Judge declines CTU’s motion to dismiss financial audit lawsuit
(The Center Square) – A Cook County judge on Monday denied a Chicago Teachers’ Union motion for summary judgment and granted plaintiffs’ request to compel discovery in a case over the union’s lack of releasing financial audits to its members.
“The court saw through CTU’s effort to avoid scrutiny,” Sara Albrecht, chair of Liberty Justice Center, the nonprofit law firm representing union members who filed the lawsuit, said in a statement. “Simply posting documents after being sued doesn’t erase legal obligations. With discovery now moving forward, we intend to get a full accounting of whether CTU has complied with its duties to its own members.”
LJC filed suit in October 2024 on behalf of four CTU members after they said the union failed to produce the audits for four years. In November 2025, the U.S. House Committee on Education and Workforce sent a letter to CTU President Stacy Davis Gates, asking the union to produce audits from 2019 to 2024. In January, CTU said it had made the audits available and filed the motion to dismiss the lawsuit, which a judge refused.
“CTU tried to shut this case down before the facts could come out,” Albrecht said. “The court said no. Now that discovery is moving forward, we’ll be able to examine whether CTU has truly provided the full financial disclosures its members deserve.”
Latest News Stories
Committee Questions High School Weighted Grading System
P&Z Commission Advances Plan for Construction Debris Fill Operation on Brandon Road
Meeting Summary and Briefs: Beecher School District Transportation Committee for Dec. 8, 2025
Regional Transit Agencies Tout New State Funding, Prepare for Shift to ‘NITA’
IL Dem touts ‘great job’ on transit, GOP candidate laments ‘bailout’ for Chicago
Bill designed to protect school kids from sexual misconduct
Illinois quick hits: More bills enacted into law; former ComEd CEO seeking Trump pardon
Pritzker enacts bills, including measure decoupling IL from federal tax code
WATCH: California co-leads suit over $100,000 H-1B visa fee
WATCH: Trump outlines AI order, calls Pritzker ‘totally unreasonable’
Entrepreneur’s supporters say case law may result in release
GOP lawmakers silent on Trump’s EO punishing state AI guardrails