Daily Press

Women settle lawsuit alleging that Liberty U. mishandled assault cases

- By Sarah Rankin

RICHMOND — A settlement was reached in a lawsuit twelve women brought last summer against Liberty University, accusing the Christian institutio­n of fostering an unsafe environmen­t and mishandlin­g cases of sexual assault and harassment.

A notice of dismissal filed Wednesday by the plaintiffs’ attorney, Jack Larkin, said the case had been settled but provided no details about the terms.

In a statement Thursday, Liberty said a settlement had been reached with all plaintiffs and all but two additional women Larkin represente­d. The university did not disclose the terms of the agreement but outlined a number of other changes in recent months to improve campus security and review how it responds to incidents of sexual harassment or violence.

“Liberty University president Jerry Prevo made it clear when the Jane Does filed their lawsuit that, despite certain claims being potentiall­y outside of the statute of limitation­s, the university was committed to doing what it could to ‘make things right’ with the plaintiffs,” the statement said.

Larkin did not respond to a request for comment from Associated Press. But he told TV station WDBJ the settlement terms were confidenti­al.

The developmen­t comes as the prominent evangelica­l school in Lynchburg faces continued scrutiny over its handling of sex assault cases. It faces other lawsuits that raise similar allegation­s and recently acknowledg­ed to news outlets that the U.S. Department of Education is reviewing its compliance with the federal Clery Act, which requires colleges and universiti­es to maintain and disclose crime statistics and security informatio­n.

In a statement, the department acknowledg­ed oversight work was ongoing but said no further comment would be provided until “the outcome officially has been communicat­ed to the institutio­n.”

The recently settled lawsuit was filed in federal court in New York and made various claims under Title IX, the federal law that protects against sex discrimina­tion in education.

It alleged that Liberty’s strict honor code makes it “difficult or impossible” for students to report sexual violence. It said the university had a “tacit policy” of weighting investigat­ions in favor of accused male students, and it said the university retaliated against women who did make such reports.

The women, former students and employees, filed suit anonymousl­y and were identified as Jane Doe 1-12. Their allegation­s spanned more than two decades.

Some plaintiffs in the lawsuit described being raped or sexually harassed and having their cases mishandled or effectivel­y ignored. One woman alleged pregnancy discrimina­tion.

In its statement, Liberty said it has spent over $8.5 million on campus security upgrades, including the installati­on of security cameras, blue light emergency call boxes and enhanced lighting, along with a new cellphone app for emergency reporting.

Liberty said it has made donations to community sexual assault response programs and is reviewing its counseling services to ensure there are more services available from licensed mental health providers, “including in rapid response scenarios resulting from sexual assault.”

The university also is revising its amnesty policy to “better communicat­e” that it will not discipline parties who engage in behaviors, in connection with a case of sexual harassment or assault “that would have otherwise violated its student honor code.”

Liberty has also been in the spotlight recently for its acrimoniou­s split with former president and chancellor Jerry Falwell Jr. in 2020. Litigation between Falwell and the school is ongoing.

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