J T v. Uplift Education

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Texas
DecidedJune 27, 2023
Docket3:20-cv-03443
StatusUnknown

This text of J T v. Uplift Education (J T v. Uplift Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J T v. Uplift Education, (N.D. Tex. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS DALLAS DIVISION J.T., individually and as next friend of § M.L., a minor, § § Plaintiff, § § Civil Action No. 3:20-CV-3443-D VS. § § UPLIFT EDUCATION, § § Defendant. § MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Plaintiff J.T., individually and as next friend of her daughter M.L., brings this action against defendant Uplift Education (“Uplift”), alleging that Uplift is liable under Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, 20 U.S.C. § 1681 (“Title IX”), and 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for the sexual abuse and harassment that M.L. suffered as a kindergarten student at the hands of her male classroom teacher, an Uplift employee.1 Uplift moves for summary judgment. Despite the tragic facts of this case, the court must faithfully apply the law to the summary judgment record and dismiss the case. The court therefore grants Uplift’s motion and dismisses this action with prejudice.2 1J.T.’s claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 is for violating M.L.’s Fourteenth Amendment rights to personal security, bodily integrity, and equal protection. 2Some of the briefing and summary judgment evidence has been filed under seal. The court is not filing this memorandum opinion and order under seal because it does not disclose information that is or should be maintained under seal. I During the 2018-2019 school year, M.L. was a kindergarten student at Grand Primary, an open-enrollment college-preparatory public charter school operated by Uplift.3 Several

times throughout the school year, M.L.’s male classroom teacher, Jamil Wazed (“Wazed”), sexually abused her and several other female students in his class. To facilitate this abuse, Wazed showed movies to the class, during which he turned off the classroom lights, separated certain children from the remaining ones, and demanded that these students perform sexual acts on him behind a “wall” of privacy folders4 that he created on his desk.

The barrier that Wazed created was roughly three feet wide and two feet high and would have been visible to anyone who glanced in the window of Wazed’s classroom. On August 5, 2019, two days before the beginning of the new school year, A.C. emailed Grand Primary’s Academic Director, Chermanda Frazier (“Frazier”), to report that

her daughter J.G. had mentioned that Wazed “would kiss her on her neck and that his beard tickled her neck.” D. App. (ECF No. 120-5) at 1342. J.G. was a female student who had been a kindergartner in Wazed’s class during the 2018-2019 school year. On August 8, 2019 Frazier saw A.C.’s email and immediately responded. Because the allegation that Wazed

3The court recounts the facts in the light most favorable to J.T., as the summary judgment nonmovant, and draws all reasonable inferences in her favor. See, e.g., Owens v. Mercedes-Benz USA, LLC, 541 F.Supp.2d 869, 870 n.1 (N.D. Tex. 2008) (Fitzwater, C.J.). 4The privacy folders in this case were blue cardboard dividers sold under the Lakeshore Learning school supply brand. Grand Primary teachers, including Wazed, used the folders to separate students during testing or when students worked on other guided assignments to minimize cheating and distractions and to give students privacy in the open classroom space. - 2 - kissed a student amounted to possible professional misconduct and violated teacher-student boundaries, Frazier immediately placed Wazed on administrative leave. Consequently, he was prohibited him from teaching, interacting with students, and entering Uplift property

without invitation and supervision. The following day, Frazier, together with Grand Primary Deans Yvonne Cooper (“Cooper”) and Christian Martinez-Canchola (“Martinez-Canchola”) and Social Counselor Catherine Savoie (“Savoie”) (collectively, the “Administrators”) began an investigation.

During the investigation, the Administrators spoke with A.C., who related that, according to J.G., Wazed had kissed her on the neck and would also cuddle with students during story time. Savoie spoke with J.G. and did not observe anything out of the ordinary or hear any reports of inappropriate conduct. The Administrators then spoke with J.G. together. J.G. called Wazed her “favorite teacher,” said that she missed him, and stated that Wazed would

kiss her on the neck when the students were good. Id. at 1281. Neither J.G. nor A.C. reported that Wazed had engaged in any other misconduct. The Administrators then selected four students from Wazed’s 2018-2019 class—female students M.L., J.A., and Y.Q., and male student L.B.5—to inquire further about the allegations that Wazed had kissed a student. In M.L.’s conversation with the

Administrators, she stated that she missed Wazed and she called him her favorite teacher. To investigate J.G.’s report that Wazed had kissed her as “a reward” when she was “good,”

5Uplift maintains that the Administrators selected these four students because they had strong verbal skills. - 3 - Frazier asked M.L. how Wazed rewarded her when she did well in class and whether he kissed her. M.L. responded that Wazed kissed her on the cheek but not the neck. M.L. did not report that Wazed had engaged in any other misconduct. J.A. told the Administrators that

she missed Wazed and that he hugged her, but never kissed her. Y.Q. also said that she missed Wazed and remembered how he taught reading. She stated that he had given her hugs and had kissed her “on the forehead like when you kiss your brain.” D. App. (ECF No. 121- 3) at 1589. L.B. stated that he missed Wazed but denied that Wazed had ever kissed him.

Grand Primary then asked Wazed to submit a statement responding to the allegation that he had kissed a student. Wazed denied the allegation and stated that he “never kissed a scholar.” D. App. (ECF No. 120-5) at 1368.6 Despite Wazed’s denial, Frazier believed the students. She determined that Wazed had acted inappropriately, but not maliciously, when he kissed at least three female students. She then provided Uplift’s Human Resources team

a draft Employee Relations Investigation Packet in which she recommended that Wazed receive a disciplinary warning regarding violation of standards regarding appropriate physical contact with students. She also recommended that Wazed be allowed to return to teaching after meeting with school leadership to “reiterate the expectations regarding student and staff physical space and touch.” Id. at 1285.

Uplift’s HR Director Gaylon Curry (“Curry”) and Managing Director Priscilla Pharms reviewed Frazier’s recommendation and rejected it on the ground that Uplift did not tolerate

6“Scholar” is the term that Uplift uses when referring to one of its students.

- 4 - any inappropriate physical contact with students and terminated employees for any physical touching that failed to maintain appropriate boundaries. Curry directed Frazier to revise her report, get a more detailed statement from Wazed, and prepare to terminate him. Frazier did

as instructed, and Uplift terminated Wazed’s employment on August 16, 2019, eight days after Frazier first saw A.C.’s email. On August 19, 2019 Uplift reported to the State Board for Educator Certification (“SBEC”) that it had terminated Wazed’s employment for failure to maintain appropriate

educator-student relationships and boundaries. Savoie also filed a report with Child Protective Services (“CPS”), stating that J.G. had disclosed that Wazed had kissed her. CPS screened the report, noted that Wazed had been terminated, and closed the matter after determining that the allegations did not involve abuse, neglect, or risk.

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