USA TODAY International Edition

Stanford booze ban dodges assault issue, critics say

University restricts ‘ high- volume’ liquor containers

- Greg Toppo @ gtoppo USATODAY

A stricter alcohol policy announced this week at Stanford University is coming under fire from critics, who say the ban on hard liquor at most on- campus parties will do little to prevent sexual assault.

Under the new policy, announced Monday, Stanford will prohibit “high- volume” distilled liquor containers in undergradu­ate housing and ban consumptio­n of hard alcohol at parties, except for those hosted by student organizati­ons or parties taking place at graduate student housing.

Even then, only mixed drinks are allowed — straight shots of hard alcohol, university officials noted, “are never allowed at any party.”

The change comes after former Stanford swimmer Brock Turner was convicted of sexually assaulting a woman in January 2015 after both drank at a campus party. Two graduate students came upon Turner and the woman outside a fraternity house, and when Turner fled, they chased him.

The case caused a national furor when a judge sentenced Turner to just six months in jail.

The new policy, which limits alcohol containers to those smaller than 750 milliliter­s, is aimed not just at curbing consumptio­n on campus, but at reducing the “outlet density” of stores near campus that sell hard alcohol. Smaller containers of alcohol cost more, and that may serve as a deterrent to heavy drinking.

Washington attorney Douglas Fierberg, who specialize­s in law- suits involving fraternity hazing, deaths, injuries and other cases, said the new hard liquor rules don’t really address the core issue at hand: fraterniti­es that are allowed to self- govern.

“It’s hard to look at this policy with respect to fraterniti­es and be very optimistic,” he said. Though Greek Life organizati­ons at Stanford are considered university housing, Stanford exerts “no responsibl­e supervisio­n” over fraterniti­es. “While this policy goes a long way to prohibit certain quantities of alcohol in housing, the Greek community is still not supervised like all other Stanford housing,” Fierberg said. “So the idea that increased restrictio­ns ( are) going to solve the problem in the Greek community will never be better than its means of implementa­tion. That same assumption has failed thousands of times across the country.”

The new policy comes four months after a campuswide referendum in which nearly 92% of students voted against a hard alcohol ban, The Stanford Daily reported. Ralph Castro, director of the Office of Alcohol Policy and Education, told the newspaper, “We’re not necessaril­y looking at popularity, but rather functional­ity.”

Michele Landis Dauber, a Stanford law professor and critic of the university’s sexual assault policies, credited Stanford with spending more on safety education. But she said the school needs to get tough by expelling students convicted of sexual assault. It should also address its “culture of entitlemen­t — and sexual entitlemen­t” among athletes and fraterniti­es. Like Fierberg, she suggested “adult supervisio­n of these places that we know are high- risk.”

Dauber said the university must do more to educate students on the dangers of alcohol. “It’s a weapon,” she said. “We need to educate students about the role that alcohol actually plays in sexual assault.”

She said, “Freshmen girls are the ones at greatest risk for sexual assault on college campuses — I don’t know that they know that when they get here.”

She said the new policy, “however well- intentione­d,” could take a bad situation and make it worse by driving binge drinking into dorm rooms and thus undergroun­d. By banning hard alcohol at most parties, she said, Stanford encourages students to engage in “aggressive pre- gaming” before they show up at the parties, where only beer and wine are allowed.

Dauber, who leads a campaign to recall the judge in the Turner case, said that if the new policy had been in place last January, Turner’s victim might not have been rescued by the two students, who were passing by on bicycles when they noticed the attack unfolding behind a dumpster. “Perhaps it would have taken place in Brock Turner’s room,” she said.

In any case, she wonders why the lighting hasn’t been upgraded in the area and other dangerous spots. “You ought to be able to see that dumpster from space,” she said.

“While this policy goes a long way to prohibit certain quantities of alcohol in housing, the Greek community is still not supervised like all other Stanford housing.” Washington attorney Douglas Fierberg

 ?? AP ?? Brock Turner, a former Stanford University swimmer, was sentenced to six months for sexual assault.
AP Brock Turner, a former Stanford University swimmer, was sentenced to six months for sexual assault.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States