The U.S. Department of Education has admitted that its leadership deliberately ignored a federal court order during the Biden administration, according to a newly released government watchdog report. The clash centers around Title IX and a 2022 court order from a federal judge in Tennessee.
Background
The issue began after President Joe Biden issued a 2021 executive order aimed at preventing discrimination based on gender identity and sexual orientation. When the education department issued new Title IX guidance based on that order, several states sued. A judge eventually ordered the agency to stop enforcing the new policy in those states.
A chief attorney working in the department’s Kansas City office blew the whistle, claiming the Office for Civil Rights was completely ignoring the judge’s ban. At first, the Department of Education investigated itself and claimed the whistleblower was wrong. But the Office of Special Counsel, an independent federal watchdog, noticed the agency suspiciously left out a major piece of evidence: a 25-page memo from a regional director that backed up the whistleblower’s exact claims.
Investigation Findings
Pushed by the watchdog to look closer, the department submitted a second report and completely reversed its stance. The new findings confirmed that former civil rights leadership worked hard to prevent the Kansas City office from complying with the clear meaning of the court order. Investigators also found evidence that bosses may have used intimidation and coercion to cover their tracks.
Charles Baldis, the Chief Counsel for the Office of Special Counsel, praised the staff who stepped up to expose the issue. “I commend the whistleblower for being persistent in reporting the disclosure despite significant internal resistance,” Baldis said in a press release.
Baldis did not hold back on his recommendations for how to fix the problem. He has advised the department to discipline or fire anyone involved in the cover-up, conduct a full audit of the civil rights office’s actions in the affected states, and financially compensate the employee who came forward.
Original reporting: Tampa Free Press — read the source article.