Categories
Campus Sexual Assault Sexual Harassment Title IX

Impartial Investigations Are the Foundation of Equitable Proceedings for Complainants and Respondents

Impartial Investigations Are the Foundation of Equitable Proceedings for Complainants and Respondents

An impartial and fair investigation is the foundation of an equitable adjudication. In a recent guidance, the Office for Civil Rights reaffirmed, “The school must conduct an adequate, reliable, and impartial investigation that provides the parties with an equal opportunity to present witnesses and other evidence.”[1]

Because the investigative process is subject to less oversight than the adjudication, investigative bias can be difficult to discern. Unfortunately, biased investigative philosophies known as “victim-centered,”[2] “trauma-informed,”[3] or “Start By Believing”[4] are believed to be commonly utilized in campus investigations. These conviction-oriented philosophies presume the guilt of the respondent and engender confirmation bias.[5]

Trauma-informed concepts, in particular, have been derided as circular and unscientific:

  • Title IX: The Big Mess on Campus[6]
  • Title IX and “Trauma-Focused” Investigations: The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly[7]
  • Best-Practice Interviewing Spans Many Contexts[8]
  • Title IX Investigations: The Importance of Training Investigators in Evidence-Based Approaches to Interviewing[9]

Flawed campus investigations have shortchanged both complainants and the accused. At Baylor University in Texas, for example, complainants reported alleged assaults to the athletic coaches of the accused harassers, but those claims were ignored and not investigated.[10]

For these reasons, the 2020 Title IX regulation contains essential language about the need for truthful investigations:[11]

A recipient must ensure that Title IX Coordinators, investigators, decision-makers, and any persons who facilitate an informal resolution process, receive training on….. how to serve impartially, including avoiding prejudgment of the facts at issue, conflicts of interest, and bias… recipient also must ensure that investigators receive training on issues of relevance to create an investigative report that fairly summarizes relevant evidence. Any materials used to train Title IX Coordinators, investigators, decision-makers, and any person who facilitates an informal resolution process, must not rely on sex stereotypes and must promote impartial investigations and adjudications of formal complaints of sexual harassment. [emphasis added]

In 2019, SAVE established an online petition devoted to the need for impartial campus investigations. [12] To date, 5,131 persons have signed the petition.[13]

SAVE urges the Office for Civil Rights to retain the existing language at Section 106.45 (b)(1), and to issue additional policy directives designed to rein in guilt-presuming “victim-centered” investigations.

Citations:

[1] Office for Civil Rights Question (May 13, 2021). Questions and Answers on Civil Rights and School Reopening in the COVID-19 Environment. Question 26. https://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/docs/qa-reopening-202105.pdf

[2] SAVE (2016), Victim-Centered Investigations: New Liability Risk for Colleges and Universities. https://www.saveservices.org/wp-content/uploads/Victim-Centered-Investigations-and-Liability-Risk.pdf

[3] Center for Prosecutor Integrity, Trauma-Informed: Junk Science. http://www.prosecutorintegrity.org/sa/trauma-informed/

[4] Center for Prosecutor Integrity, Start by Believing: Ideology of Bias. http://www.prosecutorintegrity.org/sa/start-by-believing/

[5] Simply Psychology (2020). Confirmation Bias. https://www.simplypsychology.org/confirmation-bias.html

[6] Garry, Maryanne. Title IX: The Big Mess on Campus. Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition (8, 2019): 411-412. https://www.saveservices.org/wp-content/uploads/TitleIX-TheBigMessonCampus.pdf

[7] Davis, Deborah & Loftus, Elizabeth. Title IX and “Trauma-Focused” Investigations: The Good, The Bad, and the Ugly. Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition (8, 2019): 403-410.   https://www.saveservices
.org/wp-content/uploads/TitleIXand%E2%80%9CTrauma-Focused%E2%80%9DInvestigations-TheGood
TheBadandtheUgly.pdf

[8] Brubacher, Sonja P. & Powell, Martine B. Best-Practice Interviewing Spans Many Contexts. Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition (8, 2019): 398-402.  https://www.saveservices.org/wp-content/uploads/Best-PracticeInterviewingSpansManyContexts.pdf

[9] Meissner, Christian A. & Lyles, Adrienne M. Title IX Investigations: The Importance of Training Investigators in Evidence-Based Approaches to Interviewing. Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition (8, 2019): 389-397. https://www.saveservices.org/wp-content/uploads/TitleIXInvestigations-TheImportanceofTrainingInvestigatorsinEvidence-BasedApproachestoInterviewing.pdf

[10] Lavigne, Paula (July 13, 2018), Baylor University settles Title IX lawsuit in which gang rape by up to 8 football players was alleged. http://www.espn.com/college-football/story/_/id/24090683/baylor-university-settles-title-ix-lawsuit-which-gang-rape-8-football-players-was-alleged

[11] Section 106.45 (b)(1).

[12] SAVE, ‘One of the worst days of my life:’ Stop sham ‘Start By Believing’ investigations. https://www.change.org/p/congress-stop-sham-believe-the-victim-investigations . Accessed June 3, 2021.

[13] https://www.saveservices.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/2.-Petition-signatures-Attachment-B-6.6.2021.pdf

Categories
Campus Sexual Assault Sexual Harassment Title IX

Campus Due Process Enjoys Strong Support from the Public At Large

Campus Due Process Enjoys Strong Support from the Public At Large

SAVE

June 22, 2021

From 2015 to 2020, five national public opinion polls were conducted to gauge the level of public support for campus due process. Following is a summary of these polls, in reverse chronological order:

  1. A YouGov poll commissioned by SAVE surveyed a representative sample of 2,806 persons on November 12-16, 2020:[1]

Percent of respondents who agreed:

  • Students accused of crimes on college campuses should receive the same civil liberties protections from their colleges that they receive in the court system: 68%
  • Students accused of sexual assault on college campuses should be punished only if there is clear and convincing evidence that they are guilty of a crime: 75%
  • Students accused of sexual assault on college campuses should have the right to know the charges against them before being called to defend themselves: 80%
  • Allegations of sexual assault on campus should be primarily handled by the state or local police: 68%

A secondary analysis according to party affiliation revealed similar levels of support among Democrats and Republicans.[2] The survey used the same questions and methods as the 2017 poll conducted for the Bucknell Institute for Public Policy — see 5. below.

  1. A national survey conducted May 20-25, 2020 by a Fairleigh Dickinson University Poll of 1,003 adults asked, “Assume you or someone you loved reported being sexually assaulted while attending a college or university. Please tell me if you would favor or oppose each of the following:” [3]
  • “A live court-room style hearing for the accused and accuser to meet and cross examine each other and any witnesses with the assistance of attorneys.” 62% of respondents favored, 31% opposed, 7% didn’t know
  • “The opportunity for the accused and accuser to cross examine each other and any witnesses remotely with the assistance of attorneys so that they would not have to be face to face.” 67% of respondents favored, 28% opposed, 5% didn’t know, 1% refused.
  1. A 2018 survey of 2,225 undergraduate students sponsored by the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education found widespread support for due process in sexual assault cases:[4]
  • 80% support the presumption of innocence
  • 68% support cross-examination
  • 72% support a unanimous decision required for expulsion
  1. A Rasmussen poll conducted in September, 2017 found that 73% of American adults agreed with the statement, “Every survivor of sexual misconduct must be taken seriously. Every student accused of sexual misconduct must know that guilt is not predetermined.” Six percent disagreed, and 20% were not sure how they felt about the statement.[5]
  2. A poll by the Bucknell Institute for Public Policy conducted July 25-August 1, 2017 of 1,200 persons reported these results:[6] Percent of respondents who agreed:
  • Students accused of crimes on college campuses should receive the same civil liberties protections from their colleges that they receive in the court system: 67%
  • Students accused of sexual assault on college campuses should have the right to cross-examine their accusers: 61%
  • Students accused of sexual assault on college campuses should be punished only if there is clear and convincing evidence that they are guilty of a crime: 71%
  • Students accused of sexual assault on college campuses should have the right to know the charges against them before being called to defend themselves: 81%
  • Allegations of sexual assault on campus should be primarily handled by the state or local police: 69%

In conclusion, due process and fairness are not partisan issues. They are quintessentially American values.

Citations:

[1] SAVE (Nov. 16, 2020), YouGov Poll on Campus Due Process. https://www.saveservices.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/YouGov-Poll-on-Campus-Due-Process-11.16.2020.xlsx

[2] SAVE (Nov. 18, 2020), YouGov Poll with Political Party Identification. https://www.saveservices.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/YouGov-Poll-with-political-party-identification-11.18.2020.xlsx

[3] Fairleigh Dickinson University (June 29, 2020), Americans Unsure About Title IX Changes to Colleges and Universities but Support Fairness and Consistency. https://view2.fdu.edu/publicmind/2019/200629/index.html

[4] FIRE (June 2018), Proceeding Accordingly: What Students Think about Due Process on Campus. https://www.thefire.org/research/publications/student-surveys/student-attitudes-due-process-survey/

[5] Rasmussen Reports (Sept. 13, 2017), Most Americans Agree With DeVos on Sexual Misconduct on Campuses. https://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/current
_events/social_issues/most_americans_agree_with_devos_on_sexual_misconduct_on_campuses

[6] Bucknell Institute for Public Policy (Sept. 2017), Perceptions of Higher Education Survey – Topline Results. http://bipp.blogs.bucknell.edu/files/2017/09/BIPP-Higher-Ed-Toplines.pdf

Categories
Campus Due Process Sexual Assault Sexual Harassment Title IX

Professor’s Lawsuit Against JMU Highlights Necessity of Campus Due Process Protections

Professor’s Lawsuit Against JMU Highlights Necessity of Campus Due Process Protections

Michael B. Miley

June 21, 2021

Allegations of sexual misconduct or sexual assault are serious charges that demand a serious and consistent process for the investigation and deliberation as to the fault, or lack thereof, assigned to the accused.  Even if a wrongly accused person does not face a severe and visceral punishment such as prison, a finding of fault by an officially-sanctioned institutional authority—particularly as it relates to sexual misconduct—can devastate a person’s life by potentially destroying their professional reputation and private relationships.  All individuals, and groups of individuals, can find assurance in procedures that ensure the law applies to everyone equally.

Campus adjudicative systems have long been criticized by legal scholars for lacking basic procedural protections for the accused, but in 2011, the Department of Education’s Office of Civil Rights issued new guidance for how universities must handle allegations of sexual assault, which has brought those procedural concerns into much greater focus.  The guidance document, known as the “Dear Colleague Letter,” required universities to adopt a “preponderance of the evidence” standard (greater than 50 percent chance allegation is true), granted accusers the right to appeal a university’s finding of no-fault/not guilty, and encouraged universities to restrict an accuser’s right to cross-examination.

Thus, a situation was created where universities—ill-equipped to prosecute sexual misconduct in the first place—faced serious pressure by the federal government to return findings of guilt or responsibility for those accused of sexual misconduct, as too many not guilty verdicts could result in loss of federal funds for non-compliance with agency directives.

A recent federal complaint filed in Virginia is illustrative as to how this process can railroad an individual totally without merit, and why then, due process protections necessarily improve the Title IX process.  In 2015, the complainant, Alyssa Reid, a nationally recognized debater, and professor at James Madison University began a romantic relationship with Kathryn Lese, a female graduate TA who Reid did not supervise and who did not work in Reid’s department.  Indeed, one year into their relationship, an anonymous complaint prompted a Title IX investigation by JMU, which cleared Reid of any wrongdoing in her relationship with Lese for precisely those reasons.

Two years later, their relationship ended on less than pleasant terms and Lese began sending Reid abusive text messages with threats to “ruin” Reid’s career.  Lese then gave a statement to JMU’s Title IX office that did not meet the standard necessary for a formal complaint; it did not allege that their relationship was non-consensual, unwelcome, or negatively impactful to her education.  Reid alleges that JMU discriminated against her because of her sex and sexual orientation when they improperly accepted Lese’s complaint, did not inform Reid of the complaint against her for two months, applied the wrong version of JMU’s Title IX policy to her case, and imposed sanctions on Reid prior to the consummation of the Title IX investigation, hearing, and appeals process; furthermore, there were no representatives of the LGBTQ community on Reid’s hearing panel, and during the hearing, she could not cross-examine Lese and Lese’s witnesses, and was prevented from presenting her own witnesses.

Reid is recognized by students for using her rhetorical skills and communicative abilities to give voice to marginalized individuals and groups, and her voice has been silenced now because of an unstructured process that turned Reid into an unperson: guilty, with no way to prove her innocence.

Often when faced with difficult choices, or a seeming crisis scenario—especially when the government confirms the existence of said crisis—the temptation to temporarily (at least at first) ignore or weaken procedural protections, or components of procedural protections, that are, or may appear to be, impediments to speedy dispositions and decisive institutional action.

The social, economic, and political benefits all Americans receive from the procedural safeguards of our legal system, however, must not be forgotten or ignored.  Indeed, if there are concerns from society, or certain segments of society that government mandated adjudicative systems are not achieving their espoused ideal of “equal justice under law,” the answer is not to dispose of the entire system, and all the protections inherent to it, but rather the answer is to look for ways these due process rights can be strengthened and applied to extrajudicial adjudicative bodies.

Citation:

[1] See Samantha Harris & KC Johnson, Campus Courts in Court: The Rise in Judicial Involvement in Campus Sexual Misconduct Adjudications, 22 N.Y.U. J. Legis. & Pub. Pol’y 49, 53 (2019).

 

Categories
Campus Due Process Sexual Assault Sexual Harassment Title IX

Strong Due Process Protections Are Essential for the Protection of Vulnerable Campus Groups

Strong Due Process Protections Are Essential for the Protection of Vulnerable Campus Groups

SAVE

June 17, 2021

Due process protections are especially important to assure the rights of vulnerable groups such as LGBT persons, racial minorities, disabled students, and immigrants:[1]

LGBT Groups

Former James Madison University faculty member and speech coach Alyssa Reid was accused by her former female partner of a “non-consensual relationship.” Reid eventually was held responsible for violating the university’s Title IX policy. Reid recounted movingly,[2]

“When you’re accused of sexual misconduct, it’s fundamentally different. It’s something that critiques the nature of who you are to your core, that sticks with you forever….JMU did not provide me with due process. It provided me with the illusion of due process….This hearing has ruined my life. This hearing ruined my dream. I have helped students find their place in the world. And the irony now is that I’m lost.”

Reid recently filed a lawsuit against James Madison University alleging multiple due process violations.[3]

In a second case, a male student at Brandeis University filed a complaint against his former male partner, alleging non-consensual sexual interactions. Even though the men had been in a long-term relationship, the campus investigator treated each sexual incident as if the men were strangers to each other, leading to a campus finding of “responsibility.” In a milestone decision, Judge Dennis Saylor vindicated the accused student, opining,[4]

“If a college student is to be marked for life as a sexual predator, it is reasonable to require that he be provided a fair opportunity to defend himself, and an impartial arbiter to make that decision.”

Saylor also noted that Brandeis had forced the accused student to:

“defend himself in what was essentially an inquisitorial proceeding that plausibly failed to provide him with a fair and reasonable opportunity to be informed of the charges and to present an adequate defense.”

African-Americans

During a 2015 Senate hearing on campus sexual assault, Harvard Law Professor Janet Halley made the observation that in her experience, “male students of color are accused and punished at ‘unreasonably high rates’ in campus sexual misconduct investigations.”[5] Two years later, journalist Emily Yoffe posed this question in The Atlantic: “Is the system biased against men of color?” explaining, “black men make up only about 6 percent of college undergraduates, yet are vastly overrepresented in the cases I’ve tracked.”[6]

Black faculty members also have been targeted in campus Title IX proceedings. The nation’s first elected black governor, former Virginia Governor L. Douglas Wilder, penned a scathing letter regarding his “unimaginable nightmare at Virginia Commonwealth University” after he was erroneously accused of sexual misconduct.[7]

In 2017, the Office for Civil Rights investigated Colgate University for potential race discrimination in its sexual assault adjudication processes. During the course of the investigation, the institution had to reveal the fact that “black male students were accused of 50% of the sexual violations reported to the university,”[8] even though black students represent only 5.2% of all undergraduate students.

More recently, Title IX For All analyzed demographic data from the approximately 650 lawsuits filed against institutions of higher education since 2011. Among the 30% of cases in which the race of the accused student was known, black students are four times as likely as white students to file lawsuits alleging their rights were violated in Title IX disciplinary proceedings.[9]

Learning Disabled Students

Because learning disabled students may have a more difficult time navigating social relationships, students with autism and other learning disabilities are at greater risk of accusations of sexual misconduct.[10],[11],[12],[13],[14] These articles reveal a pressing need for policy guidance to clarify the interface between Title IX and the Americans with Disabilities Act.

Following is an illustrative case from New York:

Jason Doherty, a student at the State University of New York, Purchase had been diagnosed with Asperger Syndrome and was classified as a disabled student. During freshman orientation, Doherty had a contentious interaction with three female students, resulting in a no-contact order being issued against the man. As a result, Doherty alleged that the order interfered with his academic success, and that he suffered from anxiety and depression as a result.

In his lawsuit against the institution, Doherty alleged that, “Defendants did not take into account [Plaintiff’s] disability when issuing the no contact orders, nor did they consider whether the no contact orders were being requested in an effort to tease and bully [Plaintiff] because of his disability.’”[15] The judge ruled that Doherty’s allegations of failure to accommodate were sufficient to sustain the ADA claim.

In the words of Acting Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights Suzanne B. Goldberg, “Our nation’s civil rights laws require fair and nondiscriminatory school discipline practices, yet we have data that show concerning disparities based on race, sex, and disability in the administration of discipline.”[16] To end this wave of discrimination, the due process rights of vulnerable groups on campus need to be affirmed, protected, and vigorously defended.

Citations:

[1] Raul Jauregui (June 2, 2021), Title IX Needs to Protect Every Student Present in the US, Including Dreamers. https://www.saveservices.org/2021/06/title-ix-needs-to-protect-every-student-present-in-the-us-including-dreamers/

[2] New Civil Liberties Alliance, Alyssa Reid v. James Madison University, et al. https://nclalegal.org/alyssa-reid-v-james-madison-university-et-al/

[3] New Civil Liberties Alliance, Alyssa Reid v. James Madison University, et al. https://nclalegal.org/alyssa-reid-v-james-madison-university-et-al/

[4] Doe v. Brandeis University, 177 F. Supp. 3d 561 (D. Mass. 2016). https://casetext.com/case/doe-v-brandeis-univ

[5] G. Piper (Aug. 4, 2015). Shut out of sexual-assault hearing, critics of pro-accuser legislation flood Senate committee with testimony. https://www.thecollegefix.com/shut-out-of-sexual-assault-hearing-critics-of-pro-accuser-legislation-flood-senate-committee-with-testimony/

[6] Emily Yoffe (Sept. 11, 2017). The Question of Race in Campus Sexual-Assault Cases. The Atlantic. https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2017/09/the-question-of-race-in-campus-sexual-assault-cases/539361/

[7] L. Douglas Wilder (June 3, 2020). Secretary DeVos Right to Restore Due Process on Campus. The Roanoke Times. https://www.roanoke.com/opinion/commentary/wilder-secretary-devos-right-to-restore-due-process-on-campus/article_dfac7ff4-7d4d-5109-9657-2532a0816f1d.html

[8] Soave, Robby (Sept. 14, 2017). We Need to Talk About Black Students Being Accused of Rape Under Title IX. Reason. https://reason.com/2017/09/14/we-need-to-talk-about-black-students-bei/

[9] Title IX for All (July 6, 2020). Plaintiff Demographics in Accused Student Lawsuits. https://www.titleixforall.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/07/Plaintiff-Demographics-by-Race-and-Sex-Title-IX-Lawsuits-2020-7-6.pdf

[10] William Russell (Jan. 1, 2017). Sexual Misconduct on Campus: A Brief Introduction to Title IX Guidelines and Policies for Parents and Caregivers. Autism Spectrum News. https://autismspectrumnews.org/sexual-misconduct-on-campus-a-brief-introduction-to-title-ix-guidelines-and-policies-for-parents-and-caregivers/

[11] Lee Burdette Williams (Feb. 8, 2018), The Nexus of Autism and Title IX. Inside Higher Ed. https://www.insidehighered.com/views/2018/02/08/colleges-should-understand-special-issues-related-autism-and-title-ix-opinion

[12] Susan Stone & Kristina Supler (July 12, 20218), ‘I Don’t Get It:’ Why College Students with Autism are Vulnerable to Charges of Sexual Misconduct. https://studentdefense.kjk.com/2018/07/02/i-dont-get-it-why-college-students-with-autism-are-vulnerable-to-charges-of-sexual-misconduct/

[13] Michael Allen (Dec. 20, 2018), Disability Rights and Title IX. https://allen-lawfirm.com/2018/12/20/disability-rights-and-title-ix/

[14] Golub, David (May 9, 2021), How Will Title IX Policies Affect Autistic Students? SAVE. https://www.saveservices.org/2021/05/how-will-title-ix-policies-affect-autistic-students/

[15] Doherty v. Bice, No. 18-CV-10898 (NSR), 2020 WL 5548790, *8 (S.D.N.Y. Sept. 16, 2020)

[16] Department of Education (June 4, 2021), U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights Seeks Information on the Nondiscriminatory Administration of School Discipline. https://www.ed.gov/news/press-releases/us-department-educations-office-civil-rights-seeks-information-nondiscriminatory-administration-school-discipline#:~:text=%22Our%20nation’s%20civil%20rights%20laws,in%20the%20administration%20of%20discipline.

Categories
Believe the Victim Campus Department of Justice Investigations Sexual Assault Sexual Harassment Start By Believing Title IX Trauma Informed Victim-Centered Investigations

PR: Railroading the Innocent: 5,200+ Petition Signers Demand an End to ‘Victim-Centered’ Investigations

PRESS RELEASE

Rebecca Stewart: 513-479-3335

Email: info@saveservices.org

Railroading the Innocent: 5,200+ Petition Signers Demand an End to ‘Victim-Centered’ Investigations

WASHINGTON / June 16, 2021 – An online petition is demanding an end to the use of so-called “victim-centered” investigative methods. “Victim-centered” approaches serve to remove the presumption of innocence and tilt the investigation in favor of the complainant (1). Such investigative philosophies are becoming widespread both in the criminal legal system and on college campuses.

The petition highlights the account of Matt Rolph of New York, who was accused of sexual assault by his former long-term girlfriend. Despite the fact that a jury found him innocent of all charges, Hobart College launched a “victim-centered” investigation that ignored inconsistencies among the witness statements. Rolph sued the college, with Judge Elizabeth Wolford eventually ruling in his favor (2).

Inexplicably, Congress has been supportive of such “victim-centered” methods.

Recently the House of Representatives passed H.R. 1620, which endorses “victim-centered” investigations. The bill defines “victim-centered” as asking questions of a complainant “in a manner that is focused on the experience of the reported victim.” (3) This description is an admission of the biased nature of such investigations, because it says nothing about focusing on the experiences of the defendant, or seeking to verify the truth (or falsity) of the allegation.

“Start By Believing” is another “victim-centered” philosophy that has enjoyed generous government support. Over the years, the “Start By Believing” sponsor has received $9.5 million in funding from the U.S. Department of Justice and other sources (4).

“Trauma-informed” is yet another victim-centered ideology that has been derided as “junk science.” (5)  Healthcare providers now are being instructed in circular “trauma-informed” thinking. According to a New York State nurse who attended one such training, “Current trauma-informed training teaches that a patient who remembers every detail of an incident, or a patient who remembers little to nothing of an incident, both indicate a trauma has occurred.” (6)

Two years ago the National Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers (NACDL) successfully organized to defeat ABA Resolution 114. The resolution sought to establish an “affirmative consent” standard on the basis of flawed trauma-informed science (7).

The National Registry of Exonerations, which tracks wrongful convictions of the innocent, found that investigative misconduct contributes to 35% of all wrongful convictions. The investigative misconduct includes concealment of evidence, fabrication of evidence, witness tampering, misconduct in interrogations, and making false statements at trial (8).

The names of the petition signers, now numbering 5,278 persons, are available for inspection (9). The online petition continues to accept additional signers: https://www.change.org/p/congress-stop-sham-believe-the-victim-investigations

Citations:

  1. http://www.prosecutorintegrity.org/sa/victim-centered-investigations/
  2. https://casetext.com/case/rolph-v-hobart-william-smith-colls
  3. https://www.congress.gov/bill/117th-congress/house-bill/1620/text
  4. https://evawintl.org/grants/
  5. https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2017/09/the-bad-science-behind-campus-response-to-sexual-assault/539211/
  6. https://www.saveservices.org/2021/05/healthcare-providers-are-being-indoctrinated-with-trauma-informed-myths/
  7. https://nacdl.org/Article/SeptOct2019-FromthePresidentUnleashingthePowerofNA
  8. http://www.law.umich.edu/special/exoneration/Pages/detaillist.aspx?View={faf6eddb-5a68-4f8f-8a52-2c61f5bf9ea7}&FilterField1=OM%5Fx0020%5FTags&FilterValue1=OF&SortField=Exonerated&SortDir=Desc
  9. https://www.saveservices.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/06/2.-Petition-signatures-Attachment-B-6.6.2021.pdf
Categories
Campus Due Process Sexual Assault Sexual Harassment Title IX

Disregarding Bogus Claims of Activists, Vast Majority of Americans Support Campus Due Process

PRESS RELEASE

Contact: Rebecca Stewart

Telephone: 513-479-3335

Email: info@saveservices.org

Disregarding Bogus Claims of Activists, Vast Majority of Americans Support Campus Due Process

WASHINGTON / June 9, 2021 – For years, campus activists have promoted a narrative about campus sexual assault using inflammatory terms such as “rape culture.” But analyses reveal these claims to be factually untrue, pointing to the need to restore campus fairness. Over the last decade, campus groups have made a series of questionable claims.

These groups portray campus sexual assault as an exclusively a male-on-female problem. But according to the Centers for Disease Control, nearly identical numbers of men and women are victims of sexual violence. The National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey reports that each year, 1.270 million women are raped, and 1.267 million men are “made to sexually penetrate” by their female partners (1).

Activists also have repeated the factoid that only 2-10% of sexual assault allegations are false (2). But the actual number is much higher. According to Brett Sokolow, head of the Association of Title IX Administrators, “Probably 40 or 50% of allegations of sexual assault are baseless.” (3)

More concerning is the belief that due process is an obstacle, not conduit to justice. According to this theory, the solution to campus sexual assault was to remove due process protections for the accused. As a result, reporting of incidents supposedly would increase, convictions would multiply, and sexual assault would be curbed. This was the rationale for the federal Dear Colleague Letter policy of 2011, which eliminated due process protections for the accused, such as the right to be represented by counsel.

But the “due process as an obstacle to justice” theory backfired.

A survey sponsored by the American Association of Universities documented increases in campus sexual assaults from 2015 to 2019 among undergraduates, growing by 1.4% for men and 3.0% among women. In 2019, only 11.2% of sexual assaults were reported to campus police, partly because only 45% of victims believed that school officials were “very likely” or “extremely likely” to take their report seriously (4).

Part of the problem can be traced to campus Title IX Coordinators who came to view their role as advocates, not neutral administrators. In many cases, these Coordinators made snap decisions of innocence or guilt, even before the formal investigation began. An early survey of Title IX coordinators concluded that these persons “did not consistently comply with requirements requiring mandatory reporting, did not consistently provide notice to respondents, and often departed from the investigation, documentation, and reporting requirements” of the Department of Education (5).

A 2020 YouGov survey commissioned by SAVE revealed strong public support for campus due process, as well (6):

  • Students accused of crimes on college campuses should receive the same civil liberties protections from their colleges that they receive in the court system: 68%
  • Students accused of sexual assault on college campuses should be punished only if there is clear and convincing evidence that they are guilty of a crime: 75%
  • Students accused of sexual assault on college campuses should have the right to know the charges against them before being called to defend themselves: 80%

Democrats and Republicans expressed similarly high levels of support for campus fairness (7).

This week, the federal Office for Civil Rights is holding a Public Hearing on the Title IX regulation that took effect last August. The Comment submitted by SAVE highlights the strong bipartisan support for campus due process among lawmakers, newspaper editorial boards, organizations, and individual commentators (8).

SAVE urges lawmakers and college administrators to disregard the dubious claims of activist groups, and instead work to uphold the quintessential principle of fairness and due process.

Links:

  1. https://ajph.aphapublications.org/doi/10.2105/AJPH.2014.301946
  2. https://cdn.atixa.org/website-media/atixa.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/12193336/Lisak-False-Allegations-16-VAW-1318-2010.pdf
  3. https://www.thecentersquare.com/national/legal-experts-say-bidens-pushing-ahead-to-the-obama-past-on-campus-rape-could-be/article_184d1e3a-3fc0-11eb-956d-87947675f52c.html
  4. https://www.aau.edu/newsroom/press-releases/aau-releases-2019-survey-sexual-assault-and-misconduct
  5. https://core.ac.uk/download/pdf/232687125.pdf
  6. https://www.saveservices.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/YouGov-Poll-on-Campus-Due-Process-11.16.2020.xlsx
  7. https://www.saveservices.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/YouGov-Poll-with-political-party-identification-11.18.2020.xlsx
  8. https://www.saveservices.org/title-ix-regulation/
Categories
Campus Due Process Sexual Assault Sexual Harassment Title IX

SAVE Oral Testimony to the Office for Civil Rights

SAVE Oral Testimony to the Office for Civil Rights

June 7, 2021

Good morning. My name is Edward Bartlett. I am the president of SAVE, a non-partisan organization that is working for campus fairness and due process. SAVE advocates on behalf of both complainants and respondents.

One of the misconceptions surrounding the sexual harassment debate is that the issue is a partisan one that separates Democrats and Republicans. But is that really true?

First, let’s look at the statements issued by law school professors, who are generally inclined to be liberal. Beginning in 2014, law professors from Harvard Law School,[1] the University of Pennsylvania,[2] and Cornell Law School [3] issued strongly worded statements in support of campus due process.

Second, let’s look at a recent public opinion poll.  A 2020 YouGov poll commissioned by SAVE found that two-thirds to four-fifths of all Americans agreed with the due process questions that were asked [4]. The survey reported similar levels of support among Democrats and Republicans.[5]

Third, let’s look at the judges who have issued rulings in favor of campus due process. A 2019 analysis published in the New York University Journal of Legislation and Public Policy looked at the number of pro-due process decisions by judges who had been nominated by Presidents Clinton, Bush, and Obama. The report found, “no meaningful statistical correlation exists between the [judicial] outcome and [which president] nominated the judge.”[6]

Fourth, let’s examine the statements published in the last three months, after the Department of Education announced it would be reviewing the 2020 regulation. The editorial boards of five major newspapers weighed in, in support of campus fairness:

  1. Detroit News [7]
  2. Los Angeles Times [8]
  3. New York Daily News [9]
  4. Washington Post [10]
  5. Wall Street Journal [11]

Of these newspapers, four are generally regarded as liberal, and one, the Wall Street Journal, viewed as conservative.

Finally, former Democratic presidential candidate Michael Bloomberg issued a strongly worded editorial on March 25.[12] Referring to the campus regime established under the 2011 Dear Colleague Letter, Bloomberg explained, “Alleged victims said that schools failed to investigate their claims professionally…. Accused students were routinely denied the right to examine evidence, receive written notice of the charges against them, or cross-examine witnesses.”

Bloomberg concluded, “College students deserve a better and more just system, and the Biden administration should undertake to create it.”

SAVE looks forward to continuing conversations with the Office for Civil Rights. Thank you.

Citations:

[1] https://www.bostonglobe.com/opinion/2014/10/14/rethink-harvard-sexual-harassment-policy/HFDDiZN7nU2UwuUuWMnqbM/story.html

[2] http://media.philly.com/documents/OpenLetter.pdf

[3] https://www.scribd.com/document/375274931/John-Doe-v-Cornell-Motion-of-23-Cornell-Law-Professors-to-File-Amicus-Brief-in-Support-of-Student

[4] SAVE, (November 16, 2020), YouGov Poll on Campus Due Process. https://www.saveservices.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/YouGov-Poll-on-Campus-Due-Process-11.16.2020.xlsx

[5] SAVE (November 18, 2020), YouGov Poll with Political Party Identification. https://www.saveservices.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/YouGov-Poll-with-political-party-identification-11.18.2020.xlsx

[6] https://nyujlpp.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/Harris-Johnson-Campus-Courts-in-Court-22-nyujlpp-49.pdf

[7] The Detroit News (May 10, 2021), Opinion: Keep Title IX sex assault rules constitutional. https://www
.yourdailyjournal.com/opinion/100732/opinion-keep-title-ix-sex-assault-rules-constitutional

[8] The (Los Angeles) Times Editorial Board (March 22, 2021), Editorial: Betsy Devos’s campus sex-assault rules need a tweak, not an overhaul.  https://news.yahoo.com/editorial-betsy-devoss-campus-sex-100019802.html

[9]Daily News Editorial Board (March 10, 2021), Fairness for accusers & accused: Biden shouldn’t mess with Title IX improvements on sexual misconduct.  https://www.nydailynews.com/opinion/ny-edit-biden-title-ix-changes-20210310-hn6wmbuwgfflnld72aj24qclse-story.html

[10] The Washington Post Editorial Board (March 28, 2021), Opinion: Biden has a chance to restore balance to the rules on campus sexual assault. https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/biden-has-a-chance-to-restore-balance-to-the-rules-on-campus-sexual-assault/2021/03/28/cc4416fc-8767-11eb-8a8b-5cf82c3dffe4_story.html

[11] WSJ Editorial Board (March 4, 2021), Here Comes the Due Process Rollback, House Democrats want Biden to repeal campus protections in sexual misconduct cases. https://www.wsj.com/articles/here-comes-the-due-process-rollback-11614902297

[12] https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2021-03-25/title-ix-biden-should-bring-better-justice-to-u-s-universities

Categories
Campus Sexual Assault Sexual Harassment Title IX Trauma Informed

Healthcare Providers are Being Indoctrinated with ‘Trauma Informed’ Myths

Healthcare Providers are Being Indoctrinated with
‘Trauma Informed’ Myths

Colleen Farmer, BSN, RN

June 1, 2021

I have been a Registered Nurse for the past 32 years and I have worked in the emergency room for the last 25 years. I love my job and love taking care of my patients. I am concerned, however that my coworkers –nurses, doctors and physician assistants – who recently completed the “Trauma and Sexual Assault Survivor Support Training” course were immersed in biased theories that are not scientifically supported.1

What is a trauma-informed approach?

To be “trauma-informed” means you take a “victim-centered or a “Start by Believing” approach to the care you are providing.2 There are two parts to a trauma-informed approach.

The first step “recognizes the presence of trauma symptoms, acknowledges the role that trauma has played… and how trauma interferes with one’s ability to cope.”3 These trauma informed principles then allow healthcare providers to assess and modify care with an “understanding of how trauma affects the life of an individual…” so we can “avoid triggers and re-traumatization.”3

There is nothing new about healthcare providers recognizing the role of trauma in the care of our patients. We see trauma every day in an emergency room, and I would argue that our role on how to handle trauma has not changed. Our goals have always been to recognize where our patients are, be kind, caring, sensitive, supportive and empathetic while being a good active listener to all of our patients.

Nursing care has always looked to promote a safe environment, trustworthiness, and transparency while being respectful, using clear instructions, effective communication and always encouraging our patients to voice how they feel, empowering them with choices and being a part of their own care plan as we always have.

Trauma-informed theory is not scientifically proven

The second part of a trauma-informed approach is the ”science” of neurobiology. It is explained as a stressful or life-threatening event that causes a “flood of hormones… resulting in a complete shutdown of bodily function.” This state of mind is referred to as “paralysis, tonic immobility or freezing.” The “trauma physiologically impedes the victim’s ability to resist or coherently remember the assault resulting in an impaired memory or fragmented memory recall due to the disorganized encoding that occurred during the incident.”4,5 Various experts state, the “talk on fragmented memory and tonic immobility is unsupported by prevailing scientific research findings.”5

Many scientists, psychology professionals, and groups have published papers explaining how trauma-informed concepts are unsupported. The US Air Force Office of Special Investigations, for example, sounded the alarm calling for the end of “trauma-informed” training. Regarding the use of trauma-informed training methodology (FETI), the Air Force Office stated that it is “loosely constricted, is based on flawed science, makes unfounded claims about its effectiveness, and has never once been tested, studied, researched or validated.”6

“There is no scientific evidence to support the idea that a trauma-informed approach should be offered as a valid clinical method for working with victims of trauma.”6 Simply stated, the science of neurobiology is not empirically supported. 1,5,7,8

The flaws and failures of trauma-informed training

– In trauma-informed training, tonic immobility is not only applied in life threatening situations but also expanded to include low-level, non- contact incidents or stressful incidents.9,10

– Current trauma-informed training teaches that a patient who remembers every detail of an incident or a patient who remembers little to nothing of an incident both indicate a trauma has occurred.1,4

When we make the assumption that trauma is the only possible cause, this can lead to misdiagnoses, because providers are discouraged from looking at other possible causes of memory loss such as mental illness, drug/alcohol problems or other factors. In defining trauma the Journal of Adolescent Health states, “A trauma-informed approach does not necessarily seek disclosure…”11 however, as clinicians, we need to seek the truth in order to properly treat, diagnose and care for our patients.

– In cases of sexual assault, trauma-informed, victim-centered, or “Start By Believing” training teaches us to view the patients as a “victim” vs. an alleged victim. Not only is this presumptuous, it violates both our legal and sworn ethical codes to remain neutral and impartial in our collection of evidence in our role as a sexual assault nurse examiner (SANE) provider.12 Not only are nurses and doctors being trained in this debunked science, but also our law enforcement, court personnel, judges, attorneys, staff and students on college campuses and more. 13,14,15

– When trauma is used as a preconceived assumption to justify inconsistent behavior, our objectivity as a SANE nurse or provider becomes compromised, as relevant evidence might be excluded.9 Trauma-informed training often emphasizes that documentation should “corroborate the victim’s account.”5,16,17,18 Training that suggests SANE nurses or providers corroborate a patient’s account of events, leading us to discredit inconsistencies in a patient’s story places us in the role of judge and jury, which is not our job. This violates our legal and ethical duties requiring us to remain neutral. As clinicians, we should follow scientific and lawful procedures to collect all evidence, without bias, to ensure quality of care for those who allege they have been assaulted. Our charting and reporting of events in an accurate, fair and complete way, is essential to providing good quality care for our patients.

– Trauma-informed training, care, approach, or theory, has become so broadly used and poorly defined it has the unfortunate effect of turning almost anyone into a “victim” or “survivor.”7

New York State trauma-informed programs have included trainings led by Dr. James Hopper. Dr. Hopper has stated, “Focusing on the brain…I’m able to… truly change lives, institutions, and ultimately cultures.”19 “Effective trauma-informed…methods are essential to treating victims justly…and holding perpetrators accountable.19 Hopper’s real intent appears to go well beyond what any science would support.

– A Washington Post and Kaiser Family Foundation Survey found 44% of women think when they give a guy a “nod in agreement,” that isn’t enough for consent. 24% of women surveyed agreed that “sexual activity when both people are under the influence of alcohol or drugs…” “Is sexual assault,” and 35% of women felt “sexual assault accusations are often used by women as a way of getting back at men.”20 This survey shows us there are real life consequences in being trained to “Believe the Victim.” When a nod of the head, having a drink or an angry partner is all that separates someone from a rape or sexual assault charge, we need to be very diligent in factually documenting all potential evidence. In these types of cases, the potential for harm in “corroborating a victim’s account” is very high.

The high stakes of trauma-informed policies

Currently, college and university lawsuits are the best place to see the failures of trauma-informed training. The training has been well established for the last decade. It is on our campuses, where the seed of “believe the victim” began and has grown to become the cultural movement of  #MeToo. More and more due to the biases of trauma-informed training, courts are denouncing victim-centered philosophies. They are showing they support “clear standards for admissibility of scientific evidence in court.”21,22

Trauma-Informed training does not meet this standard and has been questioned in many court cases.9,21 “Misuse of trauma-informed policies was clearly evident in Doe v. University of Mississippi. The court found trauma-informed training materials caused those trained to make “an assumption … that an assault occurred.” Even the Association for Title IX Administrators, a prominent agency that leads the way on campus policy and training, had this to say about trauma-informed training, “You will need to assess whether you can afford to have a non-empirical, biased training on your resume in this age of litigation.”23

Where do we go from here?

The “Trauma and Sexual Assault Survivor Support Training” that New York healthcare providers have attended was based on the flawed concepts of neurobiology outlined above. We need to question why medical professionals are being “trained” in unsupported scientific theory! The title of the training itself should make us question the goal of what is being taught and why we as medical professionals received training and instruction from college advocates, who work from a “survivor-centric” viewpoint that lacks transparency, accountability and is fraught with conflicts of interest.15

We need to end the unscientific “trauma-informed” training of all professions. It is extremely important that we, as nurses and providers conducting evaluations in cases of rape, sexual assault or sexual violence adhere to methods that have been scientifically validated.6 We would not want to see rape cases thrown out of court due to the use of this flawed training. We are capable of recognizing “real” trauma without the unethical use of trauma-informed training.

Citations:

  1. Trauma Informed Junk Science: http://www.prosecutorintegrity.org/sa/ trauma-informed/
  2. Center for Prosecutor Integrity Start by Believing: http://www.prosecutorintegrity.org/sa/start-by-believing/
  3. What Does “Trauma Informed Care” really mean? J. Kellie Evans, LCSW, CSOTP May 1, 2013: https://www.csa.virginia.gov/content/doc/What_does_Trauma_Informed_Care_Really_Mean_2013.pdf
  1. Trauma Informed Junk Science: http://www.prosecutorintegrity.org/sa/ trauma-informed/
  2. Center for Prosecutor Integrity Start by Believing: http://www.prosecutorintegrity.org/sa/start-by-believing/
  3. What Does “Trauma Informed Care” really mean? J. Kellie Evans, LCSW, CSOTP May 1, 2013: https://www.csa.virginia.gov/content/doc/What_does_Trauma_Informed_Care_Really_Mean_2013.pdf
  4. Jim Hopper PhD: https://www.jimhopper.com/
  5. The Bad Science Behind Campus Response to Sexual Assault by Emily Yoffe September 8th, 2017: https://www.theatlantic.com/education/archive/2017/09/the-bad-science-behind-campus-response-to-sexual-assault/539211/
  6. Report on the use of the Forensic Experiential Trauma Interview (FETI) Technique within the Department of the Air Force October 2015: http://www.prosecutorintegrity.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/03/AIR-FORCE-FETI-STUDY.pdf
  7. Trauma-Informed Approaches: The Good and the Bad by Michael S. Scheeringa, MD, Sept. 17, 2017: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/stress-relief/201709/trauma-informed-approaches-the-good-and-the-bad
  8. Truthiness of the Trauma-Informed Science-Policy Gap by Michael S. Scheeringa, MD, Sept. 11, 2018: https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/stress-relief/201809/truthiness-the-trauma-informed-science-policy-gap
  9. FACE Families Advocating for Campus Equality, Trauma Informed Theories disguised as evidence: https://static1.squarespace.com/static/5941656f2e69cffcdb5210aa/t/5ccbd3c153450a492767c70d/1556861890771/Trauma-Informed+Theories+Disguised+as+Evidence+5-2.pdf
  10. Stress Is Not Trauma by Michael S. Scheeringa, MD, June 6, 2017

https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/stress-relief/201706/stress-is-not-trauma

  1. College Sexual Assault: A Call for Trauma-Informed Prevention Heather L. McCauley, Sc.D. Adam W. Casler, M.Ed. https://www.jahonline.org/article/S1054-139X%2815%2900119-6/fulltext
  2. Nursing Ethical Considerations Lisa M. Haddad; Robin A. Geiger. Last Update: September 1, 2020: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK526054/
  3. Trauma-Informed Courts: The How and Why By Carl Donovan Trauma Training for Criminal Justice Professionals: https://www.samhsa.gov/gains-center/trauma-training-criminal-justice-professionals
  4. ATIXIA Training Materials Paul Smith’s College Building Partnerships among Law Enforcement Agencies, Colleges and Universities: Developing a Memorandum of Understanding to Prevent and Respond Effectively to Sexual Assaults at Colleges and Universities https://www.paulsmiths.edu/title-ix/ training/
  5. Paul Smith’s College Coordinated Community Response

https://www.paulsmiths.edu/care/

  1. This Campaign Against Sexual Violence Strongly Favors Female Victims, Strips Men Of Due Process Wendy McElroy June 07, 2018: https://dailycaller.com/2018/06/07/start-by-believing-program/
  2. Has EVAW Been Moderating or Covering its Tracks? By James Baresel February 16,2021: http://ifeminists.net/e107_plugins/content/content.php?content.1497
  3. CPI ‘Believe the Victim:’ The Transformation of Justice: http://www.prosecutorintegrity.org/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/Believe-the-Victim-FINAL.pdf
  4. The Brain Under (Sexual) Attack Why people don’t fight, why memories are fragmentary – and some big implications. Jim Hopper, PhD – December 14, 2017

https://www.jimhopper.com/pdf/hopper2017_brain_under_(sexual)_attack_blog_intro.pdf

20. Washington Post-Kaiser Family Foundation Survey of College Students on Sexual Assault: http://apps.washingtonpost.com/g/page/national/washington-post-kaiser-family-foundation-survey-of-college-students-on-sexual-assault/1726/

  1. Center for Prosecutor Integrity Judges: Faithful and Impartial….?

http://www.prosecutorintegrity.org/sa/judges/

  1. Six-Year Experiment in Campus Jurisprudence Fails to Make the Grade SAVE 2017: https://www.saveservices.org/wp-content/uploads/Six-Year-Experiment-Fails-to-Make-the-Grade.pdf
  2. ATIXA Position Statement Trauma-Informed Training and the Neurobiology of Trauma August 16, 2019: https://cdn.atixa.org/website-media/atixa.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/08/20123741/2019-ATIXA-Trauma-Position-Statement-Final-Version.pdf
Categories
Campus Sexual Assault Sexual Harassment Title IX

I’m Afraid to Send My Son to School: How Title IX is Hurting the Next Generation of Men

I’m Afraid to Send My Son to School: How Title IX is Hurting the Next Generation of Men

Lindsay R. McKasson, Esq.

May 27, 2021

If you had asked me five years ago what my law practice would look like today, I never would have guessed I would be representing wrongfully accused students. I did not even know Title IX was a legal practice area. I certainly would not have realized that it is an epidemic sweeping America, forever changing the lives of boys and young men.

I have long considered myself a liberal and a defender of women. It seems, however, that progressives has forgotten about due process, a critically important civil right. We live in an age where it only matters that one is accused, not whether they are guilty or “responsible” (the terminology schools use in convicting students of misconduct). As a result, hundreds if not thousands of boys and young men are being accused each year of actions that may violate a school’s Title IX policy, consequently changing their lives forever. They will always be considered “charged” even if found not responsible.

During the days, months, and sometimes more than a year of investigating the matter, accused boys and young men live in constant fear that the school will make the wrong decision and that they will be suspended or expelled, forever changing their life’s trajectory.

The best-case scenario after being charged at a school is that one is found “not responsible.” This is usually after weeks and months of the investigation pending. Lives are turned upside down trying to prove one’s innocence. Reputations are ruined. Countless money is spent on attorneys’ fees. It is an emotional roller coaster that causes many of my clients severe emotional harm. They end up with PTSD, or worse, suicidal. I tell them to have hope, that it will get better. But, I also know the stakes are high – their future opportunities are completely at risk.

I think many people hearing about this issue assume this is happening only to guilty men on college campuses. They hear “Title IX” and believe it is sexual assault or rape. Many of my cases, however, involve young men and boys, and the “charge” comes down to improper language.

I have one client who was essentially accused of using improper language. No touching was involved or alleged. He was expelled from his high school. His scholarship and admission to college revoked. Not only will he never trust a female again, but his life is also completely different than the one he worked so hard to build. This was a collegebound male who now has no secondary education.

My youngest client is a fifth grader. I have another client who was “investigated” in eighth grade for actions that allegedly occurred in seventh grade. He was found “not responsible” for the sexual activity of which he was accused. But, the accusing student, who has been caught in many, many lies during the course of the school’s and our own investigation, cannot let it go. Nor can her mother, which is often the case. They sued him. The case has gone on for years. Next summer, he will simultaneously be preparing for college and defending against false allegations that arose when he was in seventh grade.

Many of my cases do not involve sexual assault. If it does, many of the allegations are so far outside of the realm of reality, they appear false on their face. Brett Sokolow, President of the Association of Title IX Administrators (ATIXA), recently stated that around 50% of the Title IX claims made by complainants are “baseless.”[1] Yet, the schools seemingly do not care. If there is an allegation made, they must investigate and “charge” the accused. The schools are so afraid of lawsuits and getting “cancelled” by “woke culture,” they side with the female complaining student, no matter the ludicrousness of the allegations.

My experience is that many of these matters involve false allegations or allegations that do not amount to sexual assault or rape. Each false allegation not only hurts the males who are accused but also delegitimizes true sex crimes that occur on campus. For those true crimes, there is a system already in place – the American criminal justice system wherein due process is protected. Moreover, there are also options in civil court. As it stands right now, however, students are going to the universities where due process is not as protected. Moreover, it is in jeopardy should the Title IX Regulations that went into effect in August 2020 get repealed.

Title IX’s intentions of protecting women from campus rape are absolutely valid. The road to hell, however, is paved with good intentions. In the process of trying to protect women, men’s lives are being ruined. Worse than that, no one seems to care. The schools show a callous disregard for their male students. They could not be doing more damage to these young men and boys.

Now, I have a six-month-old son. I have already begun making mental notes of everything I will tell him when I send him off to school. And yes, I do mean elementary school. When I contemplate the wisdom I have gained, I become overwhelmed because I know the answer is nothing will protect him.

If someone decides to make up a lie, take something out of context, or retroactively change their mind about a consensual sexual activity, not much can be done to rectify the situation. The best-case scenario after his life is turned upside down is the school miraculously finds him not responsible. Consequently, he will never be the same. How am I supposed to have this conversation with my son? Is my best advice being to avoid school altogether and homeschool him? I hope not.

Is this really the future for our sons? Is this the America where we want to live? Again, I hope not.

I find some solace in the prohibition on “materially false statements” in the new Title IX Regulations. Specifically, 34 CFR Section 106.71 provides a safe harbor for schools to discipline those complainants (and respondents) that make “materially false statements” to schools investigating these matters. This provision should provide a strong deterrent to those students that would falsely and maliciously accuse students. Without such a regulation, I worry that there will be no incentive against making false allegations and every incentive towards making one.

All Americans should want a system that protects students from assault and from false allegations. If the Biden Administration reverses the recent Regulations, I worry that it will be easier for our sons to be falsely accused. This should concern all mothers. I hope it concerns all Americans.

Citation:

[1] https://www.thecentersquare.com/national/legal-experts-say-bidens-pushing-ahead-to-the-obama-past-on-campus-rape-could-be/article_184d1e3a-3fc0-11eb-956d-87947675f52c.html

Categories
Campus Sexual Assault Sexual Harassment Title IX

Doe v. Purdue: Lodestar Decision On Due Process and Sex Discrimination

Doe v. Purdue: Lodestar Decision On Due Process and Sex Discrimination

Philip A. Byler, Esq. (winning appellate lawyer in Doe v. Purdue)

Nesenoff & Miltenberg LLP

May 21, 2021

When then Education Secretary DeVos announced on May 6, 2020, what would be the current Title IX regulations, she pointed to three cases that were particularly instructive, one of which was the Seventh Circuit’s decision in Doe v. Purdue.[1]  Secretary DeVos noted that it was a three-woman panel with then Circuit Judge Amy Coney Barrett as the author of the opinion.[2]  A short review of Doe v. Purdue provides an understanding that the current Title IX regulations, in mandating due process and fairness in Title IX sexual misconduct proceedings,[3] were based on well considered decisional law dealing with actual human experience.

Doe v. Purdue was a constitutional due process and Title IX discrimination suit brought on behalf of Plaintiff John Doe.  He was falsely accused of sexual assault by John Doe’s former girlfriend five months after the supposed occurrences of non-consensual sexual touching (never mind that John Doe and Jane Doe had a two-month long period of consensual sexual intercourse about which no complaint was made); and John Doe was suspended by the University and dismissed from Navy ROTC because of the university suspension.   John Doe’s dream and hope to serve his country as a Naval officer was destroyed after a University disciplinary process, rightly called “Kafkaesque” by John Doe, in which, among other things, there was no hearing, no cross-examination, no sworn testimony, no access given for John Doe even to see the investigator’s report much less comment on it, no provision of the evidence that supposedly supported the allegations of complainant and thus no fair and adequate ability to prepare a defense to those allegations, no presumption of innocence (there was a presumption the accusing female’s story was true, as she did not appear ever before the Dean and the Equity Committee), and no reasoned consideration of evidence as required by a burden of proof.[4]

The Seventh Circuit upheld the Complaint’s pleading of (i) the constitutional due process claim and (ii) the Title IX discrimination claim.[5]

  1. The Constitutional Due Process Claim.

Judge Barrett, after ruling that Purdue had deprived John Doe of a stigma-plus liberty interest, turned to “whether he [John Doe] has adequately claimed that Purdue used fundamentally unfair procedures in determining his guilt.”[6] She wrote in pertinent part what is well worth quoting:

John’s circumstances entitled him to relatively formal procedures: he was suspended by a university rather than a high school, for sexual violence rather than academic failure, and for an academic year rather than a few days. Yet Purdue’s process fell short of what even a high school must provide to a student facing a days-long suspension. ‘‘[D]ue process requires, in connection with a suspension of 10 days or less, that the student be given oral or written notice of the charges against him and, if he denies them, an explanation of the evidence the authorities have and an opportunity to present his side of the story.’’ Goss [v. Lopez], 419 U.S. [565,] at 581, 95 S.Ct. 729. John received notice of Jane’s allegations and denied them, but Purdue did not disclose its evidence to John. And withholding the evidence on which it relied in adjudicating his guilt was itself sufficient to render the process fundamentally unfair. See id. at 580, 95 S.Ct. 729 (‘‘[F]airness can rarely be obtained by secret, one sided determination of facts decisive of rights’ (quoting Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Comm. v. McGrath, 341 U.S. 123, 170, 71 S.Ct. 624, 95 L.Ed. 817 (1951) (Frankfurter, J., concurring))).

John has adequately alleged that the process was deficient in other respects as well. To satisfy the Due Process Clause, ‘‘a hearing must be a real one, not a sham or pretense.’’ Dietchweiler by Dietchweiler v. Lucas, 827 F.3d 622, 629 (7th Cir. 2016) (citation omitted). At John’s meeting with the Advisory Committee, two of the three panel members candidly admitted that they had not read the investigative report, which suggests that they decided that John was guilty based on the accusation rather than the evidence. See id. at 630 (stating that a hearing would be a sham if ‘‘members of the school board came to the hearing having predetermined [the plaintiff’s] guilt’’). And in a case that boiled down to a ‘‘he said/she said,’’ it is particularly concerning that Sermersheim and the committee concluded that Jane was the more credible witness—in fact, that she was credible at all—without ever speaking to her in person. Indeed, they did not even receive a statement written by Jane herself, much less a sworn statement.  It is unclear, to say the least, how Sermersheim and the committee could have evaluated Jane’s credibility.

Sermersheim and the Advisory Committee’s failure to make any attempt to examine Jane’s credibility is all the more troubling because John identified specific impeachment evidence. He said that Jane was depressed, had attempted suicide, and was angry at him for reporting the attempt. His roommate—with whom Sermersheim and the Advisory Committee refused to speak—maintained that he was present at the time of the alleged assault and that Jane’s rendition of events was false. And John insisted that Jane’s behavior after the alleged assault—including her texts, gifts, and continued romantic relationship with him—was inconsistent with her claim that he had committed sexual violence against her. Sermersheim and the Advisory Committee may have concluded in the end that John’s impeachment evidence did not undercut Jane’s credibility. But their failure to even question Jane or John’s roommate to probe whether this evidence was reason to disbelieve Jane was fundamentally unfair to John.[7]

At this point in Judge Barrett’s opinion, a footnote stated that it was not necessary to address the lack of cross-examination because of all the other procedural deficiencies.[8]  Cross-examination, however, has been recognized as the greatest legal engine ever invented for discovery of the truth[9] and has been ruled to be required for basic due process in campus disciplinary cases.[10]

Judge Barrett’s opinion was on a motion to dismiss; however, her crystallization of the due process issues has been followed by pre-trial discovery that has fortified John Doe’s due process case as focused by Judge Barrett.  The depositions of Navy personnel and Navy document production showed that the Navy had relied exclusively upon the university suspension for disenrollment of John Doe,[11] and the depositions of Purdue people with the university documents that formed the basis of the allegations of the Complaint fully supported that Complaint and showed other failures of fair process. Among other things: John Doe was never provided the investigation report throughout the disciplinary case; there was no hearing, just an untranscribed half-hour meeting of John Doe alone with Dean Sermersheim and the Equity Committee; Jane Doe never appeared in person before Dean Sermersheim and the Equity Committee; there was involvement throughout the process of the Purdue sexual assault center known by the acronym “CARE”;  the investigators never met with John Doe concerning what John Doe says was a highly selective, misinterpretation of the texts between him and Jane Doe by the investigators.[12]

The failures of due process are important to recognize because the practical reason why due process matters is so that cases are not decided “on the basis of an erroneous or distorted conception of the law or the facts.”[13]  The damage done to John Doe’s career aspirations and emotional well-being was devastating and ought never to be inflicted without due process.  Male respondents in Title IX university sexual misconduct proceedings have their side of the story and in life, have their hopes and dreams and their feelings.  Due process, as provided by the current Title IX regulations applicable to all universities and colleges (private or public), allows male respondents to have their side of the story heard and not to have their lives upended based on Kafkaesque proceedings that really have no place in America.

  1. The Title IX Discrimination Claim.

Judge Barrett addressed John Doe’s Title IX claim by first examining what should be the test for Title IX discrimination, noting the “erroneous outcome” and “selective enforcement” doctrinal tests stated in Yusuf v. Vassar College[14] and also the “deliberate indifference” and “archaic assumptions” doctrinal tests added by the Sixth Circuit in Doe v. Miami.[15]  Judge Barrett, however, put all these doctrinal tests to the side, stating:

We see no need to superimpose doctrinal tests on the statute. All of these categories simply describe ways in which a plaintiff might show that sex was a motivating factor in a university’s decision to discipline a student. We prefer to ask the question more directly: do the alleged facts, if true, raise a plausible inference that the university discriminated against John ‘‘on the basis of sex’’?[16]

With that question in mind, Judge Barrett proceeded to analyze the facts as alleged in the Complaint.

Judge Barrett noted that John Doe cast his claim in “the backdrop” of the 2011 Dear Colleague Letter, recognizing Second Circuit and Sixth Circuit decisions that treated the 2011 Dear Colleague Letter as relevant in evaluating the plausibility of a Title IX claim.[17]  Judge Barrett quoted the Second Circuit stating ‘‘A covered university that adopts, even temporarily, a policy of bias favoring one sex over the other in a disciplinary dispute, doing so in order to avoid liability or bad publicity, has practiced sex discrimination, notwithstanding that the motive for the discrimination did not come from ingrained or permanent bias against that particular sex.”[18] Judge Barrett recognized that the Sixth Circuit had ruled that the plaintiff’s allegation that “pressure from the government to combat vigorously sexual assault on college campuses and the severe potential punishment—loss of all federal funds—if it failed to comply, led Miami University to discriminate against men in its sexual-assault adjudication process,” combined with other facts, ‘‘support[ed] a reasonable inference of gender discrimination.”[19]  Judge Barrett also recognized that the Sixth Circuit had similarly ruled that the pressure of a Department of Education investigation and the resulting negative publicity ‘‘provides a backdrop, that, when combined with other circumstantial evidence of bias in Doe’s specific proceeding, gives rise to a plausible claim.”[20] Judge Barrett further again quoted the Second Circuit:  “There is nothing implausible or unreasonable about the Complaint’s suggested inference that the panel adopted a biased stance in favor of the accusing female and against the defending male varsity athlete in order to avoid further fanning the criticisms that Columbia turned a blind eye to such assaults.”[21]

After reviewing these pronouncements, Judge Barrett adopted the Sixth Circuit approach that the 2011 Dear Colleague Letter by itself did not plausibly establish Purdue had acted in part based on sex, but that the 2011 Dear Colleague Letter ‘‘provides a backdrop that, when combined with other circumstantial evidence of bias in [a] specific proceeding, gives rise to a plausible claim.”[22]

In John Doe’s case, such facts were found to have been alleged that gave rise to a plausible inference that Purdue discriminated against John Doe on the basis of sex.[23]  The “strongest” fact, according to Judge Barrett, was that “Sermersheim chose to credit Jane [Doe]’s account without hearing directly from her.”[24]  Judge Barrett explained:

The case against him [John Doe] boiled down to a ‘’he said/she said” — Purdue had to decide whether to believe John or Jane. Sermersheim’s explanation for her decision (offered only after her supervisor required her to give a reason) was a cursory statement that she found Jane credible and John not credible. Her basis for believing Jane is perplexing, given that she never talked to Jane.[25]

Judge Barrett cited other facts as well: the Equity Committee panelists made up their minds before meeting with John Doe and appeared unfamiliar with the facts of the case while showing hostility toward John Doe; it was plausible that Dean Sermersheim and her Equity Committee advisors chose to believe Jane Doe because she is a woman and disbelieve because John Doe is a man; Purdue’s sexual assault center CARE put up on its Facebook page during the same month that John was disciplined an article from The Washington Post titled “Alcohol isn’t the cause of campus sexual assault. Men are” — which could be understood to blame men as a class for the problem of campus sexual assault rather than the individuals who commit sexual assault; and CARE Director Monica Bloom’s role in assisting Jane Doe’s case.[26]

The clarity of Judge Barrett’s analysis has resulted in Doe v. Purdue becoming the lodestar for interpreting Title IX in discrimination suits against universities by male respondents in university and college sexual misconduct disciplinary proceedings.  Four Circuits have cited Doe v. Purdue and adopted its approach when reinstating the Title IX federal court suits brought by the male plaintiffs: the Third Circuit in Doe v. University of Sciences,[27] the Sixth Circuit in Doe v. Oberlin,[28] the Eighth Circuit in Doe v. Univ. of Arkansas – Fayetteville,[29] and the Ninth Circuit in Schwake v. Arizona Bd. of Regents.[30]

  1. Recommendations As To Regulations.

The present question is what, if anything, is to be done about the current Title IX regulations?  The foregoing discussion of Doe v. Purdue has been provided to propose that the current regulations aren’t broken, and therefore don’t need to be fixed. Indeed, the current Title IX regulations were so well formulated precisely because of the many lamentable experiences with university sexual misconduct proceedings, as exemplified in Doe v. Purdue.

The current Title IX regulations state that the university or college disciplinary process shall treat complainants and respondents equitably, objectively evaluate the evidence, not have conflicts of interest or bias, presume respondents are not responsible, have prompt time frames, identify the burden of proof that is to be applied uniformly and have support services for both complainants and respondents.[31] These requirements reflect a very different disciplinary process than the one experienced by John Doe in Doe v. Purdue.  Purdue did not treat John Doe equitably, did not objectively evaluate the evidence, did have bias and an arguable conflict of interest in Dean Sermershweim serving as both decision-maker and Title IX Coordinator, did presume John Doe was responsible, did not reasonably apply the burden of proof and did not have support services for John Doe.

The current Title IX regulations require formal written notice of allegations that contains “sufficient details known at the time and with sufficient time to prepare a response before any initial interview” – “[s]ufficient details include the identities of the parties involved in the incident, if known, the conduct allegedly constituting sexual harassment, and the date and location of the alleged incident, if known.”[32] That written notice “must include a statement that the respondent is presumed not responsible for the alleged conduct” and must be amended if additional allegations are made later in the proceeding.[33]  Purdue did provide notice but did not state that John Doe was presumed not responsible for the alleged conduct.

The current Title IX regulations require that the university or college conduct investigations that:

  • “Ensure that the burden of proof and the burden of gathering evidence sufficient to reach a determination regarding responsibility rest on the recipient and not on the parties”[34];
  • “Provide an equal opportunity for the parties to present witnesses, including fact and expert witnesses, and other inculpatory and exculpatory evidence”[35];
  • “Not restrict the ability of either party to discuss the allegations under investigation or to gather and present relevant evidence”[36];
  • “Provide the parties with the same opportunities to have others present during any grievance proceeding, including the opportunity to be accompanied to any related meeting or proceeding by the advisor of their choice, who may be, but is not required to be, an attorney”[37];
  • “Provide, to a party whose participation is invited or expected, written notice of the date, time, location, participants, and purpose of all hearings, investigative interviews, or other meetings, with sufficient time for the party to prepare to participate”[38];
  • “Provide both parties an equal opportunity to inspect and review any evidence obtained as part of the investigation that is directly related to the allegations raised in a formal complaint, including the evidence upon which the recipient [university or college] does not intend to rely in reaching a determination regarding responsibility and inculpatory or exculpatory evidence whether obtained from a party or other source” and “[p]rior to completion of the investigative report, the recipient [university or college] must send to each party and the party’s advisor, if any, the evidence subject to inspection and review in an electronic format or a hard copy, and the parties must have at least 10 days to submit a written response, which the investigator will consider prior to completion of the investigative report”[39]; and
  • “[c]reate an investigative report that fairly summarizes relevant evidence and, at least 10 days prior to a hearing . . . send to each party and the party’s advisor, if any, the investigative report in an electronic format or a hard copy, for their review and written response.”[40]

These regulations would not have allowed Purdue to conduct the investigation the way the school did and would not have allowed Purdue not to disclose ever the investigation report to John Doe. Rather would have required Purdue investigators to share what the school considered its evidence with John Doe before the completion of investigation report, to meet with John Doe about the interpretation of the texts between John Doe and Jane Doe and to disclose the investigation report to John Doe 10 days prior to the hearing.

The current Title IX regulations require a “live hearing” at which cross-examination is to be conducted by the party’s advisor of all witnesses in real time, including questions challenging credibility, and the university or college is to create an audio or transcript recoding of the hearing.[41]  There was no such hearing in Doe v. Purdue, just an untranscribed half-hour meeting of John Doe alone with the Dean and the Equity Committee.

The current Title IX regulations require “[t]he decision-maker(s), who cannot be the same person(s) as the Title IX Coordinator or the investigator(s), must issue a written determination regarding responsibility” and “[t]o reach this determination, the recipient [university or college] must apply the standard of evidence” and make a “written determination [that] must include”: identification of the allegations potentially constituting sexual harassment; a description of the procedural steps taken from the receipt of the formal complaint through the determination; “[f]indings of fact supporting the determination”; “[c]onclusions regarding the application of the recipient’s code of conduct to the facts”; “[a] statement of, and rationale for, the result as to each allegation, including a determination regarding responsibility, any disciplinary sanctions the recipient imposes on the respondent, and whether remedies designed to restore or preserve equal access to the recipient’s education program or activity will be provided by the recipient to the complainant”; and a statement of the school’s appeal procedures and grounds for appeal.[42]  In Doe v. Purdue, Dean Sermersheim could not be the decision-maker because she was the Title IX Coordinator, and Dean Sermersheim’s decision would have been totally inadequate, as it consisted of a conclusory very short paragraph without findings of fact, without conclusions and without rationale.

In short, the current Title IX regulations would not allow what happened in Doe v. Purdue that was so lacking in due process and that was devastating to John Doe’s career aspirations and emotional well-being.

Citations:

[1] 928 F.3d 652 (7th Cir. 2019); “Secretary DeVos Announces New Title IX Regulation,” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hTb3yfMNGuA; U.S. Department of Education Press Release, “Secretary DeVos Takes Historic Action to Strengthen Title IX Protections for All Students,” May 6, 2020; 34 C.F.R. 106. 45.

[2] “Secretary DeVos Announces New Title IX Regulation,” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hT b3yfMNGuA.

[3] U.S. Department of Education Press Release, “U.S. Department of Education Launches New Title IX Resources for Students, Institutions as Historic New Rule Takes Effect” (August 14, 2010); 34 C.F.R. 106.45.

[4] Complaint, Doe v. Purdue, No. 2:17-cv-33-JPK (N.D. Ind.), ECF 1, pp. 2, 13-14; 928 F.3d at 656-658.

[5] 928 F.3d at 659-670.

[6] 928 F.3d at 663.

[7] 928 F.3d at 663-664.

[8] 928 F.3d at 664 n. 4.

[9] Lilly v. Virginia, 527 U.S. 116, 124 (1999); see also Maryland v. Craig, 497 U.S. 836, 846 (1990).

[10] Doe v. Baum, 903 F.3d 575, 581 (6th Cir. 2018); Doe v. Univ. of Cincinnati, 872 F.3d 393, 401–402 (6th Cir. 2017); Flaim v. Med. Coll. of Ohio, 418 F.3d 629, 641 (6th Cir. 2005); Doe v. Brandeis Univ., 177 F.Supp.3d 561, 605 (D. Mass. 2016); Donohue v. Baker, 976 F.Supp. 136 (N.D.N.Y. 1997).

[11] Memorandum of Law, Doe v. Purdue, No. 2:17-cv-33-JPK (N.D. Ind.), ECF 106.

[12] Memorandum of Law, Doe v. Purdue, No. 2:17-cv-33-JPK (N.D. Ind.), ECF 116, pp. 7-8.

[13] Marshall v. Jerrico, Inc., 446 U.S. 238, 242 (1980).

[14] 35 F.3d 709, 715 (2d Cir. 1994).

[15] 882 F.3d 579, 589 (6th Cir. 2018).

[16] 928 F.3d at 667-668.

[17] 928 F.3d at 668-669, discussing Doe v. Columbia, 831 F.3d 46 (2d Cir. 2016), Doe v. Miami, 882 F.3d 579, 594 (6th Cir. 2018), and Doe v. Baum, 903 F.3d 575, 586 (6th Cir. 2018).

[18] 928 F.3d at 668, quoting Doe v. Columbia, 831 F.3d 46, 58 n.11 (2d Cir. 2016).  Philip A. Byler was the winning appellate lawyer also in Doe v. Columbia, 831 F.3d 46 (2d Cir. 2016).

[19] 928 F.3d at 668, quoting Doe v. Miami, 882 F.3d 579, 594 (6th Cir. 2018).

[20] 928 F.3d at 668-669, quoting Doe v. Baum, 903 F.3d 575, 586 (6th Cir. 2018).

[21] 928 F.3d at 668, quoting Doe v. Columbia, 831 F.3d 46, 58 (2d Cir. 2016).

[22] 928 F.3d at 668-669, quoting Doe v. Baum, 903 F.3d 575, 586 (6th Cir. 2018).

[23] 928 F.3d at 669-670.

[24] 928 F.3d at 669.

[25] 928 F.3d at 669.

[26] 928 F.3d at 669-670.

[27] 961 F.3d 203 (3d Cir. 2020).

[28] 963 F.3d 580 (6th Cir. 2020).

[29] 974 F.3d 858 (8th Cir. 2020).

[30] 967 F.3d 949 (9th Cir. 2020).

[31] 34 C.F.R. 106.45(b)(1).

[32] 34 C.F.R. 106.45(b)(2).

[33] 34 C.F.R. 106.45(b)(2).

[34] 34 C.F.R. 106.45(b)(5)(i).

[35] 34 C.F.R. 106.45(b)(5)(ii).

[36] 34 C.F.R. 106.45(b)(5)(iii).

[37] 34 C.F.R. 106.45(b)(5)(iv).

[38] 34 C.F.R. 106.45(b)(5)(v).

[39] 34 C.F.R. 106.45(b)(5)(vi).

[40] 34 C.F.R. 106.45(5)(vii).

[41] 34 C.F.R. 106.45(6).

[42] 34 C.F.R. 106.45(7).