Prof. Tamar Shirinian gets $1.9 million settlement after dismissal from University of Tennessee
University approved $1.9M settlement with professor fired for criticizing assassinated activist.
The University of Tennessee at Knoxville approved a $1.9 million settlement with Tamar Shirinian, a former Assistant Professor of Anthropology who was dismissed from her position following a critical social media comment about conservative activist Charlie Kirk. On June 30, 2026, the university’s Board of Trustees voted to settle her retaliation lawsuit, which alleged that the institution violated her constitutional rights when it terminated her employment in response to her post. Shirinian had called Kirk a “disgusting psychopath” in a comment posted after Kirk’s assassination in September 2025, and the university subsequently fired her, leading to her legal action against the chancellor, the state university system president, and the faculty senate president.
The settlement represents a significant acknowledgment of the university’s legal exposure in the case, though it comes with notable conditions that limit its scope. Importantly, the agreement does not restore Shirinian to her former position at the university, meaning she will receive financial compensation but will not return to teaching or research at the institution. However, the settlement remains conditional—state officials must still approve the agreement before it becomes final and binding, adding an additional layer of uncertainty to the case outcome.
What Sparked the Dismissal and Legal Settlement?
The sequence of events leading to this settlement began with a social media comment Shirinian made in the aftermath of Charlie Kirk’s assassination in September 2025. Kirk, a prominent conservative activist, had been killed, and in the immediate aftermath, Shirinian posted a response on a public platform characterizing him as a “disgusting psychopath.” Rather than keeping her opinion private, she published her thoughts where university administrators, students, and the broader public could see them. The university’s response was swift and severe—Shirinian was dismissed from her position as Assistant Professor of Anthropology within a relatively short timeframe. The central legal question became whether the university fired her for legitimate institutional reasons or whether the dismissal constituted retaliation for her exercise of free speech.
Shirinian’s attorneys argued that the university had violated her First Amendment rights and her constitutional protections as a public employee. Public employees, including faculty at state universities, retain certain constitutional safeguards that prevent employers from terminating them solely for speech on matters of public concern made outside their official duties. The lawsuit targeted multiple institutional defendants, including the university chancellor, the state university system president, and the faculty senate president, indicating that Shirinian’s legal team viewed the retaliation as institutional rather than isolated. The case illustrates a critical distinction in employment law: an institution’s ability to maintain discipline and institutional reputation does not automatically override an employee’s constitutional right to speak on public matters during personal time. Universities cannot simply claim that controversial speech is inconsistent with institutional values and terminate employment without legal consequences when the speech addresses matters of genuine public concern.
Constitutional Free Speech Rights in Academic Settings
The lawsuit hinged on whether a public university can lawfully terminate a professor for statements made outside the classroom on personal time. courts evaluating such cases typically examine whether the speech addressed a matter of public concern, whether the employee spoke as a citizen rather than in an official institutional capacity, and whether the public interest in the employee’s speech outweighs the employer’s institutional interests in avoiding disruption or reputational harm. In Shirinian’s case, Charlie Kirk’s assassination was undoubtedly a matter of public concern, and her comment, while harsh, engaged directly with that significant public event. The complication arises from the conflict between institutional autonomy and employee free speech protection. Some argue that universities have legitimate interests in distancing themselves from faculty members’ inflammatory language to protect institutional reputation, while others contend that permitting termination based on off-duty speech creates a chilling effect on faculty expression and academic freedom.
This tension reveals a fundamental limitation of employment law: institutions frequently assert “bringing the institution into disrepute” or “violation of institutional values” as justification for adverse action, making it difficult for employees to predict which statements will result in termination. A warning for academics and other public employees is that these institutional claims
Retaliation Claims in Higher Education Employment
Shirinian’s core legal claim was retaliation—the assertion that the university would not have dismissed her but for her protected speech. Retaliation claims typically require showing that the employee engaged in protected conduct and that an adverse action was causally connected to that conduct. The temporal proximity between her social media comment and her firing, combined with the clear causal nexus between her criticism of Kirk and the university’s stated or implied reason for termination, supported the inference of retaliation. The $1.9 million settlement approval by the Board of Trustees signals that the university’s legal counsel determined the retaliation claim had substantial merit—substantial enough to warrant significant financial settlement rather than continued litigation. Universities face considerable legal costs defending employment disputes, particularly those involving constitutional claims.
Years of litigation, depositions, expert testimony, and the risk of a jury verdict exceeding the settlement amount create strong financial incentives to resolve. From the university’s perspective, paying $1.9 million may prove less expensive than defending the case through trial and potential appeal. This financial calculus illustrates how institutions often weigh the measurable cost of settlement against the uncertain costs and risks of litigation. For employees in similar situations, Shirinian’s case demonstrates that retaliation claims against public institutions are viable when the speech involves matters of public concern and the adverse action follows closely after the protected expression. However, the settlement’s failure to restore her professional position reveals a significant limitation: financial compensation, while substantial, cannot fully restore the professional trajectory, institutional affiliation, research opportunities, or academic community that she lost.
Settlement Approval Structure and State Oversight
The Board of Trustees approved the settlement on June 30, 2026, but this approval is not the final or binding step. State officials must still grant approval before the agreement becomes effective and the $1.9 million payment is released to Shirinian. This additional approval requirement reflects the public nature of the dispute and the fact that state funds will satisfy the settlement. State officials reviewing the settlement may evaluate whether the university’s settlement decision was prudent, whether it establishes problematic precedents for future disputes, and whether the amount is reasonable given the underlying claims.
This multi-stage approval process creates both advantages and uncertainties. For Shirinian, pending state approval introduces uncertainty about whether the settlement will ultimately proceed as negotiated, preventing her from considering the matter fully resolved until the state acts. For the university, state approval offers additional oversight and potential legitimacy through independent review, though rejection by state officials would return the case to litigation. Comparing this to private employment disputes illustrates the key difference: when private employers settle cases, the agreement is binding once both parties execute it. When public institutions settle, the presence of state oversight and public funds creates additional procedural layers that can strengthen the settlement’s legitimacy or introduce new obstacles to finalization.
Financial Settlements and Their Limitations in Employment Cases
While $1.9 million is a substantial sum, the settlement’s structure reveals important limitations in using monetary compensation alone to resolve employment disputes. Shirinian receives financial payment but not reinstatement—the settlement explicitly does not restore her to her former position as Assistant Professor of Anthropology. She will not return to teaching, conducting research, or maintaining her institutional affiliation at the University of Tennessee. For many academics, the loss of these professional elements exceeds the significance of financial compensation alone. A critical warning about employment settlements is that they provide financial relief without fully addressing the underlying professional injury.
Shirinian lost her career trajectory at the institution, her participation in the academic community, her access to research resources and graduate students, and her standing in her discipline at UTK. An assistant professor dismissed mid-career faces substantial challenges in reestablishing herself elsewhere, particularly when prospective employers learn the circumstances of her dismissal. Money compensates for lost wages and some benefits, but it cannot restore professional standing or the trajectory that her dismissal interrupted. Settlements frequently include confidentiality provisions that prevent the employee from publicly discussing the case or underlying facts. If Shirinian’s settlement contains such provisions, they would limit her ability to speak publicly about her experience or to contribute to broader conversations about free speech and institutional retaliation in academic settings. This represents another substantial limitation: while monetary settlements address financial damages, they often silence the employee’s voice regarding institutional conduct and constrain public discourse about the issues the case raises.
First Amendment Protections for Academic Employees
As faculty at a state university, Shirinian held First Amendment protections that private sector employees do not possess. The Supreme Court has established that public employees cannot be fired for speech on matters of public concern unless the employer’s interest in maintaining discipline and efficiency substantially outweighs the employee’s interest in speaking. Applying this framework to Shirinian required examining whether her comment about Charlie Kirk addressed a matter of public concern and whether the university could establish that her speech disrupted institutional operations. Charlie Kirk’s assassination was undoubtedly a matter of significant public concern, and Shirinian’s comment, though harshly worded, engaged directly with that public event.
Her statement was made on personal time and not in her capacity as an instructor. She did not use university resources or platforms in a way that exploited her position. These factors typically support constitutional protection. However, a critical limitation is that institutions can assert reputational harm or institutional interests that purportedly justify adverse action, making clear protection difficult to predict or guarantee.
Patterns in Higher Education Retaliation Cases
Shirinian’s case is not isolated in higher education. Universities have faced numerous lawsuits from faculty alleging retaliation for political speech or controversial statements made outside the classroom. Cases involving dismissal or discipline following professors’ public statements about contentious political figures, social movements, or policy questions have generated significant litigation and settlement activity.
These cases reveal a pattern in which universities initially take aggressive action against faculty for politically controversial speech, but subsequently face substantial legal exposure when courts examine the free speech implications of those actions. The $1.9 million settlement reflects a serious institutional commitment of public funds to resolve the dispute, likely reflecting both the strength of Shirinian’s constitutional claims and the university’s desire to avoid extended litigation and the risk of a larger judgment. The case demonstrates that universities face genuine legal and financial consequences when they terminate faculty for protected speech, and that substantial settlements can result from such disputes even before trial or appellate review.

