Judicial
Watch Urges Federal Probe of Racially Discriminatory Teachers’
Contract

We have formally
requested that the Civil Rights Divisions of the U.S. Departments of
Education and Labor investigate the collective bargaining agreement between
Minneapolis Public Schools and the Minneapolis Federation of Teachers,
citing violations of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
In August 2022, we filed a lawsuit
on behalf of a Minneapolis taxpayer over a teachers’ contract that
provided discriminatory job protections to certain racial minorities. The
lawsuit was filed against the superintendent of the Minneapolis Public
Schools, the Minneapolis Public Schools, and the Minneapolis Board of
Education for violating the Equal Protection Guarantee of the Minnesota
Constitution.
In January 2025, the Minnesota Supreme Court issued an
opinion,
rejecting our lawsuit without addressing the constitutionality of the
contract.
In our letters
to the Civil Rights Divisions of the Departments of Education and Labor,
Judicial Watch urges the agencies to “open a formal investigation” of
Minneapolis public
schools for civil rights violations:
Judicial Watch
requests the Office for Civil Rights investigate Article 15 of the
collective bargaining agreement between the Minneapolis Public Schools,
Special District No. 1 (“MPS”) and the Minneapolis Federation of
Teachers Local 59. The contract violates the equal protection clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S.
Constitution.
Article 15 exempts teachers of
color from MPS’s seniority-based layoffs and reassignments, which means,
when layoffs or reassignments occur, the next senior teacher who is not
“of color” would be laid off or reassigned. The contract also mandates
that MPS reinstate teachers of color over more senior teachers who are not
“of color.” Prior to the contract, teachers were laid off or reassigned
in order of seniority, with the least senior teachers laid off or
reassigned first, without regard to race or ethnicity.
Similarly, teachers were reinstated in order of seniority, with the more
senior teachers reinstated first, without regard to race or ethnicity.
Article 15 has been effective as of July 1, 2021, and continues to be in
effect today. In addition, MPS is currently negotiating with the
teachers’ union concerning a new contract. There is no indication that
this provision will not be included in the new contract.
***
MPS’s Article 15 is repugnant to the
U.S. Constitution’s guarantee of equal protection under the 14th
Amendment. It is not only a discriminatory contract that threatens
teachers’ jobs, but a blatant civil rights violation and cannot
stand.
The letters conclude: “Should any portion of
this complaint fall outside the OCR’s [Office of Civil Rights] subject
matter jurisdiction, we request that you refer that portion to the Attorney
General for further
action.”
Minneapolis Public Schools clearly discriminate against
teachers based on their race, and the school district is using taxpayer
dollars to do so. Let’s hope that the Departments of Education and Labor
do a better job of upholding civil rights law than the Minnesota Supreme
Court.
Judicial Watch Sues FBI for Records on
Death of Terrorist ‘Marwan’
We’re looking to shed
light on a law enforcement action that took down a “Most Wanted”
international terrorist.
We filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA)
lawsuit
against the U.S. Department of Justice for
records related to the killing of Malaysian-born terrorist Zulkifli bin
Hir, also known as “Marwan,” during a police raid (Judicial
Watch, Inc. v. U.S. Department of Justice (No.
1:25-cv-01991)).
Zulkifli bin Hir aka “Marwan” was
indicted by the Justice Department in August 2007 for
conspiracy and providing material support to
terrorists:
Zulkifli Abdhir, aka “Zulkifli Bin Abdul
Hir, aka “Hulagu,” aka “Marwan,” age 41, a fugitive believed to be
in the Philippines, is charged in the indictment with conspiracy to provide
material support to terrorists and providing material support to
terrorists. In September 2003, the U.S. government designated Abdhir as a
Specially Designated Global Terrorist pursuant to Executive Order 13224. In
March 2007, the State Department added him to the most-wanted list of its
Rewards for Justice program and authorized a reward of up to $5 million for
information leading to his arrest or conviction …
In
January 2015, Zulkifli bin Hir reportedly was
killed during a raid by the Philippine National Police Special Action
Force. Forty-four members of the police’s elite force also died in the
assault.
A finger taken from a man killed in the raid was delivered
to the FBI for DNA analysis. The FBI
stated: “After a thorough review of forensic data
and information obtained from our Philippine law enforcement partners, the
FBI has assessed that terrorism subject, Zulkifli Abdhir … is deceased
and has been removed from the FBI’s list of Most Wanted
Terrorists.”
We sued after the FBI failed to respond to an April
25, 2025, FOIA request for records on Zulkifli bin Hir (aka “Marwan”)
and his death during Oplan (Operation Plan) Exodus on January 25, 2015, in
Mamasapano, Maguindanao, Philippines. The request asked for records about
the collection, analysis, and chain of custody of a severed left index
finger alleged to belong to Marwan, as well as photographs of his body and
any related identification or forensic documentation.
Marwan was a
high-profile international terrorist on the FBI’s Most Wanted list with a
$5 million reward. The operation that brought him down over a decade ago
was a major event in Philippine and U.S. counterterrorism history. It’s
time for
transparency.
Judicial Watch
Sues for Records on Workplace Incident Involving
Attorney
We’re in court to help a patent attorney get the
records she rightfully deserves.
We filed a Freedom of Information
Act (FOIA) lawsuit
on behalf of patent attorney Regina Ciolek against the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS) for records concerning a reported
“workplace incident” at the Broad
Institute of MIT and Harvard (Regina
Ciolek v. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
(No.1:25-cv-02764)).
Ciolek
worked as associate intellectual property counsel at the Broad Institute of
MIT and Harvard from December 2016 to July 2021, where she was responsible
for managing intellectual property matters and patent law. The Broad
Institute receives funding from the National Institutes of Health, a
component of Health and Human Services.
Ciolek
has over 20 years of experience in intellectual property law, specializing
in biotechnology and life sciences. She holds a juris doctorate degree from
Suffolk University Law School and a master’s in biology from Brandeis
University.
We sued in the U.S. District Court for the District of
Columbia after the National Institutes of Health failed to respond to an
April 16, 2025, request for:
Copies of all records in
NIH’s possession related to a workplace incident that occurred between
December 2016 and present, where [Ciolek] was the victim. Specifically,
[Ciolek] seek[s]:
- Any NIH reports,
internal investigations, complaints, or communications (emails, memos, or
reports) regarding this incident involving Sahand Hormoz, Nir Hacohen, and
[Corri] Hale.
- Records of any disciplinary actions or safety
measures taken as a result of the incident.
- Security reports or
footage logs from NIH security personnel and/or Broad Institute personnel
if they exist.
- Records and/or images, in any way relating to
trafficked non-consensual pornography of the victim,
[Ciolek].
The three individuals connected to the incident named
in our complaint are:
Sahand
Hormoz, an associate professor of systems biology at
Harvard University and associate professor of data science at Dana-Farber
Cancer Institute, with affiliations to the Broad
Institute.
Nir
Hacohen, a core institute member and the director of the Center for
Cell Circuits at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard. He is the director
of cancer immunology at the Mass General Hospital Krantz Family Center for
Cancer Research, the David P. Ryan Chair in Cancer Research at the Mass
General Cancer Center, and a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical
School.
Cori
(Corri) Hale, senior counsel at the Broad Institute and previously an
attorney at Hale Law PC, which specializes in the defense of medical
professionals and research scientists, criminal law and business
disputes.
It is ridiculous that our client must resort
to suing the government to obtain information that she is legally entitled
to receive.
Our lawsuits on behalf of clients challenging government
actions are extensive.
Most recently, we announced that the U.S. Air
Force will finally provide full
military funeral honors to Ashli Babbitt, the Air Force veteran who was
shot and killed inside the U.S. Capitol by then-Capitol Police Lt. Michael
Byrd on January 6, 2021. Babbitt was the only official January 6 homicide
victim. The Biden administration had previously denied Babbitt and her
family these honors in retaliation for being at the U.S. Capitol that day.
This decision came on the heels of a massive, nearly $5 million Trump
administration settlement to her family for wrongful death and other claims
against the U.S. Government.
In July 2025, the Pennsylvania
Commonwealth Court ruled
that Bucks County, Pennsylvania acted in bad faith in unlawfully
suppressing public records concerning the county health department’s
Covid-19 school guidance. The Commonwealth Court affirmed the trial
court’s May 2023 award of sanctions against Bucks County in the
amount of $3,000 to Judicial Watch client Megan
Brock.
In January 2024, the City of San Francisco, in a 7-3 vote by
the Board of Supervisors of the City and County of San Francisco,
authorized a settlement
agreement in a taxpayer lawsuit we brought against the city, agreeing
to discontinue its discriminatory guaranteed-income program funded by
taxpayer money in favor of transgender individuals with a preference for
biological black and Latino men who identify as women. The agreement
committed the city to pay $3,250 in attorney’s fees and costs and not to
create a new guaranteed income program with the same eligibility
criteria.
HUD to Finally Stop
Illegals from ‘Riding the Coattails of American
Taxpayers’
Your tax dollars have been used to pay for the
housing of thousands of illegal aliens, which means people who are legally
present in the U.S. are deprived of help. Our Corruption
Chronicles blog reports:
Earlier
this year, in an effort to reverse the damage amid a nationwide affordable
housing crisis, HUD and the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) signed a
Memorandum
of Understanding (MOU)
to end the wasteful misappropriation of taxpayer dollars to benefit illegal
aliens instead of American citizens, especially veterans in need. Under the
agreement HUD provided a full-time staff member to assist in operations at
the
Incident Command Center (ICC), creating an interagency partnership to
facilitate data sharing and ensure taxpayer-funded housing programs are not
used to harbor or benefit illegal aliens. “We will safeguard precious
taxpayer resources, and we will stop the harmful practices of the former
Biden Administration, which favored and prioritized illegal aliens over
American citizens in the expenditure of housing funds and subsidies,” the
HUD-DHS MOU states. Within days HUD announced
that illegal immigrants would no longer qualify for government-backed
mortgages through a Federal Housing Administration (FHA) program that lends
to “non-permanent residents.” The new
policy ensures that illegal aliens cannot access FHA-insured financing and
refocuses the use of taxpayer-funded federal housing programs to benefit
U.S. citizens.
A few days ago, HUD Secretary
Scott Turner took another critical step, sending a letter to
over 3,000 Public Housing Authorities (PHA) around the nation requiring
citizenship information for residents of the Section 8 program, which is
funded by HUD and
managed by local PHAs. Illegal aliens are not supposed to benefit from
Section 8 housing, but enforcement has been lax for years and an estimated
100,000 non-citizens receive the taxpayer-funded subsidies. The audit will
help clear the rolls and free resources to prioritize the needs of American
citizens, according to Turner. PHAs have 30 days to provide tenant names,
addresses, unit size and cost, number of people per unit and proof of
American citizenship or eligible immigration status. “This information is
required by law and this administration is upholding the law to its fullest
extent,” Turner, a former Texas state legislator and professional
football player, writes in the letter. “No longer will illegal aliens be
able to leave citizenship boxes blank or take advantage of HUD-funded
housing, riding the coattails of hardworking American
taxpayers.”
The nation’s housing
secretary goes on to reveal that
his agency currently serves only one out of four eligible families due in
part to the lack of enforcement of prohibition against federally funded
assistance to illegal aliens. “HUD will leverage all available
enforcement actions against entities who do not comply with the request for
citizenship information, including but not limited to, examination of HUD
funding and/or evaluation of PHA program eligibility,” Scott’s letter
to the country’s PHAs states. Public housing advocates claim the
crackdown will destabilize poor families and worsen the nation’s housing
crisis. “No matter where we come from, how long we’ve lived here, or
what language we speak, our country has the resources to ensure that all of
us have a safe place to call home,” said an official with the National
Housing Law Project, a nonprofit dedicated to advancing housing justice
for poor people. “But Trump and Turner are threatening to take away the
funding necessary to keep millions of people housed, despite tenants across
the country struggling to make ends meet. Rather than address sky-high
rents, increasing evictions, and record homelessness, Trump and Turner are
forcing public housing authorities to divert their limited resources
away from affordable housing and towards wasteful policy designed to cause
fear and hardship among immigrant families and scare them into
self-evicting.”
Until next week,
