Lodi News-Sentinel

DeVos wants to strengthen accused’s rights in campus sex misconduct cases

- By Teresa Watanabe

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos unveiled sweeping changes Friday to campus sexual misconduct rules that would bolster the rights of the accused and give colleges more flexibilit­y in how they handle Title IX cases.

The long-awaited rules make key changes to former guidelines from the Obama administra­tion, including a tighter definition of sexual misconduct, reduced responsibi­lity for colleges to investigat­e complaints, and the right for advisers on all sides to cross-examine those involved.

DeVos said her aim was to restore fairness and rebalance the rights of the accuser and accused in the contentiou­s arena of campus sexual assault. As more victims step forward to report cases, emboldened by a more supportive national environmen­t, hundreds of alleged offenders across the nation have fought back with lawsuits saying that colleges violated their due process rights by rushing to unfair judgments.

“Throughout this process, my focus was, is, and always will be on ensuring that every student can learn in a safe and nurturing environmen­t,” DeVos said in a statement. “That starts with having clear policies and fair processes that every student can rely on.

“Every survivor of sexual violence must be taken seriously, and every student accused of sexual misconduct must know that guilt is not predetermi­ned,” she said. “We can, and must, condemn sexual violence and punish those who perpetrate it, while ensuring a fair grievance process. Those are not mutually exclusive ideas. They are the very essence of how Americans understand justice to function.”

Title IX prohibits sex discrimina­tion in education by schools that receive federal funding. It is mainly relevant to higher education but also covers K-12 schools, although DeVos made distinctio­ns between them in her proposed rules.

The rules drew immediate, sharply divided reaction. Some hailed the changes as long overdue. Others condemned them as a rollback of protection­s that would make it more difficult for students to report sexual assault and easier for colleges to ignore them.

Jess Davidson, interim executive director of End Rape on Campus, said the proposed rules were “worse than we thought.”

“It will return schools to a time where rape, assault and harassment were swept under the rug,” Davidson said in a statement.

Sen. Dianne Feinstein expressed fears that the rules would silence victims and endanger students. “We refuse to let this administra­tion drown out the voices of victims in favor of their accusers,” the California Democrat said in a statement.

Suzanne Taylor, the University of California’s interim systemwide Title IX coordinato­r, said in a statement that the “proposed changes will reverse decades of well-establishe­d, hard-won progress toward equity in our nation’s schools, unravel critical protection­s for individual­s who experience sexual harassment, and undermine the very procedures designed to ensure fairness and justice.”

Supporters said the rules would better ensure fairness in proceeding­s they believe have become too skewed against the accused.

“Finally they’re issuing rules to reinforce the rights that already are well establishe­d and should be uniformly applied,” said Mark Hathaway, a Los Angeles attorney who has represente­d more than 150 students accused of sexual misconduct. “It’s been a long time coming.”

The proposed new federal rules would for the first time require colleges and universiti­es to allow cross-examinatio­n during mandatory live hearings in misconduct cases, though parties would not question each other directly. Both sides would have equal opportunit­y to present witnesses and access evidence. And the person who makes the ultimate finding could not be the same person who investigat­ed the complaint, addressing widespread criticism that Title IX coordinato­rs often act as prosecutor, judge and jury.

Hathaway said California courts already have begun ordering colleges to restore due process rights to accused students. In recent cases against Claremont McKenna College and University of California, Santa Barbara, he said, the state appeals court said that respondent­s had the right to question their accusers.

Taylor, however, said in an interview that the prospect of cross-examinatio­n, probably by an attorney, would intimidate victims and witnesses and discourage them from speaking up.

The new rules also would adopt the U.S. Supreme Court’s definition of sexual harassment, which requires conduct to be so severe, pervasive and “objectivel­y offensive” that it effectivel­y denies a person equal access to the school’s education program or activity. Obama-era guidelines defined sexual harassment only as “unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature” that was so severe or pervasive that it denied or limited access to education. They did not require the conduct to be objectivel­y offensive or deny access.

The Foundation for Individual Rights in Education, which promotes free speech on campuses, welcomed the narrower definition. It would eliminate the “confusion that has led institutio­ns nationwide to adopt overly broad definition­s of sexual harassment that threaten student and faculty speech,” said Samantha Harris, a foundation vice president.

But Taylor said the change would sharply reduce victims’ ability to win justice.

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