknown

This text of Harrison v. RVA Dirt, LLC PLEASE FILE IN THIS CASE ONLY! DO NOT FILE IN MEMBER CASE! (Harrison v. RVA Dirt, LLC PLEASE FILE IN THIS CASE ONLY! DO NOT FILE IN MEMBER CASE!) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrison v. RVA Dirt, LLC PLEASE FILE IN THIS CASE ONLY! DO NOT FILE IN MEMBER CASE!, (E.D. Va. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA Richmond Division TYRA HARRISON, ) Plaintiff, ) Vv. Civil Action No.: 3:24-cv-384-HEH RVA DIRT, LLC, et al., Defendants. MEMORANDUM OPINION (Denying Defendants’ Motions to Dismiss) THIS MATTER is before the Court on Defendant Becca DuVal’s (“DuVal”) Motion to Dismiss (ECF No. 18) and consolidated Defendant Solomon Jefferson’s (“Jefferson”) (collectively, “Defendants”) Motion to Dismiss (ECF No. 7)!, both filed on August 8, 2024. Defendants move to dismiss Plaintiff Tyra Harrison’s (“Plaintiff’ or “Tyra”) defamation allegations for failure to state a claim. The parties have filed memoranda supporting their respective positions, and the Court heard oral argument on December 5, 2024. At the hearing, the Court denied Defendants’ Motions for the reasons articulated below. (Min. Entry at 1, ECF No. 40.) I. BACKGROUND On June 6, 2023, following the graduation of Huguenot High School (“HHS”) in downtown Richmond, six individuals were shot in Monroe Park, adjacent to the

References to Plaintiff’s suit against Jefferson may be found at Case No. 3:24-cv-385.

graduation venue. (RVA Dirt Compl. { 15, ECF No. 1.)? Among the victims were a graduating HHS senior and his stepfather, both of whom died from their injuries. (/d.) In

response to this tragedy, the Richmond Public School (“RPS”) Board hired Sands Anderson PC, a law firm, to investigate the graduation day operations, procedures, and preparations and produce a report (the “Sands Anderson Report”). (/d. 17.) Rather than investigating how or why the shooting occurred, the RPS Board, and therefore Sands Anderson, was particularly focused on the process surrounding the entrance of participants and the homebound process. (/d.) Sands Anderson interviewed twenty-nine individuals, including Jefferson, who was employed by RPS as the Chief Academic Officer, Secondary Education. (Jefferson Compl. 3, Case No. 3:24-cv-385, ECF No. 1.) Plaintiff, however, was not interviewed. (RVA Dirt Compl. { 18.) After the Sands Anderson Report was completed and submitted to the RPS Board, the Board voted not to release the Report to the public. Ud. 719.) After ensuing litigation under the Virginia Freedom of Information Act, the Sands Anderson Report was ordered to be released by the Circuit Court for the City of Richmond. (/d. 20.) Many Richmond-area media outlets ran news stories about the Report; most focused on how “RPS officials had prior security concerns about the safety of the student victim and that RPS officials allowed the student victim to participate in the graduation ceremony

2 For clarity, the Court refers to Plaintiff's Complaint against RVA Dirt and DuVal as the “RVA Dirt Complaint” and Plaintiff's Complaint against Jefferson in Case No. 3:24-cv-385 as the “Jefferson Complaint.”

without proper consideration of the safety concerns.” (/d. ] 22.) None of these stories mentioned Plaintiff. (fd. 4 23.) RVA Dirt also ran a story based on the Sands Anderson Report. (/d. 24.) Founded in 2016, RVA Dirt “consists of four busy women making time to stick their noses into Richmond politics.” (See id. J 1.) It offers “clever, irreverent, and reliable coverage of City Council and School Board Meetings, candidate interviews, and city events,” imploring readers to “come for the dirt [and] stay for the jokes.” (See id. 2n.4 (citing RVA Dirt, About Us, https://www.rvadirt.com/about-us (last visited Feb. 20, 2025)),) RVA Dirt’s article on the Sands Anderson Report was titled “The Altria Shopting and the Attorney-Client-Public Report” (the “Article”). (RVA Dirt Compl. 1 24-25; RVA Dirt Article, ECF No. 19-1.) DuVal wrote the Article which explored the safety concerms surrounding the graduation ceremony and the RPS Board. (/d.) DuVal begins the Article by discussing much of the controversy surrounding the release of the Report, the findings of the Report, and other matters generally related to the RPS Board. Half-way through the Article, DuVal states that “[t]he real shoe drops around page 251 of the 1132 pages of interview transcripts and staff emails the investigators compiled.” (/d. 27; RVA Dirt Article at 5.*) There, the Article begins to discuss the interview of Jefferson which was included in the Sands Anderson Report. The Article notes that Jefferson recounted the ““‘disastrous’ story of the start of the 2022- 23 school year, when RPS’ central office was so full of ‘high profile vacancies’

3 The Court employs the pagination assigned by the CM/ECF docketing system.

(resignations) that their organizational chart looked like Swiss cheese.” (RVA Dirt Article at 5.) After discussing several vacancies, and the reasons for them, the Article

moves into a discussion of Plaintiff: Solomon was overseeing this transition, Austin’s portfolio of principals, and his own, when his boss, Tyra Harrison, Director of Teaching and Learning, (~ note: and another aggrieved underling) “went after” the Chief of Staff, Michelle Hudacsko, and set off another wave of resignations. Tyra “was supposed to be leading the department in the absence of a Chief Academic Officer.” The last CAO, Tracy Epp, had resigned a couple of months earlier; but really, the position had been vacant long before then. (Epp had been out on FMLA.) (“Statement 1”) (RVA Dirt Compl. § 28 (emphasis in original); RVA Dirt Article at 6 (emphasis added).) After noting the RPS Board would then drive out COO Gonzalez, CAO Epp, and COS Hudacsko, the Article again discusses Plaintiff: Rumor has it that Tyra had been denied that CAO position, so she filed unsubstantiated allegations of abuse against Michelle Hudacsko, took her own FMLA break, then (per a source) “quit before she could be fired.” (Obligatory note: Tyra’s perspective is not represented in this report, and I’m sure she’d have much to say about these characterizations UPDATE, she describes this a “very poor representation of this story.”) [(“Statement 2”)] Solomon tells investigators that Tyra and Tracy “were there, [but] they weren’t really present . . .” which left “other folks holding the bag.” (“Statement 3”) (RVA Dirt Compl. §] 29-30 (emphasis in original); RVA Dirt Article at 6 (emphasis added).) Finally, the Article begins to conclude by discussing how the student victim’s mother had discussed threats against the student with a HHS counselor, but the counselor did not tell anyone. (RVA Dirt Article at 7.) But neither was it

the counselor’s responsibility, the Article notes. (/d.) That responsibility fell on the school’s central office: Someone from central office probably should have thought to ask - to identify particularly challenging cases and offer support. But the woman (Tyra) responsible for the 2023 graduations was a no-show after “about a month” on the job - and the guy (Solomon) forced to fill her shoes was “actually doing 3 jobs” and didn’t even “have a high school background.” Obviously, this was NOT ideal. (“Statement 4”) (RVA Dirt Compl. § 32 (emphasis in original); RVA Dirt Article at 7 (emphasis added).) Before ending the Article, DuVal brings the discussion full circle— impugning the efficacy of the RPS Board: Now look. All I have to work from is a transcript. But I imagine this is the point in Solomon’s story where the investigator takes off her glasses, sits back in her chair, and rubs her temples. Investigator: What do you attribute that sort of vacuum of leadership to? Like, was it just because of a bad series of people moving on, and sicknesses, and FMLA, and deaths? Or was it just kind of more systemic than that? Solomon: Well. Yeah. It was School Board. Specifically: vacancies created by the School Board’s “toxic” “mean- spirited” leadership in 2022 (then-Chairwoman Harris-Muhammed and Vice Chair Gibson), and the many cumulative failures of the remaining staff who were unprepared, overworked, and/or bickering among themselves.

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Harrison v. RVA Dirt, LLC PLEASE FILE IN THIS CASE ONLY! DO NOT FILE IN MEMBER CASE!, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-rva-dirt-llc-please-file-in-this-case-only-do-not-file-in-vaed-2025.