A whistleblower who went public with accusations of sexual assault against a St. Louis chess coach now says that she鈥檚 facing retaliation.
, chess grandmaster Jennifer Shahade, a two-time National Women鈥檚 Chess Champion, publicly accused Alejandro Ramirez of assaulting her and engaging in sexual misconduct with younger players.
Shahade鈥檚 allegations ultimately led to her being 鈥渃onstructively discharged鈥 from her position as director of women鈥檚 programs for the St. Louis-based U.S. Chess Federation. , Shahade said the discharge followed a 鈥渟ham mediation鈥 and public statements by chess officials to discredit her as a whistleblower.
Ramirez, who has denied the allegations against him, with the St. Louis Chess Club and St. Louis University.
The case was taken up on Monday鈥檚 Legal Roundtable edition of St. Louis on the Air.
鈥淐ertainly, there's been a lot of publications made by the Chess Federation that are directly rebutting allegations that she makes, and these are all played out in the public sphere,鈥 said attorney Erin Lueker, a former public defender for St. Louis County and a prosecuting attorney for the State of Missouri. 鈥淚n her case, the question was whether or not these are actually false rumors.鈥
Along with Lueker, the panel discussion featured Eric Banks, a former city counselor for St. Louis, and Mark Smith, former associate vice chancellor and dean at Washington University.
In addition to , the panel discussed an unusual fine against an assistant city counselor and the latest updates in the case of a St. Louis officer who crashed a police SUV into Bar:PM.
To hear the full discussion and analysis by the Legal Roundtable, listen to St. Louis on the Air on , or or by clicking the play button below.
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