College of Colorado professor Patty Limerick introduced Wednesday that she had prevailed in her mental property lawsuit towards the Boulder campus.
Limerick — a lauded professor and historian of the American West — alleged in her lawsuit that the college restricted her entry to a long time price of her paperwork and supplies after firing her as director of the Heart for the American West in 2022.
CU repeatedly has denied proscribing Limerick’s entry to her personal scholarly materials. She stays a tenured historical past professor on the faculty.
“For 40 years, Limerick was a hyperactive advocate of and ambassador for the College of Colorado,” a information launch from Limerick’s lawyer, Stan Garnett, acknowledged. “During the last two years, the college’s actions and selections decreased her authority when it got here to exercising that function. She is relieved and blissful to return to the general public sphere, voicing her affection for and gratitude to the school and college students of the College of Colorado on each potential event.”
In Might, Limerick sued CU Boulder for possession of her scholarly work and mental property, claiming the college restricted entry to these supplies via a technicality.
In a press release Wednesday, CU Boulder spokesperson Nicole Mueksch stated the college maintains its place that Limerick was not barred from accessing her work.
“Professor Limerick is and can proceed to be a valued tenured college member of the College of Colorado Boulder,” the college stated in a press release that was agreed upon as a part of the settlement. “The college helps Professor Limerick’s present and future tutorial works, together with the Utilized Historical past Initiative, a program targeted on educating and elevating the work of society’s younger historians.”
Limerick claimed her work was restricted within the chaos of her 2022 firing after an inner investigation discovered the tenured tutorial made her workers uncomfortable by blurring the traces between her private {and professional} lives, comparable to pressuring workers to plan her wedding ceremony.
After the firing, Limerick stated she was given restricted time to vacate her workplace and that she was not allowed again in with out categorical college permission, which made accessing information tough, she stated. She additionally stated she was locked out of sure paperwork and information and that the college “made it very tough” to switch her e mail account.
Garnett claimed CU used a “never-before-used-provision” to strip Limerick’s entry via a college coverage that states the establishment owns supplies created with substantial use of college assets. The settlement stated the college can now not say Limerick used substantial college assets to provide her work.
Beneath the settlement, CU can pay $50,000 for Limerick’s lawyer charges.
The settlement additionally says Limerick, Garnett and an affiliate lawyer can have bodily entry to workplaces and storage areas within the Heart for the American West for an eight-hour interval on the finish of the month, and that they’ll establish a “forensic professional” to comb via and catalog a Google Drive of fabric. Then, Limerick can establish and stock works she believes belong to her, the settlement states.
CU and Limerick agreed to work collectively to deal with any disputes relating to the supplies.
“I’m pleased with the outcomes,” Limerick stated. “I’m blissful that I had the assets to place up a struggle and resist, and apprehensive for these in greater schooling who don’t.”
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