Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, who’s been battling allegations of sexual misconduct, won’t be teaching a class at Harvard Law School this winter after an outcry from hundreds of alumni, according to a report.

“Today, Judge Kavanaugh indicated that he can no longer commit to teaching his course in January Term 2019, so the course will not be offered,” Catherine Claypoole, associate dean and dean for academic and faculty affairs, wrote in an email, the Harvard Crimson reported late Monday.

Hundreds of alumni signed a letter calling on law school Dean John Manning to “rescind” Kavanaugh’s position as lecturer and prohibit him from teaching a three-week class titled “The Supreme Court Since 2005” this winter.

“We believe that Judge Kavanaugh’s appointment as an HLS lecturer sends a message to law students, and in particular female students, that powerful men are above the law, and that obstructive, inappropriate behavior will be rewarded,” says the letter, which the newspaper said is available online. “Judge Kavanaugh is not leadership material, and he is not lectureship material. HLS would be tarnished to have him on campus in any position of authority.”

The Crimson reported that the letter had 700 signatures by Monday, including alumni who graduated from as far back as 1959.

Hundreds of current law school students also sent separate letters to Manning about Kavanaugh, who has been lecturing at the Ivy League school for a decade.

Kavanaugh has denied accusations made by Christine Blasey Ford, a Palo Alto University professor, that he held her down on a bed, tried to remove her clothing and stopped her from calling out for help during a high school party in 1982.

Since Ford made her claims, two more women have gone public to accuse the federal appeals court judge of sexual misconduct while he attended Georgetown Prep and Yale University during the 1980s.

The FBI is investigating those allegations.