Controversial University of Central Florida Professor Charles Negy was under investigation — and then cleared — for comments he made in class about Black men’s penises. The investigation was happening at the same time Negy won a significant legal victory in federal court against the school in his ongoing lawsuit.
An anonymous person filed a complaint this Spring that said Nagy made a comment implying Black men have large penises as an example of a positive stereotype.
“It was deeply inappropriate and made me profoundly uncomfortable,” the person wrote in the complaint in April that UCF recently released following a Florida Politics records request.
But ultimately, the school’s psychology chair, Florian Jentsch, found Negy’s comments were “relevant to the class and fell within his academic freedom for the subject he was teaching,” school records said.
The school took no action and suggested the person who complained could see a counselor or go to the ombudsman for additional help.
Negy, who has taught psychology at UCF since 1998, is paid $120,316 annually, according to the school.
When reached for comment, Negy took issue with the fact that UCF allows for anonymous complaints, arguing the process invites “frivolous complaints.”
He also denied he had been laughing or telling a joke, saying the discussion about Black men’s penises fit into a larger, serious debate.
“The purpose of addressing positive stereotypes in class is because most students have the incorrect view that group stereotypes always reflect something negative about the group. I want them to understand society also has positive group stereotypes that equally may (or may not) be unfounded,” Negy wrote in an email. “Surely you know that that stereotype about Black men is highly common in popular U.S. culture, which makes you wonder how an adult college student would be so traumatized over hearing it discussed briefly and with context in a university course?”
Negy has a history at UCF of making remarks that some people find offensive.
In 2020, as Black Lives Matter protests unfolded, Negy’s comments went viral on social media, saying that Blacks have privilege and aren’t discriminated against in the United States. #UCFfirehim began trending on Twitter. UCF condemned Negy’s statement.
Under pressure from the backlash, UCF began investigating Negy and accused him of creating a hostile class environment.
The school fired the longtime psychology professor, but his termination was short-lived since an arbitrator ruled Negy could get his job back.
Then Negy fought back.
Negy filed a federal lawsuit in 2023 over claims that UCF violated his First and Fourteenth Amendment rights. Negy said he was prosecuted for his views and suffered financially and emotionally when he temporarily lost his job.
U.S. District Judge Carlos Mendoza wrote “a reasonable jury … could find that Defendants’ motives were entirely unlawful” in firing Negy.
“There is evidence showing they were motivated by their distaste for Plaintiff and his views, along with public pressure. But in the words of Noam Chomsky: ‘If we don’t believe in freedom of expression for people we despise, we don’t believe in it at all,’” Mendoza wrote in his order in May. “This could be one of those ‘rarest of cases where reasonable government officials truly know that the termination . . . of a public employee violated ‘clearly established’ federal rights.”
In his ruling, Mendoza denied summary judgment to UCF President Alexander Cartwright, Provost Michael Johnson and then interim College of Sciences Dean Tosha Dupras. The Judge ruled in favor of UCF Chief DEI Officer Kent Butler over Negy and was split on Office of Institutional Equity Director Nancy Myers.
“That means the court found there was enough evidence for a jury to decide whether Dr. Negy was actually fired in retaliation for his constitutionally protected speech rather than for alleged classroom misconduct. Importantly, the court denied qualified immunity to four of the five individual defendants, meaning they could potentially be held personally liable,” according to Negy’s lawyer, Samantha Harris. “Those defendants have appealed that decision to the Eleventh Circuit.”
The 11th Circuit warned it might not have jurisdiction, which could send Negy’s civil lawsuit back to the lower court for trial, said Harris, who called Mendoza’s ruling “very, very significant” for Negy, who she said is simply standing up for his rights.
UCF declined to comment for this story.
Harris defended Negy amid his lawsuit and the newest complaint about his discussion of stereotypes.
“Look, he teaches a cross-cultural psychology class,” Harris said. “I deal with so many faculty members whose courses touch on sensitive subject matters, and with students today, that can really be a minefield.”
Gov. Ron DeSantis and state leaders are making higher education a battleground to fight against “woke” professors. A conservative professor like Negy could be someone Republicans want to protect (although adding to the nuances, Negy is also gay and Hispanic).
Harris said of UCF, “Because of this lawsuit, their actions around the First Amendment and academic freedom are under a tremendous amount of scrutiny right now.
‘We deserve city council members that will not only work tirelessly to get our neighbors back in their houses and our businesses reopened, but also elected officials that have a vision.’
Former Rep. Jennifer Webb has entered the race for the Gulfport City Council’s Ward 3 seat and will launch her campaign this week with a birthday kickoff event at the North End Tap House.
Webb, a Democrat who is the current Executive Director of Live Tampa Bay, announced her candidacy in a message to supporters and on her campaign website. She wrote that her decision to run for the Ward 3 seat is rooted in years of connection to Gulfport and long involvement in neighborhood events, local volunteer efforts and community support.
“You deserve someone who cherishes our community enough to show up, who appreciates our city enough to insist on transparency and accountability, and who loves all of our neighbors enough to live and let live,” she wrote.
From 2018-2020, Webb represented House District 69, which spans throughout parts of Pinellas County. Her professional background includes serving as the Director of Project Opioid Tampa Bay and founding the consulting firm Omni Public and worked at the University of South Florida as Director of Partnerships for the Office of Community Engagement and Partnerships, according to her Live Tampa Bay profile.
Webb holds degrees from the University of South Florida and Louisiana State University.
She chose to live in Ward 3 because of the neighborhood’s diversity and added that the city needs Council members who “champion the final leg of our recovery” from Hurricane’s Helene and Milton, and “provide a pathway into our future.”
“We deserve city council members that will not only work tirelessly to get our neighbors back in their houses and our businesses reopened, but also elected officials that have a vision for the future of Gulfport that includes all of our neighbors,” she wrote.
Her campaign kickoff event is scheduled for Thursday from 5:30 to 7 p.m. at the North End Tap House. She is also accepting contributions through her website.
A federal watchdog says the Energy Foundation China (EF China) and U.S. Energy Foundation (US EF) violated Florida fundraising regulations.
Americans for Public Trust (APT), a group focused on foreign dark money fundraising, sent a letter to Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson alleging the nonprofit groups broke Florida’sSolicitation of Contributions Act. That requires any nonprofits soliciting donations in Florida to register with the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Affairs — and now bars registered entities from taking money from any “foreign source of concern.”
“EF China, an organization ‘that works with the Chinese government on climate change issues,’ is one of the most prolific processers of foreign dark money,” wrote Caitlin Sutherland, Executive Director of APT, in a six-page letter to Simpson.
The organization says EF China directs money in different nations through other nonprofits.
“While this foreign funding — which is mostly pushing extremist environmental policies — has been exposed, countless more millions could very-well be flowing into EF China from the United States’ adversaries, as EF China has selectively disclosed only certain ‘key funders.’ As such, the systemic interconnectedness between EF China and the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) accentuates the urgent need for extensive inquiry,” the letter reads.
The message ties several EF China officials, including organization President Ji Zou and Executive Director of International Cooperation Huiyong Zhang, to the Chinese Communist Party.
EF China has registered in Florida as a charitable foundation since 2018. US EF, a San Francisco-based organization with the same U.S. address as EF’s China’s American office, has registered in Florida since 2022.
But APT said changessigned by Gov. Ron DeSantis in 2024 mean any connection to a “foreign country of concern” puts both groups in conflict with Florida law. State statute lists China specifically as a nation registered nonprofits cannot be funded by and still solicit charitable contributions in Florida.
“There is substantial evidence suggesting that both EF China and U.S. EF may have accepted funding or other things of value directly or indirectly from Chinese sources or facilitators,” the letter reads.
Besides EF China listing in its mission statement a desire of “contributing to China’s accomplishment of an early carbon peak and carbon neutrality,” the nonprofit has an office in Beijing and acts there under oversight of the National Development and Reform Commission of China, a Department of the nation’s State Council.
While the Beijing office is listed as a foreign branch on registration paperwork, APT says more employees for EF China work in China than in the U.S. Moreover, a number of employees for the nonprofit previously held positions with the Chinese government or communist party there.
US EF, meanwhile, has always operated as a U.S. spinoff of EF China, receiving reimbursements for expenses. That means that group, too, should not be able to solicit funds in Florida, by APT’s read.
Sutherland urges Simpson’s Department to investigate whether and to what extent both nonprofits have operated in violation of state law.
“We further request that, if so determined, the Department pursue appropriate civil and criminal penalties for any violations of the Act that it uncovers in the course of its investigation of EF China and US EF,” the letter concludes.
Last Call – A prime-time read of what’s going down in Florida politics.
First Shot
A memorial to legendary reporter Bill Cotterell will now grace the Senate Press Gallery, following a dedication Monday by Senate President Ben Albritton.
Albritton presented the plaque on the Senate floor in front of the Capitol press corps, delivering brief remarks before opening the floor to Cotterell’s wife, Cynthia Fuller, who spoke briefly of her husband’s work and legacy.
Ben Albritton and Cynthia Fuller honor Bill Cotterell with Senate Press Gallery memorial dedication ceremony. Image via The Workmans.
Carrie Venclauskas, the mother of Cotterell’s daughter-in-law, was also in attendance and livestreamed the dedication to Cotterell’s son, Chris, who is stationed at a Naval base.
Cotterell, who died Nov. 24 at 82, carved out a lasting reputation in Florida political journalism through five decades of relentless reporting, sharp-eyed commentary and an unwavering commitment to the First Amendment. A Miami native and U.S. Marine Corps veteran, Cotterell began his career as a copy clerk at the Miami Herald before joining United Press International in 1967, arriving in Tallahassee two years later.
He returned in 1984 and soon became one of the Capitol press corps’ most recognizable fixtures, spending 27 years at the Tallahassee Democrat and, later, writing a weekly statewide column for the News Service of Florida until his death.
Cotterell’s work earned him admiration across the political spectrum. Inducted into the Florida Newspaper Hall of Fame in 2017, he was long considered essential reading on state agencies, public employees and the political forces shaping Florida. His columns challenged Democrats and Republicans alike, often delivering uncomfortable truths with wry turns of phrase. Even while battling illness, Cotterell kept filing copy from a rehab center, a testament to a lifelong, old-school devotion to journalism that colleagues and readers admired.
Cotterell’s family held a private memorial service Dec. 4 in Tallahassee. According to the Tallahassee Democrat, a public remembrance is being planned for next year.
“Don’t take down a fence until you know why it was put up.”
— Senate President Ben Albritton, advocating for a cautious approach to slashing property taxes.
Put it on the Tab
Look to your left, then look to your right. If you see one of these people at your happy hour haunt, flag down the bartender and put one of these on your tab. Recipes included, just in case the Cocktail Codex fell into the well.
While the House moves forward on a slate of property tax proposals, Senate President Ben Albritton is ordering a round of Easy Does Its for his chamber.
Longshot Governor candidate James Fishback served himself a Double Trouble for being registered to vote in Florida and D.C. simultaneously.
Breakthrough Insights
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Seminoles face Stanford for women’s soccer crown
Two giants of women’s college soccer meet tonight for the NCAA Championship as Florida State faces Stanford in Kansas City (7 p.m. ET, ESPNU).
Florida State, winners of four national championships in the past 10 seasons, goes for a fifth against fellow ACC powers, Stanford, a program in search of a fourth championship.
The two teams met in October with the Cardinal taking a 2-1 decision in Tallahassee. It’s the second time the Seminoles have faced Stanford for the national championship. FSU won in 2023.
Stanford has been the dominant team in the NCAA tournament, allowing no goals. During the season, the Cardinals were the most potent attacking team in the nation. In 24 games, Stanford scored 96 goals, 25 more than the next most efficient team in the nation. Stanford was also the only team in the country with two of the top 10 goal scorers (Jasmine Aikey, 21 goals, and Andrea Kitahata, 17 goals).
FSU is a strong attacking team as well, ranking sixth in the nation with 56 goals in 21 games.
Stanford topped Duke 1-0 behind Aikey’s goal on a free kick in the 10th minute to advance to the finals, while FSU survived TCU 1-0 on a Wrianna Hudson goal in the 72nd minute.
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Last Call is published by Peter Schorsch, assembled and edited by Phil Ammann and Drew Wilson, with contributions from the staff of Florida Politics.