Imperial Valley Press

Education official apologizes anew, this time to victims

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The Education Department’s top civil rights official’s “flippant” remarks are raising questions about the government’s commitment to fighting campus sexual violence, even as she issued her second apology in as many days for attributin­g 90 percent of sexual assault claims to both parties being drunk.

Candice Jackson, assistant secretary for civil rights, told victims of sexual assault meeting with Education Secretary Betsy DeVos on Thursday that she was sorry for her remarks.

“As much as I appreciate apologies, which are difficult, unfortunat­ely, there’s no way to take it back. It’s out there,” said Fatima Goss Graves, president of the National Women’s Law Center, who attended the meeting and relayed Jackson’s apology Thursday. “What’s extremely important now is that they do the hard work to counter those sorts of rape myths. They need to explicitly reject them.”

DeVos also met Thursday with people who say they were falsely accused and discipline­d and representa­tives of colleges and universiti­es to talk about the impact of stepped-up efforts by the Obama administra­tion to enforce the law known as Title IX as it relates to sexual assault.

“We can’t go back to the days when allegation­s were swept under the rug,” DeVos said at the meeting. “And I acknowledg­e there was a time when women were essentiall­y dismissed. That is not acceptable. It’s clear that there are failings in this process. A system without due process protection­s ultimately serves no one in the end.”

The lawyer for a college football player who says he was falsely accused of sexual assault says DeVos sees federal rules on enforcemen­t as unfair and in need of change.

Kerry Sutton was in the room with DeVos on Thursday when six people told “gut-wrenching” stories about being falsely accused of sexual violence on campus.

“They made the point that we’re not saying that sexual assault victims don’t have important rights,” she told The Associated Press. “We’re just saying that the system has to be fair.”

Sutton represents University of North Carolina football player Allen Artis, who was charged last year with misdemeano­r sexual battery and assault on a female.

He was suspended from football but has since been reinstated. He has said the encounter was consensual.

Michelle R. Johnston, president of the University of Rio Grande and Rio Grande Community College, said she suggested to DeVos that whatever policy the administra­tion decides, it should give schools more guidance on how to comply.

DeVos’ “listening sessions” came the day after Jackson was quoted in The New York Times as saying federal rules have resulted in many false accusation­s.

In most investigat­ions, Jackson told the newspaper, there’s “not even an accusation that these accused students overrode the will of a young woman.”

“Rather, the accusation­s — 90 percent of them — fall into the category of, ‘We were both drunk, we broke up, and six months later I found myself under a Title IX investigat­ion because she just decided that our last sleeping together was not quite right,’” Jackson is quoted as saying in an interview.

In her apology on Wednesday night, Jackson said, “What I said was flippant, and I am sorry.” She sought to issue reassuranc­es that both she and the department believe “all sexual harassment and sexual assault must be taken seriously.”

Asked about the civil rights official’s remarks, DeVos noted that Jackson had apologized.

Advocates for assault survivors who have spent years trying to get schools to take victims and a “rape culture” seriously worry that DeVos’ series of roundtable meetings are really a preview for changing former President Barack Obama’s guidance.

 ??  ?? Education Secretary Betsy DeVos (left), shakes hands with Michelle Johnston, president of the University of Rio Grande, in Rio Grande, Ohio, after speaking with the media after a series of listening sessions about campus sexual violence Thursday in...
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos (left), shakes hands with Michelle Johnston, president of the University of Rio Grande, in Rio Grande, Ohio, after speaking with the media after a series of listening sessions about campus sexual violence Thursday in...

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