Home / Full timeline / In New York City, a jury ruled that Leonard Jeffries had been wrongfully dismissed from his job as chairman of City College’s Black studies department for criticizing Jews and Whites.
In New York City, a jury ruled that Leonard Jeffries had been wrongfully dismissed from his job as chairman of City College’s Black studies department for criticizing Jews and Whites.
1993 (May 18)
In New York City, a jury ruled that Leonard Jeffries had been wrongfully dismissed from his job as chairman of City College's Black studies department for criticizing Jews and Whites. It then awarded him $400,000. Jeffries had sued the college for $25 million for replacing him as department chairman. (He remained a member of the faculty, however.) He claimed school officials were upset about a controversial speech he gave in 1991. In that speech, he declared that Jews and the Mafia had conspired to depict Blacks in a negative way in the movies and that Jews had financed the Black slave trade. While his remarks created an uproar, they were not the reason for his firing, insisted school officials. They maintained that Jeffries was simply a poor administrator. The jury sided with Jeffries, saying that his constitutional right to free speech had been violated. After the verdict, he vowed to continue his fight to regain his former job as department chairman.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.