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Uncategorized

SAVE PR – Surging Public Support for Due Process and the Presumption of Innocence

WASHINGTON / November 12, 2018 – Several non-partisan, national surveys point to widespread public concern about the erosion of the presumption of innocence and due process in our country, the problem of false allegations, and a pressing need to reinvigorate these bedrock principles of fairness in our legal system.

Public concern was first spotlighted in a 2011 SAVE survey that reported 9.7% of persons report they have been falsely accused of sexual assault, domestic violence, or child abuse. One in six of the respondents personally knew someone who said he or she had been falsely accused of domestic violence, child abuse, or sexual assault (1).

A 2013 survey commissioned by the Center for Prosecutor Integrity found that 66.8% of respondents believe the presumption of innocence is becoming lost in our legal system. In addition, 42.8% of persons say prosecutorial misconduct has become widespread (2).

A 2017 YouGov poll revealed strong support for the restoration of due process in campus sexual assault cases. The survey queried whether “Students accused of crimes on college campuses should receive the same civil liberties from their colleges that they receive in the court system.” Among the 1,200 persons responding, 65% of Democrats, 77% of Republicans, and 67% of Independents expressed agreement with the statement (3).

A poll by Ipsos/NPR found 80% of men and 73% of women believe that those who are accused of sexual harassment should be given the benefit of the doubt until proven otherwise. The survey was conducted October 22-23, 2018 with a sample of 1,003 adults (4).

Much of the shift in public perceptions can be linked to the controversies associated with the #MeToo movement.

Morning Consult recently found 57% of U.S. adults say they are equally worried about men facing false allegations of sexual assault as they are about women facing sexual assault. Overall support for the #MeToo movement has dropped 2% over the last year, the survey found (5).

A survey conducted by YouGov and the Economist in October revealed 18% of Americans now think false accusations of sexual assault are a bigger problem than attacks that go unreported or unpunished, compared with 13% one year ago. These shifts in public opinion against complainants have been stronger among women than men, the Economist noted (6).

SAVE has developed a Due Process Statement that urges members of Congress to “speak out in support of Constitutionally rooted due process rights on campus.” Over 285 law professors, scholars, and state lawmakers have signed the Statement. SAVE invites additional state lawmakers to become co-signers. For more information, contact mvalois@saveservices.org.

Citations:

1.http://www.saveservices.org/dv/falsely-accused/survey/

2.http://www.prosecutorintegrity.org/survey-summary/

3.http://bipp.blogs.bucknell.edu/files/2017/09/BIPP-Higher-Ed-Toplines.pdf

4.https://www.ipsos.com/en-us/news-polls/NPR-Sexual-Harassment-and-Assault

5.https://morningconsult.com/2018/10/11/a-year-into-metoo-public-worried-about-false-allegations/

6.https://amp.economist.com/graphic-detail/2018/10/15/after-a-year-of-metoo-american-opinion-has-shifted-against-victims?__twitter_impression=true#top

Categories
False Allegations

‘I was angry:’ Tell the DOJ to Bring Judy Munro-Leighton to Justice

On Friday, it was revealed that Sen. Chuck Grassley referred another person to the Department of Justice because she made a false allegation of sexual assault against Judge Brett Kavanaugh.

Judy Munro-Leighton originally sent an email to Sen. Kamala Harris claiming that Kavanaugh had “sexually assaulted and raped me in his car.” But when investigators spoke with her, Munro-Leighton admitted, “I was angry, and I sent it out.”

False allegations have become a cancer in our legal system: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1TzTCWfiRew  Honesty and fairness are cornerstones of the American legal system. Munro-Leighton abused these precepts.

The Department of Justice cannot sweep this case under the rug. Tell the Department of Justice that justice must be served. Call the DOJ Comment Line: 202-353-1555.

Sincerely,

The SAVE Team

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Uncategorized

New Education Department Rules to Change Procedures for Campus Sexual-Assault Cases

New Education Department Rules to Change Procedures for Campus Sexual-Assault Cases

By

Michelle Hackman

Oct. 31, 2018 6:37 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON—New federal rules governing campus sexual-assault cases will require that accused students be allowed to cross-examine their accusers, according to people familiar with a draft of the rules.

The requirement marks a shift from an initial draft of the new rules, leaked in August, which Trump officials are writing to replace a set of Obama-era guidelines they feel didn’t provide sufficient protections for students accused of sexual assault.

The rules, which Education Secretary Betsy DeVos will likely publish in November, will narrow the definition of sexual assault that schools are required to adjudicate and restrict eligible cases to those that occur on campus. The rules will be subject to a comment period before taking effect.

The rule changes fall under Title IX, a 1972 law barring gender discrimination in schools and colleges that receive federal funding.

In the earlier draft, the administration initially proposed providing schools with the option of incorporating cross-examination into their procedures.

The current version would make a cross-examination provision mandatory, though questions could be funneled through a neutral party and students could be seated in separate rooms. The rules would also bar accused students from asking their accusers inappropriate questions, such as details of the accuser’s sexual history.

The modification echoes the goals of some university administrators, men’s rights activists and due-process advocates who believe students accused of behavior that could result in their expulsion should be given more opportunities to defend themselves.

“Courts have recognized that cross-examination is an essential part of the process of figuring out the truth in cases where credibility is a factor,” said Joe Cohn, legislative and policy director at the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, which advocates for more due process for those accused of campus sexual assault.

Anurima Bhargava, a former Obama Justice Department official who oversaw civil rights enforcement in educational settings, said the Obama administration discouraged the use of cross-examination because it could make sexual-assault victims reluctant to come forward.

“If someone tells their story and then they need to be questioned on it, that can be an incredibly invasive and traumatizing experience,” she said.

The modification also reflects a belief espoused by President Trump and some other Republicans that young men—who make up the vast majority of accused students—are often presumed guilty and subjected to an unfair process to determine the truth.

Following Democrats’ demands that Justice Brett Kavanaugh step aside this fall, Mr. Trump suggested that the #MeToo movement is unfairly targeting men who aren’t guilty of any sexual impropriety. He said it is a “very scary time for young men in America” when “you can be guilty of something you may not be guilty of.”

An Education Department spokeswoman declined to comment on the contents of the rules until it is published.

The new rules will make at least one change from the earlier draft that was pushed by victims’ advocates. Rather than allowing only accused students to appeal rulings, the rules will maintain an Obama standard allowing both parties to appeal.

Critics have said that practice too often forced schools to retry accused students who had been already found innocent.

Some officials had advocated publishing the sexual-assault rules ahead of next week’s midterms, arguing that it would be viewed positively by the Republican base, particularly after Justice Kavanaugh’s nomination. Those officials were ultimately overruled, according to people familiar with the matter.

The new Title IX rules, which are currently under final review at the White House, won’t contain a definition of gender, as some officials in other agencies had urged.

The Department of Health and Human Services is still looking at defining gender as an individual’s sex at birth, though if it isn’t defined that way in Title IX, it will be harder to apply such a definition across the federal government.

Trump administration officials are now looking at issuing a legal opinion through the Justice Department stating the administration’s belief that gender under Title IX is determined by a person’s genitals at birth, according to people familiar with their thinking.

But issuing such an opinion, without writing the definition into formal regulations, would put the government on weaker footing.

Once the rules are published, the public will be given a window to comment before they go into effect.

University administrators, in particular, said the old process put undue restraints on their ability to handle assault cases, and that the Obama administration’s stance led schools to fear that any misstep could prompt a costly federal investigation.

Mrs. DeVos revoked those guidelines in 2017, and said her agency would issue formal regulations in their place. The rules she intends to publish will carry the force of law without action by Congress.

The rules are being prepared as sexual assault—and colleges’ responses to it—remains a flashpoint on campuses. Both the accused and alleged victims have faulted institutions for shoddy investigations or biased tribunals.

In a speech last year, Mrs. DeVos likened the campus processes used to adjudicate sexual assault to “kangaroo courts” that followed arbitrary rules and offered inadequate protections to those involved.

“Survivors, victims of a lack of due process, and campus administrators have all told me that the current approach does a disservice to everyone involved,” she said.

Categories
Uncategorized

OTL: College athletes three times more likely to be named in Title IX sexual misconduct complaints

COLLEGE ATHLETES IN recent years were about three times more likely than other students to be accused of sexual misconduct or domestic violence in complaints made at Power 5 conference schools, according to an analysis by Outside the Lines.

That finding is based upon data from Title IX complaints covering allegations of sexual assault, domestic violence, sexual exploitation, sexual coercion, stalking or retaliation collected from 32 Power 5 schools that provided records in response to requests for complaints against athletes over the past six years. Outside the Lines sought the data from all 65 Power 5 schools, but some officials did not provide information, and some that did provide information did not do so for all years.

The data provided show that, on average, about 6.3 percent of Title IX complaints against students — whether the complaint resulted in a formal investigation or not — included an athlete as the person accused of wrongdoing, officially called a “respondent” in the reports. Though that percentage equates to a minority of the overall number of complaints at Power 5 campuses made during the time period, athletes were named in such reports more often than might be expected considering they represent, on average, just 1.7 percent of total student enrollment at the universities.

Using the data to make school-to-school comparisons about which have the highest percentage of complaints or the highest number of complaints involving accused athletes should be done with caution because school officials did not always provide the exact data Outside the Lines requested. For example, one school might have insisted upon providing every complaint that had been filed with a Title IX office while another school might have insisted upon providing data only about cases that ended up in formal investigations.

It is, however, possible to determine an overall student-athlete-to-other-student comparison, because within each school, the data for athletes and students were subject to the same parameters. Outside the Lines consulted with two statisticians about its study methods.

W. Scott Lewis, co-founder of the Association of Title IX Administrators and partner with The NCHERM Group consultants, said it can be helpful to know whether a student involved in a Title IX complaint is an athlete, a member of the Greek system, ROTC or any other affiliation so school officials can detect patterns and take next steps.

“You’re supposed to — when you’re dealing with a student — understand the context of that student’s experience,” Lewis said, “regardless of the action they’ve been accused of.”

Kansas State University did not have an existing report about complaints against athletes but compiled the data for Outside the Lines anyway.

“If we don’t know this, we should know this,” said Jeff Morris, vice president of communications and marketing at Kansas State. Given the high-profile, national stories about campus sexual assault issues tied to athletes, he said, “We should all be paying attention.”


STARTING IN MARCH, Outside the Lines filed public records requests with all 53 public Power 5 schools and followed up with informal inquiries. Outside the Lines also requested data from the 12 private Power 5 schools that are not subject to open records laws; Baylor was the only private school that provided information.

A few schools declined Outside the Lines’ requests, stating that releasing records would violate student privacy, although each Outside the Lines request explicitly stated that names and identifying information could be excluded.

Some of the schools that didn’t provide numbers of complaints against athletes did at least provide the number of complaints against all students. Outside the Lines included those in its database because the information would be of public interest, even though those schools were not factored into the overall data analysis. However, some schools didn’t even have that level of detail on complaints.

The University of Virginia sought to charge Outside the Lines $33,902 to pull complaints in order to calculate just those that had named students; that estimate did not include records involving athletes, which the university refused to provide, citing privacy concerns. Outside the Lines declined to pay for the records but did pay clerical expenses for data from some schools.

An official at Virginia consulted with archrival Virginia Tech University prior to sending Outside the Lines its estimate, according to emails obtained by Outside the Lines. Virginia Tech officials confirmed to Virginia officials that they had received the same request but were planning to deny the request for athlete data. “I honestly do not feel it’s the best use of our extremely limited resources to try to pull this data for a story,” one Virginia Tech Title IX official wrote.

Understaffed Title IX offices is a common concern among Title IX officials: Outsides the Lines surveyed Title IX administrators at schools of all sizes and divisions, and of the 99 respondents, 75 percent said they did not have enough staff.

“I want the information as much as anybody else. I think we could learn from it. I think we could prevent things with it,” said Brett Sokolow, president of the Association of Title IX Administrators. “It would be amazing if Title IX offices had the capacity to get out there and say, ‘We’re having a problem with the tennis team, and we can see that in our data. Let’s make sure we direct more of our education policy training efforts to them to see if we can shore that up.’ That’s very rare.”

Dan Schorr, a Title IX consultant who aided Michigan State with Title IX investigations, said schools should, at the very least, know how many athletes are in complaints overall.

“If everyone in the community knows a certain sports team is involved in a certain number of complaints, there might be an outcry and a demand for reform,” said Schorr, who is now managing director with the consulting firm Ankura. “If people aren’t aware of that, that’s not going to happen.”

The U.S. Department of Education did not respond to requests for an interview with its assistant secretary for civil rights, Kenneth Marcus, or to questions from Outside the Lines for this story. The office is planning to release new rules for how schools should handle allegations of sexual assault, with an emphasis on giving accused students more due process in investigations.

Several rules in draft form were leaked to media this year and relate to which sexual assault and violence incidents should be counted and who should be required to report them. The changes could have significant impact on the Title IX caseload totals. In 2011, the U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights re-emphasized sexual violence as a matter of equity and access under Title IX. Schools have been required to have a Title IX coordinator on campus and set up a procedure to address filed complaints.

Another key finding from the data obtained by Outside the Lines: Awareness and use of Title IX offices has increased dramatically in the past six years, with many coordinators and industry experts citing high-profile athlete cases as a driving force. Reports of sexual misconduct against students overall are up — about four times as many in 2017 as in 2012 among the schools that provided data for those years. The OCR, which investigates complaints about how all types of schools respond to Title IX sexual violence reports, had 130 complaints in 2014. As of this fall, it had about 400 open cases, according to the department’s website.

Without those athlete cases making headlines, the campus sexual assault awareness campaign “would be largely nonexistent,” said Catherine Lhamon, the assistant secretary for civil rights at the U.S. Department of Education from 2013 to 2017, and current chairwoman of the United States Commission on Civil Rights.

“The capturing of the hearts and minds of the American public is what has moved this issue,” she said. “The response of student communities to sexual violence among athletes has been really important.”

While there were some variations in the Outside the Lines data about how schools categorized violations and complaints, and which university office handled those complaints, the numbers generally included accusations of sexual assault and abuse, domestic or dating violence, sexual exploitation, sexual coercion, stalking and — where available — retaliation for reporting such incidents.

A spokesman for Ohio State, which had 37 complaints from 2012 to 2017 involving athletes, noted that the university has the most athletes of any Power 5 athletic department and that members of the dance and cheer teams are designated as athletes within the athletic department. A campaign launched in 2015 to raise awareness of sexual assault has “resulted in more survivors coming forward in subsequent years,” he said.

Michigan State, which remains under federal investigation for its handling of Title IX complaints, provided data on athletes for 2016-17 and 2017-18 only. It had 26 complaints made against athletes. A Michigan State spokeswoman told Outside the Lines that officials did not know how many total complaints against Spartan athletes there were prior to 2016; the officials declined to review existing Title IX complaints to find the answer.

At West Virginia, athletes made up about 1.8 percent of the student body but represented about 13 percent of Title IX complaints filed there over six years. WVU’s executive director for student conduct, Carrie Showalter, said the school’s system allows officials to track and detect patterns in certain groups, but she wasn’t aware of that discrepancy involving athletes until contacted by Outside the Lines.

“I do think it’s something that would cause us to look into things a little bit further to see if there’s anything else as a university we need to be doing,” she said.

The idea that athletes are overrepresented in college sexual assault cases is not new. A 1995 study in the Journal of Sport & Social Issues found that male athletes made up 3.8 percent of the male student body but were responsible for 5.5 percent of reported sexual assaults. That report also included data from judicial affairs departments at 10 schools, which showed athletes represented 19 percent of the perpetrators reported for sexual assault but made up only 3.3 percent of the male population.


KNOWING THAT THE data show athletes are over-represented in Title IX complaints at these schools is one thing; the reason why that might be occurring is unknown and debated among Title IX experts.

Lhamon said too many colleges and universities “turn away” from information that might show cultural problems within athletics, yet “the unfortunate reality today, still, is that we have a hypersexualized culture associated with elite athletes.”

Sokolow, the Title IX administrators association leader, said of the roughly 400 external investigations his group completes each year, at least half involve allegations against athletes.

“A lot of it may have to do with the aggressive kind of training and inclination that programs place on athletes to exert aggressive behavior. If that flows over into their sexual lives, you’re going to see more complaints coming out of that,” Sokolow said. “When students of any kind, athletes or not, tend to have a lot of consensual sexual opportunities, it becomes more difficult for them to separate out what non-consent looks like, because everything for them tends to seem consensual. And I think if you did studies, you’d see that student-athletes probably have more sex than students who are not athletes, in many cases.”

Schools and coaches can make the problem worse when they promote sex and sexual behavior among athletes, said Justin Lawrence, a Title IX administrator who conducts sexual assault awareness training at various colleges, including Texas Tech University, which had the lowest percentage of complaints against athletes in the Outside the Lines analysis.

Lawrence cited as examples the recent University of Louisville scandal in which basketball staffers provided access to strippers for recruits and the use of attractive female students as hosts to accompany recruits on official visits — a practice that made headlines at Tennessee and Baylor.

But it starts with coaches tolerating something far subtler, Lawrence said.

“People in the locker room talking about what they did with who or how this person looks. You know the locker room talk, ‘Boys will be boys,’” Lawrence said. “That’s where the rape culture starts. The very foundation of it. So we have to stop that.”

John Clune, a Colorado attorney who has represented women in several high-profile Title IX lawsuits, including some involving athletes, said he sees a higher rate of gang rape and videotape of sex abuse allegations against athletes than nonathletes. He cited a lawsuit he filed against Baylor that alleged a gang rape was part of a bonding activity for recruits.

“There’s something different about the group mentality within these athletic teams that we don’t really see in nonathlete cases, or at least not anywhere near the same frequency,” Clune said.

A September article in the Journal of Clinical Sport Psychology, “Sexual Assault on College Campuses: What Sport Psychology Practitioners Need to Know,” combined years of past research on sexual assault and college athletes and details higher alcohol use among athletes and that “male student-athletes are historically overrepresented as offenders.” The article states that some studies of violent behavior and athletes supported a link between sports and sexual aggression, but there were others that did not.

The article also cited a 2017 study — published in a journal called Violence Against Women — that covered sexual coercion practices among undergraduate athletes showing that they were “77 percent more likely to engage in sexual coercion than non-athletes,” and that athletes reported less positive attitudes toward women and greater acceptance of rape myths, with one example being that “women make false allegations of sexual assault to target innocent men.”

But Paul V. Cannarella, an attorney in South Carolina, said that is exactly what happened this year with his client, a soccer player at Coker College, a private school in Hartsville. The athlete was arrested and charged with rape and kidnapping, but the charges were dropped when the woman who had accused him admitted to making it up, according to a May 6, 2018, story in The State newspaper. The woman was arrested and charged with filing a false police report. A Title IX investigation also found no merit to her claims, Cannarella said.

“Nice-looking athletes tend to attract more women. … They’re just attracted to the big man on campus,” he said. “They consensually involve themselves with that athlete. And then if they feel rejected after anything that goes on between the two of them, and they get angry about it, they have a tendency to misrepresent what happened between the two of them.”

Since 2011, of 256 lawsuits brought by accused students against their universities alleging unfair treatment, about 20 percent of the claims have been made by athletes, said Samantha Harris, a vice president with the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), an advocacy group promoting greater due process in Title IX investigations.

“There may be a perception out there that this might be a problem of student-athletes because these cases have been in the news,” she said. “But I don’t think that is generally reflected in the greater prevalence of sexual assault.”

Schorr, who said he has consulted with dozens of universities, said that although students overall are becoming more comfortable coming forward, he said the process is still daunting for those “who dare accuse the star athlete of impropriety.”

He said women can face hostility from the school and community, and that “there is definitely preferential treatment institutionally.” Schorr said that the investigative process actually tends to favor athletes who are “not always being held as accountable as a nonstudent-athlete would be.”

Even though the Outside the Lines data show complaints against athletes are rising, information from police reports and interviews with alleged victims who have spoken to Outside the Lines indicate that there are still women who decline to report athletes for fear of retaliation and publicity.

FIRE’s Harris said “very few” students accused in Title IX complaints are getting due process — student-athletes or other students — but she did not know why athletes would be more likely to be accused in a complaint.

Of the 45 Division I and Division II Title IX administrators who responded to the Outside the Lines survey, about 69 percent said they felt that athletes were neither more nor less likely to be accused in a complaint, 18 percent said they were less likely, and 13 percent said they thought they were more likely.

Professor Vicki Michaelis and journalism students Wilson Alexander, Brittney Butler, John Durham, Jed May, Connor Richter, Kelsey Russo, Mason Wittner at the University of Georgia assisted Outside the Lines in requesting records for this story. ESPN consulted with Analysis & Inference Inc.’s senior statistician and president William Fairley and senior statistician William Huber on the methodology used in the analysis of the Outside the Lines data.

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#MeToo

#HeToo: How the Campus Accused Fight Back in Court and Often Win

John Doe and Jane Roe met at a fraternity party. The two, both referred to with common legal pseudonyms, danced and drank. Then they went upstairs to John’s room, where they had sex. Two days later, Jane filed a sexual misconduct charge against John, contending that she had been too drunk to consent. John disagreed.

After several months of investigation, the University of Michigan found for Jane. John was forced to withdraw from the university, just 13.5 credits shy of graduating.

But then John took a step that is becoming more common among students who believe they have been harmed by tough policies aimed at combating campus sexual assault. He hired a lawyer and took the university to court, maintaining his innocence and charging the school had denied him even the rudiments of due process, specifically the right to question or cross-examine his accuser.

And in the preliminary legal skirmishing that has taken place so far, a federal appeals court thunderously rejected the university’s motion to dismiss John’s lawsuit.

“When it comes to due process, the ‘opportunity to be heard’ is the constitutional minimum,” Judge Amul Thapar wrote in a majority decision. “If a student is accused of misconduct, the university must hold some sort of hearing before imposing a sentence as serious as expulsion or suspension, and … that hearing must include an opportunity for cross-examination.”

Two powerful currents regarding sexual misconduct are clashing on campus. One is an intensified effort to prosecute the mostly male students accused of such misconduct – sustained by an Obama administration-inspired crackdown and the more recent #MeToo movement, and fueled by press reports about an alarming frequency of unpunished sex offenses.

The counter-current is the pushback from accused students, who are hiring lawyers to argue their clients were caught up in murky sexual situations but found guilty in what to amount mock trials that resulted in severe consequences.

Exactly how many cases have been brought is hard to determine. Experts say dozens of them have been filed in state courts, where there is no central repository of information, and scores more have been settled before they were decided in the courts.

The federal courts offer a more precise number, according to research by K.C. Johnson, a historian at Brooklyn College, and Samantha Harris, a vice president at the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education. Since 2011, 142 lawsuits by accused men have been brought in federal courts on which substantive rulings have been made, often regarding whether to dismiss or to allow the proceeding to move forward. Judges have found the universities at fault in more than half the cases, 77, while one produced a mixed result. The legal reasons were varied, including a failure to provide due process – that is, university disciplinary boards did not allow accused men open, fair hearings with an opportunity to cross-examine their accusers. In other cases, universities have been found in violation of their own rules and procedures.

In an ironic twist, judges have found in some cases that schools’ procedures were so weighted against accused men that their rights were violated under Title IX, the section of the Civil Rights Act that prohibits sexual discrimination. Title IX was devised mainly to protect women against discrimination; now at least some courts have ruled that the tendency of universities automatically to “believe women” amounts to gender discrimination against men.

The “sex police” at universities “are being hammered by an unprecedented wave of litigation, and higher education is losing,” according to a white paper by the National Center for Higher Education Risk Management, a for-profit consulting company. “If you are the sex police, your overzealousness to impose sexual correctness is causing a backlash that is going to set back the entire consent movement.”

Vice President Joe Biden at a sexual assault prevention rally at Ohio State University in 2015.

The wave of lawsuits also is an unintended consequence of the Obama administration’s efforts to respond to loud and widespread complaints that little was being done to address an “epidemic” of sexual assault on campus.

In 2011, the Department of Education’s Civil Rights Division sent a “Dear Colleague” letter to more than 7,000 colleges and universities that receive federal funding. The letter advised them to lower the standard of proof required to find a student guilty of a sexual offense from the “clear and convincing” standard commonly in use, to a “preponderance of the evidence” standard, meaning that an accusation need only be “more likely [true] than not” for an accused person to be found guilty.

The letter warned that the failure to adopt these guidelines could result in a Title IX violation, putting federal grants at risk. Noncompliance could also open schools to prosecution by the Department of Justice, and, in fact, the DOJ did open investigations of several dozen schools, including some that have been the targets of lawsuits by accused men.

The Obama guidelines were embraced by women’s groups and schools alike as a welcome effort, at last, to combat sexual assault. There were rallies on many campuses, anti-sexual violence campaigns such as “Start by Believing” and “It’s on Us.” Prominent figures, including Vice President Joe Biden, appeared at universities and endorsed these campaigns, as did many university chancellors and presidents. For example, at the University of Michigan, John Doe’s and Jane Roe’s school, President Mark Schlissel signed a “Start by Believing Proclamation” as part of a “National Sexual Assault Awareness Month.” This “ ‘flips the script’ on the message victims have historically received from professions and support people,” the movement’s websitesays, “which is ‘How do I know you’re not lying?’ ”

Meanwhile, new administrators were hired and procedures put in place to handle charges of sexual assault. The guidelines often encouraged review boards and investigators charged with looking into such allegations not to hold open hearings or to allow cross-examinations of female accusers for fear of humiliating or re-traumatizing them.

The problem is that the vast majority of accusations of sexual misconduct, like the one at the University of Michigan, involved behavior that was witnessed only by two people, the accuser and the accused. In most cases the two parties were under the influence of alcohol or drugs at the time, and each had different versions of what took place. If the accuser is assumed to be telling the truth, the accused must be assumed to be lying, which is at odds with the concept of the presumption of innocence.

These circumstances are at the heart of the legal backlash driven by accused students who claim their schools rushed to judgment against them, violating their rights as they did so, to satisfy demands for aggressive action against sexual violence.

 Education Secretary Betsy DeVos rescinded Obama guidelines, but schools still follow them.

The backlash could gain some support from Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos’s move last year to rescind the Obama guidelines and allow schools to return to “clear and convincing evidence” as the standard of proof. So far, few schools seem interested in changing policies. And there doesn’t seem to be a vigorous national effort to reform the system.

As a result, pushback is happening on a case-by-case basis, and it isn’t going away. “I’m getting as many calls as ever,” said Andrew Miltenberg, a Manhattan attorney who has sued some two dozen universities over the past few years on behalf of male students.

The backlash is not surprising, given the stakes. “These guys find themselves expelled,” said Deborah L. Gordon, a Michigan civil rights lawyer who represented John Doe in his suit. For a young man to be expelled from a university, moreover, means not getting a degree, losing the tuition he’s already paid, and having the label of sexual offender placed on his permanent record. “So, gradually these cases have been making their way through the courts,” Gordon said, “which have mainly been affirming the due process rights of the accused.”

Andrew Miltenberg, counsel for campus accused.

Miltenberg himself came to public attention a couple of years ago when he invoked Title IX to sue Columbia University on behalf of Paul Nungesser, who was accused of rape by a fellow student and cleared by the school. Nungesser argued that the school discriminated against him because it allowed his accuser to carry a mattress around campus for a year to protest the university’s decision not to prosecute the case. Miltenberg won a confidential settlement for his client in that case.

After that, Miltenberg filed a suit against Vassar College for a Chinese student he believed was falsely accused of sexual misconduct. Miltenberg lost that case, but gained attention. “People started calling from left and right,” he said. “There was an underground culture of parents whose kids had gone through this.” Recently his firm opened an office in Boston to be in an area thick with colleges and universities.

Miltenberg said schools have been ill equipped – both structurally and ideologically – to deal with sexual abuse cases.  “In 2011 and 2012, when the Dear Colleague Letter came down, most universities didn’t have Title IX coordinators,” he said. “Most conduct review boards were set up for things like plagiarism, cheating, or throwing a lamp while under the influence.

“Mattress Girl” Emma Sulkowicz, center right, at her Columbia graduation. She was sued by the man she accused.

“When the universities saw the uproar about sexual assault,” he continued, “what did they do? Did they hire retired FBI agents or police detectives to carry out Title IX investigations? No. They turned to people whose backgrounds are either in victim rights, or domestic violence, or they’re women’s rights advocates, people who have led campaigns to be tougher on sexual assaults. These are not the people who should be investigating and adjudicating these matters.”

Miltenberg’s recent filing against the University of Colorado, Boulder, contains the basic elements of many of his cases. A freshman from Italy, Girolamo Francesco Messeri, and a male friend met two girls one night, neither of whom were students at the college. The four ended up in the boy’s dorm room, where Messeri and one of the women began making out. For less than five minutes, the pair went into the bathroom where, according to Miltenberg’s complaint, she performed oral sex on Messeri.

Two days later, the woman went to the campus police and accused him of a forced sexual encounter. On that same day, according to Miltenberg, Messeri was expelled from his dormitory and forced to live in a hotel, on the ground that he posed a danger on campus. Two months after that, a pair of investigators for the Office of Institutional Equity and Compliance issued a “finding” that Messeri was responsible for “sexual assault.”
But according to Miltenberg, the investigators did not hold a hearing and never even interviewed the accuser, relying instead on interviews conducted by the campus police.

Messeri’s friend testified that the female student seemed unruffled and unbothered when she emerged from the bathroom; she also, the complaint says, continued to spend time with Messeri, later went to a party, smoked marijuana, and mugged for the camera as she took selfies with her friend. But the university investigators gave credence only to the friend of the accuser, who supported her allegation. Later, the criminal case against Messeri was dismissed on the recommendation of the Boulder district attorney. In the meantime, however, the university’s Title IX coordinator, Valerie Simons, informed Messeri that he was being expelled.

“CU-Boulder’s investigation and adjudication of Jane Roe’s allegations were tainted by gender bias resulting from federal and local pressure to protect female victims of sexual violence,” Miltenberg’s complaint reads. “… As a result, Plaintiff was deprived of a fair and impartial hearing with adequate due process protections, as mandated by the United States Constitution.”

A CU-Boulder spokesman did not respond to a request for comment.

The case against CU-Boulder has yet to be heard in court, but in a large number of similar cases, the courts have been sympathetic to the due process complaint. According to the tabulation made by Johnson and Harris, since 2011 the federal courts have allowed 21 cases claiming due process violations to proceed following university attempts to have them dismissed.

An example was a case brought against Ohio State University. In November 2014, Jane Roe, a female medical student there, accused a fellow student of sexually assaulting her during an encounter that had occurred 10 months earlier. Jane said that she had been too drunk to be able to give her consent, which was a violation of the university’s code of conduct. John Doe claimed that Jane, with whom he had had sexual relations for over a year, was alert and talkative during the encounter and that the sex was consensual.

A university Conduct Board Hearing sided with Jane, and John was expelled before he could complete his fourth and final year of medical school.  He was also forced to leave his job as a registered nurse at the university’s Wexner Medical Center.

But there were some odd aspects of the case seemingly ignored by the university. Most important, it turned out that Jane filed her complaint a few days after she had received a notice from the university that she would have to  withdraw because of failing grades. This decision, however, was rescinded when she told a review committee that her poor academic performance was due to the sexual assault she had suffered. In other words, it would seem that Jane might have had a motive to fabricate a charge of sexual assault. John, however, had been informed of none of this, the court found, and it was therefore impossible for him to “effectively cross-examine Jane Roe on a critical issue: her credibility, and specifically, her motive to lie.”

In rejecting the university’s motion to dismiss John’s suit, the court said that “universities perhaps, in their zeal to end the scourge of campus sexual assaults, turned a blind eye to the rights of accused students. Put another way, the snake might be eating its own tail.”

Lack of due process is one way courts have decided for plaintiffs, but there are other ways as well. In 26 cases, according to Johnson and Harris, courts have found universities in breach of contract, meaning a failure to follow their own published procedures, or procedures that were inherently inequitable.

In a 2017 suit against the University of Notre Dame, a judge barred the school from taking action, pending a full hearing, against a student being expelled after being accused by an ex-girlfriend. The judge in the case found that the university’s procedures were “arbitrary and capricious in a number of respects,” among them a refusal by the school’s hearing panel to consider text messages and phone recordings that, in the judge’s words, “seriously undermined Jane’s testimony at the hearing.”

What about the considerable number of cases, 64, that have gone in favor of universities? In seven of them, lower court rulings favorable to universities seemed to have been undermined by later appeals court rulings, but had not been formally reversed. In 18, rulings were made on some grounds other than the actual merits — for example, that the accused student wasn’t able to show that enough harm had been done to him to justify going to court. In another 23 rulings, courts found that they should not be overruled even despite procedural flaws, since the school’s findings against the accused seemed accurate. In only sixteen of the cases did judges rule in favor of the universities after the accused student raised serious questions about the guilty finding against him and the fairness of the process.

In a suit brought against Purdue University, for example, a judge found that the male plaintiff had no “property interest” in his education at Purdue, and therefore the due process protections of the 14th Amendment didn’t apply.

Still, the number of cases that have gone favorably for them has led some lawyers and analysts to believe that new case law is being made, especially in reaffirming the legal necessity for men facing expulsion to have the right, at the very least, to question the women accusing them.

But Miltenberg is cautious. “We have achieved some very good results, and progress towards transparency, equity and due process are being made,” he said. “But there is still a long road ahead until we can have confidence in the campus disciplinary process and the manner in which courts are interpreting Title IX.”

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#MeToo Excesses Have Turned the Tide of Public Opinion, Surveys Reveal

Contact: Rebecca Stewart

Telephone: 513-479-3335

Email: info@saveservices.org

#MeToo Excesses Have Turned the Tide of Public Opinion, Surveys Reveal

WASHINGTON / November 1, 2018 – Three recent surveys reveal the excesses of the #MeToo movement have increased public skepticism of sexual harassment accusers and rallied support for the accused. As a result, overall support for the grass-roots movement has ebbed. #MeToo was launched in October, 2017 after actress Alyssa Milano issued a tweet asking her followers to reply “me too” if they had been sexually harassed or assaulted.

The first survey, conducted by YouGov and the Economist, revealed 18% of Americans now think false accusations of sexual assault are a bigger problem than attacks that go unreported or unpunished, compared with 13% one year ago. “Surprisingly, these changes in opinion against victims have been slightly stronger among women than men,” the Economist noted (1).

Morning Consult did a second study that found 57% of U.S. adults say they are equally worried about men facing false allegations of sexual assault as they are about women facing sexual assault. Overall support for the #MeToo movement has dropped 2% over the last year, the survey found (2).

A third poll by NPR and Ipsos found 49% of Americans believe the #MeToo movement has gone too far. These persons cited the problem of accusations ruining persons’ careers, and the tendency for some to claim sexual “harassment” for behavior that doesn’t rise to that level. 79% said persons accused of such offenses should be afforded the benefit of the doubt (3).

These concerns are highlighted by the case of a 9-year-old boy who sent a note to a female student that said, “I like you. I like your hair because it is not sloppy. I like your eyes because they sparkle like diamonds.” The words were accompanied by a heart-shaped figure. The boy was sent to the principal’s office, and may face charges of sexual harassment (4).

SAVE emphasizes that workplaces should afford a safe environment for all persons, and complaints of sexual harassment should be taken seriously. The principles of fairness, due process, and the presumption of innocence should apply in such cases.

Citations:

  1. https://amp.economist.com/graphic-detail/2018/10/15/after-a-year-of-metoo-american-opinion-has-shifted-against-victims?__twitter_impression=true#top
  2. https://morningconsult.com/2018/10/11/a-year-into-metoo-public-worried-about-false-allegations/
  3. https://www.npr.org/2018/10/31/662178315/on-metoo-americans-more-divided-by-party-than-gender?utm_source=twitter.com&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=politics&utm_term=nprnews&utm_content=2059
  4. https://www.parenting.com/news-break/9-year-old-could-face-sexual-harassment-charge-love-note?fbclid=IwAR2no5jtboTL88TZt2ZKomotPbAuO0sPriwG3nE1ID5HzxF5Fw7LagmV0s0

SAVE — Stop Abusive and Violent Environments — is working for effective and fair solutions to domestic violence and sexual assault: www.saveservices.org