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Suicide lawsuit against China-born scientist Jane Wu’s US university to proceed

County judge says the family’s key claims are strong enough for the case to continue

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The legal battle over the death of Chinese-American neuroscientist Jane Wu will move to a more substantive phase after a court ruling on Tuesday, with the next hearing set for mid-May. Photo: Handout
Ling Xinin Ohio
A US judge has refused to throw out a lawsuit accusing Northwestern University of mistreating Chinese-American neuroscientist Jane Wu before her suicide, allowing the case to move ahead.
The ruling on Tuesday rejected the university’s request for dismissal and means one of the most consequential cases related to the now-defunct “China Initiative” will proceed into a more substantive phase, with the next hearing set for mid-May.
Wu’s family alleges the former Dr Charles L. Mix research professor with Northwestern’s Feinberg School of Medicine took her own life, aged 60, in July 2024 as a direct result of how she was treated amid years of investigations into her ties to China.
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The relatives claim the university sidelined Wu, shutting down her laboratory and reassigning her research grants. They also allege that, weeks before her death, Wu was removed from her office in handcuffs and forced into a psychiatric unit.

At the latest hearing in Chicago, Cook County Judge Jonathan Green said the family’s key claims – including discrimination based on national origin and allegations of wrongful confinement – were strong enough to continue.

Chinese-American neuroscientist Jane Wu was a tenured faculty member at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine. Photo: Northwestern University
Chinese-American neuroscientist Jane Wu was a tenured faculty member at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine. Photo: Northwestern University

Green also allowed claims to move forward relating to severe emotional harm and alleged mishandling of Wu’s psychiatric admission by university-linked doctors, which means questions about how she was admitted and held will be examined in court.

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