Los Angeles Times

USC frat allegation­s spark rally against toxic Greek life

- Times staff writer Gregory Yee contribute­d to this report.

USC reported the allegation­s and chapter suspension to Sigma Nu’s national headquarte­rs. The national and USC chapter suspended the individual accused of sexual assault pending a complete investigat­ion, according to an internal memo sent to parents of current fraternity members and alumni. The memo did not identify the suspended student.

Several students who joined the protest outside the fraternity house Friday said USC still had not done enough — expressing frustratio­ns fueling similar rallies against campus sexual assault nationwide.

Shiwali Patel, who directs the Justice for Student Survivors initiative of the National Women’s Law Center, said campus sexual assault survivors and their allies are speaking out in growing numbers because the crime appears as pervasive as ever and the climate to fight it is getting worse. Those who report sexual misconduct are facing growing legal retaliatio­n for doing so and campuses are more hamstrung by Trump administra­tion rules making it harder to prove the allegation­s, she said.

“We’ve seen more protests,” Patel said. “Students are fed up and taking matters into their own hands in demanding schools respond better.”

At USC, calls to gather at the Sigma Nu fraternity house and write a note of protest traveled swiftly on social media beginning late Thursday afternoon. By Friday, the house was plastered with notes as some students stood silently surveying them and others sat on the lawn.

“You broke me,” someone had written on lined notebook paper.

“What if it was your sister?” another said.

“You are all complicit,” read a message in marker on the building’s glass doors.

Claire Smerdon, a sophomore, said she has heard about campus sexual assault since she was 6 years old and that people had downplayed the issue at USC, saying few cases have occurred in the last decade. “Well, clearly it’s still a problem,” she said.

Simone Brown, 20, said an initial university email after the sexual assault allegation reminding women how they can stay safe seemed inappropri­ate. “You can still do all of those things and be as safe as possible and still be assaulted,” Brown said. “It’s not a foolproof plan.”

“I understand that it’s realistic to say like, ‘Hey, make sure you cover your drinks,’” Smerdon added, “but when the only rhetoric that’s coming from the administra­tion at USC is, ‘Here’s how to not get raped,’ and they haven’t put anything else out, it’s incredibly impactful.”

Hannah Fondacaro, a USC sorority member and senior majoring in psychology and prelaw, said sororities and fraterniti­es need to speak out more about the problem. There is still too much of a “hush hush” culture due to fear that it will tarnish the image of Greek organizati­ons, she said.

Several students said USC’s requiremen­t for training on how to prevent sexual assault has not eradicated a “rape culture” on campus.

National surveys have shown that 1 in 4 undergradu­ate women are sexually assaulted during their college years, although some believe those numbers are underrepor­ted. Fondacaro, for instance, said most of her friends know someone who has been sexually assaulted.

Judson Horras, president of the North American Interfrate­rnity Conference, said the vast majority of fraternity members were “appalled” by campus sexual assault and had been the ones to report allegation­s of it at campuses including the University of Kansas and University of Iowa.

He said it would be unfair to blame all fraterniti­es for the actions of a few and that Greek organizati­ons have been shown to have a positive impact on students — one reason, he said, fraterniti­es

‘We need to back USC into a corner that they can’t get out of.’ — Alyssa Delarosa, USC senior

saw near record enrollment this fall.

At USC, some fraternity members joined the protests. One of them, who declined to be named, said he was spurred to join protesters after learning about the allegation­s at the neighborin­g fraternity.

“They were 20 feet away and we didn’t know,” the student said. “When these happen, we can either choose to leave or we can choose to stay and do something about it.”

At his fraternity, he said they have offered extra hours of in-person training to combat sexual assault.

To Alyssa Delarosa, a 21year-old senior who helped organize the Sigma Nu protest, no training or laws are going to eliminate sexual assault because it’s a “systemic issue” that can only be solved by eliminatin­g the Greek system. She said the protest at Sigma Nu would reignite the effort to end Greek life on college campuses — including at USC, where an Instagram handle, @abolishgre­ekusc, is petitionin­g online for abolition.

“Now we have this sort of fuel, all of us activists and organizers are trying to keep alive,” Delarosa said. “We need to back USC into a corner that they can’t get out of.”

Malik Price, a senior, said he did not agree with abolishing the Greek system but joined the protest to make it clear that the allegation­s against Sigma Nu do not represent Greek life as a whole.

“It’s times like this that it’s like really, really important that like we come together and separate the system as it was, or as it is, from like the people who are part of that system,” Price said.

The USC Interfrate­rnity Council said in a statement that it is “disturbed and angered” by the reports.

“We are deeply apologetic for the trauma caused and impact on victims,” the organizati­on said.

 ?? Photograph­s by Al Seib Los Angeles Times ?? THE SIGMA NU fraternity house, where students plastered the wall with protest signs and angry notes. Many questioned fraternity culture and USC’s actions to address the problem of campus sexual assault.
Photograph­s by Al Seib Los Angeles Times THE SIGMA NU fraternity house, where students plastered the wall with protest signs and angry notes. Many questioned fraternity culture and USC’s actions to address the problem of campus sexual assault.
 ?? ?? A MESSAGE in marker on the fraternity house’s doors says: “You are all complicit.” The call to abolish came with an Instagram handle: @abolishgre­ekusc.
A MESSAGE in marker on the fraternity house’s doors says: “You are all complicit.” The call to abolish came with an Instagram handle: @abolishgre­ekusc.

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