Posted on 10/26/2015 7:54:21 AM PDT by Academiadotorg
We are still, for the most part, a nation of laws, except on college campuses.
At the Heritage Foundation recently, Samantha Harris, director of policy research at the Foundation for Individual Rights in Education (FIRE), said that students have complained about the lack of due process at colleges. In the last five years, thanks to unprecedented intrusion by the federal government due process has gotten a lot worse, she said. Too often, accused students are left without a hearing or [cannot] confront their accuser in court, Harris averred. By her estimate, more than 60 students have filed lawsuits of unfair treatment by colleges by withholding due process.
She said that in her travels, people ask, Why are colleges handling rape cases? Her answer? The short answer is Title IX. Over the years, Harris pointed out, reports and administrative agencies have expanded the meaning of discrimination to sexual assaults, rapes and other types of cases. Title IX has inserted the agency directly into the minutia of sexual assault cases that have gotten media attention. The Office of Civil Rights (OCR) at the Department of Education discourages cross-examination by college administrators, which is considered an essential part of a fair trial by lawyers. If a college rejects this Title IX directive from the OCR, it is found to be out of compliance and will see their its federal funding revoked.
The OCR has pushed the single investigator model, which has been praised by the Obama administration to protect against sexual assault. But, it is a troublesome model in which a single person investigates, interviews and issues a verdict without a hearing as if that investigator were the judge and jury. Harris said, that this blanket presumption of guilt regarding sexual assaults is troublesome to her and students alike.
Since 2014, the OCR dramatically ramped up its investigations of institutions. According to Harriss count, In May of 2014 the number was 55. By August of 2015, 128 schools were under investigation by the OCR for Title IX violations, more than doubling down in just one year. The OCR made these figures public, a first for the agency, which raises many questions among the higher education community. Harris also suggested there is a strong possibility that OCRs guidance here may have violated the Administrative Procedure Act, where federal agencies are subject to give notice and allow public comment on agency actions.
Now, accused students have begun to sue universities in court and theyve so far proven to be an uphill battle for plaintiffs. But, Harris sees important trends emerging that could benefit future plaintiffs on the state court level. At the state court level, universities have seen their defenses dismantled and defeated, but it is much harder to win at the federal level. In federal cases, plaintiffs must prove sex discrimination under Title IX, how university procedures violated their due process rights and a breach of contract. In Harriss own words, The big challenge for these plaintiffs that they actually have to [present] gender bias and show there is a bias against male students.
bfl
Universities are much more likely to suppress than they are to pursue. They comply when they are made to comply, and then generally in the most politically correct way - and also targeting those who bring in the least amount of money (e.g. individual students).
It’s just the beginnings of the “Peoples’ Court” system as seen under the Nazi’s.
“Single Investigator Model” sounds a lot like Judge Dredd.
Doesn’t it?
Just wait until the Obama/Lynch ‘Safe Cities’ takes hold in our major cities. The UN will be Lord of All.
***the Peoples Court system as seen under the Nazis.***
Somehow it brings to mind the “People’s Courts” of the RED GUARDS of 1966-1968.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_Guards_%28China%29
“After the 18 August rally, the Cultural Revolution Group directed the Red Guards to attack the ‘Four Olds’ of Chinese society (old customs, old culture, old habits and old ideas).
For the rest of the year, Red Guards marched across China in a campaign to eradicate the ‘Four Olds’. Old books and art were destroyed, museums were ransacked, and streets were renamed with new revolutionary names and adorned with pictures and the sayings of Mao.
Many famous temples, shrines, and other heritage sites in Beijing were attacked.[11]
Actually, Roland Freisler, was an old Bolshevik, and gained inspiration for the People's Court from the Soviet Show Trials of the 1930s.
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