Lawsuit accuses Harvard of ignoring sexual harassment by professor

Harvard University had no comment regarding a lawsuit filed by three female graduate students accusing the Ivy League school of ignoring for years the sexual harassment of students by a professor. (Shutterstock)
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Updated 08 February 2022
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Lawsuit accuses Harvard of ignoring sexual harassment by professor

  • Harvard placed John Comaroff on administrative leave following a university investigation into his conduct
  • The trio alleged that Comaroff for years "kissed and groped students without their consent"

BOSTON: Three female graduate students at Harvard University filed a lawsuit on Tuesday accusing the Ivy League school of ignoring for years the sexual harassment of students by a professor who they said threatened their academic careers if they reported him.
The students filed the lawsuit in federal court in Boston days after Harvard placed John Comaroff, an anthropology professor and expert on South Africa, on administrative leave following a university investigation into his conduct.
Margaret Czerwienski, Lilia Kilburn and Amulya Mandava alleged that Comaroff for years “kissed and groped students without their consent, made unwelcome sexual advances, and threatened to sabotage students’ careers if they complained.”
They said they were among the students who reported Comaroff to Harvard officials. Yet despite those warnings, Harvard watched as he retaliated by ensuring the students would have “trouble getting jobs,” the lawsuit said.
Comaroff, who joined Harvard in 2012, was not named as a defendant. His lawyers — Norman Zalkind, Janet Halley, and Ruth O’Meara-Costello — in a joint statement said he “categorically denies ever harassing or retaliating against any student.”
Harvard had no comment. In January, it placed Comaroff on leave for the spring semester and barred him from teaching required courses after finding he engaged in verbal conduct that violated its sexual harassment and professional conduct policies.
Those sanctions have divided the Harvard community, where nearly 40 faculty members signed onto an open letter questioning the investigation and calling him an “excellent colleague.”
In Tuesday’s lawsuit, the women said Harvard’s inaction allowed Comaroff to repeatedly and forcibly kiss Kilburn, grope her in public and even graphically described ways she would be supposedly raped or killed in South Africa for being in a same-sex relationship.
All three said their academic trajectories and career prospects had been “profoundly altered” and that Harvard violated Title IX of the Educational Amendments of 1972, which protects students from discrimination based on sex, and various Massachusetts laws.


Swiss bar owner released on bail after deadly New Year’s fire, prompting outcry

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Swiss bar owner released on bail after deadly New Year’s fire, prompting outcry

  • Italy’s PM Giorgia Meloni calls decision ‘insult’ to victims’ families
  • Victims’ families concerned about evidence disappearing
GENEVA: The owner of a Swiss bar that was engulfed in a deadly New Year’s Day fire was released from detention on bail on Friday, court authorities said, prompting anger and incomprehension from victims’ families and Italy’s prime minister.
Jacques Moretti and his wife Jessica are under investigation for negligent homicide and other crimes linked to the blaze that killed ‌40 people and ‌injured more than 100, many of ‌them teenagers. ⁠Many of ‌the survivors are still hospitalized with severe burns in hospitals across Europe.
Jacques Moretti was detained on January 9. His bail arrangements include a 200,000 Swiss franc ($253,485) payment and an order to report daily to a police station, the court said.
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni called the decision to release him “an affront to the memory of the victims of ⁠the New Year’s Eve tragedy and an insult to their families, who are suffering from ‌the loss of their loved ones.”
“The Italian ‍government will demand answers from ‍the Swiss authorities about what happened,” she wrote on X. ‍Six of the dead were Italian as were 10 of those injured.
Lawyers for the victims and their families also said they were struggling to understand the court order and said their clients were concerned about evidence disappearing.
“My clients note that once again no consideration has been given to the risk of collusion or the disappearance ⁠of evidence — a risk that greatly worries them and jeopardizes the integrity of the proceedings,” said Romain Jordan, a Swiss lawyer for over 20 families of victims.
The owners have both expressed grief over the tragedy and said they would cooperate with prosecutors.
“Jessica and Jacques Moretti will both continue to comply with all requests from the authorities,” their lawyers said in a written statement after the release order.
Prosecutors said they had interviewed the bar owners about safety issues and renovations of Le Constellation bar during two hearings that had each lasted ‌more than 10 hours.
They had also ordered searches, secured evidence and seized assets, they added.