Lodi News-Sentinel

DeVos’ new rules for handling campus assault provide much-needed balance

- CHRISTINE M. FLOWERS Christine M. Flowers is a lawyer and columnist for the Philadelph­ia Daily News. Readers may send her email at cflowers19­61@gmail.com.

When Brett Kavanaugh became the latest victim of the unhinged #MeToo movement, the nation got a look at what happens when someone is accused of a crime, denies the charges and is not believed. Being a respected jurist on the brink of a Supreme Court confirmati­on did not spare him from an onslaught of defamatory claims and subversive suggestion­s. Kavanaugh's treatment highlighte­d what the #MeToo movement, designed to empower women, had truly become _ a witch hunt without due process.

Betsy DeVos figured it out before the rest of us.

Earlier this year, the secretary of education announced plans to modify the rules governing sexual assault on campus to balance the rights of both victims and those accused of committing assault. Last week, the final proposal was presented _ and there was plenty of backlash.

"I am dismayed with the Trump administra­tion's cruel proposal that will have the effect of putting power in the hands of abusers and dissuading survivors from coming forward," John B. King Jr., who was education secretary in the Obama administra­tion, said on Twitter.

Others suggested that the new rules would make it much less likely that victims would seek help. Former Vice President Joe Biden, someone who has long been a champion of victims of violence and who spearheade­d the Violence Against Women Act, said "(the) proposed rollback would return us to the days when schools swept rape and assault under the rug and survivors were shamed into silence."

As someone who spends a good part of her days helping victims of abuse in the immigratio­n context, I thank Biden for his admirable advocacy. I also agree with DeVos that "every survivor of sexual violence must be taken seriously."

But after seeing what happened to a Supreme Court nominee with access to the best lawyers and resources, I am thrilled that the Trump administra­tion decided that all college students are also entitled to protection. If accusation­s could nearly take down a man as respected as Kavanaugh, what happens to someone who doesn't have that level of clout and legal prowess? Due process exists because not every person accused of a crime has actually committed it.

Or, as DeVos said, "Every student accused of sexual misconduct must know that guilt is not predetermi­ned." The changes to the Obamaera rules create a balance for both victims and the accused.

First, they revise the definition of sexual harassment. Before, harassment was defined as "unwelcome conduct of a sexual nature." That was so overly broad that a wolf whistle and sustained ogling would qualify as harassment. Now, the conduct has to be "so severe, pervasive, and objectivel­y offensive that it denies a person access to the school's education program or activity."

I'm glad they used the phrase "objectivel­y offensive" because #MeToo has raised the sensitivit­ies of some women into legal causes of action. As the great Camille Paglia noted 20 years before women started marching in their pink hats: "A male student makes a vulgar remark about your breasts? Don't slink off to whimper and simper with the campus shrinking violets. Deal with it. On the spot. Say, 'Shut up you jerk! And crawl back to the barnyard where you belong.'"

Second, colleges are no longer required to use the relatively lax "prepondera­nce of the evidence" standard of proof and can now require that an accuser prove a case with "clear and convincing evidence."

Third, colleges are now obligated to investigat­e incidents that occurred only on campus or at sanctioned events.

The fourth and most important change is that the accused now has the right to confront his accuser through cross-examinatio­n. While he (or, in the rare case, she) does not have the right to directly confront the person making the claims, a lawyer can be hired to represent the accused.

The right to confront your accuser is the single most fundamenta­l principle of our criminal justice system. Colleges used to act like lawless Star Chambers and err too heavily on the side of helping victims while sometimes ignoring the damage done to young people too easily tarred as "rapists" without any substantiv­e proof.

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