Rape survivor demands change to Stanford’s sexual assault policies

Trigger warning: This article discusses sexual assault.

“Five months ago, I was forcibly raped by another Stanford student.”

So began an email by Leah Francis ’14 that quickly circulated throughout the Stanford community Tuesday night. In the email, Francis disclosed the story of her sexual assault and the ensuing judicial process, and called for reforms to the University’s handling of sexual assault cases.

According to documents obtained by The Daily, the University’s Alternate Review Process (ARP) found Francis’ rapist responsible for sexual assault, sexual misconduct and violating the Fundamental Standard. His punishment was a five-quarter suspension, 40 hours of community service and completion of a sexual assault awareness program.

However, the suspension does not take effect until summer 2014 and includes summer quarters, so Francis’ assailant, a member of the Class of 2014, can graduate on time and return in a year for graduate school. According to Francis, he was originally going to be allowed to walk at Commencement until Francis raised a complaint to Stanford’s Title IX coordinator.

In her email, Francis characterized this punishment as a “gap year.”

“Should he change his mind and decide to go to grad school elsewhere, he can choose to walk away from Stanford with no significant undergraduate consequences for forcibly sexually assaulting me,” she wrote.

Criticisms of ARP
In May 2013, Stanford adopted a revised Alternate Review Process following two years of review in response to the Dear Colleague Letter sent by the Department of Education in April 2011.  The new standard lowered the standard of proof from “beyond a reasonable doubt” to “a preponderance of the evidence” and made several changes to the process of reviewing sexual assault cases.

In an interview with The Daily, Francis was critical of the current process of adjudicating sexual assault cases.

“It really ruins your life. It’s really hard to maintain any semblance of acceptable grades [while going through the ARP],” Francis said, adding that she estimated that she had to write over 100 pages for the proceedings.  “[The process is] extremely detrimental to the ability of the survivor to keep on surviving.”

Francis reported the assault, which took place off campus early in the morning of Jan. 1, 2014, to the University on Jan. 7. According to documents obtained by The Daily, the assailant was notified that he was being formally charged on April 9. He was found guilty on April 25, and sanctions were announced on May 6.

In accordance with Title IX, schools must complete their investigations into sexual assault cases in a “reasonably prompt” time frame. According to the Department of Education, a typical investigation takes approximately 60 days, although compliance is determined on a case-by-case basis.

On June 2, Francis filed an appeal against the sanctions and requested that her assailant be expelled. The University has not yet ruled on the appeal.

Before filing her appeal, Francis requested further justification for the panel’s original sanctions. In additional information released on May 13, the panel explained its initial decision by stating, “[Francis’ assailant] demonstrated a commitment and ability to abide by University policy moving forward. The panel felt that his presence on campus will not constitute a threat to the Stanford community, and that expulsion is therefore unwarranted.”

According to Francis, the panelists were given a document containing Stanford’s precedent of sanctions for sexual assault cases to assist them in their decision-making. This document, which The Daily has obtained, indicates that the University has suspended nine students (for between one and eight quarters) and expelled one for sexual assault since 2005. Until Francis’ case, no student had been sanctioned for sexual assault since the 2010-11 school year.

Changes Demanded
Francis will be leading a “Rally for Reforming Sexual Violence Resources and Policy at Stanford” today in White Plaza. Students have been putting flyers around campus and are also planning to wear red tape on their caps at Commencement as a sign of protest. An online petition in favor of reform had over 800 signatures as of Wednesday night.

The protesters are demanding changes including mandatory expulsion for individuals found guilty of sexual assault, expanded resources for preventing sexual assault and better support for survivors of sexual assault.

According to Francis, her assailant can currently attend classes at Stanford but has to be escorted by a plainclothes officer at all times.

“Rather than providing a cushion around a person who has been convicted of a violent sex crime [to keep them away from the victim]…[Stanford] should be severing ties with that person,” Francis said.

Rebecca Felix ’14, another student involved in the campaign for Stanford to change its policies, said that the office of Sexual Assault and Relationship Abuse (SARA) needs to expand its resources. Felix said that some survivors of sexual assault had contacted her and told her that when they visited the SARA office during drop-in hours, no one was there. Francis said that she had visited the office herself and found no one there.

Another reform that Francis would like is to assign each survivor of sexual assault a volunteer professor who can act as a resource and advisor. Francis said that when a tenured professor became involved in her case, the University became much more responsive to her needs. According to Francis, her assailant had continued to live near her residence for two weeks after the sanctions were returned against him, but was moved out of his housing the day she contacted a tenured professor.

Francis also called for secrecy rules to be relaxed during ARP proceedings.

“I felt like the University was trying to prevent me from getting the help that I needed,” Francis said.

University Response
In an email to The Daily, University spokesperson Lisa Lapin wrote that the University cannot comment on specific cases, but “we regret any circumstance in which a student believes a process here at Stanford has not met their expectations.”

“We take very seriously the pain and trauma that are generated by sexual assault,” Lapin wrote. “We have strengthened our programs in the area of sexual assault response and prevention over the last several years, seeking to provide support to individuals in crisis, encourage reporting, ensure fair and thorough disciplinary processes, and educate the community to prevent future incidents. But we are always looking to improve what we do, and we genuinely welcome input from students on how we can do better.”

In an interview, Lapin added that it would be premature to speculate about any additional reforms at this point.

The effort to change Stanford’s policy towards sexual assault comes at a time when sexual assault policies are being examined at colleges and universities across the country. On May 1, the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights released a list of 55 colleges under investigation for possible Title IX violations related to the handling of sexual assault cases. Stanford was not on this list.

The University recently hired a new Title IX Coordinator, Catherine Criswell. Criswell also refused to comment on a pending case, but wrote in an email to The Daily that she has “already begun active conversations with students, faculty, and staff around these issues.”

On Wednesday, the University provost posted a new website that listed resources for sexual assault survivors. The website explains that survivors have several options and recommends that survivors report their experience to the police and the University.

In the Facebook event for the rally, one student wrote that the website merely reiterates Stanford’s current policy. The post invited others to attend the protest and “let our university know that we are NOT looking for a new website, we are looking to change policies and the culture around sexual assault and abuse at [Stanford.]”

“We wanted to focus on changing campus culture, university policy and getting more resources for survivors of sexual assault, and we believe that having a rally in support of those objectives is the most productive thing we can do,” Francis said. “What we really care about is helping other survivors.”

Click here for photos and Tweets from Thursday’s rally.

Catherine Zaw contributed reporting.

Contact Caleb Smith at caleb17 ‘at’ stanford.edu. 

About Caleb Smith

Caleb Smith '17 is a Deputy Desk Editor from Oakland, California and is planning on majoring in public policy. Outside the Daily, Caleb is Co-director of news at KZSU Stanford, the campus radio station. Have a tip or suggestion? Please contact him at caleb17 ‘at’ stanford.edu.
  • A Concearned Student

    It is important to understand that when there is a rape or an alleged rape there are multiple avenues of justice. The university process is one, and the legal process is another. If someone is found guilty in the justice system they will go to jail, and likely be expelled… and they should if they committed the crime (Rape is EVIL!)!!!!!
    But there is and should always be a presumption of innocence until proven guilty, and if there is not enough evidence for a guilty ruling in a court of law, there should not be drastic punishment from the university.

  • Concerned2

    Agreed. “Preponderance of evidence” seems to be a very slippery slope. This did not happen on campus, so shouldn’t it be a legal matter (with “beyond a reasonable doubt”) rather than a Stanford matter? Given that we know absolutely none of the other facts of the case, and don’t deserve or need to, I’m not inclined to grab my pitchfork in outrage at Stanford’s punishment — it is severe and there must be some compelling reason for a lack of legal punishment. I see no reason why Stanford should be the justice-giver in a situation like this, the university’s primary responsibility here is to protect the university community from this kind of behavior rather than to dole out punishment to an individual. A legal judgment would be that punishment and certainly grounds for expulsion, but that has not happened. My knowledge of and experience with these situations is little, so I would be glad to be corrected, but that is my inclination.

  • JonMW72

    She didn’t report rape to the police? Rape is a serious matter and should not just be reported to university staff on some panel that may or may not work.

    I don’t know why you would report something of that magnitude only to a panel of university staff.

  • B.J.D

    Careful who you call a rapist … he was never convicted in a court of law only a university sanctioned kangaroo court.

  • Female of class of 2014

    Completely agreed. Also I am not entirely sure why this is considered an university matter since it did not happen ON CAMPUS. I think expulsion should only really happen if the person is condemned by a court of law. The OCS is a joke and is not adequate to deal with cases that happened at Stanford, much less those who did not.

  • B.J.D

    I agree 100%. If a crime occurs and the accused is found guilty in court, I think the university should be able to use whatever policy that have to sanction them. Barring that, the university should stay out.

  • Adam

    So it never actually explains why there are no criminal charges? Was it investigated and police decided there was not any evidence? Did the DA decide there wasn’t anything there to pursue?

    I find it confusing Stanford can “convict” someone of a crime that the judicial system would send someone to jail for?

  • Dan Rather
  • BT

    Why is the Daily using trigger warnings? Isn’t the headline enough?

  • Manowaffle

    Regardless of the legal implications of the case, the university has found the student guilty, he is clearly in serious violation of the Fundamental Standard (which specifically cites sexual assault as a violation). That is grounds for expulsion.

    The university clearly reserves the right to determine the punishment based on the crime, but sexual assault is clearly one of the most serious violations, and if the university is convinced that a student is guilty of rape then they should pursue the harshest punishment available.

  • formercardinal

    I was sexually assaulted on campus twice during my freshman year (99-00). Like other women I knew who were also assaulted by other Stanford students, I didn’t make any kind of official complaint about these incidents. I didn’t think I could handle going through the justice process, didn’t think I could prove that the sex wasn’t consensual, didn’t know whether the definition of sexual assault in California covered one of the incidents (it did), and didn’t realize at the time that I wasn’t going to be able to forget about these incidents just by trying. And I felt like the incidents were my fault, a view that I was sure other people would share. I’m sure I felt guiltier than my attackers. Reporting things wasn’t really on m y radar, actually.. My friends knew of several guys who had sexually assaulted women or beaten up their girlfriends, but no one who had ever been disciplined, and in our minds the normal way to deal with those guys was just to avoid them and tell other women to avoid them, not to make a big deal about the incidents. Making a scene about things and destroying the peace wasn’t what we did–somehow it felt like breaking the rules at Stanford. In a way, telling anyone at all I had been raped was against the culture, and one female friend openly rebuked me and said I’d misunderstood what had happened. I hope the culture has changed, but it sounds like it hasn’t at all.

  • Unacceptable

    This is highly inappropriate and if true, a violation of Stanford’s right of the student. Please administrators remove this. He, if the perpetrator, was not judged by a court of law but by the Kangaroo court of Stanford.

  • moth0

    Guilty by preponderance of evidence (51% guilty) of a he said/she said case that occurred off campus while class was not in session. In other words, kangaroo court.

    ARP wants a kangaroo court, they can only deal kangaroo punishment. A serious punishment of expulsion should require a serious trial.

  • Cherryblossomgirl08

    Sorry for my ignorance on this issue – but why isn’t the rapist, if found guilty, in jail?

  • WhydoIevenbother….

    Because he was found guilty by Stanford’s internal process – which lacks due process and has different standards for condemning people than a court. He was not found by a judge or a juri. Thus, he should not be expelled and most certainly not go to jail until he is subject to a REAL court with REAL laws.

  • WhydoIevenbother….

    I still think that Stanford should not even act on a case that happened with students that were outside of the university at the time until proven by a court of law. There is a presumption of guilt by the OCS system that is not fair to the Responding student in question. Please note that I am not saying that the rape did not occur, I am just saying that Stanford should have not gotten involved.

  • Miles New

    I hope that the survivor and her family will be able to move on and face new life, after all what happened. Yet, this safety service I found is really helpful to let you get safe from bullies. It has lots of safety features and one is the GPS Location which helps you monitor those whom you would love to get protected. To understand more about this service, check this out: http://safekidzone.com/?a_aid=514ae252c9f64

  • oldstanford

    In OldStanford’s time, we didn’t have this problem. Why? Because embedded in the culture were ideas, since then scoffed at, about women. Those were myths. But, come on, guys, you can usually profit more from people’s misapprehensions about you than you can if they have an accurate picture.

  • peopledontgetit

    Rape is notoriously difficult to prosecute — theres’s usually no witnesses and little physical evidence. Even if the survivor, police officer, hospital etc. follow all procedures perfectly (which they often don’t and is an issue in itself), it can still very difficult to prove “beyond a reasonable doubt.’

    Universities recognized this and wanted to create safe spaces for survivors even if proof of a crime wasn’t completely up to legal standards. This is why schools have alternate review processes and punishments tend to be intended to support the victim — the accused is suspended until the survivor graduates, loses housing, must stay 50 feet away etc. It would be difficult for the university to justify more punitive punishments, ie expulsion, without meeting a higher standard of proof, which is why they try to find this middle ground.

    Although the system doesn’t always work out in the best way, on the aggregate, the justification behind it makes sense.

  • Mark Power

    Leah Francis WAS NOT RAPED. She had regret sex. Progressives are evil and insane.

  • Stanford ’99

    If you’re going to be pedantic about this, the Fundamental Standard explicitly applies to the conduct of students “both within and without the University”

  • B.J.D

    I see … so someone’s life can be ruined and their future destroyed over an allegation that dissent carry enough weight to go to trial.

  • Sara Jane Gregoire

    I’m currently in the same situation, except the University of Arizona has done ABSOLUTELY NOTHING as punishment for my physics TA raping me. Now that he knows how to get away with rape, I’m sure he will continue to do it. It’s absolutely pathetic. There’s nothing in university policy stating that raping a student is a Code of Conduct violation, so they told me they can’t do anything about it.

  • Tracheal

    Fascist feminist ‘rape culture’ bigots should never be allowed to control the rape narrative or bully schools in to committing Kangaroo Kourt justice. Rape is a crime that is best handled by the police/courts. Hysterical feminist hate mongers need to be shown the door on this ‘loaded’ and very complicated, ‘she said he said’, crime.

  • AKelley

    If you read alternate articles, she DID report it to police. She also goes to School with the student who raped her, this is why it was then reported to the school. Please read into it more before you make such remarks. She is a victim of a disturbing crime. Most women don’t come forward because the police and alternate authorities do little to nothing about rape and sexual assault.

  • Stanford ’08

    Couldn’t agree more. First, while she can use the word “rape” all she wants, sexual assault (which is the charge) simply isn’t the same thing, related as though they may be. I’m surprised that the Daily would use such sensationalist language in their headline, without at least qualifying it. Second, yes. There are civil and criminal avenues toward justice. If (and that’s a big if) this man were convicted of rape, then the university would likely have ruled very differently.

    As an attorney and Stanford Graduate (’08), I am concerned that the student newspaper and many members of the student body may be rushing to conclusions without all of the facts. I’m sure that the ARB at Stanford is composed of intelligent, concerned individuals, and they doled out the punishment that they felt was appropriate in this given set of circumstances. While sexual assault and rape are terrible, the actual circumstances can vary wildly from situation to situation. A hard line rule requiring expulsion if anyone accused under a “preponderance of the evidence standard” would be a huge mistake, and may even have a chilling effect on people reporting.

    I worry that this sort of media coverage may bring us further from rather than closer to justice.

  • Professor Rosenfeld

    Rape, especially acquaintance rape, is very difficult to prove in the courts. Stanford’s judicial process is not a “kangaroo court” but a serious judicial process. The burden of proof is substantially lower in the Stanford judicial process because the potential consequences of conviction are much lower: suspension or expulsion from Stanford, compared against felony conviction and loss of freedom if one were convicted in criminal court. Despite the fact that many commenters on this page seem to think that University justice has a tendency to be unfair to the accused, in fact the US Department of Education takes the opposite view: too often in the past students accused or even found guilty (through university judicial processes) of sexual assault were given a mere slap on the wrist. See http://www.nytimes.com/2014/05/02/us/politics/us-lists-colleges-under-inquiry-over-sex-assault-cases.html

  • JonMW72

    I was asking a genuine question, not making a judgement. Where are these alternate articles you are talking about? I haven’t seen the police mentioned anywhere in any of the articles I’ve seen. If a police station ignored what she said and didn’t produce a rape kit, then she has a huge legal case against the police on her hands. I’m not naive to the ways of the police world. Send links to these articles

  • WhydoIevenbother….

    Dear Professor Rosenfeld,

    With all due respect, unless you personally have gone through the process of the OCS yourself or has seen someone that you care for going through the process, you unfortunately, have no idea how little evidence (or lack thereof) is necessary to convict someone. The reasoning behind the fact that there is so much conviction at the Stanford campus for people that go through the process is because the panel and the staff at the OCS believe that the “consequences of conviction are low”, so they are not really bothered by convicting the innocent. However, imagine yourself as an innocent accused party, do you believe that it is fair for someone who is not responsible for a crime to be convicted without any shred of actual evidence? Moreover, do you think it is fair to be expelled from Stanford without any evidence that you committed the crime because the other party misinterpreted the facts? A California judge believes that Stanford is uncapable of dealing with even the most simplest cheating cases: http://www.stanforddaily.com/2013/10/17/enforce-the-charter/

    so what makes you believe that they will do right by a case so difficult as that of rape. Being expelled from the school that you could have payed 240,000.00 dollars to attend is not something to be taken lightly and the truth of the matter is, whether you like it or not, Stanford is not able to deal with cases like this. I feel sorry for Leah and for all parties involved to have gone through this horrible process that is that of the OCS. However, true justice can only be found at a normal court and in my opinion if she believes that she has a case for that, she should pursue that case. What Stanford should do instead of the “kangaroo court” (which it is, if you have been through it), is to create a safe environment for all of its students to prevent situations of actual rape to happen.

  • Class of 2014

    The fact that it is gives itself the right to judge a case that is thousands of miles away does not mean that it is able to do so. I think that is the case here.

  • You are welcome…

    First,

    1)”The accused student is appealing the finding, and Francis is appealing the man’s punishment. Neither Francis nor the school is permitted to name her assailant.” – http://www.mercurynews.com/education/ci_25906242/stanford-sexual-assault-victim-demands-tougher-sanctions-offenders

    2) “The case remains open in Alaska, where the alleged incident happened. No charges in the case have been filed by police.” -http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2014/06/06/hundreds-rally-in-support-of-stanford-student-seeking-reform-for-victims-of-sexual-assault/

    Finally, I do not believe that it is within Stanford’s capacity to judge this case…

  • JonMW72

    This happened in Alaska? Then what on earth is Stanford’s jurisdication on this? If authorities in Alaska didn’t file a case then there’s not much Stanford can do.

  • moth0

    Professor Rosenfeld, Stanford’s regular judicial review process (1997 Charter) uses the “beyond a reasonable doubt” level of proof. Additionally it uses a 5 out of 6 panelists to convict. The ARP process used for sexual offenses uses a lesser level of proof and fewer panelists specifically to make it easier to convict. Your argument about consequences would be appropriate if the ARP was only able to give lesser punishments than the regular Stanford judicial review process. Comparing the punishments in a student versus criminal judicial systems really doesn’t make sense.

    Would you support all judicial trials at Stanford use the preponderance of evidence level of proof? In the criminal courts, should misdemeanors use the preponderance of evidence since the consequences compare with a felony are much lower?

  • Zack Selzman

    It’s my understanding that she did not say no and she did not say stop, but she did act in a way that would lead a man to believe that she wanted to be with him. In a court this would have been a very difficult case to get a guilty verdict. You can’t jump a woman in an alley and have sex with her even if she does not say stop and does not say no.. but if you are in a romantic situation with a woman and she does not let you know that she does not want to take it to the next level that is different. You were in a romantic situation.. that started the car up… you have an obligation to let someone know if you don’t want to drive the car anywhere, because it is fair to assume that a romantic situation is going to progress to the next level.. obviously, if a woman is struggling against you.. or in some other way making it clear that she is not consenting then you have to stop… But it really sounds like this guy was completely blindsided, thought he was in a consensual relationship and found out a fair time afterwards that she felt differently. I saw the signs saying ‘Silence is not consent’.. and to be perfectly fair in many situations silence is not rape either. If you are going to deprive someone of their freedom and lock them up.. you have an obligation to at least say no..

  • theworst
  • Zack Selzman

    That’s what I thought.. She thinks she passed out, in a beyond a shadow of a doubt context you would have to assume she did not pass out, and she absolutely was not passed out when she took her dress off in front of this guy and gets into his bed. She assumes absolutely no responsibility for the consequences of her diminished capacity, but if the guy was also drunk of somewhat diminished capacity and read the signals wrong when an ex girlfriend took off her dress and got into bed with him, then he bears the full brunt of his diminished capacity, because he really should have been a mind reader and realized that she was too drunk, even though she was likely just as drunk as he was. There is no way a jury would have found this guy guilty beyond a reasonable doubt… For the whole “silence is not consent” crowd.. context matters, because although silence is not consent, taking off your dress and hoping into a guys bed and then being silent really is.

  • Zack Selzman

    In fairness, you did not experience a ‘Rape Culture’ something happened to you, and you did absolutely nothing to seek any remedy for what happened to you, and because that happened to you, you believe that there should be no requirements for proof whatsoever. If what you did was get very very drunk, take off your clothes and get into a guys bed and give absolutely no indication to the guy that you did not want to have sex.. well, if that was what happened to you, then drink less and communicate more. There is a good reason that the police did not file charges in Alaska. This woman has no basis for getting this guy kicked out of the University and destroying his future. Her actions created an untenable ambiguity.

  • ML

    She should have reported the rape so that the individual who allegedly perpetrated the assault could be judged by a jury and go to jail for a very long time if convicted. Ignorant folks who make comments like “She had regret sex,” when they probably knows nothing about the case only contribute to the problem and are probably likely perpetrators of similar crimes themselves. It seems as though a person who is a victim of such a crime, can rarely if ever get proper justice from a university panel or investigation. If the individual was truly guilty of the crime, he should have definitely been permanently expelled, and his acceptance to graduate school should have been rescinded.

  • ML

    Mr. Power:

    I look forward to seeing the results of your extensive investigation. Your comment seem to go hand in hand with your name.

    Ms. Francis should have reported the rape so that the individual who allegedly perpetrated
    the assault could be judged by a jury and go to jail for a very long
    time if convicted. Ignorant folks who make comments like “She had
    regret sex,” when they probably knows nothing about the case only
    contribute to the problem and are probably likely perpetrators of
    similar crimes themselves. It seems as though a person who is a victim
    of such a crime, can rarely if ever get proper justice from a university
    panel or investigation. If the individual was truly guilty of the
    crime, he should have definitely been permanently expelled, and his
    acceptance to graduate school should have been rescinded

  • I think

    I believe the ARP ejudicates issues between students.

  • Zack Selzman

    ‘are probably likely perpetrators of similar crimes themselves’ Get a life! You criticize a guy because you assume he is speaking without having all the facts, and then you make a gigantic insulting leap just to feed your Internet toadliness. All who disagree with you are evil? Join the Taliban.

  • Zack Selzman

    Rape is a crime, if you were raped report it to the police,

  • reuvenavram

    According to her own testimony:

    – She was in Alaska with an ex-boyfriend
    – She admits to crawling into bed with him, wearing only hear underwear
    – the “rape” was when he crawled on top of her during the night
    – She didn’t say no, but she didn’t say yes either
    – She didn’t report to Police, but reported to campus a week later

    Certainly, this man may not be a perfect gentlemen, but she’s no lady either. This happened off Campus. It’s wrong of Stanford to get involved at all.

  • reuvenavram

    And they do! This happened in ALASKA not campus.

  • reuvenavram

    She wasn’t raped. We both know this. She was “raped” to give her status in her community.

  • Me_Mongo

    I don’t think you actually read the facts in this case. She had been hooking up with him for over a year. She was sleeping with him in her underwear. He started undressing her and she didn’t say no or struggle. Her claim is based on a previous conversation she had with him where she stated she just wanted to be friends. This was not a rape.

  • Zack Selzman

    A kangaroo court is a judicial tribunal or assembly that
    blatantly disregards recognized standards of law or justice. That is exactly what Stanford Does. In this specific case the complainant took off her clothes and got into a mans bed and says she thinks that she may have been passed out, but is not sure. When the sex occurred, she did not say no and did not say stop and Stanford found this guy guilty. The Police in the state of Alaska who the case was reported to did not charge the man with anything. Stanford found him guilty with absolutely no evidence and no firm basis from which to draw that conclusion.

  • Pepil

    The university is not convinced and that is why he was not kicked out.

  • parent

    I have both a daughter and a son on campus, so believe me that I take charges of sexual assault extremely seriously. However, some of the details of the Stanford cases have me worried that the rights of due process for — almost always — male students are not protected. See, also http://www.thefire.org/cases/stanford-university-biased-sexual-misconduct-procedures-and-unjust-guilty-finding/ and http://www.stanforddaily.com/2012/12/05/culture-of-silence-surrounds-sexual-assault/

    The argument that suspension/expulsion and having this on one’s permanent record is not as severe as incarceration and therefore Stanford’s process justifies less stringent standards of evidence is ridiculous, if you are innocent of a crime, or if you were just as drunk as the accuser.

  • parent

    Where did you get that information?