Yasmeen Elagha v. Northwestern University, et al.

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedNovember 3, 2025
Docket1:24-cv-12066
StatusUnknown

This text of Yasmeen Elagha v. Northwestern University, et al. (Yasmeen Elagha v. Northwestern University, et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yasmeen Elagha v. Northwestern University, et al., (N.D. Ill. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS EASTERN DIVISION

YASMEEN ELAGHA, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) 24 C 12066 ) NORTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY, et al., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM OPINION

CHARLES P. KOCORAS, District Judge: Plaintiff Yasmeen Elagha brings this case against Defendants Northwestern University (“Northwestern”) and Hari Osofsky, Susan Michelle Spies Roth, and George Langford (together, the “Defendant Deans”) alleging violations of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act (“Title VI”), 42 U.S.C. § 2000d et seq. Before the Court is Defendants’ motion to dismiss Elagha’s second amended complaint (“SAC”) under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim. For the following reasons, Defendants’ motion is granted. BACKGROUND The following facts come from the SAC and are presumed true for purposes of this motion. All reasonable inferences are drawn in Elagha’s favor. Elagha is a Palestinian Muslim woman who wears a hijab. She graduated from Northwestern’s Pritzker School of Law (“Law School”) in May 2024 and is currently a licensed attorney practicing in Illinois. At all relevant times, Defendant Osofsky was the Dean of the Law School, Defendant Roth was the Associate Dean and Dean of

Students at the Law School, and Defendant Langford was the Associate Dean/Infrastructure Planning and Design at the Law School. While a law student, Elagha was very active in Pro-Palestinian, anti-war causes and organizations on campus. Since at least November 2022, Elagha made complaints

in writing to Northwestern regarding harassment and targeting she faced from other students, but Elagha did not receive any protections like other students of different racial and ethnic backgrounds had received. For example, in November 2022, Elagha filed a report with Northwestern’s Office of Civil Rights (“OCR”) against fellow law

student, “A.K.”, after A.K. publicly stated that she was “personally gunning for” Elagha after she sent a school-wide email supporting Palestine. Elagha asked Northwestern to issue a no-contact directive against A.K. as it customarily would have done when requested by students of other races. Northwestern ignored Elagha’s request. At some point after October 2023, “a fellow student, [S.M.], published violent

social media posts against Palestinians and pro-Palestinian supporters, including threats to ‘share your address online’ if one supports Hamas.” Dkt. # 38, ¶ 64. Elagha reported these threats and safety concerns to Northwestern administrators, but no action was taken, and her complaints were not followed up with or taken seriously. Despite

Plaintiff’s safety complaints, Northwestern did not discipline S.M. In November 2023, Elagha attended a protest. Several law students followed and recorded Elagha and the other students participating in the protest, even when asked

to stop. During the protest, other members of the Northwestern community made threatening remarks about the protesters’ status at the university and their future job prospects, saying things like “we know people high up in university” and “good luck getting jobs after this.” Dkt. # 38, ¶ 16. Pictures and videos of the protestors were

shared on social media, including one post by another law student that garnered significant attention and attracted racist and harmful comments. Elagha had her private scholarship status exposed in a tweet by a fellow law student, though it was later deleted.

A fellow law student, “M.M.”, falsely reported to the Northwestern University Police Department (“NUPD”) that Elagha assaulted, battered, and harassed her at the November 2023 protest. NUPD did not contact Elagha and instead posted M.M.’s allegations on their website. NUPD failed to remove the false claim from their public database.

Elagha again filed an OCR report against A.K., whom she believes encouraged M.M. to make the false report. She asked Northwestern to issue a no-contact directive against A.K. because A.K. began “doxing”1 Elagha. Northwestern treated Elagha’s

1 “Doxing,” or “doxxing,” “involves releasing someone’s personal details onto the Internet in an easily accessible form . . . [and] [i]t may be used to humiliate, intimidate, threaten, or punish the identified individual.” Lord v. Smith, 2022 WL 17668707, at *4 n.4 (N.D. Ill. 2022) (citing David M. Douglas, Doxing: A Conceptual Analysis, 18 ETHICS INFO. TECH. 199, 199 (2016)); see also Dye v. City of Bloomington, 580 F. Supp. 3d 560, 565 n.1 (S.D. Ind. 2022) (“‘Doxing’ refers request differently than other similarly situated students of different ethnic and racial backgrounds and denied Elagha’s request.

After the November 2023 protest, a group of students, including Elagha, met with unknown Northwestern administrators to express their safety concerns and asked the school to issue a statement to promote civility on campus and to hold students accountable for doxing and harassment. Despite assurances that Northwestern would

follow up on the students’ concerns, no concrete actions were taken to address the threats or the doxing incidents. Because of the “hostile and unsafe learning environment and the personal losses she endured,” Elagha did not feel safe on campus during the Fall 2023 semester. Dkt.

# 38, ¶ 67. Northwestern excused her from classes but did not grant Elagha a remote learning accommodation. Because she could not attend her classes, Elagha did not feel adequately prepared to take her final exams for the Fall 2023 semester. The exams were deferred to the Spring 2024 semester, “during which she was forced to independently teach herself an entire year’s worth of coursework and complete all exams within a two-

week period shortly before graduating in May 2024.” Dkt. # 38, ¶ 71. In February 2024, Elagha complained to Defendant Deans Osofsky and Spies Roth that one of Elagha’s professors told her that “someone who looks like you probably shouldn’t go around saying they’re going to blow things up.” Dkt. # 38, ¶ 74.

to publicly identifying someone or publishing private information about someone as a form of punishment or revenge.”). This remark was in response to Elagha indicating that she would blow something up on her computer screen, meaning enlarge the object for easier viewing.

On or about May 20, 2024, Tony Kinnett, an investigative columnist with the Daily Signal emailed Elagha stating that she “is alleged to have followed/stalked and then assaulted an individual on November 9, 2023” and asked her “Did you follow/stalk [M.M.] on 11/9/23? Did you assault [M.M.] on 11/9/23?” Dkt. # 38, ¶ 35. Elagha

forwarded the reporter’s email to the Defendant Deans with the notice that “Now, I am at risk of being defamed with false allegations from [M.M.]. I can consider my job offer rescinded if this publishes. I need the administration’s assistance in immediately shutting this down. The administration must contact the reporter and emphasize that this event is fully fabricated, false, and defamatory.”2 Id. ¶ 36. Dean Roth responded

and advised Elagha to refer the reporter to media@northwestern.edu, the official email for requests for comments from Northwestern. On or about May 21, 2024, the Daily Signal published an article that Elagha “berated a fellow law student, [M.M.] for taking photographs of the demonstration” and

that “in public comments, [M.M.] alleged that Yasmeen Elagha pushed her in the back. She filed a police report with Northwestern University Police about the incident involving Elagha.” Id. ¶ 42. Kinnett also made posts on his social media account regarding the same.

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