San Diego Unified School District Superintendent Lamont Jackson speaks about the beginning of school. Photo by Chris Stone
Former San Diego Unified School District Superintendent Lamont Jackson in 2022. Photo by Chris Stone

The San Diego Unified School District and its former superintendent, Lamont Jackson, are being sued by a one-time employee who alleges that Jackson routinely sexually harassed her.

The complaint from Monika Hazel, who was an area superintendent with SDUSD, comes months after Jackson was fired by the district when the Board of Education found there were “credible” accounts of inappropriate conduct toward two former district employees.

Hazel also said she was demoted for refusing Jackson’s advances.

Hazel, who is now superintendent of the Fallbrook Union Elementary School District, states in her San Diego Superior Court complaint, filed Monday that, shortly after Jackson became superintendent, he “subjected her to sexually harassing conduct.”

That included touching her without her consent, asking her for sex and “offering opportunities contingent upon plaintiff’s compliance with his sexual advances.”

The lawsuit alleges that, after refusing an advance from Jackson in late 2022, Hazel was demoted a month later and her salary was “significantly reduced.” The physical, emotional and financial repercussions of the demotion gave her “no choice but to seek alternative employment and constructively terminated her employment with defendant SDUSD,” according to the lawsuit.

The complaint also states that Hazel faced “hostile and discriminatory behavior” from Fabiola Bagula, then a deputy superintendent and currently SDUSD’s acting superintendent, following Jackson’s termination.

Bagula allegedly reprimanded Hazel in front of co-workers and told Hazel to “cower,” “bow [her] head,” and use a “baby girl voice” when raising concerns. The plaintiff, according to the complaint, found that “unprofessional and humiliating.”

The lawsuit alleges that Jackson used the term “work wife” to refer to both Hazel and Bagula, and that after Hazel’s demotion, Jackson admitted the decision was retaliatory.

He told her, according to the suit that “You made your choice, I had to make a choice. I couldn’t have two work wives (referring to Bagula).”

In a statement issued late Tuesday afternoon, SDUSD said, “We have not yet been served. Our counsel needs to review the lawsuit, and upon that review will take the appropriate actions required to protect the district’s best interest.”

Jackson took over as interim superintendent after former superintendent Cindy Marten left to become deputy U.S. education secretary. He was unanimously chosen by the Board of Education to serve as superintendent in early 2022.

Two years later, an ethics investigation into Jackson, sparked by allegations of sexual harassment and retaliatory behavior, led to his termination.

Updated 7 p.m. Dec. 3, 2024