Posted on 05/06/2020 7:34:10 PM PDT by lasereye
This week, Education Secretary Betsy DeVos formally announced new Title IX rules governing sexual-misconduct cases in schools.
Its difficult to understand why instances of alleged criminal sexual misconduct shouldnt be forwarded and adjudicated by the proper authorities, where both victim and accused are subjected, like all of us, a system that determines truth, guilt, and punishment.
Its also difficult to understand why schools, which arent properly equipped to conduct criminal investigations, much less fair trials, should be held responsible for the actions of all their students, even when they are off campus.
This, however, is the reality of Title IX. At the very least, then, the state should ensure that students are afforded the same impartiality, norms, and protections that every one of us expects in the real world. Yet, with a 2011 Dear Colleague letter, the Obama administration compelled schools to conduct sexual-misconduct inquiries as if they were show trials stripping students of the ability to face their accuser, or to call witnesses, or to see the evidence against them.
DeVos is now returning some sanity to the handling such cases. For this, Catherine E. Lhamon, chairwoman of the United States Commission on Civil Rights, accused her of taking us back to the bad old days, when it was permissible to rape and sexually harass students with impunity.
This is appalling hyperbole. And its all the more reprehensible because it comes from the chairwoman of an agency created and charged with ensuring that the constitutional rights of all Americans be protected equally.
As my colleague Charles Cooke points out, its unclear why Lhamon believes this specific crime, and not others, should be exempted from age-old expectations of due process. After all, we cant have people murdering or carjacking or stealing with impunity, so why not abolish the Fifth Amendment? If the only thing achieved by protections for the accused is incentivizing more criminality, why have any protections at all?
It would certainly be helpful if Democrats who are denouncing DeVoss campus-sexual-assault policies would explain which rules they object to, and why.
Are they opposed to schools allowing hearings in which lawyers and advocates from both sides can ask questions? Are they opposed to the accused having access to evidence related to the charges filed against them (sans medical records)?
The Obama guidelines allowed accusers to appeal not guilty verdicts but did not guarantee the same right for the accused. Rather, it permitted penalties to be handed out before investigations were even conducted. And those who conducted the investigation, often a single untrained employee, were empowered to be both judge and jury. Adjudicators will now be trained, and the training material they use will be published on the schools website to offer transparency.
The new rules, and there are 2,033 pages of them, also expand the protections for victims by asking schools to investigate allegations of stalking, domestic violence, and dating violence.
The rules also roll back broadsides against free speech instituted by the Obama administration, which forced schools to investigate sexual-themed speech that offended students. As with most things on campus these days, the process was hijacked by brittle and perpetually offended progressive students.
DeVos does not institute a clear and convincing evidentiary standard over the less rigorous preponderance of evidence standard; instead, she lets schools choose to live by either standard, so long as they apply it equally.
Now, we shouldnt be under the impression that Americans will be given a fair reading of the new rules, either. The Washington Post, for example, claims that DeVos guidelines, will give universities and colleges a clear but controversial road map for handling emotionally charged conflicts that often pit one student against another.
Have you noticed that conservative positions and not very long ago due process was the bailiwick of liberal groups such as the ACLU, as well are almost always controversial? Guess what? Everything in politics is controversial, or we wouldnt be talking about it. And yes, sexual-assault accusations tend to be emotional events that pit one student against another. The insinuation of this kind of editorializing (shoved into a story thats presented as news) is that emotional conflicts deserve a special set of rules. Some of us would argue that emotional conflicts especially benefit from a dispassionate process.
Here is the framing offered by NBC News:
Now, under reworked federal rules, alleged student perpetrators will have added protections, including the presumption that they are innocent throughout the disciplinary process and the right to be provided all evidence collected against them.
There is no legitimate concept of justice in which the presumption of innocence is an added protection. It is the foundational protection. The Obama administration deprived students of it, and the Trump administration reinstated it. Thats the story.
What? The Never-trumper Review with a positive article about a Trump cabinet employee? THE SHAME!!! How are they going to sell berths on their next cruise?
Everything is on the line. Maybe they’re waking up a little.
If Trump loses i’ll be drunk all the time.
If he wins, I’ll just be drunk half the time.
Make sure you make that first drink a gin & tonic with a zinc supplement
“Presumption of innocence”
Who’d have thunk?
Why did it become necessary to put Constitutional language in a Federal regulation?
At least the Øbøzø virus is on the way to eradication.
If he wins, Ill just be drunk half the time.
= = =
Would that be during your waking hours half of the day?
now i’m confused...forgot about sleep..
i need a drink
Amen! Three cheers for Betsy!
It IS permissible, as long as you are a rat running for president. This person needs to get with the current talking points.
During my career with a major oil company I was accused of sexual harassment by a contract employee I was supervising. She made the claim after she learned I was planning to discipline her for her poor work performance. I was guilty until I proved myself innocent which took just over a year. The woman never was disciplined for her poor work performance or for filing a false harassment claim. Due process? I wish.
men dont get presumption of innocence if a woman make a charge against them
this is the gross iniquity/injustice of our system at present
rape and sex charges are THE MOST LIED ABOUT charges and any police department or the feds will confirm it by their own statistics
we need to bring back biblical sentencing for ALL LIARS who file false charges against innocent people
the LIARS will get the maximum sentence for what they tried framing the innocent person for.
its not just about framing an innocent person, it’s about deliberately using the courts as a personal weapon to SWAT another person, the courts are used as a patsy and played like a fool, and they don’t appreciate that
iterodes everyone’s trust in the already strained system
all liars should get the max penalty for what they framed the innocent person for. the maximum penalty.
+1000
One of my old FR taglines:
“If false witness wasn’t a problem it wouldn’t be listed in the Ten Commandments”
If the teachers Union could be disbanded/dissolved then some light could enter that dark miserable tunnel of the American education system.
Good for Betsy.
I agree.
That will never happen.
The accusation automatically lets LE take the easy way out of a thorough investigation.
During my career at various companies I have seen sexual harassment accusers come forth when it's workforce reduction (layoff) time. The accusers somehow know when a reduction is in the early planning stage.
The female contacts HR and brings up a baseless sexual harassment case because they know an accuser is layoff-proof.
Many innocent men have lost their jobs due to this disgusting unspoken rule.
Other women can smell a rat, and they despise these false accusers.
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