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Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 28, 2026

The annual Robert Ballow Excellence in Writing Awards were presented to Nashville School of Law (NSL) 4L students on March 25. Eight students were recognized for their performance in the Rigorous Writing Exercise (RWE) program. The RWE is a project all NSL students embark on as a requirement of graduation. Working with a volunteer mentor from the legal community, students research and write a 15-20 page paper on the topic of their choice. See the list of winners and read their work. The school also named NSL alumna Kate Nyquist as the 2025 Mentor of the Year. The honor is conferred in recognition of a mentor’s exceptional service to the program.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 28, 2026

Knox County lawyer Robert Brian DeBusk received a public censure from the Tennessee Supreme Court on April 28. While working as an assistant district attorney, DeBusk discovered an email sent from a jailed defendant to his attorney. This intercepted email then became part of the basis for a motion to disqualify the district attorney’s office. DeBusk was subpoenaed to testify at a hearing on the motion. While in the hallway prior to testifying, DeBusk discussed the facts with an attorney not related to this matter, who then was called to testify. When asked about the facts, DeBusk stated “I don’t recall,” which was contrary to what he had discussed in the hallway. When further pressed on his recollection, DeBusk refused to answer by pleading the “Fifth.” Finally, DeBusk testified substantively about the facts of the matter. The court found that these actions violated Rules of Professional 8.4(c) and 8.4(d).

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 28, 2026

Madison County has received $10 million through the General Assembly's approved budget as an initial investment toward building a West Tennessee Regional Juvenile Justice Center that would serve all West Tennessee counties outside of Shelby County. The planned pre-adjudication facility aims to house and support justice-involved youth in a structured environment emphasizing dignity, early intervention and wraparound rehabilitation services. Local and state leaders celebrated the milestone while acknowledging that the $10 million is just a starting point. Full development will require additional state and regional funding to be secured. WBBJ has the story.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 28, 2026

The U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals is seeking comments on the reappointment of Jimmy Croom, bankruptcy judge for the Western District of Tennessee, to a 14-year term that would begin on March 20, 2027. Members of the bar and the public are invited to submit comments to be considered during the reappointment process. All comments will be kept confidential and should be mailed to Circuit Executive Marc Theriault, 503 Potter Stewart U.S. Courthouse, 100 East Fifth St., Cincinnati, Ohio 45202 or be submitted via email. All comments must be received no later than June 11. Contact the Office of the Circuit Executive at 513-564-7200 for more information. Read the full announcement from the court.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 28, 2026

Following federal reclassification of marijuana as a less dangerous drug, Tennessee state Rep. Jason Powell, D-Nashville, urged Gov. Bill Lee to call a special legislative session to consider legalizing medical cannabis, arguing that years of study and broad public support — surveys show that 81% of Tennesseans favor the move — make further delay unjustifiable. Powell framed the issue as one of compassionate care for veterans, cancer patients and other suffering Tennesseans, noting that 40 states already have established medical marijuana programs. Republican lawmakers recently voted to block an automatic state review that federal reclassification would have triggered, expressing concern about moving too quickly on cannabis policy. Marijuana possession remains a crime in Tennessee. According to the Tennessean, some Republicans have signaled openness to change as federal rescheduling shifts oversight toward doctors.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 28, 2026

The Tennessee Supreme Court on April 27 permanently disbarred Hamilton County lawyer Arthur C. Grisham Jr. from the practice of law. The court found that Grisham violated Rules of Professional Conduct 1.3 and 1.4 when he knowingly and repeatedly failed to respond to court orders, pleadings and discovery requests; failed to communicate with his client about the impact of these actions; and failed to inform his client of the resulting dismissal of his action. Further, Grisham knowingly filed an appeal without informing his client and obtaining authorization, and knowingly ignored court orders to correct deficient pleadings, which resulted in the dismissal of the appeal. The court modified the recommendation of the Board of Professional Responsibility's hearing panel to impose a 10 year suspension. It said that a comparative analysis of similar cases and a review of American Bar Association (ABA) standards justified permanent disbarment.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 28, 2026

Gov. Bill Lee has appointed lawyer Mark Stapleton of Rogersville to the 3rd Judicial District Circuit Court, the Administrative Office of the Courts announced today. Stapleton fills the vacancy created by the elevation of Judge William Phillips to the Court of Appeals, effective immediately. Stapleton currently serves as founding attorney at Stapleton Law Office. He earned his bachelor’s degree at the University of Tennessee and his law degree from the Cumberland School of Law. The 3rd Judicial District covers Hamblen, Hancock, Hawkins and Greene counties.

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 28, 2026

Richard Bean, the 85-year-old former superintendent of a Knox County juvenile detention center named for him, has filed a federal lawsuit seeking $5 million from Knox County, County Mayor Glenn Jacobs and Juvenile Court Judge Tim Irwin. Bean alleges his constitutional rights were violated through forced resignation, age discrimination and reputational damage from public statements made by county officials, Knox News reports. The lawsuit claims Irwin and Jacobs conspired against Bean after he fired two employees — a nurse and an IT specialist — who had exposed medical malfeasance at the facility, and that the officials pressured him to rehire those workers before he resigned three days later. Bean says the ordeal cost him lost wages and earning capacity and caused emotional pain and suffering.

Posted by: Doug Hamill on Apr 28, 2026

In a split decision, based upon an issue of first impression, the 6th Circuit recently held that no retaliation claim exists under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act in the case of Smith v. Michigan Department of Corrections.[1] The holding is somewhat surprising as courts nationwide have long assumed without questioning that the cause of action exists.

The issue of whether a retaliation claim exists presented itself in an unusual manner. Smith sued his former employer, Michigan Department of Corrections and the State of Michigan (collectively MDOC), under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act[2] for failing to provide him a reasonable accommodation for his disability and retaliating against him for making an accommodation request. The district court granted summary judgment to MDOC on the failure-to-accommodate claim, but the retaliation claim was tried for 10 days to a jury, which found in favor of MDOC. Smith appealed several trial issues, including whether the jury instruction erroneously required Smith to prove his disability was the “sole cause” of MDOC’s adverse action against him — a standard drawn from Section 504(a) of the Rehabilitation Act. However, prior to oral argument, the 6th Circuit, sua sponte, raised the issue of whether a retaliation claim even exists under the act — an issue the parties and the district court assumed was not even in dispute.

Judge Bush, joined by Judge Batchelder, wrote the majority opinion. The majority first noted that the Supreme Court has never held that any provision of the act creates a private right of action for retaliation.[3] Nor is there binding precedent from the 6th Circuit.[4] The majority recognized that “[t]he longstanding practice of this circuit has been to proceed under the assumption that a cause of action for retaliation exists under § 504.”[5] However, much like decisions from other circuit courts, the majority viewed caselaw as “widespread but informal acceptance of retaliation claims lacking meaningful statutory analysis.”[6] Therefore, the majority turned to statutory analysis.

First, the majority noted the presumption against implied causes of action[7] when the statute in question was enacted much like a contract between the federal government and state governments.[8] Any conditions the federal government attaches to the receipt of federal funds must be stated unambiguously. That is, recipients of federal funds must understand that they may be potentially accepting exposure to private lawsuits.[9] Because Section 504(a) does not explicitly mention retaliation, the majority “decline[d] to read retaliation into a provision that says nothing about it.”[10]

Second, the majority focused upon the language of Section 504(d) of the act. Smith argued that the cause of action for retaliation must arise from Section 504(d)’s express incorporation of “standards” from the ADA, including the ADA’s anti-retaliation provision, 42 U.S.C. § 12203.[11] The majority again noted that Section 504(d) contained no express provision for a retaliation claim.[12] As for the term “standards,” the majority found that “standards” are not synonymous with “cause of action.”[13] “Standards guide how claims are adjudicated, not whether a cause of action exists in the first place.”[14] Smith also argued that the Supreme Court case of Jackson v. Birmingham Board of Education,[15] holding that Title IX’s general prohibition against discrimination on the basis of sex was broad enough to include retaliation even in the absence of an express provision, was persuasive authority to find a retaliation cause of action under Section 504.[16] The majority, however, disagreed. It noted that, unlike Title IX, the Rehabilitation Act does not carry with it a similar history of expansive judicial interpretation, nor does the act contain general language like Title IX’s prohibition on discrimination “on the basis of sex.”[17]

The majority summarized its holding as follows. 

We read § 504(d) to incorporate from the ADA only adjudicatory standards — and not to create new causes of action — because that interpretation aligns with both the ordinary legal meaning of ‘standards,’ and the structure of the Rehabilitation Act and related acts. Subsection (d) functions as a technical cross-reference provision; it is structurally and linguistically ill-suited to serve as the source of an implied right to sue.[18]

On the issue of whether a retaliation claim exists under the act, Judge Bloomekatz wrote a vigorous dissent. First, the dissent pointed to long-standing caselaw within the 6th Circuit and in other circuits which recognized a cause of action for retaliation under the act.[19] Second, from a policy standpoint, the dissent noted that “[p]rotection against retaliation is essential to effective enforcement of anti-discrimination statutes because those regimes depend on individuals coming forward to report violations.”[20] Third, the dissent agreed with Smith’s argument that, by incorporating the ADA’s anti-retaliation provision, Section 504(d) is not silent as to retaliation; it therefore prohibits retaliation and provides a cause of action for retaliation in employment cases.[21] The dissent explained that the majority’s holding — that no right of action for retaliation exists — would render meaningless Section 504(d)’s express incorporation of the ADA’s anti-retaliation provision.[22] According to the dissent, when the Rehabilitation Act was amended by adding cross-references to the ADA within Section 504(d), such cross references should not be treated as surplusage. Rather, courts should interpret the ADA cross references (particularly those provisions that do not relate to causation standards) to “give effect, if possible, to every clause and word of a statute.”[23] In sum, Section 504(d)’s incorporation of the ADA’s anti-retaliation provision is itself an express intent of Congress to allow a cause of action for retaliation under Section 504 of the act, according to the dissent.

The plaintiff filed a petition for certiorari in February 2026. Thus, it is possible that the Supreme Court may directly take up this issue. Notwithstanding, there are two key takeaways from this split decision. First, the causation standard applicable for employment-related claims brought under Section 504 is most likely “but for” causation (the same as under Title I of the ADA), rather than “sole” causation. Judge Bloomekatz expressly held so in her dissenting opinion, noting that Section 504(d) creates a carve-out for employment-related claims and incorporating the standards of Title I of the ADA to such claims.[24] The majority opinion, in dicta, essentially says the same thing. “Instead, § 504(d) merely states that the ‘standards’ for determining whether employment discrimination has occurred under the Rehabilitation Act are the same as those applied under Title I of the ADA.”[25] Had Judges Bush and Batchelder found that a retaliation claim existed under Section 504, they most likely would have agreed with Judge Bloomekatz that the “but for” causation standard applies to employment-related claims.

The second takeaway is consideration of whether a retaliation claim exists under Section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act,[26] which applies to disability discrimination claims against the federal government, i.e., federal sector employment. Notably, Section 501(f) has identical wording to Section 504(d).[27] Many of the same arguments raised in the Smith case — both pro and con — could be made in the context of Section 501. One notable distinction, however, is that Section 501 applies to the federal government, which normally embraces (rather than limits) broad anti-retaliation provisions and schemes. Food for thought, however.


Doug Hamill is a member of Mikel & Hamill PLLC in Chattanooga.  He primarily represents individuals in employment law matters.  He can be reached at dhamill@mhemploymentlaw.com.


[1] 159 F.4th 1067 (6th Cir. 2025) decided on November 21, 2025

[2] 29 U.S.C. § 794

[3] 159 F.4th at 1075

[4] Id. at 1076

[5] Id.

[6] Id.

[7] There is no express cause of action for retaliation mentioned in Section 504 of the act.

[8] Id. at 1077

[9] Id. at 1078

[10] Id.

[11] Id.

[12] Id. at 1079

[13] Id.

[14] Id.

[15] 544 U.S. 167

[16] Id. at 1081

[17] Id.

[18] Id. at 1082

[19] Id. at 1086-87

[20] Id. at 1087

[21] Id. at 1091

[22] Id. at 1092

[23] Id. at 1093

[24] Id. at 1093-94

[25] Id. at 1081

[26] 29 U.S.C. § 791

[27] Compare 29 U.S.C. § 791(f) to 29 U.S.C. § 794(d)

Posted by: Julia Wilburn on Apr 28, 2026

three-judge panel of the Tennessee Court of Appeals has ruled that Gov. Bill Lee's October 2025 deployment of the National Guard to Memphis is legal, reversing a judgement from Davidson County Chancellor Patricia Head Moskal. The Commercial Appeal reports that three questions were brought by the state to the appeal: whether plaintiffs invoked an available waiver of the government's immunity (known as sovereign immunity) from being sued, if they have standing and if Lee violated state law in deploying the National Guard to Memphis. According to the Daily Memphian, the panel weighed whether or not the plaintiffs had standing to sue — holding that they did not — and did not address whether Lee's deployment order was legal. Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti said in a press release that the ruling "recognizes that an elected official who disagrees with this effort does not have the right to veto the Governor by filing a lawsuit. When elected officials disagree about policy, we resolve that at the ballot box, not the courts." Read the appellate opinion.


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