Background
Dr. Wei Jiang, a tenured professor at Duke University, alleged that her salary was reduced and professional opportunities were curtailed following audits of her research study. She claimed these actions were motivated by discrimination based on her race, national origin, sex, and age, as well as retaliation for filing a discrimination charge. The district court dismissed her complaint under Rule twelve comma six for failure to state a claim, and denied her motion to amend the complaint as futile.
The court’s reasoning
The court reviewed the complaint de novo, accepting factual allegations as true but rejecting legal conclusions and unwarranted inferences. It held that Dr. Jiang’s complaint relied on repetitive narratives of professional disagreement and conclusory assertions of discrimination without providing connective facts to support a plausible inference of unlawful motive. Regarding retaliation, the court found that the challenged actions preceded the protected activity or did not constitute protected activity under federal law. The court further concluded that the proposed amended complaint would be futile as it failed to fill the causal gap or provide plausible allegations of similarly situated comparators.
A plausible claim to relief demands more than an unadorned, the-defendant-unlawfully-harmed-me accusation.
Katti v. Arden, 161 F.4th 217, 224 (4th Cir. 2025)
What it means going forward
Employment discrimination plaintiffs in the Fourth Circuit must plead specific facts connecting adverse actions to discriminatory or retaliatory motives rather than relying on speculative assertions or bare recitations of protected class membership.