The CIA maintained that Adirim was not terminated over politics but because of âmultiple complaintsâ from CIA staff about her conduct in the workplace.
A federal judge has denied an emergency bid by Dr. Terry Adirim to halt her dismissal from the CIA, rejecting her claims that political activists orchestrated her firing in retaliation for her role in enforcing the militaryâs COVID-19 vaccine mandate.
Her lawsuit named the CIA, Raiklin, CIA Director John Ratcliffe, and the conservative nonprofit Americaâs Future, Inc., as defendants. It alleged due process violations, defamation, a contract breach, and a Privacy Act violation stemming from alleged leaks about her dismissal to Breitbart News.
âPlaintiff pinpoints the blame not on the CIA, but on a non-governmental actor, Ivan Raiklin, whom she accuses of orchestrating her termination through a scheme of defamation and political influence,â the attorneys wrote. âBesides being farfetchedâand untrueâPlaintiffâs allegations do not actually amount to any viable claim against the Federal Defendants, let alone any claim that merits an injunction.â
The Department of Justice acknowledged Adirimâs name appeared on Raiklinâs so-called âDeep State Target Listâ but said this had no bearing on the CIAâs decision. âThere is no reason other than the close timing of Ms. Loomerâs White House visit and the CIAâs communication of its termination decision to Plaintiff to suggest the two are linked,â the filing states.
The CIA maintained that Adirim wasnât terminated over politics but because of âmultiple complaintsâ from CIA staff about her âinappropriate and harassingâ conduct in the workplace.
Adirim, who had signed key policy documents enabling the Pentagonâs mandate while serving as acting assistant secretary of Defense for Health Affairs, became a focal point in that broader political reckoningâeven as the CIA maintained her dismissal was unrelated.

A soldier watches another soldier receive his COVID-19 vaccination from Army Preventative Medical Services in Fort Knox, Ky., on Sept. 9, 2021. Jon Cherry/Getty Images
In her complaint, Adirim contended that being fired just weeks before qualifying for federal retirement amounted to irreparable harm, that she had been defamed after decades of public service, and that her family had been endangered.
The CIA said that the decision was internal, lawful, and based on employee complaints rather than political pressure.
In response to the May 9 ruling, Adirimâs attorney Kevin Carroll told The Epoch Times in an emailed statement, âWe respect the courtâs decision and look forward to litigating the underlying issues.â
The case remains active in federal court but without the injunction she had sought, Adirimâs termination is now set to proceed as planned.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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