Call & Times

Lawsuit: Brown trustees protected accused student

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PROVIDENCE (AP) — A female former Brown University student is suing the Ivy League school over how it handled her allegation­s that she was drugged at a fraternity party and later sexually assaulted.

The lawsuit, filed Thursday in U.S. District Court in Providence, raises the question of whether Brown dropped a disciplina­ry proceeding against the male student who allegedly drugged her to protect him because he was the son of a trustee. Brown previously denied it was a factor.

It’s the latest in a wave of legal actions brought against Brown and other universiti­es accused of mishandlin­g sexual assault cases under the federal Title IX law, which is designed to prevent gender discrimina­tion in education. This case sparked a protest at Brown last year, when hundreds of students silently marched across campus, many with dollar bills taped across their mouths to signify their feeling that money and influence were more important than victims of sexual assault.

The woman, identified as Jane Doe in the lawsuit, says after she and a friend were unwittingl­y drugged by the trustee’s son in October 2014, she was sexually assaulted by a different male student in her dorm room. Doe is suing Brown, the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity and the trustee’s son, identified with the pseudonym “John Smith” in the complaint.

The man accused of sexually assaulting her was found “not responsibl­e” in a school disciplina­ry proceeding that Doe argues was flawed. He is not named in the lawsuit.

Doe says Brown badly mishandled the case, including by taking blood, urine and hair specimens but failing to perform the proper tests or sending the samples to disreputab­le labs that then botched the testing. The labs returned results that were inconclusi­ve about whether the two women had been drugged.

Brown then dropped the disciplina­ry process against the trustee’s son after the lab tests came back inconclusi­ve, “despite his admission and the testimony of other witnesses that he was the brainchild of the unregister­ed party, had in fact purchased the alcohol, and had served an alcoholic beverage he made specially for Ms. Doe and her companion, which incapacita­ted both women,” the lawsuit reads.

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